Author’s Introduction.
When considerably
younger, I read and thoroughly enjoyed the many works of Georgette Heyer. A completely new and colourful world of Regency Romance opened up to me, and I found the whole range of books delightful in the extreme.
One book, The Masqueraders, was to become my favourite, dealing with issues with which I could readily identify. It had everything one could want in a book: -
Wonderful characters,beautiful women, handsome heroes, nasty villains, duels by moonlight, deception, love and romance, highwaymen, heroic deeds and horse-back rides across open countryside. Good triumphed over evil, and true love prevailed.
It also had a hero who spent most of the book dressed as a beautiful woman, and a heroine who appeared as a man.
I have planned for a long time to modernise the story, using those wonderful characters that Georgette introduced to me then. Now I feel I am in a position to fulfil that ambition, and if this turns out half as good as the original, then I will be well pleased.
I make no apology for lifting the book from the eighteenth century and plonking it into the twenty-first. I am probably breaching all manner of copyright laws, but I state now that although the opening of the story is based on that great book, by the very nature of the world we find ourselves, my story will be different, save some of the names and the fact that it takes part in London. Anyone who has read the original work will be able to see where I am going to end up, but hopefully not the direction I intend to take to get there.
My thanks to those who helped me edit, but mainly my thanks to the late, great Georgette Heyer for being such an inspiration.
Tanya Allan
Modern Masquerade
by Tanya.J.Allan
Part Nine
Complications.
Rob and Pru went back to work on
Monday morning, the excitement of the weekend behind them. Tony went back to
his farms, and Letty enrolled on a creative writing course.
On the top floor of TremaineTower, Michael
Hatton was not a happy man. His office was vast, taking almost a quarter of
the entire top floor. What wasn’t glass was wood panelling, and the desk was
slightly smaller than an aircraft carrier. Embedded in the desk were essential
pieces of information technology, without which he would find running the vast
business empire very hard.
He wasn’t a good-looking man, but he exuded an air of power and
strength. Almost completely bald, he kept what little hair he had left cropped
very short. At fifty-seven, he was overweight and not terribly fit. Preferring
to spend his leisure time relaxing with either his wife or his mistress, and
rarely undertaking any strenuous exercise.
“What do you mean, you can’t find him?” he asked.
“I’m sorry sir, but the trail went cold in Geneva about four weeks ago,” said the man dressed in a black suit.
“Bloody hell, Ryan, what the hell am I paying you for?”
“Sir, with respect, he was onto us as soon as we picked him up.”
Ryan Grover was a private investigator. He’d been a detective with the Metropolitan
Police. However, he’d undertaken various covert and wholly unauthorised
investigations on behalf of a much younger Mike Hatton, resulting in enormous
financial advantage for the latter, and a requirement to resign for Ryan.
Mike had looked after the man, and he continued to produce excellent
results until now.
“You didn’t go to Geneva?” Mike asked.
“He knows me, I had my best team onto him. He’s a slippery
bastard. I had a man in the Zurich Bank, just in case, and we got lucky. It’s
the first sighting in six years. I picked him up in New
Zealand, to lose him almost immediately, and rumour
has it he was in America a few
years ago.”
“What about his bloody kids?”
“Nothing. They weren’t in Geneva with him, that much we do know.”
“Could they be in the country already?”
“No. I’ve a contact with Special Branch, and another with the
Immigration service. I have the Tremaine name flagged. If anyone tries to
enter the country with that name, I’ll know. All the airline passenger lists
are screened.”
“What about false passports, or ferries and the bloody tunnel?”
“That’s always possible. There was a chance they could actually
manage to find employment with this company. We’ve acquired the boy’s
fingerprints from a house in Adelaide. We’ve checked all male employees in that age bracket against these
prints, and nothing.”
Mike stood up from behind his desk and walked over to the window.
Without turning round, he continued speaking.
“We made a mistake not taking care of business twenty five years
ago.”
“We thought we had.”
“Yes, but we were too fucking slow. He managed to leave the
country.”
“He can’t come back, there’s the embezzlement charges to face.”
