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The Cry of the Halidon
by Robert Ludlum
For Marge and Don Wilde Wonder
Bread and hibiscus and quiet
flights to the islands, and for God's sake, stay out of the sun! Watch
your language; they cut off telephones! Best always…
PART ONE
Port Antonio/London
ONE
Port Antonio, Jamaica
The white sheet of ocean spray burst up from the coral rock and
appeared suspended, the pitch-blue waters of the Caribbean serving as a
backdrop. The spray cascaded forward and downward and asserted itself
over the thousands of tiny, sharp, ragged crevices that were the coral
overlay. It became ocean again, at one with its source.
Timothy Durell walked out on the far edge of the huge free-form pool
deck, imposed over the surrounding coral, and watched the increasing
combat between water and rock. This isolated section of the Jamaican
north coast was a compromise between man and natural phenomenon.
Trident Villas were built on top of a coral sheet, surrounded by it on
three sides, with a single drive that led to the road in front. The
villas were miniature replicas of their names: guest houses that
fronted the sea and the fields of coral. Each an entity in itself; each
isolated from the others, as the entire complex was isolated from the
adjoining territory of Port Antonio.
Durell was the young English manager of Trident Villas, a graduate
of London's College of Hotel Management, with a series of letters after
his name indicating more knowledge and experience than his mid-twenties
appearance would seem to support. But Durell was good; he knew it, the
Trident's owners knew it. He never stopped looking for the unexpected -
that, along with routine smoothness, was the essence of superior
management.
He had found the unexpected now. And it troubled him.
It was a mathematical impossibility. Or, if not impossible,
certainly improbable in the extreme.
It simply did not make sense.
'Mr Durell?'
He turned. His brown Jamaican secretary, her skin and features
bespeaking the age-old coalition of Africa and Empire, had walked out
on the deck with a message. 'Yes?'
'Lufthansa flight 16 from Munich will be late getting into Montego.'
'That's the Keppler reservation, isn't it?'
'Yes. They'll miss the
in-island connection.'
'They should have come into Kingston…'
'They
didn't,' said the girl, her voice carrying the same disapproval as
Durell's statement, but not so sternly. 'They obviously don't wish to
spend the night in Montego; they had Lufthansa radio ahead. You're to
get them a charter…'
'On three hours' notice? Let the Germans do it!
It's their equipment that's late…'
'They tried. None available in Mo'bay.'
'Of course, there isn't…
I'll ask Hanley. He'll be back from Kingston with the Warfields by five
o'clock.'
'He may not wish to…'
'He will. We're in a spot. I trust it's not indicative of the week.'
'Why do you say that? What bothers you?'
Durell turned back to the
railing overlooking the fields and cliffs of coral. He lighted a
cigarette, cupping the flame against the burst of warm breeze. 'Several
things. I'm not sure I can put my finger on them all. One I do
know.' He looked at the girl, but his eyes were remembering. 'A little
over twelve months ago, the reservations for this particular week began
coming in. Eleven months ago they were complete. All the villas were
booked… for this particular week.'
'Trident's popular. What is so unusual?'
'You don't understand.
Since eleven months ago, every one of those reservations has stood
firm. Not a single cancellation, or even a minor change of dates. Not
even a day.'
'Less bother for you. I'd think you'd be pleased.'
'Don't you see?
It's a mathematical imp - well, inconsistency, to say the least. Twenty
villas. Assuming couples, that's forty families, really - mothers,
fathers, aunts, uncles, cousins… For eleven months nothing has happened
to change anyone's plans. None of the principals died - and at our
rates we don't cater exclusively to the young. No misfortunes of
consequence, no simple business interferences, or measles or mumps or
weddings or funerals or lingering illness. Yet we're not the Queen's
coronation; we're just a week-in-Jamaica.'
The girl laughed. 'You're playing with numbers, Mr Durell. You're
put out because your well-organized waiting list hasn't been used.'
'And the way they're all arriving,' continued the young manager, his
words coming faster. 'This Keppler, he's the only one with a problem,
and how does he solve it? Having an aircraft radio ahead from somewhere
over the Atlantic. Now, you grant that's a bit much… The
others? No one asks for a car to meet them, no in-island confirmations
required, no concerns about luggage or distances. Or anything. They'll
just be here.'
'Not the Warfields. Captain Hanley flew to Kingston for the
Warfields.'
'But we didn't know that. Hanley assumed that we did, but
we didn't. The arrangements were made privately from London. He thought
we'd given them his name; we hadn't. I hadn't.'
'No one else would…' The girl stopped. 'But everyone's… from all
over.'
'Yes. Almost evenly divided. The States, England, France, West
Germany, and; . . Haiti.'
'What's your point?' asked the girl, seeing the concern on Durell's
face.
'I have a strange feeling that all our guests for the week are
acquainted. But they don't want us to know it.' London, England
The tall, light-haired American in the unbuttoned Burberry trench
coat walked out the Strand entrance of the Savoy Hotel. He stopped for
an instant and looked up at the English sky between the buildings in
the court. It was a perfectly normal thing to do - to observe the sky,
to check
the elements after emerging from shelter - but this man did not give
the normally cursory glance and form a judgment based primarily on the
chill factor.
He looked.
Any geologist who made his living developing geophysical surveys for
governments, companies and foundations knew that the weather was
income; it connoted progress or delay.
Habit.
His clear grey eyes were deeply set beneath wide eyebrows, darker
than the light brown hair that fell with irritating regularity over his
forehead. His face was the colour of a man's exposed to the weather,
the tone permanently stained by the sun, but not burned. The lines at
the sides and below his eyes seemed stamped more from his work than
from age; again a face in constant conflict with the elements. The
cheekbones were high, the mouth full, the jaw casually slack; for there
was a softness also about the man… in abstract contrast to the hard
professional look.
This softness, too, was in his eyes. Not weak, but inquisitive; the
eyes of a man who probed… perhaps because he had not probed
sufficiently in the past.
Things… things… had happened to this man.
The instant of observation over, he greeted the uniformed doorman
with a smile and a brief shake of his head, indicating a negative.
'No taxi, Mr McAuliff?'
'Thanks, no, Jack. I'll walk.'
'A bit nippy, sir.'
'It's refreshing - only going a few blocks.'
The doorman tipped his cap and turned his attention to an incoming
Jaguar sedan. Alexander McAuliff continued down the Savoy Court, past
the theatre and the American Express office to the Strand. He crossed
the pavement and I entered the flow of human traffic heading north
towards Waterloo Bridge. He buttoned his raincoat, pulling the lapels
up to ward off London's February chill.
It was nearly one o'clock; he was to be at the Waterloo intersection
by one. He would make it with only minutes to spare.
He had agreed to meet the Dunstone company man this way, but he
hoped his tone of voice had conveyed his annoyance. He had been
perfectly willing to take a taxi, or rent a car, or hire a chauffeur…
if any or all were necessary; but if Dunstone was sending an automobile
for him, why not send it to the Savoy? It wasn't that he minded the
walk; he just hated to meet people in automobiles in the middle of
congested streets. It was a goddamn nuisance.
The Dunstone man had had a short, succinct explanation that was, for
the Dunstone man, the only reason necessary - for all things: 'Mr
Julian Warfield prefers it this way.'
He spotted the automobile immediately. It had to be Dunstone's -
and/or Warfield's. A St James Rolls-Royce, its glistening black,
hand-tooled body breaking space majestically, anachronistically, among
the petrol-conscious Austins, MGs, and European imports. He waited on
the kerb, ten feet from the crosswalk into the bridge. He would not
gesture or acknowledge the slowly approaching Rolls. He waited until
the car stopped directly in front of him, a chauffeur driving, the rear
window open.
'Mr McAuliff?' said the eager, young-old face in the frame.
'Mr Warfield?' asked McAuliff, knowing that this fiftyish,
precise-looking executive was not.
'Good heavens, no. The, name's Preston. Do hop in; I think we're
holding up the line.'
'Yes, you are.' Alex got into the back seat as Preston moved over.
The Englishman extended his hand.
'It's a pleasure. I'm the one you've been talking to on the
telephone.'
'Yes… Mr Preston.'
'I'm really very sorry for the inconvenience, meeting like this. Old
Julian has his quirks, I'll grant you.'
McAuliff decided he might have misjudged the Dunstone man. 'It was a
little confusing, that's all. If the object was precautionary - for
what reason I can't imagine - he picked a hell of a car to send.'
Preston laughed. 'True. But then, I've learned over the years that
Warfield, like God, moves in mysterious ways that basically are quite
logical. He's really all right. You're having lunch with him, you know.'
'Fine. Where?'
'Belgravia.'
'Aren't we going the wrong way?'
'Julian and God - basically logical, chap.'
The St James Rolls crossed Waterloo, proceeded south to The Cut,
turned left until Blackfriars Road, then left again, over Blackfriars
Bridge and north into Holborn. It was a confusing route.
Ten minutes later the car pulled up to the entrance canopy of a
white stone building with a brass plate to the right of the glass
double doors that read 'SHAFTSBURY ARMS.' The doorman pulled at the
handle and spoke jovially.
'Good afternoon, Mr Preston.'
'Good afternoon, Ralph.'
McAuliff followed Preston into the building, to a bank of three
elevators in the well-appointed hallway. 'Is this Warfield's place?' he
asked, more to pass the moment than for inquiry.
'No, actually. It's mine. Although I won't be joining you for lunch.
However, I trust cook implicitly; you'll be well taken care of.'
'I won't try to follow that… "Julian and God."'
Preston smiled noncommittally as the elevator door opened.
Julian Warfield was talking on the telephone when Preston ushered
McAuliff into the tastefully - elegantly - decorated living room. The
old man was standing by an antique table in front of a tall window
overlooking Belgravia Square. The size of the window, flanked by long
white drapes, emphasized Warfield's shortness. He is really quite a
small man, thought Alex as he acknowledged Warfield's wave with a nod
and a smile.
'You'll send the accrual statistics on to Macintosh, then,' said
Warfield deliberately into the telephone; he was not asking a
question. 'I'm sure he'll disagree, and you can both hammer it out.
Good-bye.' The diminutive old man replaced the receiver and looked over
at Alex.
'Mr McAuliff, is it?' Then he chuckled. 'That was a prime lesson in
business. Employ experts who disagree on just about everything and take
the best arguments from both for a compromise.'
'Good advice generally, I'd say,' replied McAuliff. 'As long as the
experts disagree on the subject matter and not just chemically.'
'You're quick. I like that… Good to see you.' Warfield crossed to
Preston. His walk was like his speech: deliberate, paced slowly.
Mentally confident, physically unsure. 'Thank you for the use of your
flat, Clive. And Virginia, of course. From experience, I know the lunch
will be splendid.'
'Not at all, Julian. I'll be off.'
McAuliff turned his head sharply, without subtlety, and looked at
Preston. The man's first-name familiarity with old Warfield was the
last thing he expected. Clive Preston smiled and walked rapidly out of
the room as Alex watched him, bewildered.
'To answer your unspoken questions,' said Warfield, 'although you
have been speaking with Preston on the telephone, he is not with
Dunstone, Limited, Mr McAuliff.'
Alexander turned back to the diminutive businessman. 'Whenever I
phoned the Dunstone offices for you, I had to give a number for someone
to return the call—'
'Always within a few minutes,' interrupted Warfield. 'We never kept
you waiting; that would have been rude. Whenever you telephoned - four
times, I believe - my secretary informed Mr Preston. At his offices.'
'And the Rolls at Waterloo was Preston's,' said Alex.
'Yes.'
'So if anyone was following me, my business is with Preston. Has
been since I've been in London.'
'That was the object.'
'Why?'
'Self-evident, I should think. We'd rather not have anyone know
we're discussing a contract with you. Our initial call to you in New
York stressed that point, I believe.'
'You said it was confidential. Everyone says that. If you meant it
to this degree, why did you even use the name of Dunstone?'
'Would you have flown over otherwise?'
McAuliff thought for a moment. A week of skiing in Aspen
notwithstanding, there had been several other projects. But
Dunstone was Dunstone, one of the largest corporations in the
international market. 'No, I probably wouldn't have.'
'We were convinced of that. We knew you were about to negotiate with
ITT about a little matter in southern Germany.'
Alex stared at the old man. He couldn't help but smile. 'That, Mr
Warfield, was supposed to be as confidential as anything you might be
considering.'
Warfield returned the good humour. 'Then we know who deals best in
confidence, don't we? ITT is patently obvious… Come, we'll have a
drink, then lunch. I know your preference: Scotch with ice. Somewhat
more ice than I think is good for the system.'
The old man laughed softly and led McAuliff to a mahogany bar across
the room. He made drinks rapidly, his ancient hands moving deftly, in
counterpoint to his walk. He offered Alex a glass and indicated that
they should sit down. 'I've learned quite a bit about you, Mr McAuliff.
Rather fascinating.'
'I heard someone was asking around.'
They were across from one another, in armchairs. At McAuliff's
statement, Warfield took his eyes off his glass and looked sharply,
almost angrily, at Alex. 'I find that hard to believe.'
'Names weren't used, but the information reached me. Eight sources.
Five American, two Canadian, one French.'
'Not traceable to Dunstone.' Warfield's short body seemed
to stiffen; McAuliff understood that he had touched an exposed nerve.
'I said names weren't mentioned.'
'Did you use the Dunstone name in any ensuing
conversations? Tell me the truth, Mr McAuliff.'
'There'd be no reason not to tell the truth,' answered Alex, a touch
disagreeably. 'No, I did not.'
'I believe you.'
'You should.'
'If I didn't, I'd pay you handsomely for your time and suggest you
return to America and take up with ITT.'
'I may do that anyway, mightn't I? I do have that option.'
'You like money.'
'Very much.'
Julian Warfield placed his glass down and brought his thin, small
hands together. 'Alexander T. McAuliff. The "T" is for Tarquin, rarely,
if ever, used. It's not even on your stationery; rumour is you don't
care for it…'
'True. I'm not violent about it.'
'Alexander Tarquin McAuliff, thirty-eight years old. BS, MS, PhD,
but the title of Doctor is used as rarely as his middle name. The
geology departments of several leading American universities, including
California Tech and Columbia, lost an excellent research fellow when Dr
McAuliff decided to put his expertise to more commercial pursuits.' The
man smiled, his expression one of how-am-I-doing; but, again, not a
question.
'Faculty and laboratory pressures are no less aggravating than those
outside. Why not get paid for them?'
'Yes. We agreed you like money?'
'Don't you?'
Warfield laughed, and his laugh was genuine and loud. His thin,
short body fairly shook with pleasure as he brought Alex his glass.
'Excellent reply. Really quite fine.'
'It wasn't that good…'
'But you're interrupting me,' said Warfield as he returned to his
chair. 'It's my intention to impress you.'
'Not about myself, I hope.'
'No. Our thoroughness… You are from a close-knit family, secure
academic surroundings—'
'Is this necessary?' asked McAuliff, fingering his glass,
interrupting the old man.
'Yes, it is,' replied Warfield simply, continuing as though his line
of thought was unbroken. 'Your father was - and is, in retirement - a
highly regarded agro-scientist; your mother, unfortunately deceased, a
delightfully romantic soul adored by all. It was she who gave you the
"Tarquin," and until she died you never denied the initial or the name.
You had an older brother, a pilot, shot down in the last days of the
World War; you yourself made a splendid record in Korea… Upon receipt
of your doctorate, it was assumed that you would continue the family's
academic tradition. Until personal tragedy propelled you out of the
laboratory. A young woman - your fiancee - was killed on the streets of
New York. At night. You blamed yourself… and others. You were to have
met her. Instead, a hastily called, quite unnecessary research meeting
prohibited it… Alexander Tarquin McAuliff fled the university. Am I
drawing an accurate picture?'
'You're invading my privacy. You're repeating information that may
be personal but hardly… classified. Easy to piece together. You're also
extremely obnoxious. I don't think I want to have lunch with you.'
'A few more minutes. Then - it is your decision.'
'It's my decision right now.'
'Of course. Just a bit more… Dr McAuliff embarked on a new career
with extraordinary precision. He hired out to several established
geological-survey firms, where his work was outstanding; then left the
companies and underbid them on upcoming contracts. Industrial
construction knows no national boundaries: Fiat builds in Moscow;
Moscow in Cairo; General Motors in Berlin; British Petroleum in Buenos
Aires; Volkswagen in New Jersey, USA; Renault in Madrid - I could go on
for hours. And everything begins with a single file folder profuse with
complicated technical paragraphs describing what is and what is not
possible in terms of construction upon the land. Such a simple,
taken-for-granted exercise. But without that file, nothing else is
possible.'
'Your few minutes are about up, Warfield. And, speaking for the
community of surveyors, we thank you for acknowledging our necessity.
As you say, we're so often taken for granted.' McAuliff put his glass
down on the table next to his armchair and started to get up.
Warfield spoke quietly, precisely. 'You have twenty-three bank
accounts, including four in Switzerland; I can supply the code numbers
if you like. Others in Prague, Tel Aviv, Montreal, Brisbane, Sao Paulo,
Kingston, Los Angeles, and, of course, New York, among others.'
Alexander remained immobile at the edge of his chair and stared at
the little old man. 'You've been busy.'
'Thorough… Nothing patently illegal; none of the accounts is
enormous. Altogether they total three hundred and eighteen thousand
four hundred-odd US dollars, as of several days ago when you flew from
New York. Unfortunately, the figure is meaningless. Due to
international tax agreements regarding financial transfers, the money
cannot be centralized.'
'Now I know I don't want to have lunch with you.'
'Perhaps not. But how would you like one million dollars? Free and
clear, all American taxes paid. Deposited in the bank of your choice.'
McAuliff continued to stare at Warfield. It was several moments
before he spoke.
'You're serious, aren't you?'
'Utterly.'
'For a survey?'
'Yes.'
'There are five good houses right here in London. For that kind of
money, why call on me? Why not use them?'
'We don't want a firm. We want an individual. A man we have
investigated thoroughly; a man we believe will honour the most
important aspect of the contract. Secrecy.'
'That sounds ominous.'
'Not at all. A financial necessity. If word got out, the speculators
would move in. Land prices would skyrocket, the project would become
untenable. It would be abandoned.'
'What is it? Before I give you my answer, I have to know that.'
'We're planning to build a city. In Jamaica.'
TWO
McAuliff politely rejected Warfield's offer to have Preston's car
brought back to Belgravia for him. Alex wanted to walk, to think in the
cold winter air. It helped him to sort out his thoughts while in
motion; the brisk, chilling winds somehow forced his concentration
inward.
Not that there was so much to think about as to absorb. In a sense,
the hunt was over. The end of the intricate maze was in sight, after
eleven years of complicated wandering. Not for the money per se. But
for money as the conveyor belt to independence.
Complete. Total. Never having to do what he did not wish to do.
Ann's death - murder - had been the springboard. Certainly the
rationalization, he understood that. But the rationalization had solid
roots, beyond the emotional explosion. The research meeting -
accurately described by Warfield as 'quite unnecessary' - was
symptomatic of the academic system.
All laboratory activities were geared to justify whatever grants
were in the offing. God! How much useless activity! How many pointless
meetings! How often useful work went unfinished because a research
grant did not materialize or a department administrator shifted
priorities to achieve more obvious progress for progress-oriented
foundations.
He could not fight the academic system; he was too angry to join its
politics. So he left it.
He could not stand the companies, either. Jesus! A
different set of priorities, leading to only one objective: profit.
Only profit. Projects that didn't produce the most favourable 'profit
picture' were abandoned without a backward glance. Stick to business. Don't waste time.
So he left the companies and went out on his own. Where a man could
decide for himself the price of immediate values. And whether they were
worth it.
All things considered, everything… everything Warfield proposed was
not only correct and acceptable, it was glorious. An unencumbered,
legitimate million dollars for a survey Alex knew he could handle.
He knew vaguely the area in Jamaica to be surveyed: east and south
of Falmouth, on the coast as far as Duncan's Bay; in the interior into
the Cock Pit. It was actually the Cock Pit territory that Dunstone
seemed most interested in: vast sections of uninhabited - in some
cases, unmapped - mountains and jungles. Undeveloped miles ten minutes
by air to the sophistication of Montego Bay, fifteen to the expanding,
exploding New Kingston.
Dunstone would deliver him the specific degree marks within the next
three weeks, during which time he was to assemble his team.
He was back on the Strand now, the Savoy Court several blocks away.
He hadn't resolved anything, really; there was nothing to resolve,
except perhaps the decision to start looking for people at the
university. He was sure there would be no lack of interested
applicants; he only hoped he could find the level of qualification he
needed.
Everything was fine. Really fine.
He walked down the alley into the court, smiled at the doorman, and
passed the thick glass doors of the Savoy. He crossed to the
reservations desk on the right and asked for any messages.
There were none.
But there was something else. The tuxedoed clerk behind the counter
asked him a question.
'Will you be going upstairs, Mr McAuliff?'
'Yes… yes, I'll be going upstairs,' answered Alex, bewildered at the
inquiry. 'Why?'
'I beg your pardon?'
'Why do you ask?' McAuliff smiled.
'Floor service, sir,' replied the man, with intelligence in his
eyes, assurance in his soft British voice. 'In the event of any
cleaning or pressing. These are frightfully busy hours.'
'Of course. Thank you.' Alex smiled again, nodded his appreciation,
and started for the small brass-grilled elevator. He had tried to pry
something else from the Savoy man's eyes, but he could not. Yet he knew
something else was there. In the six years he had been staying at the
hotel, no one had ever asked him if he was 'going upstairs.'
Considering English… Savoy propriety, it was an unlikely question.
Or were his cautions, his Dunstone cautions, asserting themselves
too quickly, too strongly?
Inside his room, McAuliff stripped to shorts, put on a bathrobe, and
ordered ice from the floor steward. He still had most of a bottle of
Scotch on the bureau. He sat in an armchair next to the window and
opened a newspaper, considerately left by room service.
With the swiftness for which the Savoy stewards were known, there
was a knock on his corridor door. McAuliff got out of the chair and
then stopped.
The Savoy stewards did not knock on hallway doors - they let
themselves into the foyers. Room privacy was obtained by locking the
bedroom doors, which opened on to the foyers.
Alex walked rapidly to the door and opened it. There was no steward.
Instead, there was a tall, pleasant-looking middle-aged man in a tweed
overcoat.
'Mr McAuliff?'
'Yes?'
'My name is Holcroft. May I speak with you, sir?'
'Oh? Sure… certainly.' Alex looked down the hallway as he gestured
the man to pass him. 'I rang for ice; I thought you were the steward.'
'Then may I step into your… excuse me, your lavatory, sir? I'd
rather not be seen.'
'What? Are you from Warfield?'
'No, Mr McAuliff. British Intelligence.'
THREE
'That was a sorry introduction, Mr McAuliff. Do you mind if I begin
again?' Holcroft walked into the bedroom-sitting room. Alex dropped ice
cubes into a glass.
'No need to. I've never had anyone knock on my hotel door, say he's
with British Intelligence, and ask to use the bathroom. Has kind of a
quaint ring to it… Drink?'
'Thank you. Short, if you please; a touch of soda will be fine.'
McAuliff poured as requested and handed Holcroft his glass. 'Take
off your coat. Sit down.'
'You're most hospitable. Thank you.' The Britisher removed his tweed
overcoat and placed it carefully on the back of a chair.
'I'm most curious, that's what I am, Mr Holcroft.' McAuliff sat by
the window, the Englishman across from him. 'The clerk at the desk; he
asked if I was going upstairs. That was for you, wasn't it?'
'Yes, it was. He knows nothing, however. He thinks the managers
wished to see you unobtrusively. It's often done that way. Over
financial matters, usually.'
'Thanks very much.'
'We'll set it right, if it disturbs you.'
'It doesn't.'
'I was in the cellars. When word reached me, I came up the service
elevator.'
'Rather elaborate—'
'Rather necessary,' interrupted the Englishman. 'For the past few
days, you've been under continuous surveillance. I don't mean to alarm
you.'
McAuliff paused, his glass halfway to his lips. 'You just have. I
gather the surveillance wasn't yours.'
'Well, you could say we observed - from a distance - both the
followers and their subject.' Holcroft sipped his whiskey
and smiled.
'I'm not sure I like this game,' said McAuliff quietly.
'Neither do we. May I introduce myself more completely?'
'Please do.'
Holcroft removed a black leather identification case from his jacket
pocket, rose from the chair, and crossed to McAuliff. He held out the
flat case and flipped it open. 'There is a telephone number below the
seal. I'd appreciate it if you would place a call for verification, Mr
McAuliff.'
'It's not necessary, Mr Holcroft. You haven't asked me for anything.'
'I may.'
'If you do, I'll call.'
'Yes, I see… Very well.' Holcroft returned to his chair. 'As my
credentials state, I'm with Military Intelligence. What they do not say
is that I have been assigned to the Foreign Office and Inland Revenue.
I'm a financial analyst.'
'In the Intelligence service?' Alex got out of his chair and went to
the ice bucket and the whiskey. He gestured at them; Holcroft shook his
head. 'That's unusual, isn't it? I can understand a bank or a brokerage
office, not the cloak-and-dagger business.'
'The vast majority of… Intelligence gathering is allied with
finance, Mr McAuliff. In greater or lesser degrees of subtlety, of
course.'
'I stand corrected.' Alex replenished his drink and realized that
the ensuing silence was Holcroft's waiting for him to return to his
chair. 'When I think about it, I see what you mean,' he said, sitting
down.
'A few minutes ago, you asked if I were with Dunstone, Limited.'
'I don't think I said that.'
'Very well. Julian Warfield - same thing.'
'It was a mistake on my part. I'm afraid I don't remember asking you
anything.'
'Yes, of course. That's an essential part of your agreement. There
can be no reference whatsoever to Mr Warfield or Dunstone or any one
or thing
related. We understand. Quite frankly, at this juncture we approve
wholeheartedly. Among other reasons, should you violate the demands of
secrecy, we think you'd be killed instantly.'
McAuliff lowered his glass and stared at the Englishman, who spoke
so calmly, precisely. 'That's preposterous,' he said simply.
'That's Dunstone, Limited,' replied Holcroft softly.
'Then I think you'd better explain.'
'I shall do my best… To begin with, the geophysical survey that
you've contracted for is the second such team to be sent out—'
'I wasn't told that,' interrupted Alex.
'With good reason. They're dead. I should say, "disappeared and
dead." No one's been able to trace the Jamaican members; the whites are
dead, of that we are sure.'
'How so? I mean, how can you be sure?'
'The best of all reasons, Mr McAuliff. One of the men was a British
agent.'
McAuliff found himself mesmerized by the soft-spoken Intelligence
man's narrative. Holcroft might have been an Oxford don going over the
blurred complexities of a dark Elizabethan drama, patiently clarifying
each twist of an essentially inexplicable plot. He supplied conjectures
where knowledge failed, making sure that McAuliff understood that they
were conjectures.
Dunstone, Limited, was not simply an industrial-development company;
that was to say, its objectives went far beyond those of a
conglomerate. And it was not solely British, as its listed board of
directors implied. In actuality, Dunstone, Limited, London, was the
'corporate' headquarters of an organization of international financiers
dedicated to building global cartels beyond the interferences and
controls of the European Common Market and its trade alliances. That
was to say - by conjecture - eliminating the economic intervention of
governments: Washington, London, Berlin, Paris, The Hague, and all
other points of the financial compass. Ultimately, these were to be
reduced to the status of clients, not origins of resource or
negotiation.
'You're saying, in essence, that Dunstone is in the process of
setting up its own government.'
'Precisely. A government based solely on economic trade factors. A
concentration of financial resources unheard of since the pharaohs.
Along with this economic catastrophe, and no less important, is the
absorption of the government of Jamaica by Dunstone, Limited. Jamaica
is Dunstone's projected base of operations. They can succeed, Mr
McAuliff.'
Alex put his glass on the wide windowsill. He began slowly, trying
to find words, looking out at the slate rooftops converging into the
Savoy Court. 'Let me try to understand… from what you've told me and
from what I know. Dunstone anticipates investing heavily in Jamaican
development. All right, we agree on that, and the figures are
astronomical. Now, in exchange for this investment, they expect to be
awarded a lot of clout from a grateful Kingston government. At least,
that's what I'd expect if I were Dunstone. The normal tax credits,
importing concessions, employment breaks, real estate… general
incentives. Nothing new.' McAuliff turned his head and looked at
Holcroft. 'I'm not sure I see any financial catastrophe… except, maybe,
an English financial catastrophe.'
'You stood corrected; I stand rebuked,' said Holcroft. 'But only in
a minor way. You're quite perceptive; it's true that our concerns were
- at first - UK-oriented. English perversity, if you will.
Dunstone is an important factor in Britain's balance of trade. We'd
hate to lose it.'
'So you build a conspiracy—'
'Now, just a minute, Mr McAuliff,' the agent broke in, without
raising his voice. 'The highest echelons of the British government do
not invent conspiracies. If Dunstone were what it is
purported to be, those responsible in Downing Street would fight openly
for our interests. I'm afraid that is not the case. Dunstone reaches
into extremely sensitive areas in London, Berlin, Paris, Rome… and,
most assuredly, in Washington. But I shall return to that… I'd like to
concentrate on Jamaica for the moment. You used the terms "concessions."
"tax breaks"… "clout" and "incentives." I say "absorption." '
'Words.'
'Laws, Mr McAuliff. Sovereign; sanctioned by prime
ministers and cabinets and parliament. Think for a minute, Mr McAuliff.
An existing, viable government in a strategically located independent
nation controlled by a huge industrial monopoly with world markets.
It's not outlandish. It's around the corner.'
Alex did think about it. For more than a minute. Prodded by
Holcroft's gently spoken, authoritatively phrased 'clarifications.'
Without disclosing MI5's methods of discovery, the Britisher
explained Dunstone's modus operandi. Enormous sums of capital
had been transferred from Swiss banks to Kingston's King Street, that
short stretch of the block that housed major international banking
institutions. But the massive cash flow was not deposited in British,
American or Canadian banks. Those went begging, while the less secure
Jamaican banks were stunned by an influx of hard money unheard of in
their histories.
Few knew that the vast new Jamaican riches were solely Dunstone's.
But for these few, proof was supplied by the revolving transfers of a
thousand accounts within an eight-hour business day.
Heads spun in astonishment. A few heads. Selected men in
extraordinarily high places were shown incontrovertibly that a new
force had invaded Kingston, a force so powerful that Wall Street and
Whitehall would tremble at its presence.
'If you know this much, why don't you move in? Stop them.'
'Not possible,' answered Holcroft. 'All transactions are covered;
there's no one to accuse. It's too complex a web of financing. Dunstone
is masterminded by Warfield. He operates on the premise that a closed
society is efficient only when its various arms have little or no
knowledge of each other.'
'In other words, you can't prove your case and—'
'We cannot expose what we cannot prove,' interrupted Holcroft. 'That
is correct.'
'You could threaten. I mean, on the basis of what you know damn well
is true, you could raise one hell of a cry… But you can't chance it. It
goes back to those "sensitive" areas in Berlin, Washington, Paris, et
cetera. Am I correct about that, too?'
'You are.'
'They must be goddamn sensitive.'
'We believe they comprise an international cross section of
extraordinarily powerful men.'
'In governments?'
'Allied with major industries.'
'For instance?'
Holcroft held Alex's eyes with his own. His message was clear. 'You
understand that what I say is merely… conjecture.'
'All right. And my memory is short.'
'Very well.' The Britisher got out of the chair and walked around
it. His voice remained quiet, but there was no lack of precision. 'Your
own country: conceivably the Vice-President of the United States or
someone in his office and, certainly, unknown members of the Senate and
the President's cabinet. England: prominent figures in the House of
Commons and undoubtedly various department directors at Inland Revenue.
Germany: ranking vorsitzen in the Bundestag. France: elitist
holdovers from the pre-Algerian Gaullists… Such men as I have
described must exist relative to Warfield. The progress made
by Dunstone would have been impossible without influence in such
places. Of that we are certain.'
'But you don't know who, specifically.'
'No.'
'And you think, somehow, I can help you?'
'We do, Mr McAuliff.'
'With all the resources you have, you come to me? I've been
contracted for a Dunstone field survey, nothing else.'
'The second Dunstone survey, Mr McAuliff.'
Alexander stared at the Englishman.
'And you say that team is dead.'
Holcroft returned to his chair and sat down once more. 'Yes, Mr
McAuliff. Which means Dunstone has an adversary. One that's either
quite powerful or very knowledgeable or both. And we haven't the
slightest idea what it is… who they are. Only that it exists, they
exist. We wish to make contact with those who want the same thing we
do. We can guarantee the safety of your expedition. You are the key.
Without you, we're stymied. Without us, you and your people might well
be in extreme jeopardy.'
McAuliff shot out of the chair and stood above the British agent. He
took several short, deep breaths and walked purposefully away from
Holcroft; then he aimlessly paced the Savoy room. The Englishman seemed
to understand Alex's action. He let the moment subside; he said nothing.
'Jesus! You're something, Holcroft!' McAuliff returned to
his chair, but he did not sit down. He reached for his drink on the
windowsill, not so much for the whiskey as to hold the glass. 'You come
in here, build a case against Warfield by way of an economics lecture,
and then calmly tell me that I've signed what amounts to my last
contract if I don't cooperate with you.'
'That's rather black and white, chap…'
'That's rather exactly what you just said! Suppose you're mistaken?'
'We're not.'
'You know goddamn well I can't prove that either. If I go
back to Warfield and tell him about this little informal chat, I'll
lose the contract the second I open my mouth. And the largest fee any
surveyor was ever offered.'
'May I ask the amount? Just academic interest.'
McAuliff looked at Holcroft. 'What would you say to a million
dollars?'
'I'd say I'm surprised he didn't offer two. Or three… Why not? You
wouldn't live to spend it.'
Alex held the Englishman's eyes. 'Translated, that means if
Dunstone's enemies don't kill me, Dunstone will?'
'It's what we believe. There's no other logical conclusion. Once
your work is finished.'
'I see…' McAuliff walked slowly to the whiskey and poured
deliberately, as if measuring. He did not offer anything to Holcroft.
'If I confront Warfield with what you've told me, you're really saying
that he'd…'
'Kill you? Are those the words that stick, Mr McAuliff?'
'I don't have much cause to employ those kind of words, Mr Holcroft.'
'Naturally. No one ever gets used to them… Yes, we think he would
kill you. Have you killed, of course. After picking your brains.'
McAuliff leaned against the wall, staring at the whiskey in his
glass, but not drinking. 'You're not giving me an alternative, are you?'
'Of course we are. I can leave these rooms; we never met.'
'Suppose someone sees you? That surveillance you spoke of.'
'They won't see me; you will have to take my word for that.'
Holcroft leaned back in the chair. He brought his fingers together
pensively. 'Of course, under the circumstances, we'd be in no position
to offer protection. From either faction—'
'Protection from the unprovable,' interjected Alex softly.
'Yes.'
'No alternative…' McAuliff pushed himself away from the wall and
took several swallows of whiskey. 'Except one, Holcroft. Suppose I
cooperate, on the basis that there may be substance to your
charges… or theories, or whatever you call them. But I'm not
accountable to you.'
'I'm not sure I understand.'
'I don't accept orders blindly. No puppet strings. I want that
condition - on the record. If that's the phrase.'
'It must be. I've used it frequently.'
McAuliff crossed in front of the Englishman to the arm of his chair.
He sat on the edge. 'Now, put it in simple words. What am I supposed to
do?'
Holcroft's voice was calm and precise. 'There are two objectives.
The first is Dunstone's opposition; those who destroyed - killed the
first survey team. It is conceivable that they will lead you to the
second and, obviously, primary objective: the names of Dunstone's
unknown hierarchy. The faceless men in London, Paris, Berlin,
Washington… even one or two. We'd be grateful for anything specific.'
'How do I begin?'
'With very little, I'm afraid. But we do have something. It's only a
word, a name, perhaps. We don't know. But we have every reason to think
it's terribly important.'
'A word?'
'Yes…"Halidon."'
FOUR
It was like working in two distinct spheres of reality, neither
completely real. During the days, McAuliff conferred with the men and
women in the University of London's geophysics laboratories, gathering
personnel data for his survey team. The university was Dunstone's cover
- along with the Royal Historical Society - and neither was aware that
Dunstone's finances were behind the expedition.
During the nights, into the early morning hours, he met with R. C.
Holcroft, British Intelligence, in small, guarded houses on dimly lit
streets in Kensington and Chelsea. These locations were reached by two
changes of vehicles - taxis driven by MI5. And for each meeting Alex
was
provided with a cover story regarding his whereabouts: a dinner party,
a girl, a crowded restaurant he was familiar with; nothing out of the
ordinary, everything easily explained and verifiable.
The sessions with Holcroft were divided into areas of instruction:
the political and financial climate of Jamaica, MI5 contacts throughout
the island, and basic skills - with instruments - in communication and
counter-surveillance.
At several sessions, Holcroft brought in West Indian 'specialists' -
black agents ,who were capable of answering just about any question
McAuliff might raise. McAuliff had few questions; he had surveyed for
the Kaiser bauxite interests near Oracabessa a little over a year ago,
a fact he suspected had led Julian Warfield to him.
When they were alone, R. C. Holcroft droned on about the attitudes
and reactions Alex should foster. Always build on part of the truth… keeping it simple… the basics
easily confirmed… You'll find it quite acceptable to operate on different levels…
naturally, instinctively. Your concentration will separate
independently… Very rapidly your personal antennae will be activated… second
nature. You'll fall into a rhythm… the connecting link between your
divided objectives…
The British agent was never emphatic, simply redundant. Over and
over again, he repeated the phrases, with minor variations in the words.
Alex understood. Holcroft was providing him with fundamentals: tools
and confidence.
'Your contact in Kingston will be given you in a few days; we're
still refining. Kingston's a mess; trust isn't easily come by there.'
'Whose trust?' asked McAuliff.
'Good point,' replied the agent. 'Don't dwell on it. That's our job.
Memorize everyone else.'
Alex looked at the typewritten names on the paper that was not to be
removed from the house in Kensington. 'You've got a lot of people on
your payroll.'
'A few too many. Those that are crossed out were on double rosters.
Ours and the CIA's. Your Central Intelligence Agency has become too
political in recent years.'
'Are you concerned about leaks?'
'Yes. Dunstone, Limited, is alive in Washington. Elusive, but very
much alive.'
The mornings found him entering the other sphere of reality, the
University of London. He discovered that it was easier than he'd
thought to shut out the previous night's concerns. Holcroft's theory of
divided objectives was borne out; he did fall into a rhythm. His
concentration was now limited to professional concerns - the building
of his survey team.
It was agreed that the number should not exceed eight, preferably
fewer. The areas of expertise would be the normal ones: shale,
limestone, and bedrock stratification; water and gas-pocket analyses;
vegetation - soil and botanical research; and finally, because the
survey extended into the interior regions of the Cock Pit country,
someone familiar with the various dialects and outback customs.
Warfield had thought this last was superfluous; Alex knew better.
Resentments ran high in Jamaica.
McAuliff had made up his mind about one member of the team, a soil
analyst from California named Sam Tucker. Sam was an immense, burly man
in his fifties, given to whatever excesses could be found in any
immediate vicinity, but a top professional in his field. He was also
the most reliable man Alex had ever known, a strong friend who had
worked surveys with him from Alaska to last year's Kaiser job in
Oracabessa. McAuliff implied that if Julian Warfield withheld approval
from Sam, he might have to find himself another surveyor.
It was a hollow threat, all things considered, but it was worth the
embarrassment of having to back down. Alex wanted Sam with him in
Jamaica. The others would be new, unproven; Tucker had worn well over
the years. He could be trusted.
Warfield ran a Dunstone check on Sam Tucker and agreed there was
nothing prejudicial beyond certain minor idiosyncrasies. But Sam was to
be no different from any other member; none was to be informed of
Dunstone's interest. Obviously.
None would be. Alex meant it. More than Warfield realized. If there
was any truth to R. C. Holcroft's astonishing pronouncements.
Everyone on the survey would be told the same story. Given a set of
facts engineered by Dunstone, Limited. Even the organizations involved
accepted the facts as truth; there was no reason not to. Financial
grants were not questioned; they were academic holy writ. Coveted,
revered, never debated.
The geological survey had been made possible through a grant from
the Royal Historical Society, encouraged by the Commonwealth Activities
Committee, House of Lords. The expedition was to be a joint endeavour
of the University of London and the Jamaican Ministry of Education.
All salaries, expenses, disbursements of any kind were to be made
through the bursar's office at the university. The Royal Society would
establish lines of bank credit, and the university was to draw on these
funds.
