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After half an hour, Lucy started to yawn. I grabbed the opportunity.

"Come on, Luce. How about the zoo tomorrow?"

"Oh, yes, Daddy," she said, clapping her hands. Fortunately she didn't demand more time with the anarchy game.

Caroline was curled up on one of the long leather sofas. I looked down at her and saw the face I'd awoken next to countless times. When she was at rest, her skin was as smooth and her forehead as unfurrowed as they'd ever been. Obviously working in international finance was good for you. I wished I'd aged as well. I'd just turned forty-one and the gray hairs had established themselves for good, and not just on my head.

Then Caroline woke up and immediately frowned at me, as if I'd been molesting her with Lucy in the room.

"Come on, darling," she said, sitting up. "It's time we went back to our hovel."

Lucy mouthed the last word at me after her mother walked past her.

I raised my shoulders. Caroline had bought a four- bedroom house that had been refurbished to almost regal standards by its previous owner, an award-winning architect, so I had no idea what she was complaining about. Well, I did. She thought money earned from frivolous activities like writing had less value than that gained from real work like banking. There was a time, when my early novels were flying and she was struggling to get back into her career after Lucy was born, that she'd been glad enough for literary money. That was another thing that had been erased from her memory.

I kissed Lucy, and called good-night to Caroline down the hall. Then, after waiting in vain for an answer, I closed the door and went for my computer.

Maybe I had mail.

I was also spoiling for a fight. Four The woman moved with catlike poise across the carpet of the room, the cold steel of the silver pistol against her cheek. She stood in front of the mirror and looked at her face. For a few moments, it was a stranger who stared back at her. Then she remembered what she'd become and smiled. She was no longer Sara Robbins. She had changed her name, her appearance, her very nature.

The hotel near Victoria Station was cheap, most of its residents being tourists from the U.S. and Australia on budget holidays. They only stayed a few days before moving on to other cities on the modern Grand Tour- Edinburgh, Paris, Berlin-spectral cities filled with memories of slaughter, medieval and modern. But she was here for the duration, had already been in residence for two weeks, preparing, checking and carrying out the most subtle of surveillance. She'd learned the trade from masters, men who slipped unseen through streets and across squares, their weapons never more than a finger's length away.

Soon she would strike the first blow in the city so large that she could disappear at will into its backstreets and lanes, its underground tunnels and its spacious, forested parks. They would not find her, unless she made the most egregious of errors. That would not happen. Her brother had trained her well. He'd also left a directory of former CIA and Special Forces operatives, and they had completed her education in the arts of deception and death. The White Devil, her brother and lover, would have been so proud.

And yet, she didn't miss him, at least not in the sense that he was absent. Rather, she felt his presence in everything that she did. He was with her, though not as some spook at her shoulder. He was inside her-he had penetrated every cell and organ of her body, his mind was in hers.

She had felt that from the beginning, when he'd made himself known to her before his great scheme was put into action. And after his passing, she had felt it even more, the possession-not that his soul possessed her, but rather that their twin souls possessed each other. There was never any inequality. The White Devil had treated her as his partner from the start, his partner and his shared destiny. That destiny still awaited them, but her brother could now only experience it through her eyes and ears, her mouth and nose, her touch, while the man responsible for his death was still alive. That fact filled her veins with burning fire and drove her every action. She would destroy Matt Wells, but first she would turn him into a quivering wreck.

Standing at the window and looking through the gap between the dirty gray curtains, the woman took in the people on the street below. It was raining and they were walking quickly, even those with umbrellas. The early morning cloud cover and muted lights blurred everything, making the lines between cars and people indistinct. It was a semiliquid landscape, one poisoned by exhaust gases and the fumes from boilers and pumps. A man- made hell. .and suddenly she was back in the jungle of Colombia, a hell of nature's creation, her throat burning and the rotting vegetation making her stomach heave. She made sure her guide didn't notice that. They were under a kilometer from the target and soon all her concentration would have to be on the job. This would be her first major kill and she felt her brother inside her, urging her forward. He had made a file on the target, checked all the data personally. It was six months since he'd been executed in London. She had spent four of them being trained by different experts-unarmed combat, the use of weapons, covert procedures, advanced computing skills and the mechanics of international finance. Let loose on the world, she had already killed a pusher in Atlanta, a pair of crackheads in Jacksonville and a scumbag who had tried to rape her in the washroom of a bar in Miami. Those murders had been of her own choosing, as the White Devil had suggested in order to build her confidence. But only by hitting major players would she prove her real worth.

Pedro "El Loco" Camargo called himself a guerrilla leader, but the reality was that he ran the area's cocaine production, treated the workers as slaves and took any girl he wanted to his bed. His private army, the so-called Golden Liberation Fighters, lorded over the villages and shot anyone who showed disobedience or disrespect. The organization was rotten from head to toe. And she was here to remove that head.

El Loco, led astray by the typical dictator's delusion that his people loved him, allowed them to pay court every Saturday. The men and women who had aired their grievances at the first such reception were found soon afterward with their throats cut and their faces unrecognizable. Since then, the GLF had been forcing workers to present themselves and laud their leader.

"Remember, there will be fighters all around," said her guide, Esteban, when they reached the tree line. He was a former sidekick of El Loco, but had been bought off by Sara's brother before his death. "But they will be drunk and drugged up. My people are ready. As soon as you strike, they will deal with the whores' sons."

The woman wondered, not for the first time, why Esteban's supporters had not taken the apparently simple step themselves. But she dismissed the thought, content to do her brother's will, even if the Colombian was temporarily taking advantage of her. She unslung her pack and took out tattered peasant woman's clothes. She caught Esteban's eye as she was undoing her trousers. He turned away quickly when he saw the look on her face.

After that, it was easy. She had to stand in line with the sweating, broken people, her head bent and her steps as unsteady as theirs. The long, black wig she was wearing, along with the dirt she had rubbed on to her face, arms and legs, made her inconspicuous. As she got closer to El Loco, she glanced left and right. Heavily armed men were leaning against the walls of what used to be the village school, their eyes bloodshot and vacant. They saw her, but they didn't see what she was. That meant they'd enjoyed running their hands all over her in a fruitless search for weapons.

Now she was inside-more men with Kalashnikovs and American weapons, the smell of fear and destitution more noisome. The man in front of her launched into a lengthy tribute to his master. After five minutes, Camargo, a tall, bearded man who had run to fat, nodded and the talkative man was hustled away by two GLF men. It was her turn.