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Authors: Jack Higgins

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“Any particular reason?”

 

“I’ve got someone new joining the team from the Intelligence Corps.”

 

“Really?” Holley asked. “What have we got?”

 

“Captain Sara Gideon, a brilliant linguist. Speaks fluent Pashtu, Arabic, and Iranian. Just what we’ve been needing.”

 

“Is that all?” Holley joked.

 

“Ah, I was forgetting Hebrew.”

 

Dillon said, “You haven’t gone and recruited an Israeli, have you?”

 

“That would be illegal, Dillon. No, she’s a Londoner. There have been Gideons around since the seventeenth century. I’m sure you’ve heard of the Gideon Bank. She inherited it. While she pursues her military agenda, her grandfather sits in for her as chairman of the board.”

 

“You mean she’s one of those Gideons?” Dillon said. “So why isn’t she married to some obliging millionaire, and what the hell is she doing in the army?”

 

“Because at nineteen, she was at college in Jerusalem brushing up on her Hebrew before going up to Oxford when her parents visited her and were killed in a Hamas bus bombing.”

 

“Ah-ha,” Holley said. “So she chose Sandhurst instead of Oxford.”

 

“Correct.”

 

“And in the last nine years has served with the Intelligence Corps in Belfast, Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq, and two tours in Afghanistan.”

 

“Jesus, what in the hell is she after?” Dillon said. “Is she seeking revenge, is she a war junkie, what?”

 

“Roper’s just posted her full history, so you can read it for yourself.”

 

“I wouldn’t miss it for anything,” Dillon said.

 

“Yes, I’m sure you’ll find it instructive, particularly the account of the nasty ambush near Abusan, where she took a bullet in the right thigh which left her with a permanent limp.”

 

“All right, General, I surrender,” Dillon said. “I’ll keep my big gob shut. I can’t wait to meet her in person.”

 

“What do we do with her until you get to the Pierre?” Holley asked.

 

“Keep her happy. She was booking in at the Plaza after a flight from Arizona. There’s some secret base out there that the RAF are involved in, something to do with pilotless aircraft. She’ll be returning to London with us. She’s been on the staff of Colonel Hector Grant, our military attaché at the UN, and this will be her final appearance for him, so she’ll be in uniform.”

 

“Does she know what she’s getting into with us?”

 

“I’ve told Roper to brief her on everything—including you two and your rather murky pasts.”

 

“You’re so kind,” Holley said. “It’s a real privilege to know you.”

 

“Oh, shut up,” Ferguson told him. “Miller is very impressed with her, and I’m happy about the whole thing.”

 

“Well, we’re happy if you’re happy,” Dillon told him.

 

“We’ve got to go now. Why don’t you two clear off and do something useful. I’ll see you tonight.”

 

D
illon walked away through the downpour, the nightstick in his right hand. He turned left into an alley and Holley waited for a few moments, then took from his pocket a crumpled Burberry rain hat in which a spring clip held a Colt .25. He eased it onto his head, got out of the truck, and walked quickly through the rain.

Dressed as he was as a beat cop, Dillon didn’t need to show any particular caution, tried a door, which opened to his touch, and passed into a decaying kitchen, a broken sink in one corner, cupboards on the peeling walls, and a half-open door that indicated a toilet.

 

“Holy Mother of God,” he said softly. “Whatever’s going on here, there can’t be money in it.”

 

He opened the far door, discovered a corridor dimly lit by a single lightbulb, and heard voices somewhere ahead. He started forward, still grasping the nightstick in his right hand, his left clutching a Walther PPK with a Carswell silencer in the capacious pocket of his storm coat.

 

The voices were raised now as if in argument and someone said, “Well, I think you’re a damn liar, so you’d better tell me the truth quickly, mister, or Ivan here will be breaking your right arm. You won’t be able to swim very far in the sewer after that, I’m afraid.”

 

There was no door, just an archway leading to a platform with iron stairs dropping down, and Dillon, peering out, saw a desk and two men confronting Holley, who was glancing wildly
about him, or so it seemed. Dillon eased the Walther out of his pocket, stepped out, and started down the stairs.

