year.
It was April, and time was running out. The Rule of Seven was in play, backed by Harry Van Dorn's brilliant brain and seemingly limitless resources, and they still didn't know nearly enough about what it was. Seven disasters, orchestrated by Harry Van Dorn, to plunge the world into chaos, chaos that would somehow be turned to Van Dorn's benefit. But the whens, the wheres, the hows were still maddeningly unclear. Not to mention who—Harry couldn't be doing this without help.
Whatever it was, it was deadly.
And it was the Committee's job to keep deadly things from happening. No matter how high the body count happened to be.
She wasn't feeling good about this, and she'd learned to trust her instincts. Peter was the best they had, a brilliant operative who'd never failed a mission.
But she had the unpleasant feeling that all that was about to change.
She shook herself, returning to the spotless walnut desk that held nothing but a Clarefontaine pad and a black pen. She kept everything in her head, for safety's sake, but sometimes she just needed to write.
She scrawled something, then glanced down at it. The Rule of Seven.
What the hell was Harry Van Dorn planning to unleash on an unsuspecting world?
And would killing him be enough to stop it?
2
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H arry Van Dorn's McMansion of a yacht was large enough that Genevieve could almost forget she was surrounded by water. The smell of the sea was still there, but she loved the ocean if she wasn't on a boat, and she could easily pretend she was on some nice safe cliff overlooking the surf, rather than bobbing around in the middle of it.
Harry Van Dorn was both quirky and charming, there was no denying it, and he was focusing all that charm on her. His megawatt smile, his crinkly blue eyes, his lazy voice and rapt attention to her every word should have made her melt. Except that Genevieve didn't melt easily, even beneath the warm Caribbean sun with a billionaire doing his best to seduce her.
The Tab had appeared, of course, cold with a glass of ice as well. She knew she ought to have insisted on Pellegrino or something equally upscale—the firm would never approve of something as mundane as soda pop—but she should have been on vacation, and for now she could let little things drop. She'd even kicked off her shoes as she stretched out on the white leather chaise, wiggling her silk-covered toes in the sunlight.
She knew how to make the most self-effacing man become expansive, and Harry was hardly a wallflower. The Van Dorn Foundation had never been under her particular purview—she'd been kept busy with the relatively simple concerns of several smaller foundations—but she found his worldview fascinating. It was no wonder he collected humanitarian awards by the bucketload—he'd even been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, though she thought it would be a cold day in hell before he got one. The profits from his overseas production companies were cut in half because he refused to let them employ child labor, and the workers received enough of a living wage that they didn't have to send their children into factories and brothels. He still made a profit, Genevieve thought cynically, and his generous salaries were still only a fraction of what he used to pay the workers in the American factories that now lay closed and abandoned in the dying cities in the Midwest, but the humanitarian organizations ignored that part. Either ignored it, or knew that giving a billionaire an award was likely to make his charitable foundation feel even more charitable toward them.
His money came from everywhere—oil fields in the Middle East, diamond mines in Africa, investments so complicated she doubted even he understood them. All she knew was he made money faster than he could spend it, and his tastes were lavish.
But she had become used to billionaires in the past few years, and in the end there were all the same, even someone like Harry Van Dorn with his little