Read Luc: A Spy Thriller Online

Authors: Greg Coppin

Tags: #Spy Thriller

Luc: A Spy Thriller (4 page)

BOOK: Luc: A Spy Thriller
9.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

I shook my head. ‘That would be a one-off payment. You know the business I’m in. Information, intelligence. How many times over the next ten, twenty years might I come knocking at your door? Take the long view, Mr Steenhoek.’

‘You’ve knocked at my door already this week. I have received precious little payment, but plenty of blood and bits of bone have splattered about the place, and I am now several men and a kneecap down.’

‘I can’t change what’s done, Mr Steenhoek, but believe me…’

‘Do you think
any
amount of payment can compensate, can recompense, for what you have done to me?’

‘Look. I can only apologise, Mr Steenhoek. But I do need this information. There is…’

‘Toledo, get the diamonds.’

I held up a hand to Toledo. ‘Mr Steenhoek, that man I asked about. The one shot and dumped in Crooked Tree. He was a colleague of mine and I think that maybe while observing you he saw you with someone else. Someone who didn’t want to be seen. Someone, perhaps, who is from Guatemala.’

‘Toledo…’

‘Mr Steenhoek, have you recently met anyone from Guatemala?’

‘…Get me the diamonds.’

‘Toledo, don’t you go near them.’ I turned back to Steenhoek. ‘You can have them, Mr Steenhoek, they’re yours, but in return for that information. I
need
that information.’

Toledo pulled the gun from inside his jacket and dug the barrel into the side of my head. With the other hand he patted me down and very quickly found the bag of diamonds in my shirt pocket.

‘This isn’t fair, Mr Steenhoek,’ I said.

Steenhoek noisily exhaled a sort of laugh and looked at me strangely. ‘Where do I start with
that
?’

Toledo pulled out the small grey cloth bag. Steenhoek motioned for him to throw it at him. The bag landed on the mauve bedclothes on his lap. He pulled the drawstring and looked inside. Was it my imagination or did Steenhoek’s eyes literally sparkle at what they saw? He took out one of the diamonds and held it up to the light. That’s when I made my move.

I snapped my head back, away from the field of fire of the thug’s gun. I smashed a fist into the thug’s stomach, did it again, and he doubled a little and I swung out to fully face him and thrust his head down onto my knee. I pounded a massive right hook into the side of his head and he bounced off the wall and I stepped back as he dropped to the floor, out cold.

I picked up the gun and stalked over to Steenhoek. The blood was up and I stared him in the eyes and thrust the gun into his good knee and I told him,
told him
, I needed that information.

Steenhoek stared back, palpably tense now, reliving the sound of yesterday’s shot, the hit, the pain; feeling it might come again, might be relived, this time on the other knee, the only good knee. Crippled.

His mouth was open.

‘Who did you meet?’

A shadow swept across the frosted glass of the door.


Tell me
,’ I demanded.

The door opened and the nurse I had seen earlier walked in. She immediately reacted on seeing the thug sprawled on the floor and I turned to face her and tucked the gun down the back of my belt, so it rested against the base of my spine.

‘This man is leaving,’ Steenhoek said firmly to the nurse.

‘Have you been causing trouble?’ the nurse asked me, as she attended to the thug. I pulled my shirt back down over the gun.

‘Make sure he doesn’t come back again, please, nurse.’

The nurse stood up and ushered me out. I glared at Steenhoek.

‘I’ll be back tomorrow, see how you’re doing,’ I said.

‘I don’t ever want to see this man again, do you hear me, nurse?’

I stared at him. ‘All you had to do…’ I shook off the nurse and marched out. I quickly took a right turn as an unhappy looking Grace Steenhoek came around the corner at the far end.

I left the hospital, walked back to the Suzuki, which was parked down the street, and got inside.

I stared at the sky and waited.

Five minutes later my mobile phone vibrated.

‘Luc,’ I said.

‘It’s Charlie. When the nurse left he got on the phone. Do you want to hear the call now?’