“Which we generated. He’s had twenty-five bloody years. What the
hell’s he been doing in that time?”
“I don’t know, sir.”
“Shit! Why now of all times? Just as the Tech -American group are
offering the best takeover bid I’ve ever seen on a table.”
Ryan wisely kept silent.
“What can he do to us?”
“Not a lot, unless he has any of the documents from the original
Tremaine Brothers Ltd. Apart from the original accounts we altered to make it
look like he’d stolen the money, there isn’t anything.”
“I still find it had to believe he just walked in and took the
fucking things from under our noses,” Mike said, thinking back to those days
when he decided to shift power and wealth in his favour. His cousin Robert had
inherited the company and most of the stocks and shares. The bloody Tremaines
had always had one over on the Hattons, who, being cousins had always been
involved in the running of the company, but never at the top.
It had been in the seventies during the recession. Robert had left
the UK to try to find new
markets and workforces in the Far East. While he was gone, Mike had used Ryan to dig some dirt on a
competitor, and managed to frame his cousin for an embezzlement of £250,000
during the acquisition of said company. When Robert returned he was arrested
for the offence and bailed pending further enquiries.
The only evidence that would support Robert’s defence was the
company accounts. Mike had provided altered accounts as being the genuine
article, intending to dispose of the others as soon as possible. However,
inexplicably, as they all thought Robert had breached his bail conditions and
fled the company, the accounts went missing from the company safe. The only
other person, apart from Mike, who knew the combination, was Robert.
The security officer claim that no one looking like Mr Tremaine had
gone anywhere near the safe. The only people who’d been in the building were
some office cleaners and some typists.
Mike believed that Robert must have disguised himself, but had no
concrete evidence. The alternate explanation was that an office worker, unaware
of their importance, accidentally disposed of them. As time went by, Mike was
less inclined to believe the former story as he thought that Robert would have
been anxious to prove his innocence.
“I have to go to Paris at the weekend. I need to know that we’re safe for the meeting
next week with Tech -American.”
“We’re safe. Everyone in the company is screened, and I’m happy I
can vouch for all employees. He can’t have anyone on the inside.”
“The only other way he can get to us is through the shareholders. I
want you to get a list of all the major shareholders, sort out where they are
and they are who they say they are. I wouldn’t put it past the bastard to buy
up as many shares as he can and open a take-over bid at the next meeting.”
“Yes sir.”
“We should have killed him, you know that?”
“Hindsight is a wonderful thing, sir.”
“Get on, let’s do what we need to do.”
Graham Goodyer was a barrister. He was a good one, and was attached
to the Serious Fraud Office in London. As part of the Home Office, the SFO comprised of lawyers and
detectives, as well as accountants and other specialists who were experts in
the field of business and commerce. It was in this area that multi-million
pound swindles took place on a daily basis, and because the perpetrators were
highly connected, professional, respectable men and women; tracing and
arresting them was exceptionally difficult.
His first appointment of the day was a Colonel Fabio Metatucci of
the Italian Carabinieri. The letter had mentioned something about a British
Company that may be responsible for high profile bribes in connection with EU
contracts.
The man ushered into his office was almost exactly what Graham had
expected. Although not tall, the Italian was very distinguished, with an
immaculate suit and expensive shoes. He displayed a pent up energy and an air
of command if not patrician arrogance. His hair was greying at the temples and
his nose was slightly hooked, in the Roman tradition.
Graham stood up, and offered the man his hand. They shook, and the
Italian had a firm dry shake. Graham noticed the man wore a Rolex wristwatch.
“Colonel, I am delighted to meet you, please sit down.”
“Thank you, Mr Goodyer.” The Italian sat, holding a manila folder
across his knee.
“Now, how can we help each other, as that was what was in your
letter?”
The Colonel smiled and opened the folder. Selecting five sheets of
paper, he passed them over to Graham.
“You are familiar with the Tremaine Industries?” he asked, his
accent distinct, yet his English was impeccable.
“I am, yes. Are they responsible or suspected?”