The reason for the survey was compatible with the endeavours of the
Commonwealth Committee at Lords, whose members peopled and paid for
most royal societies. It was a patrimonial gift to the new, independent
nation -another not-to-be-forgotten link with Britannia. A study which
would be acknowledged in textbooks for years to come. For, according to
the Jamaican Ministry, there were no records of this particular
territory having been subjected to a geophysical survey of any
dimensions.
Obviously.
And if there were, certainly no one was going to bring them up.
Academic holy writ.
The university rip-off. One did not question.
The selection of Alexander McAuliff for the post of survey director
was acknowledged to be an embarrassment to both the society and the
university. But the American was the Jamaican Ministry's choice. One
suffered such insults from the colonies.
One took the money; one did not debate.
Holy writ.
Everything was just complicated enough to be academically viable,
thought McAuliff. Julian Warfield understood the environs through which
he manoeuvred.
As did R. C. Holcroft of British Intelligence.
And Alex began to realize that he would have to catch up. Both
Dunstone, Limited, and MI5 were committed to specific objectives. He
could get lost in those commitments.
In some ways, he had lost already.
He intended doing something about that in the not-too-distant
future. Certain… things would have to be made clear.
But choosing the team was his immediate concern.
McAuliffs personnel approach was one he had used often enough to
know it worked. He would not interview anyone whose work he had not
read thoroughly; anyone he did interview had already proven himself on
paper. Beyond the specific areas of expertise, he cared about
adaptability to the physical and climatic requirements, and to the
give-and-take of close-quarters association.
He had done his work. He was ready.
'My secretary said you wanted to see me, Dr McAuliff.' The speaker
at the door was the chairman of the geophysics department, a
bespectacled, gaunt academician who tried not to betray his resentment
of Alex. It was obvious that the man felt cheated by both the Royal
Society and Kingston for not having been chosen for McAuliff's job. He
had recently completed an excellent survey in Anguilla; there were too
many similarities between that assignment and the Jamaican grant for
comfort.
'Good Lord,' said Alex. 'I expected to come to your office.' He
crossed to his desk and smiled awkwardly. He had been standing by the
single window, looking out over a miniature quadrangle, watching
students carrying books, thankful that he was no longer part of that
world. 'I think I'll be ready to start the interviews this afternoon.'
'So soon?'
'Thanks mainly to you, Professor Ralston. Your recommendations were
excellent.' McAuliff wasn't being polite; the academician's candidates
were good - on paper. Of the ten final prospects, exactly half were
from Ralston; the remaining five were free-lancers highly thought of by
two London survey firms. 'I'm inclined just to take your people without
seeing any others,' continued Alex, now being polite. 'But the Kingston
Ministry is adamant that I interview these.' McAuliff handed Ralston a
sheet of paper with the five non-university names.
'Oh, yes. I recognize several,' said Ralston, his voice now
pleasantly acknowledging Alex's compliment. 'A couple here are… a
couple, you know.'
'What?'
'Man-and-wife team. The Jensens.'
'There's one Jensen. Who's the woman?'
'R. L. Wells. That's Ruth Wells, Jensen's wife.'
'I didn't realize… I can't say that fact is in their favour.'
'Why not?'
'I'm not sure,' answered Alex sincerely. 'I've never had a married
couple on a survey. Silly reaction, isn't it? Do you know anybody else
there?'
'One fellow. I'd rather not comment.'
'Then I wish you would.'
'Ferguson. James Ferguson. He was a student of mine. Very outspoken
chap. Quite opinionated, if you know what I mean.'
'But he's a botanist, a plant specialist, not a geology man.'
'Survey training; geophysics was his curriculum secondary. Of
course, it was a number of years ago.'
McAuliff sorted out some papers on the desk. 'It couldn't have been
too many. He's only been on three tours, all in the past four years.'
'It wasn't, actually. And you should see him. He's considered quite
good, I'm told.'
'Here are your people,' said Alex, offering a second page to
Ralston. 'I chose five out of the eight you submitted. Any more
surprises there? Incidentally, I hope you approve.'
Ralston read the list, adjusting his spectacles and pursing his lips
as he did so. 'Yes, I thought you'd select these. You realize, of
course, that this Whitehall chap is not one of us. He was recommended
by the West Indies Studies. Brilliant fellow, according to the chairs.
Never met him myself. Makes quite a lot of money on the lecture
circuits.'
'He's black, isn't he?'
'Oh, certainly. He knows every tongue, every dialect, every cultural
normality and aberration in the Antilles. His doctoral thesis traced no
fewer than twenty-seven African tribes to the islands. From the
Bushwadie to the Coromantees. His research of Indian-African
integration is the standard reference. He's quite a dandy, too, I
believe.'
'Anyone else you want to talk about?'
'No, not actually. You'll have a difficult time deciding between
your shale-bedrock experts. You've two very decent ones here. Unless
your… immediate reactions take precedence. One way or the other.'
'I don't understand.'
Ralston smiled. 'It would be presumptuous of me to comment further.'
And then the professor added quickly, 'Shall I have one of our girls
set up the appointments?'
'Thanks, I'd appreciate it. If schedules can be organized with all
ten, I'd like an hour apiece over the next few days; whatever order is
convenient for everyone.'
'An hour…'
'I'll call back those I want to talk with further - no sense in
wasting everyone's time.'
'Yes, of course.'
One applicant disqualified himself the moment he walked into
McAuliff's cubicle. The fact that he was more drunk than sober at one
o'clock in the afternoon might have been explained, but, instead, it
was used as the excuse to eliminate him for a larger problem: He was
crippled in his right leg. Three men were crossed off for identical
conditions: Each was obviously hostile to West Indians - a spreading
English virus, Britain's parallel to Americus Redneckus.
The Jensens - Peter Jensen and Ruth Wells - were delightful
surprises, singly and together. They were in their early fifties,
bright, confident, and good-natured. A childless couple, they were
financially secure and genuinely interested both in each other and in
their work. His expertise was ore minerals; hers, the sister science of
palaeontology - fossils. His had direct application, hers was removed
but academically justifiable.
'Might I ask you some questions, Dr McAuliff?' Peter Jensen packed
his pipe, his voice pleasant.
'By all means.'
'Can't say that I know much about Jamaica, but this seems like a
damned curious trip. I'm not sure I understand - what's the point?'
Alex was grateful for the opportunity to recite the explanation
created by Dunstone, Limited. He watched the ore man closely as he
spoke, relieved to see the light of recognition in the geologist's
eyes. When he finished, he paused and added, 'I don't know if that
clears up anything.'
'Oh, my word, it certainly does, chap. Burke's Peerage strikes
again!' Peter Jensen chuckled, glancing at his wife. 'The
royal H has been hard
pressed to find something to do. Its members at
Lords simply provided it. Good show… I trust the university will make a
pound or two.'
'I'm afraid the budget's not that loose.'
'Really?' Peter Jensen held his pipe as he looked at McAuliff. 'Then
perhaps I don't understand. You'll forgive me, but you're not
known in the field as a particularly inexpensive director… quite
rightfully, let me add; your reputation precedes you.'
'From the Balkans to Australia,' added Ruth Wells Jensen, her
expression showing minor irritation with her husband. 'And if you have
a separate arrangement, it's none of Peter's bloody business.'
Alex laughed softly. 'You're kind, both of you. But there's nothing
special. I got caught, it's as simple as that. I've worked for
companies on the island; I hope to again. Often. All geophysical
certificates are issued by Kingston, and Kingston asked for me. Let's
call it an investment.'
Again McAuliff watched Peter Jensen closely; he had rehearsed the
answer. The Britisher looked once more at his wife. Briefly. Then he
chuckled, as he had done seconds before.
'I'd do the same, old chap. But God help the survey I was director
on.'
'It's one I'd avoid like a May Day in Trafalgar,' said Ruth,
matching her husband's quiet laugh. 'Who have you set, if it's proper
to ask. Anyone we might know?'
'Nobody yet. I've really just started—'
'Well,' interrupted Peter Jensen, his eyes alive with humour, 'since
you suffer from inadequate freight charges, I should tell you we'd
rather not be separated. Somewhat used to each other by now. If you're
interested in one of us, the other would take half-till to straggle
along.'
Whatever doubts that remained for Alex were dispelled by Ruth Wells
Jensen's words. She mimicked her husband's professional tones with good
natured accuracy. 'Half-till, old chap, can be negotiated. Our flat's
damned cold this time of year.'
The Jensens would be hired.
The third non-university name, James Ferguson, had been accurately
described by Ralston as outspoken and opinionated. These traits,
however, were the results of energy and impatience, it seemed to
McAuliff. Ferguson was young - twenty-six - and was not the sort to
survive, much less thrive in an academic environment. Alex recognized
in Ferguson much of his younger self: consummate interest in his
subject, intolerance of the research world in which it was studied. A
contradiction, if not a conflict of objectives. Ferguson free-lanced
for agro-industry companies, and his best recommendation was that he
rarely was out of work, in a market not famous for excessive
employment. James Ferguson was one of the best vegetation specialists
around.
'I'd love to get back to Jamaica,' said the young man within seconds
after the preliminary interview began. 'I was in Port Maria for the
Craft Foundation two years ago. It's my judgment the whole bloody
island is in the middle of a gold mine if the fruit and synthetic
industries would allow development.'
'What's the gold?' asked McAuliff.
'The baracoa fibres. In the second growth stages. A banana strain
could be developed that would send the nylon and the tricot boys into
panic, to say nothing of the fruit shippers.'
'Can you prove it?'
'Damn near did,I think. That's why I was thrown out by the
foundation.'
'You were thrown out?'
'Quite unceremoniously. No sense hiding the fact; don't care to,
really. They told me to stick to business. Can you imagine? You'll
probably run across a few negatives about me, if you're interested.'
'I'm interested, Mr Ferguson.'
The interview with Charles Whitehall disturbed McAuliff. That was to
say, the man disturbed him, not the quality of information received.
Whitehall was a black cynic, a now-Londoner whose roots and expertise
were in the West Indies but whose outlook was aggressively
self-perpetuating. His appearance startled McAuliff. For a man who had
written three volumes of Caribbean history, whose work was, in
Ralston's words, 'the standard reference,' Charles Whitehall looked
barely as old as James Ferguson.
'Don't let my appearance fool you, Mr McAuliff,' said Whitehall,
upon entering the cubicle and extending his hand to Alex. 'My tropic
hue covers the years better than paler skin. I'm forty-two years old.'
'You read my thoughts.'
'Not necessarily. I'm used to the reaction,' replied the black,
sitting down, smoothing his expensive blazer, and crossing his legs,
which were encased in flared pin-striped trousers.
'Since you don't waste words, Dr Whitehall, neither will I. Why are
you interested in this survey? As I gather, you can make a great deal
more money on the lecture circuit. A geophysical survey isn't the most
lucrative employment.'
'Let's say the financial aspects are secondary; one of the few times
in my life that they will be, perhaps.' Whitehall spoke while removing
a silver cigarette case from his pocket. 'To tell you the truth, Mr
McAuliff, there's a certain ego fulfillment in returning to one's
country as an expert under the aegis of the Royal Historical Society.
It's really as simple as that.'
Alex believed the man. For, as he read him, Whitehall was a scholar
far more honoured abroad than at home. It seemed that Charles Whitehall
wanted to achieve an acceptance commensurate with his scholarship that
had been denied him in the intellectual - or was it social? - houses of
Kingston.
'Are you familiar with the Cock Pit country?'
'As much as anyone who isn't a runner. Historically and culturally,
much more so, of course.'
'What's a runner?'
'Runners are hill people. From the mountain communities. They hire
out as guides… when you can find one. They're primitives, really. Who
have you hired for the survey?'
'What?' Alex's thoughts were on runners.
'I asked who was going with you. On the survey team. I'd be
interested.'
'Well… not all the posts have been filled. There's a couple named
Jensen - ores and palaeo; a young botanist, Ferguson. An American
friend of mine, a soil analyst, name of Sam Tucker.'
'I've heard of Jensen, I believe. I'm not sure, but I think so. I
don't know the others.'
'Did you expect to?'
'Frankly, yes. Royal Society projects generally attract very
high-calibre people.' Whitehall delicately tapped his cigarette on the
rim of an ashtray.
'Such as yourself?' asked McAuliff, smiling.
'I'm not modest,' replied the black scholar, returning Alex's smile
with an open grin. 'And I'm very much interested. I think I could be of
service to you.'
So did McAuliff.
The second shale-bedrock analyst was listed as A. Gerrard Booth.
Booth was a university applicant personally recommended by Ralston in
the following manner:
'I promised Booth I'd bring these papers and articles to your
attention. I do believe Booth would be a fine asset to the survey.'
Ralston had given McAuliff a folder filled with A. Gerrard Booth's
studies of sheet strata in such diverse locations as Iran, Corsica, and
southern Spain. Alex recalled having read several of the articles in
the National Geologist, and remembered them as lucid and
professional. Booth was good; Booth was better than good.
Booth was also a woman. A. Gerrard Booth was known to her colleagues
as Alison Booth; no one bothered with the middle name.
She had one of the most genuine smiles McAuliff had ever seen. It
was more a half laugh - one might even say masculine, but the word was
loudly denied by her complete femininity. Her eyes were blue and alive
and level - the eyes of a professional. Her handshake was firm, again
professional. Her light brown hair was long and soft and slightly waved
- brushed repeatedly, thought Alex, for the interview. Her age was
anywhere from late twenties to middle thirties; there was no way to
tell by observation, except that there were laugh lines at the corners
of her eyes.
Alison Booth was not only good and a woman; she was also, at least
on first meeting, a very attractive, outgoing person. The term
'professional' kept recurring to McAuliff as they spoke.
'I made Roily promise to omit the fact that I was a woman. Don't
hold him responsible.'
'Were you so convinced I was anti-liberation?'
The girl raised her hand and brushed her long, soft hair away from
the side of her lovely face. 'No preformed hostility, Dr McAuliff. I
just understand the practical obstacles. It's part of my job to
convince you I'm qualified.'
And then, as if she were aware of the possible double-entendre,
Alison Booth stopped smiling and smoothed her skirt… professionally.
'In field work and the laboratory, I'm sure you are
qualified…'
'Any other considerations would be extraneous, I should think,' said
the girl, with a slight trace of English aloofness.
'Not necessarily. There are environmental problems, degrees of
physical discomfort, if not hardship.'
'I can't conceive of Jamaica being in that league with Iran or
Corsica. I've surveyed in those places.'
'I know—'
'Roily told me,' interrupted Alison Booth, 'that you would not
accept tour references until you had interviewed us.'
'Group isolation tends to create fallible judgments. Insupportable
relationships. I've lost good men in the past because other good men
reacted negatively to them for the wrong reasons.'
'What about women?'
'I used the term inclusively, not exclusively.'
'I have very good references, Dr McAuliff. For the right reasons.'
'I'll request them.'
'I have them with me.' Alison unbuckled the large leather purse on
her lap, extracted two business envelopes, and placed them on the edge
of McAuliff's desk. 'My references, Dr McAuliff.'
Alex laughed as he reached for the envelopes. He looked over at the
girl; her eyes locked with his. There was both a good-humoured
challenge and a degree of supplication in her expression. 'Why is this
survey so important to you, Miss Booth?'
'Because I'm good and I can do the job,' she answered simply.
'You're employed by the university, aren't you?'
'On a part-time basis, lecture and laboratory. I'm not permanent… by
choice, incidentally.'
'Then it's not money.' McAuliff made a statement.
'I could use it; I'm not desperate, however.'
'I can't imagine your being desperate anywhere,' he said, with a
partial smile. And then Alex saw - or thought he saw - a trace of a
cloud across the girl's eyes, an instant of concern that left as
rapidly as it had come. He instinctively pressed further. 'But why this
tour? With your qualifications, I'm sure there are others. Probably
more interesting, certainly more money.'
'The timing is propitious,' she replied softly, with precise
hesitation. 'For personal reasons that have absolutely nothing to do
with my qualifications.'
'Are there reasons why you want to spend a prolonged period in
Jamaica?'
'Jamaica has nothing to do with it. You could be surveying Outer
Mongolia for all that it matters.'
'I see.' Alex replaced the two envelopes on the desk. He
intentionally conveyed a trace of indifference. The girl reacted.
'Very well, Dr McAuliff. It's no secret among my friends.' The girl
held her purse on her lap. She did not grip it; there was no intensity
about her whatsoever. When she spoke, her voice was steady, as were her
eyes. She was the total professional again. 'You called me "Miss
Booth"; that's incorrect. "Booth" is my married name. I regret to say
the marriage was not successful; it was terminated recently. The
solicitousness of well-meaning people during such times can be boring.
I'd prefer to be out of touch.'
McAuliff returned her steady gaze, trying to evoke something beyond
her words. There was something, but he would not allow his
prying further; her expression told him that… professionally.
'It's not relevant. I apologize. But I appreciate your telling me.'
'Is your… responsibility satisfied?'
'Well, my curiosity, at any rate.' Alex leaned forward, elbows on
the desk, his hands folded under his chin. 'Beyond that, and I hope
it's not improper, you've made it possible for me to ask you to have
dinner with me.'
'I think that would depend on the degree of relevance you ascribed
to my acceptance.' Alison's voice was polite but not cold. And there
was that lovely humour in her eyes.
'In all honesty, I do make it a point to have dinner or a
long lunch… even a fair amount of drinks with those I'm thinking about
hiring. But right now, I'm reluctant to admit it.'
'That's a very disarming reply, Dr McAuliff,' said the girl, her
lips parted, laughing her half laugh. 'I'd be delighted to have dinner
with you.'
'I'll do my damnedest not to be solicitous. I don't think it's
necessary at all.'
'And I'm sure you're never boring.'
'Not relevantly.'
FIVE
McAuliff stood on the corner of High Holborn and Chancery and looked
at his watch. The radium hands glowed in the mist-laden London
darkness; it was 11.40. Preston's Rolls-Royce was ten minutes late. Or
perhaps it would not appear at all. His instructions were that if the
car did not arrive by midnight, he was to return to the Savoy. Another
meeting would be scheduled.
There were times when he had to remind himself whose furtive
commands he was following, wondering whether he in turn was being
followed. It was a degrading way to live, he reflected: the constant
awareness that locked a man into a pocket of fear. All the fictions
about the shadow world of conspiracy omitted the fundamental indignity
intrinsic to the world. There was no essential independence; it was
strangling.
This particular evening's rendezvous with Warfield had necessitated
a near-panic call to Holcroft, for the British agent had scheduled a
meeting himself, for one in the morning. That is, McAuliff had
requested it, and Holcroft had set the time and the place. And at 10.20
that night the call had come from Dunstone: Be at High Holborn and
Chancery at 11.30, an hour and ten minutes from then.
Holcroft could not, at first, be found. His highly secret, private
telephone at the Foreign Office simply did not answer. Alex had been
given no other number, and Holcroft had told him repeatedly never to
call the FO and leave his name. Nor was he ever to place a call to the
agent from his rooms at the Savoy. Holcroft did not trust the
switchboards at either establishment.
So Alex had to go out on to the Strand, into succeeding pubs and
chemists' shops to public telephones until Holcroft's line answered. He
was sure he was being observed - by someone - and thus he had to
pretend annoyance each time he hung up after an unanswered call. He
found that he had built the fabric of a lie, should Warfield question
him. His lie was that he was trying to reach Alison Booth and cancel a
lunch date they had for the following day. They did have a lunch date
which he had no intention of cancelling, but the story possessed
sufficient truth to be valid. Build on part of the truth… Attitude and reaction. MI5.
Finally, Holcroft's telephone was answered, by a man who stated
casually that he had gone out for a late supper.
A late supper! Good God!… Global cartels, international collusion in
the highest places, financial conspiracies, and a late supper.
In reasoned tones, as opposed to McAuliff's anxiety, the man told
him that Holcroft would be alerted. Alex was not satisfied; he insisted
that Holcroft be at his telephone - if he had to wait all night - until
he, Alex, made contact after the Warfield appointment.
It was 11.45. Still no St James Rolls-Royce. He looked around at the
few pedestrians on High Holborn, walking through the heavy mist. He
wondered which, if any, was concerned with him.
The pocket of fear.
He wondered, too, about Alison. They had had dinner for the third
night in succession; she had claimed she had a lecture to prepare, and
so the evening was cut short. Considering the complications that
followed, it was a good thing.
Alison was a strange girl. The professional who covered her
vulnerability well; who never strayed far from that circle of quiet
humour that protected her. The half laugh, the warm blue eyes, the
slow, graceful movement of her hands… these were her shields, somehow.
There was no problem in selecting her as his first choice…
professionally. She was far and away the best applicant for the team.
Alex considered himself one of the finest rock-strata specialists on
both continents, yet he wasn't sure he wanted to pit his expertise
against hers. Alison Gerrard Booth was good.
And lovely.
And he wanted her in Jamaica.
He had prepared an argument for Warfield, should Dunstone's goddamn
security computers reject her. The final clearance of his selections
was the object of the night's conference.
Where was that goddamned black ship of an automobile? It
was ten minutes to midnight.
'Excuse me, sir,' said a deep, almost guttural voice behind
McAuliff. He turned, and saw a man about his own age, in a brown
mackinaw; he looked like a longshoreman or a construction worker.
'Yes?'
'It's m' first time in London, sir, and I thinks I'm lost.'
The man then pointed up at the street sign, barely visible in the
spill of the lamp through the mist. 'This says Chancery Lane, which is supposed
to be near a place called Hatton, which is where I'm supposed to meet
m' friends. I can't find it, sir.'
Alex gestured to his left. 'It's up there two or three blocks.'
The man pointed again, as a simpleton might point, in the direction
of McAuliffs gesture. 'Up there, sir?'
'That's right.'
The man shook his arm several times, as if emphasizing. 'You're
sure, sir?' And then the man lowered his voice and spoke rapidly.
'Please don't react, Mr McAuliff. Continue as though you are
explaining. Mr Holcroft will meet you in Soho; there's an all-night
club called The Owl of Saint George. He'll be waiting. Stay at the bar,
he'll reach you. Don't worry about the time… He doesn't want you to
make any more telephone calls. You're being watched.'
McAuliff swallowed, blanched, and waved his hand - a little too
obviously, he felt - in the direction of Hatton Garden. He, too, spoke
quietly, rapidly. 'Jesus! I'm being watched, so are you!'
'We calculate these things—'
'I don't like your addition! What am I supposed to tell Warfield? To
let me off in Soho!'
'Why not? Say you feel like a night out. You've nothing scheduled in
the morning. Americans like Soho; it's perfectly natural. You're not a
heavy gambler, but you place a bet now and then.'
'Christ! Would you care to describe my sex life?'
'I could, but I won't.' The guttural, loud North Country voice
returned. 'Thank you, sir. You're very kind, sir. I'm sure I'll find m'
friends.'
The man walked swiftly away, into the night mist toward Hatton
Garden. McAuliff felt his whole body shiver; his hands trembled. To
still them, he reached into his pocket for cigarettes. He was grateful
for the opportunity to grip the metal of his lighter.
It was five minutes to twelve. He would wait several minutes past
midnight and then leave. His instructions were to 'return to the
Savoy'; another meeting would be set. Did that mean it was to be
scheduled later that night? In the morning hours? Or did 'return to the
Savoy' simply mean that he was no longer required to remain at the
corner of High Holborn and Chancery Lane? He was free for the evening?
The words were clear, but the alternate interpretation was entirely
feasible. If he chose, he could - with a number of stops - make his way
into Soho, to Holcroft. The network of surveillance would establish the
fact that Warfield had not appeared for the appointment. The option was
open. My God! thought Alex. What's happening to me? Words
and meanings… options and alternates. Interpretations of… orders!
Who the hell gave him orders!
He was not a man to be commanded!
But when his hand shook as he raised his cigarette to his lips, he
knew that he was… for an indeterminate period of time. Time in a hell
he could not stand; he was not free.
The radium hands on his wristwatch converged. It was midnight. To
goddamn hell with all of them! He would leave! He would call
Alison and tell her he wanted to come over for a drink… ask her if she
would let him. Holcroft could wait all night in Soho. Where was it? The
Owl of Saint George. Silly fucking name!
To hell with him!
The Rolls-Royce sped out of the fog from the direction of Newgate,
its deep-throated engine racing, a powerful intrusion on the otherwise
still street. It swung alongside the kerb in front of McAuliff and
stopped abruptly. The chauffeur got out of his seat, raced around the
long hood of the car, and opened the rear door for Alex.
It all happened so quickly that McAuliff threw away his cigarette
and climbed in, bewildered; he had not adjusted to the swift change of
plans. Julian Warfield sat in the far right corner of the huge rear
seat, his tiny frame dwarfed by the vehicle's expansive interior.
'I'm sorry to have kept you waiting until the last minute, Mr
McAuliff. I was detained.'
'Do you always do business with one eye on secrecy, the other on
shock effect?' asked Alex, settling back in the seat, relieved to feel
he could speak with confidence.
Warfield replied by laughing his hard, old-man's laugh. 'Compared to
Howard Hughes, I'm a used-car salesman.'
'You're still damned unsettling.'
'Would you care for a drink? Preston has a bar built in right
there.' Warfield pointed to the felt back of the front seat. 'Just pull
on that strap.'
'No, thank you. I may do a little drinking later, not now.' Easy.
Easy, McAuliff, he thought to himself. For Christ's sake,
don't be obvious. Holcroft can wait all night. Two minutes ago, you
were going to let him do just that!
The old man took an envelope from his jacket pocket. 'I'll give you
the good news straight off. There's no one we objected to strenuously,
subject to minor questions. On the contrary, we think you finalized
your selections rather ingeniously…'
According to Warfield, the initial reaction at Dunstone to his list
of first choices was negative. Not from security - subject to those
minor questions; nor in quality - McAuliff had done his homework. But
from a conceptual viewpoint. The idea of female members on a geological
survey expedition was rejected out-of-hand, the central issue being
that of less strength, not necessarily weakness. Any project entailing
travel had, by tradition, a masculine identification; the intrusion of
the female was a disquieting component. It could only lead to
complications - any number of them.
'So we crossed off two of your first choices, realizing that by
eliminating the Wells woman, you would also lose her husband, Jensen…
Three out of the first five rejected; knew you'd be unhappy, but then,
you did understand… Later, it came to me. By George, you'd
out-thought the lot of us!'
'I wasn't concerned with any strategies, Warfield. I was putting
together the best team I could.' McAuliff felt he had to interject the
statement.
'Perhaps not consciously, and qualitatively you have a splendid
group. But the inclusion of the two ladies, one a wife and both
superior in their fields, was a profound improvement.'
'Why?'
'It provides - they provide - a unique ingredient of innocence. A
patina of scholarship, actually; an aspect we had overlooked. A
dedicated team of men and women - on a grant from the Royal Society… so
different somehow from an all-male survey expedition. Really, most
remarkable.'
'That wasn't my intention. I hate to disabuse you.'
'No disabusement whatsoever. The result is the same. Needlessly
said, I pointed out this consideration to the others, and they agreed
instantly.'
'I have an idea that whatever you might "point out" would be
instantly agreed to. What are the minor questions?'
'"Incidental information you might wish to consider" is a better
description.' The old man reached up and snapped on a reading lamp. He
then removed several pages from his overcoat, unfolded them, and placed
them in front of the envelope. He adjusted his glasses and scanned the
top paper. 'The husband and wife, this Jensen and Wells. They're quite
active in leftish political circles. Peace marches, ban-the-bombing,
that sort of thing.'
'That doesn't have any bearing on their work. I doubt they'll be
organizing the natives.' McAuliff spoke wearily - on purpose. If
Warfield intended to raise such 'questions,' he wanted the financier to
know he thought them irrelevant.
'There is a great deal of political instability in Jamaica; unrest,
to be precise. It would not be in our interests for any of your people
to be outspoken on such matters.'
McAuliff shifted in his seat and looked at the little old man - tiny
lips pursed, the papers held in his thin, bony fingers under the pin
spot of yellow light, giving his ancient flesh a sallow colour. 'Should
the occasion arise - and I can't conceive of it - when the Jensens make
political noises, I'll quiet them… On the other hand, the inclusion of
such people might be an asset to you. They'd hardly, knowingly, work
for Dunstone.'
'Yes,' said Warfield quietly. 'That, too, occurred to us… This chap,
Ferguson. He ran into trouble with the Craft Foundation.'
'He ran into a potentially vital discovery concerning baracoa
fibres, that's what he ran into. It scared the hell out of Craft and
Craft's funding resources.'
' We have no fight with Craft. We don't want one. The fact
that he's with you could raise eyebrows. Craft's well thought of in
Jamaica.'
'There's no one as good as Ferguson, certainly not the alternate,
and he was the best of those remaining. I'll keep Ferguson
away from Craft.'
'That is essential. We cannot permit him otherwise.'
Charles Whitehall, the black scholar-dandy, was a psychological
mess, according to Dunstone's data banks. Politically he was a
conservative, a black conservative who might have led the Kingston
reactionaries had he remained on the island. But his future was not in
Jamaica, and he had recognized it early. He was bitter over the fact.
Warfield hastened to add, however, that this negative information was
balanced - and more so - by Whitehall's academic standing. His interest
in the survey was ultimately a positive factor; his inclusion tended to
remove any commercial stain from the project. To compound the
complications of this very complex man, Whitehall was a Class Triple A
Black Belt practitioner of Jukato, a more intricate and deadly
development of Judo.
'Our contacts in Kingston are quite impressed with his being with
you. I suspect they'll offer him a chair at the West Indies University.
I think he'll probably accept, if they pay him enough… Now, we come to
the last submission.' Warfield removed his glasses, placed them on his
lap with the papers, and rubbed the bridge of his thin, bony nose. 'Mrs
Booth… Mrs Alison Gerrard Booth.'
Alex felt the stirrings of resentment. Warfield had already told him
that Alison was acceptable; he did not want to hear intimate, private
information dredged up by Dunstone's faceless men or whirring machines.
'What about her?' asked McAuliff, his voice careful. 'Her record
speaks for itself.'
'Unquestionably. She's extremely qualified… And extremely anxious to
leave England.'
'She's explained that. I buy it. She's just been divorced, and the
circumstances, I gather, are not too pleasant… socially.'
'Is that what she told you?'
'Yes. I believe her.'
Warfield replaced his glasses and flipped the page in front of him.
'I'm afraid there's a bit more to it than that, Mr McAuliff. Did she
tell you who her husband was? What he did for a living?'
'No. And I didn't ask her.'
'Yes… Well, I think you should know. David Booth is from a socially
prominent family - viscount status, actually - that hasn't had the cash
flow of a pound sterling for a generation. He is a partner in an
export-import firm whose books indicate a barely passable subsistence…
Yet Mr Booth lives extremely well. Several homes - here and on the
Continent - drives expensive cars, belongs to the better clubs.
Contradictory, isn't it?'
'I'd say so. How does he do it?'
'Narcotics,' said Julian Warfield, as if he had just given the time
of day. 'David Booth is a courier for Franco-American interests
operating out of Corsica, Beirut, and Marseilles.'
For the next few moments both men were silent. McAuliff understood
the implication, and finally spoke. 'Mrs Booth was on surveys in
Corsica, Iran… and southern Spain. You're suggesting that she's
involved.'
'Possibly; not likely. If so, unwittingly. After all, she did
divorce the chap. What we are saying is that she undoubtedly learned of
her husband's involvement; she's afraid to remain in England. We don't
think she plans to return.'
Again, there was silence, until McAuliff broke it.
'When you said "afraid," I presume you mean she's been threatened.'
'Quite possibly. Whatever she knows could be damaging. Booth didn't
take the divorce action very well. Not from the point of view of
affection - he's quite a womanizer - but, we suspect, for reasons
related to his travels.' Warfield refolded the pages and put them back
into his overcoat pocket.
'Well,' said Alex, 'that's quite a… minor explosion. I'm not sure
I'm ready for it.'
'I gave you this information on Mrs Booth because we thought you'd
find out for yourself. We wanted to prepare you… not to dissuade you.'
McAuliff turned sharply and looked at Warfield. 'You want her along
because she might… might possibly be valuable to you. And not 'for
geological reasons.' Easy, McAuliff. Easy!
'Anything is conceivable in these complicated times.'
'I don't like it!'
'You haven't thought about it. It is our opinion that she's
infinitely safer in Jamaica than in London… You are concerned, aren't
you? You've seen her frequently during the past week.'
'I don't like being followed, either.' It was all Alex could think
to say.
'Whatever was done was minimal and for your protection,' replied
Warfield quickly.
'Against what? For Christ's sake, protection from whom?' McAuliff
stared at the little old man, realizing how much he disliked him. He
wondered if Warfield would be any more explicit than Holcroft on the
subject of protection. Or would he admit the existence of a prior
Jamaican survey? 'I think I have a right to be told,' he added angrily.
'You shall be. First, however, I should like to show you these
papers. I trust everything will be to your satisfaction.' Warfield
lifted the flap of the unsealed envelope and withdrew several thin
pages stapled together on top of a single page of stationery. They were
onionskin carbons of his lengthy Letter of Agreement signed in
Belgravia Square over a week ago. He reached above, snapped on his own
reading lamp, took the papers from Warfield and flipped over the
carbons to the thicker page of stationery. Only it wasn't stationery;
it was a Xerox copy of a Letter Deposit Transfer from the Chase Bank in
New York. The figures were clear: On the left was the amount paid into
his account by a Swiss concern; on the right, the maximum taxes on that
amount, designated as income, to the Swiss authorities and the United
States Internal Revenue Service.
The net figure was $333,000.
He looked over at Warfield. 'My first payment was to have been
twenty-five per cent of the total contract upon principal work of the
survey. We agreed that would be the team's arrival in Kingston. Prior
to that date, you're responsible only for my expenses and, if we
terminate, two hundred a day for my time. Why the change?'
'We're very pleased with your preliminary labours. We wanted to
indicate our good faith.'
'I don't believe you—'
'Besides,' continued Warfield, raising his voice over Alex's
objection, 'there's been no contractual change.'
'I know what I signed.'
'Not too well, apparently… Go on, read the agreement. It states
clearly that you will be paid a minimum of twenty-' five per
cent, no later than the end of the business day we determined
to be the start of the survey. It says nothing about an excess of
twenty-five per cent; no prohibitions as to an earlier date… We thought
you'd be pleased.' The old man folded his small hands like some kind of
Ghandi of peace in Savile Row clothes.
McAuliff reread the transfer letter from Chase. 'This bank transfer
describes the money as payment for services rendered as of today's
date. That's past tense, free and clear. You'd have a hard time
recouping if I didn't go to Jamaica. And considering your paranoia over
secrecy, I doubt you'd try too hard… No, Mr Warfield, this is out of
character.'
'Faith, Mr McAuliff. Your generation overlooks it.' The financier
smiled benignly.
'I don't wish to be rude, but I don't think you ever had it. Not
that way. You're a manipulator, not an ideologue… I repeat: out of
character.'
'Very well.' Warfield unfolded his delicate hands, still retaining
the Ghandi pose under the yellow light. 'It leads to the protection of
which I spoke and which, rightly, you question… You are one of us,
Alexander Tarquin McAuliff. A very important and essential part of
Dunstone's plans. In recognition of your contributions, we have
recommended to our Directors that you be elevated - in confidence - to
their status. Ergo, the payments made to you - in gross terms,
amounting to close to a million - are the initial monies due one of our
own. As you say, it would be out of character for such excessive
payments to be made otherwise.'
'What the hell are you driving at?'
'In rather abrupt words, don't ever try to deny us. You are a
consenting participant in our work. Should you at any time, for
whatever motive, decide you do not approve of Dunstone, don't try to
separate yourself. You'd never be believed.'
McAuliff stared at the now smiling old man. 'Why would I do that?'
he asked softly.
'Because we have reason to believe there are… elements most anxious
to stop our progress. They may try to reach you; perhaps they have
already. Your future is with us. No one else. Financially, perhaps
ideologically… certainly, legally.'
Alex looked away from Warfield. The Rolls had proceeded west into
New Oxford, south on Charing Cross, and west again on Shaftesbury. They
were approaching the outer lights of Piccadilly Circus, the gaudy
colours diffused by the heavy mist.
'Who were you trying to call so frantically this evening?' The old
man was not smiling now.
McAuliff turned from the window. 'Not that it's any of your damned
business but I was calling - not frantically - Mrs Booth. We're having
lunch tomorrow. Any irritation was due to your hastily scheduled
meeting and the fact that I didn't want to disturb her after midnight.
Who do you think?'
'You shouldn't be hostile—'
'I forgot,' interrupted Alex. 'You're only trying to protect me.
From… elements.'
'I can be somewhat more precise.' Julian Warfield's eyes bore into
Alex's, with an intensity he had not seen before. 'There would be no
point in your lying to me, so I expect the truth. What does the word
"Halidon" mean to you, Mr McAuliff?'
SIX
The screaming, hysterical cacophony of the acid-rock music caused a
sensation of actual pain in the ears. The eyes were attacked next, by
tear-provoking layers of heavy smoke, thick and translucent - the
nostrils reacting immediately to the pungent sweetness of tobacco laced
with grass and hashish.
McAuliff made his way through the tangled network of soft flesh,
separating thrusting arms and protruding shoulders gently but firmly,
finally reaching the rear of the bar area.
The Owl of Saint George was at its undulating peak. The psychedelic
lights exploded against the walls and ceiling in rhythmic crescendos;
bodies were concave and convex, none seemingly upright, all swaying,
writhing violently.
Holcroft was seated in a circular booth with five others: two men
and three women. Alex paused, concealed by drinkers and dancers, and
looked at Holcroft's gathering. It was funny; not sardonically funny,
humorously funny. Holcroft and his middle-aged counterpart across the
table were dressed in the 'straight' fashion, as were two of the three
women, straight and past forty. The remaining couple was young, hip,
and profuse with beads and suede and flowing hair held back with
headbands. The picture was instantly recognizable: parents indulging
the generation gap, uncomfortable but game.
McAuliff remembered the man's words on High Holborn. Stay at
the bar, he'll reach you. He manoeuvred his way to within arm's
length of the mahogany and managed to shout his order to the black Soho
bartender with an Afro haircut. He wondered when Holcroft would make
his move; he did not want to wait long. He had a great deal to say to
the British agent.
'Pardon, but you are a chap named McAuliff, aren't you?'
The shouted question caused Alex to spill part of his drink. The
shouter was the young mod from Holcroft's table. Holcroft was not
wasting time.
'Yes. Why?'
'My girl's parents recognized you. Asked me to invite you over.'
The following moments, McAuliff felt, were like a play within a
play. A brief, staged exercise with acutely familiar dialogue, acted
out in front of a bored audience of other, more energetic actors. But
with a surprise that made Alex consider Holcroft's skill in a very
favourable light.
He did know the middle-aged man across from Holcroft. And
his wife. Not well, of course, but they were acquaintances. He'd met
them two or three times before, on previous London trips. They weren't
the sort of memorable people one recognized on the street - or in The
Owl of Saint George - unless the circumstances were recalled.
Holcroft was introduced by his correct name, and McAuliff was seated
next to him.
'How the hell did you arrange this?' asked Alex after five
excruciating minutes remembering the unmemorable with the
acquaintances. 'Do they know who you are?'
'Laugh occasionally,' answered Holcroft with a calm, precise smile.
'They believe I'm somewhere in that great government pyramid, juggling
figures in poorly lit rooms… The arrangements were necessary. Warfield
has doubled his teams on you. We're not happy about it; he may have
spotted us, but, of course, it's unlikely.'
'He's spotted something, I guarantee it.' Alex bared his teeth, but
the smile was false. 'I've got a lot to talk to you about. Where can we
meet?'
'Here. Now,' was the Britisher's reply. 'Speak occasionally to the
others, but it's perfectly acceptable that we strike up a conversation.
We might use it as a basis for lunch or drinks in a day or two.'
'No way. I leave for Kingston the morning after next.'
Holcroft paused, his glass halfway to his lips. 'So soon? We didn't
expect that.'
'It's insignificant compared to something else… Warfield knows
about Halidon. That is, he asked me what I knew about it.'
' What?'
'Mr McAuliff?' came the shouted enquiry from across the table.
'Surely you know the Bensons, from Kent…'
The timing was right, thought Alex. Holcroft's reaction to his news
was one of astonishment. Shock that changed swiftly to angered
acceptance. The ensuing conversation about the unremembered Bensons
would give Holcroft time to think. And Alex wanted him to think.
'What exactly did he say?' asked Holcroft. The revolving
psychedelic lights now projected their sharp patterns on the table,
giving the agent a grotesque appearance. 'The exact words.'
'"What does the word 'Halidon' mean to you?" That's what he said.'
'Your answer?'
'What answer? I didn't have one. I told him it was a town in New
Jersey.'