‘Yes.’ The listening device was inside the little plastic bobble on the drawstring of the grey cloth bag.

There was a click down the line, then some ambient sounds. Then rustling. Then tonal beeps - he was tapping out the phone number. There was the faintest sound of a dialling tone. Then Steenhoek started speaking.

‘Hello, I can’t speak long…Not too bad. I’m in the hospital, as you’ve heard. The reason I’m ringing is that as a valued client I thought you would like to know that I have just received some very interesting information which concerns you.’ I couldn’t quite get the next bit, there was some sort of crackling sound, which seemed fairly close to the mic. ‘…tish agent meddling in your…’ and then it went again. And then I recognised what Steenhoek was probably doing. As he was speaking he was scooping up the diamonds in his lap and letting them fall through his fingers. ‘…Meet one of my men. Three o’clock. Usual place. Usual arrangement.’

The recording stopped and Charlie was back on the line.

‘Shame about the crackling,’ she said.

‘He was playing about with the diamonds. What about the other phone number?’

‘Pre-paid.’

I nodded. ‘To be expected.’

‘Do you want any back up for this meet?’ Charlie asked.

‘No. I do not.’

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER NINE

He came out about an hour later. The tall, lean thug. Toledo. Dark clothing. Bruising around the face. A black rucksack slung over his shoulder. He took athletic strides to get to the Range Rover.

I held back, waited for two vehicles to get between us. He took the turning into Pickstock Street and went right the way down, heading in the direction of the famous Swing Bridge and turned into North Front Road.

He swung the Range Rover round and parked up on the quayside. I slowed and pulled over to the kerb. The salty aroma of the sea was more pronounced here. A flock of gulls squawked loudly and insistently nearby. Toledo got out and threw the rucksack over his shoulder and walked down the grey wooden jetty. He stepped onto the water taxi. He was going to one of the islands.

This was not good.

It was a good security measure - the thug just had to turn round to see if anyone followed him onto the boat. Unless I’d been blown, and he was leading me a merry dance. But I didn’t think so on that score.

I could see him on the deck, looking out at the marina to the side, occasionally taking glances to his right, scouting the dock.

Yes, security measure, all right.

Very good. And it meant there was no way I could get on that boat without him seeing me.

A small man with quick, practised movements released the rope from around the metal bollard and jumped easily back onto the boat. I watched it glide off, the thug now facing into the boat, his hands spread behind him on the rail.

Maybe the meet was on the boat.

If so, I hoped it would happen soon, while they were still in eye shot for me to see the client.

The thug lazily turned round and leaned on the rail and looked out onto the water. He would soon slip out of view.

I got the Suzuki going and took it down the quayside. I parked up and walked down to where a small boat was berthed. I walked along the wooden jetty, looking around for the owner of the boat. There were a group of men about two hundred yards away, laughing and joking, and I was about to go over when the hatch of the boat opened and somebody walked up the little steps. She had blonde hair and was wearing navy blue shorts and a pink T-shirt. I could see out of the corner of my eye the ferry boat was now a silhouette on the sea.

‘Hello,’ I said to the woman.

‘Oh hi,’ she said, suddenly noticing me. She had beautiful dark eyes.

‘Can I ask a favour?’ I said. ‘I need to get to…actually, where does that boat go to?’ I asked, pointing at the ferry now heading towards the horizon. She looked around. Her hair was up in a pony tail and I saw her beautiful soft neck.

‘That’s the boat for Caye Caulker,’ she said, turning back.

‘That’s exactly where I need to get to. And, well, as you can see, I missed the boat.’

‘Oh, that’s okay,’ she said. ‘There’ll be another one in half an hour.’

‘Thing is, I don’t want to wait the half hour.’

‘Uh-huh. How can I help?’

‘I wondered if I could borrow your boat.’ I took my wallet out of my pocket and pulled out some notes. ‘Twenty dollars.’

‘Twenty dollars, that’s nice of you. But this is my granddad’s boat.’

‘Right. Is he around?’

‘No. I’m waiting for him. We’re going fishing out at Ambergris.’

