Forgive No More Read online




  Forgive No More

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Epigraph

  Prologue

  Day 1

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Day 2

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Day 3

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Day 4

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Day 5

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Day 6

  Chapter 72

  Chapter 73

  Chapter 74

  Chapter 75

  Chapter 76

  Chapter 77

  Chapter 78

  Chapter 79

  Chapter 80

  Chapter 81

  Chapter 82

  Chapter 83

  Chapter 84

  Chapter 85

  Chapter 86

  Chapter 87

  Chapter 88

  Chapter 89

  Chapter 90

  Chapter 91

  Chapter 92

  Chapter 93

  Chapter 94

  Chapter 95

  Chapter 96

  Chapter 97

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  James Blake Thrillers

  Copyright

  The sun went down in wrath at such deceit.

  J.M.W. Turner, The Fallacies of Hope

  Prologue

  Sera Monastery, Lhasa

  Everyone knew him here as one of the most devout, one of the few who had risen to the rank of Ajahn. Devout because of the time he spent in meditation and prayer. He was honored they would think of him in this way within the monastery, given he was not Tibetan.

  It was the center of his universe, the place he went back to in order to replenish his life, to regenerate his energy and regain what was lost when he went out there, into the wider world.

  The last time he’d been out into that world he’d killed fifty men and not a few women without a thought. Because he served a higher goal. And because, when looked at from here, from the center of the universe, the deaths were not important. In the great flow of energy passing through this place and through him as he meditated and chanted, the lives of these people were as nothing. Could be nothing.

  Still, a slew of naked thoughts ran through his mind and threatened to disrupt the state of truth to which he was all the time aiming in these two hours alone in the monastery cell – why had he been concerned that the little girl would have to die? Why did he have to meet her? Why did she have to speak to him before the killings at Town Lake? He’d checked the lists of those who’d died. The little girl had been spared. But that was not the point. It was the simple fact that her innocence had touched him and he’d been made to care what would happen to her. It would not leave his thoughts. Try as he might to let these ideas go, they hung on, confronting him.

  With time and mental effort, his mind focused once more on the flow of energy through him, the flow that gave him the glimpse of the divine.

  He turned to face the door as a novice samanera came for instruction.

  Strange, he thought, that he was so far away now from the world where they knew him by a different name.

  Wolfgang Heller.

  Day 1

  September 2nd

  Chapter 1

  Leaving Julia and heading for London was one of the hardest decisions of my life.

  As the train gained speed out of Oxenholme, leaving the vivid green hillsides of the English Lake District behind, my thoughts turned to what had led me to leave.

  It would have been easy to stay in Ambleside with Julia.

  No one knew we were there.

  We’d both made sure we weren’t followed when we headed north. Julia had given birth to our son, Simon, the child for whom we’d waited so long. She needed me at her side and I should have been there to share with her the wonder of the new life we’d brought into the world.

  But however much I wished it could have been different, I knew I couldn’t stay.

  The secret life we’d been living was over. There could no longer be anonymity here. Nothing had been the same since Detective Inspector Reid came to our door and told us Agent Jack Franks had died so soon after tracking us down. That was the signal to run for our lives.

  The two Italians who killed Martin Craig would have killed Julia if she hadn’t escaped. Those attackers were sent by the Landos. We were loose ends as far as they were concerned. With the two million reward placed on our heads by Matteo Lando still in place, there would be many seeking us out.

  I knew it wasn’t viable waiting there in the hope we could remain hidden. A chance sighting by someone who knew either of us from our earlier lives would be enough. However difficult it was going to be, I had to be out here.

  The shock waves of the killing of Agent Franks posed dangers just as strong as those posed by the Landos. We knew Agent Nate Craven ordered the Franks killing. Craven was running black ops within the Bureau and making millions by guaranteeing the safety of the cartel shipping drugs into the US from Tijuana. Agent Franks had been clean. He would have taken what he knew to his superiors when he discovered what Craven was doing. For Craven there had been no choice but to act.

  We knew this but lacked proof. Without evidence our accusations would be brushed aside.

  Craven wanted me killed because of what I knew.

  What made our problems worse were not just these dual threats – the Landos and Craven – but that these threats were connected and fed off each other.

  Alessa Lando was the source of the attack on the politician that brought Agent Franks into play. Her assassin, Wolfgang Heller, planted the bombs at Town Lake that killed the politician and most of his family. And the Landos were involved with the drugs cartel in Tijuana that claimed its protection from Craven.

