She looked down at the papers on his desk, and he immediately turned them over so that she couldn’t read them. Instead, her gaze landed on the yellow scratch pad covered with notes, phone numbers, and figures from various phone calls he’d taken throughout the day. She reached over, turning it her direction. “Fargo?” she said, reading the name circled and underlined on the pad. “A new business acquisition in North Dakota? Something I should let my lawyer know about?”
He pulled the pad away from her and turned it upside down as well. “You’ve served your subpoena, now go.”
“Oh, I wasn’t here to serve that. It’s not
Charles, his teeth clenched, waited until the door shut after her. “Do you
“She’s only trying to goad you on.”
“Well, it’s working.” He got up, poured himself a drink, finally relaxing enough to think about what she said. “Can she do that? Freeze my money?”
“We’ll find out come morning when the banks open. But assuming her attorney could convince a judge you’ve been hiding assets, then yes she can. If I had to guess, this forensic accountant of hers suggested it. Trying to force your hand to see where your money is moving from.”
Charles carried his glass and the bottle of whiskey to his desk, then sat. “She wants to start a war? I’m willing to dig in for as long as it takes.”
“Or you could pay her what she’s asking and end it.”
“No.” Charles took a swig of his drink. It would be a cold day in hell before he allowed that, he thought.
His phone rang. It was Fisk. Finally.
“I have an update from Jamaica,” Fisk said. “You may not like what you hear, but, I assure you, it’ll work out.”
He clenched his glass in his hand. “Work out? Are you telling me you failed to get the documents?”
“About that… Turns out, the Fargos may have survived after all.”
Anger surged through him. “What the— How is it those two keep slipping through your fingers?”
“I told you, they aren’t your average couple. Sam Fargo has extensive training at DARPA and possibly even the CIA. The wife was a Boston College graduate…” Avery heard him shuffling papers as he checked his notes. “… with a master’s in anthropology and history with a focus on ancient trade routes.”
“Which explains her interest in treasure. What it doesn’t explain is
“Unless you factor in that she’s extremely intelligent — and an expert marksman.”
“And what? Somebody handed her a gun on board the
“Mistakes were made. They’re being addressed.”
“I was under the impression that the crew you hired to take over the
“As mentioned, they’ve been dealt with. In the meantime, we have a lead on the Fargos. My men were able to follow them from the car rental to Kingston. Unfortunately, the Fargos managed to evade them. But they won’t for long.”
“I thought you said that these men were capable of getting the job done.”
“They are.”
“Then how is it that these two meddlesome socialites have managed to elude them thus far? To me, that sounds as though your men are anything
“I warned you the Fargos were resourceful.”
Charles slammed his glass to the desk, whiskey sloshing over the rim. “You
“They can. And they will.”
“They better. I want those documents and then the Fargos eliminated. Period. If you can’t trust them to get the job done, then handle it yourself. I want results, not incompetence.”
“Understood. We do have a plan. I’ll call you once the details are firmed up.”
Charles dropped the phone into the cradle, grabbed his glass, then took a long drink.
“I take it,” Winton said, “the news isn’t good?”
“How about you concentrate on keeping my wife from getting her hands on my fortune. I’ll worry about my extracurricular activities.”
“As long as you’re aware that any money you’re moving toward those activities might be discovered.”
“I’m well aware of the risks.”
Winton nodded, then stood. “If there’s nothing else, I’ll see myself out.”
He left, and Charles poured himself another drink, his eye moving to the scratch pad. The Fargo name glared up at him. He ripped it from the pad, crumpled it, then tossed it to the ground. At the moment, he wasn’t sure what angered him more — the Fargos inserting themselves into his business or his wife trying to steal his fortune.
Death was too good for all of them.
Which made him wonder, did he really want Alexandra dead?