Excerpt
Excerpt
Every Breath You Take
Chapter One
High atop a snow-covered hill, the Wyatt mansion perched like a
regal crown, its Gothic stone spires pointing skyward, its
stained-glass windows glowing like jewels.
A mile away, limousines and luxury cars paraded in a slow stream
toward a uniformed security guard posted at the gated entrance to
the estate. As each vehicle reached him, the security guard checked
the occupants' names off the guest list; then he issued a politely
worded edict to the driver: "I'm sorry, because of the snowfall,
Mr. Wyatt does not want any vehicles parked inside the gates this
evening."
If a chauffeur was at the wheel, the guard stepped aside, allowing
the chauffeur to turn into the drive, proceed through the gates,
and deliver his passengers to the house before returning to the
main road to park and wait.
If the vehicle's owner was at the wheel, the guard motioned him
toward a line of shiny black Range Rovers parked up the hill at a
cross street, wisps of exhaust curling from their tailpipes.
"Please pull forward and leave your car with an attendant," the
guard instructed. "You'll be shuttled up to the house."
However, as each new arrival soon discovered, that process was
neither as simple nor as convenient as it sounded. Although there
were plenty of helpful attendants and available Range Rovers
waiting within sight, large snowbanks and parked cars had
encroached on the winding residential lane so that it was almost
impassably narrow in places, and the steady procession of
slow-moving vehicles had churned four inches of unplowed snow from
earlier that day into thick slush.
The whole ordeal was unnerving and annoying to every- one. . . .
Everyone except Detectives Childress and MacNeil, who were in an
unmarked Chevrolet that was backed into a driveway one hundred and
fifty yards uphill from the entrance to the Wyatt estate. The two
detectives were part of a handpicked team, formed earlier that day,
assigned to keep Mitchell Wyatt under twenty-four-hour
surveillance.
At eight pm, they had tailed him here, to Cecil Wyatt's estate,
where he swerved around the security guard who was trying to wave
him down, then turned into the private drive and disappeared from
sight. Once Wyatt vanished, there was nothing for Childress and
MacNeil to do but park and make a record of whom he was associating
with. To facilitate that, Childress was observing the scene through
a pair of night-vision binoculars, reporting license-plate numbers
and miscellaneous information to MacNeil, who wrote it down in a
notebook.
"We have a new contender approaching the starting line," Childress
murmured as another pair of headlights reached the security guard
at the gate. He read the vehicle's license plate aloud for MacNeil;
then he described the vehicle and driver. "White Mercedes AMG, this
year's model, or possibly last year's. Driver is a Caucasian male
in his early sixties, passenger is a Caucasian female, early
thirties, and she's snuggled up against her smiling sugar
daddy."
When MacNeil didn't reply, Childress glanced at him and realized
MacNeil's attention was focused on a pair of headlights slowly
descending the hill from the right. "Must be someone who lives up
here," Childress remarked. "And he's not only rich, he's curious,"
he added as the black Lincoln Town Car came to a full stop and cut
off its headlights directly in front of the driveway where they
were parked.
The back door opened, and a man in his late thirties wearing a dark
overcoat got out. Childress rolled down his window, intending to
make an excuse for their presence, but as the man paused and put
his cell phone to his ear, Childress recognized him. "That's Gray
Elliott. What's he doing out here?"
"He lives nearby. Maybe he's attending the party."
"Or maybe he wants to pitch in and do some surveillance with us,"
Childress joked, but there was admiration in his voice. After only
one year in office as Cook County's state's attorney, Gray Elliott
was a hero to the cops --- a brilliant attorney who wasn't afraid
to take on tough, risky cases. The fact that he was also a wealthy
socialite who'd dedicated himself to public service rather than the
pursuit of greater wealth added another facet to his heroic
image.
MacNeil liked him for all of those reasons but MacNeil had always
liked Gray --- even when he had been a carefree, reckless teenager
whom MacNeil had busted for several minor youthful offenses.