“Please, just read.”
Graham did, and started to frown. He read all the documents, and
looking up appeared confused.
“I don’t understand,” he said.
The Colonel handed over three more sheets of paper.
Graham took them, and read them carefully.
“I don’t see the connection, Colonel.”
“Mr Goodyer, I have to admit to a small deception. Had I given my
real name, you would not have given me your valuable time, and we’d be going
through a wearisome procedure involving the boys in blue. You have in your
hands the original accounts of Tremaine Brothers Ltd, prior to the acquisition
of Stamford and Grant Ltd in
1979. There is also the itinerary and hotel bills showing clearly that at the
time of the alleged offence I, Robert Tremaine was not in the country, and had
neither the means, motive or opportunity to undertake such that is alleged
against me.
“Secondly, I have here a set of photographs, taken by a trusted
colleague of mine, showing my cousin Michael Hatton and another man, Ryan
Grover whom, I believe, at the time was a Detective in the Metropolitan Police.
The first photograph clearly shows Hatton passing an envelope to Grover. The
second shows Grover opening the envelope, and one can just see that the
contents appear to be a substantial amount of money. The third photograph
shows Grover handing over some documents, which I believe are the private
accounts of Stamford and Grant,
having been removed during a burglary in September 1979.”
Graham looked at his visitor, unaware of how best to proceed.
Before he attempted to try, Robert pressed on.
“I have obtained, at some personal cost to myself, an itemised
account from a Swiss bank. It is a numbered account, but I can link it
directly to Michael Hatton, by these hotel receipts, these photographs and this
statement from Karl Schroeder, an account manager at the Banque du Basle. One
can see that the exact amount that I am accused of removing from my own
company, were paid into this account in January 1980.”
Robert sat back and folded his arms.
Graham read through the papers once more.
“Why did you breach your bail, if you believed you’d been framed?”
“One, no one believed me, they’d done a first class job on me. Two,
I needed to be free to obtain my evidence. Three, I couldn’t trust anyone, as
there was already one Detective Inspector taking money from Hatton, so who
else?”
“Where have you been, since leaving the country?”
“All over, old boy. The question should be, where haven’t I been?”
“Your wife and child were with you, are they still abroad?”
“Sadly, my wife died in South America, shortly after giving birth to my son. Both my children are now
adults and their location is no business of yours.”
“I need to bring someone else in on this one,” Graham said, picking
up the phone.
“No problem, old chap. I’m not going anywhere.”
Howard Markham was not giving up that easily. It was several weeks
since he’d been kept in police custody for twelve hours, but eventually bailed
for the officers to make some further enquiries. It seems that the person
reporting the card missing was unobtainable, and it looked like the card had
been issued to someone whose details were not verified. He returned to his Chigwell home that he shared with his
seventy year old mother.
It was the only real asset his father had left, his house that is,
not his wife. The business had gone, as had all the investments, during the
stock market crash in the late eighties. The only other item, which was almost
an asset, that Howard had left, was the letter written by Sir Charles Greyson.
It related to certain product reports pertaining to the pharmaceutical
industry, just prior to the launch of an AIDS medication. The shares shot up
on launch, to crash back as soon as the medication was deemed to have
potentially dangerous side effects.
Sir Charles, armed with the details in the reports, stood to gain a
great deal if shares had been bought and sold at key moments. Howard did not
actually know whether Sir Charles took that opportunity, and was banking on the
fact that the regulators wouldn’t care, the fact the information reached the
public domain when it shouldn’t have would be sufficient.
Howard was also a coward. He wasn’t prepared to face Sir Charles,
but Letty was a different matter. The scatty girl had no knowledge as to
whether the letter was a threat or not, but could be frightened into doing what
he told her. He’d deliberately kept his head down for a couple of weeks, and
when the letter from the police arrived, releasing him from the bail and
telling him there was no further action being taken in respect of the credit
card, he decided it was time to act.
He sat and watched the house every morning for several days. Letty
went out at eight, returning at about six. She carried a bag containing books,
so Howard surmised that she was attending college. He was tempted to follow
her, but knew that if she saw him, she’d probably run scared and do something
silly. He needed to bide his time.