'I beg your pardon?'
'Halidon, New Jersey. It's a town.'
'Different spelling, I believe. And pronunciation… Did he accept
your ignorance?'
'Why wouldn't he? I'm ignorant.'
'Did you conceal the fact that you'd heard the word? It's terribly
important!'
'Yes… yes, I think I did. As a matter of fact, I was thinking about
something,else. Several other things—'
'Did he bring it up later?' broke in the agent.
'No, he didn't. He stared hard, but he didn't mention it again… What
do you think it means?'
Suddenly a gyrating, spaced-out dancer careened against the table,
his eyes half focused, his lips parted without control. 'Well, if it
ain't old Mums and Dadsies!' he said, slurring his words with rough
Yorkshire. 'Enjoying the kiddie's show-and-tell, Mums?'
'Damn!' Holcroft had spilled part of his drink.
'Ring for the butler, Pops! Charge it to old Edinburgh. He's a
personal friend! Good old Edinburgh.'
The solo, freaked-out dancer bolted away as quickly as he had
intruded. The other middle-aged straights were appropriately solicitous
of Holcroft, simultaneously scathing of The Owl's patrons; the
youngsters did their best to mollify.
'It's all right, nothing to be concerned with,' said the agent
good-naturedly. 'Just a bit damp, nothing to it.' Holcroft removed his
handkerchief and began blotting his front. The table returned to its
prior and individual conversations. The Britisher turned to McAuliff,
his resigned smiling belying his words. 'I have less than a minute;
you'll be contacted tomorrow if necessary.'
'You mean that… collision was a signal?'
'Yes. Now, listen and commit. I haven't time to repeat myself. When
you reach Kingston, you'll be on your own for a while. Quite frankly,
we weren't prepared for you so soon—'
'Just a minute!' interrupted McAuliff, his voice low, angry.
'Goddamn you! You listen… and commit! You guaranteed complete
safety, contacts twenty-four hours a day. It was on that basis I
agreed—'
'Nothing has changed.' Holcroft cut in swiftly, smiling
paternalistically - in contradiction to the quiet hostility between
them. 'You have contacts; you've memorized eighteen, twenty
names—'
'In the north country, not Kingston! You're supposed to deliver the
Kingston names!'
'We'll do our best for tomorrow.'
'That's not good enough!'
'It will have to be, Mr McAuliff,' said Holcroft coldly.
'In Kingston, east of Victoria Park on Duke Street, there is a fish
store called Tallon's. In the last extremity - and only then - should
you wish to transmit information, see the owner. He's quite arthritic
in his right hand. But, mind you, all he can do is transmit. He's of no
other use to you… Now, I really must go.'
'I've got a few other things to say.' Alex put his hand on
Holcroft's arm.
'They'll have to wait—'
'One thing… Alison Booth. You knew, didn't you?'
'About her husband?'
'Yes.'
'We did. Frankly, at first, we thought she was a Dunstone plant. We
haven't ruled it out… Oh, you asked about Warfield's mention of
Halidon; what he meant. In my judgment, he knows no more than we do.
And he's trying just as hard to find out.'
With the swiftness associated with a much younger man, Holcroft
lifted himself up from the booth, sidled past McAuliff, and excused
himself from the group. McAuliff found himself seated next to the
middle-aged woman he presumed had come with Holcroft. He had not
listened to her name during the introductions, but as he looked at her
now, he did not have to be told. The concern - the fear -was in her
eyes; she tried to conceal it, but she could not. Her smile was
hesitant, taut.
'So you're the young man…' Mrs Holcroft stopped and brought the
glass to her lips.
'Young and not so young,' said McAuliff, noting that the woman's
hand shook, as his had shaken an hour ago with Warfield. 'It's
difficult to talk in here with all the blaring. And those godawful
lights.'
Mrs Holcroft seemed not to hear or be concerned with his words. The
psychedelic oranges and yellows and sickening greens played a visual
tattoo on her frightened features. It was strange, thought Alex, but he
had not considered Holcroft as a private man with personal possessions
or a wife or even a private, personal life.
And as he thought about these unconsidered realities, the woman
suddenly gripped his forearm and leaned against him. Under the
maddening sounds and through the wild, blinding lights, she whispered
in McAuliff's ear: 'For God's sake, go after him!'
The undulating bodies formed a violently writhing wall. He lunged
through, pushing, pulling, shoving, finally shouldering a path for
himself amid the shouted obscenities. He tried looking around for the
spaced-out intruder who had signalled Holcroft by crashing into the
table. He was nowhere to be found.
Then, at the rear of the crowded, flashing dance floor, he could see
the interrupted movements of several men pushing a single figure back
into a narrow corridor. It was Holcroft!
He crashed through the writhing wall again, towards the back of the
room. A tall black man objected to Alex's assault.
'Hey, mon! Stop it! You own The Owl, I think not!'
'Get out of my way! Goddamn it, take your hands off me!'
'With pleasure, mon!' The black removed his hands from McAuliffs
coat, pulled back a tight fist, and hammered it into Alex's stomach.
The force of the blow, along with the shock of its utter surprise,
caused McAuliff to double up.
He rose as fast as he could, the pain sharp, and lurched for the
man. As he did so, the black twisted his wrist somehow, and McAuliff
fell into the surrounding, nearly oblivious dancers. When he got to his
feet, the black was gone.
It was a curious and very painful moment.
The smoke and its accompanying odours made him dizzy; then he
understood. He was breathing deep breaths; he was out of breath. With
less strength but no less intensity, he continued through the dancers
to the narrow corridor.
It was a passageway to the restrooms, 'Chicks' to the
right, 'Roosters' to the left. At the end of the narrow
hallway was a door with a very large lock, an outsized padlock, that
was meant, apparently, to remind patrons that the door was no egress;
The Owl of Saint George expected tabs to be paid before departure.
The lock had been pried open. Pried open and then reset in the round
hasps, its curving steel arm a half inch from insertion.
McAuliff ripped it off and opened the door.
He walked out into a dark, very dark, alleyway filled with garbage
cans and refuse. There was literally no light but the night sky, dulled
by fog, and a minimum spill from the windows in the surrounding
ghettolike apartment buildings. In front of him was a high brick wall;
to the right the alley continued past other rear doorways, ending in a
cul-de-sac formed by the sharply angled wall. To his left, there was a
break between The Owl's building and the brick; it was a passageway to
the street. It was also lined with garbage cans, and the stench that
had to accompany their presence.
McAuliff started down the cement corridor, the light from the street
lamps illuminating the narrow confines. He was within twenty feet of
the pavement when he saw it. Them: small pools of deep red fluid.
He raced out into the street. The crowds were thinning out; Soho was
approaching its own witching hour. Its business was inside now: the
private clubs, the all-night gambling houses, the profitable beds where
sex was found in varying ways and prices. He looked up and down the
sidewalk, trying to find a break in the patterns of human traffic: a
resistance, an eruption.
There was none.
He stared down at the pavement; the rivulets of blood had been
streaked and blotted by passing feet, the red drops stopping abruptly
at the kerb. Holcroft had been taken away in an automobile.
Without warning, McAuliff felt the impact of lunging hands against
his back. He had turned sideways at the last instant, his eyes drawn
by the flickering of a neon light, and that small motion kept him from
being hurled into the street. Instead, his attacker - a huge black -
plunged over the kerb, into the path of an onrushing Bentley,
travelling at extraordinary speed. McAuliff felt a stinging pain on his
face: Then man and vehicle collided; the anguished scream was the
scream at the moment of death; the screeching wheels signified the
incredible to McAuliff. The Bentley raced forward, crushing its victim,
and sped off. It reached the corner and whipped violently to the left,
its tyres spinning above the kerb, whirring as they touched stone
again, propelling the car out of sight. Pedestrians screamed, men ran,
whores disappeared into doorways, pimps gripped their pockets, and
McAuliff stood above the bloody, mangled corpse in the street and knew
it was meant to be him.
He ran down the Soho street; he did not know where, just away. Away
from the gathering crowds on the pavement behind. There would be
questions, witnesses… people placing him at the scene - involved,
not placed, he reflected. He had no answers, and instinctively he knew
he could not allow himself to be identified - not until he had some
answers.
The dead black was the man in The Owl of Saint George, of that he
was certain: the man who had stunned him with a savage blow to the
stomach on the dance floor and twisted his wrist, throwing him onto the
surrounding gyrating bodies. The man who had stopped him from reaching
Holcroft in the narrow corridor that led past the 'Chicks' and
the 'Roosters' into the dark alleyway beyond.
Why had the black stopped him? Why for Christ Almighty's sake had he
tried to kill him?
Where was Holcroft?
He had to get to a telephone. He had to call Holcroft's number and
speak to someone, anyone who could give him some answers.
Suddenly, Alex was aware that people in the street were staring at
him. Why?… Of course. He was running - well, walking too rapidly. A man
walking rapidly at this hour on a misty Soho street was conspicuous. He
could not be conspicuous; he slowed his walk, his aimless walk, and
aimlessly crossed unfamiliar streets.
Still they stared. He tried not to panic. What was it?
And then he knew. He could feel the warm blood trickling down his
cheek. He remembered now: the sting on his face as the huge black hands
went crashing past him over the kerb. A ring, perhaps. A fingernail…
what difference? He had been cut, and he was bleeding. He reached into
his coat pocket for a handkerchief. The whole side of his jacket had
been ripped.
He had been too stunned to notice or feel the jacket ripping, or the
blood.
Christ! What a sight! A man in a torn jacket with blood on his face
running away from a dead black in Soho.
Dead? Deceased? Life spent?
No. Murdered.
By the method meant for him: a violent thrust into the street, timed
to meet the heavy steel on an onrushing, racing Bentley.
In the middle of the next block - what block? - there was a
telephone booth. An English telephone booth, wider and darker than its
American cousin. He quickened his pace as he withdrew coins from his
pocket. He went inside; it was dark, too dark, Why was it so dark? He
took out his metal cigarette lighter, gripping it as though it were a
handle that, if released, would send him plunging into an abyss. He
pressed the lever, breathed deeply, and dialled by the light of the
flame.
'We know what's happened, Mr McAuliff,' said the clipped, cool
British voice. 'Where precisely are you calling from?'
'I don't know. I ran… I crossed a number of streets.'
'It's urgent we know where you are… When you left The Owl, which way
did you walk?'
'I ran, goddamn it! I ran. Someone tried to kill
me!'
'Which way did you run, Mr McAuliff?'
'To the right… four or five blocks. Then right again; then left, I
think, two blocks later.'
'All right. Relax, now… You're phoning from a call booth?'
'Yes. No, damn it, I'm calling from a phone
booth!… Yes. For Christ's sake, tell me what's happening! There aren't
any street signs; I'm in the middle of the block.'
'Calm down, please.' The Englishman was maddening: imperviously
condescending. 'What are the structures outside the booth? Describe
anything you like, anything that catches your eye.'
McAuliff complained about the fog and described as best he could the
darkened shops and buildings. 'Christ, that's the best I can do… I'm
going to get out of here. I'll grab a taxi somehow; and then I want to
see one of you! Where do I go?'
'You will not go anywhere, Mr McAuliff!' The cold British
tones were suddenly loud and harsh. 'Stay right where you are. If there
is a light in the booth, smash it. We know your position. We'll pick
you up in minutes.'
Alex hung up the receiver. There was no light bulb in the booth, of
course. The tribes of Soho had removed it… He tried to think. He hadn't
gotten any answers. Only orders. More commands.
It was insane. The last half hour was madness. What was he doing!
Why was he in a darkened telephone booth with a bloody face and a torn
jacket, trembling and afraid to light a cigarette? Madness!
There was a man outside the booth, jingling coins in his hand and
pointedly shifting his weight from foot to foot in irritation. The
command over the telephone had instructed Alex to wait inside, but to
do so under the circumstances might cause the man on the pavement to
object vocally, drawing attention. He could call someone else, he
thought. But who?… Alison? No… He had to think about Alison now, not
talk with her.
He was behaving like a terrified child! With terrifying
justification, perhaps. He was actually afraid to move, to walk outside
a telephone booth and let an impatient man jingling coins go in. No, he
could not behave like that. He could not freeze. He had learned that
lesson years ago - centuries ago - in the hills of Panmunjung. To
freeze
was to become a target. One had to be flexible within the perimeters of
commonsense. One had to, above all, use his natural antennae and stay
intensely alert. Staying alert, retaining the ability and capacity to
move swiftly, these were the important things.
Jesus! He was correlating the murderous fury of Korea with a back
street in Soho. He was actually drawing a parallel and forcing himself
to adjust to it. Too goddamn much!
He opened the door, blotted his cheek, and mumbled apologies to the
man jingling coins. He walked to a recessed doorway opposite the booth
and waited.
The man on Holcroft's telephone was true to his word. The wait
wasn't long, and the automobile recognizable as one of those Alex and
the agent had used several times. It came down the street at a steady
pace and stopped by the booth, its motor running.
McAuliff left the darkness of the recessed doorway and walked
rapidly to the car. The rear door was flung open for him and he climbed
in.
And he froze again.
The man in the back seat was black. The man in the back seat was
supposed to be dead, a mangled corpse in the street in front of The Owl
of Saint George!
'Yes, Mr McAuliff. It is I,' said the black who was supposed to be
dead. 'I apologize for having struck you, but then, you were intruding.
Are you all right?'
'Oh, my God!' Alex was rigid on the edge of the seat as the
automobile lurched forward and sped off down the street. 'I thought… I
mean, I saw. . .'
'We're on our way to Holcroft. You'll understand better then. Sit
back. You've had a very strenuous past hour… Quite unexpectedly,
incidentally.'
'I saw you killed.'
McAuliff blurted out the words
involuntarily.
'You saw a black man killed; a large black man like myself. We do
weary of the bromide that we all look alike. It's both unflattering
and untrue. By the way, my name is Tallon.'
McAuliff stared at the man. 'No, it's not. Tallon is the name of a
fish store near Victoria Park. In Kingston.'
The black laughed softly. 'Very good, Mr McAuliff. I was testing
you. Smoke?'
Alex took the offered cigarette gratefully. 'Tallon held a match
for him, and McAuliff inhaled deeply, trying to find a brief moment of
sanity.
He looked at his hands. He was both astonished and disturbed.
He was cupping the glow of the cigarette as he had done… centuries
ago as an infantry officer in the hills of Panmunjung.
They drove for nearly twenty minutes, travelling swiftly through the
London streets to the outskirts. McAuliff did not try to follow their
route out of the window; he did not really care. He was consumed with
the decision he had to make. In a profound way it was related to the
sight of his hands - no longer trembling - cupping the cigarette. From
the non-existent wind? From betraying his position? From enemy snipers?
No. He was not a soldier, had never been one really. He had
performed because it was the only way to survive. He had no motive
other than survival; no war was his or ever would be his. Certainly not
Holcroft's.
'Here we are, Mr McAuliff,' said the black who called himself
'Tallon.'
'Rather deserted place, isn't it?'
The car had entered a road by a field - a field, but not
grass-covered. It was a levelled expanse of ground, perhaps five acres,
that looked as though it was being primed for construction. Beyond the
field was a river bank; Alex presumed it was the Thames, it had to be.
In the distance were large square structures that looked like
warehouses. Warehouses along a river bank. He had no idea where they
were.
The driver made a sharp left turn, and the automobile bounced as it
rolled over a primitive car path on the rough ground. Through the
windshield, McAuliff saw in the glare of the headlamps two vehicles
about a hundred yards away, both sedans. The one on the right had its
inside lights on. Within seconds, the driver had pulled up parallel
with the second car.
McAuliff got out and followed 'Tallon' to the lighted automobile.
What he saw bewildered him, angered him, perhaps, and unquestionably
reaffirmed his decision to remove himself from Holcroft's war.
The British agent was sitting stiffly in the rear seat, his shirt
and overcoat draped over his shoulders, an open expanse of flesh at his
midsection revealing wide, white bandages. His eyes were squinting
slightly, betraying the fact that the pain was not negligible. Alex
knew the reason; he had seen the sight before - centuries ago - usually
after a bayonet encounter.
Holcroft had been stabbed.
'I had you brought here for two reasons, McAuliff. And I warrant
you, it was a gamble,' said the agent as Alex stood by the open door.
'Leave us alone, please,' he added to the black.
'Shouldn't you be in a hospital?'
'No, it's not a severe laceration—'
'You got cut, Holcroft,' interrupted McAuliff. 'That's no
laceration.'
'You're melodramatic; it's unimportant. You'll notice, I trust, that
I am very much alive.'
'You're lucky.'
'Luck, sir, had nothing whatsoever to do with it! That's part of
what I want you to understand.'
'All right. You're Captain Marvel, indestructible nemesis of the
evil people.'
'I am a fifty year old veteran of Her Majesty's Service who was
never very good at football… soccer, to you.' Holcroft winced and
leaned forward. 'And it's quite possible I would not be in these
extremely tight bandages had you followed my instructions and not made
a scene on the dance floor.' 'What?'
'But you provoke me into straying. First things first. The instant
it was apparent that I was in danger, that danger was removed. At no
time, no moment, was my life in jeopardy.'
'Because you say so? With a ten-inch bandage straddling your
stomach? Don't try to sell water in the Sahara.'
'This wound was delivered in panic caused by you! I was in the
process of making the most vital contact on our schedule, the contact
we sought you out to make.'
'Halidon?'
'It's what we believed. Unfortunately, there's no way to verify.
Come with me.' Holcroft gripped the side strap, and with his right hand
supported himself on the front seat as he climbed painfully out of the
car. Alex made a minor gesture of assistance, knowing that it would be
refused. The agent led McAuliff to the forward automobile, awkwardly
removing a flashlight from his draped overcoat as they approached.
There were several other men in shadows; they stepped away, obviously
under orders.
Inside the car were two lifeless figures: one sprawled over the
wheel, the other slumped across the rear seat. Holcroft shot the beam
of light successively on both corpses. Each was male, black, in his
mid-thirties, perhaps, and dressed in conservative, though not
expensive business suits. McAuliff was confused: There were no signs of
violence, no shattered glass, no blood. The interior of the car was
neat, clean, even peaceful. The two dead men might have been a pair of
young executives taking a brief rest off the highway in the middle of a
long business trip. Alex's bewilderment was ended with Holcroft's next
word.
'Cyanide.'
'Why?'
'Fanatics, obviously. It was preferable to revealing information…
unwillingly, of course. They misread us. It began when you made such an
obvious attempt to follow me out of The Owl of Saint George. That was
their first panic; when they inflicted… this.' Holcroft waved his hand
just once at his midsection.
McAuliff did not bother to conceal his anger. 'I've about had it
with your goddamn caustic deductions!'
'I told you it was a gamble bringing you here—'
'Stop telling me things!'
'Please bear in mind that without us you had a life expectancy of
four months - at the outside.'
'Your version, Holcroft.' But the agent's version had more substance
than McAuliff cared to think about at the moment.
'Do men take their lives because versions are false? Even fanatics?'
Alex turned away from the unpleasant sight. For no particular
reason, he ripped the torn lining from the base of his jacket and
leaned against the hood of the car. 'Since you hold me responsible for
so much tonight, what happened?'
The Britisher told him. Several days ago, MI5's surveillance had
picked up a second 'force' involved with Dunstone's movements. Three,
possibly four, unidentifiable subjects who kept reappearing. The
subjects were black. Photographs were taken, fingerprints obtained by
way of restaurants, discarded objects - cigarette packs, newspapers,
and the like - and all the data fed into the computers at New Scotland
Yard and Emigration. There were no records; the subjects were in the
country illegally. Holcroft had been elated; the connection was so
possible. It was obvious that the subjects were 'negative' insofar as
Dunstone was concerned. Obvious… then proven without doubt earlier in
the evening, when one of the subjects killed a Dunstone man who spotted
him.
'We knew then,' said Holcroft, 'that we had centred in; the target
was accurate. It remained to make positive contact, sympathetic
contact. I even toyed with the idea of bringing these men and you
together in short order, perhaps this morning. So much resolved so
damned quickly…'
A cautious preliminary contact was made with the subjects: so
harmless and promising, we damn near offered what was left of the
Empire. They were concerned, of course, with a trap.
A rendezvous was arranged at The Owl of Saint George, a racially
integrated club that offered a comfortable environment. It was
scheduled for 2.30 in the morning, after Holcroft's meeting with
McAuliff.
When Alex made his panicked - and threatening - call to Holcroft's
number, insisting that they meet regardless of time, the agent left his
options open. And then made his decision. Why not The Owl of Saint
George? Bring the American into Soho, to the club, and if it proved the
wrong decision, McAuliff could be stopped once inside. If the decision
was the right one, the circumstances would be optimal - all parties
present.
'What about Warfield's men?' asked Alex. 'You said he doubled his
teams on me.'
'I lied. I wanted you to remain where you were. Warfield had a
single man on you. We diverted him. The Dunstone people had their own
anxieties: One of their men had been killed. You couldn't be held
responsible for that.'
The night progressed as Holcroft had anticipated: without incident.
The agent made arrangements for the table - 'we know just about
everyone you've met in London, chap' - and awaited the compatible
merging of elements.
And then, in rapid succession, each component fell apart. First was
Alex's statement that the survey team was leaving in two days - MI5 was
not ready for it in Kingston. Then the information that Warfield had
spoken the name of 'Halidon'; it was to be expected, of course.
Dunstone would be working furiously to find the killers of the first
survey team. But, again, MI5 had not expected Dunstone to have made
such progress. The next breakdown was the spaced-out agent who crashed
into the table and used the word 'Edinburgh' - used it twice.
'Each twenty-four-hour period we circulate an unusual word that has
but one connotation: "abort, extreme prejudice." If it's repeated, that
simply compounds the meaning: Our cover is blown. Or misread. Weapons
should be ready.'
At that moment, Holcroft saw clearly the massive error that had been
made. His agents had diverted Warfield's men away from Alex, but not
one of the blacks. McAuliff had been observed in Warfield's company at
midnight for a considerable length of time. Within minutes after he had
walked into The Owl, his black surveillance had followed, panicked that
his colleagues had been led into a trap.
The confrontation had begun within the gyrating, psychedelic madness
that was The Owl of Saint George.
Holcroft tried to stop the final collapse.
He broke the rules. It was not yet 2.30, but since Alexander
McAuliff had been seen with him, he dared not wait. He tried to
establish a bridge, to explain, to calm the raging outburst.
He had nearly succeeded when one of the blacks - now dead behind the
wheel - saw McAuliff leap from his seat in the booth and plunge into
the crowds, whipping people out of his way, looking frantically -
obviously - for Holcroft.
This sight triggered the panic. Holcroft was cut, used as a shield,
and propelled out the rear door into the alley by two of the subjects
while the third fled through the crowds in front to alert the car for
escape.
'What happened during the next few minutes was as distressing as it
was comforting,' said Holcroft. 'My people would not allow my physical
danger, so the instant my captors and I emerged on the pavement, they
were taken. We put them in this car and drove off, still hoping to
reestablish good will. But we purposely allowed the third man to
disappear - an article of faith on our part.'
The MI5 had driven out to the deserted field. A doctor was summoned
to patch up Holcroft. And the two subjects - relieved of weapons, car
key removed unobtrusively - were left alone to talk by themselves,
hopefully to resolve their doubts, while Holcroft was being bandaged.
'They made a last attempt to get away but, of course, there were no
keys in the vehicle. So they took their deadly little vials or tablets
and, with them, their lives. Ultimately, they could not trust us.'
McAuliff said nothing for several moments. Holcroft did not
interrupt the silence.
'And your "article of faith" tried to kill me.'
'Apparently. Leaving one man in England we must try to find: the
driver… You understand that we cannot be held accountable: you
completely disregarded our instructions—'
'We'll get to that,' broke in McAuliff. 'You said you brought me out
here for two reasons. I get the first: Your people are quick, safety
guaranteed… if instructions aren't "disregarded."' Alex mimicked
Holcroft's reading of the word. 'What's the second reason?'
The agent walked directly in front of McAuliff and, through the
night light, Alex could see the intensity in his eyes. 'To tell you you
have no choice but to continue now. Too much has happened. You're too
involved.'
That's what Warfield said.'
'He's right,'
'Suppose I refuse? Suppose I just pack up and leave?'
'You'd be suspect, and expendable. You'd be hunted down. Take my
word for that, I've been here before.'
'That's quite a statement from a… what was it, a financial analyst?'
'Labels, Mr McAuliff. Titles. Quite meaningless.'
'Not to your wife.'
'I beg your—' Holcroft inhaled deeply, audibly. When he continued,
he did not ask a question. He made a quiet, painful statement. 'She
sent you after me.'
'Yes.'
It was Holcroft's turn to remain silent. And Alex's option not to
break that silence. Instead, McAuliff watched the fifty year old agent
struggle to regain his composure.
'The fact remains, you disregarded my instructions.'
'You must be a lovely man to live with.'
'Get used to it,' replied Holcroft with cold precision. 'For the
next several months, our association will be very close. And you'll do
exactly as I say. Or you'll be dead.'
PART TWO
Kingston
SEVEN
The red-orange sun burned a hole in the streaked blue tapestry that
was the evening sky. Arcs of yellow rimmed the lower clouds; a
purplish-black void was above. The soft Caribbean night would soon
envelope this section of the world. It would be dark when the plane
landed at Port Royal.
McAuliff stared out at the horizon through the tinted glass of the
aircraft's window. Alison Booth was in the seat beside him, asleep.
The Jensens were across the 747's aisle, and for a couple whose
political persuasions were left of centre, they adapted to BOAC's
first-class accommodations with a remarkable lack of guilt, thought
Alex. They ordered the best wine, the foie gras, duck a l'orange, and
Charlotte Malakof as if they had been used to them for years. And Alex
wondered if Warfield was wrong. All the left-oriented he knew, outside
the Soviet block, were humourless; the Jensens were not.
Young James Ferguson was alone in a forward seat. Initially, Charles
Whitehall had sat with him, but Whitehall had gone up to the lounge
early in the flight, found an acquaintance from Savanna La-Mar, and
stayed. Ferguson used the unoccupied seat for a leather bag containing
photographic equipment. He was currently changing lens filters,
snapping shots of the sky outside.
McAuliff and Alison had joined Charles Whitehall and his friend for
several drinks in the lounge. The friend was white, rich, and a heavy
drinker. He was also a vacuous inheritor of old southwest Jamaican
money, and Alex found it contradictory that Whitehall would care to
spend much time with him, and it was a little disturbing to watch
Whitehall respond with such alacrity to his friend's alcoholic,
unbright, unfunny observations.
Alison had touched McAuliffs arm after the second drink. It had been
a signal to return to their seats; she had had enough. So had he.
Alison?
During the last two days in London there had been so much to do that
he had not spent the time with her he had wanted to, intended to. He
was involved with all-day problems of logistics: equipment purchases
and rentals, clearing passports, ascertaining whether inoculations were
required (none was), establishing bank accounts in Montego, Kingston,
and Ocho Rios, and scores of additional items necessary for a long
geological survey. Dunstone stayed out of the picture but was of
enormous help behind the scenes. The Dunstone people told him precisely
who to see where; the tangled webs of bureaucracy - governmental and
commercial - were untangled.
He had spent one evening bringing everyone together - everyone but
Sam Tucker, who would join them in Kingston. Dinner at Simpsons. It was
sufficiently agreeable; all were professionals. Each sized up the
others and made flattering comments where work was known. Whitehall
received the most recognition - as was appropriate. He was an authentic
celebrity of sorts. Ruth Jensen and Alison seemed genuinely to like
each other, which McAuliff had thought would happen. Ruth's husband,
Peter, assumed a paternalistic attitude towards Ferguson, laughing
gently, continuously at the young man's incessant banter. And Charles
Whitehall had the best manners, slightly aloof and very proper, with
just the right traces of scholarly wit and unfelt humility. But Alison.
He had kept their luncheon date after the madness at The Owl of
Saint George and the insanity that followed in the deserted field on
London's outskirts. He had approached her with ambiguous feelings. He
was annoyed that she had not brought up the questionable activities of
her recent husband. But he did not accept Holcroft's vague concern that
Alison was a Warfield plant. It was senseless. She was nothing if not
independent - as he was. To be a silent emissary from Warfield meant
losing independence - as he knew. Alison could not do that, not without
showing it.
Still, he tried to provoke her into talking about her husband. She
responded with humorously civilized cliches such as leaving sleeping
dogs lie, which he had. Often. She would not, at this point, discuss
David Booth with him.
It was not relevant.
'Ladies and gentlemen,' said the very masculine, in-charge tones
over the aircraft's speaker. 'This is Captain Thomas. We are nearing
the northeast coast of Jamaica; in several minutes we shall be over
Port Antonio, descending for our approach to Palisados Airport, Port
Royal. May we suggest that all passengers return to their seats. There
may be minor turbulence over the Blue Mountain range. Time of arrival
is now anticipated at 8.20, Jamaican. The temperature in Kingston is
seventy-eight degrees, weather and visibility clear…'
As the calm, strong voice finished the announcement, McAuliff
thought of Holcroft. If the British agent spoke over a loudspeaker, he
would sound very much like Captain Thomas, Alex considered.
Holcroft.
McAuliff had not ended their temporary disassociation - as Holcroft
phrased it - too pleasantly. He had countered the agent's caustic
pronouncement that Alex do as Holcroft instructed with a volatile
provision of his own: He had six hundred sixty-odd thousand dollars
coming to him from Dunstone, Limited, and he expected to collect it.
From Dunstone or some other source.
Holcroft had exploded. What good was a million dollars to a dead
geologist? Alex should be paying for the warnings and the protection
afforded him. But, in the final analysis, Holcroft recognized the
necessity for something to motivate Alexander's cooperation. Survival
was too abstract; lack of survival could not be experienced.
In the early morning hours, a Letter of Agreement was brought to
McAuliff by a temporary Savoy floor steward; Alex recognized him as the
man in the brown mackinaw on High Holborn. The letter covered the
conditions of reimbursement in
the event of loss of fees' with a very clear ceiling of
six hundred and sixty thousand dollars.
If he remained in one piece - and he had every expectation of so
doing - the loss was six thousand dollars.
He would live with it. He mailed the agreement to New York.
Holcroft.
He wondered what the explanation was; what could explain a wife
whose whispered voice could hold such fear? He wondered about the
private, personal Holcroft, yet knew instinctively that whatever
private questions he had would never be answered.
Holcroft was like that. Perhaps all the people who did what Holcroft
did were like that. Men in shadows; their women in unending tunnels of
fear. Pockets of fear.
And then there was… Halidon.
What did it mean? What was it?
Was it black?
Possibly. Probably not, however, Holcroft had said. At least, not
exclusively. It had too many informational resources, too much apparent
influence in powerful sectors. Too much money.
The word had surfaced under strange and horrible circumstances. The
British agent attached to the previous Dunstone survey had been one of
two men killed in a bush fire that began inside a bamboo camp on the
banks of the Martha Brae River, deep within the Cock Pit country.
Evidence indicated that the two dead members of the survey had tried to
salvage equipment within the fire, collapsed from the smoke, and burned
in the bamboo inferno.
But there was something more; something so appalling that even
Holcroft found it difficult to recite it.
The two men had been bound by bamboo shoots to separate trees, each
next to valuable survey equipment. They had been consumed in the
conflagration, for the simple reason that neither could run from it.
But the agent had left a message, a single word scratched on the metal
casing of a geoscope. Halidon.
Inspection under a microscope gave the remainder of the horror
story: particles of human tooth enamel. The agent had scratched the
letters with broken teeth.
Halidon… holly-dawn.
No known definition. A word? A name? A man? A three-beat sound?
What did it mean?
'It's beautiful, isn't it,' said Alison, looking beyond him through
the window.
'You're awake.'
'Someone turned on a radio and a man spoke… endlessly.' She smiled
and stretched long legs. She then inhaled in a deep yawn, which caused
her breasts to swell against the soft white silk of her blouse.
McAuliff watched. And she saw him watching, and smiled again - in
humour, not provocation. 'Relevancy, Dr McAuliff. Remember?'
'That word's going to get you into trouble, Ms Booth.'
'I'll stop saying it instantly. Come to think, I don't believe I
used it much until I met you.'
'I like the connection; don't stop.'
She laughed, and reached for her pocketbook, on the deck between
them.
There was a sudden series of rise-and-fall motions as the plane
entered air turbulence. It was over quickly, but during it Alison's
open purse landed on its side - on Alex's lap. Lipstick, compact,
matches, and a short thick tube fell out, wedging themselves between
McAuliff's legs. It was one of those brief, indecisive moments.
Pocketbooks were unfair vantage points, somehow unguarded extensions of
the private self. And Alison was not the type to reach swiftly between
a man's legs to retrieve property.
'Nothing fell on the floor,' said Alex awkwardly, handing Alison the
purse. 'Here.'
He picked out the lipstick and the compact with his left hand, his
right on the thick tube, which, at first, seemed to have a very
personal connotation. As his eyes were drawn to the casing, however,
the connotation became something else. The tube was a weapon, a
compressor. On the cylinder's side were printed words:
312 GAS CONTENTS
FOR MILITARY AND/OR POLICE USE ONLY
AUTHORISATION NUMBER 4316
RECORDED: 1-6
The authorization number and the date had been handwritten in
indelible ink. The gas compressor had been issued by British
authorities a month ago.
Alison took the tube from his hand. 'Thank you' was all she said.
'You planning to hijack the plane? That's quite a lethal-looking
object.'
'London has its problems for girls… women these days. There were
incidents in my building. May I have a cigarette? I seem to be out.'
'Sure.' McAuliff reached into his shirt pocket and withdrew his
cigarettes, shaking one up for her. He lighted it, then spoke softly,
very gently. 'Why are you lying to me, Alison?'
'I'm not. I think it's presumptuous of you to think so.'
'Oh, come on.' He smiled, reducing the earnestness of his inquiry.
'The police, especially the London police, do not issue compressors of
gas because of "incidents." And you don't look like a colonel in the
Women's Auxiliary Army.' As he said the words, Alex suddenly had the
feeling that perhaps he was wrong. Was Alison Booth an emissary from
Holcroft? Not Warfield, but British Intelligence?
'Exceptions are made. They really are, Alex.' She locked her eyes
with his; she was not lying.
'May I venture a suggestion? A reason?'
'If you like.'
'David Booth?'
She looked away, inhaling deeply on her cigarette. 'You know about
him. That's why you kept asking questions the other night.'
'Yes. Did you think I wouldn't find out?'
'I didn't care… no, that's not right; I think I wanted you to find
out if it helped me get the job. But I couldn't tell you.'
'Why not?'
'Oh, Lord, Alex! Your own words; you wanted the best professionals,
not personal problems! For all I knew, you'd have scratched me
instantly.' Her smile was gone now. There was only anxiety.
'This Booth must be quite a fellow.'
'He's a very sick, very vicious man… But I can handle David. I was
always able to handle him. He's an extraordinary coward.'
'Most vicious people are.'
'I'm not sure I subscribe to that. But it wasn't David. It was
someone else. The man he worked for.'
'Who?'
'A Frenchman. A marquis. Chatellerault is his name.'
The team took separate taxis into Kingston. Alison remained behind
with McAuliff while he commandeered the equipment with the help of the
Jamaican government people attached to the Ministry of Education. Alex
could feel the same vague resentment from the Jamaicans that he had
felt with the academicians in London; only added now was the aspect of
pigmentation. Were there no black geologists? they seemed to be
thinking.
The point was emphasized by the Customs men, their khaki uniforms
creased into steel. They insisted on examining each box, each carton,
as though each contained the most dangerous contraband imaginable. They
decided to be officially thorough as McAuliff stood helplessly by long
after the aircraft had taxied into a Palisados berth. Alison remained
ten yards away, sitting on a luggage dolly.
An hour and a half later, the equipment had been processed and
marked for in-island transport to Boscobel Airfield, in Ocho Rios.
McAuliff's temper was stretched to the point of gritted teeth and a
great deal of swallowing. Hegrabbed Alison's arm and marched
them both towards the terminal.
'For heaven's sake, Alex, you're bruising my elbow!' said Alison
under her breath, trying to hold back her laughter.
'Sorry… I'm sorry. Those goddamned messiahs think they
inherited the earth! The bastards!'
'They recently inherited their own island—'
'I'm in no mood for anti-colonial lectures,' he interrupted. I'm in
the mood for a drink. Let's stop at the lounge.'
'What about our bags?'
'Oh, Christ! I forgot… it's this way, if I remember,' said Alex,
pointing to a gate entrance on the right.
'Yes,' replied Alison. "Incoming Flights" usually means that.'
'Be quiet. My first order to you as a subordinate is not to say
another word until we get our bags and I have a drink in my hand.'
But McAuliffs command, by necessity, was rescinded. Their luggage
was nowhere in sight. And apparently no one knew where it might be; all
passenger baggage stored on Flight 640 from London had been picked up.
An hour ago.
'We were on that flight. We did not pick up our
bags. So, you see, you're mistaken,' said Alex curtly to the luggage
manager.
'Then you look-see, mon,' answered the Jamaican, irritated by the
American's implication that he was less than efficient. 'Every suitcase
taken - nothing left. Flight 640 all here, mon! No place
other.'
'Let me talk to the BOAC representative. Where is he?'
'Who?'
'Your boss, goddamn it!'
'I top mon!' replied the black angrily.
Alex held himself in check. 'Look, there's been a mix-up. The
airline's responsible, that's all I'm trying to say.'
'I think not, mon,' interjected the luggage manager defensively as
he turned to a telephone on the counter. 'I will call Bo-Ack.'
'BOAC.' McAuliff spoke softly to Alison. 'Our bags are probably on
the way to Buenos Aires.' They waited while the man spoke briefly on
the phone.
'Here, mon.' The manager held the phone out for Alex. 'You talk,
please.'
'Hello?'
'Dr McAuliff?' said the British voice.
'Yes. McAuliff.'
'We merely followed the instructions in your note, sir.'
'What note?'
'To First Class Accommodations. The driver brought it to us. The
taxi. Mrs Booth's and your luggage was taken to Courtleigh Manor. That is
what you wished, is it not, sir?' The voice was laced with a trace of
over-clarification, as if the speaker were addressing someone who had
had an extra drink he could not handle.
'I see… Yes, that's fine,' said Alex quietly. He hung up the
telephone and turned to Alison. 'Our bags were taken to the hotel'
'Really? Wasn't that nice.' A statement.
'No, I don't think it was,' answered McAuliff. 'Come on, let's find
that bar.'
They sat at a corner table in the Palisados observation lounge. The
red-jacketed waiter brought their drinks while humming a Jamaican folk
tune softly. Alex wondered if the island's tourist bureau instructed
all those who served visitors to hum tunes and move rhythmically. He
reached for his glass and drank a large portion of his double Scotch.
He noticed that Alison, who was not much of a drinker, seemed as
anxious as he was to put some alcohol into her system.
All things considered - all things - it was conceivable that his
luggage might be stolen. Not hers. But the note had specified his and
Mrs Booth's.
'You didn't have any more artillery, did you?' asked Alex quickly.
'Like that compressor?'
'No. It would have set off bells in the airline X-ray. I declared
this prior to boarding.' Alison pointed to her purse.
'Yes, of course,' he mumbled.
'I must say, you're remarkably calm. I should think you'd be
telephoning the hotel, see if the bags got there… oh, not for me. I
don't travel with the Crown jewels.'
'Oh, Lord, I'm sorry, Alison.' He pushed his chair back. 'I'll call
right away.'
'No, please.' She reached out and put her hand over his. 'I think
you're doing what you're doing for a reason. You don't want to appear
upset. I think you're right. If they're gone, there's nothing I can't
replace in the morning.'
'You're very understanding. Thanks.'
She withdrew her hand and drank again. He pulled his chair back and
shifted his position slightly, towards the interior of the lounge.
Unobtrusively, he began scanning the other tables.
The observation lounge was half filled, no more than that. From his
position - their position - in the far west corner of the room, Alex
could see nearly every table. And he slowly riveted his attention on
every table, wondering, as he had wondered two nights ago on High
Holborn, who might be concerned with him.
There was movement in the dimly lighted entrance. McAuliffs eyes
were drawn to it: the figure of a stocky man in a white shirt and no
jacket standing in the wide frame. He spoke to the lounge's hostess,
shaking his head slowly, negatively, as he looked inside. Suddenly,
Alex blinked and focused on the man.
He knew him.
A man he had last seen in Australia, in the fields of Kimberly
Plateau. He had been told the man had retired to Jamaica.
Robert Hanley, a pilot.
Hanley was standing in the entranceway of the lounge, looking for
someone inside. And Alex knew instinctively that Hanley was looking for
him.
'Excuse me,' he said to Alison. 'There's a fellow I know. Unless I'm
mistaken, he's trying to find me.'
