was about to kill me when—”
“When I shot him. Yes, I do remember—I was there,” Sophia snarked.
Nina took the gun from Eddie. Checking, she found that it was fully loaded with a round already chambered. “And why were you there?”
Sophia gave her a patronizing look. “It’s all rather complicated.”
“Well, gee, if only I were a PhD so I could understand. Wait, whaddya know!” She put the magazine back into the weapon, making sure Sophia heard the click as it seated. “You can explain on the way to Glas.”
“Oh, very well. If Eddie will let me take my hands off this door.”
“Go ahead,” he told her. “By the way, what’s with the gloves? The air in a submarine bad for your cuticles?”
Her expression became considerably more hostile. “Actually, I have you to thank for that. And this.” She brought up her left hand to point with her index finger at the scar running down her face; her ring and little fingers remained strangely rigid beneath the expensive black leather. “When you threw me off that cliff in Switzerland—”
“When he tackled you over it to stop you from shooting me,” Nina reminded her.
“Whatever. The point remains that my dear ex-husband used me to cushion himself on the way down.” Acid on her tongue, Sophia opened the door. Eddie glanced through. The corridor was clear. “I came out of the experience rather worse off than he did.”
“I broke a rib and punctured a lung!” Eddie objected.
“And I lost half my fucking hand!” With a genuine flare of anger, she tugged off her left glove—revealing that a chunk the size of a large bite was missing from the edge of her palm, replaced, along with the two fingers above it, by a waxy prosthesis attached with an elastic strap. “It got torn off on a rock, and before I even had time to realize what had happened I hit another one—face-first.” She turned the injured side of her face to them. Even after surgery to repair it, the scar was still ragged and deep. Despite her loathing for Sophia, Nina couldn’t help feeling a pang of sympathy.
But only a pang. The Englishwoman was a ruthless multiple murderer, killing without a qualm anyone who threatened to obstruct her goals. Both Nina and Eddie had been in her sights on more than one occasion. “Well, sorry to hear that,” she said lamely. “Okay, let’s go.”
Eddie was tempted to make some tasteless hand-themed joke, but restrained himself. Like Nina he had found the sight shocking, though for different reasons. Sophia had been his wife, after all, and to see the face he had known so well ravaged by injury was unsettling.
Scar aside, though, it was not quite as he remembered. “Who arranged for the plastic surgery?” he asked as Sophia put the glove back on and went through the door. He followed, keeping the gun fixed on her back; Nina cautiously took up the rear with the Glock at the ready. “Glas, I’m assuming.”
“Yes,” said Sophia, hands raised as she led them down the passage. “I knew him before I met you again in New York.”
“When you say you knew him …,” said Nina suspiciously.
Sophia blew out an exasperated breath. “I seem to have acquired a reputation as a woman who sleeps with every wealthy and powerful man she meets.”
“Oh, I wonder why?” Eddie muttered.
“But yes, I did.”
“I might have bloody known!”
“It was after my father died, and the jackals in the City stripped every last morsel of flesh from his company’s bones to leave me with nothing. I still had my title, so—to be bluntly mercenary about it—I was looking for a man with resources I could use to get my revenge. Harald was one potential suitor, as it were.”
Eddie made a disgusted sound. “Along with René Corvus, Richard Yuen, Victor Dalton …”
“He wasn’t the best choice at the time, I’ll be frank. But he was still infatuated with me.”
“What man wouldn’t be?” Nina said sarcastically. “I mean, on average there’s only a fifty percent chance that you’ll kill them.”
“It’s not even close to fifty percent,” Sophia replied, irked at the accusation. “I didn’t kill Gabriel Ribbsley. Or Joe Komosa, or—”
“Enough, Jesus!” Eddie cut in. “I don’t need to hear the fucking list. The literal fucking list.”
She gave him a small cat-like smile, pleased to have needled him once more. “But anyway, I managed to drag myself out of the lake not far from the waterfall and broke into a nearby house. I didn’t know whom