The Bloodline Feud (Merchant Princes Omnibus 1)

The Bloodline Feud (Merchant Princes Omnibus 1) by Stross Charles Page A

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Authors: Stross Charles
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reading the mess of photocopies and memos from the file box. He was in his early fifties, thickset with the stomach of middle age, but tall enough to
carry it well. His suit was conservative: He might have been a retired general or a corporate chairman. Neither guess would be wrong, but neither would be the full truth, either. Right now he
looked as if he had a headache; his expression was sour as he read a yellowing newspaper clipping. ‘What a mess,’ he murmured. ‘What a blessed mess . . .’
    A buzzer sounded above the left-hand door.
    The officeholder glanced at the door with wintry gray eyes. ‘Enter,’ he called sharply. Then he looked back at the papers.
    Footsteps, the sound of male dress shoes – leather-soled – on parquet, were abruptly silenced as the visitor reached the carpeted inner sanctum.
    ‘You summoned me, uncle? Is there any movement on my proposal? If anyone wants me to – ’
    Angbard Lofstrom looked up again and fixed his nephew with a long icy stare. His nephew shuffled, discomfited: a tall, blond fellow whose suit would not have been out of place in an advertising
agency’s offices. ‘Patience,’ he said in English.
    ‘But I – ’
    ‘I said patience.’ Angbard laid the newspaper clipping flat on his blotter and stared at his nephew. ‘This is not the time to discuss your proposal. About which there is no
news, by the way. Don’t expect anything to happen soon; you need to learn timing if you want to make progress, and the changes you are suggesting we make are politically difficult.’
    ‘How much longer?’ The young man sounded tense.
    ‘As long as I deem necessary.’ Angbard’s stare hardened. ‘Remember why you are here.’
    ‘I – yes, my lord. If it pleases you to accept my apologies . . .’
    ‘How is the prisoner?’ Angbard asked abruptly.
    ‘Oh. Last time I checked – fifteen minutes ago – she was unconscious but sleeping normally. She is in one of the doppelgänger cells. I removed the mnemonic she was wearing
on her person and had one of the maids search her for tattoos. Her cell has no mirror, no shaving apparatus. I left instructions that I am to be called when she awakens.’
    ‘Hmm.’ Angbard chewed on his upper lip with an expression of deep disapproval.
    ‘What does the doctor say?’
    ‘The doctor says that he might have to splint her arm, later – there is bruising – but she sustained no serious harm in the course of the pickup.’
    ‘Well.’ Angbard waved one hand in the direction of the chairs positioned before his desk. ‘Sit down.’ His nephew sat with alacrity, his back stiff. ‘Do we have any
known loose ends, Earl Roland?’
    ‘Yes, sir, but nothing critical. We have retrieved the documents, camera, recorder, personal computer, and all the other effects that we could find. Her house was untidy, but we are fairly
sure we were able to locate everything – her office was well-organized. The windows have been repaired, and the neighbors informed indirectly that she is on assignment away from home. She is
unmarried and has few attachments.’ Roland looked faintly disapproving. ‘There is reference to an elderly mother who lives alone. The only possible problem is referred to in the
contractor’s report. Evidently on her last excursion a woman, identity unknown, arrived, collected her car, then her person, and drove her home. Presumably a friend. The problem is that she
left the stakeout by taxi without any notice – I assume she summoned it by means of a portable telephone – and our contractor team was too short-staffed to dispatch a tail. I have
therefore instructed them to continue surveillance and reinstate the line tap, in the hope that the friend reappears. Once she does so – ’
    Roland shrugged.
    ‘See that you do – I want them in custody as soon as possible.’ Angbard harrumphed. ‘As to the prisoner’s disposition . . .’ He paused, head cocked slightly
to one side.
    ‘Sir?’ Roland was a picture

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