McAuliff thought, as he threaded his way around the tables and
through the subdued shadows of the room, that it was somehow right that
Robert Hanley, of all the men in the Caribbean, would be involved.
Hanley, the open man who dealt with a covert world because he was,
above all, a man to be trusted. A laughing man, a tough man, a
professional with expertise far beyond that required by those employing
him. Someone who had miraculously survived six decades when all the
odds indicated nearer to four. But then, Robert Hanley did not look
much over forty-five. Even his close-cropped, reddish-blond hair was
devoid of grey.
'Robert!'
'Alexander!'
The two men clasped hands and held each other's shoulders.
'I said to the lady sitting with me that I thought you were looking
for me. I'll be honest, I hope I'm wrong.'
'I wish you were, lad.'
'That's what I was afraid of. What is it? Come on in.'
'In a minute. Let me tell you the news first. I wouldn't want the
lady to see you uncork your temper.' Hanley led Alex away from the
door; they stood alone by the wall. 'It's Sam Tucker.'
'Sam? Where is he?'
'That's the point, lad. I don't know. Sam flew into Mo'Bay three
days ago and called me at Port Antone'; the boys in Los Angeles told
him I was here. I hopped over, naturally, and it was a grand reunion. I
won't go into the details. The next morning, Sam went down to the
lobby to get a paper, I think. He never came back.'
EIGHT
Robert Hanley was flying back to Port Antonio in an hour. He and
McAuliff agreed not to mention Sam Tucker to Alison. Hanley also agreed
to keep looking for Sam; he and Alex would stay in touch.
The three of them took a taxi from Port Royal into Kingston, to the
Courtleigh. Hanley remained in the cab and took it on to the small
Tinson Pen Airfield, where he kept his plane.
At the hotel desk, Alex enquired nonchalantly, feeling no casualness
whatsoever, 'I assume our luggage arrived?'
'Indeed, yes, Mr McAuliff,' replied the clerk, stamping both
registration forms and signalling a bellhop. 'Only minutes ago. We had
them brought to your rooms. They're adjoining.'
'How thoughtful,' said Alex softly, wondering if Alison had heard
the man behind the desk. The clerk did not speak loudly, and Alison was
at the end of the counter, looking at tourist brochures. She glanced
over at McAuliff; she had heard. The expression on her face was
noncommittal. He wondered.
Five minutes later, she opened the door between their two rooms, and
Alex knew there was no point speculating further.
'I did as you ordered, Mister Bossman,' said Alison, walking in. 'I
didn't touch the—'
McAuliff held up his hand quickly, signalling her to be quiet. 'The bed,
bless your heart! You're all heart, luv!'
The expression now on Alison's face was definitely committal. Not
pleasantly. It was an awkward moment, which he was not prepared for; he
had not expected her to walk deliberately into his room. Still, there
was no point standing immobile, looking foolish.
He reached into his jacket pocket and withdrew a small,
square-shaped metal instrument the size of a cigarette pack. It was one
of several items given him by Holcroft. (Holcroft had cleared his
boarding pass with BOAC in London, eliminating the necessity of his
declaring whatever metallic objects were on his person.)
The small metal box was an electronic scanner with a miniaturized
high-voltage battery. Its function was simple, its mechanism complex,
and Holcroft claimed it was in very common use these days. It detected
the presence of electronic listening devices within a nine-by-nine-foot
area. Alex had intended to use it the minute he entered the room.
Instead, he absentmindedly had opened the doors to his small balcony
and gazed for a brief time at the dark, majestic rise of the Blue
Mountains beyond in the clear Kingston night.
Alison Booth stared at the scanner and then at McAuliff. Both anger
and fear were in her eyes, but she had the presence of mind to say
nothing.
As he had been taught, Alex switched on the instrument and made half
circles laterally and vertically, starting from the far corner of the
room. This pattern was to be followed in the other three corners. He
felt embarrassed, almost ludicrous, as he waved his arm slowly, as
though administering some occult benediction. He did not care to look
at Alison as he went through the motions.
Then, suddenly, he was not embarrassed at all. Instead, he felt a
pain in the centre of his upper stomach, a sharp sting as his breath
stopped and his eyes riveted on the inch-long, narrow bar in the dial
of the scanner. He had seen that bar move often during the practice
sessions with Holcroft; he had been curious, even fascinated at its
wavering, stuttering, movements. He was not fascinated now. He was
afraid.
This was not a training session in an out-of-the-way, safe practice
room with Holcroft patiently, thoroughly explaining the importance of
overlapping areas. It was actually happening; he had not really thought
that it would happen. It all had been… well, basically insincere,
somehow so improbable.
Yet now, in front of him, the thin, inch-long bar was vibrating,
oscillating with a miniature violence of its own. The tiny sensors were
responding to an intruder.
Somewhere within the immediate area of his position was a foreign
object whose function was to transmit everything being said in this room.
He motioned to Alison; she approached him warily. He gestured and
realized that his gestures were those of an unimaginative charade
contestant. He pointed to the scanner and then to his lips. When she
spoke he felt like a goddamned idiot.
'You promised me a drink in that lovely garden downstairs. Other
considerations will have to wait… luv
.' She said the words quietly,
simply. She was very believable!
'You're right,' he answered, deciding instantly that he was no
actor. 'Just let me wash up.'
He walked swiftly into the bathroom and turned the faucets on in the
basin. He pulled the door to within several inches of closing; the
sound of the rushing water was discernible, not obvious. He returned to
where he had been standing and continued to operate the scanner,
reducing the semicircles as the narrow bar reacted, centering in on the
location of the object as he had been taught to do by Holcroft.
The only non-stunning surprise was the fact that the scanner's tiny
red light went on directly above his suitcase, against the wall on a
baggage rack.
The red light indicated that the object was within twelve inches of
the instrument.
He handed Alison the scanner and opened the case cautiously. He
separated his clothes, removing shirts, socks, and underwear, and
placing them - throwing them - on the bed. When the suitcase was more
empty than full, he stretched the elasticized liner and ran his fingers
against the leather wall.
McAuliff knew what to feel for; Holcroft had showed him dozens of
bugs of varying sizes and shapes.
He found it.
It was attached to the outer lining: a small bulge the size of a
leather-covered button. He let it stay and, as Holcroft had instructed,
continued to examine the remainder of the suitcase for a second,
back-up device. It was there, too. On the opposite side. He took the
scanner from Alison, walked away from the area, and rapidly 'half
circled' the rest of the room. As Holcroft had told him to expect,
there was no further movement on the scanner's dial. For, if a
transmitter was planted on a movable host, it usually indicated that it
was the only source available.
The rest of the room was clean. 'Sterile' was the word Holcroft had
used.
McAuliff went into the bathroom; it, too, was safe. He turned off
the faucets and called out to Alison.
'Are you unpacked?' Now why the hell did he say that? Of all
the stupid…
'I'm an old hand at geo trips,' came the relaxed reply. 'All my
garments are double-knit; they can wait. I really want to see that lovely
garden. Do hurry.'
He pulled the door open and saw that the girl was closing the
balcony door, drawing the curtains across the floor-to-ceiling glass.
Alison Booth was doing the right thing, he reflected. Holcroft had
often repeated the command: When you find a transmitter, check
outside sightlines; assume visual surveillance.
He came out of the bathroom; she looked across at him… No, he
thought, she did not look at him, she stared at him.
'Good,' she said. 'You're ready. I think you missed most of your
beard, but you're presentable. Let's go… luv'
Outside the room, in the hotel corridor, Alison took his arm, and
they walked to the elevator. Several times he began to speak, but each
time he did so, she interrupted him.
'Wait till we're downstairs,' she kept repeating softly.
In the patio garden, it was Alison who, after they had been seated,
requested another table. One on the opposite side of the open area; a
table, Alex realized, that had no palms or plants in its vicinity.
There were no more than a dozen other couples, no single men or
unescorted women. McAuliff had the feeling that Alison had observed
each couple closely.
Their drinks arrived; the waiter departed, and Alison Booth spoke.
'I think it's time we talked to each other… about things we haven't
talked about.'
Alex offered her a cigarette. She declined, and so he lighted one
for himself. He was buying a few seconds of time before answering her,
and both of them knew it.
'I'm sorry you saw what you did upstairs. I don't want you to give
it undue importance.'
'That would be funny, darling, except that you were
halfway to hysterics.'
'That's nice.'
'What?'
'You said "darling."'
'Please. May we stay professional?'
'Good Lord! Are you? Professional, I mean?'
'I'm a geologist. What are you?'
McAuliff ignored her. 'You said I was… excited upstairs. You were
right. But it struck me that you weren't. You did all the correct
things while I was fumbling.'
'I agree. You were fumbling. Alex… were you told to hire me?'
'No. I was told to think twice or three times before accepting you.'
'That could have been a ploy. I wanted the job badly; I would have
gone to bed with you to get it… Thank you for not demanding that,'
'There was no pressure one way or the other about you. Only a
warning. And that was because of your recent husband's sideline
occupation, which, incidentally, apparently accounts for most of his
money. I say money because it's not considered income, I gather.'
'It accounts for all his money, and is not reported as
income. And I don't for a minute believe the Geophysics Department of
London University would have access to such information. Much less the
Royal Society.'
'Then you'd be wrong. A lot of the money for this survey is a
grant from the government funnelled through the society and the
university. When governments spend money, they're concerned about
personnel and payrolls.' McAuliff was pleasantly surprised at
himself. He was responding as Holcroft said he would: creating instant,
logical replies. Build on part of the truth, keep it simple…
Those had been Holcroft's words.
'We'll let that dubious, American-oriented assessment pass,' said
Alison, now reaching for his cigarettes. 'Surely you'll explain what
happened upstairs.'
The moment had come, thought Alex, wondering if he could carry it
off the way Holcroft said: Reduce any explanation to very few
words, rooted in common sense and simplicity, and do not vary. He
lighted her cigarette and spoke as casually as possible.
'There's a lot of political jockeying in Kingston. Most of it's
petty, but some of it gets rough. This survey has controversial
overtones. Resentment of origin, jealousies, that sort of thing. You
saw it at Customs… There are people who would like to discredit us. I
was given that goddamned scanner to use in case I thought something
very unusual happened. I thought it had, and I was right.' Alex drank
the remainder of his drink and watched the girl's reaction. He did his
best to convey only sincerity.
'Our bags, you mean,' said Alison.
'Yes. That note didn't make sense, and the clerk at the desk said
they got here just before we did. But they were picked up at Palisados
over two hours ago.'
'I see. And a geological survey would drive people to those
extremes? That's hard to swallow, Alex.'
'Not if you think about it. Why are surveys made? What's generally
the purpose? Isn't it usually because someone - some people - expect to
build something?'
'Not one like ours, no. It's too spread out over too great an area.
I'd say it's patently, obviously academic. Anything else
would—' Alison stopped as her eyes met McAuliffs. 'Good Lord! If it was
anything else, it's unbelievable!'
'Perhaps there are those who do believe it. If they did,
what do you think they'd do?' Alex signalled the waiter by holding up
two fingers for refills. Alison Booth's lips were parted in
astonishment.
'Millions and millions and millions,' said the girl
quietly. 'My God, they'd buy up everything in sight!'
'Only if they were convinced they were right.'
Alison forced him to look at her. When, at first, he refused, and
glanced over at the waiter, who was dawdling, she put her hand on top
of his and made him pay attention. 'They are right, aren't
they, Alex?'
'I wouldn't have any proof of it. My contract's with London
University, with countersigned approvals from the Society and the
Jamaican Ministry. What they do with the results is their business.' It
was pointless to issue a flat denial. He was a professional surveyor,
not a clairvoyant.
'I don't believe you. You've been primed.'
'Not primed. Told to be on guard, that's all.'
'Those… deadly little instruments aren't given to people who've only
been told to be on guard.'
'That's what I thought. But you know something? You and I are wrong,
Alison. Scanners are in… common use these days. Nothing out of the
ordinary. Especially if you're working outside home territory. Not a
very nice comment on the state of trust, is it?'
The waiter brought their drinks. He was humming and moving
rhythmically to the beat of his own tune. Alison continued to stare at
McAuliff. He wasn't sure, but he began to think she believed him. When
the waiter left, she leaned forward, anxious to speak.
'And what are you supposed to do now? You found those awful… things.
What are you going to do about them?'
'Nothing. Report them to the Ministry in the morning, that's all.'
'You mean you're not going to take them out and step on them or
something? You're just going to leave them there?'
It was not a pleasant prospect, thought Alex, but Holcroft had been
clear: If a bug was found, let it remain intact and use it.
It could be invaluable. Before eliminating any such device, he was to
report it and await instructions. A fish store named Tallon's, near
Victoria Park.
'They're paying me… paying us. I suppose they'll want to quietly
investigate. What difference does it make? I don't have any secrets.'
'And you won't have,' said the girl softly but pointedly,
removing her hand from his.
McAuliff suddenly realized the preposterousness of his position. It
was at once ridiculous and sublime, funny and not funny at all.
'May I change my mind and call someone now?' he asked.
Alison slowly - very slowly - began to smile her lovely smile. 'No.
I was being unfair… And I do believe you. You're the most
maddeningly unconcerned man I've ever known. You are either supremely
innocent or superbly ulterior. I can't accept the latter; you were far
too nervous upstairs.' She put her hand back on top of his free one.
With his other, he finished the second drink.
'May I ask why you weren't? Nervous.'
'Yes. It's time I told you. I owe you that… I shan't be returning to
England, Alex. Not for many years, if ever. I can't. I spent several
months… cooperating with Interpol. I've had experience with those
horrid little buggers. That's what we called them. Buggers.'
McAuliff felt the stinging pain in his stomach again. It was fear,
and more than fear. Holcroft had said British Intelligence doubted she
would return to England. Julian. Warfield suggested that she might be
of value for abstract reasons having nothing to do with her
contributions to the survey.
He was not sure how - or why - but Alison was being used.
Just as he was being used.
'How did that happen?' he asked with appropriate
astonishment.
Alison touched on the highlights of her involvement. The marriage
was sour before the first anniversary. Succinctly put, Alison Booth
came to the conclusion very early that her husband had pursued and
married her for reasons having more to do with her professional travels
than for anything else.
'… it was as though he had been ordered to take me, use me, absorb
me…'
The strain came soon after they were married: Booth was inordinately
interested in her prospects. And, from seemingly nowhere, survey offers
came out of the blue, from little-known but good-paying firms, for
operations remarkably exotic.
'… among them, of course, Beirut, Corsica, southern Spain. He joined
me each time. For days, weeks at a time…'
The first confrontation with David Booth came about in Corsica. The
survey was a coastal-offshore expedition in the Capo Senetosa area.
David arrived during the middle stages for his usual two - to
three-week
stay, and during this period a series of strange telephone calls and
unexplained conferences took place, which seemed to disturb him
beyond his limited abilities to cope. Men flew into Ajaccia in small,
fast planes; others came by sea in trawlers and small ocean-going
craft. David would disappear for hours, then for days at a time.
Alison's field work was such that she returned nightly to the team's
seacoast hotel; her husband could not conceal his behaviour, nor the
fact that his presence in Corsica was not an act of devotion to her.
She forced the issue, enumerating the undeniable, and brutally
labelling David's explanations for what they were: amateurish lies. He
had broken down, wept, pleaded, and told his wife the truth.
In order to maintain a life style David Booth was incapable of
earning in the marketplace, he had moved into international narcotics.
He was primarily a courier. His partnership in a small
importing-exporting business was ideal for the work. The firm had no
real identity; indeed, it was rather nondescript, catering - as
befitted the owners -to a social rather than a commercial clientele,
dealing in art objects on the decorating level. He was able to travel
extensively without raising official eyebrows. His introduction to the
world of the contrabandists was banal: gambling debts
compounded by an excess of alcohol and embarrassing female alliances.
On the one hand, he had no choice; on the other, he was well paid and
had no moral compunctions.
But Alison did. The geological surveys were legitimate, testimonials
to David's employers' abilities to ferret out unsuspecting
collaborators. David was given the names of survey teams in selected
Mediterranean sites and told to contact them, offering the services of
his very respected wife, adding further that he would confidentially
contribute to her salary if she was hired. A rich, devoted husband only
interested in keeping an active wife happy. The offers were invariably
accepted. And, by finding her 'situations,' his travels were given a
twofold legitimacy. His courier activities had grown beyond the
dilettante horizons of his business.
Alison threatened to leave the Corsican job.
David was hysterical. He insisted he would be killed, and Alison as
well. He painted a picture of such widespread, powerful
corruption-without-conscience that Alison, fearing for both their
lives, relented. She agreed to finish the work in Corsica, but made it
clear their marriage was finished. Nothing would alter that
decision.
So she believed at the time.
But one late afternoon in the field - on the water, actually -
Alison was taking bore samples from the ocean floor several hundred
yards offshore. In the small cabin cruiser were two men. They were
agents of Interpol. They had been following her husband for a number of
months. Interpol was gathering massive documentation of criminal
evidence. It was closing in.
'Needless to say, they were prepared for his arrival. My room was as
private as yours was intended to be this evening…'
The case they presented was strong and clear. Where her husband had
described a powerful network of corruption, the Interpol men told of
another world of pain and suffering and needless, horrible death.
'Oh, they were experts,' said Alison, her eyes remembering, her
smile compassionately sad. 'They brought photographs, dozens of them.
Children in agony; young men, girls destroyed. I shall never forget
those pictures. As they intended I would not…'
Their appeal was the classic recruiting approach: Mrs David Booth
was in a unique position; there was no one like her. She could do so
much, provide so much. And if she walked away in the manner
she had described to her husband - abruptly, without explanation -
there was the very real question of whether she would be allowed to do
so. My God, thought McAuliff as he listened, the more
things change… The Interpol men might have been Holcroft speaking in a
room at the Savoy Hotel.
The arrangements were made, schedules created, a reasonable period
of time specified for the 'deterioration' of the marriage. She told a
relieved Booth that she would try to save their relationship, on the
condition that he never again speak to her of his outside activities.
For half a year Alison Gerrard Booth reported the activities of her
husband, identified photographs, planted dozens of tiny listening
devices in hotel rooms, automobiles, their own apartment. She did so
with the understanding that David Booth - whatever the eventual charges
against him - would be protected from physical harm. To the best of
Interpol's ability.
Nothing was guaranteed.
'When did it all come to an end?' asked Alex.
Alison looked away, briefly, at the dark, ominous panorama of the
Blue Mountains, rising in blackness several miles to the north. 'When I
listened to a very painful recording. Painful to hear; more painful
because I had made the recording possible.'
One morning after a lecture at the university, an Interpol man
arrived at her office in the geology department. In his briefcase he
had a cassette machine and a cartridge that was a duplicate of a
conversation recorded between her husband and a liaison from the
Marquis de Chatellerault, the man identified as the overlord of the
narcotics operation. Alison sat and listened to the voice of a broken
man drunkenly describing the collapse of his marriage to a woman he
loved very much. She heard him rage and weep, blaming himself for the
inadequate man that he was. He spoke of his refused entreaties for the
bed, her total rejection of him. And at the last, he made it clear
beyond doubt that he loathed using her; that if she ever found out, he
would kill himself. What he had done, almost too perfectly, was to
exonerate her from any knowledge whatsoever of Chatellerault's
operation. He had done it superbly.
'Interpol reached a conclusion that was as painful as the recording.
David had somehow learned what I was doing. He was sending a message.
It was time to get out.'
A forty-eight-hour divorce in Haiti was arranged. Alison Booth was
free.
And, of course, not free at all.
'… within a year, it will all close in on Chatellerault, on David…
on all of them. And somewhere, someone will put it together: Booth's
wife…'
Alison reached for her drink and drank and tried to smile.
'That's it?' said Alex, not sure it was at all.
'That's it, Mr McAuliff… Now, tell me honestly, would you have hired
me had you known?'
'No, I would not… I wonder why I didn't know.'
'It's not the sort of information the university, or Emigration, or
just about anyone else would have.'
'Alison?' McAuliff tried to conceal the sudden fear he felt. 'You did
hear about this job from the university people, didn't you?'
The girl laughed and raised her lovely eyebrows in mock protest.
'Oh, Lord, it's tell-all time!… No, I admit to having a jump; it gave
me time to compile that very impressive portfolio for you.'
'How did you learn of it?'
'Interpol. They'd been looking for months. They called me about ten
or twelve days before the interview.'
McAuliff did not have to indulge in any rapid calculations. Ten or
twelve days before the interview would place the date within reasonable
approximation of the afternoon he had met with Julian Warfield at
Belgravia Square.
And later with a man named Holcroft from British Intelligence.
The stinging pain returned to McAuliffs stomach. Only it was sharper
now, more defined. But he could not dwell on it. Across the
dark-shadowed patio, a man was approaching. He was walking to their
table unsteadily. He was drunk, thought Alex.
'Well, for God's sake, there you are! We wondered where
the hell you were! We're all in the bar inside. Whitehall's an absolute
riot on the piano! A bloody black Noel Coward!… Oh, by the way, I trust
your luggage got here. I saw you were having problems, so I scribbled a
note for the bastards to send it along. If they could read my whiskey
slant.'
Young James Ferguson dropped into an empty chair and smiled
alcoholically at Alison. He then turned and looked at McAuliff, his
smile fading as he was met by Alex's stare.
'That was very kind of you,' said McAuliff quietly.
And then Alexander saw it in Ferguson's eyes. The focused
consciousness behind the supposedly glazed eyes.
James Ferguson was nowhere near as drunk as he pretended to be.
NINE
They expected to stay up most of the night. It was their silent,
hostile answer to the 'horrid little buggers.' They joined the others
in the bar and, as a good captain should, McAuliff was seen talking to
the maitre'd ; all knew the evening was being paid for by their
director.
Charles Whitehall lived up to Ferguson's judgment. His talent was
professional; his island patter songs - filled with Caribbean idiom and
Jamaican black wit - were funny, brittle, cold, and episodically hot.
His voice had the clear, high-pitched thrust of a Kingston balladeer;
only his eyes remained remote. He was entertaining and amusing, but he
was neither entertained nor amused himself, thought Alex.
He was performing.
And finally, after nearly two hours, he wearied of the chore,
accepted the cheers of the half-drunken room, and wandered to the
table. After receiving individual shakes, claps and hugs from Ferguson,
the Jensens, Alison Booth, and Alex, he opted for a chair next to
McAuliff. Ferguson had been sitting there - encouraged by Alex - but
the young botanist was only too happy to move. Unsteadily.
'That was remarkable!' said Alison, leaning across McAuliff,
reaching for Whitehall's hand. Alex watched as the Jamaican responded;
the dark Caribbean hand - fingernails manicured, gold ring glistening -
curled delicately over Alison's as another woman's might. And then, in
contradiction, Whitehall raised the girl's wrist and kissed her fingers.
A waiter brought over a bottle of white wine for Whitehall's
inspection. He read the label in the nightclub light, looked up at the
smiling attendant, and nodded. He turned back to McAuliff; Alison was
now chatting with Ruth Jensen across the table. 'I should like to speak
with you privately,' said the Jamaican casually. 'Meet me in my room,
say, twenty minutes after I leave.'
'Alone?'
'Alone.'
'Can't it wait until morning?'
Whitehall levelled his black eyes at McAuliff and spoke softly but
sharply. 'No, it cannot.'
James Ferguson suddenly lurched up from his chair at the end of the
table and raised his glass to Whitehall. He weaved and gripped the edge
with his free hand; he was the picture of a very drunk young man.
'Here's to Charles the First of Kingston! The bloody black Sir Noel!
You're simply fantastic, Charles!'
There was an embarrassing instant of silence as the word 'black' was
absorbed. The waiter hurriedly poured Whitehall's wine; it was no
moment for sampling.
'Thank you,' said Whitehall politely. 'I take that as a high
compliment, indeed… Jimbo-mon.'
'Jimbo-mon!' shouted Ferguson with delight. 'I love it! You
shall call me Jimbo-mon! And now, I should like—' Ferguson's
words were cut short, replaced by an agonizing grimace on his pale
young face. It was suddenly abundantly clear that his alcoholic
capacity had been reached. He set his glass down with wavering
precision, staggered backward and, in a slow motion of his own,
collapsed to the floor.
The table rose en masse; surrounding couples turned. The waiter put
the bottle down quickly and started towards Ferguson; he was joined by
Peter Jensen, who was nearest.
'Oh, Lord,' said Jensen, kneeling down. 'I think the poor fellow's
going to be sick. Ruth, come help… You there, waiter. Give me a hand,
chap!'
The Jensens, aided by two waiters now, gently lifted the young
botanist into a sitting position, unloosened his tie, and generally
tried to reinstate some form of consciousness. And Charles Whitehall,
standing beside McAuliff, smiled, picked up two napkins, and lobbed
them across the table onto the floor near those administering aid. Alex
watched the Jamaican's action; it was not pleasant. Ferguson's head was
nodding back and forth; moans of impending illness came from his lips.
'I think this is as good a time as any for me to leave,' said
Whitehall. 'Twenty minutes?'
McAuliff nodded. 'Or thereabouts.'
The Jamaican turned to Alison, delicately took her hand, kissed it,
and smiled. 'Good night, my dear.'
With minor annoyance, Alex sidestepped the two of them and walked
over to the Jensens, who, with the waiters' help, were getting Ferguson
to his feet.
'We'll bring him to his room,' said Ruth. 'I warned him about the
rum; it doesn't go with whiskey. I don't think he listened.' She smiled
and shook her head.
McAuliff kept his eyes on Ferguson's face. He wondered if he would
see what he saw before. What he had been watching for for over an hour.
And then he did. Or thought he did.
As Ferguson's arms went limp around the shoulders of a waiter and
Peter Jensen, he opened his eyes. Eyes that seemingly swum in their
sockets. But for the briefest of moments, they were steady, focused,
devoid of glaze. Ferguson was doing a perfectly natural thing any
person would do in a dimly lit room. He was checking his path to avoid
obstacles.
And he was - for that instant - quite sober.
Why was James Ferguson putting on such a splendidly embarrassing
performance? McAuliff would have a talk with the young man in the
morning. About several things including a 'whiskey-slanted' note that
resulted in a suitcase that triggered the dial of an electronic scanner.
'Poor lamb. He'll feel miserable in the morning.' Alison had come
alongside Alex. Together they watched the Jensens take Ferguson out the
door.
'I hope he's just a poor lamb who went astray for the night and
doesn't make a habit of it.'
'Oh, come on, Alex, don't be old-auntie. He's a perfectly nice young
man who's had a pint too many.' Alison turned and looked at the
deserted table. 'Well, it seems the party's over, doesn't it?'
'I thought we agreed to keep it going.'
'I'm fading fast, darling; my resolve is weakening. We also agreed
to check my luggage with your little magic box. Shall we?'
'Sure.' McAuliff signalled the waiter.
They walked down the hotel corridor; McAuliff took Alison's key as
they approached her door. 'I have to see Whitehall in a few minutes.'
'Oh? How come? It's awfully late.'
'He said he wanted to speak to me. Privately. I have no idea why.
I'll make it quick.' He inserted the key, opened the door, and found
himself instinctively barring Alison in the frame until he had switched
on the lights and looked inside.
The single room was empty, the connecting door to his still open, as
it had been when they left hours ago.
'I'm impressed,' whispered Alison, resting her chin playfully on the
outstretched, forbidding arm that formed a bar across the entrance.
'What?' He removed his arm and walked towards the connecting door.
The lights in his room were on - as he had left them. He closed the
door quietly, withdrew the scanner from his jacket, and crossed to the
bed, where Alison's two suitcases lay alongside each other. He held the
instrument above them; there was no movement on the dial. He walked
rapidly about the room, laterally and vertically blessing it from all
corners. The room was clean. 'What did you say?' he asked softly.
'You're protective. That's nice.'
'Why were the lights off in this room and not in mine?' He had not
heard her words.
'Because I turned them off. I came in here, got my purse, used some
lipstick, and went back into your room. There's a switch by the door. I
used it.'
'I don't remember.'
'You were upset at the time. I gather my room isn't the centre of
attention yours is.' Alison walked in and closed the corridor door.
'No, it's not, but keep your voice low… Can those goddamn things
listen through doors and walls?'
'No, I don't think so.' She watched him take her suitcases from the
bed and carry them across the room. He stood by the closet, looking for
a luggage rack. There was none. 'Aren't you being a little obvious?'
'What?'
'What are you doing with my bags? I haven't unpacked.'
'Oh.' McAuliff could feel the flush on his face. He felt like a
goddamn idiot. 'I'm sorry. I suppose I could say I'm compulsively neat.'
'Or just compulsive.'
He carried the bags back to the bed and turned to look at her, the
suitcases still in his hands. He was so terribly tired. 'It's been a
rotten day… a very confusing day,' he said. 'The fact that it's not
over yet is discouraging as hell; there's still Whitehall to go… And in
the next room, if I snore or talk in my sleep or go to the bathroom
with the door open, everything is recorded somewhere on a tape. I can
say it doesn't bother me, but it doesn't make me feel any better,
either… I'll tell you something else, too, while I'm rambling. You are
a lovely, lovely girl… and you're right, I'm compulsive… for example,
at this moment I have the strongest compulsion to hold you and kiss you
and feel your arms around me, and… you are so goddamn desirable… and
you have such a beautiful smile and laugh… when you laugh I just want
to watch you and touch your face… and all I want to do is hold you and
forget everything else… Now I'm finished rambling, and you can tell me
to go to hell because I'm not relevant.'
Alison Booth stood silently, looking at McAuliff for what seemed to
him far too long. Then she walked slowly, deliberately, to him.
'Do you know how silly you look holding those suitcases?' she
whispered as she leaned forward and kissed him on the lips.
He dropped the bags; the noise of their contact with the floor made
them both smile. He pulled her to him and the comfort was splendid, the
warm, growing excitement a special thing. And as he kissed her, their
mouths moistly exploring, pressing, widening, he realized Alison was
trembling, gripping him with a strength that was more than a desire to
be taken. Yet it was not fear; there was no hesitancy, no holding back,
only anxiety.
He lowered her gently to the bed; as he did so, she unbuttoned the
silk blouse and guided his hand to her breasts. She closed her eyes as
he caressed her and whispered.
'It's been a terribly long time, Alex. Do you think Whitehall could
wait a while longer? You see, I don't think I can.'
They lay beside each other, naked, under the soft covers. She rose
on her elbow, her hair falling over her face, and looked at him. She
traced his lips with her fingers and bent down, kissing him, outlining
his lips now with her tongue.
'I'm absolutely shameless,' she said, laughing softly. 'I want to
make love to you all night long. And most of the day… I'm parched and
I've been to the well and I want to stay here.'
He reached up and let her hair fall through his fingers. He followed
the strands downward to the swell of her body and cupped her left
breast. 'We'll take the minimum time out for food and sleep.'
There was the faint ring of a telephone. It came from the direction
of the connecting door. From his room.
'You're late for Charles Whitehall,' said Alison. 'You'd better go
answer it.'
'Our goddamn Sir Noel.' He climbed out of the bed, walked rapidly to
the door, opened it, and went into the room. As he picked up the
telephone, he looked at the drawn curtains of his balcony doors; he was
grateful for Alison's experience. Except for his socks - why his socks?
-he was naked.
'I said twenty minutes, Mr McAuliff. It's nearly an hour.'
Whitehall's voice was quietly furious.
'I'm sorry. I told you "thereabouts." For me, an hour is
"thereabouts." Especially when someone gives me orders at this time of
night and he's not bleeding.'
'Let's not argue. Will you be here soon?'
'Yes.'
'When?'
'Twenty minutes.' Alex hung up the telephone a bit harder than was
necessary and looked over at his suitcase. Whoever was on the other end
of that line knew he was going out of the room to meet
someone who had tried to issue him orders at three o'clock in the
morning. He would think about it later.
'Do you know how positively handsome you are? All over,' said Alison
as he came back into the room.
'You're right, you're shameless.'
'Why do you have your knee socks on? It looks peculiar.' She sat up,
pulling the sheet over her breasts, and reached for the cigarettes on
the night table.
'Light me one, will you please? I've got to get dressed.' McAuliff
looked around the bed for the clothing he had removed in such haste a
half hour ago.
'Was he upset?' She handed him a cigarette as he pulled on his
trousers and picked up his shirt from the floor.
'He was upset. He's also an arrogant son of a bitch.'
'I think Charles Whitehall wants to strike back at someone, or
something,' said Alison, watching him absently. 'He's angry.'
'Maybe it's recognition. Not granted to the extent he thinks it
should be.' McAuliff buttoned his shirt.
'Perhaps. That would account for his dismissing the compliments.'
'The what?' he asked.
'His little entertainment downstairs tonight was frighteningly
thought out. It wasn't prepared for a nightclub. It was created for
Covent Garden. Or the grand hall of the United Nations.'
He tapped gently on Whitehall's door, and when it opened, McAuliff
found the Jamaican dressed in an embroidered Japanese hopi
coat. Beneath the flowery garment, Whitehall wore his flared pin-stripe
trousers and velvet slippers.
'Come in, please. This time you're early. It's not yet fifteen
minutes.'
'You're obsessed with time. It's after three in the morning; I'd
rather not look at my watch.' Alex closed the door behind him. 'I hope
you have something important to tell me. Because if you don't, I'm
going to be damned angry.'
The black had crossed to the bureau; he picked up a folded piece of
paper from the top and indicated a chair for McAuliff. 'Sit down,
please. I, too, am quite exhausted, but we must talk.'
Alex walked to the armchair and sat down. 'Go ahead.'
'I think it's time we had an understanding. It will in no way affect
my contributions to the survey.'
'I'm relieved to hear that. I didn't hire you to entertain the
troops downstairs.'
'A dividend,' said Whitehall coldly. 'Don't knock it; I'm very good.'
'I know you are. What else is new?'
The scholar tapped the paper in his hands. 'There'll be periods when
it will be necessary for me to be absent. Never more than a day or two
at a time. Naturally, I'll give you advance notice, and if there are
problems - where possible - I shall rearrange my schedule.'
'You'll what?' McAuliff sat forward in the chair. 'Where… possible…
you'll fit your time to mine! That's goddamn nice of you. I
hope the survey won't be a burden.'
Whitehall laughed, impersonally. 'Not at all. It was just what I was
looking for. And you'll see, you'll be quite pleased… although I'm not
sure why I should be terribly concerned. You see, I cannot accept the
stated reasons for this survey. And I suspect there are one or two
others, if they spoke their thoughts, who share my doubts.'
'Are you suggesting that I hired you under false pretences?'
'Oh, come now,' replied the black scholar, his eyes narrowing in
irritation. 'Alexander McAuliff, a highly confidential, one-man survey
company whose work takes him throughout the world… for very large fees,
abruptly decides to become academically charitable? To take
from four to six months away from a lucrative practice to head up a university
survey! Whitehall laughed like a nervous jackal, walked rapidly to
the curtains of the room's balcony doors, and flipped one side
partially open. He twisted the latch and pulled the glass panel several
inches inward; the curtain billowed in the night breeze.
'You don't know the specifics of my contract,' said Alex
noncommittally.
'I know what universities and royal societies and
ministries of education pay. It's not your league, McAuliff.' The
Jamaican returned to the bed and sat down on the edge. He brought the
folded paper to his chin and stared at Alex.
McAuliff hesitated, then spoke slowly. 'In a way, aren't you
describing your own situation? There were several people in London who
didn't think you'd take the job. It was quite a drop in income for you.'
'Precisely. Our positions are similar; I'm sure for very different
reasons… Part of my reasoning takes me to Savanna-la-Mar in
the morning.'
'Your friend on the plane?'
'A bore. Merely a messenger.' Whitehall held up the folded piece of
paper. 'He brought me an invitation. Would you care to read it?'
'You wouldn't offer unless it was pertinent.'
'I have no idea whether it is or not. Perhaps you can tell
me.'
Alex took the paper extended to him and unfolded it. It was hotel
stationery. The George V, Paris. The handwriting was slanted, the
strokes rapid, words joined in speed.
My dear Whitehall—
Forgive this hastily
written note but I have just learned that we
are both en route to Jamaica. I for a welcome rest and you, I
understand, for more worthwhile pursuits.
I should deem it an
honour and a pleasure to meet with you. Our
mutual friend will give you the details. I shall be staying in
Savanna-la-Mar, albeit incognito. He will explain.
I do believe our
coming together at the earliest would be mutually
beneficial. I have long admired your past (?) island activities. I ask
only that our meeting and my presence in Jamaica remain confidential.
Since I so admire your endeavours, I know you will understand.
Chatellerault
Chatellerault… ? The Marquis de Chatellerault.
David Booth's 'employer.' The man behind a narcotics network that
spread throughout most of Europe and the Mediterranean. The man Alison
feared so terribly that she carried a lethal-looking cylinder of gas
with her at all times!
McAuliff knew that Whitehall was observing him. He forced himself to
remain immobile, betraying only numbness on his face and in his eyes.
'Who is he?' asked McAuliff blandly. 'Who's this Chatel…
Chatellerault?'
'You don't know?'
'Oh, for Christ's sake, Whitehall,' said Alex in weary
exasperation. 'Stop playing games. I've never heard of him.'
'I thought you might have.' The scholar was once again staring at
McAuliff. 'I thought the connection was rather evident.'
'What connection?'
'To whatever your reasons are for being in Jamaica.
Chatellerault is… among other things… a financier with considerable
resources. The coincidence is startling, wouldn't you agree?'
'I don't know what you're talking about.' McAuliff glanced down at
Chatellerault's note. 'What does he mean by your past question mark
island activities?'
Whitehall paused before replying. When he did, he spoke quietly,
thus lending emphasis to his words. 'Ten years ago I left my homeland
because the political faction for which I worked… devotedly, and in
secret… was forced underground. Further underground, I should say. For
a decade we have remained dormant - on the surface. But only on the
surface… I have returned now. Kingston knows nothing. It never
associated me with the movement. But Chatellerault knows, and therefore
demands confidentiality. I have, with considerable risk, broken this
confidence as an article of faith. For you… please. Why are you here,
McAuliff? Perhaps it will tell me why such a man as Chatellerault
wishes a conference.'
Alex got out of the chair and walked aimlessly towards the balcony
doors. He moved because it helped him concentrate. His mind was racing;
some abstract thoughts signalling a warning that Alison was in danger…
others balking, not convinced.
He crossed to the back of the chair facing Whitehall's bed and
gripped the cloth firmly. 'All right, I'll make a deal with you. I'll
tell you why I'm here, if you'll spell out this… activity of yours.'
'I will tell you what I can,' replied Charles, his eyes devoid of
deceit. 'It will be sufficient, you will see. I cannot tell you
everything. It would not be good for you.'
'That's a condition I'm not sure I like.' 'Please. Trust me.'
The man was not lying, that much was clear to Alex. 'Okay… I know
the north coast; I worked for Kaiser's bauxite. I'm considered very pro
- that is, I've put together some good teams and I've got a decent
reputation—'
'Yes, yes. To the point, please!'
'By heading up this job, the Jamaican government has guaranteed me
first refusal on fifty per cent of any industrial development for the
next six years. That could mean hundreds of thousands of dollars… It's
as simple as that.'
Whitehall sat motionless, his hands still folded beneath his chin,
an elegant little boy in a concerned man's body. 'Yes, that is
plausible,' he said finally. 'In much of Kingston, everything's for
sale. It could be a motive for Chatellerault.'
Alex remained behind the chair. 'All right. Now, that's why I'm
here. Why are you?'
'It is good you told me of your arrangement… I shall do my best to
see that it is lived up to. You deserve that.'
'What the hell does that mean?'
'It means I am here in a political capacity. A solely Jamaican
concern. You must respect that condition… and my confidence. I'd deny
it anyway, and you would soil your foreigner's hands in things
Jamaican. Ultimately, however, we will control Kingston.'
'Oh, Christ! Comes the goddamn revolution!'
'Of a different sort, Mr McAuliff. Put plainly, I'm a fascist.
Fascism is the only hope for my island.'
TEN
McAuliff opened his eyes, raised his wrist from beneath the covers,
and saw that it was 10.25. He had intended to get up by 8.30 - 9.00 at
the latest.
He had a man to see. A man with arthritis at a fish store called
Tallon's.
He looked over at Alison. She was curled up away from him, her hair
sprayed over the sheets, her face buried in the pillow. She had been
magnificent, he thought. No, he thought again, they had been
magnificent together. She had been… what was the word she used?
Parched. She had said: 'I've been parched and I've been to the well…'
And she had been.
Magnificent.
Yet still the thoughts came back.
A name that meant nothing to him twenty-four hours ago was suddenly
an unknown force to be reckoned with, separately put forward by two
people who were strangers a week ago.