Elliott finished his phone call, walked over to the car, leaned
down, and looked inside. "You must be Childress," he said by way of
greeting; then he shifted his attention to MacNeil. "I'd like a
word with you, Mac."
MacNeil got out and joined him at the back of the car. The wind had
died down, and the engine was running, pumping warm exhaust at
their feet. "I asked that you be assigned to this case," Gray told
him, "because you headed the investigation into William Wyatt's
disappearance, and you're familiar with all the players."
"Not all of them," Mac interrupted, unable to keep his curiosity in
check. "I never heard of Mitchell Wyatt until today. Who the hell
is he, and why are we watching him?"
"He's William Wyatt's half brother, and I believe he's responsible
for William's disappearance."
"His half brother?" MacNeil repeated, his forehead furrowing into a
doubtful frown. "When William disappeared, I interviewed all his
family members and all his friends. No one ever mentioned a half
brother. In fact, when I interviewed Cecil Wyatt, the old man
repeatedly told me how important it was that we find his only
grandson, and bring William home to his wife and kid."
"You were deliberately misled by an arrogant, devious old man who
wasn't ready to admit he had a grandson he'd never acknowledged.
I've known the Wyatts my whole life, and I never knew William had a
half brother. For that matter, neither did William until this past
June.
"According to the story I was just told, William's father, Edward,
had an affair with his secretary when William was a couple years
old and his mother was dying of cancer. The secretary got pregnant,
and William's mother died a few months later, but when the
secretary pressed Edward to marry her as he'd promised, he stalled,
then denied the baby was his. She retaliated by threatening to take
the whole sordid tale to the Tribune."
Elliott's cell phone rang, and he paused to glance at the caller's
name; then he ignored the call and continued. "At the time, Cecil
had big political plans for Edward, which a scandal would have
destroyed, but allowing ‘a common little tart' to marry into
the family was unthinkable. Cecil tried to buy her off, but she
wouldn't budge about her child's right to be legitimate, to be
named Wyatt, and to be raised as a Wyatt. She hired a lawyer, and
eventually a deal was struck: Edward would marry her shortly before
the baby was due, and then divorce her immediately after the birth.
She relinquished all rights to the baby, granting full custody to
Cecil. Cecil, in turn, was obliged to see that the baby was raised
‘with all the benefits associated with Wyatt money and social
connections,' including the finest education, travel abroad, and so
forth. She received a substantial sum of money on the condition
that she never divulge a word about anything that had happened and
never again have contact with any of the parties involved,
including the baby."
MacNeil turned the collar up on his jacket. The bottom half of his
body was reasonably warm, but his ears were freezing. "Obviously,
Cecil later changed his mind about the grandson," he said, rubbing
his hands together before he stuck them in his pockets.
"No, he adhered to the letter of the agreement but not the spirit.
He'd agreed Mitchell would grow up ‘with all the benefits
associated with Wyatt money and social connections,' but Cecil
never specifically agreed that the ‘social connections' would
be with the Wyatts themselves. A week after he was born, Cecil sent
Mitchell to a family in Italy, along with a falsified birth
certificate. When he was four or five, Cecil yanked him out of that
family's home and had him sent to an exclusive boarding school in
France. Later, Mitchell was sent to prep school in Switzerland, and
then on to Oxford."
"Did the kid even know who he was, or who was paying for his fancy
education?" MacNeil asked.
"The family he lived with in Italy told him what they'd been told,
which was that he'd been abandoned as a newborn on a California
doorstep and that his name was merely a combination of two names
picked out of a phone book by a group of generous American
benefactors who regularly put up the money to support and educate
boys just like him. These supposed benefactors wished for nothing
in return except the right to remain anonymous."
"Jeez." MacNeil shook his head.
"If that's pity I hear, save it for someone who deserves it,"
Elliott said sarcastically. "From all accounts, young Mitchell
enjoyed his life and made the most of his opportunities. He was a
natural athlete who excelled at sports, he went to the finest
schools, and he mixed easily with kids from Europe's leading
families. After he graduated from college, he put his education,
his good looks, and his acquired social contacts to excellent use,
managing to make himself a load of money. He's thirty-four now, and
he runs companies based mostly in Europe. He has apartments in
Rome, London, Paris, and New York." Elliott paused to look at his
watch, frowning as he tried to see its face in the dark. "Can you
see the time on your watch?"