  These competing and overlapping rivalries were sure to lead to further deaths and Julia and myself, not to mention my brother Miles, were caught up in them. I wouldn’t have escaped the US without help from Miles but I had to leave
him there and he was now out of contact.

  I had to find the evidence to bring this to an end.

  I was dragged back from my thoughts as I saw the guard coming through the carriage. When I showed him my ticket, he paused as if he were about to question my right to be on the train. I began to think the police had briefed railway staff to look out for me. In the event, he was trying to be helpful.

  He clipped the ticket. “Should be arriving into Euston at 14.50.”

  I thanked him and told myself I should stop believing I was the only wanted man in the country.

  As the countryside sped by, my thoughts returned to my last conversation with Julia before I’d set out for London.

  “I’m going back there in the morning.”

  She was close to tears. “You know it’s too great a risk.”

  “I won’t need more than a few days. You’ll be safe while I’m away.”

  “You’ll be in danger.”

  “We can’t wait here until someone finds us. You know that would be worse.”

  “Why London? You know how difficult it’s been for us there.”

  “That’s where the evidence is.”

  I could tell she knew there was more to come. I’d never been able to keep anything hidden from her. She knew just by looking into my eyes. “Jim, you have another reason for going to London, don’t you?”

  I couldn’t avoid telling her. “I don’t plan being there for long. Just long enough to check out what Miles was investigating. Then I need to head for Florence.”

  Julia drew back, terror written on her face. “Jim. You can’t go back. Not after everything we’ve been through in that place. It’s the center of everything harmful to us.”

  I held her hand. “And that’s just why I have to go back. Don’t you see, it’s only by discovering the truth that we’ll ever be free. Something dark was driving Alfieri Lando to do what he did to you and to who knows how many others.”

  A tear ran down Julia’s face, followed by another. I could see I’d taken her back to those days three years before when she’d gone to Florence in her work as an art conservator and in all innocence begun studying the Lando art collection. And, in what she’d found the most difficult thing to confide in me, the memory of the ritualistic way in which Alfieri Lando, dressed in a red cape and mask, had defiled her.

  “Jim, you know how hard I’ve worked to put all this behind me. Behind us. Alfieri is dead. His son is in prison for his murder. Can’t you see I can’t bring myself to allow you to bring that all back again?”

  “But it’s not us, Julia. Not us bringing this back again. The Landos are not going to stop until they find us. The harm they represent will never go away.”

  She wiped her eyes. “And if you were to go back to Florence, where would you start?”

  “I’ve thought of little else. I’ve lived through everything that took place when I struggled to find you, when I thought I’d never see you again. And I now know I need to start with Zella DeFrancesco.”

  Julia didn’t sound convinced. “But we know she went into witness protection after the Lando trials, just like us. How are you going to find her?”

  “Florence is her only known address.”

  “You’ll be going back into the heart of the Lando power base.”

  I shook my head. “That’s not the most important thing right now. We need our family to have a safe future.”

  She closed her eyes. She knew I’d made up my mind.

  I kissed her. “I won’t be away long, I promise.”

  The train sped on.

  We were approaching Stafford, the last stop before London.

  Chapter 2

  Agent Michael Bedford had been with the London Bureau for two years. As overseas postings went, this was good – civilized compared with the black spots of the Middle East where half the men he’d trained with were now based.

  What took away the shine was his line manager, Bill Maynard, who demanded hourly updates. So here Bedford was, taking it like a man.

  Nothing Maynard did was understated. He was full on and proud of it. “Bedford, I need progress. Not anytime soon. Now!”

  Bedford found it difficult to tolerate Maynard’s lack of manners. Where he’d grown up in Boston, you didn’t talk to people like that. “We’re getting there, sir. Adam Weston is all but tied in. We’re about to locate him.”

  Maynard glowered at him. “Well, getting there isn’t good enough. We’re on high priority here. We need a result. PDQ.”

  Bedford had sought the backroom life, one of the better options the FBI had to offer. He’d majored in computing science, so it was a natural for him to aim for counter intelligence, taking on the hackers.

  “I hope you understand, sir, we have to get this right. Weston has been taking information from our system. But he hasn’t penetrated our deep encryption. Make it too easy and Weston is going to be suspicious. Make it too difficult and he’s going to stay away for good. He’s aware of not spending too much time in our database, worried we’ll be on to him. He’s cautious but still curious. That’s the way we want it.”

  Maynard interrupted. “OK. All very creditable and subtle, but where’s the meat?”

  “It’s coming. He could bite anytime now. He’s intelligent and experienced. It’s like a stealth fight between two people who are not sure the other is there.”