Chatellerault. The Marquis de Chatellerault.
Currently in Savanna-la-Mar, on the southwest coast of Jamaica.
Charles Whitehall would be seeing him shortly, if they had not met
by now. The black fascist and the French financier. It sounded like a
vaudeville act.
But Alison Booth carried a deadly cylinder in her handbag, in the
event she ever had occasion to meet him. Or meet with those who worked
for him.
What was the connection? Certainly there had to be one.
He stretched, taking care not to wake her. Although he wanted to
wake her and hold her and run his hands over her body and make warm
love to her in the morning.
He couldn't. There was too much to do. Too much to think about…
He wondered what his instructions would be. And how long it would
take to receive them. And what the man with arthritis at a fish store
named Tallon's would be like.
And, no less important, where in God's name was Sam Tucker? He was
to be in Kingston by tomorrow. It wasn't like Sam to just take his
leave without a word; he was too kind a man. And yet, there had been
times…
When would they get the word to fly north and begin the actual work
on the survey?
He was not going to get the answers staring up at the ceiling from
Alison Booth's bed. And he was not going to make any telephone calls
from his room.
He smiled as he thought about the 'horrid little buggers' in his
suitcase. Were there horrid little men crouched over dials in dark
rooms waiting for sounds that never came?
There was a certain comfort in that.
'I can hear you thinking.' Alison's voice was muffled in the pillow.
'Isn't that remarkable.'
'It's frightening.'
She rolled over, her eyes shut, and smiled and reached under the
blankets for him. 'You also stretch quite sensually.' She caressed the
flatness of his stomach, and then his thighs, and then McAuliff knew
answers would have to wait. He pulled her to him; she opened her eyes
and raised the covers so there was nothing between them.
The taxi let him off at Victoria's South Parade. The thoroughfare
was aptly named, in the nineteenth-century sense. The throngs of people
flowing in and out of the park's entrance were like crowds of brightly
coloured peacocks, strutting, half acknowledging, quickening steps only
to stop and gape.
McAuliff walked into the park, doing his best to look like a
strolling tourist. Intermittently he could feel the hostile,
questioning glances as he made his way up the gravel path to the centre
of the park. It occurred to him that he had not seen a single other
white person; he had not expected that. He had the distinct feeling
that he was an object, to be tolerated but watched. Not essentially to
be trusted.
He was a strange-toned outsider who had invaded the heart of this
Man's playground. He nearly laughed when a young Jamaican mother guided
a smiling child to the opposite side of the path as he approached. The
child obviously had been fascinated by the tall, pinkish figure; the
mother, quietly, efficiently, knew better. With dignity.
He saw the rectangular white sign with the brown lettering: QUEEN
STREET, EAST. The arrow pointed to the right, at another, narrower
gravel path. He started down it.
He recalled Holcroft's words: Don't be in a hurry. Ever, if
possible. And never when you are making a contact. There's nothing so
obvious as a man in a rush in a crowd that's not; except a woman. Or
that same man stopping every five feet to light the same cigarette over
and over again, so he can peer around at everyone. Do the natural
things, depending on the day, the climate, the surroundings…
It was a warm morning… noon. The Jamaican sun was hot, but there
were breezes from the harbour, less than a mile away. It would be
perfectly natural for a tourist to sit down and take the sun and the
breeze; to unbutton his collar, remove his jacket, perhaps. To look
about with pleasant tourist curiosity.
There was a bench on the left; a couple had just got up. It was
empty. He took off his jacket, pulled at his tie, and sat down. He
stretched his legs and behaved as he thought was appropriate.
But it was not appropriate. For the most self-conscious of reasons:
He was too free, too relaxed in this Man's playground. He felt it
instantly, unmistakably. The discomfort was heightened by an old man
with a cane who walked by and hesitated in front of him. He was a touch
drunk, thought Alex; the head swayed slightly, the legs a bit unsteady.
But the eyes were not unsteady. They conveyed mild surprise mixed with
disapproval.
McAuliff rose from the bench and swung his jacket under his arm. He
smiled blankly at the old man and was about to proceed down the path
when he saw another man, difficult to miss. He was white - the only
other white man in Victoria Park. At least, the only one he could see.
He was quite far away, diagonally across the lawns, on the north-south
path, about a hundred and fifty yards in the distance.
A young man with a slouch and a shock of untrained dark hair.
And he had turned away. He had been watching him. Alex was sure of
that. Following him.
James Ferguson. The young man who had put on the second-best
performance of the night at the Courtleigh Manor last evening. The
drunk who had the presence of mind to keep sharp eyes open for
obstacles in a dimly lit room.
McAuliff took advantage of the moment and walked rapidly down the
path, then cut across the grass to the trunk of a large palm. He was
nearly two hundred yards from Ferguson now. He peered around the tree,
keeping his body out of sight. He was aware that a number of Jamaicans
sitting about on the lawn were looking at him; he was sure,
disapprovingly.
Ferguson, as he expected, was alarmed that he had lost the subject
of his surveillance. (It was funny, thought Alex. He could think the
word 'surveillance' now. He doubted he had, used the word a dozen
times in his life before three weeks ago.) The young botanist began
walking rapidly past the brown-skinned strollers. Holcroft was right,
thought McAuliff. A man in a hurry in a crowd that wasn't was obvious.
Ferguson reached the intersection of the Queen Street path and
stopped. He was less than forty yards from Alex now; he hesitated, as
if not sure whether to retreat back to the South Parade or go on.
McAuliff pressed himself against the palm trunk. Ferguson thrust
forward, as rapidly as possible. He had decided to keep going, if only
to get out of the park. The bustling crowds on Queen Street East
signified sanctuary. The park had become unsafe.
If these conclusions were right - and the nervous expression on
Ferguson's face seemed to confirm them -McAuliff realized that he had
learned something else about this strange young man: He was doing what
he was doing under duress and with very little experience. Look for the small things, Holcroft had said. They'll
be there; you'll learn to spot them. Signs that tell you there is valid
strength or real weakness…
Ferguson reached the East Parade gate, obviously relieved. He
stopped and looked carefully in all directions.
The unsafe field was behind him.
The young man checked his watch while waiting for the uniformed
policeman to halt the traffic for pedestrians. The whistle blew,
automobiles stopped with varying levels of screeches, and Ferguson
continued down Queen Street. Concealing himself as best he could in the
crowd. Alex followed. The young man seemed more relaxed now. He wasn't
as aggressive in his walk, in his darting glances. It was as though,
having lost the enemy, he was more concerned with explanations than
with reestablishing contact.
But McAuliff wanted that contact reestablished. It was as good a
time as any to ask young Ferguson those questions he needed answered.
Alex started across the street, dodging the traffic, and jumped over
the kerb out of the way of a Kingston taxi. He made his way through the
stream of shoppers to the far side of the walk.
There was a side street between Mark Lane and Duke. Ferguson
hesitated, looked around, and apparently decided it was worth trying.
He abruptly turned and entered.
McAuliff realized that he knew that street. It was a free-port strip
interspersed with bars. He and Sam Tucker had been there late one
afternoon a year ago, following a Kaiser conference at the Sheraton. He
remembered, too, that there was a diagonally connecting alley that
intersected the strip from Duke Street. He remembered because Sam had
thought there might be native saloons in the moist, dark brick
corridor, only to discover it was used for deliveries. Sam had been
upset; he was fond of backstreet native saloons.
Alex broke into a run. Holcroft's warning about drawing attention
would have to be disregarded. Tallon's could wait; the man with
arthritis could wait. This was the moment to reach James Ferguson.
He crossed Queen Street again, now paying no attention to the
disturbance he caused, or the angry whistle from the harassed Kingston
policeman. He raced down the block; there was the diagonally connecting
alley. It seemed even narrower than he remembered. He entered and
pushed his way past a half a dozen Jamaicans, muttering apologies,
trying to avoid the hard stares of those walking in the opposite
direction towards him - silent challenges, grownup children playing
king-of-the-road. He reached the end of the passageway and stopped. He
pressed his back against the brick and peered around the edge, up the
side street. His timing was right.
James Ferguson, his expression ferretlike, was only ten yards away.
Then five.
And then McAuliff walked out of the alley and confronted him.
The young man's face paled to a deathly white. Alex gestured him
against the stucco wall; the strollers passed in both directions,
several complaining.
Ferguson's smile was false, his voice strained, 'Well, hello, Alex…
Mr McAuliff. Doing a bit of shopping? This is the place for it.'
''Have I been shopping, Jimbo-mon? You'd know if I had,
wouldn't you?'
'I don't know what you… I wouldn't—'
'Maybe you're still drunk,' interrupted Alex. 'You had a lot to
drink last night.'
'Made a bloody fool of myself, I expect. Please accept my apologies.'
'No apologies necessary. You stayed just within the lines. You were
very convincing.'
'Really, Alex, you're a bit much.' Ferguson moved back. A Jamaican
woman, basket balanced on her head, hurried past. 'I said I was sorry.
I'm sure you've had occasion to overindulge.'
'Very often. As a matter of fact, I was a hell of a lot drunker than
you last night.'
'I don't know what you're implying, chap, and frankly, my head's too
painful to play anagrams. Now, for the last time, I apologize.'
'For the wrong sins, Jimbo-mon. Let's go back and find some real
ones. Because I have some questions.'
Ferguson awkwardly straightened his perennial slouch and whisked
away the shock of hair on his forehead. 'You're really quite abusive. I
have shopping to do.'
The young man started to walk around McAuliff. Alex grabbed his arm
and slammed him back into the stucco wall. 'Save your money. Do it in
London.'
'No!' Ferguson's body stiffened; the taut flesh around his
eyes stretched further. 'No, please,' he whispered.
'Then let's start with the suitcases.' McAuliff released the arm,
holding Ferguson against the wall with his stare.
'I told you,' the young man whined. 'You were having
trouble. I tried to help.'
'You bet your ass I had trouble! And not only with Customs. Where
did my luggage go? Our luggage? Who took it?'
'I don't know. I swear I don't!'
'Who told you to write that note?'
'No one told me! For God's sake, you're crazy!'
'Why did you put on that act last night?'
'What act?'
'You weren't drunk - you were sober.'
'Oh, Christ Almighty, I wish you had my hangover. Really—'
'Not good enough, Jimbo-mon. Let's try again. Who told you to write
that note?'
'You won't listen to me—'
'I'm listening. Why are you following me? Who told you to follow me
this morning?'
'By God, you're insane!'
'By God, you're fired!'
'No!… You can't. Please.' Ferguson's voice was frightened
again, a whisper.
'What did you say?' McAuliff placed his right hand against the wall,
over Ferguson's frail shoulder. He leaned into the strange young man.
'I'd like to hear you say that again. What can't I do?'
'Please… don't send me back. I beg you.' Ferguson was breathing
through his mouth; spots of saliva had formed on his thin lips. 'Not
now.'
'Send you back? I don't give a goddamn where you go! I'm not your
keeper, little boy.' Alex removed his hand from the wall and yanked his
jacket from under his left arm. 'You're entitled to return-trip
airfare. I'll draw it for you this afternoon, and pay for one more
night at the Courtleigh. After that, you're on your own. Go wherever
the hell you please. But not with me; not with the survey.'
McAuliff turned and abruptly walked away. He entered the narrow
alleyway and took up his position in the line of laconic strollers. He
knew the stunned Ferguson would follow. It wasn't long before he heard
him. The whining voice had the quality of controlled hysteria. Alex did
not stop or look back.
'McAuliff! Mr McAuliff! Please!' The English tones echoed
in the narrow brick confines, creating a dissonant counterpoint to the
lilting hum of a dozen Jamaican conversations. 'Please, wait…
Excuse me, excuse me, please. I'm sorry, let me pass, please…'
'What you do, mon?! Don't push you.'
The verbal objections did not deter Ferguson; the bodily
obstructions were somewhat more successful. Alex kept moving, hearing
and sensing the young man closing the gap slowly. It was eerily comic:
a white man chasing another white man in a dark, crowded passageway
that was exclusively - by civilized cautions - a native thoroughfare.
McAuliff was within feet of the exit to Duke Street when he felt
Ferguson's hand gripping his arm.
'Please. We have to talk… not here.'
'Where?'
They emerged on the sidewalk. A long horse-drawn wagon filled with
fruits and country vegetables was in front of them at the kerb. The
sombreroed owner was arguing with customers by a set of ancient scales;
several ragged children stole bananas from the rear of the vehicle.
Ferguson still held McAuliffs arm. 'Go to the Devon House. It's a
tourist—'
'I know.'
'There's an outside restaurant.'
'When?'
'Twenty minutes.'
The taxi drove into the long entrance of Devon House, a Georgian
monument to an era of English supremacy and white, European money.
Circular floral gardens fronted the spotless columns; rinsed gravelled
paths wove patterns around an immense fountain. The small outdoor
restaurant was off to the side, the tables behind tall hedges, the
diners obscured from the front. There were only six tables, McAuliff
realized. A very small restaurant; a difficult place in which to follow
someone without being observed.
Perhaps Ferguson was not as inexperienced as he appeared to be.
'Well, hello, chap!'
Alex turned. James Ferguson had yelled from the central path to the
fountain; he now carried his camera and the cases and straps and meters
that went with it. 'Hi,' said McAuliff, wondering what role the young
man intended to play now.
'I've got some wonderful shots. This place has quite a history, you
know.' Ferguson approached him, taking a second to snap Alex's picture.
'This is ridiculous,' replied McAuliff quietly. 'Who the hell are
you trying to fool?'
'I know exactly what I'm doing. Please cooperate.' And
then Ferguson returned to his play-acting, raising his voice and his
camera simultaneously. 'Did you know that this old brick was the
original courtyard? It leads to the rear of the house, where the
soldiers were housed in rows of brick cubicles.'
'I'm fascinated.'
'It's well past elevenses, old man,' continued an enthusiastic, loud
Ferguson. 'What say to a pint? Or a rum punch? Perhaps a spot of lunch.'
There were only two other separate couples within the small
courtyard restaurant. The men's straw hats and bulging walking shorts
complemented the women's rhinestone sunglasses; they were tourists,
obviously unimpressed with Kingston's Devon House. They would soon be
talking with each other, thought McAuliff, making happier plans to
return to the bar of the cruise ship or, at least, to a free-port
strip. They were not interested in Ferguson or himself, and that was
all that mattered.
The Jamaican rum punches were delivered by a bored waiter in a dirty
white jacket. He did not hum or move with any rhythmic punctuation,
observed Alex. The Devon House restaurant was a place of inactivity.
Kingston was not Montego Bay.
'I'll tell you exactly what happened,' said Ferguson suddenly, very
nervously; his voice once more a panicked whisper. 'And it's everything
I know. I worked for the Craft Foundation, you knew all about that.
Right?'
'Obviously,' answered McAuliff. 'I made it a condition of your
employment that you stay away from Craft. You agreed.'
'I didn't have a choice. When we got off the plane, you and Alison
stayed behind; Whitehall and the Jensens went on ahead to the luggage
pickup. I was taking some infrared photographs of the airport… I was in
between, you might say. I walked through the arrival gate, and the
first person I saw was Craft himself; the son, of course, not the old
fellow. The son runs the foundation now. I tried to avoid him. I had
every reason to; after all, he sacked me. But I couldn't. And I was
amazed - he was positively effusive. Filled with apologies; what
outstanding work I had done, how he personally had come to the airport
to meet me when he heard I was with the survey.' Ferguson swallowed a
portion of his punch, darting his eyes around the brick courtyard. He
seemed to have reached a block, as if uncertain how to continue.
'Go on,' said Alex. 'All you've described is an unexpected welcome
wagon.'
'You've got to understand. It was all so strange… as you
say, unexpected. And as he was talking, this chap in uniform comes
through the gate and asks me if I'm Ferguson. I say yes and he tells me
you'll be delayed, you're tied up; that you want me to have
your bags sent on to the hotel. I should write a note to that effect so
BOAC will release them. Craft offered to help, of course. It all seemed
minor, quite plausible, really, and everything happened so fast. I
wrote the note and this chap said he'd take care of it. Craft tipped
him. Generously, I believe.'
'What kind of uniform was it?'
'I don't know. I didn't think. Uniforms all look alike when you're
out of your own country.'
'Go on.'
'Craft asked me for a drink. I said I really couldn't. But he was
adamant, and I didn't care to cause a scene, and you were delayed. You do
see why I agreed, don't you?'
'Minor and plausible. Go on.'
'We went to the lounge upstairs… the one that looks out over the
field. It's got a name…'
'"Observation."'
'What?'
'It's called the "Observation Lounge." Please, go on.'
'Yes. Well, I was concerned. I mean, I told him there were my own
suitcases and Whitehall, the Jensens. And you, of course. I didn't want
you wondering where I was… especially under the circumstances.'
Ferguson drank again; McAuliff held his temper and spoke simply.
'I think you'd better get to the point, Jimbo-mon.'
'I hope that name doesn't stick. It was a bad evening.'
'It'll be a worse afternoon if you don't go on.'
'Yes… Craft told me you'd be in Customs for another hour and the
chap in uniform would tell the others I was taking pictures; I was to
go on to the Courtleigh. I mean, it was strange. Then he changed the
subject - completely. He talked about the foundation. He said they were
close to a major breakthrough in the baracoa fibres; that much of the
progress was due to my work. And, for reasons ranging from the legal to
the moral, they wanted me to come back to Craft. I was actually to be
given a percentage of the market development… Do you realize what that
could mean?'
'If this is what you had to tell me, you can join them today.'
'Millions!' continued Ferguson, oblivious to Alex's interruption.
'Actually millions… over the years, of course. I've never had
any money. Stony, most of the time. Had to borrow the cash for my
camera equipment, did you know that?'
'It wasn't something I dwelled on. But that's all over with. You're
with Craft now…'
'No. Not yet. That's the point. After the survey. I must
stay with the survey - stay with you.' Ferguson finished
his rum punch and looked around for the waiter.
'Merely stay with the survey? With me? I think you've left out
something.'
'Yes. Actually.' The young man hunched his shoulders over the table;
he avoided McAuliffs eyes. 'Craft said it was harmless, completely
harmless. They only want to know the people you deal with in the
government… which is just about everyone you deal with, because most
everyone's in the government. I am to keep a log. That's all;
simply a diary.' Ferguson looked up at Alex, his eyes pleading. 'You do
see, don't you? It is harmless.'
McAuliff returned the young man's stare. 'That's why you followed me
this morning?'
'Yes. But I didn't mean to do it this way. Craft suggested that I
could accomplish a great deal by just… tagging along with you. Asking
if I could join you when you went about survey business. He said I was
embarrassingly curious and talked a lot anyway; it would be normal.'
'Two points for Craft.'
'What?'
'An obsolete American expression… Nevertheless, you followed me.'
'I didn't mean to. I rang your room. Several times. There was no
answer. Then I called Alison… I'm sorry. I think she was upset.'
'What did she say?'
'That she thought she heard you leave your room only minutes ago. I
ran down to the lobby. And outside. You were driving away in a taxi. Then
I followed you, in another cab.'
McAuliff put his glass aside. 'Why didn't you come up to me in
Victoria Park? I saw you and you turned away.'
'I was confused… and frightened. I mean, instead of asking to tag
along, there I was, really following you.'
'Why did you pretend you were so drunk last night?'
Ferguson took a long nervous intake of breath. 'Because when I got
to the hotel, I asked if your luggage had arrived. It hadn't. I
panicked, I'm afraid… You see, before Craft left, he told me about your
suitcases—'
'The bugs?' interrupted Alex angrily.
'The what?' Instantly, James understood. 'No. No! I swear
to you, nothing like that. Oh, God, how awful.'
Ferguson paused, his expression suddenly pensive. 'Yet, of course, it
makes sense…'
No one could have rehearsed such a reversal of reactions, thought
Alex. It was pointless to explode. 'What about the suitcases?'
'What?… Oh, yes, Craft. At the very end of the conversation, he said
they were checking your luggage - checking, that's all he
said.
He suggested, if anyone asked, that I say I'd taken it upon myself to
write the note; that I saw you were having trouble. But I wasn't to
worry, your bags would get to the hotel. But they weren't there,
you see.'
McAuliff did not see. He sighed wearily. 'So you pretended to be
smashed?'
'Naturally. I realized you'd have to know about the note; you'd ask
me about it, of course, and be terribly angry if the luggage was lost;
blame me for it… Well, it's a bit unsporting to be hard on a fellow
who's squiffed and tried to do you a good turn. I mean, it is, really.'
'You've got a very active imagination, Jimbo-mon. I'd go so far as
to say convoluted.'
'Perhaps. But you didn't get angry, did you? And here we are and
nothing has changed. That's the irony: Nothing has changed.'
'Nothing changed? What do you mean?'
'I think something very basic has changed.
You've told me about Craft.'
'Yes. I would have anyway; that was my purpose this morning. Craft
need never know; no way he could find out. I'll just tag along with
you. I'll give you a portion of the money that's coming to me. I
promise you that. I'll write it out, if you like. I've never had any
money. It's simply a marvellous opportunity. You do see that, don't
you?'
ELEVEN
He left Ferguson at the Devon House and took a cab into Old
Kingston. If he was being followed, he didn't give a damn. It was a
time for sorting out thoughts again, not worrying about surveillance.
He wasn't going anywhere.
He had conditionally agreed to cooperate with Ferguson. The
condition was that theirs was a two-way street; the botanist could keep
his log - freely supplied with controlled names - and McAuliff would be
kept informed of this Craft's inquiries.
He looked up at the street signs; he was at the corner of Tower and
Matthew, two blocks from the harbour. There was a coin telephone on a
stanchion halfway down the sidewalk. He hoped it was operable.
It was.
'Has a Mr Sam Tucker checked in?' he asked the clerk on the other
end of the line.
'No, Mr McAuliff. As a matter of fact, we were going over the
reservations list a few minutes ago. Check-in time is three o'clock.'
'Hold the room. It's paid for.'
'I'm afraid it isn't, sir. Our instructions are only that you're
responsible; we're trying to be of service.'
'You're very kind. Hold it, nevertheless. Are there any messages for
me?'
'Just one minute, sir. I believe there are.'
The silence that ensued gave Alex the time to wonder about Sam.
Where the hell was he? McAuliff had not been as alarmed as
Robert Hanley over Tucker's disappearance. Sam's eccentricities
included sudden wanderings, impulsive treks through native areas. There
had been a time in Australia when Tucker stayed four weeks with an
outback aborigine community, travelling daily in a Land Rover to the
Kimberly survey site twenty-six miles away. Old Tuck was always looking
for the unusual - generally associated with the customs and life styles
of whatever country he was in. But his deadline was drawing near in
Kingston.
'Sorry for the delay,' said the Jamaican, his lilt denying the
sincerity of the statement. 'There are several messages. I was putting
them in the order of their sequence.
'Thank you. What are—'
'They're all marked urgent, sir,' interrupted the clerk. 'Eleven
fifteen is the first; from the Ministry of Education. Contact Mr Latham
as soon as possible. The next at 11.20 is from a Mr Piersall at the
Sheraton. Room 51. Then a Mr Hanley called from Montego Bay at 12.06;
he stressed the importance of your reaching him. His number is—'
'Wait a minute,' said Alex, removing a pencil and a notebook from
his pocket. He wrote down the names
'Latham,'
'Piersall,'
'Hanley.'
'Go
ahead.'
'Montego exchange, 8227. Until five o'clock. Mr Hanley said to call
him in Port Antonio after 6.30.'
'Did he leave that number?'
'No, sir. Mrs Booth left word at 1.35 that she would be back in her
room at 2.30. She asked that you ring through if you telephoned from
outside. That's everything, Mr McAuliff.'
'All right. Thank you. Let me go back, please.' Alex repeated the
names, the jists of the messages, and asked for the Sheraton's
telephone number. He had no idea who 'Mr Piersall' was. He mentally
scanned the twelve contact names provided by Holcroft; there was no
Piersall.
'Will that be all, sir?'
'Yes. Put me through to Mrs Booth, if you please.'
Alison's phone rang several times before she answered. 'I was taking
a shower,' she said, out of breath. 'Rather hoping you were here.'
'Is there a towel around you?'
'Yes. I left it on the knob with the door open, if you must know. So
I could hear the telephone.'
'If I was there, I'd remove it. The towel, not the phone.'
'I should think it appropriate to remove both.' Alison laughed, and
McAuliff could see the lovely half smile in the haze of the afternoon
sun on Tower Street.
'You're right, you're parched. But your note said it was urgent. Is
anything the matter?' There was a click within the interior of the
telephone box; his time was nearly up. Alison heard it, too.
'Where are you? I'll call you right back,' she said quickly.
The number had been deliberately, maliciously scratched off the
dial's centre. 'No way to tell. How urgent? I've got another call to
make.'
'It can wait. Just don't speak to a man named Piersall until we
talk. 'Bye now, darling.'
McAuliff was tempted to call Alison right back; who was Piersall?
But it was more important to reach Hanley in Montego. It would be
necessary to call collect; he didn't have enough change.
It took the better part of five minutes before Hanley's phone rang
and another three while Hanley convinced a switchboard operator at a
less-than-chic hotel that he would pay for the call.
'I'm sorry, Robert,' said Alex. I'm in a coin box in Kingston.'
'It's all right, lad. Have you heard from Tucker?' There was an
urgency in Hanley's rapidly asked question.
'No. He hasn't checked in. I thought you might have something.'
'I have, indeed, and I don't like it at all… I flew back to Mo'Bay a
couple of hours ago, and these damn fools here tell me that two blacks
picked up Sam's belongings, paid the bill, and walked out without a
word.'
'Can they do that?'
'This isn't the Hilton, lad. They had the money and they did it.'
'Then where are you?'
'Goddamn it, I took the same room for the afternoon. In case Sam
tries to get in touch, he'll start here, I figured. In the meantime,
I've got some friends asking around town. You still don't want the
police?'
McAuliff hesitated. He had agreed to Holcroft's command not to go to
the Jamaican police for anything until he had checked with a contact
first and received clearance. 'Not yet, Bob.'
'We're talking about an old friend!'
'He's still not overdue, Robert. I can't legitimately report him
missing. And, knowing our old friend, I wouldn't want him embarrassed.'
'I'd sure as hell raise a stink over two strangers picking up his
belongings!' Hanley was angry, and McAuliff could not fault him for it.
'We're not sure they're strangers. You know Tuck; he hires
attendants like he's the court of Eric the Red. Especially if he's got
some money and he can spread it around the outback. Remember Kimberly,
Bob.' A statement. 'Sam blew two months' wages setting up an
agricultural commune, for Christ's sake.'
Hanley chuckled. 'Aye, lad, I do. He was going to put the hairy
bastards in the wine business. He's a one-man Peace Corps with a
vibrating crotch… All right, Alex. We'll wait until tomorrow. I have to
get back to Port Antone'. I'll phone you in the morning.'
'If he's not here by then, I'll call the police and you can activate
your subterranean network - which I'm sure you've developed by now.'
'Goddamn right. We old travellers have to protect ourselves. And
stick together.'
The blinding sun on the hot, dirty Caribbean street and the stench
of the telephone mouthpiece was enough to convince McAuliff to return
to Courtleigh Manor.
Later, perhaps early this evening, he would find the fish store
called Tallon's and his arthritic contact.
He walked north on Matthew Lane and found a taxi on Barry Street; a
half-demolished touring car of indeterminate make, and certainly not of
this decade, or the last. As he stepped in, the odour of vanilla
assaulted his nostrils. Vanilla and bay rum, the scents of black
Jamaica; delightful in the evening, oppressive during the day under the
fiery equatorial sun.
As the cab headed out of Old Kingston - harbour-front Kingston -
where man-made decay and cascading tropical flora struggled to coexist,
Alex found himself staring with uncomfortable wonder at the suddenly
emerging new buildings of New Kingston. There was something obscene
about the proximity of such bland, clean structures of stone and tinted
glass to the rows of filthy, tin, corrugated shacks - the houses of
gaunt children who played slowly, without energy, with bony dogs, and
of pregnant young-old women hanging rags on ropes salvaged from the
waterfront, their eyes filled with the bleak, hated prospects of
getting through another day. And the new, bland, scrubbed obscenities
were less than two hundred yards from even more terrible places of
human habitation: rotted, rat-infested barges, housing those who had
reached the last cellars of dignity. Two hundred yards.
McAuliff suddenly realized what these buildings were: banks. Three,
four, five… six banks. Next to, and across from each other, all within
an easy throw of a safe-deposit box.
Banks.
Clean, bland, tinted glass.
Two hundred yards.
Eight minutes later, the odd, ancient touring car entered the
palm-lined drive of Courtleigh Manor. Ten yards in from the gates, the
driver stopped, briefly, with a jerk. Alex, who was sitting forward,
taking out his wallet, braced himself against the front seat as the
driver quickly apologized. Then McAuliff saw what the Jamaican was
doing. He was removing a lethal, thirty-inch machete from the worn felt
next to him, and putting it under the seat. The driver grinned.
'I take a fare into old town, mon. Shack town. I keep long knife by
me all the time there.'
'Is it necessary?'
'Oh, mon! True, mon. Bad people; dirty people. Not Kingston, mon.
Better to shoot all the dirty people. No good, mon. Put 'em in boats
back to Africa. Sink boats; yes mon!'
'That's quite a solution.' The car pulled up to the kerb, and
McAuliff got out. The driver smiled obsequiously as he stated an
inflated charge. Alex handed him the precise amount. 'I'm sure you
included the tip,' he said as he dropped the bills through the window.
At the front desk, McAuliff took the messages handed to him; there
was an addition. Mr Latham of the Ministry of Education had telephoned
again.
Alison was on the small balcony, taking the afternoon sun in her
bathing suit. McAuliff entered the room from his connecting door.
She reached out and he took her hand. 'Have you any idea what a
lovely lady you are, lovely lady?'
'Thank you, lovely man.'
He gently released her hand. 'Tell me about Piersall,' he said.
'He's at the Sheraton.'
'I know. Room 51.'
'You spoke to him.' Alison obviously was concerned.
'No. That was his message. Phone him in room 51. Very urgent.'
'He may be there now; he wasn't when you called.'
'Oh? I got the message just before I talked to you.'
'Then he must have left it downstairs. Or used a pay phone in the
lobby. Within minutes.'
'Why?'
'Because he was here. I talked with him.'
'Do tell.'
She did.
Alison had finished sorting out research notes she had prepared for
the north coast, and was about to take her shower when she heard a
rapid knocking from Alex's room. Thinking it was one of their party,
Alison opened her own door and looked out in the corridor. A tall, thin
man in a white Palm Beach suit seemed startled at her appearance. It
was an awkward moment for both. Alison volunteered that she had heard
the knocking and knew McAuliff was out; would the gentleman care to
leave a message?
'He seemed very nervous. He stuttered slightly, and said he'd been
trying to reach you since eleven o'clock. He asked if he could trust
me. Would I speak only to you? He was really quite upset. I invited him
into my room, but he said no, he was in a hurry. Then he blurted it
out. He had news of a man named Sam Tucker. Isn't he the American who's
to join us here?'
Alex did not bother to conceal his alarm. He bolted from his
reclining position and stood up. 'What about Tucker?'
'He didn't go into it. Just that he had word from him or about
him. He wasn't really clear.'
'Why didn't you tell me on the phone?'
'He asked me not to. He said I was to tell you when I saw you, not
over the telephone. He implied that you'd be angry, but you should get
in touch with him before you went to anyone else. Then he left… Alex,
what the hell was he talking about?'
McAuliff did not answer; he was on his way to her telephone. He
picked up the receiver, glanced at the connecting door, and quickly
replaced the phone. He walked rapidly to the open door, closed it, and
returned to the telephone. He gave the Sheraton's number and waited.
'Mr Piersall, room 51, please.'
The interim of silence was infuriating to McAuliff. It was broken by
the soothing tones of a subdued English voice, asking first the
identity of the caller and then whether the caller was a friend or,
perhaps, a relative of Dr Piersall's. Upon hearing Alex's replies, the
unctuous voice continued, and as it did so, McAuliff remembered a cold
night on a Soho street outside The Owl of Saint George. And the
flickering of a neon light that saved his life and condemned his
would-be killer to death.
Dr Walter Piersall had been involved in a terrible, tragic accident.
He had been run down by a speeding automobile in a Kingston street.
He was dead.
TWELVE
Walter Piersall, American, PhD, anthropologist, student of the
Caribbean, author of a definitive study on Jamaica's first known
inhabitants, the Arawak Indians, and the owner of a house called 'High
Hill' near Carrick Foyle in the parish of Trelawny.
That was the essence of the information supplied by the Ministry's
Mr Latham.
'A tragedy, Mr McAuliff. He was an honoured man, a titled man.
Jamaica will miss him greatly.'
'Miss him! Who killed him, Mr Latham?'
'As I understand it, there is very little to go on; the vehicle sped
away, the description is contradictory.'
'It was broad daylight, Mr Latham.'
There was a pause on Latham's part. 'I know, Mr McAuliff. What can I
say? You are an American; he was an American. I am Jamaican, and the
terrible thing took place on a Kingston street. I grieve deeply for
several reasons. And I did not know the man.'
Latham's sincerity carried over the wire. Alex lowered his voice.
'You say "the terrible thing." Do you mean more than an accident?'
'No. There was no robbery, no mugging. It was an accident. No doubt
brought on by rum and inactivity. There is a great deal of both in
Kingston, Mr McAuliff. The men… or children who committed the crime are
undoubtedly well into the hills now. When the rum wears off, the fear
will take its place; they will hide. The Kingston police are not
gentle.'
'I see.' McAuliff was tempted to bring up the name 'Sam Tucker,' but
he held himself in check. He had told Latham only that Piersall had
left a message for him. He would say no more for the time being. 'Well,
if there's anything I can do…'
'Piersall was a widower, he lived alone in Carrick Foyle. The police
said they were getting in touch with a brother in Cambridge,
Massachusetts… Do you know why he was calling you?'
'No idea.'
'A great deal of the survey will take place in Trelawny Parish.
Perhaps he had heard and was offering you hospitality.'
'Perhaps… Mr Latham, is it logical that he would know about the
survey?' Alex listened intently to Latham's reply. Again, Holcroft: Learn
to spot the small things.
'Logical? What is logical in Jamaica, Mr McAuliff? It is a poorly
kept secret that the Ministry - with the gracious help of our recent
mother country - is undertaking an overdue scientific evaluation. A
secret poorly kept is not really much of a secret. Perhaps it is not
logical that Dr Piersall knew; it is certainly possible, however.' No hesitations, no overly quick responses, no rehearsed words.
'Then I guess that's what he was calling about. I'm sorry.'
'I grieve.' Again Latham paused; it was not for effect. 'Although it
may seem improper, Mr McAuliff, I should like to discuss the business
between us.'
'Of course. Go ahead.'
'All of the survey permits came in late this morning… less than
twenty-four hours. It generally takes the best part of a week…'
The processing was unusual, but Alex had come to expect the unusual
with Dunstone, Limited. The normal barriers fell with abnormal ease.
Unseen expediters were everywhere, doing the bidding of Julian Warfield.
Latham said that the Ministry had anticipated more, rather than
less, difficulty, as the survey team would be entering the territory of
the Cock Pit, miles of uninhabited country - jungle, really. Escorts
were required, guides trained in the treacherous environs. And
arrangements had to be made with the recognized descendants of the
Maroon people, who, by a treaty of 1739, controlled much of the
territory. An arrogant, warlike people, brought to the islands as
slaves, the Maroons knew the jungles far better than their white
captors. The British sovereign, George the First, had offered the
Maroons their independence, with a treaty that guaranteed the Cock Pit
territories in perpetuity. It was a wiser course than continuing
bloodshed. Besides, the territory was considered unfit for white
habitation.
For over 235 years that treaty was often scoffed at but never
violated, said Latham. Formal permission was still sought by Kingston
from the 'Colonel of the Maroons' for all those who wished to enter
their lands.
The Ministry was no exception.
Yet the Ministry, thought McAuliff, was in reality Dunstone,
Limited. So permissions were granted, permits obtained with alacrity.
'Your equipment was air-freighted to Boscobel,' said Latham. 'Trucks
will transport it to the initial point of the survey.'
'Then I'll leave tomorrow afternoon or, at the latest, early the
next day. I'll be hiring out of Ocho Rios; the others can follow when
I'm finished. It shouldn't take more than a couple of days.'
'Your escort-guides, we call them "runners," will be available in
two weeks. You will not have any need for them until then, will you? I
assume you will be working the coast to begin with.'
'Two weeks'll be fine… I'd like a choice of runners, please.'
'There are not that many to choose from, Mr McAuliff. It is not a
career that appeals to many young people; the ranks are thinning. But I
shall do what I can.'
'Thank you. May I have the approved maps in the morning?'
'They will be sent to your hotel by ten o'clock. Goodbye, Mr
McAuliff. And again, my deeply felt regrets over Dr Piersall.'
'I didn't know him either, Mr Latham,' said Alex. 'Good-bye.'
He did not know Piersall, thought McAuliff, but he had heard
the name 'Carrick Foyle,' Piersall's village. He could not
remember where he had heard it, only that it was familiar.
Alex replaced the telephone and looked over at Alison, on the small
balcony. She had been watching him, listening. She could not conceal
her fear. A thin, nervous man in a white Palm Beach suit had told her -
less than two hours ago - that he had confidential information, and now
he was dead.
The late afternoon sun was a Caribbean orange, the shadows shafts of
black across the miniature balcony. Behind her was the near deep green
of the high palms, behind them the awesome rise of the mountain range.
Alison Booth seemed to be framed within a tableau of chiaroscuro tropic
colours. As though she were a target.
'He said it was an accident.' Alex walked slowly to the balcony
doors. 'Everyone's upset. Piersall was liked on the island. Apparently,
there's a lot of drunken hit-and-runs in Kingston.'
'And you don't believe him for an instant.'
'I didn't say that.' He lighted a cigarette; he did not want to look
at her.
'You don't have to. You didn't say one word about your friend
Tucker, either. Why not?'
'Common sense. I want to talk to the police, not an associate
director of the Ministry. All he can do is babble and create confusion.'
'Then let's go to the police.' Alison rose from the deck chair.
'I'll get dressed.'
'Wo!' McAuliff realized as he said the word that he was too
emphatic.
'I mean, I'll go. I don't want you involved.'
'I spoke to the man. You didn't.'
'I'll relay the information.'
'They won't accept it from you. Why should they hear it second-hand?'
'Because I say so.' Alex turned away, ostensibly to find an ashtray.
He was not convincing, and he knew it. 'Listen to me, Alison.' He
turned back. 'Our permits came in. Tomorrow I'm going to Ocho Rios to
hire drivers and carriers; you people will follow in a couple of days.
While I'm gone
I don't want you - or any member of the team - involved with the police
or anybody else. Our job here is the survey. That's my responsibility;
you're my responsibility. I don't want delays.'
She walked down the single step, out of the frame of colour, and
stood in front of him. 'You're a dreadful liar, Alex. Dreadful in the
sense that you're quite poor at it.'
'I'm going to the police now. Afterwards, if it's not too late, I
may drop over to the Ministry and see Latham. I was a little rough with
him.'
'I thought you ended on a very polite note.'
It was Alison who spotted Holcroft's small things, thought McAuliff.
She was better than he was. 'You only heard me. You didn't hear him… If
I'm not back by seven, why not call the Jensens and have dinner with
them? I'll join you as soon as I can.'
'The Jensens aren't here.'
'What?'
'Relax. I called them for lunch. They left word at the desk that
since it was a day off, they were touring. Port Royal, Spanish Town,
Old Harbour. The manager set up their tour.'
'I hope they enjoy themselves.'
He told the driver that he wanted a half-hour's tour of the city. He
had thirty minutes to kill before cocktails in Duke Street - he'd spot
the restaurant; he didn't know the specific address - so the driver
could do his imaginative best within the time span.
The driver protested: Thirty minutes was barely sufficient to reach
Duke Street from the Courtleigh in the afternoon traffic. McAuliff
shrugged and replied that the time was not absolute.
It was precisely what the driver wanted to hear. He drove out
Trafalgar, south on Lady Musgrave, into Old Hope Road. He extolled the
commercial virtues of New Kingston, likening the progress to Olympian
feats of master planning. The words droned on, filled with idiomatic
exaggerations of the 'all the time big American millions' that were
turning the tropical and human overgrowth that was Kingston into a
Caribbean financial mecca. It was understood that the millions would be
German or English or French, depending on the accent of the passenger.
It didn't matter. Within minutes, McAuliff knew that the driver knew
he was not listening. He was staring out the rear window, watching the
traffic behind them.
It was there.
A green Chevrolet sedan, several years old. It stayed two to three
cars behind, but whenever the taxi turned or sped ahead of other
vehicles, the green Chevrolet did the same.