 

W
hen Holley had entered the warehouse he had found it dark and gloomy, a sad sort of place and crammed with a lot of rusting machinery. The roof seemed to be leaking, there were chain hoists here and there, and two old vans that had obviously seen better days were parked to one side. There was a light on farther ahead, suspended from the ceiling over a desk with a couple of chairs, no sign of people, iron stairs descending from the platform above.

He called out, “Hello, is anyone there? I’ve got an appointment with Patrick Murphy.”

 

“Would that be Mr. Grimshaw?” a voice called—Irish, not American.

 

The man who stepped into the light was middle-aged, with silver hair, and wore a dark suit over a turtleneck sweater. He produced a pack of cigarettes, shook one out, and lit it with an old lighter.

 

“Yes, I’m Daniel Grimshaw,” Holley said.

 

“Then come away in.”

 

“Thank you.” Holley took a step forward, the rear door of the van on his right opened, and a man stepped out, a Makarov in his hand. He was badly in need of a shave, his dark unruly hair was at almost shoulder length, and he wore a bomber jacket. He moved in behind Holley and rammed the Makarov into his back.

 

“Do you want me to kill him now?” he asked in Russian, a language Holley understood.

 

“Let’s hear what his game is first,” Murphy told him in the same language.

 

“Now, that’s what I like to hear,” Holley said in Russian. “A sensible man.”

 

“So you speak the lingo?” Murphy was suddenly wary. “Arms for the Kosovans? Are the Serbs turning nasty again this year? Ivan here’s on their side, being Russian, but I’ll hear what you’ve got to say.” This was said in English, but now he added in Russian, “Make sure he’s clean.”

 

Ivan’s hands explored Holley thoroughly, particularly between the legs, and Holley said, “It must be a big one you’re looking for.”

 

Ivan gave him a shove so violent that Holley went staggering, and his Burberry rain hat fell to the floor, disclosing the Colt, which the Russian picked up at once, throwing the hat across to the desk.

 

“Now can I shoot him?”

 

Murphy pulled the Colt from the clip in the rain hat and examined it. “Very nice. I like it.” He left the cap on the desk and slipped the Colt into his pocket.

 

Ivan said, “Only a pro would use a shooter like that.”

 

“I know that, I’m not a fool. Show him where he’s going to end up if he doesn’t answer a few questions.”

 

Ivan leaned down, grasped a ring in the floor, and heaved back a trapdoor. There was the sound of running water, the smell of sewage.

 

Where the hell are you, Dillon?
That was the only thought running through Holley’s mind. He glanced about him wildly, trying to act like a man in panic.

 

He said to Murphy, “What is this? What are you doing? I told you my name is Daniel Grimshaw.”

 

“Well, I think you’re a damn liar, so you’d better tell me the truth quickly, mister, or Ivan here will be breaking your right arm. You won’t be able to swim very far in the sewer after that, I’m afraid.”

 

“You’re making a big mistake.”

 

“It’s not my mistake, my friend.” Murphy shook his head and said to Ivan in Russian, “Break his arm.”

 

Dillon called in the same language, “I don’t think so,” and shot Ivan in his gun hand. Ivan cried out, dropped the Makarov, and slumped to one knee beside the open sewer.

 

Murphy took the whole thing surprisingly calmly. Remembering that he’d slipped the Colt .25 into his pocket, he watched Holley pick up the Makarov and realized there was still a chance things might go his way.

 

“I assume I’d be right in supposing that your fortunate arrival isn’t coincidental, Officer. I congratulate you on your performance—the NYPD would be proud of you.”

 

“I used to be an actor,” Dillon said. “But then I discovered the theater of the street had more appeal. Audience guaranteed, you see, especially in Belfast.”

 

Murphy was immediately wary. “Ah,
that
theater of the street? So which side did you play for? You couldn’t be IRA, not the both of you.”

 

“Why not?” Dillon asked.

 

“Well, admittedly you’ve got an Ulster accent, but your friend here is English.”

