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                        Dino closed the door and walked into Harrod’s.

                        Stone drove on out Knightsbridge, which became the Cromwell Road, and soon he was on a four-lane highway, and soon after that, on the M4 motorway. Traffic was heavy, but he made good time. He got off the motorway at the prescribed exit and took the opportunity to check the traffic behind him. No one exited after him that he could see, and he felt tail-free, except for Mason’s van, which was nowhere to be seen.

                        He followed the signs to the village and the restaurant and parked the car. The Thames was before him, broad and slow-moving, with pretty houses on the other side. He went into the restaurant; it was precisely one o’clock. Lance was not there yet, and the maître d’ seated him outside on the terrace, under an elm tree. He ordered a kir royale and sipped it. Lance, he figured, was driving around the village to see if either he or Stone had a tail. Another fifteen minutes passed before he entered the restaurant.

                        Stone shook his hand. “A very elegant place,” he said.

                        “Wait until you taste the food.”

                        They had only desultory conversation until the food arrived, then Lance took a look around to be sure they were not being overheard. “I’m going to have to pat you down,” he said to Stone.

                        Stone laughed. “Don’t worry, I haven’t worn a wire in years, not since I was a cop.”

                        Lance got up, walked behind Stone and, on the pretense of pointing at something on the river, ran his hands expertly over Stone’s body, down to the crotch.

                        “Don’t have too much fun there,” Stone said.

                        “What’s this?” Lance asked, patting Stone’s jacket pocket.

                        Stone removed the pen and handed it to him.

                        Lance inspected it closely and unscrewed the cap.

                        Don’t try to unscrew the other end, Stone thought.

                        Lance didn’t; he returned the pen, and Stone put it back into his pocket.

                        “Now,” Lance said.

                        Stone leaned forward, as if to listen closely, putting his left hand on the table.

                        “I’m going to tell you everything I think you need to know.”

                        “If it’s everything I think I need to know, we’ll be fine.”

                        “There is a company west and south of here, in Wiltshire, a very secret company that makes very, very high-tech parts for the British military. We’re talking very specialized metallurgy, machine tools, incredibly tight tolerances, and computerized design. For the past year, a man who works there, making these parts, has managed to make a duplicate of one extremely important component.”

                        Stone interrupted. “Surely parts of that kind are stringently catalogued and accounted for.”

                        “This man has been working in this facility for nearly thirty years, and he has accumulated a reservoir of trust, which leads his employers and colleagues to give him wide latitude. He’s brilliant, and he’s crotchety, and nobody likes to piss him off, so they leave him pretty much to himself.”

                        “I see.”

                        “This gentleman is nearing retirement, and he feels that his pension plan and what he has managed to save are insufficient to keep him in the style to which he would like to become accustomed. You see, he has a little horse-betting habit, which, over the years, has taken its toll on his nest egg.”

                        “Do you mean to tell me that an important employee of a high-security facility could be betting the ponies and losing and not be noticed?”

                        “Apparently, he has been very discreet, and he has not been noticed,” Lance replied. “In any case, he has made it known to someone who knows someone I know that he has built this very special device, and that it is for sale. I have bid on it, and he has accepted my offer. All that remains to be done is to meet with him, retrieve the device, pay him half a million dollars in cash, and pass the device on to someone else.”

                        “It sounds too simple,” Stone said.

                        “Believe me when I tell you, there has been nothing simple about it. I have known about this for seven months, and it has taken nearly every day of that time to set this up—retrieval of the device, payment, shipping, and finally, collecting payment.”

                        “And with all that time to prepare, why do you suddenly need my money?”

                        “Because the investor who was to have provided it last week met with a fatal accident, and his funds are no longer forthcoming. You happened to arrive at a moment when you could be useful.”

                        “Why me?”

                        “Because you’re here,” Lance said emphatically. “The people to whom I’m to deliver the device are not the kind who take disappointment lightly; they get ugly quickly. I have given them a schedule, and they expect me to keep it.”

                        “Why don’t they deal directly with your man? Why do they need you?”

                        “Because they don’t know who he is or how he came by the device. Only I know that, just yours truly, and no one else. By the way, you are not going to know that, either. You will know only what I tell you, and if that’s not enough for you, then—”

                        “Then you’ll have to disappoint your buyers, won’t you?” Stone asked coldly.

                        That stopped Lance in his tracks. “I have another source for the funds, but it is a less attractive one, which will cost me too much in interest. If you don’t want into this, say so, and lunch is on me and we won’t meet again.”

                        Stone stared at him for a long moment. “What is the device? What does it do?”

                        “Please believe me, Stone, you do not want that information. In the unlikely event that this should go awry, you will be grateful for not knowing.”

                        Stone thought he had shown a sufficient amount of reluctance to be convincing. “When does the transaction take place?”

                        “Within the next forty-eight hours,” Lance replied, “after your funds are safely in a Swiss account.”

                        “Whose account?”

                        “Yours; I’ve brought the paperwork with me; you can instruct the bank not to proceed at any time you choose. But if you’re in, then the transfer has to be received in Zurich by the close of business tomorrow, which is noon in New York.”