The Coptic Secret

Free The Coptic Secret by Gregg Loomis Page B

Book: The Coptic Secret by Gregg Loomis Read Free Book Online
Authors: Gregg Loomis
Tags: thriller, Not Read, Gregg Loomis
said tentatively.
    Gurt was not her favorite person. Even though Gurt had been nothing if not kind and polite, Lang's longtime secretary made little effort to conceal her opinion of Lang and Gurt's previous living arrangements. Lang also suspected a small bit of jealousy. Before Gurt's first arrival in Atlanta, the white-haired grandmother had pretty much run Lang's personal life since Dawn's death. Gurt was a definite challenge to her abundant mothering instincts.
    Any hint of hostility fell away when Sara spied Manfred. "And who might this be?"
    Manfred bowed slightly and extended a hand. "I am named Manfred Fuchs."
    "Manfred Reilly," Lang corrected.
    Sara's eyes widened as she hastily looked from father to son and back again. She would have been blind to miss the resemblance. "When ... ? Who ... ? How ... ?"
    "Sometime ago, Lang and in the normal manner," Gurt said.
    "But, but you were never ..."
    "Married?" Gurt smiled. "That is to the biological process irrelevant."
    Not to Sara. Lang had often observed that years of membership in a Southern Baptist church made Sara worry too much that someone somewhere somehow was having fun. True or not, he tried not to show his amusement as her religion wrestled with her love for small children.
    The latter won.
    She fished a cellophane-wrapped peppermint from the bowl on her desk and extended one toward Manfred, who looked at the proffered treat and then at his mother.
    Gurt apparently was willing to accept the peace offering. "What do you say?"
    "Danke, er, thank you."
    Sara pulled the candy back. "It comes at a price. Come give your auntie Sara a hug."
    For the moment, the Gurt vs. Sara battle was over. Lang had enjoyed the mini drama long enough. He had come for a specific purpose and it wasn't to introduce his new family. He limped into his office and shut the door behind him. Ignoring two stacks of pink phone-message slips, he opened his center desk drawer and reached inside. His groping fingers found a catch and there was a click as a false back popped open. From it he extracted a worn address book. Thumbing the pages, he found what he was looking for and punched numbers into the telephone's keyboard, beginning with the 202 D.C. area code.
    He knew the actual phone that he was calling could be located anywhere in the world, connected by a series of shifting random relays that would make any call from the person he was seeking totally untraceable. He waited for the third ring, after which there was only a beep. No voice, no message. He keyed in his own number and hung up.
    It took about two minutes before Sara buzzed him. From the noise in the background, she, Gurt and Manfred were having a swell time. "Number one for you. Man named Berkley. Wouldn't say who he's with or what he wanted other than speaking to you. Want to take it or should I tell him you're out of the office?"
    Lang was already reaching for the phone to press the button that would connect him. "I'll take it. Thanks."
    He pushed the first line button. "Miles! My gatekeeper tells me you wouldn't tell her what you wanted or who you were with!"
    There was a slight pause, confirming Lang's guess the call was going through multiple relays. "I coulda told her, Lang, but then I'd hafta kill her. How's it goin' with you?"
    "I need a little help."
    Again the pause before Miles's drawl. "Damn! An' here I was thinkin' you'd called 'cause you need my wise counsel an' sage advice."
    Lang smiled. Miles Berkley was still the same bullshit artist. "Miles, about two months ago a wealthy English philanthropist, name of Eon Weatherston-Wilby, was kidnapped from the British Museum and subsequently murdered."
    "I think I remember. Why do all those rich Brits have two las' names, anyway?"
    "Same reason Southerners like us have two last names instead of a first and last. Langford and Miles instead of Joe and Frank."
    "Damn," Miles said, "an' I'd always thought it was to cover somebody's ass when they weren't sure who the father

Similar Books

Dealers of Light

Lara Nance

Peril

Jordyn Redwood

Rococo

Adriana Trigiani