MacNeil pulled up his sleeve and glanced at the large glowing green
numerals on his Timex. "Eight forty-five."
"I have to go. I need to put in an appearance at Cecil's
party."
"How did Wyatt end up right here, right now, after all this time?"
MacNeil said quickly, trying to make optimal use of the remaining
time.
"Seven months ago, in early June, William came across the documents
in an old safe, and he was outraged at the treatment his poor half
brother had received from his father and grandfather. He hired
detectives, and when they located Mitchell Wyatt in London, William
took his wife and his son and flew to London to introduce them in
person and explain what had happened."
"That was a nice thing to do."
Elliott tipped his head back and looked at the sky. "Yes, it was,"
he said in the carefully controlled voice of a man trying not to
betray any emotion. "William was a thoroughly nice guy --- the only
male in his family for generations who wasn't an egotistical
sociopath." Abruptly, he looked back at MacNeil and finished. "When
William came back from London filled with glowing accounts of
Mitchell's amazing successes, Edward didn't want anything to do
with his long-lost son, but old Cecil was evidently impressed
enough to ask for a meeting. The meeting took place in August, when
Mitchell was supposedly here on business. And then, after William
disappeared in November, Cecil asked Mitchell to come back to
Chicago so they could get to know each other better. Ironically,
the old man is now quite taken with his prodigal grandson --- so
much so that he's asked him to be present tonight, for his
eightieth birthday party. I have to get going," he said, already
starting toward his car.
MacNeil walked beside him. "You haven't told me anything that
explains why we're keeping Mitchell Wyatt under
surveillance."
Elliott stopped abruptly, his expression tight, his voice cold and
clipped. "Oh, did I leave that out?" he asked. "Here are just two
of the reasons: In September, one month after that first reunion
between Cecil and Mitchell, Edward --- William and Mitchell's
father --- ‘fell' off his balcony and plunged thirty stories
to his death. In November, William vanished. Coincidentally,
according to U.S. passport and immigration records, Mitchell Wyatt
entered the U.S. shortly before each event occurred and departed
almost immediately afterward."
When MacNeil's eyes narrowed, Elliott said, "Now you're getting
part of the picture. Here's more of it: Mitchell has been in
Chicago for two weeks. He's staying at William's house, consoling
William's beautiful wife, and befriending William's
fourteen-year-old son." Unable to keep the loathing from his voice,
Elliott said, "Mitchell Wyatt is systematically exterminating
members of his own family and restructuring the family to suit
himself."
"You think he's after the family fortune," MacNeil concluded.
"I think the Wyatt genes have produced another sociopath. The
ultimate sociopath --- a cold-blooded murderer."
When he walked away, MacNeil got back into the Chevy with
Childress, and they watched Elliott's town car stop at the
intersection and wait while a group of party guests were
transferred into Range Rovers. A gray-haired woman slipped in the
slush, and her husband grabbed for her. A middle-aged couple
shivered in the cold while a nervous elderly couple struggled to
step up onto the Range Rover's elevated running boards with the
help of parking attendants.
"You know," Childress said, when the vehicles were finally on their
way, "when we drove past the security gates tonight, I got a look
at the driveway leading to the house, and I swear it looked
perfectly clear --- at least as far as I could see."
"It was," MacNeil agreed.
"Then why in the hell is the security guard making everyone leave
their vehicles out here on the main road?"
MacNeil shrugged. "Who knows?"
Excerpted from EVERY BREATH YOU TAKE © Copyright 2011 by
Judith McNaught. Reprinted with permission by Ballantine Books, a
division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
Every Breath You Take
- Genres: Fiction
- hardcover: 352 pages
- Publisher: Ballantine Books
- ISBN-10: 0345479904
- ISBN-13: 9780345479907