‘How long’s he going to be?’ I could see the silhouette getting smaller all the time.

‘Oh, not long.’

‘How long’s not long?’

‘I don’t know. Five minutes. An hour. Difficult to say.’

‘That’s - I can’t really wait that long. What’s your name?’

‘Lucia.’

‘Really? Okay, Lucia, I’m going to give you a hundred dollars for the use of your boat. I promise I’ll get it back to you and your granddad in no later than three hours. That sounds like a good deal, doesn’t it?’

She looked at me. I got the distinct impression there was some serious evaluating going on behind those dark eyes.

‘This is my granddad’s boat,’ she said. ‘I wouldn’t let a stranger take it away.’

I sighed inwardly. ‘Well, how about if you came along too? How about if you took me to Caye Caulker?’

‘What’s your name?’ she asked.

‘Philip.’

Her eyes narrowed again as she scanned my face. She screwed up her mouth and then pulled out a mobile phone from her shorts. She tapped out a couple of keys and then put it to her ear. Twenty seconds later she dropped her arm. ‘He’s not answering,’ she said.

She looked back up at me. Her dark eyes were warm.

‘Well, Philip,’ she said. ‘I size people up pretty quickly.’

‘And?’

‘And I hope I’m not wrong. Make it a hundred and twenty and you can jump aboard.’

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER TEN

The little boat was pretty speedy. We nipped through the water with ease and Lucia turned out to be very good at the whole boating thing.

There was a large floppy hat lying on the floor of the boat, and for added disguise, in case Toledo decided to look in this direction, I decided to wear it.

‘That’s my granddad’s,’ Lucia said on seeing me with it on. She reached into a canvas bag and pulled out a small tube. She pulled the lid off and I could see it was a chapstick.

‘Trying to keep the sun off my ears,’ I said.

‘Then you should sit on the opposite side,’ she said, running the chapstick along her full lips.

‘But I also want a tan on my face.’

She brushed her lips together and then dropped the stick back into the canvas bag. She smiled. ‘You’re strange.’

‘As you said, you sized me up pretty quickly.’

We were now overtaking the water taxi and it was obvious we would make it to Caye Caulker before it. I kept my back to the other boat so, yes, I was getting the sun on my face.

‘So your name’s Lucia.’

‘It is.’ A smile was never far from her face.

‘Lovely name. And interesting too.’ We were speaking a little louder than is usual because of the noise of the engine.

‘Why interesting?’ she asked.

‘Well, to me anyway. My surname is Luc. L-u-c.’

She raised her eyebrows. ‘Perhaps we’re meant to be together.’

‘You stay there, I’ll get the ring.’ I made to get up.

‘Take a seat, Romeo, you’re rocking the boat.’

‘You know me inside out. I’ve told you this.’

She brushed her tanned thighs to get rid of some sort of bug that was flying about.

‘Are you Belizean?’ I asked.

‘I am. Born and bred.’ She had a trace of the Kriol lilt to her voice. ‘My granddad, the man who owns this boat, is originally from the U.S. He moved here in his forties and married a local girl. My gran.’

I nodded. ‘I’m trying to pick up some of the Belizean Kriol. I like learning new languages.’

‘I’m glad you call Kriol a language. Some don’t.’

The wash caused by the boat kept spraying my shirt and arm. ‘I know the arguments. But I’ll stick to calling it a language.’

‘You do that. So what have you got so far?’


Shub dis plog eena datdeh hoal
. Which, the room attendant at my hotel informed me when I asked how I got the ceiling fan to work.’

BOOK: Luc: A Spy Thriller
9.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Enticing the Earl by Nicole Byrd
Scars by Kathryn Thomas
The Quaker Café by Remmes, Brenda Bevan
Love Realized by Melanie Codina, Madison Seidler
My Demon by Lisa Hinsley
Hades Daughter by Sara Douglass
Romancing the Holiday by Helenkay Dimon, Christi Barth, Jaci Burton
Edge of Destiny by J. Robert King