On the Thursday, he waited for Sir Charles to leave the house, and
then rang the front door bell. The butler answered.
“Sir?”
“Hello, is Letty at home?”
“No, sir.”
“Damn! I so wanted to get these articles to her,” he said, holding
up a folder containing blank pages of A4 paper.
“She will be home at six this evening, you may leave them if you
wish.”
“I hoped to get them to her this morning. She told me she needed
them at college.”
“She’s at the Covent GardenCollege, I’m sure
you could drop them off at the reception.”
“Thank you.”
Howard returned to his car, sitting, carefully planning how he would
do this. She had to go with him willingly, and once he was married to her, the
millions she was due would fall neatly into his hands. He knew there was much
that would go wrong, but he was determined to make sure that nothing did.
Driving through the busy London streets, he managed to find the college, and sat up outside.
If he approached her, she’d make a scene and that would be
counter-productive. He had to persuade her to meet him, and somewhere that he
could have control if she did become difficult. The only way she’d meet him
would be if she thought he was willing to part with the letter and let bygones
be bygones. There was a time when he knew she fancied him, perhaps he could
convince her that he was actually a decent bloke and wasn’t as bad as she thought.
He cured his temper, for if only he’d kept his cool and allowed her to have her
second thoughts, he might still have had a chance.
As he watched the students coming and going, he realised that there
was no way she’d go with him willingly. He was not going to be able to marry
her, so there had to be another answer.
Kidnap.
He could take her and use the letter to keep her quiet. He’d set up
a phoney kidnap and then pretend to rescue her. She’d say nothing, he’d be a
hero. Her father would be delighted and reward him handsomely. A fiendish
plan took shape in his mind. He needed to make some preparations, so he drove
quietly away just before Letty walked within feet of where he’d just been
parked.
Rob was working on his least favourite type of work, translating a
contract full of legal jargon from Arabic into English. He was tucked away in
his cubicle, oblivious of everything that was going on around him. As Katie,
he had developed a character of a distant but generally sweet girl, who was not
interested in romantic entanglements with anyone.
After rebuffing the office Romeos, he was subtly approached by a
pleasant young woman called Sheena who worked in HR. Rob had been standing at
the photocopier; waiting for it to complete a complex task he had programmed it
to do.
“Hi, you’re Katie Marriott, aren’t you?” she said.
“Yup, guilty.”
“I’m Sheena, I work in HR.”
“I know, I saw you in there on our first day.”
“Oh, you remembered me?”
“I try to remember everyone, just in case.”
“How are you settling in?”
“Fine, it’s okay really. I just wish the fellas would understand
what no means.”
“They’re a pain, aren’t they?” Sheena asked.
“Not so much a pain, more just plain boring. Just because I’m
single doesn’t mean I’m available.”
Rob was getting impatient with the copier, but understood the first
rule of copiers, - leave me and I’ll eat your paper and screw everything up.
“You started with your brother, didn’t you?”
“Yes, he’s in the legal department.”
“I know. I had lunch with him yesterday.”
“Oh yes?” Rob was surprised.
Sheena laughed.
“It’s not what you think, it was the only free table, so we shared.
He’s very nice.”
“Yes, I think so.”
“I don’t want you to think I’m forward or nosey, but have you anyone
at the moment?”
“Me? Not really, why?”
“I just saw you being pestered by our Jon boy. He really fancies
you, were you aware of that?”
“I’d have to be blind and stupid not to. He keeps buying me things,
it’s so embarrassing.”
“You don’t like him, then?”
Rob smiled.
“Let’s just say, he’s not my type, okay?”
Sheena seemed to be struggling with something, and Rob started to
understand where she was going.
“So, what is your type?” she finally asked.
Rob collected the sheets of paper that had now been sorted, and
started putting them in order.
“I’m not entirely sure, to be honest. I think I’ve yet to find
him.”
“Are you sure it may not be a her?”
