Safe in an anonymous hotel
…
There was no time for an explanation, picking up on the urgency in my tone. They gathered up a few belongings because I added they couldn’t come back, and, after Cecelia and I tossed the work phones on the kitchen bench, we headed down the stairs to the basement.
By the time the call with Alfie ended, I realized that we were just supposed to find her, Rodby had a whole other team on standby ready to ‘extract’ her. And, if I was not mistaken, it would be against her will if she didn’t want to go with them. It was why she greeted us with a gun, she knew what might happen.
Perhaps she knew the Rodby’s better than I did.
Like certain parts of London various groups of building basements were used by the defence forces and government offices, and the one Juliet was staying in might have been one because the basement was connected to another and another, and it felt like it had once been offices, given the green walls, arrows and exit signs, and overhead lighting.
At the end, we came out into a narrow alley between buildings and not far from that, Russell Square underground. Just before descending, Cecilia gave me a new phone. She had brought another two burner phones, acting on instinct, or perhaps knowing how much of a maverick I was. Or she had simply changed roles, and become a maverick of her own.
We took the train to the one place I thought, for the moment, to be the safest. Heathrow airport, and on the way, Cecelia booked two rooms at the hotel nearest to the underground station. Five more people, some with bags would not look out of place. But just Cecelia and I checked in with other IDs, and took a room each, and the others wandered up after us.
Almost an hour and a half later we were sitting in the room Cecelia booked for her and me, both with a second bedroom, but this one had a dining area. She smiled at me when I realised there were two rooms.
“Now, I’m going to assume that you will trust me to a certain degree, and when I say I have no idea what is going on, except that it has to do with the Burkhardt family, there’s an inheritance that needs to be claimed in a few days, and there’s someone trying to assassinate Juliet, who appears to be a direct descendant of the count and an eligible heir.”
I looked at Vittoria, who was still very confused with the turn of events, and probably evaluating whether I could be trusted or not. “I now believe you are Juliet’s mother.” Now that mother and daughter were sitting side by side, the similarities between them.
Vittoria and the countess were sharing another pizza that Celecia had ordered up through room service, along with several bottles of red wine. Juliet went over to the kitchenette, opened one, and poured five glasses.
It was not a bad wine, perhaps an Italian Sangiovese.
Juliet remained standing and looked at her mother. “Even I’m confused at the moment. When do you and the countess become friends?”
“We have been for quite some time, particularly after I realised she had nothing to do with my banishment. That was the count, at the behest of his mother, who has been the true villain in both our lives.”
Vittoria looked at her daughter, “I’ve come to realize the threats against all of us are the work of that vile woman. This is the third or fourth attempt on your life, I’ve been attacked twice, and now the countess just escaped from what I perceive to be a threat, instigated by her.”
“Are you saying my old friend is working with her? I hardly think she knows who the old woman is. And assuming that she doesn’t, what other reason would she have to do with what just happened.” She looked at me, “You came to the opera with us, so you must know her.”
“Not because I was a friend of the family, I’m not. I think now I was asked along for a very specific reason, one she might not have been privy to, but that her husband, my old employer, was. And my experience over the years is that nothing to do with him is ever straightforward.”
“Are you one of his people now?” The way she said it, it sounded like she considered me a hatchet man.
“No, not exactly, nor is Cecelia. We just do this and that from time to time. I thought I was in retirement, Cecelia is in between acting roles, and he simply asked us to find you.”
“Then if you were seeking the countess, how did you know about me, and turn up at the conference hall, coincidentally when an assassin tried to kill me?” Juliet made a good argument.
“I may have done a little research. The countesses feud with Vittoria, and the uncovering of photographs, one of which had the teen version of you with your mother, Vittoria, at the Chateau in Sorrento, the same Chateau where the countess resides. Sometimes we get lucky. I was surprised though Juliet, given your history. I didn’t bring them, and, by the way, I was the one who nearly got shot and killed.”
