“A typed letter. It said that the digital files and all copies of the photos would be destroyed if I did just one task. There would be no further demands after that.” Ricci took a deep breath. “The message said I should be prepared for an overnight trip at all times. In addition, I should text a list of all the supplies I would need for a simple otoplasty to the number in the letter. At some point in the next few months, I would receive a text message telling me where to go. It would contain the code word ‘lilies.’ That was it.”
“What happened the day of the mutilation?” Mikel’s voice was like a whipcrack.
Ricci winced at the last word. “A text arrived from a different number, not the one that I’d sent the list to. It said that I should bring the lilies to the train station in Brussels at six p.m. on that day. Someone would accept the flower delivery there. When I got off the train, another text arrived, telling me to walk to where the van was parked and get in.”
He curled over his knees. “I didn’t know what was going to happen to me.” His voice broke on a sob. “It was almost a relief when they took the blindfold off, and I saw I was in a makeshift operating room. At least there I felt certain about what I was supposed to do.”
“Slice a perfectly healthy ear off of a man being held against his will,” Quinn snapped. “You were comfortable with that.”
“No! No.” He shook his head without straightening. “But that would be the end. I wouldn’t have to wonder if Sylvie would get a packet of photos in the mail on any given day.”
“You believed the blackmailer would destroy the original photo files?” Quinn injected utter scorn into her voice.
“I didn’t have a choice. And I was right.” He raised his head. “No package has ever come.” A touch of confidence was back in his voice. He’d weathered the storm, so he could still globe-trot between all his fancy houses.
Setting aside her desire to smack the conceit off Ricci’s too-handsome face, Quinn sorted through the implications of what they had learned. Using Ricci’s skills had been a one-off for the blackmailer, which led back to the kidnapping being a personal vendetta. The blackmailer hadn’t shaken Ricci down for money on top of his services, so that hadn’t been a motivation either.
She began to feel that exhilarating sense of standing on the top of a mountain of data where she could see the dots. Now she had to find the connections.
The person who planned all this had to know Ricci and his wife well enough to understand the pressure those photos would exert. Ricci’s love nest was in Paris. Brussels was only about four hours from Paris by car. Gabriel had heard Kodra refer to Paris.
“Do you or your wife have any friends or business associates who live in Paris?” Quinn asked.
“Of course. Quite a few. We have an apartment there.” Ricci looked away. “Other than the one Rupert lived in.”
“I want you to write down their names, no matter how casual the acquaintance. I want contact info and how you know them,” Quinn said. “Here’s a secure address to email the list to.” She handed him one of the business cards Mikel insisted that she carry. It was the first time she had used one.
“Do not leave out a single name,” Mikel reinforced Quinn’s request.
“I’ll include everyone I can think of.” Ricci flicked the business card against his palm. “What happens now?”
Mikel stood. “If we think of further questions, we’ll be in touch.”
“I mean what happens to me?”
“You make sure that I can always find you.” Mikel projected icy menace. “If I have to go looking for you, it will make your future very unpleasant.”
“What do you mean? I have to stay here in Zug all the time?” Ricci had the nerve to sound annoyed.
“No. You just have to make it easy for my surveillance team to keep track of you,” Mikel said.
The surgeon went pale as he glanced toward the windows again. “I’m under surveillance?”
“How do you think we knew you were here?” Mikel smiled and walked toward the front door.
Quinn stood and flicked her jacket back to show Ricci her Glock one more time.
Once they were settled in the limousine again, Quinn took the gun out of the shoulder holster, checked that the chamber was still empty, and handed it to Mikel. “I enjoyed making him flinch.”
“I wanted to kill him.” Her boss’s declaration was chilling because it was so matter-of-fact.
Quinn’s hero worship of Mikel ratcheted up a notch. “Yeah, I kept imagining Gabriel strapped down on that table while Ricci sliced into his ear, just because he wanted to keep his six houses. How could anyone, especially a doctor, do that?”
“People do far worse,” Mikel said, his voice burdened with a vast weariness. “In a twisted way, Gabriel was lucky that Ricci did the surgery. Ricci is highly skilled. The fact that he’s a narcissistic cabrón doesn’t change that.”
“What if the instigator of the kidnapping only thought of the surgery because he knew he could blackmail Ricci into doing it?”
“There is always that possibility.” Mikel stowed both Glocks in the briefcase. “I could see your brain working at the end of our interview. You believe the blackmailer is someone familiar with the Riccis.”