Cards on the table, Sheena looked expectantly at Rob, believing him
to be another girl. This was so complex that Rob started to laugh. Here he
was, a male, dressed and pretending to be a girl. He fancied another girl who
didn’t know he was a boy, but had met him as a boy and didn’t know he was a
girl, or not. Then here was a girl, who was a lesbian, who also fancied him,
believing he was a girl too.
“Sheena, she might be a girl, hell I don’t know. I promise, if I
get a feeling it’s you, I’ll let you know.”
“We could go out for a drink and a meal, just to find out?” she
asked, hopefully.
Rob looked at her. With what he had between his legs, she’d run a
mile. Once this was over, one way or another he was staying as just one gender
for the rest of his bloody life.
“Maybe, let’s see what happens, in a week or two. Okay?”
Keeping to his policy of never shutting any door, he watched Sheena
leave with a smile on her face. Why did everyone he met end up fancying him?
Ever since then, Sheena would seek him out and joined him for lunch.
However, he was now stuck in this Arabic contract, so sex was a long way from
his mind.
“Katie?”
He looked up. It was the MD’s PA, Madeline Green.
“Yes?”
“Mr Hatton wants to know if you’re free this weekend.”
“This weekend? Yes, I think so. I was going shopping with a
friend, but I can do that any time. Why?”
“He has a conference in Paris. He needs someone fluent in French German and Italian, so your
name immediately came up. Could you accompany him?”
“Yes, I suppose so.”
“Excellent, here’s your ticket. You leave from Heathrow on Friday
at two twenty, and return on
Monday at noon. Here’s his
itinerary, and I’ll give you a copy of his notes before you go. You’ll be
staying at the Hotel Splendide in the centre of Paris.”
“Aren’t you going?”
“No, I’ve a wedding to go to. Besides, I’m sure you can cope.”
“Right, what sort of clothes do I need?”
“What you normally wear will be fine.”
“Right, thanks.”
Madeline smiled and left him alone with his Arabic. Friday was only
two days away. Still, he was so used to being Katie now, he almost felt he was
her.
He finished his translation and took it to the legal department.
Pru was in her office, pouring over some documents, making marks in the margin
with a red pen.
“Hello stranger,” he said.
“Hi Katie, what’s up?” Pru answered, just as a colleague walked past
the open door.
“I’ve just brought this back, do you want it or what?”
Pru looked at the translation work.
“Yup, that for me, leave it there and I’ll sort it in a minute.”
“I’m off to Paris
with the boss on Friday,” Rob said.
“Lucky you, I hope he can keep his hands to himself.”
“I’ll be all right. He’s married.”
“I hear he’s a mistress as well.”
“Then he’ll be too knackered to chase after me.”
“Talking about chasing after you, has Sheena from HR spoken to you
yet?”
“Sheena, the ‘I’d like to go to bed with you’ girl?”
“She has. What happened?”
“Nothing, what do you expect?”
“I wondered how you handled it, that’s all.”
“I let her believe there’s always a chance, as I do with all of
them. I hear she had lunch with you. Did she twig?”
“No, at least I don’t think so. This is getting very complicated, I
hope the old man comes soon and puts an end to everything.”
Rob examined one of his nails.
“Fuck, the varnish is chipped.”
Pru smiled, but it was a sad smile. She recognised that Rob was
probably more girl than boy now.
“Well, I hope Paris
is fun. It should be nice as the weather is warming up a bit.”
“It should be. I might get some shopping done, but I doubt it. I’ll
see you later.”
He returned to his office and found he had nothing left to do. He
popped his head around his boss’s door.
“Ronald, if there is nothing else for me, I’d like to go and sort out
some stuff for Friday. Mr Hatton wants to take me to Paris for a conference.”
“Katie, I know, his PA has just sent me a memo. Are you okay with
this, it is rather short notice?”
“Fine, I just need to rearrange and reschedule some things.”
“Take the rest of the day, and tomorrow if you want.”
Rob smiled sweetly, enjoying watching Ronald blush.
“You’re a darling, thanks,” he said, leaving him alone.
since 04/16/05