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The others reluctantly agreed that someone with Henry’s eclectic espionage background was bound to check out the area thoroughly before he made contact. They withdrew to the safety of a diner two blocks away and said they’d wait for Trey to call.

Trey and I waited in silence in the shadows, listening to the rumble of traffic over the bridge behind us. I’d noticed a sign on the way across that told me it was the Congressman William V Chapell Jr Memorial Bridge. Some memorial.

Everywhere was the buzz and click of exotic insects. There was a slight breeze coming up from the water that stirred around my bare midriff. Underfoot, the dark asphalt was still warm from soaking up the sun all day. It was now slowly giving out heat like it was exhaling.

My body was tense but a part of my mind was on standby. It began pondering on the completely different outlook that was required when you lived in a consistently hot climate like Florida, knowing you can rely on the weather most of the time. It might be constantly sunny, but it was also harsh and somehow unforgiving.

I thought of my bikes sitting at home, the new Honda not yet seriously ridden because I didn’t want the final dregs of the winter road salt to pit its pristine aluminium frame. The last time I’d seen it seemed a long time ago.

A sudden image of Sean rose up out of nowhere. A brief snapshot of a country house restaurant he’d taken me to the month before, near Henley-on-Thames. Perhaps it was the very Englishness of it, against such a setting, that had sparked off the memory.

I’d dressed up for the occasion, probably the first time Sean had seen my legs in public. We’d eaten in an elegant high-ceilinged dining room, our table lit by a pair of tall silver candlesticks. The cool ivory linen was so starched the napkin had barely drooped when the waiter had laid it across my lap.

And afterwards, when they’d cleared the debris of our meal, I’d glanced up and found Sean watching me intently and frowning.

“What is it?” I’d asked.

“You do realise,” he’d said carefully, twirling the stem of his wineglass between those long and clever fingers, “that what you’re proposing to do for a living is not exactly the safest profession in the world, don’t you, Charlie?”

It was the first time he’d voiced it out loud and that had made me pause a moment before I’d replied.

“Yes,” I’d said, my voice calm, “but I also know what I am.” I shrugged, a little helplessly. “What else would you suggest I do with it?”

He’d smiled. One of those slow-burning smiles that made the blood thump in my ears so hard I could hardly hear other people speaking because of it.

Nobody observing us then – just another absorbed couple out for another quiet supper – would have guessed the violence that laced our history. Sean slid into the cultured skin very well. It hadn’t come naturally to him, but he’d persevered until it fitted and perhaps because of that there was always an air of contained force, of submerged danger about him. He had taught himself how to walk the thin line between civilisation and savagery and was just as at home on either side.

And he was just too good at what he did to have been taken out so easily. I had to cling to that thought.

Or what else was there for me to live for?

The vision snapped shut again, its passing riffling the air like the closing pages of a heavy book. I blinked and the hazy reflections of the flames against hallmarked silverware and gilt-edged bone china re-formed into the glitter of streetlights on the darkened water.

Trey nudged my arm. “He’s here,” he said.

A red Corvette swung a touch too fast into the parking area, its tyres letting out a protesting squeak as it made the turn.

I haven’t come across a lot of Corvettes, but even I could tell this wasn’t a collector’s item. It was just at that age where it’s too old to be a new car, but not old enough to be a true classic. At that moment it was probably languishing right at the bottom of its depreciation curve.

The body was mostly red, as though its owner had got halfway through rubbing it down and then got bored with the idea. When he pulled up and cut the engine, one of the pop-up headlights didn’t close all the way. The car looked like an outclassed boxer at the end of a tough fight.

Trey took a step forwards but I grabbed his arm and kept him in the shadows. I had the bag Aimee had given me slung over my shoulder and I’d already partly unzipped it. Now I put my hand inside and curled my fingers around the SIG’s pistol grip.

“Let’s just see what he does,” I murmured.

The driver climbed out and peered around him, like his night vision wasn’t too good. Henry was both younger and fatter than I’d pictured him. Even in the light air he was sweating noticeably.

“Hey, Trey!” he yelled, turning a slow circle. “You out there, man?”

I pulled Trey further into cover behind a parked minivan. “The guy’s a total waster,” I whispered, trying to keep my disgust mostly hidden. “The nearest he’s ever got to the CIA is watching a Tom Clancy movie. Let’s get out of here.”

Trey yanked his arm out of my grip and glared at me, shifting to the corner of the van so he could take another look at Henry.

“Hey, c’mon, Trey,” Henry called, his voice still louder than I was happy about. He wiped the back of his hand across his mouth. What did he have to be so nervous about?

“Hey, either you want to know about your old man or you don’t, but don’t fuck me around, huh?”

That did it. Trey lunged round the corner of the van before I could stop him and trotted out towards the Corvette. Cursing under my breath, I followed.

It took Henry a while after he’d spotted Trey to notice me. His eyes narrowed.

“I thought I told you to come alone,” he said.

Trey half glanced over his shoulder and mumbled something that included the word “girlfriend” but I didn’t catch the rest of it.

“Oh, OK then.” Henry smiled wolfishly at me, looking everywhere but at my face. It was the kind of smile that makes you want to go and scrub yourself down with an abrasive cleaner afterwards. I tried not to let that show.

He turned back to the car. “You’ll have to cosy up some, then,” he said. “This baby’s only a two seater.”

“Like, where are we going?” I asked, copying the rising inflection the American kids used when they spoke. Trey looked at me sharply but didn’t comment. Henry didn’t seem to notice anything amiss.

“My hide-out,” he said. “I keep a little place a few blocks from here.”

I hesitated, but Trey was already opening the Corvette’s passenger door and climbing in. It was either drag him out of there by force or go along with it, even if allowing yourself to be taken from a relatively public place to a private one of someone else’s choosing was madness in these circumstances. It went against everything I’d ever taught or learned, but I reminded myself that I was the kid’s bodyguard. If he went, I went. It was as simple as that.

With a sigh I climbed in with Trey, uncomfortably aware of his bony body pressing against me and the fact that I probably weighed more than he did.

Henry eased his bulk behind the wheel and grinned at the way we were tangled together alongside him. I’d tried to keep the bag reachable but, even so, I doubted I could actually get to the gun to use it if I had to.

That jolted me. In the course of a few days I’d gone from never carrying a gun to being unhappy to be parted from it.

We set off, the poor old Corvette’s engine occasionally firing on all the cylinders it was supposed to. The inside of the car smelt of old cigarettes and damp. Henry drove sitting upright, hunched over the steering wheel. He glanced sideways at us a couple of times once we were out on the road, still smiling.