 

“Well, I’d say you’re a Dublin man myself,” Dillon told him. “And admittedly there’s some strange people calling themselves IRA these days, and a world of difference between them. We, for example, are the Provo variety, and Mr. Holley’s sainted mother being from Crossmaglen, the heart of what the British Army described as bandit country, his Yorkshire half doesn’t count.”

 

Murphy was beginning to look distinctly worried. “What do you want?”

 

Dillon smiled amiably. “For a start, let’s get that piece of shit on his feet. He’s a disgrace to the Russian Federation. Putin wouldn’t approve of him at all.”

 

Holley pulled Ivan up to stand on the edge of the sewage pit. Following Dillon’s lead, he said, “Is this where you want him, Dillon? He might fall in, you know.”

 

Dillon ignored him and said to Murphy, “I’m going to put a question to you. If you tell me the truth, I’ll let you live. Of course, if you turn out to have lied, I’ll have all the fuss of coming back and killing you, and that will annoy me very much, because I’m a busy man.”

 

Murphy laughed uneasily. “That’s a problem, I can see that, but how will you know?”

 

“By proving to you I mean business.” He turned to where Ivan stood swaying on the edge of the pit, pulled Holley out of the way, and kicked the Russian’s feet out from under him, sending him down with a cry into the fast-flowing sewage, to be swept away.

 

“There he goes,” Dillon said. “With any luck, he could end up in the river, but I doubt it.”

 

Murphy looked horrified. “What kind of a man are you?”

 

“The stuff of nightmares, so don’t fug with me, Patrick,” Dillon told him. “Last week a trawler named
Amity
was surprised by the Royal Navy as it attempted to land arms on the County Down coast. Our sources tell us the cargo originated with you. I’m not interested in Irish clubs or whoever raised funds over here. I want to know who ordered the cargo in Northern Ireland. Tell me that and you’re home free.”

 

For a moment, Murphy seemed unable to speak, and Holley said, “Are you trying to tell us you don’t know?”

 

Murphy seemed to swallow hard. “No. I know who it is. We do a lot of this kind of work, putting deals together for small African countries, people from the Eastern European bloc. None of the players are big fish. Lots of small agencies put things our way, stuff the big arms dealers won’t touch.”

 

“So cut to the chase,” Dillon told him.

 

“I got a call from one of them. He said an Irish party was in town looking for assistance.”

 

“And he turned up here?”

 

“That’s right. Ulster accent, just like you. A quiet sort of man, around sixty-five, strong-looking, good face, graying hair. Used to being in charge, I’d say.”

 

Dillon said, “What was his name?”

 

“I can only tell you what he called himself. Michael Flynn. Had a handling agent in Marseilles. The money was all paid into a holding company who provided the
Amity
with false papers, paid half a dozen thugs off the waterfront to crew it. Nothing you could trace, I promise you. My end came from Marseilles by bank draft. It all came to nothing. I never heard from Flynn
again, but from what I saw in the newspaper accounts, the Royal Navy only came on the
Amity
by chance. A bit unfortunate, that.”

 

Holley turned to Dillon. “Okay?”

 

“It’ll have to be, won’t it?”

 

“You mean I’m in the clear?” Murphy asked.

 

“So it would appear,” Dillon told him. “Just try to cultivate a different class of friend in the future. That bastard Ivan was doing you no good at all.”

 

“That’s bloody marvelous.” Murphy hammered a fist on the desk and came round it. “You kept your word, Mr. Dillon, and I’m not used to that, so I’ll tell you something else.”

 

Dillon smiled beautifully and turned to Holley. “See, Daniel, Patrick wants to unburden himself. Isn’t that nice?”

 

But even he couldn’t have expected what came next.

 

“I was holding out on you on one thing. I actually did find out who Flynn really was. He wasn’t particularly nice to me, so I’ll tell you.”

 

Dillon wasn’t smiling now. “And how did you find that out?”

 

“He called round to see me one evening and discovered his mobile hadn’t charged up properly. He was upset about it, because he had a fixed time to call somebody in Northern Ireland. He was agitated, so it was obviously important. He asked if he could use my landline.”

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