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"Time out," Cavanaugh said.

"It really is bullshit," Ali insisted.

"Honestly, time out. Did Duncan keep any whiskey around here?"

"You've become a drinker ?" Kim asked in astonishment.

"No," Cavanaugh said, "but maybe if we hit each other over the head with the bottle long enough, we'll start talking sense. Duncan trusted the three of you absolutely. I trust you absolutely. But that doesn't change the security breach we need to find, and it doesn't change the problem I've got. Somebody's hunting me, somebody with a lot of money and resources. Just because the first attempt failed doesn't mean the threat's over. I've got to believe there'll be another attack, bigger and better organized."

Brockman ran a hand across his shaved head. Ali exhaled slowly.

"Sorry," Kim said. "I guess we're all reacting to stress."

After a knock on the door, a security guard brought in a package. "Mr. Faraday's assistant delivered this."

Cavanaugh gave the bulging, legal-sized envelope to William, who spread the contents onto the conference table.

"Where do I put my autograph?" Cavanaugh asked.

"Aren't you going to read it first? As your lawyer, I strongly advise you to study what you're signing."

"Is there anything in it you don't approve of?"

"It's elegantly simple. You accept the bequest. You assume control of the company, with all its assets and, I emphasize, its liabilities."

"Yesterday, you told me Duncan made some questionable business decisions."

"He expanded the company too quickly. London, Paris, Rome, Hong Kong. The new office planned for Tokyo. Granted, after nine/eleven, first-rate security has never been in greater demand. But right now, GPS has more money going out than coming in. There's a risk of bankruptcy."

"Bankruptcy?" Ali frowned at Brockman. "Nobody told me anything about--"

Cavanaugh signed the document.

"We need a witness." William looked at Jamie. "But it can't be your wife."

"Wife?" Kim looked stunned.

"Hell, I'll do it," Mrs. Patterson said, happy to have continued to be part of the group. She signed where William indicated.

"So the company's mine now?" Cavanaugh asked William.

"Down to the paper clips and the water coolers."

"Then let's get started. Gerald, cancel the Tokyo office. Merge the Paris office with the one in Rome. Ali, Mrs. Patterson needs to be protected around the clock. Put her in a safe site."

"And assign some handsome young men to watch her," Jamie said.

"William needs a safe site, too," Cavanaugh added. "The hit team can use both of them to get at me. Kim, do a computer search on every assignment I ever had. There's a chance the attack on me was meant to keep me quiet about something I learned. I want the best protectors to escort Jamie and me. Send for Rob Miller, Dominic Benuto, Hans Dietrich, and . . ."

The somber looks he received made him stop.

He suddenly processed two incongruous statements that Ali and Kim had made. Ali had said, "As if we don't have enough problems." Kim had said, "I guess we're all reacting to stress."

"What's wrong?" he asked.

Kim drew a breath. "Except for Eddie, they're all dead. Within the past twenty-four hours."

At first, Cavanaugh was certain he hadn't heard correctly.

"Miller was in Venice, protecting a corporate executive and his wife," Ali explained. "Dominic was in Oaxaca, escorting a movie star. The others were on equally unrelated assignments. All of them were killed with sharp-edged weapons."

Cavanaugh leaned forward, pressing his hands on the table.

"All the blades were covered with a rapid-acting poison," Kim added.

Cavanaugh couldn't speak.

"The clients survived." Brockman sounded troubled. "They weren't harmed in the least. Nobody attacked them."

"Nobody? But that doesn't make sense," William objected.

"Sure, it does," Cavanaugh said. "If the clients weren't attacked, it means the protectors were the targets."

"But why not just use guns?"

"Because there's something creepily intimate about being stabbed," Cavanaugh replied. "A victim often doesn't feel the cuts or have any idea how serious the wound might be. There's a video that knife trainers use. The tape came from a security camera mounted to the ceiling of a bar in California. You see a bunch of Anglo tough guys beating up a short Latino man. They really put the boots to him. Finally, the worst of the attackers has the Latino on the bar's pool table, wailing the hell out of him. On the video, you see a little movement to the left, the Latino's hand trying to get out from under the bad guy, struggling to reach into his jean's pocket. Then you see a lot of quick little movements. The hand's a blur. Then the bad guy straightens, as if he pounded the Latino as much as he wanted to. He turns, and his stomach's wide open, but he's in shock and doesn't know he's been cut. Everybody runs. The bad guy looks puzzled by their reaction and walks over to the bar. He sits down. The Latino, who's covered with blood, gets off the pool table, puts his knife in his pocket, straightens his clothes, and walks out. The bad guy sitting at the bar orders a drink. He's still in so much shock that he doesn't know how many times he's been cut. He sits there a moment longer, shakes his head as if he's a little confused about something, and falls over dead."

William looked appalled.

"Most security personnel are so worried about a knife threat, they make sure they carry at least one knife so they can scare somebody with it if the situation gets that bad. Several knives are preferable so you've got a better chance of drawing one of them. Attached to a break-away chain around the neck." Cavanaugh opened his shirt, displaying a short, black knife in a nylon scabbard: part of the contents of the Gulfstream's bug-out bag. It was called La Griffe , a French word for "talon," which described its shape.

"And here." Jamie pulled back her blazer, showing William a utility knife holstered above her left hip, something else from the bug-out bag.

"And here." Cavanaugh unclipped a five-inch tactical folding knife from the inside of his pants pocket. The clip attachment made it easy to find and retrieve the knife. On the back of the blade, a hook snagged on the pocket. The resistance caused the blade to open as the knife was being drawn. "I had years of training with blades. A master knife maker taught me to forge them. But I hate the thought of being attacked by one. Believe me, a lot of protectors will feel cold and naked when word gets out they're being stalked with blades."

"But you weren't attacked with a blade," Jamie told him. "What's the connection?"

Chapter 3.

Raoul had no idea where he was being taken. After he used a pay phone to tell his parents that he was heading north to find a job in Denver, the stranger drove him to a small airport, Double Eagle, west of Albuquerque. There, the stranger returned his rental car. No security check was required as they walked toward a small jet. A few minutes later, they soared into the cobalt sky.

"I use small airports," the stranger explained, as if Raoul understood what the hell he was talking about. "I stay below eighteen thousand feet. That way, I don't need to file an instrument flight plan, and I don't turn on my transponder, which is how radar would otherwise track me."

Raoul had trouble concentrating. Until now, he'd never been in a plane. Vertigo threatened to make him vomit. But there was no way he'd let the stranger realize he was afraid. Although his palms were slick with sweat, he kept them firmly on his knees. He forced himself not to tremble.