The driver saw it, too.
'You got trouble, mon?'
There was no point in lying. 'I don't know.'
'I know, mon. Lousy green car be'n d'ere all the time. It stay in
big parking lot at Courtleigh Manor. Two block son of a bitch drivin'.'
McAuliff looked at the driver. The Jamaican's last statement
triggered his memory of Robert Hanley's words from Montego Bay. Two
blacks picked up Sam's things. Alex knew the connection was
far-fetched, coincidental at best in a black country, but it was all he
had to go on. 'You can earn twenty dollars, friend,' he said quickly to
the driver. 'If you can do two things.'
'You tell me, mon!'
'First, let the green car get close enough so I can read the license
plate, and when I've got it, lose them. Can you do that?'
'You watch, mon!' The Jamaican swung the wheel to the right; the
taxi veered briefly into the right lane, narrowly missing an oncoming
bus, then lurched back into the left, behind a Volkswagen. McAuliff
crouched against the seat, his head pressed to the right of the rear
window. The green Chevrolet duplicated the taxi's movements, taking up
a position two cars behind.
Suddenly the cab driver accelerated again, passing the Volks and
speeding ahead to a traffic light that flashed the yellow caution
signal. He swung the car into the left intersection; Alex read the
street sign and the wording on the large shield-shaped sign beneath:
TORRINGTON ROAD
ENTRANCE
GEORGE VI MEMORIAL PARK
'We head into race course, mon!' shouted the driver. 'Green son of a
bitch have to stop at Snipe Street light. He come out'a d'ere fast. You
watch good now!'
The cab sped down Torrington, swerving twice out of the left lane to
pass three vehicles, and through the wide-gated entrance into the park.
Once inside, the driver slammed on the brakes, backed the taxi into
what looked like a bridle path, spun the wheel, and lurched forward
into the exit side of the street.
'You catch 'em good now, mon!' yelled the Jamaican as he slowed the
car down and entered the flow of traffic leaving the George VI Memorial
Park.
Within seconds the green Chevrolet came into view, hemmed between
automobiles entering the park. And then McAuliff realized precisely
what the driver had done. It was early track time; George VI Memorial
Park housed the sport of kings. Gambling Kingston was on the way to the
races.
Alex wrote down the license number, keeping himself out of sight but
seeing clearly enough to know that the two blacks in the Chevrolet did
not realize that they had passed within feet of the car they were
following.
'Them sons of bitches got to drive all way 'round, mon! Them dumb
block sons of bitches!… Where you want to go, mon? Plenty of time, now.
They don't catch us.'
McAuliff smiled. He wondered if the Jamaican's talents were listed
in Holcroft's manual somewhere. 'You just earned yourself an extra five
dollars. Take me to the corner of Queen and Hanover streets, please. No
sense wasting time, now.'
'Hey, mon! You hire my taxi all the time in Kingston. I do what you
say. I don't ask questions, mon.'
Alex looked at the identification behind the dirty plastic frame
above the dashboard. 'This isn't a private cab… Rodney.'
'You make a deal with me, mon; I make a deal with the taxi boss.'
The driver grinned in the rear-view mirror.
'I'll think about it. Do you have a telephone number?'
The Jamaican quickly produced an outsized business card and handed
it back to McAuliff. It was the taxi company's card, the type that was
left on hotel counters. Rodney's name was printed childishly in ink
across the bottom. 'You telephone company number, say you gotta have
Rodney. Only Rodney, mon. I get the message real quick. All' time they
know where Rodney is. I work hotels and Palisados. Them get me quick.'
'Suppose I don't care to leave my name—'
'No, name, mon!' broke in the Jamaican, grinning in the mirror. 'I
got lousy son-of-a-bitch memory. Don't want no name! You tell taxi
phone… you the fella at the race course. Give place; I get to you, mon.'
Rodney accelerated south to North Street, left to Duke, and south
again past the Gordon House, the huge new complex of the Kingston
legislature.
Out on the sidewalk, McAuliff straightened his jacket and his tie
and tried to assume the image of an average white businessman not
entirely sure of which government entrance he should use. Tallon's was
not listed in any telephone or shopping directory; Holcroft had
indicated that it was below the row of government houses, which meant
below Queen, but he was not specific.
As he looked for the fish store, he checked the people around him,
across the street, and in the automobiles that seemed to go slower than
the traffic allowed.
For a few minutes he felt himself in the pocket of fear again;
afraid that the unseen had their eyes on him.
He reached Queen Street and hurried across with the last contingent
making the light. On the kerb he turned swiftly to watch those behind
on the other side.
The orange sun was low on the horizon, throwing a corridor of
blinding light from the area of Victoria Park several hundred yards to
the west. The rest of the street was in dark, sharply defined shadows
cast from the structures of stone and wood all around. Automobiles
passed east and west, blocking a clear vision of those on the north
corner. Corners.
He could tell nothing. He turned and proceeded down the block.
He saw the sign first. It was filthy, streaked with runny print that
had not been refinished in months, if not years:
TALLON'S
FINE FISH & NATIVE DELICACIES
1/2 QUEEN'S ALLEY
1 BLOCK—DUKE ST WEST
He walked the block. The entrance to Queen's Alley was barely ten
feet high, cut off by grillework covered with tropical flowers. The
cobblestone passage did not go through to the next street. It was a
dead end, a lightless cul-de-sac; the sort of hidden back street common
to Paris and Rome and Greenwich Village. Although it was in the middle
of a commercial market area, there was a personal quality about its
appearance, as though an unwritten sign proclaimed this section
private: residents only, keys required, not for public usage. All that
was needed, thought McAuliff, was a gate.
In Paris and Rome and Greenwich Village, such wide alleys held some
of the best restaurants in the world, known only to those who cared.
In Saigon and Macao and Hong Kong, they were the recesses where
anything could be had for a price.
In Kingston, this one housed a man with arthritis who worked for
British Intelligence.
Queen's Alley was no more than fifty feet long. On the right was a
bookstore with subdued lighting in the windows, illuminating a variety
of wares from heavy academic leather to non-glossy pornography. On the
left was Tallon's.
He had pictured casements of crushed ice supporting rows of
wide-eyed dead fish, and men in soiled, cheap white aprons running
around scales, arguing with customers.
The crushed ice was in the window; so were several rows of
glassy-eyed fish. But what impressed him was the other forms of ocean
merchandise placed artistically: squid, octopus, shark, and exotic
shellfish.
Tallon's was no Fulton Market.
As if to add confirmation to his thoughts, a uniformed chauffeur
emerged from Tallon's entrance carrying a plastic shopping bag,
insulated, Alex was sure, with crushed ice.
The double doors were thick, difficult to open. Inside, the counters
were spotless; the sawdust on the floor was white. The two attendants
were just that: attendants, not countermen. Their full-length aprons
were striped blue and white and made of expensive linen. The scales
behind the chrome-framed glass cases had shiny brass trimmings. Around
the shop, stacked on shelves lighted by tiny spotlights in the ceiling,
were hundreds of tins of imported delicacies from all parts of the
world.
It was not quite real.
There were three other customers: a couple and a single woman. The
couple was at the far end of the store, studying labels on the shelves;
the woman was ordering from a list, being overly precise, arrogant.
McAuliff approached the counter and spoke the words he had been
instructed to speak.
'A friend in Santo Domingo told me you had north-coast trout.'
The light-skinned black behind the white wall barely looked at Alex,
but within that instant there was recognition. He bent down, separating
shellfish inside the case, and answered casually. Correctly. 'We have
some freshwater trout from Martha Brae, sir.'
'I prefer salt-water trout. Are you sure you can't help me?'
'I'll see, sir.' The man shut the case, turned, and walked down a
corridor in the wall behind the counter, a passageway Alex assumed led
to large refrigerated rooms.
When a man emerged from a side door within the corridor, McAuliff
caught his breath, trying to suppress his astonishment. The man was
black and slight and old; he walked with a cane, his right forearm
stiff, and his head trembled slightly with age.
It was the man in Victoria Park: the old man who had stared at him
disapprovingly in front of the bench on the Queen Street path.
He walked to the counter and spoke, his voice apparently stronger
than his body. 'A fellow salt-water trout lover,' he said, in an accent
more British than Jamaican, but not devoid of the Caribbean. 'What are
we to do with those fresh-water aficionados who cost me so much money?
Come, it is nearly closing. You shall have your choice from my own
selection.'
A hinged panel of the butcher-block counter was lifted by the
light-skinned black in the striped apron. Alex followed the arthritic
old man down the short corridor and through a narrow door into a small
office that was a miniature extension of the expensive outer design.
The walls were panelled in fruitwood; the furniture was a single
mahogany desk with a functional antique swivel chair, a soft leather
couch against the wall, and an armchair in front of the desk. The
lighting was indirect, from a lone china lamp on the desk. With the
door closed, Alex saw oak file cabinets lined against the inner wall.
Although the room was confining in size, it was eminently comfortable -
the isolated quarters of a contemplative man.
'Sit, Mr McAuliff,' said the proprietor of Tallon's, indicating the
armchair as he hobbled around the desk and sat down, placing his cane
against the wall. 'I've been expecting you.'
'You were in Victoria Park this morning.'
'I did not expect you then. To be quite frank, you startled me, I'd
been looking at your photograph minutes before I took my stroll. From
nowhere the face of this photograph was in front of my eyes in
Victoria.' The old man smiled and gestured with his palms up,
signifying unexpected coincidence. 'Incidentally, my name is "Tallon."
Westmore Tallon. We're a fine old Jamaican family, as I'm sure you've
been
told.'
'I hadn't, but one look at your… fish store would seem to confirm
it.'
'Oh, yes. We're frightfully expensive, very exclusive. Private
telephone number. We cater only to the wealthiest on the island. From
Savanna to Montego to Antonio and Kingston. We have our own delivery
service - by private plane, of course… It's most convenient.'
'I should think so. Considering your extracurricular activities.'
'Which, of course, we must never consider to the point of
discussion, Mr McAuliff,' replied Tallon quickly.
'I've got several things to tell you. I expect you'll transmit the
information and let Holcroft do what he wants.'
'You sound angry.'
'On one issue, I am. Goddamned angry… Mrs Booth. Alison Booth. She
was manipulated here through Interpol. I think that smells. She made
one painful - and dangerous - contribution. I should think you people
would let her alone.'
Tallon pushed his foot against the floor, turning the silent antique
swivel to his right. He aimlessly reached over for his cane and
fingered it. 'I am merely a… liaison, Mr McAuliff, but from what I
understand, no pressure was exerted on you to employ Mrs Booth. You did
so freely. Where was the manipulation?'
Alex watched the small, arthritic man toy with the handle of the
cane. He was struck by the thought that in some strange way Westmore
Tallon was like an artist's composite of Julian Warfield and Charles
Whitehall. The communion of elements was disturbing. 'You people are
very professional,' he said quietly, a touch bitterly. 'You're
ingenious when it comes to presenting alternatives.'
'She can't go home, Mr McAuliff. Take my word for that.'
'From a certain point of view, she might as well… The Marquis de
Chatellerault is in Jamaica.'
Tallon spun in the antique chair to face McAuliff. For an instant he
seemed frozen. He stared at Alex, and when he blinked it was as though
he silently rejected McAuliffs statement. 'This is impossible,' he said
simply.
'It's not only possible, I don't even think it's a secret. Or if it
is, it's poorly kept; and as somebody said about an hour ago, that's
not much of a secret.'
'Who gave you this information?' Tallon held onto his cane, his
grasp visibly firmer.
'Charles Whitehall. At three o'clock this morning. He was invited to
Savanna-la-Mar to meet Chatellerault.'
'What were the circumstances?'
'The circumstances aren't important. The important fact is that
Chatellerault is in Savanna-la-Mar. He is the houseguest of a family
named Wakefield. They're white and rich.'
'We know them,' said Tallon, writing a note awkwardly with his
arthritic hand. 'They're customers. What else do you have?'
'A couple of items. One is extremely important to me, and I warn
you, I won't leave here until something's done about it.'
Tallon looked up from his notepaper. 'You make pronouncements
without regard for realistic appraisal. I have no idea whether I can do
anything about anything. Your camping here would not change that.
Please continue.'
Alex described James Ferguson's unexpected meeting with Craft at the
Palisados Airport and the manipulation that resulted in the electronic
devices in his luggage. He detailed Craft's offer of money in exchange
for information about the survey.
'It's not surprising. The Craft people are notoriously curious,'
said Tallon, writing painfully on his notepaper. 'Shall we get to the
item you say is so vital?'
'I want to summarize first.'
'Summarize what?' Tallon put down his pencil.
'What I've told you.'
Tallon smiled. 'It's not necessary, Mr McAuliff. I take notes
slowly, but my mind is quite alert.'
'I'd like us to understand each other… British Intelligence wants
the Halidon. That was the purpose - the only purpose - of my
recruitment. Once the Halidon could be reached, I was finished.
Complete protection still guaranteed to the survey team.'
'And so?'
'I think you've got the Halidon. Chatellerault and Craft.'
Tallon continued to stare at McAuliff. His expression was totally
neutral. 'You have arrived at this conclusion?'
'Holcroft said this Halidon would interfere. Eventually try to stop
the survey. Diagrams aren't necessary. The marquis and Craft fit the
prints. Go get them.'
'I see…' Tallon reached once more for his cane. His personal
sceptre, his sword Excalibre. 'So, in one extraordinary simplification,
the American geologist has solved the riddle of the Halidon.'
Neither man spoke for several moments. McAuliff broke the silence
with equally quiet anger. 'I could get to dislike you, Mr Tallon.
You're a very arrogant man.'
'My concerns do not include your approval, Mr McAuliff. Jamaica is
my passion - yes, my passion, sir. What you think is not
important to me… except when you make absurd pronouncements that could
affect my work… Arthur Craft, pere et fils, have been raping
this island for half a century. They subscribe to the belief that
theirs is a mandate from God. They can accomplish too much in the name
of Craft; they would not hide behind a symbol. And Halidon is
a symbol, Mr McAuliff… The Marquis de Chatellerault? You were quite
correct. Mrs Booth was manipulated - brilliantly, I think -
into your survey. It was cross-pollination, if you like; the
circumstances were optimum. Two kling-klings in a hibiscus, one
inexorably forcing the other to reveal himself. She was bait, pure and
simple, Mr McAuliff. Chatellerault has long been suspected of being an
associate of Julian Warfield. The marquis is with Dunstone, Limited.'
Tallon lifted his cane up laterally, placed it across his desk, and
continued to gaze blankly at Alex.
McAuliff said finally, 'You withheld information; you didn't tell me
things I should have been told. Yet you expect me to function as one of
you. That smells, Tallon.'
'You exaggerate. There is no point in complicating further an
already complicated picture.'
'I should have been told about Chatellerault, instead of hearing his
name from Mrs Booth.'
Tallon shrugged. 'An oversight. Shall we proceed?'
'All right. There's a man named Tucker. Sam Tucker.'
'Your friend from California? The soil analyst?'
'Yes.'
McAuliff told Hanley's story without using Hanley's name. He
emphasized coincidence of the two blacks who had removed Tucker's
belongings and the two Jamaicans who had followed his taxi in the green
Chevrolet sedan. He described briefly the taxi owner's feats of driving
skills in the racetrack park, and gave Tallon the license-plate number
of the Chevrolet.
Tallon reached for his telephone and dialled without speaking to
Alex. 'This is Tallon,' he said quietly into the phone. 'I want MV
information. It is urgent. The license is KYB-448. Call me back on this
line.' He hung up and shifted his eyes to McAuliff. 'It should take no
longer than five minutes.'
'Was that the police?'
'Not in any way the police would know… I understand the Ministry
received your permits today. Dunstone does facilitate things, doesn't
it?'
'I told Latham I was leaving for Ocho Rios tomorrow afternoon. I
won't if Tucker doesn't show up. That's what I want you to know.'
Once again, Westmore Tallon reached for his cane, but not with the
aggressiveness he had displayed previously. He was suddenly a rather
thoughtful, even gentle, man. 'If your friend was taken against his
will, it would be kidnapping. A very serious crime, and insofar as he's
American, the sort of headline attraction that would be an anathema. It
doesn't make sense, Mr McAuliff… You say he's due today, which could be
extended to this evening, I presume?'
'Yes.'
'Then I suggest we wait… I cannot believe the parties involved could
- or would - commit such a gargantuan mistake. If Mr Tucker is not
heard from by… say ten o'clock, call me.' Tallon wrote a number on a
piece of paper and handed it to Alex. 'Commit this to memory, please;
leave the paper here.'
'What are you going to do if Tucker doesn't show?'
'I will use perfectly legitimate connections and have the matter
directed to the most authoritative officials in the Jamaican police. I
will alert highly placed people in the government: the
governor-general, if necessary. St Croix has had its murders; tourism
is now practically nonexistent. Jamaica could not tolerate an American
kidnapping… Does that satisfy you?'
'I'm satisfied.' Alex crushed out his cigarette in the ashtray, and
as he did so, he remembered Tallon's reaction to
Chatellerault's appearance in Savanna-la-Mar. 'You were surprised that
Chatellerault was on the island. Why?'
'As of two days ago, he was registered at the George V in Paris.
There's been no word of his leaving, which means he flew here
clandestinely, probably by way of Mexico. It is disturbing. You must
keep a close watch on Mrs Booth… you have a weapon, I assume?'
'Two rifles in the equipment. An .030 Remington telescopic and a
long-power .22 automatic. Nothing else.'
Tallon seemed to debate with himself, then made a decision. He took
a key ring from his pocket, selected a key, and opened a lower drawer
of his desk. He removed a bulky manila envelope, opened the flap, and
shook a pistol onto his blotter. A number of cartridges fell out with
the gun. 'This is a .38 Smith and Wesson, short barrel. All markings
have been destroyed. It's untraceable. Take it, please; it's wiped
clean. The only fingerprints will be yours. Be careful.'
McAuliff looked at the weapon for several seconds before reaching
out and slowly picking it up. He did not want it; there was a finality
of commitment somehow attached to his having it. But again, there was
the question of alternatives: Not having it might possibly be foolish,
though he did not expect to use it for anything more than a show of
force.
'Your dossier includes experience in small-arms fire. But it could
be a long time. Would you care to refresh yourself at a pistol range?
We have several, within minutes by plane.'
'No, thank you,' replied Alex. 'Not too long ago, in Australia, it
was the only diversion we had.'
The telephone rang with a muted bell. Tallon picked it up and
acknowledged with a simple 'Yes?'
He listened without speaking to the party on the other end of the
line. When he terminated the call, he looked at McAuliff .
'The green Chevrolet sedan is registered to a dead man. The
vehicle's license is in the name of Walter Piersall. Residence: High
Hill, Carnck Foyle, parish of Trelawny.'
THIRTEEN
McAuliff spent another hour with Westmore Tallon, as the old
Jamaican aristocrat activated his informational network. He had sources
all over the island.
Before the hour was up, one important fact had been uncovered: The
deceased, Walter Piersall of Carrick Foyle, parish of Trelawny, had in
his employ two black assistants with whom he invariably travelled. The
coincidence of the two men who had removed Sam Tucker's belongings from
the hotel in Montego Bay and the two men who followed Alex in the green
Chevrolet was no longer far-fetched. And since Piersall had brought up
Sam's name with Alison Booth, the conclusion was now to be assumed.
Tallon ordered his own people to pick up Piersall's men. He would
telephone McAuliff when they had done so.
Alex returned to Courtleigh Manor. He stopped at the desk for
messages. Alison was at dinner; she hoped he would join her. There was
nothing else.
No word from Sam Tucker.
'If there are any calls for me, I'll be in the dining room,' he said
to the clerk.
Alison sat alone in the middle of the crowded room, which was
profuse with tropical plants and open-grilled windows. In the centre of
each table was a candle within a lantern, these were the only sources
of light. Shadows flickered against the dark red and green and yellow
foliage; the hum was the hum of contentment, rising but still quiet
crescendos of laughter; perfectly groomed, perfectly dressed manikins
in slow motion, all seemingly waiting for the nocturnal games to begin.
This was the manikins' good hour. When manners and studied grace and
minor subtleties were important. Later it would be different; other
things would become important… and too often ugly. Which is why James
Ferguson knew his drunken pretence had been plausible last night.
And why Charles Whitehall arrogantly, quietly, had thrown the
napkins across the table onto the floor. To clean up the foreigner's
mess.
'You look pensive. Or disagreeable,' said Alison as he pulled out
the chair to sit down.
'Not really.'
'What happened? What did the police say? I half expected a call from
them.'
McAuliff had rehearsed his reply, but before delivering it he
gestured at the cup of coffee and the brandy glass in front of Alison.
'You've had dinner, I guess.'
'Yes. I was famished. Haven't you?'
'No. Keep me company?'
'Of course. I'll dismiss the eunuchs.'
He ordered a drink. 'You have a lovely smile. It's sort of a laugh.'
'No sidetracking. What happened?'
McAuliff lied quite well, he thought. Certainly better - at least
more persuasively - than before. He told Alison he had spent nearly two
hours with the police. Westmore Tallon had furnished him with the
address and even described the interior of the main headquarters; it
had been Tallon's idea for him to know the general details. One could
never tell when they were important.
'They backed up Latham's theory. They say it's hit-and-run. They
also hinted that Piersall had a diversion or two that was closeted. He
was run down in a very rough section.'
'That sounds suspiciously pat to me. They're covering themselves.'
The girl's eyebrows furrowed, her expression one of disbelief.
'They may be,' answered Alex casually, sincerely. 'But they can't
tie him to Sam Tucker, and that's my only concern.'
'He is tied. He told me.'
'And I told them. They've sent men to Carrick Foyle,
that's where Piersall lived. In Trelawny. Others are going over his
things at the Sheraton. If they find anything, they'll call me.'
McAuliff felt that he was carrying off the lie. He was, after all, only
bending the truth. The arthritic Westmore Tallon was doing these things.
'And you're satisfied with that? You're just going to take their
word for it? You were awfully troubled about Mr Tucker a few hours ago.'
'I still am,' said Alex, putting down his glass and looking at her.
He had no need to lie now. 'If I don't hear from Sam by late tonight…
or tomorrow morning, I'm going to go to the American Embassy and yell
like hell.'
'Oh… all right. Did you mention the little buggers this morning? You
never told me.'
'The what?'
'Those bugs in your luggage. You said you were supposed to report
them.'
Again McAuliff felt a wave of inadequacy; it irked him that he
wasn't keeping track of things. Of course, he hadn't seen Tallon
earlier, had not received his instructions, but that was no
explanation. 'I should have listened to you last night. I can just get
rid of them; step on them, I guess.'
'There's a better way.'
'What's that?'
'Put them someplace else.'
'For instance?'
'Oh, somewhere harmless but with lots of traffic. It keeps the tapes
rolling and people occupied.'
McAuliff laughed; it was not a false laugh. 'That's very funny. And
very practical. Where?'
Alison brought her hands to her chin; a mischievous little girl
thinking mischievously. 'It should be within a hundred yards or so -
that's usually the range tolerance. And where there's a great deal of
activity… Let's see. I complimented the headwaiter on the red snapper.
I'll bet he'd bring me to the chef to get the recipe.'
'They love that sort of thing,' added Alex. 'It's perfect. Don't go
away. I'll be right back,'
Alison Booth, former liaison to Interpol, reported that two
electronic devices were securely attached to the permanent laundry
hamper under the salad table in the Courtleigh Manor kitchen. She had
slipped them in - and pushed them down - along with a soiled napkin, as
an enthusiastic chef described the ingredients of his Jamaican red
snapper sauce.
'The hamper was long, not deep,' she explained as McAuliff finished
the last of his dinner. 'I pressed rather hard; the adhesive will hold
quite well, I think.'
'You're incredible,' said Alex, meaning it.
'No, just experienced,' she replied, without much humour. 'You were
only taught one side of the game, my darling.'
'It doesn't sound much like tennis.'
'Oh, there are compensations. For example, do you have any idea how
limitless the possibilities are? In that kitchen, for the next three
hours or so, until it's tracked?'
I'm not sure I know what you mean.'
'Depending upon who's on the tapes, there'll be a mad scramble
writing down words and phrases. Kitchen talk has its own contractions,
its own language, really. It will be assumed you've taken your suitcase
to a scheduled destination, for reasons of departure, naturally.
There'll be quite a bit of confusion.' Alison smiled, her eyes again
mischievous, as they had been before he had gone upstairs to pry loose
the bugs.
'You mean "Sauce Bearnaise" is really a code for submachine gun?
"BLT" stands for "hit the beaches"?'
'Something like that. It's quite possible, you know.'
'I thought that sort of thing only happened in World War Two movies.
With Nazis screaming at each other, sending panzer divisions in the
wrong directions.' McAuliff looked at his watch. It was 9.15. 'I have a
phone call to make, and I want to go over a list of supplies with
Ferguson. He's going to—'
He stopped. Alison had reached over, her hand suddenly on his arm.
'Don't turn your head,' she commanded softly, 'But I think your little
buggers provoked a reaction. A man just came through the dining room
entrance very rapidly, obviously looking for someone.'
'For us?'
'For you, to be precise, I'd say.'
'The kitchen codes didn't fool them very long.'
'Perhaps not. On the other hand, it's quite possible they've been
keeping loose tabs on you and were double checking. It's too small a
hotel for round-the-clock—'
'Describe him,' interrupted McAuliff. 'As completely as you can. Is
he still facing this way?'
'He saw you and stopped. He's apologizing to the man on the
reservations book, I think. He's white; he's dressed in light trousers,
a dark jacket, and a white - no, a yellow shirt. He's shorter than you
by a bit; fairly chunky—'
'What?'
'You know, bulky. And middle-young, thirties, I'd say. His hair is
long, not mod, but long. It's dark blond or light brown; it's hard to
tell in this candlelight.'
'You've done fine. Now I've got to get to a telephone.'
'Wait till he leaves; he's looking over again,' said Alison,
feigning interested, intimate laughter. 'Why don't you leer a little
and signal for the check. Very casually, my darling.'
'I feel like I'm in some kind of nursery school. With the prettiest
teacher in town.' Alex held up his hand, spotted the waiter, and made
the customary scribble in the air. 'I'll take you to your room, then
come back downstairs and call.'
'Why? Use the phone in the room. The buggers aren't there.' Damn! Goddamn! It had happened again; he wasn't prepared. The
little things, always the little things. They were the traps. Holcroft
said it over and over again… Holcroft. The Savoy. Don't make calls on
the Savoy phone.
'I was told to use the pay telephone. They must have their reasons.'
'Who?'
'The Ministry. Latham… the police, of course.'
'Of course. The police.' Alison withdrew her hand from his arm as
the waiter presented the bill for Alex to sign. She didn't believe him;
she made no pretence of believing him. Why should she? He was a rotten
actor; he was caught… But it was preferable to an ill-phrased statement
or an awkward response to Westmore Tallon over the phone while Alison
watched him. And listened. He had to feel free in his conversation with
the arthritic liaison; he could not have one eye, one ear on Alison as
he talked. He could not take the chance that the name Chatellerault, or
even a hint of the man, was heard. Alison was too quick.
'Has he left yet?'
'As you signed the check. He saw we were leaving.' Her reply was
neither angry nor warm, merely neutral.
They walked out of the candlelit dining room, past the cascading arc
of green foliage into the lobby, towards the bank of elevators. Neither
spoke. The ride up to their floor continued in silence, made bearable
by other guests in the small enclosure.
He opened the door and repeated the precautions he had taken the
previous evening - minus the scanner. He was in a hurry now; if he
remembered, he would bless the room with electronic benediction later.
He checked his own room and locked the connecting door from her side.
He looked out on the balcony and in the bathroom. Alison stood in the
corridor doorway, watching him.
He approached her. 'Will you stay here until I get back?'
'Yes,' she answered simply.
He kissed her on the lips, staying close to her, he knew, longer
than she expected him to; it was his message to her. 'You are a lovely
lady.'
'Alex?' She placed her hands carefully on his arms and looked up at
him. 'I know the symptoms. Believe me, I do. They're not easy to
forget… There are things you're not telling me and I won't ask. I'll
wait.'
'You're overdramatizing, Alison.'
'That's funny.'
'What is?'
'What you just said. I used the words with David. In Malaga. He was
nervous, frightened. He was so unsure of himself. And of me. And I said
to him: David, you're being overly dramatic… I know now that it was at
that moment he knew.'
McAuliff held her eyes with his own. 'You're not David and I'm not
you. That's as straight at I can put it. Now, I have to get to a
telephone. I'll see you later. Use the latch.'
He kissed her again, went out the door, and closed it behind him. He
waited until he heard the metallic sounds of the inserted bolt, then
turned towards the elevators.
The doors closed; the elevator descended. The soft music was piped
over the heads of assorted businessmen and tourists; the cubicle was
full. McAuliff's thoughts were on his imminent telephone call to
Westmore Tallon, his concerns about Sam Tucker.
The elevator stopped at an intermediate floor. Alex looked up at the
lighted digits absently, vaguely wondering how another person could fit
in the cramped enclosure. There was no need to think about the problem;
the two men who waited by the parting doors saw the situation, smiled,
and gestured that they would wait for the next elevator.
And then McAuliff saw him. Beyond the slowly closing panels, far
down in the corridor. A stocky man in a dark jacket and light trousers.
He had unlocked a door and was about to enter a room; as he did so, he
pulled back his jacket to replace the key in his pocket. The shirt was
yellow.
The door closed.
'Excuse me! Excuse me, please!' said McAuliff rapidly as he reached
across a tuxedoed man near the panel of buttons and pushed the one
marked 2, the next number in descent. 'I forgot my floor. I'm terribly
sorry.'
The elevator, its thrust suddenly, electrically interrupted, jerked
slightly as it mindlessly prepared for the unexpected stop. The panels
opened and Alex sidled past the irritated but accommodating passengers.
He stood in the corridor in front of the bank of elevators and
immediately pushed the Up button. Then he reconsidered. Where
were the stairs?
The 'EXIT—STAIRCASE' sign was blue with white letters. That seemed
peculiar to him; exit signs were always red. It was at the far end of
the hallway. He walked rapidly down the heavily carpeted corridor,
nervously smiling at a couple who emerged from a doorway at midpoint.
The man was in his fifties and drunk; the girl was barely in her
twenties, sober and mulatto. Her clothes were the costume of a
high-priced whore. She smiled at Alex; another sort of message. He
acknowledged, his eyes telling her he wasn't interested but good luck,
take the company drunk for all she could.
He pushed the crossbar on the exit door. Its sound was too loud; he
closed it carefully, quietly, relieved to see there was a knob on the
inside of the door.
He ran up the concrete stairs on the balls of his feet, minimizing
the sound of his footsteps. The steel panel had the Roman numeral III
stencilled in black over the beige paint. He twisted the knob slowly
and opened the door on to the third-floor corridor.
It was empty. The nocturnal games had begun below; the players would
remain in the competitive arenas until the prizes had been won or lost
or forgotten in alcoholic oblivion. He had only to be alert for
stragglers, or the overanxious, like the pigeon on the second floor who
was being manoeuvred with such precision by the child-woman mulatto. He
tried to recall at which door the man in the yellow shirt had stood. He
had been quite far down the hallway, but not at the end. Not by the
staircase; two-thirds of the way, perhaps. On the right; he had pulled
back his jacket with his right hand, revealing the yellow shirt. That
means he was now inside a door on Alex's left. Reversing the viewpoint,
he focused on three… no, four doors on his left that were possible.
Beginning with the second door from the staircase, one-third the
distance to the elevators.
Which one?
McAuliff began walking noiselessly on the thick carpet down the
corridor, hugging the left wall. He paused before each door as he
passed, his head constantly turning, his eyes alert, his ears listening
for the sound of voices, the tinkling of glasses. For anything.
Nothing.
Silence. Everywhere.
He looked at the brass numbers. 218, 216, 214, 212. Even 210. Any
farther would be incompatible with what he remembered.
He stopped at the halfway point and turned. Perhaps he knew enough.
Enough to tell Westmore Tallon. Alison had said that the tolerance
range for the electronic bugs was one hundred yards from first
positioning to the receiving equipment. This floor, this section of the
hotel, was well within that limit. Behind one of those doors was a tape
recorder activated by a man in front of a speaker or with earphones
clamped to his head.
Perhaps it was enough to report those numbers. Why should he look
further?
Yet he knew he would. Someone had seen fit to intrude on his life in
a way that filled him with revulsion. Few things caused him to react
violently, but one of them was the actual, intended invasion of his
privacy. And greed. Greed, too, infuriated him. Individual, academic,
corporate.
Someone named Craft - because of his greed - had instructed his
minions to invade Alex's personal moments.
Alexander Tarquin McAuliff was a very angry man.
He started back towards the staircase, retracing his steps, close to
the wall, closer to each door, where he stopped and stood immobile.
Listening.
214, 216, 218…
And back once again. It was a question of patience. Behind one of
those doors was a man in a yellow shirt. He wanted to find that man.
He heard it.
Room 214.
It was a radio. Or a television set. Someone had turned up the
volume of a television set. He could not distinguish the words, but he
could hear the excitement behind the rapid bursts of dialogue from a
clouded speaker, too loud to avoid distortion.
Suddenly, there was the sound of a harsh, metallic crack of a door
latch. Inches away from McAuliff someone had pulled back the bolt and
was about to open the door.
Alex raced to the staircase. He could not avoid noise, he could only
reduce it as much as possible as he lurched into the dimly lit concrete
foyer. He whipped around, pushing the heavy steel door closed as fast
and as quietly as he could; he pressed the fingers of his left hand
around the edge, preventing the door from shutting completely, stopping
the sound of metal against metal at the last half second.
He peered through the crack. The man in the yellow shirt came out of
the room, his attention still within it. He was no more than fifty feet
away in the silent corridor - silent except for the sound of the
television set. He seemed angry, and before he closed the door he
looked inside and spoke harshly in a Southern drawl.
'Turn that fuckin' thing down, you goddamn ape!'
The man in the yellow shirt then slammed the door and walked rapidly
towards the elevators. He remained at the end of the corridor,
nervously checking his watch, straightening his tie, rubbing his shoes
over the back of his trousers until a red light, accompanied by a soft,
echoing bell, signalled the approach of an elevator. McAuliff watched
from the stairwell two hundred feet away.
The elevator doors closed, and Alex walked out into the corridor. He
crossed to Room 214 and stood motionless for a few moments. It was a
decision he could abandon, he knew that. He could walk away, call
Tallon, tell him the room number, and that would be that.
But it would not be very satisfying. It would not be satisfying at
all. He had a better idea: He would take whoever was in that room to
Tallon himself. If Tallon didn't like it, he could go to hell. The same
for Holcroft. Since it was established that the electronic devices were
planted by a man named Craft, who was in no way connected with the
elusive Halidon, Arthur Craft could be taught a lesson. Alex's
arrangements with Holcroft did not include abuses from third and fourth
parties.
It seemed perfectly logical to get Craft out of the chess game.
Craft clouded the issues, confused the pursuit.
McAuliff had learned two physical facts about Arthur Craft: He was
the son of Craft the elder and he was American. He was also an
unpleasant man.
It would have to do.
He knocked on the door beneath the numerals 214.
'Yes, mon? Who is it, mon?' came the muffled reply from within.
Alex waited and knocked again. The voice inside came nearer the door.
'Who is it, please, mon?'
'Arthur Craft, you idiot!'
'Oh! Yes sir, Mr Craft, mon!' The voice was clearly frightened. The
knob turned; the bolt had not been inserted.
The door had opened no more than three inches when McAuliff slammed
his shoulder against it with the full impact of his near two hundred
pounds. The door crashed against the medium-sized Jamaican inside,
sending him reeling into the centre of the room. Alex gripped the edge
of the vibrating door and swung it back into place, the slam of the
heavy wood echoing throughout the corridor.
The Jamaican steadied himself, in his eyes a combination of fury and
fear. He whipped around to the room's writing desk; there were boxed
speakers on each side. Between them was a pistol.
McAuliff lurched forward, his left hand aiming for the gun, his
right grabbing any part of the man it could reach. Their hands met
above the warm steel of the pistol; Alex gripped the black's and dug
his fingers into the man's throat.
The man shook loose; the gun went careening off the surface of the
desk onto the floor. McAuliff lashed out with the back of his fist at
the black's face, instantaneously opening his hand and yanking forward,
pulling the man's head down by the hair. As the head went down, Alex
brought his left knee crashing up into the man's chest, then into his
face.
Voices from a millennium ago came back to him: Use your knees!
Your feet! Grab! Hold! Slash at the eyes! The blind can't fight!…
Rupture!
It was over. The voices subsided. The man collapsed at his feet.
McAuliff stepped back. He was frightened; something had happened to
him. For a few terrifying seconds, he had been back in the Korean
hills. He looked down at the motionless Jamaican beneath him. The head
was turned, flat against the carpet; blood was oozing from the pink
lips.
Thank God the man was breathing.
It was the gun. The goddamned gun!' He had not expected a
gun. A fight, yes. His anger justified that. But he had thought of it
as a scuffle - intense, over quickly. He would confront, embarrass,
forcibly make whoever was monitoring the tapes go with him. To
embarrass; to teach an avaricious employer a lesson.
But not this.
This was deadly. This was the violence of survival.
The tapes. The voices. The excited voices kept coming out
of the speakers on the desk.
It was not a television set he had heard. The sounds were the sounds
of the Courtleigh Manor kitchen. Men shouting, other men responding
angrily; the commands of superiors, the whining complaints of
subordinates. All frantic, agitated… mostly unintelligible. They must
have driven those listening furious.
Then Alex saw the revolving reels of the tape deck. For some reason,
it was on the floor, to the right of the desk. A small compact
Wollensak recorder, spinning as if nothing had happened.
McAuliff grabbed the two speakers and crashed them repeatedly
against each other until the wood splintered and the cases cracked
open. He tore out the black shells and the wires and threw them across
the room. He crossed to the right of the desk and crushed his heel into
the Wollensak, grinding the numerous flat switches until a puff of
smoke emerged from the interior and the reels stopped their movement.
He reached down and ripped off the tape; he could burn it, but there
was nothing of consequence recorded. He rolled the two reels across the
floor, the thin strand of tape forming a narrow V on the
carpet.
The Jamaican groaned; his eyes blinked as he swallowed and coughed.
Alex picked up the pistol on the floor, and squeezed it into his
belt. He went into the bathroom, turned on the cold water, and threw a
towel into the basin.
He pulled the drenched towel from the sink and walked back to the
coughing, injured Jamaican. He knelt down, helped the man into a
sitting position, and blotted his face. The water flowed down on the
man's shirt and trousers… water mingled with blood.
'I'm sorry,' said Alex. 'I didn't mean to hurt you. I wouldn't have
if you hadn't reached for that goddamned pistol.'
'Mon!' The Jamaican coughed his interruption. 'You crazy-mon!'
The Jamaican held his chest and winced painfully as he struggled to his
feet. 'You break up… everyt'ing, mon!' said the injured man, looking
at the smashed equipment.
'I certainly did! Maybe your Mr Craft will get the message. If he
wants to play industrial espionage, let him play in somebody else's
backyard. I resent the intrusion… Come on, let's go.' Alex took the man
by the arm and began leading him to the door.
'No, mon!' shouted the black, resisting.
'Yes, mon,' said McAuliff quietly. 'You're coming with me.'
'Where, mon?'
'To see a little old man who runs a fish store, that's all.' Alex
shoved him; the Negro gripped his side. His ribs were broken, thought
McAuliff.
'Please, mon! No police, mon! I lose everyt'ing!' The
Jamaican's dark eyes were pleading as he held his ribs.
'You went for a gun, mon! That's a very serious thing to do.'
'Them not my gun. Them gun got no bullets, mon.'
'Look-see, mon! Please! I got good job… I don' hurt nobody.'
Alex wasn't listening. He reached into his belt for the pistol.
It was no weapon at all.
It was a starter's gun; the kind held up by referees at track meets.
'Oh, for Christ's sake…' Arthur Craft, Junior, played games - little
boys' games with little boys' toys.
McAuliff looked at the panicked Jamaican.
'Okay, mon. You just tell your employer what I said. The next time,
I'll haul him into court.'
It was a silly thing to say, thought Alex, as he walked out into the
corridor, slamming the door behind him. There'd be no courts; Julian
Warfield or his adversary, R. C. Holcroft, was far more preferable.
Alongside Dunstone, Limited, and British Intelligence, Arthur Craft was
a cipher.
An unimportant intrusion that in all likelihood was no more.
He walked out of the elevator and tried to recall the location of
the telephone booths. They were to the left of the entrance, past the
front desk, he remembered.