I could see Vittoria shaking her head. “If you can make the distinction, then others can too. Neither of us are now safe. At least I can discount orange ribbon girl. I knew she was tailing me, and I thought I lost her.”
Cecelia smiled. “You wish. Top of my class for surveillance.
I thought I would add a little spice to the conversation, “Why did you give the impression you’ve been trying to kill the countess?”
That brought a look of consternation from both. The countess answered, “Only for the sake of appearances, and to keep the rest of the family away from the idea that we had joined forces, which is the only way we’re going to keep them from realizing we know more about them than they think we do.”
“But not enough to stop them from trying to stop both of you and now all three of you, from claiming the inheritance?”
“It is actually all of the business. The Count held all the shares. It was his, passed down from his father, and all he had to do with the rest of the family members was give them jobs. That ownership would be passed to me, or any children of ours if there were any. We could not, but he told me on his death bed there was one.”
“Juliet.”
“Whose mother was the woman he wanted to marry but was not allowed to, but whom he had got pregnant and promised to look after. Nobility and their secrets. But he also told his brother, Alessandro, who in turn told the mother, who really is a nasty piece of work. She made it perfectly clear to me before I came to London that it would be for the best if I did not attend the signing of the inheritance papers in a few days’ time. If I chose not to, I would be given a house to live in and a large sum of money for my helpfulness. It is the reason I got away from the hotel the night of the opera, because I believe Alessandro had arranged for me to be kidnapped, or worse.”
“Who would get the assets, if not you?” I asked.
“As per the provisions of the will, Alessandro who is the next male heir, who had arrived at the hotel and was waiting in my room to see me. I understand it would not be good business for the company to be run by a woman. Especially one without any experience and had been sent to make sure it didn’t happen.”
“That story about a bitter rival?”
“It was always Alessandro. I had first met him, and we had one date before I was swept up by the Count and taken away from him. He never forgave me for passing him over. He had always expected his older brother would marry for love and let him take over the business.”
“And you suspected he was there to remove you when he knew that with the girl the count had confessed existed with a stronger claim? I doubt that was why he was there. You are not a threat to them. Not according to the terms of the will.”
The countess glared at me. “How do you know this?”
“Let’s just say I know.” I turned back to Vittoria. “Why were you trying to get close to Alessandro, surely he knew you were his brother’s former lover?”
“To be honest, I have no idea. Perhaps I have changed since those early days. I was surprised she didn’t recognise me from the time I spent with the Count. It was mostly to find out what they were planning, but he wasn’t that interested in me, or would he talk about the family. Perhaps he knew I had a romantic attachment to his brother all those years ago, though at times he seemed too stupid to know what day it was. He couldn’t run the business; if you want an opinion, it is the old woman who wants it and nothing ever stands in her way. She is ruthless. I wouldn’t be surprised if she killed the count. And now she is after my beautiful daughter.”
“Well, we can’t let that happen.”
The whole story was a tangled web of deceit and lies, just the sort of stuff that really old families like the Burkehardt’s were. And typically the old women were the matriarchs that kept everything going.
But I wasn’t so sure Alessandro was as stupid as Vittoria made out.
“How do you two know each other?” Vittoria’s gaze went from me back to Juliet.
Juliet answered. “He was injured and spent time in hospital. I was there working on rehabilitation programmes, and I drew the short straw. We spent a lot of time together, it went on for a little after he was discharged, and then my world exploded. We ran into each other recently when I got into some trouble with an old acquaintance who used my stepbrother as leverage. Evan got him freed and sorted the problem. We didn’t get back together.”
“And yet you speak so fondly of him?”
I hoped Vittoria was not one of those match-making mothers.
“He saved my brother, and me. That’s it.”
And to prevent any more discussion, I said, “We need to formulate a plan that gets you to Italy as soon as possible but not by conventional means. Rodby is already all over the trains, planes, and ferries.”
“What other way is there?”
“Where there’s a will there’s a way. I’ll let you know tomorrow.”
© Charles Heath 2023