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While one part of Felicity’s mind focused on driving, another considered the unusually fine and exceedingly rare item she had been asked to acquire. The only reference she had found to it listed its value at eighty thousand dollars.

It seemed clear that tonight’s target meant more than money to the client. Felicity would receive half of its current market value on delivery, a quick forty thousand dollars. Even with her lifestyle, she could relax for a couple of months after this one. The contractor had given her the present owner’s name and offered her other assistance, but she had declined. Felicity was a technician and an artist, the best at what she did, and she preferred to work alone. That way, she stayed in complete control.

With a slight squeal of tires, Felicity turned left down a still narrower road. She had now left streetlights behind, and was only a couple of miles away from her diamond treasure. She had already come to think of it as hers, even though she had only seen its image and the replica attached to Mrs. Stahl’s gown. One good look had told her Mrs. Stahl was not wearing the real thing.

With only moonlight to guide her, she pulled her car off to the side of the narrow road a couple of hundred feet from Stahl’s front gate. A seven-foot wall surrounded the villa. A row of dahlia bushes, probably imported from the mountains, stood at its base. Their round, red, flowers bowed their heads, lending their almost imperceptible scent to the air. Because she didn’t want to crush them, the bushes would present more of a challenge than the barbed wire topping the wall. What lay beyond the wall, well that was another story.

It was still quite warm outside when she stood next to her car and stripped. With cool efficiency she squirmed into her working clothes: a pair of black tights, a black stretch turtleneck pullover, and black suede boots. She strapped her hair back with a wide, black elastic band. A slim black shoulder bag from the car’s back seat completed her outfit. She had pre-packed it with everything she would need for this job. She paused for just a moment to stare up at the densely packed stars above her, filled her lungs with the sweetly scented air, and headed for work.

The humidity was oppressive. Her skin was already damp and sticky after the brief jog to the wall, and she was feeling the weight of her long, thick hair. Someday she would overcome her vanity and cut it to a more convenient length. For now, she crouched beside the stuccoed stone wall and went over Stahl’s security system in her mind one last time.

Two fierce Doberman pinschers roamed on the other side of the wall. Beyond them, the house itself was wired with a variety of alarms. Touch a window or wall and the police immediately got a ring. The alarm on the safe was wired separately. Dogs roaming freely meant that Stahl had decided against motion sensors or electric eyes outside the house. However he had installed an independent electric eye to stand guard in front of the safe. That information had been expensive, and she never did manage to find whoever installed the safe so its exact location remained a mystery.

Felicity drew two large, raw, boneless steaks from her utility bag and flipped them over the wall. As they thumped to the ground, she could hear the pair of canines running. Seconds later she heard the dogs snarling. That menacing noise was quickly replaced by the slavering sounds of an animal feast. In her head she began ticking off seconds, something she did with unusual accuracy. According to her supplier the drug in the meat would take effect within two minutes. She could count the time off with accuracy to rival any stopwatch.

Two minutes later, she hopped over the bushes to grip the top of the wall under the barbed wire. When she hoisted herself to the top of the wall and looked down she saw one dog sleeping on his side. The other one slumped over as she watched.

She dropped to her feet again outside the wall. From her shoulder bag she pulled simple leather square, about two feet long on a side, and tossed it over the wire. Hopping to grip this, she flipped herself over the wall. Her landing was steady, on all fours. She sprinted the fifty yards to the door.

All the outside pressure alarms were wired through, and controlled by the front door lock. It was an expensive option, and more complex than it needed to be. Its primary advantage was that it prevented Stahl from having to memorize a deactivation code. She simply pulled out the key she had made and slid it smoothly into the lock. As she turned the key, the deadbolt slid back and all of the alarms except for those on the safe were turned off. Smiling, she opened the door and walked in as if she belonged there.

The villa was a scaled down mansion, but she did not need a light to find her way around. The floor plan was locked within her photographic memory, and she could call it up like a diagram displayed on a screen. The living room, with its semi-circular sofa, was adjacent to the dining room and overlooked the patio. That gave the ground floor an opening for fresh air to flow through. That sliding glass entrance overlooked the swimming pool and even at night offered a magnificent view.

Knowing that the staff left at night, Felicity headed straight up the long staircase. Again she reached into her bag. This time, she produced a palm-sized disc with an earphone attachment. Fitting the earpiece into her left ear, she began probing the walls, staying between three and four inches away from the tasteful blue flowered wallpaper. She worked around furniture, paying special attention near light switches and electrical sockets. It was slow, tedious work. The tension in her neck grew as the minutes crawled by.

She was beside the king-size bed when the quiet beeping began. Pressing her hand unit to the headboard caused the volume to rise to maximum. With a smile she returned the tiny metal detector to its home inside her bag and began probing the wood with long delicate fingers for a trip lever.

The button turned out to be under the solid oak headboard’s top shelf. She had to press it in and push it to one side. As she did this, the entire headboard slid smoothly to the right, revealing a built-in safe, set flush with the wall.

Staring at the recessed steel door, Felicity heaved a sigh of relief. Until this minute, she faced the possibility that she might be unfamiliar with the safe’s protective system. Luckily for her it was a common Model Number 14 Fort Knox inset wall safe, at least three years old. She knew exactly what type of integral alarm would be used. She stepped into the hallway, moving to the nearest linen closet. Behind a stack of satin sheets she found a control panel on the wall. It required only two quick adjustments with a cross-tipped screwdriver to deactivate the alarm. Certainly a switch in the bedroom somewhere did the same thing, but there was no reason to waste more time searching for it.

Felicity’s profession required her to be very knowledgeable about safes and security systems. She had studied these devices for several years, researching like a candidate for a rather specific Masters Degree program. This particular safe was a fairly old, basic tumbler type design. Stahl had been penny wise and pound foolish not to install a more up-to-date electronic type. She knew how to deal with the latest mechanisms too, but this one called for some of her old school skills.

She had to kneel on oversized pillows at the head of the bed to reach the safe door. She stuck a magnetized amplifier to it. A short wire led from the amplifier to an earplug. Once she had that in place in her left ear she began turning the dial slowly, picturing the disc shaped tumblers behind it. Listening for the clicking noise as each tumbler aligned with the bolt release mechanism, she soon deciphered the combination. When the last number fell into place, she turned the lever and pulled open the square steel door.

When she looked inside, her breath caught in her throat. God, it was a beautiful piece of work. It seemed quite at home surrounded by a stack of currency and a pair of pearl necklaces. She had a special weakness for Russian malachite, the green marbled semiprecious stone which, in this case, served as a setting for one of the most perfect teardrop diamonds Felicity had ever seen. Finding this kind of clarity in a three and a half carat diamond would be a thrill, even if it weren’t mounted in her favorite stone.