He nodded to clerks while thinking of Westmore Tallon's private
number.
'Mr McAuliff, sir?' The speaker was a tall Jamaican with very broad
shoulders, emphasized by a tight nylon jacket.
'Yes?'
'Would you come with me, please?'
Alex looked at the man. He was neat, the trousers pressed, a white
shirt and a tie in evidence beneath the jacket. 'No… why should I?'
'Please, we have very little time. A man is waiting for you outside.
A Mr Tucker.'
'What? How did—'
''Please, Mr McAuliff. I cannot stay here.'
Alex followed the Jamaican out the glass doors of the entrance. As
they reached the driveway, he saw the man in the yellow shirt - Craft's
man - walking on the path from the parking lot; the man stopped and
stared at him, as if unsure what to do.
'Hurry, please,' said the Jamaican, several steps in front of
McAuliff, breaking into a run. 'Down past the gates. The car is
waiting!'
They ran down the drive, past the stone gateposts.
The green Chevrolet was on the side of the road, its motor running.
The Jamaican opened the back door for Alex.
'Get in!'
McAuliff did so.
Sam Tucker, his massive frame taking up most of the back seat, his
shock of red hair reflecting the outside lights, extended his hand.
'Good to see you, boy!'
'Sam!'
The car lurched forward, throwing Alex into the felt. In the front
seat, McAuliff saw that there were three men. The driver wore a
baseball cap; the third man - nearly as large as Sam Tucker - was
squeezed between the driver and the Jamaican who had met him inside the
Courtleigh lobby. Alex turned back to Tucker.
'What is all this, Sam? Where the hell have you been?'
The answer, however, did not come from Sam Tucker. Instead, the
black by the window, the man who had led Alex down the driveway, turned
and spoke quietly.
'Mr Tucker has been with us, Mr McAuliff… If events can be
controlled, we are your link to the Halidon.'
FOURTEEN
They drove for nearly an hour. Always climbing, higher and higher,
it seemed to McAuliff. The winding roads snaked upward, the turns
sudden, the curves hidden by sweeping waterfalls of tropic greenery.
There were stretches of unpaved road. The automobile took them poorly;
the whining of the low gear was proof of the strain.
McAuliff and Sam Tucker spoke quietly, knowing their conversation
was overheard by those in front. That knowledge did not seem to bother
Tucker.
Sam's story was totally logical, considering his habits and life
style. Sam Tucker had friends, or acquaintances, in many parts of the
world no one knew about. Not that he intentionally concealed their
identities, only that they were part of his personal, not professional,
life.
One of these people had been Walter Piersall.
'I mentioned him to you last year, Alexander,' said Tucker in the
darkness of the back seat. 'In Ocho Rios.'
'I don't remember.'
'I told you I'd met an academic fellow in Carrick Foyle. I was going
to spend a couple of weekends with him.' That was it, thought McAuliff. The name 'Carrick Foyle'; he
had heard it before. 'I remember now. Something about a
lecture series at the Kingston Institute.'
'That's right. Walter was a very classy type - an anthro man who
didn't bore you to death. I cabled him I was coming back.'
'You also got in touch with Hanley. He's the one who set off the
alarms'
'I called Bob after I got into Montego. For a little sporting life.
There was no way I could reach him later. We travelled fast, and when
we got where we were going, there was no telephone. I figured he'd be
mad as hell.'
'He was worried, not mad. It was quite a disappearing act.'
'He should know better. I have friends on this island, not enemies.
At least, none either of us knows about.'
'What happened? Where did you go?'
Tucker told him.
When Sam arrived in Montego Bay, there was a message from Piersall
at the arrivals desk. He was to call the anthropologist in Carrick
Foyle after he was settled. He did, but was told by a servant in
Carrick Foyle that Piersall might not return until late that night.
Tucker then phoned his old friend Hanley, and the two men got drunk,
as was their established custom at reunions.
In the morning, while Hanley was still sleeping, Sam left the hotel
to pick up cigars.
'It's not the sort of place that's large on room service, boy.'
'I gathered that,' said Alex.
'Out on the street, our friends here—' Tucker gestured towards the
front seat - 'were waiting in a station wagon—'
'Mr Tucker was being followed,' interrupted the black by the window.
'Word of this reached Dr Piersall. He sent us to Mo'Bay to look after
his friend. Mr Tucker gets up early.'
Sam grinned. 'You know me. Even with the juice, I can't sleep long.'
'I know,' said Alex, remembering too many hotel rooms and survey
campsites in which Tucker had wandered about at the first light of dawn.
'There was a little misunderstanding,' continued Sam. 'The boys here
said Piersall was waiting for me. I figured, what the hell, the lads
thought enough of me to stick out the night, I'd go with 'em straight
off. Old Robert wouldn't be up for an hour or so… I'd call him from
Piersall's house. But, goddamn it, we didn't go to Carrick Foyle. We
headed for a bamboo camp down the Martha Brae. It took us damn near two
hours to get there, a godforsaken place, Alexander.'
When they arrived at the bamboo camp, Walter Piersall greeted Sam
warmly. But within minutes Tucker realized that something had happened
to the man. He was not the same person that Sam had known a year ago.
There was a zealousness, an intensity not in evidence twelve months ago.
Walter Piersall was caught up in things Jamaican. The quiet
anthropologist had become a fierce partisan in the battles being waged
between social and political factions within Jamaica. He was suddenly a
jealous guardian of the islanders' rights, an enemy of the outside
exploiters.
'I've seen it happen dozens of times, Alexander,' said Sam. 'From
the Tasman to the Caribbean; it's a kind of island fever. Possession…
oneness, I think. Men migrate for taxes or climate or whatever the hell
and they turn into self-proclaimed protectors of their sanctuaries… the
Catholic convert telling the pope he's not with it…'
In his cross-island proselytizing, Piersall began to hear whispers
of an enormous land conspiracy. In his own backyard in the parish of
Trelawny. At first he dismissed them; they involved men with whom one
might disagree, but whose integrity was not debated. Men of
extraordinary stature.
The conspiratorial syndrome was an ever-present nuisance in any
infant, growing government; Piersall understood that. In Jamaica it was
given credence by the influx of foreign capital looking for tax havens,
by a parliament ordering more reform programmes than it could possibly
control, and by a small, wealthy island aristocracy trying to protect
itself - the bribe was an all-too-prevalent way of life.
Piersall had decided, once and for all, to put the whispered rumours
to rest. Four months ago he'd gone to the Ministry of Territories and
filed a Resolution of Intent to purchase by way of syndication twenty
square miles of land on the north border of the Cock Pit. It was a
harmless gesture, really. Such a purchase would take years in the
courts and involve the satisfactory settling of historic island
treaties; his point was merely to prove Kingston's willingness to
accept the filing. That the land was not controlled by outsiders.
'Since that day, Alexander, Piersall's life was made a hell.' Sam
Tucker lit a thin native cigar; the aromatic smoke whipped out the open
window into the onrushing darkness. 'He was harassed by the police,
pulled into the parish courts dozens of times for nonsense; his
lectures were cancelled at the university and the Institute; his
telephone tapped - conversations repeated by government attorneys…
Finally, the whispers he tried to silence killed him.'
McAuliff said nothing for several moments. 'Why was Piersall so
anxious to contact you?' he asked Tucker.
'In my cable I told him I was doing a big survey in Trelawny. A
project out of London by way of Kingston. I didn't want him to think I
was travelling six thousand miles to be his guest; he was a busy man,
Alexander.'
'But you were in Kingston tonight. Not in a bamboo camp on the
Martha Brae. Two of these men' - McAuliff gestured front - 'followed me
this afternoon. In this car.'
'Let me answer you, Mr McAuliff,' said the Jamaican by the window,
turning and placing his arm over the seat. 'Kingston intercepted Mr
Tuck's cable; they made kling-kling addition, mon. They thought Mr Tuck
was mixed up with Dr Piersall in bad ways. Bad ways for them, mon. They
sent dangerous men to Mo'Bay. To find out what Mr Tuck was doing—'
'How do you know this?' broke in Alex.
For the briefest instant, the black by the window glanced at the
driver. It was difficult to tell in the dim light and rushing shadows,
but McAuliff thought the driver nodded imperceptibly.
'We took the men who came to Mo'Bay after Mr Tuck. That is all you
need to know, mon. What was learned caused Dr Piersall much concern. So
much, mon, that we flew to Kingston. To reach you, mon… Dr Piersall was
killed for that.'
'Who killed him?'
'If we knew, there would be dead men hung in Victoria Park.'
'What did you learn… from the men in Montego?'
Again, the black who spoke seemed to glance at the driver. In
seconds he replied, 'That people in Kingston believed Dr Piersall would
interfere further. When he went to find you, mon, it was their proof.
By killing him they took a big sea urchin out of their foot.'
'And you don't know who did it—'
'Hired niggers, mon,' interrupted the black.
'It's insane!' McAuliff spoke to himself as much as to Sam Tucker.
'People killing people… men following other men. It's goddamn crazy!'
'Why is it crazy to a man who visits Tallon's Fish Market?' asked
the black suddenly.
'How did—' McAuliff stopped. He was confused; he had been so
careful. 'How did you know that? I lost you at the racetrack!'
The Jamaican smiled, his bright teeth catching the light from the
careening reflections through the windshield. 'Ocean trout is not
really preferable to the fresh-water variety, mon.'
The counterman! The nonchalant counterman in the striped linen
apron. 'The man behind the counter is one of you. That's pretty good,'
said McAuliff quietly.
'We're very good. Westmore Tallon is a British agent… So
like the English: Enlist the clandestine help of the vested interests.
And so fundamentally stupid. Tallon's senile Etonian classmates might
trust him; his countrymen do not.'
The Jamaican removed his arm from the seat and turned front. The
answer was over.
Sam Tucker spoke pensively, openly. 'Alexander… now tell me what the
hell is going on. What have you done, boy?'
McAuliff turned to Sam. The huge, vital, capable old friend was
staring at him in the darkness, the rapid flashes of light bouncing
across his face. Tucker's eyes held confusion and hurt. And anger.
What in hell had he done, thought Alex.
'Here we are, mon,' said the driver in the baseball cap, who had not
spoken throughout the trip.
McAuliff looked out the windows. The ground was flat now, but high
in the hills and surrounded by them. Everything was sporadically
illuminated by a Jamaican moon filtering through the low-flying clouds
of the Blue Mountains. They were on a dirt road; in the distance,
perhaps a quarter of a mile away, was a structure, a small cabinlike
building. A dim light could be seen through a single window. On the
right were two other… structures. Not buildings, not houses or cabins,
nothing really definable; just free-form, sagging silhouettes…
translucent? Yes… wires, cloth. Or netting… They were large tentlike
covers, supported by numerous poles. And then Alex understood: beyond
the tents the ground was matted flat and along the border, spaced every
thirty or forty feet apart, were unlit cradle torches. The tents were
camouflaged hangars; the ground a landing strip.
They were at an unmarked airfield in the mountains.
The Chevrolet slowed down as it approached what turned out to be a
small farmhouse. There was an ancient tractor beyond the edge of the
building; field tools -ploughs, shoulder yokes, pitchforks - were
scattered about carelessly. In the moonlight the equipment looked like
stationary relics. Unused, dead remembrances only.
Camouflage.
As the hangars were camouflaged.
An airfield no map would indicate.
'Mr McAuliff? Mr Tucker? If you would come with me, please.' The
black spokesman by the window opened the door and stepped out. Sam and
Alex did the same. The driver and the third Jamaican remained inside,
and when the disembarked passengers stepped away from the car, the
driver accelerated the motor and sped off down the dirt road.
'Where are they going?' asked McAuliff anxiously.
'To conceal the automobile,' answered the black. 'Kingston sends out
ganga air patrols at night, hoping to find such fields as these. With
luck to spot light aircraft on narcotics runs.'
'This ganga country? I thought it was north,' said Tucker.
The Jamaican laughed. 'Ganga, weed, poppy… north, west, east. It is
a healthy export industry, mon. But not ours… Come, let us go inside.'
The door of the miniature farmhouse opened as the three of them
approached. In the frame stood the light-skinned black whom Alex had
first seen in a striped apron behind the counter at Tallon's.
The interior of the small house was primitive: wooden chairs, a
thick round table in the centre of the single room, an army cot against
the wall. The jarring contradiction was a complicated radio set on a
table to the right of the door. The light in the window was from the
shaded lamp in front of the machinery; a generator could be heard
providing what electricity was necessary.
All this McAuliff observed within seconds of entering. Then he saw a
second man, standing in shadows across the room, his back towards the
others. The body - the cut of the coat, the shoulders, the tapered
waist, the tailored trousers - was familiar.
The man turned around; the light from the table lamp illuminated his
features.
Charles Whitehall stared at McAuliff and then nodded once, slowly.
The door opened, and the driver of the Chevrolet entered with the
third black. He walked to the round table in the centre of the room and
sat down. He removed his baseball cap, revealing a large shaven head.
'My name is Moore. Barak Moore, Mr McAuliff. To ease your concerns,
the woman, Alison Booth, has been called. She was told that you went
down to the Ministry for a conference.'
'She won't believe that,' replied Alex.
'If she cares to check further, she will be informed that you are
with Latham at a warehouse. There is nothing to worry about, mon.'
Sam Tucker stood by the door; he was relaxed but curious. And
strong; his thick arms were folded across his chest, his lined features
- tanned by the California sun -showed his age and accentuated his
leathery strength. Charles Whitehall stood by the window in the left
wall, his elegant, arrogant face exuding contempt.
The light-skinned black from Tallon's Fish Market and the two
Jamaican 'guerrillas' had pulled their chairs back against the far
right wall, away from the centre of attention. They were telegraphing
the fact that Barak Moore was their superior.
'Please, sit down.' Barak Moore indicated the chairs around the
table. There were three. Tucker and McAuliff looked at each other;
there was no point in refusing. They walked to the table and sat down.
Charles Whitehall remained standing by the window. Moore glanced up at
him. 'Will you join us?'
'If I feel like sitting,' answered Whitehall.
Moore smiled and spoke while looking at Whitehall. 'Charley-mon
finds it difficult to be in the same room with me, much less at the
same table.'
'Then why is he here?' asked Sam Tucker.
'He had no idea he was going to be until a few minutes before
landing. We switched pilots in Savanna-la-Mar.'
'His name is Charles Whitehall,' said Alex, speaking to Sam. 'He's
part of the survey. I didn't know he was going to be here either.'
'What's your field, boy?' Tucker leaned back in his chair and spoke
to Whitehall.
'Jamaica… boy.'
'I meant no offence, son.'
'You are offensive' was Whitehall's simple reply.
'Charley and me,' continued Barak Moore, 'we are at the opposite
poles of the politic. In your country, you have the term "white trash";
he considers me "black garbage." For roughly the same reasons: He
thinks I'm too crude, too loud!, too unwashed. I am an uncouth
revolutionary in Charley-mon's eyes… he is a graceful rebel, you see.'
Moore swept his hand in front of him, balletically, insultingly. 'But
our rebellions are different, very different, mon. I want
Jamaica for all the people. He wants it for only a few.'
Whitehall stood motionless as he replied. 'You are as blind now as
you were a decade ago. The only thing that has changed is your name,
Bramwell Moore.' Whitehall sneered vocally as he continued. ''Barak
… as childish and meaningless as the social philosophy you espouse; the
sound of a jungle toad.'
Moore swallowed before he answered. 'I'd as soon kill you, I think
you know that. But it would be as counterproductive as the solutions
you seek to impose on our homeland. We have a common enemy, you and I.
Make the best of it, fascisti-mon.'
'The vocabulary of your mentors. Did you learn it by rote, or did
they make you read?'
'Look,' McAuliff interrupted angrily. 'You can fight or
call names, or kill each other for all I give a damn, but I want to get
back to the hotel!' He turned to Barak Moore. 'Whatever you have to
say, get it over with.'
'He has a point, Charley-mon,' said Moore. 'We come later… I will,
as they say, summarize. It is a brief summary, mon… That there are
development plans for a large area of the island - plans that exclude
the people - is now established. Dr Piersall's death confirms it. That
your geological survey is tied to those plans, we logically assume;
therefore, the Ministry and the Royal Society are - knowingly or
unknowingly - concealing the identity of the financial interest.
Furthermore, Mr McAuliff here is not unaware of these facts, because he
deals with British Intelligence through the despicable Westmore Tallon…
That is the summary. Where do we go?' Moore stared at Alex, his eyes
small black craters in a huge mountain of dark skin. 'We have a right
to go somewhere, Mr McAuliff.'
'Before you shove him against the wall, boy,' interjected Sam
Tucker, to Alex's surprise, 'remember, I'm no part of you. I don't say
I won't be, but I'm not now.'
'I should think you'd be as interested as we are, Tucker.' The
absence of the "Mister," McAuliff thought, was Moore's hostile response
to Sam's use of the word "boy." Moore did
not realize that Tucker used the term for everyone.
'Don't mistake me,' added Sam. 'I'm interested. Just don't go
running off too fast at the mouth… I think you should say what you
know, Alex.'
McAuliff looked at Tucker, then Moore, then over at Whitehall.
Nothing in Holcroft's instructions included such a confrontation.
Except the admonition to keep it simple; build on part of the truth.
'The people in British Intelligence - and everything they represent
- want to stop this development as much as you do. But they need
information. They think the Halidon has it. They want to make contact
with the Halidon. I'm supposed to try and make that contact.'
Alex wasn't sure what to expect from his statement, but certainly
not what happened. Barak Moore's blunt features, grotesque under the
immense shaven head, slowly changed from immobility to amusement, from
amusement to the pinched flesh of outright mirth; it was a humour based
in cruelty, however. His large mouth opened, and a coughing, malevolent
laugh emerged.
From the window there was another sound, another laugh: higher and
jackal-like. Charles Whitehall's elegant neck was stretched back, his
head tilted towards the ceiling, his arms folded across his tailored
jacket. He looked like some thin, black Oriental priest finding
amusement in a novice's ignorance.
The three Jamaicans in the row of chairs, their white teeth gleaming
in the shadows, were smiling, their bodies shaking slightly in silent
laughter.
'What's so goddamn funny?' asked McAuliff, annoyed by the undefined
humiliation.
'Funny, mon? Many times more than funny. The mongoose
chases the deadly snake, so the snake wants to make friends?' Moore
laughed his hideous laugh once again. 'It is not in any law of nature,
mon!'
'What Moore is telling you, Mr McAuliff,' broke in Whitehall,
approaching the table, 'is that it's preposterous to think the Halidon
would cooperate with the English. It is inconceivable. It is the
Halidons of this island that drove the British from Jamaica. Put
simply, MI5 is not to be trusted.'
'What is the Halidon?' Alex watched the black scholar, who
stood motionless, his eyes on Barak Moore.
'It is a force,' said Whitehall quietly.
McAuliff looked at Moore; he was returning Whitehall's stare. 'That
doesn't say very much, does it?'
'There is no one in this room who can tell you more, mon.' Barak
Moore shifted his gaze to Alex.
Charles Whitehall spoke. 'There are no identities, McAuliff. The
Halidon is an unseen curia, a court that has no chambers. No one is
lying to you. Not about this… This small contingent here, these three
men; Moore's elite corps, as it were—'
'Your words, Charley-mon! We don't use them! Elite!' Barak
spat out the word.
'Immaterial,' continued Whitehall. 'I venture to say there are no
more than five hundred people in all Jamaica who have heard of the
Halidon. Less than fifty who know for certain any of its members. Those
that do would rather face the pains of Obeah than reveal identities.'
'Obeah,' Sam Tucker's comment was in his voice. He had no
use for the jingoistic diabolism that filled thousands upon thousands
of native minds with terror - Jamaica's counterpart of the Haitian
voodoo. 'Obeah's horseshit, boy! The sooner your hill and village
people learn that, the better off they'll be!'
'If you think it's restricted to the hills and the villages, you are
sadly mistaken,' said Whitehall. 'We in Jamaica do not offer Obeah as a
tourist attraction. We have too much respect for it.'
Alex looked up at Whitehall. 'Do you have respect for it?
Are you a believer?'
Whitehall levelled his gaze at McAuliff, his eyes knowing - with a
trace of humour. 'Yes, Mr McAuliff, I have respect for Obeah. I have
traced its strains to its origins in Mother Africa. I have seen what
it's done to the veldt, in the jungles. Respect; I do not say
commitment or belief.'
'Then the Halidon is an organization.' McAuliff took out his
cigarettes. Barak Moore reached over to accept one; Sam Tucker leaned
forward in his chair. Alex continued. 'A secret society that has a lot
of clout. Why?… Obeah?'
'Partly, mon,' answered Moore, lighting his cigarette like a man who
does not smoke often. 'It is also very rich. It is whispered that it
possesses wealth beyond anyone's thinking, mon.'
Suddenly, McAuliff realized the obvious. He looked back and forth
between Charles Whitehall and Barak Moore.
'Christ Almighty! You're as anxious to reach the Halidon as I am! As
British Intelligence is!'
'That is so, mon.' Moore crushed out his barely smoked cigarette on
the surface of the table.
'Why?' asked Alex.
Charles Whitehall replied. 'We are dealing with two giants, Mr
McAuliff. One black, one white. The Halidon must win.'
FIFTEEN
The meeting in the isolated farmhouse high in the hills of the Blue
Mountains lasted until two o'clock in the morning.
The common objective was agreed to: contact with the Halidon.
And since Barak Moore's and Charles Whitehall's judgment that the
Halidon would not deal directly with British Intelligence was
convincing, McAuliff further agreed to cooperate with the two black
antagonists. Barak and his 'elite' guerrillas would provide additional
safety for the survey team. Two of the three men sitting against the
wall of the farmhouse would fly to Ocho Rios and be hired as carriers.
If the Jamaicans suspected he knew more than he was telling them,
they did not press him, thought Alex. They accepted his story - now
told twice to Whitehall - that initially he had taken the survey as an
investment for future work. From Kingston. MI5 was a complication
thrust upon him.
It was as if they understood he had his own concerns, unrelated to
theirs. And only when he was sure those concerns were not in conflict
would he be completely open.
Insane circumstances had forced him into a war he wanted no part of,
but one thing was clear above all other considerations: the safety of
those he had brought to the island.
… Two things.
One million dollars.
From either enemy. Dunstone, Limited, or British Intelligence.
'MI5 has not told you, then, who is behind this land rape,' said
Barak Moore - not asking a question - continuing immediately. 'It goes
beyond the Kingston flunkies, mon.'
'If the British reach the Halidon, they'll tell them what they
know,' said McAuliff. I'm sure of that. They want to pool their
information, that much they've told me.'
'Which means the English assume the Halidon know a great deal,'
added Whitehall pensively. 'I wonder if that is so.'
'They have their reasons,' said Alex cautiously. 'There was a
previous survey team.'
The Jamaicans knew of it. Its disappearance was either proof of the
Halidon's opposition or an isolated act of theft and murder by a roving
band of primitive hill people in the Cock Pit.
There was no way to tell.
Circles within circles.
What of the Marquis de Chatellerault? Why had he insisted upon
meeting with Whitehall in Savanna-la-Mar?
'The marquis is a nervous man,' said Whitehall. 'He claims to have
widespread interests on the island. He smells bad fish with this
survey.'
'Has it occurred to you that Chatellerault is himself involved?'
McAuliff spoke directly to the black scholar. 'MI5 thinks so. Tallon
told me that this afternoon.'
'If so, the marquis does not trust his colleagues.'
'Did Chatellerault mention anyone else on the team?' asked Alex,
afraid of the answer.
Whitehall looked at McAuliff and replied simply. 'He made several
allusions, and I told him that I wasn't interested in side issues. They
were not pertinent; I made that clear.'
'Thank you.'
'You're welcome.'
Sam Tucker raised his scraggy eyebrows, his expression dubious.
'What the hell was pertinent? What did he want?'
'To be kept informed of the survey's progress. Report all
developments.'
'Why did he think you'd do that?' Sam leaned forward in the chair.
'I would be paid handsomely, to begin with. And there could be other
areas of interest, which, frankly, there are not.'
'Ha, mon!' interjected Moore. 'You see, they believe
Charley-mon can be bought! They know better with Barak Moore!'
Whitehall looked at the revolutionary, dismissing him. There is
little to pay you for.' He opened his silver cigarette case; Moore
grinned at the sight of it. Whitehall closed it slowly, placed it at
his right, and lighted his cigarette with a match. 'Let's get on. I'd
rather not be here all night.'
'Okay, mon.' Barak glanced at each man quickly. 'We want the same as
the English. To reach the Halidon.' Moore pronounced the word in the
Jamaican dialect: hollydawn. 'But the Halidon must come to
us. There must be a strong reason. We cannot cry out for them. They
will not come into the open.'
'I don't understand a damn thing about any of this,' said Tucker,
lighting a thin cigar, 'but if you wait for them, you could be sitting
on your asses a long goddamn time.'
'We think there is a way. We think Dr Piersall provided it.' Moore
hunched his shoulders, conveying a sense of uncertainty, as if he was
not sure how to choose his words. 'For months Dr Piersall tried to…
define the Halidon. To seek it out, to understand. He went back into
Caribe history, to the Arawak, to Africa. To find meaning.' Moore
paused and looked at Whitehall. 'He read your books, Charley-mon. I
told him you were a bad liar, a diseased goat. He said you did not lie
in your books… From many small things, Dr Piersall put together pieces
of the puzzle, he called it. His papers are in Carrick Foyle.'
'Just a minute.' Sam Tucker was irritated. 'Walter talked a
goddamned streak for two days. On the Martha Brae, in the plane, at the
Sheraton. He never mentioned any of this. Why didn't he?' Tucker looked
over at the Jamaicans against the wall, at the two who had been with
him since Montego Bay.
The black who had spoken in the Chevrolet replied. 'He would have,
mon. It was agreed to wait until McAuliff was with you. It is not a
story one repeats often.'
'What did the puzzle tell him?' asked Alex.
'Only part, mon,' said Barak Moore. 'Only part of the puzzle was
complete. But Dr Piersall arrived at several theories. To begin with,
Halidon is an offshoot from the Coromanteen tribe. They isolated
themselves after the Maroon wars, for they would not agree to the
treaties that called upon the Maroon nation - the Coromantees - to run
down and capture runaway slaves for the English. The Halidon would not
become bounty hunters of brother Africans. For decades they were
nomadic. Then, perhaps two hundred, two hundred and fifty years ago,
they settled in one location. Unknown, inaccessible to the outside
world. But they did not divorce themselves from the outside world.
Selected males were sent out to accomplish what the elders believed
should be accomplished. To this day it is so. Women are brought in to
bear children so that the pains of inbreeding are avoided… And two
final points: The Halidon community is high in the mountains where the
winds are strong, of that Piersall was certain. And last, the Halidon
has great riches… These are the pieces of the puzzle; there are many
missing.'
No one spoke for a while. Then Tucker broke the silence.
'It's a hell of a story,' said Sam 'but I'm not sure where it gets
us. Our knowing it won't bring them out. And you said we can't go after
them. Goddamn! If this… tribe has been in the mountains for two hundred
years and nobody's found them, we're not likely to, boy! Where is "the
way" Walter provided?' _,
Charles Whitehall answered. 'If Dr Piersall's conclusions are true,
the way is in the knowledge of them, Mr Tucker.'
'Would you explain that?' asked Alex.
In an unexpected show of deference, the erudite scholar turned to
the rough-hewn guerrilla. I think… Barak Moore should amplify. I
believe the key is in what he said a few minutes ago. That the Halidon
must have a strong reason to contact us.'
'You are not mistaken, mon. Dr Piersall was certain that if word got
to the Halidon that their existence - and their great wealth - had been
confirmed by a small band of responsible men, they would send an
emissary. They guard their wealth above all things, Piersall believed.
But they have to be convinced beyond doubt… That is the way.'
'Who do you convince?' asked Alex.
'Someone must travel to Maroon Town, on the border of the Cock Pit.
This person should ask for an audience with the Colonel of the Maroon
people, offer to pay much, much money. It was Dr Piersall's belief that
this man, whose title is passed from one generation to the next within
the same tribal family, is the only link to the Halidon.'
'The story is told him, then?'
'No, McAuliff, mon! Not even the Colonel of the Maroons is to be so
trusted. At any rate, it would be meaningless to him. Dr Piersall's
studies hinted that the Halidon kept open one perpetual line to the
African brothers. It was called "nagarro"—
'The Akwamu tongue,' broke in Whitehall. 'The language is extinct,
but derivations exist in the Ashanti and Mossai-Grusso dialects. "Nagarro"
is an abstraction, best translated to mean "a spirit materialized."'
'A spirit…' Alex began to repeat the phrase, then stopped. 'Proof…
proof of something real.'
'Yes,' replied Whitehall.
'Where is it?' asked McAuliff.
'The proof is in the meaning of another word,' said Barak Moore. The
meaning of the word "Halidon."'
'What is it?'
'I do not know—'
'Goddamn!' Sam Tucker exploded. Barak Moore held up his
hand, silencing him.
'Piersall found it. It is to be delivered to the Colonel of the
Maroon people. For him to take up into the mountains.'
McAuliff's jaws were tense; he controlled himself as best he could.
'We can't deliver what we don't have.'
'You will have it, mon.' Barak settled his gaze on Alexander. 'A
month ago Dr Piersall brought me to his home in Carrick Foyle. He gave
me my instructions. Should anything happen to him, I was to go to a
place in the forests of his property. I have committed this place to
memory, mon. There, deep under the ground, is an oilcloth packet.
Inside the packet is a paper; on it is written the meaning of the
Halidon.'
The driver on the ride back to Kingston was the Jamaican who was
obviously Barak Moore's second-in-command, the black who had done the
talking on the trip out to the airfield. His name was Floyd. Charles
Whitehall sat in the front seat with him; Alex and Sam Tucker sat in
back.
'If you need stories to say where you were,' said Floyd to all of
them, 'there was a long equipment meeting at a Ministry warehouse. On
Crawford Street, near the docks. It can be verified.'
'Who were we meeting with?' asked Sam.
'A man named Latham. He is in charge—'
'Latham?' broke in Alex, recalling all too vividly his
telephone conversation with the ministry man that afternoon. 'He's the
one—'
'We know,' interrupted Floyd, grinning in the rearview mirror at
McAuliff. 'He's one of us, mon.'
He let himself into the room as quietly as possible. It was nearly
3.30; the Courtleigh Manor was quiet, the nocturnal games concluded.
He closed the door silently and started across the soft carpet. A
light was on in Alison's room, the door open perhaps a foot. His own
room was dark. Alison had turned off all the lamps; they had been on
when he left her five hours ago.
Why had she done that?
He approached the slightly open door, removing his jacket as he did
so.
There was a click behind him. He turned. A second later, the bedside
lamp was snapped on, flooding the room with its dim light, harsh only
at the source.
Alison was sitting up in his bed. He could see that her right hand
gripped the small deadly weapon 'issued by the London police'; she was
placing it at her side, obscuring it with the covers.
'Hello, Alex.'
'Hello.'
It was an awkward moment.
'I stayed here because I thought your friend Tucker might call. I
might not have heard the telephone.'
'I could think of better reasons.' He smiled and approached the bed.
She picked up the cylinder and twisted it. There was the same click he
had heard seconds ago. She placed the strange weapon on the night table.
'Also, I wanted to talk.'
'You sound ominous.' He sat down. 'I wasn't able to call you…
everything happened so fast. Sam showed up; he just walked through the
goddamn lobby doors and wondered why I was so upset… Then, as he was
registering, the call came from Latham. He was really in a hurry. I
think I threw him with Ocho Rios tomorrow. There was a lot of equipment
that hadn't been shipped to Boscobel—'
'Your phone didn't ring,' interrupted Alison quietly.
'What?'
'Mr Latham didn't ring through to your room.'
McAuliff was prepared; he had remembered a little thing.
'Because I'd left word we were having dinner. They were sending a page
to the dining room.'
'That's very good, Alex.'
'What's the matter with you? I told the clerk to call you and
explain. We were in a hurry; Latham said we had to get to the
warehouse… down on Crawford Street, by the docks… before they closed
the check-in books for the night.'
'That's not very good. You can do better.'
McAuliff saw that Alison was deadly serious. And angry. 'Why do you
say that?'
'The front desk did not call me; there was no explaining clerk.
. .' Alison pronounced the word 'clerk' in the American fashion,
exaggerating the difference from English speech. It was insulting. 'An
"assistant" of Mr Latham's telephoned. He wasn't very good, either. He
didn't know what to say when I asked to speak to Latham; he didn't
expect that… Did you know that Gerald Latham lives in the Barbican
district of Kingston? He's listed right in the telephone book.'
The girl stopped; the silence was strained. Alex spoke softly as he
made the statement. 'He was home.'
'He was home,' replied Alison. 'Don't worry. He didn't know who
called him. I spoke to a woman first, and when he got on the phone I
hung up.'
McAuliff inhaled a deep breath and reached into his shirt pocket for
his pack of cigarettes. He wasn't sure there was anything to say. 'I'm
sorry.'
'So am I,' she said quietly. 'I'll write you out a proper letter of
resignation in the morning. You'll have to accept a promissory note for
the airfare and whatever other expenses I'm liable for. I'll need what
money I have for a while. I'm sure I'll find a situation.'
'You can't do that.' McAuliff found himself saying the words with
strength, in utter conviction. And he knew why. Alison was perfectly
willing to leave the survey; she was going to leave it. If
her motive - or motives - for coming to Jamaica were not what she had
said they were, she would not do that. 'For Christ's sake, you can't
resign because I lied about a few hours! Damn it, Alison, I'm not
accountable to you!'
'Oh, stop behaving like a pompous, wounded ass! You don't do that
very well, either… I will not go through the labyrinth again;
I'm sick to death of it. No more, do you hear!' Suddenly her voice fell
and she caught her breath - and the fear was in her eyes. 'I can't
stand
it any longer.'
He stared at her. 'What do you mean?'
'You elaborately described a long interview with the Jamaican police
this afternoon. The station, the district, the officers… very detailed,
Alex. I called them after I hung up on Latham. They'd never heard of
you.'
SIXTEEN
He knew he had to go back to the beginning - to the very beginning
of the insanity. He had to tell her the truth. There was relief in
sharing it.
All of it. So it made sense, what sense there was to make.
He did.
And as he told the story, he found himself trying to understand all
over again. He spoke slowly, in a monotone actually; it was the drone
of a man speaking through the mists of confusion.
Of the strange message from Dunstone, Limited, that brought him to
London from New York, and a man named 'Julian Warfield.' Of a
'financial analyst' at the Savoy Hotel whose plastic card identified
him as 'Holcroft, R. C., British Intelligence.' The pressurized days of
living in two worlds that denied their own realities - the covert
training, the secret meetings, the vehicle transfers, the hiring of
survey personnel under basically false pretences. Of a panicked, weak
James Ferguson, hired to spy on the survey by a man named 'Arthur Craft
the Younger,' who was not satisfied being one of the richest men in
Jamaica. Of an arrogant Charles Whitehall, whose brilliance and
scholarship could not lift him above a fanatic devotion to an outworn,
outdated, dishonoured concept. Of an arthritic little islander, whose
French and African blood had strained its way into the Jamaican
aristocracy and MI5 by way of Eton and Oxford.
Of Sam Tucker's odd tale of the transformation of Walter Piersall,
anthropologist, converted by 'island fever' into a self-professed
guardian of his tropic sanctuary.
And finally of a shaven-headed guerrilla revolutionary named 'Barak
Moore.' And everyone's search for an 'unseen curia' called 'the
Halidon.'
Insanity. But all very, very real.
The sun sprayed its shafts of early light into the billowing grey
clouds above the Blue Mountains. McAuliff sat in the frame of the
balcony door; the wet scents of the Jamaican dawn came up from the
moist grounds and down from the tall palms, cooling his nostrils and so
his skin.
He was nearly finished now. They had talked - he had talked - for an
hour and forty-five minutes. There remained only the Marquis de
Chatellerault.
Alison was still in the bed, sitting up against the pillows. Her
eyes were tired, but she did not take them off him.
He wondered what she would say - or do - when he mentioned
Chatellerault. He was afraid.
'You're tired; so am I. Why don't I finish in the morning?'
'It is the morning.'
'Later, then.'
'I don't think so. I'd rather hear it all at once.'
'There isn't much more.'
'Then I'd say you saved the best for last. Am I right?' She could
not conceal the silent alarm she felt. She looked away from him, at the
light coming through the balcony doors. It was brighter now, that
strange admixture of pastel yellow and hot orange that is peculiar to
the Jamaican dawn.
'You know it concerns you…'
'Of course I know it. I knew it last night.' She returned her eyes
to him. 'I didn't want to admit it to myself… but I knew it. It was all
too tidy.'
'Chatellerault,' he said softly. 'He's here.'
'Oh, God,' she whispered.
'He can't touch you. Believe me.'
'He followed me. Oh my God…'
McAuliff got up and crossed to the bed. He sat on the edge and
gently stroked her hair. 'If I thought he could harm you, I never would
have told you. I'd simply have him… removed.' Oh, Christ,
thought Alex. How easily the new words came. Would he soon be using kill,
or eliminate!
'Right from the very start, it was all programmed. I was
programmed.' She stared at the balcony, allowing his hand to caress the
side of her face, as if oblivious to it. 'I should have realized; they
don't let you go that easily.'
'Who?'
'All of them, my darling,' she answered, taking his hand, holding it
to her lips. 'Whatever names you want to give them, it's not important.
The letters, the numbers, the official-sounding nonsense… I was warned,
I can't say I wasn't.'
'How?' He pulled her hand down, forcing her to look at him. 'How
were you warned? Who warned you?'
'In Paris one night. Barely three months ago. I'd finished the last
of my interviews at the… underground carnival, we called it.'
'Interpol?'
'Yes. I met a chap and his wife. In a waiting room, actually. It's
not supposed to happen; isolation is terribly important, but someone
got their rooms mixed up… They were English. We agreed to have a late
supper together… He was a Porsche automobile dealer from Macclesfield.
He and his wife were at the end of their tethers. He'd been recruited
because his dealership - the cars, you see - were being used to
transport stolen stock certificates from European exchanges. Every time
he thought he was finished, they found reasons for him to continue -
more often than not, without telling him. It was almost three years; he
was about out of his mind. They were going to leave England. Go to
Buenos Aires.'
'He could always say no. They couldn't force him.'
'Don't be naive, darling. Every name you learn is another hook, each
new method of operation you report is an additional notch in your
expertise.' Alison laughed sadly. 'You've travelled to the land of the
informer. You've got a stigmata all your own.'
'I'll tell you again: Chatellerault can't touch you.'
She paused before acknowledging his words, his anxiety. 'This may
sound strange to you, Alex. I mean, I'm not a brave person - no
brimfuls of courage for me - but I have no great fear of him. The
appalling thing… the fear is them. They wouldn't let me go.
No matter the promises, the
agreements, the guarantees. They couldn't resist. A file somewhere, or
a computer, was activated and came up with his name;
automatically mine appeared in a data bank. That was it: factor X
plus factor Y, subtotal - your life is not your own. It never
stops. You live with the fear all over again.'
Alex took her by the shoulders. 'There's no law, Alison. We can
pack; we can leave.'
'My darling, my darling… You can't. Don't you see? Not
that way. It's what's behind you: the agreements, the countless files
filled with words, your words… you can't deny them. You cross borders,
you need papers; you work, you need references. You drive a car or take
a plane or put money in a bank… They have all the weapons. You can't
hide. Not from them.'
McAuliff let go of her and stood up. He picked up the smooth, shiny
cylinder of gas from the bedside table and looked at the printing and
the inked date of issue. He walked aimlessly to the balcony doors and
instinctively breathed deeply; there was the faint, very faint, aroma
of vanilla with the slightest trace of a spice.
Bay rum and vanilla.
Jamaica.
'You're wrong, Alison. We don't have to hide. For a lot of reasons,
we have to finish what we've started; you're right about that. But
you're wrong about the conclusion. It does stop. It will stop.' He
turned back to her. 'Take my word for it.'
'I'd like to. I really would. I don't see how.'
'An old infantry game. Do unto others before they can do unto you.
The Holcrofts and the Interpols of this world use us because we're
afraid. We know what they can do to what we think are our well-ordered
lives. That's legitimate; they're bastards. And they'll admit it… But
have you ever thought about the magnitude of disaster we can cause them!
That's also legitimate, because we can be bastards, too. We'll play
this out - with armed guards on all our flanks. And when we're
finished, we'll be finished. With them.
Charles Whitehall sat in the chair, the tiny glass of Pernod on the
table beside him. It was six o'clock in the morning; he had not been to
bed. There was no point in trying to sleep; sleep would not come.