  Maynard banged his fist hard on the table. “Get it done. Draw him in. Locate him. It’s not that difficult, Bedford. Just do it.”

  Bedford nodded in agreement. He knew why it was important to find Adam Weston. Miles Blake was a threat to national security. Not just because as an investigative journalist he was probing the corners of American life that the power elite wanted to remain hidden but because he was using a contact within the State Department and the organization needed to clean that up. It was why Maynard was so exercised, so much on Bedford’s back.

  Weston was hiding behind a series of proxy servers that hid his location. But Bedford had an answer. He’d embedded a Java script into the code. The moment Weston took the bait, the script would seek out the man’s IP address. From there, with a little pressure on the local authorities, it wouldn’t take long to locate him.

  “I understand, sir. I’ll get onto it right away.”

  Maynard walked away. “Damn right you will.”

  Bedford knew he couldn’t blame it all on Maynard. He was doing his duty as he saw fit, after all. No, the difficulties here were greater than that. Bedford wished now he hadn’t taken money from Craven. It was all so straightforward then. A little on the side for providing information Craven wanted to access without others in the organization knowing. Bedford didn’t suspect the Craven money came from kickbacks in smuggling drugs out of Mexico.

  It was a shock to Bedford when he found out. His own brother had died of a drugs overdose. One of the reasons Bedford had joined the organization was to make a difference, to right some of the wrongs that led to his brother’s death. And now here he was trapped in a black ops set-up with a man like Craven with no way back to the light. If he didn’t go along with what Craven wanted, his career in the organization would be finished.

  This was what led to Bedford’s part in the cover up of the killing of Jack Franks. Bedford had doctored the record. He’d removed the initial reports suggesting murder and replaced them with others to show that Franks’ death was a tragic accident, the result of the Agent cleaning his Glock with the safety off.

  Bedford was guilty about deceiving Maynard and his colleagues, feelings made worse by the knowledge that Jack Franks had an exemplary record. But there had been no choice. Craven had demanded it.

  Now he was making more demands.

  Bedford was backroom and wanted it to stay this way. But Craven wouldn’t listen. He told him he was stretched after the Town Lake bombing, fully occupied in the States, meaning that Bedford was the only one who could fill in.

  When Bedford complained, Craven told him it would be simple fo
r the origin of the drugs money he’d received to be made known to the organization. If he didn’t want to do time for that, he’d be wise to get behind what was needed.

  So, at the same time as he had Maynard on his back, Craven was insisting Bedford should work for him. He wanted all available local information about James and Miles Blake.

  Craven called the shots with Bedford just as much as Maynard. He had to go along with it but hated himself for giving up on his ideals.

  Back came boss man Maynard. He looked as angry as ever.

  “Have you seen this, Bedford?” He slapped a print out of a database search onto the desk. “We know Weston is working for Miles Blake, a known target of interest. This report shows that Agent Franks died when contacting Miles’ brother, James. That’s a big unexplained connection and one I do not like. I want to know what we have on James Blake and how he figures in the Franks case. You get me?”

  “Jack Franks’ death was an accident, sir.”

  Maynard ignored him. “And what’s the connection between Franks and Miles Blake?”

  Bedford held his head in his hands. “I’ll get onto it, sir.”

  Something latent in Maynard was drawing him to look further into the Franks case. It could only spell trouble.

  It was untenable. For different reasons, both men who had power over his life wanted him to take action on James and Miles Blake.

  Chapter 3

  As the London train sped on towards Euston station, I thought through the plans I’d made to ensure Julia would be safe while I was away.

  Before leaving I’d bought two pay-as-you-go phones. Since they had no previous history, any calls made on them would be difficult to trace. Provided we were careful and used them as little as possible, there was no reason why they would come to the attention of those trying to find us.

  This was how I would keep in contact with Julia.

  I weighed the phone in my hand.

  Should I call her?

  I wanted to call, to reassure myself that Julia had come to terms with my leaving, but I decided against it. The phones were for emergencies. This was not that time. I returned the phone to my jacket pocket.

  Obtaining the phones had been simple. Making the other arrangements was not as straightforward. Faith Webster was understanding in allowing us to stay with her in the 16th century farmhouse at the top of Rook Lane, high over the Ambleside Valley. Everything had been done to make the farmhouse secure before I’d left. There was no question of hiring protection while I was away – such men would be difficult to find in Ambleside even if we could have afforded them. Faith Webster had an old double-barreled shotgun she kept for scaring rabbits but could not claim to be a practiced shot.