of space between them.
“Let me get you a drink.”
“No, I don’t want—”
But the barmaid came by and Dom signaled her, ordering her a mojito. He was drinking, Kristin saw, neat whisky, never a good sign.
“You look gorgeous.” He ran a hand down her arm.
“You think?” she retorted. “You should have seen me on Saturday.”
“Look, love, things just got a bit out of control. I—”
“They’re only as out of control as you want them to be, Dom, and I’m—”
The barmaid brought her drink and Kristin took it, giving the girl an absent smile. She took a drink, tasting mint and lime and feeling the kick of the rum as it went down. Dutch courage . She needed Dutch courage.
“Drink up,” Dom said quietly, and she saw then that in spite of the whisky he was sober, and there was no affection in his gray eyes. “And tell me about the cops.”
Kristin swallowed. The fear she’d damped down since that morning came back in a rush. “She said it was personal, the inspector, that she was doing a favor for a friend, a woman named Erika Rosenthal. She said the brooch had belonged to her friend and it was lost during the war. She wanted to know who was selling it.”
“You’re sure you didn’t tell her?” Dom’s voice rose.
“No. Of course not,” she said, thinking how perilously close she had come to spilling everything. There had been something sympathetic about the inspector, with her open face and coppery hair. “And Khan read them the lawyer act. But I don’t—”
“You have to take it out of the sale.” Dom was sweating now, the calm of a moment before gone, and when he raised his glass, his hand shook.
“Take it out of the sale?” Kristin stared at him. “Are you mad? You know I can’t take it out of the sale. Only Harry can do that.”
“Harry’s convinced himself his twenty percent will keep the wolves from the door. He—”
“Twenty percent?” Kristin’s voice shot up. “You offered Harry twenty percent, against me risking the wrath of Khan for my four percent bringing-in fee?”
“I’d have made it up to you, Kris. But now—”
“Now, nothing. You and Harry work it out between you.” She set down her glass, miraculously empty. “As far as I’m concerned, I don’t know you—or Harry—from Adam, and I took in that brooch in good faith. And if it sells, you can keep my bloody four percent.”
She stood, the room spinning as the alcohol hit her system. The rhythm of the samba playing on the DJ’s turntable seemed almost tangible in the air. Steadying herself with a hand on the back of the banquette, she leaned over and kissed Dom, very lightly, on the cheek. “’Bye, Dom. Have a nice life.”
When she reached the street, she looked back, but he hadn’t followed, and she didn’t know if she felt relief or despair.
Quickly, she walked round the corner into Kensington Church Street and started south, and when a 49 bus came along she got on.It would take her through South Ken, and she had a sudden desire to see the familiar museums and to pass by the showroom. It was, she told herself, all she had left.
But when the bus trundled past the Old Brompton Road, she stayed on, resisting the impulse to stop and look in the showroom windows. After all, if Khan found out she’d known there was something dodgy about that brooch, he would fire her in a heartbeat, and then there would be nothing at all.
It was only as the bus neared the King’s Road that she realized Dom had changed his mind about the sale even before she’d told him about the cops. She got off, still thinking, walking slowly towards World’s End. The road was empty, the pub dark—somehow it had got to be past closing time.
She waited to cross at the light, pulling her cardigan up around her throat, wondering just what she would say to Khan if Harry Pevensy did pull the brooch from the sale. Khan would hold her responsible, and there would be hell to pay. She felt suddenly exhausted and a bit
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