know.â
They waited until the table had been cleared and Drayton had left. Then Hurley opened the envelope. Carefully, one at a time, he laid out a dozen different photographs. âThese are all photos we acquired from Interpol, the International Criminal Police Organization,â he explained.
Theodosia gave a cursory glance at the photos. There were ten men and two women, a dozen photos in all. Some were in color, some in black-and-white. She studied the one closest to her. The man was midthirties with dark hair, a hawk nose, and high cheekbones. Dangerous-looking, but a little intriguing, too.
As she made a concentrated effort to study each of the photos, Theodosia noted that all the faces had a somewhat cultured European vibe to them. They may have been thievesâor even dangerous killersâbut they all looked like theyâd lived a pampered lifestyle.
She worked her way through the photos, shaking her head as she went. When she got to the last row, she figured this whole thing had been an exercise in futility. The FBI wasnât getting anything out of this and she certainly didnât recognize . . .
When Theodosia glanced at the last photo, her eyeswidened and she let out a small gasp. The FBI agents were quick to notice.
âDo you recognize this person?â Zimmer asked.
Theodosia tapped the photo with a manicured finger. âWho is this man?â
âHis name is Klaus Hermann,â Zimmer said. âHeâs a German national, a jewel thief who has been working in Paris and Rome for the past couple of years. He also goes by a number of aliases that include Count Henri von Strasser, Lord Conroy, and Rupert Gainsborough.â
âWhere is he now?â Theodosia asked.
âWe donât know,â Hurley said. âHe disappeared last year right after a particularly daring raid on a jewelry store in Cannes. We figured he might be cooling his heels in South America. Drinking rum and guava juice and relaxing on the beach at the Four Seasons in Buenos Aires.â He paused. âWhy? Do you recognize him?â
Theodosia stared at the picture of Klaus Hermann, aka Count von Strasser, Lord Conroy, and Rupert Gainsborough. And thought that, at the right angle, with the right lighting, he bore a slight resemblance to Draytonâs friend Lionel Rinicker.
âI donât think I know him,â Theodosia said finally. âBut he mildly resembles someone I recently met.â
âWhat?â The agents were ready to pounce on her information. Maybe even draw their weapons and make an arrest.
âI donât know if I should . . .â
âItâs your duty,â Hurley said.
âThis isnât just federal, this is international,â Zimmer put in. He was using his hard-edged FBI voice now. âWeâre working with our legal attaché offices overseas.â
Theodosia twisted the moonstone ring she wore on her left hand. Should she or shouldnât she? And did she really have a choice? Sheâd promised Brooke that sheâd help as much as she could. And these two guys standing over her
were
genuine FBI.
âThis man looks a little bit like Lionel Rinicker,â she said.
âWho is that?â Zimmer asked. âWhat do you know about him?â
âHeâs a fairly new Charleston resident and he serves on the board of directors at the Heritage Society.â
Zimmer began scribbling notes like crazy.
Then, like a cat sneaking up on its unsuspecting prey, Drayton appeared at their table. Heâd been eavesdropping on the entire conversation.
âTheodosia!â Drayton cried. âWhat are you telling these men?â He looked like he was about to have an explosive coronary.
Theodosia put a finger on the photo and spun it around. âLook at this guy,â she said. âWho do
you
think he looks like?â
Drayton stared at the photo. Then he put the palm of his hand against his cheek and
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