Two days on the island and the sores of a decade ago were disturbed.
He had not expected it; he had expected to control everything. Not be
controlled.
His enemy now was not the enemy - enemies - he had waited ten years
to fight: the rulers in Kingston; worse, perhaps, the radicals like
Barak Moore. It was a new enemy, every bit as despicable, and
infinitely more powerful, because it had the means to control his
beloved Jamaica.
Control by corruption; ultimately own… by possession.
He had lied to Alexander McAuliff. In Savanna-la-Mar, Chatellerault
openly admitted that he was part of the Trelawny Parish conspiracy.
British Intelligence was right. The marquis's wealth was intrinsic to
the development of the raw acreage on the north coast and in the Cock
Pit, and he intended to see that his investment was protected. Charles
Whitehall was his first line of protection, and if Charles Whitehall
failed, he would be destroyed. It was as simple as that. Chatellerault
was not the least obscure about it. He had sat opposite him and smiled
his thin Gallic smile and recited the facts… and names… of the covert
network Whitehall had developed on the island over the past decade.
He had capped his narrative with the most damaging information of
all: the timetable and the methods Charles and his political party
expected to follow on their road to power in Kingston.
The establishment of a military dictatorship with one, non-military
leader to whom all were subservient - the Praetorian of Jamaica was the
title, Charles Whitehall the man.
If Kingston knew these things… well, Kingston would react.
But Chatellerault made it clear that their individual objectives
were not necessarily in conflict. There were areas - philosophical,
political, financial - in which their interests might easily be merged.
But first came the activity on the north coast. That was immediate; it
was the springboard to everything else.
The marquis did not name his partners - Whitehall got the distinct
impression that Chatellerault was not entirely sure who they all were -
but it was manifestly clear that he did not trust them. On one level he
seemed to question motives, on another it was a matter of abilities. He
spoke briefly about previous interference and/or bungling, but did not
dwell on the facts.
The facts obviously concerned the first survey.
What had happened?
Was the Halidon responsible?
Was the Halidon capable of interference?
Did the Halidon really exist?
The Halidon.
He would have to analyse the anthropologist Piersall's papers;
separate a foreigner's exotic fantasies from island reality. There was
a time, ten years ago, when the Ras Tafarians were symbols of African
terror, before they were revealed to be children stoned on grass with
mud-caked hair and a collective desire to avoid work. And there were
the Pocomanians, with their bearded high priests inserting the sexual
orgy into the abstract generosities of the Christian ethic: a
socio-religious excuse for promiscuity. Or the Anansi sects -
inheritors of the long-forgotten Ashanti belief in the cunning of the
spider, on which all progress in life was patterned.
There were so many. So often metaphysically paranoid; so fragmented,
so obscure.
Was the Halidon - Hollydawn - any different?
At this juncture, for Charles Whitehall it didn't really matter.
What mattered was his own survival and the survival of his plans. His
aims would be accomplished by keeping Chatellerault at bay and
infiltrating the structure of Chatellerault's financial hierarchy.
And working with his first enemy, Barak Moore.
Working with both enemies.
Jamaica's enemies.
James Ferguson fumbled for the light switch on the bedside lamp. His
thrusts caused an ashtray and a glass to collide, sending both crashing
to the floor. Light was coming through the drawn curtains; he was
conscious of it in spite of the terrible pain in his eyes and through
his head, from temple to temple. Pain that caused flashes of darkness
to envelope his inner eye. He looked at his watch as he shaded his face
from the dim spill of the lamp. It was 6.15.
Oh, Christ! His head hurt so, tears welled in the far corners of his
eyes. Shafts of pain - sharp, immobilizing - shot down into his neck
and
seemed to constrict his shoulders, even his arms. His stomach was in a
state of tense, muscular suspension; if he thought about it, he knew he
would be sick and vomit.
There was no pretence regarding the amount of alcohol he had
consumed last night. McAuliff could not accuse him of play-acting now.
He had gotten drunk. Very drunk. And with damn good reason.
He had been elated.
Arthur Craft had telephoned him in panic. In panic
Craft the Younger had been caught. McAuliff had found the room where
the taping was being done and beaten someone up, physically beaten
him up! Craft had yelled over the telephone, demanding where
McAuliff had got his name.
Not from him! Certainly not from Jimbo-mon. He had said nothing.
Craft had roared, swearing at the goddamned nigger on the tape
machine, convinced the black fucker had confessed to McAuliff, adding
that the goddamned nigger would never get near a courtroom.
'If it came to that.' If it came to that.
'You never saw me,' Craft the Younger had screamed. 'We
never talked! We didn't meet! You get that absolutely clear, you shaky
son of a bitch!'
'Of course… of course, Mr Craft,' he had replied. 'But then, sir… we
did talk, didn't we? This doesn't have to change anything.'
He had been petrified, but he had said the words. Quietly, with no
great emphasis. But his message had been clear.
Arthur Craft, Junior, was in an awkward position. Craft the Younger
should not be yelling; he should be polite. Perhaps even solicitous.
After all, they had talked…
Craft understood. The understanding was first indicated by his
silence, then confirmed by his next statement.
'We'll be in touch.'
It had been so simple. And if Craft the Younger wanted it different,
wanted things as they were not, well, Craft controlled an enormously
wealthy foundation. Certainly he could find something for a very, very
talented botanist.
When he hung up the telephone last night, James had felt a wave of
calm come over him. The sort of quiet confidence he experienced in a
laboratory, where his eye and mind were very sure indeed.
He would have to be cautious, but he could do it.
He had gotten drunk when he realized that.
And now his head and stomach were in pain. But he could stand them;
they were bearable now. Things were going to be different.
He looked at his watch. His goddamn Timex. It was 6.25. A cheap
watch, but accurate.
Instead of a Timex there might be a Piaget Chronometer in his
future. And new, very expensive camera equipment. And a real bank
balance.
And a new life.
If he was cautious.
The telephone rang on Peter Jensen's side of the bed, but his wife
heard it first.
'Peter… Peter! For heaven's sake, the phone.'
'What?… What, old girl?' Peter Jensen blinked his eyes; the room was
dark, but there was daylight beyond the drawn curtains.
The telephone rang again. Short bursts of bell; the kind of rapid
blasts hotel switchboards practice. Nimble fingers, irritated guests.
Peter Jensen reached over and switched on the light. The travelling
clock read ten minutes to eight.
Again the shrill bell, now steady.
'Damn!' sputtered Peter as he realized the instrument was beyond the
lamp, requiring him to reach farther. 'Yes, yes! Hello?'
'Mr Peter Jensen, please?' said the unfamiliar male voice.
'Yes. What is it? This is Jensen.'
'Cable-International, Mr Jensen. A wire arrived for you several
minutes ago. From London. Shall I read it? It's marked urgent, sir.'
'No!' replied Peter quickly, firmly. 'No, don't do that. I've been
expecting it; it's rather long, I should think.'
'Yes, sir, it is.'
'Just send it over right away, if you please. Can you do that? The
Courtleigh Manor. Room 401. It won't be necessary to stop at the desk.'
'I understand, Mr Jensen. Right away. There'll be a charge for an
unscheduled—'
'Of course, of course,' interrupted Peter. 'Just send it over,
please.'
'Yes, sir.'
Twenty-five minutes later, the messenger from Cable-International
arrived. Moments before, room service had wheeled in a breakfast of
melon, tea, and scones. Peter Jensen opened the two-page cablegram and
spread it out over the linen cloth on his side of the table. There was
a pencil in his hand.
Across from him, Ruth held up a page of paper, scanning it over the
rim of her cup. She, too, had a pencil, at the side of the saucer.
The company name is "Parkhurst,"' said Peter.
'Check,' said Ruth, putting down her tea. She placed the paper
alongside, picked up the pencil, and made a mark on the page.
'The address is "Sheffield By The Glen."' Peter looked over at her.
'Go ahead,' replied Ruth, making a second notation.
'The equipment to be inspected is microscopes.'
'Very well.' Ruth made a third mark on the left of the page, went
back to her previous notes, and then darted her eyes to the bottom
right. 'Are you ready?'
'Yes.'
Ruth Wells Jensen, palaeontologist, proceeded to recite a series of
numbers. Her husband started at the top of the body of the cablegram
and began circling words with his pencil. Several times he asked his
wife to repeat a number. As she did so, he counted from the previous
circle and circled another word.
Three minutes later, they had finished the exercise. Peter Jensen
swallowed some tea and reread the cablegram to himself. His wife spread
jam on two scones and covered the teapot with the cozy.
'Warfield is flying over next week. He agrees. McAuliff has been
reached.'
PART THREE
The North Coast
SEVENTEEN
Holcroft's words kept coming back to McAuliff: You'll find it
quite acceptable to operate on different levels. Actually, it evolves
rather naturally, even instinctively. You'll discover that you tend to
separate your concentrations.
The British Intelligence agent had been right. The survey was in its
ninth day, and Alex found that for hours at a time he had no other
thoughts but the immediate work at hand.
The equipment had been trucked from Boscobel Airfield straight
through to Puerto Seco, on Discovery Bay. Alex, Sam Tucker, and Alison
Booth flew into Ocho Rios ahead of the others and allowed themselves
three days of luxury at the San Souci while McAuliff ostensibly hired a
crew - two of the five of which had been agreed upon in an isolated
farmhouse high in the hills of the Blue Mountains. Alex found - as he'd
expected - that Sam and Alison got along extremely well. Neither was
difficult to like; each possessed an easy humour, both were
professionals. And there was no reason to conceal from Sam the fact
that they were lovers. As Tucker phrased it: 'I'd be shocked if you
weren't, Alexander.'
Sam's approval was important to McAuliff. For at no time was Alison
to be left alone when he was away. Under no circumstances. Ever.
Sam Tucker was the ideal protective escort. Far superior to himself,
Alex realized. Tuck was the most resourceful man he had ever known, and
just about the hardest. He had within him an aggressiveness that when
called upon was savage. He was not a man to have as an enemy. Alison
was as safe as a human being could be in his care.
The fourth day had been the first day of the survey work. The team
was housed halfway between Puerto Seco and Rio Bueno Harbour, in a
pleasant beach motel called Bengal Court. Work began shortly after six
in the morning.
The initial objective of the survey was to plot the coastline
definitely. Alex and Sam Tucker operated the equipment.
Azimuths were shot along the shoreline, recorded by transit cameras.
The angular degree demarcations were correlated with the coastal charts
provided by the Jamaican Institute. By and large, these charts were
sectional and imperfect, acceptable for the details of road maps and
small-craft navigation, but inadequate for geophysical purposes. To set
up accurate perimeters, McAuliff employed sonic geodometers which
bounced sound waves back and forth between instruments, giving what
amounted to perfect bearings. Each contour, each elevation was recorded
on both sonic graphs and transit cameras.
These chores were dull, laborious, and sweat-provoking under the hot
sun. The single relief was the constant presence of Alison, as much as
she herself objected to it. Alex was adamant, however. He instructed
Barak Moore's two men to stay within a hundred yards of her at all
times, and then commanded Alison not to stroll out of his sight.
It was an impossible demand, and McAuliff realized he could not
prolong it more than a few days. Alison had work to do; minor over the
coastal area, a great deal once they started inland. But all beginnings
were awkward under pressure; he could not separate this particular
concentration that easily, nor did he wish to. Very rapidly your own personal antennae will be activated
automatically. Their function will be second nature, as it were. You
will fall into a rhythm, actually. It is the connecting link between
your divided objectives. You will recognize it and build a degree of
confidence in the process.
Holcroft.
But not during the first few days; there was no confidence to speak
of. He did grant, however, that the fear was lessening… partially,
imperceptibly. He thought this was due to the constant physical
activity and the fact that he could require such men as Sam
and Barak Moore's 'special forces' to take up posts around Alison. And
at any given moment he could turn his head and there she was - on the
beach, in a small boat - chipping rocks, instructing one of the crew in
the manipulation of a drill bore.
But, again, were not all these his antennae? And was not the
lessening of fear the beginnings of confidence? R. C. Holcroft. Supercilious son of a bitch. Manipulator.
Speaker of truths.
But not the whole truth.
The areas bordering Braco Beach were hazardous. Sheets of coral
overlay extended hundreds of yards out into the surf. McAuliff and Sam
Tucker crawled over the razor-sharp miniature hills of ocean polyps and
set up their geodometers and cameras. Both men incurred scores of minor
cuts, sore muscles, and sorer backs.
That was the third day, marked by the special relief of Alison's
somehow commandeering a fisherman's flat-bottom boat and, with her two
'escorts,' bringing a picnic lunch of cold chicken out to the reef.
It was a comfortable hour on the most uncomfortable picnic grounds
imaginable.
The black revolutionary, Floyd, who had guided the boat into its
precarious coral mooring, succinctly observed that the beach was
flatter and far less wet.
'But then they'd have to crawl all the way out here again,' Alison
had replied, holding onto her wide-brimmed cloth sun hat.
'Mon, you have a good woman!' This observation came from Floyd's
companion, the huge, quiet Negro named Lawrence…
The five of them perched - there was no other description - on the
highest ridges of the coral jetty, the spray cascading up from the base
of the reef, creating faint rainbow prisms of colour in its mist. Far
out on the water two freighters were passing each other, one heading
for the open sea, the second aiming for the bauxite docks east of
Runaway Bay. A luxurious cabin cruiser rigged for deep-sea fishing
sliced through the swells several hundred yards in front of them, the
passengers pointing in astonishment at the strange sight of five humans
picnicking on a reef.
McAuliff watched the others respond to the cruiser's surprised
riders. Sam Tucker stood up, gestured at the coral, and yelled,
'Diamonds!'
Floyd and Lawrence, their black, muscular bodies bared to the waist,
roared at Sam's antics. Lawrence pried loose a coral stone and held it
up, then chucked it to Tucker, who caught it and shouted again, 'Twenty
carats!'
Alison, her bluejeans and light field blouse drenched with the
spray, joined in the foolish game. She elaborately accepted the coral
stone, presented by Sam, and held it on top of her outstretched hand as
though it were a jewelled ring of great value. A short burst of breeze
whipped across the reef; Alison dropped the stone in an effort to hold
her hat, whose brim had caught the wind. She was not successful; the
hat glided off and disappeared over a small mound of coral. Before Alex
could rise and go after it, Lawrence was on his feet, dashing
sure-footedly over the rocks and down towards the water. Within seconds
he had the hat, now soaked, and effortlessly leaped back up from the
water's edge and handed it to Alison.
The incident had taken less than ten seconds.
'You keep the hat on the head, Miss Aleesawn. Them sun
very hot; roast skin like cooked chicken, mon.'
'Thank you, Lawrence,' said Alison gratefully, securing the wet hat
over her head. 'You run across this reef as though it were a golf
green!'
'Lawrence is a fine caddy, Miss Alison,' said Floyd smiling, still
sitting. 'At the Negril Golf Club he is a favourite, is that not so,
Lawrence?'
Lawrence grinned and glanced at McAuliff knowingly. 'Eh, mon. At
Negril they all the time ask for me. I cheat good, mon. Alia time I
move them golf balls out of bad places to the smooth grass. I think
everybody know. Alia time ask for Lawrence.'
Sam Tucker chuckled as he sat down again. 'Alia time big goddamn
tips, I'd say.'
'Plenty good tips, mon,' agreed Lawrence.
'And probably something more,' added McAuliff, looking at Floyd and
remembering the exclusive reputation of the Negril Golf Club. 'Alia
time plenty of information.'
'Yes, mon.' Floyd smiled conspiratonally. 'It is as they say: The
rich Westmorelanders talk a great deal during their games of golf.'
Alex fell silent. It seemed strange, the whole scene. Here they
were, the five of them, eating cold chicken on a coral reef three
hundred yards from shore, playing children's games with passing cabin
cruisers and joking casually about the surreptitious gathering of
information on a golf course.
Two black revolutionaries - recruits from a band of hill country
guerrillas. A late-middle aged 'soldier of fortune'. (Sam Tucker would
object to the cliche, but if it was ever applicable, he was the
applicant.) A strikingly handsome… lovely English divorcee whose
background just happened to include undercover work for an
international police organization. And one thirty-eight year old
ex-infantryman who six weeks ago flew to London thinking he was going
to negotiate a geological survey contract.
The five of them. Each knowing that he was not what he appeared to
be; each doing what he was doing… she was doing… because there were no
alternatives. Not really.
It wasn't strange; it was insane.
And it struck McAuliff once again that he was the least qualified
among these people, under the circumstances. Yet because of the
circumstances - having nothing to do with qualifications - he was their
leader. Insanity.
By the seventh day, working long hours with few breaks, Alex and Sam
had charted the coastline as far as Burwood, five miles from the mouth
of the Martha Brae, their western perimeter. The Jensens and James
Ferguson kept a leisurely parallel pace, setting up tables with
microscopes, burners, vials, scales, and chemicals as they went about
their work. None found anything exceptional, nor did they expect to in
the coastal regions. The areas had been studied fairly extensively for
industrial and resort purposes; there was nothing of consequence not
previously recorded. And since Ferguson's botanical analyses were
closely allied with Sam Tucker's soil evaluations, Ferguson volunteered
to make the soil
tests, freeing Tucker to finish the topographies with Alex.
These were the geophysical concerns. There was something else, and
none could explain it.
It was first reported by the Jensens.
A sound. Only a sound. A low wail or cry that seemed to follow them
throughout an entire afternoon.
When they first heard it, it came from the underbrush beyond the
dunes. They thought that perhaps it was an animal in pain. Or a small
child in some horrible anguish, an agony that went beyond a child's
tears.
In a very real sense, it was terrifying.
So the Jensens raced beyond the dunes into the underbrush, thrashing
at the tangled foliage to find the source of the dreadful, frightening
cry.
They had found nothing.
The animal or the child, or whatever it was, had fled.
Shortly thereafter - late in the same afternoon - James Ferguson
came running down to the beach, his face an expression of bewildered
panic. He had been tracing a giant mollusk fern to its root source; the
trek had taken him up into a rocky precipice above the shore. He had
been in the centre of the overhanging vines and maccafats when a
vibration - at first a vibration - caused his whole body to tremble.
There followed a wild, piercing screech, both high-pitched yet full,
that pained his ears beyond - he said -endurance.
He had gripped the vines to keep from plummeting off the precipice.
Terrified, he had scrambled down hysterically to firmer ground and
raced back to the others.
James had not been more than a few hundred yards away.
Yet none but he had heard the terrible thing.
Whitehall had another version of the madness. The black scholar had
been walking along the shoreline, half sand, half forest, of Bengal
Bay. It was an aimless morning constitutional; he had no destination
other than the point, perhaps.
About a mile east of the motel's beach, he rested briefly on a large
rock overlooking the water. He heard a noise from behind, and so he
turned, expecting to see a bird or a mongoose fluttering or scampering
in the woods.
There was nothing.
He turned back to the lapping water beneath him, when suddenly there
was an explosion of sound - sustained, hollowlike, a dissonant
cacophony of wind.
And then it stopped.
Whitehall had gripped the rock and stared into the forest. At
nothing.
Aware only that he was afflicted with a terrible pain in his temples.
But Charles was a scholar, and a scholar was a sceptic. He had
concluded that, somewhere in the forest, an enormous unseen tree had
collapsed from the natural weight of ages. In its death fall, the tons
of ripping, scraping wood-against-wood within the huge trunk had caused
the phenomenon.
And none was convinced.
As Whitehall told his story, McAuliff watched him. He did not think
Charles believed it himself.
Things not explicable had occurred, and they were all - if nothing
else - scientists of the physical. The explainable.
Perhaps they all took comfort in Whitehall's theory of sonics.
Alexander thought, so; they could not dwell on it. There was work to do. Divided objectives.
Alison thought she had found something, and with Floyd's and
Lawrence's help she made a series of deep bores arcing the beaches and
coral jetties. Her samplings showed that there were strata of soft
lignite interspersed throughout the limestone beds on the ocean floor.
Geologically it was easily explained: Hundreds of thousands of years
ago, volcanic disturbances swallowed whole land masses of wood and
pulp. Regardless of explanations, however, if there were plans to sink
pilings for piers or even extended docks, the construction firms were
going to have to add to their base supports.
Alison's concentrations were a relief to McAuliff. She was absorbed,
and so complained less about his restrictions, and, more important, he
was able to observe Floyd and Lawrence as they went about the business
of watching over her. The two blacks were extremely thorough. And
gracefully subtle. Whenever Alison wandered along the beach or up into
the shore grass, one or both had her flanked or preceded or followed.
They were like stalking panthers prepared to spring, yet they did not
in their tracking call attention to themselves. They seemed to become
natural appendages, always carrying something - binoculars, sampling
boxes, clipboards… whatever was handy - to divert any zeroing in on
their real function.
And during the nights, McAuliff found a protective bonus he had
neither asked for nor expected: Floyd and Lawrence alternated patrols
around the lawns and in the corridors of the Bengal Court motel. Alex
discovered this on the night of the eighth day, when he got up at four
in the morning to get himself a plastic bucket of ice from the machine
down the hall. He wanted ice water.
As he turned the corner into the outside alcove where the machine
was situated, he was suddenly aware of a figure behind the latticework
that fronted the lawn. The figure had moved quickly; there had been no
sound of footsteps.
McAuliff rapidly scooped the cubes into the small bucket, closed the
metal door, and walked back around the corner into the hallway. The
instant he was out of sight, he silently placed the ice at his feet and
pressed his back against the wall's edge.
There was movement.
McAuliff whipped around the corner, with every intention of hurling
himself at whoever came into view. His fists were clenched, his spring
accurate; he lunged into the figure of Lawrence. It was too late to
regain his footing.
'Eh, mon! cried the black softly as he recoiled and fell
back under Alex's weight. Both men rolled out of the alcove onto the
lawn.
'Christ!' whispered McAuliff, next to Lawrence on the ground. 'What
the hell are you doing here?'
Lawrence smiled in the darkness; he shook his hand, which had been
pinned by Alex under his back. 'You're a big fella, mon! You pretty
quick, too.'
'I was pretty damned excited… What are you doing out here?'
Lawrence explained briefly, apologetically. He and Floyd had made an
arrangement with the night watchman, an old fisherman who prowled
around at night with a shotgun neither guerrilla believed he knew how
to use. Barak Moore had ordered them to stand evening patrols; they
would have done so whether commanded to or not, said Lawrence.
'When do you sleep?'
'Sleep good, mon,' replied Lawrence. 'We take turns all
the time.'
Alex returned to his room. Alison sat up in bed when he closed the
door.
'Is everything all right?' she asked apprehensively.
'Better than I expected. We've got our own miniature army. We're
fine.'
On the afternoon of the ninth day, McAuliff and Tucker reached the
Martha Brae River. The geodometer charts and transit photographs were
sealed hermetically and stored in the cool vaults of the equipment
truck. Peter Jensen gave his summary of the coastal ore and mineral
deposits; his . wife, Ruth, had found traces of plant fossils embedded
in the coral, but her findings were of little value, and James
Ferguson, covering double duty in soil and flora, presented his
unstartling analyses. Only Alison's discovery of the lignite strata was
unexpected.
All reports were to be driven into Ocho Rios for duplication.
McAuliff said he would do this himself; it had been a difficult nine
days, and the tenth was a day off.
Those who wanted to go into Ochee could come with him; the others
could go to Montego or laze around the Bengal Court beach, as they
preferred. The survey would resume on the morning of the eleventh day.
They made their respective plans on the river bank, with the
inevitable picnic lunches put up by the motel. Only Charles Whitehall,
who had done little but lie around the beach, knew precisely
what he wanted to do, and he could not state it publicly. He spoke to
Alex alone.
'I really must see Piersall's papers. Quite honestly,
McAuliff, it's been driving me crazy.'
'We wait for Moore. We agreed to that.'
'When? For heaven's sake, when will he show up? It will be ten days
tomorrow; he said ten days.'
'There were no guarantees. I'm as anxious as you. There's an
oilcloth packet buried somewhere on his property, remember?'
'I haven't forgotten for an instant.' Separation of concentrations; divided objectives.
Holcroft.
Charles Whitehall was as concerned academically as he was
conspiratorially. Perhaps more so, thought Alex. The black scholar's
curiosity was rooted in a lifetime of research.
The Jensens remained at Bengal Court. Ferguson requested an advance
from McAuliff and hired a taxi to drive him into Montego Bay. McAuliff,
Sam Tucker, and Alison Booth drove the truck to Ocho Rios. Charles
Whitehall followed in an old station wagon with Floyd and Lawrence; the
guerillas insisted that the arrangements be thus.
Barak Moore lay in the tall grass, binoculars to his eyes. It was
sundown; rays of orange and yellow light filtered through the green
trees above him and bounced off the white stone of Walter Piersall's
house, four hundred yards away. Through the grass he saw the figures of
the Trelawny Parish police circling the house, checking the windows and
the doors; they would leave at least one man on watch. As usual.
The police had finished the day's investigation, the longest
investigation, thought Barak, in the history of the parish. They had
been at it nearly two weeks. Teams of civilians had come up from
Kingston: men in pressed clothes, which meant they were more than
police.
They would find nothing, of that Barak Moore was certain.
If Walter Piersall had accurately described his caches.
And Barak could not wait any longer. It would be a simple matter to
retrieve the oilcloth packet - he was within a hundred and fifty yards
of it at the moment - but it was not that simple. He needed Charles
Whitehall's total cooperation - more than Whitehall realized - and that
meant he had to get inside Piersall's house and bring out the rest of
Piersall's legacy. The anthropologist's papers. The papers. They were cemented in the wall of an old,
unused cistern in Piersall's basement.
Walter Piersall had carefully removed several cistern blocks, dug
recesses in the earth beyond, and replaced the stones. It was in one of
these recesses that he had buried his studies of the Halidon.
Charles Whitehall would not help unless he saw those papers. Barak
needed Charley-mon's help.
The Trelawny police got into their vehicles; a single uniformed
guard waved as the patrol cars started down the road.
He, Barak, the people's revolutionary, had to work with Whitehall,
the political criminal. Their own war - perhaps a civil war - would
come
later, as it had in so many new lands.
First, there was the white man. And his money and his companies and
his unending thirst for the sweat of the black man. That was first,
very much first, mon!
Barak's thoughts had caused him to stare blindly into the
binoculars. The guard was nowhere in sight now. Moore scanned the area,
refocusing the Zeiss Ikon lenses as he covered the sides and the
sloping back lawn of Piersalls house. It was a comfortable white man's
home, thought Barak.
It was on top of a hill, the entrance road a long climb from
George's Valley to the west and the Martha Brae to the east. Mango
trees, palms, hibiscus, and orchids lined the entrance and surrounded
the one-and-a-half-storeyed white stone structure. The house was long,
most of the wide, spacious rooms on the first floor. There was black
iron grillework everywhere, across the windows and over the door
entrances. The only glass was in the second-floor bedrooms; all the
windows had teak shutters.
The rear of High Hill, as the house was called, was the most
striking. To the east of the old pasture of high grass, where Barak
lay, the gently sloping back lawn had been carved out of the forests
and the fields, seeded with a Caribbean fescue that was as smooth as a
golf course; the rocks, painted a shiny white, gave the appearance of
whitecaps in a green sea.
In the centre of the area was a medium-sized pool, installed by
Piersall, with blue and white tiles that reflected the sun as sharply
as the blue-green water in it. Around the pool and spreading out over
the grass were tables and chairs - white wrought iron - delicate in
appearance, sturdy in design.
The guard came into view again, and Moore caught his breath, as much
in astonishment as in anger. The guard was playing with a dog, a
vicious-looking Doberman. There had been no dogs before. It was a bad
thing, thought Barak… yet, perhaps, not so bad. The presence of the dog
probably meant that this policeman would stay alone at his post longer
than the normal time span. It was a police custom to leave dogs with
men for two reasons: because the district they patrolled was dangerous,
or because the men would remain for a relatively long time at their
watches. Dogs served several purposes; they were alarms, they
protected, and they helped pass the hours.
The guard threw a stick; the Doberman raced beyond the pool, nearly
crashing into a wrought-iron table, and snatched it up in his mouth.
Before the dog could bring it back the policeman threw another stick,
bewildering the Doberman, who dropped the first retrieval and went
after the second.
He is a stupid man, thought Barak, watching the laughing guard. He
did not know animals, and a man who did not know animals was a man who
could be trapped.
He would be trapped tonight.
EIGHTEEN
It was a clear night. The Jamaican moon - three-quarters of it -
shone brightly between the high banks of the river. They had poled a
stolen bamboo raft down the rushing waters of the Martha Brae until
they had reached the point of shortest distance to the house in Carrick
Foyle. They manoeuvred the raft into a pitch-black recess and pulled it
out of the water, hiding it under cascading umbrellas of full-leaved
mangroves and maiden palms.
They were the raiding party: Barak, Alex, Floyd and Whitehall. Sam
Tucker and Lawrence had stayed at Bengal Court to protect Alison.
They crept up the slope through the dense, ensnaring foliage. The
slope was steep, the travelling slow and painfully difficult. The
distance to the High Hill property was no more than a mile - perhaps a
mile and a quarter - but it took the four of them nearly an hour to
reach it. Charles Whitehall thought the route was foolish. If there was
one guard and one dog, why not drive to the road below the winding,
half-mile entrance and simply walk up to the outer gates?
Barak's reasoning held more sophistication than Whitehall conceded
to the Trelawny police. Moore thought it possible that the parish
authorities had set up electronic tripwires along the entrance drive.
Barak knew that such instruments had been in use in Montego Bay,
Kingston, and Port Antonio hotels for months. They could not take the
chance of setting one off.
Breathing heavily, they stood at the southern border of Piersall's
sloping lawn and looked up at the house called 'High Hill'. The moon's
illumination on the white stone made the house stand out like an
alabaster monument, still, peaceful, graceful, and solid. Light spilled
out of the teak shutters in two areas of the house: the downstairs back
room opening onto the lawn and the centre bedroom on the second floor.
All else was in darkness.
Except the underwater spotlights in the pool. A slight breeze caused
ripples on the water; the bluish light danced from underneath.
'We must draw him out,' said Barak. 'Him and the dog, mon.'
'Why? What's the point?' asked McAuliff, the sweat from the climb
rolling down into his eyes. 'He's one, we're four.'
'Moore is right,' answered Charles Whitehall. 'If there are
electronic devices outside, then certainly he has the equivalent
within.'
'He would have a police radio, at any rate, mon,' interjected Floyd.
'I know those doors; by the time we broke one down, he would have time
- easy to reach others'
'It's a half hour from Falmouth; the police are in Falmouth,'
pressed Alex. 'We'd be in and out by then.'
'Not so, mon,' argued Barak. 'It will take us a while to select and
pry loose the cistern stones… We'll dig up the oilcloth packet first.
Come!'
Barak Moore led them around the edge of wooded property, to the
opposite side, into the old grazing field. He shielded the glass of his
flashlight with his fingers and raced to a cluster of breadfruit trees
at the northern end of the rock-strewn pasture. He crouched at the
trunk of the farthest tree; the others did the same. Barak spoke
- whispered.
'Talk quietly. These hill-winds carry voices. The packet is buried
in the earth forty-four paces to the right of the fourth large rock on
a northwest diagonal from this tree.'
'He was a man who knew Jamaica,' said Whitehall softly.
'How do you mean?' McAuliff saw the grim smile on the scholar's face
in the moonlight.
'The Arawak symbols for a warrior's death march were in units of
four, always to the right of the setting sun.'
'That's not very comforting,' said Alex.
'Like your American Indians,' replied Whitehall, 'the Arawaks were
not comforted by the white man.'
'Neither were the Africans, Charley-mon.' Barak locked eyes with
Whitehall in the moonlight. 'Sometimes I think you forget that.' He
addressed McAuliff and Floyd. 'Follow me. In a line.'
They ran in crouched positions through the tall grass behind the
black revolutionary, each man slapping a large prominent rock as he
came upon it. One, two, three, four.
At the fourth rock, roughly a hundred and fifty yards from the base
of the breadfruit tree, they knelt around the stone. Barak cupped his
flashlight and shone it on the top. There was a chiselled marking,
barely visible. Whitehall bent over it.
'Your Dr Piersall had a progressive imagination; progressive in the
historical sense. He's jumped from Arawak to Coromantee. See?'
Whitehall traced his index finger over the marking under the beam of
the flashlight and continued softly. 'This twisted crescent is an
Ashanti moon the Coromantees used to leave a trail for members of the
tribe perhaps two or three days behind in a hunt. The chips on the
convex side of the crescent determine the direction: one - to the left;
two - to the right. Their placement on the rim shows the angle. Here:
two chips, dead centre; therefore, directly to the right of the stone
facing the base of the crescent.' Whitehall gestured with his right
hand northeast.
'As Piersall instructed.' Barak nodded his head; he did not bother
to conceal his pique at Charley-mon's explanation. Yet there was
respect in that pique, thought McAuliff, as he watched Moore begin
pacing off the forty-four steps.
Piersall had disguised the spot chosen for burial. There was a
thicket of mollusk ferns spreading out in a free-form spray within the
paced-off area of the grass. They had been rerooted expertly; it was
illogical to assume any sort of digging had taken place there in years.
Floyd took a knapsack shovel from his belt, unfolded the stem, and
began removing the earth. Charles Whitehall bent down on his knees and
joined the revolutionary, clawing at the dirt with his bare hands.
The rectangular black box was deep in the ground. Had not the
instructions been so precise, the digging might have stopped-before
reaching it. The depth was over three feet. Whitehall suspected it was
exactly four feet when deposited. The Arawak unit of four.
The instant Floyd's small shovel struck the metal casing, Whitehall
lashed his right hand down, snatched the box out of the earth, and
fingered the edges, trying to pry it apart. It was not possible and
Whitehall realized it within seconds. He had used this type of
receptacle perhaps a thousand times: It was a hermetically sealed
archive case whose soft, rubberized edges created a vacuum within. It
had two locks, one at each end, with separate keys; once the keys were
inserted and turned, air was allowed in, and after a period of minutes
the box could be forced open. It was the sort of repository used in the
most heavily endowed libraries to house old manuscripts, manuscripts
that were studied by scholars no more than once every five years or so
and thus preserved with great care. The name 'archive case' was well
suited for documents in archives for a millennium.
'Give me the keys!' whispered Charles urgently to Barak.
'I have no keys, mon. Piersall said nothing about keys.' 'Damn'
'Keep quiet!' ordered McAuliff.
'Put that dirt back,' said Moore to Floyd. 'So it is not so obvious,
mon. Push back the ferns.'
Floyd did as he was told; McAuliff helped him. Whitehall stared at
the rectangular box in his hands; he was furious.
'He was paranoid!' whispered the scholar, turning to Barak. 'You
said it was a packet. An oilcloth packet! Not this. This will take a
blowtorch to open!'
'Charley's got a point,' said Alex, shovelling in dirt with his
hands, realizing that he had just called Whitehall 'Charley.'
'Why did
he go to this trouble? Why didn't he just put the box with the rest of
the papers in the cistern?'
'You ask questions I cannot answer, mon. He was very concerned,
that's all I can tell you.'
The dirt was back in the hole. Floyd smoothed out the surface and
pushed the roots of the mollusk ferns into the soft earth. That will
do, I think, mon,' he said, folding the stem of the shovel and
replacing it in his belt.
'How are we going to get inside?' asked McAuliff. 'Or get the guard
outside?'
'I have thought of this for several hours,' replied Barak. 'Wild
pigs, I think.'
'Very good, mon!' interrupted Floyd.
'In the pool?' added Whitehall knowingly.
'Yes.'
'What the hell are you talking about?' Alex watched the faces of the
three blacks in the moonlight.
Barak answered. 'In the Cock Pit there are many wild pigs. They are
vicious and troublesome. We are perhaps ten miles from the Cock Pit's
borders. It is not unusual for pigs to stray this far… Floyd and I will
imitate the sounds. You and Charley-mon throw rocks into the pool.'
'What about the dog?' asked Whitehall. 'You'd better shoot it.'
'No shooting, mon! Gunfire would be heard for miles. I will take
care of the dog.' Moore withdrew a small anaesthetizing dart gun from
his pocket. 'Our arsenal contains many of these. Come.'
Five minutes later McAuliff thought he was part of some demonic
children's charade. Barak and Floyd had crept to the edge of the tall
grass bordering the elegant lawn. On the assumption that the Doberman
would head directly to the first human smell, Alex and Whitehall were
in parallel positions ten feet to the right of the revolutionaries, a
pile of stones between them. They were to throw the rocks as accurately
as possible into the lighted pool sixty feet away at the first sounds
emanating from Moore and his comrade.
It began.
The shrieks intruded on the stillness of the night with terrible
authenticity. They were the bellows of panicked beasts, shrill and
somehow horrible. 'Eeeowahhee… gnnrahha, gnnrahhaaa… eeaww, eeaww… eeeowahhee…""
McAuliff and Whitehall lobbed rocks into the pool; the splashes were
interspersed with the monstrous shrieks. A weird cacophony filled the
air.
The shutters from the first floor room were thrown open. The guard
could be seen behind the grillework, a rifle in his hand.
Suddenly a stone hit Alex's cheek. The blow was gentle, not
stunning. He whipped his head towards the direction of the throw. Floyd
was waving his arm in the tall grass, commanding McAuliff to stop
hurling the rocks. Alex grabbed Whitehall's hand. They stopped.
The shrieks then became louder, accompanied by blunt thuds of
pounding earth. Alex could see Barak and Floyd in the moonlight. They
were slapping the ground like crazed animals; the horrible noises
coming from their shaking heads reached a crescendo.
Wild pigs fighting in the high grass.
The door of Piersall's house crashed open. The guard, rifle in hand,
released the dog at his side. The animal lurched out onto the lawn and
raced towards the hysterical sounds and all-too-human odours.
McAuliff knelt, hypnotized by what followed in the Jamaican
moonlight. Barak and Floyd scrambled back into the field without
raising their bodies above the grass and without diminishing the pitch
of their animal screams. The Doberman streaked across the lawn and
sprang headlong over the border of the field and into the tall grass.
The continuing shrieks and guttural roars were joined by the savage
barking of the vicious dog. And, amid the terrible sounds, Alex could
distinguish a series of spits; the dart gun was being fired repeatedly.
A yelping howl suddenly drowned out the man-made bellowing; the
guard ran to the edge of the lawn, his rifle raised to fire. And before
McAuliff could absorb or understand the action, Charles Whitehall
grabbed a handful of rocks and threw them towards the lighted pool. And
then, a second handful hard upon the first.
The guard spun around to the water; Whitehall slammed Alex out of
the way, raced along the edge of the grass, and suddenly leaped out on
the lawn at the black patrolman.
McAuliff watched, stunned.
Whitehall, the elegant academic - the delicately boned Charley-mon -
lashed his arm out into the base of the guard's neck, crashed his foot
savagely into the man's midsection, and seized a wrist, twisting it
violently so that the rifle flew out of the guard's hands; the man
jerked off his feet, spun into the air, and whipped to the ground. As
the guard vibrated off the grass, Whitehall took swift aim and crashed
his heel into the man's skull below his forehead.
The body contorted, then lay still.
The shrieking stopped; all was silent.
It was over.
Barak and Floyd raced out from the high grass onto the lawn. Barak
spoke.
'Thank you, Charley-mon. Indiscriminate gunfire might have found us.'
'It was necessary,' replied Whitehall simply. 'I must see those
papers.'
'Then let us go,' said Barak Moore. 'Floyd, take this real pig
inside; tie him up somewhere.'
'Don't waste time,' countered Whitehall, starting for the house, the
receptacle under his arm. 'Just throw him into the grass. He's dead.'
Inside, Floyd led them to the cellar stairs and down into Piersall's
basement. The cistern was in the west section, about six feet deep and
five wide. The walls were dry; cobwebs laced the sides and the top.
Barak brushed aside the filmy obstructions and lowered himself into the
pit.
'How do you know which are the blocks?' asked Whitehall urgently,
the black rectangular box clasped in his hand.
'There is a way; the Doctor explained,' replied Moore, taking out a
small box of safety matches. He struck one and stared at the north
centre line, revolving slowly clock-wise, holding the lighted match
against the cracks in the blocks on the lower half of the pit.
'Ground phosphorus,' stated Whitehall quietly. 'Packed into the
concrete edges.'
'Yes, mon. Not much; enough to give a little flame, or a sputter,
perhaps.'
'You're wasting time!' Whitehall spat out the words. 'Swing to your left,
towards the northwest point! Not to your right.'
The three men looked abruptly at the scholar. 'What,
Charley-mon?' Barak was bewildered.
'Do as I say!… Please.'
'The Arawak symbols?' asked McAuliff. 'The… odyssey to death, or
whatever you called it? To the right of the setting sun?'
I'm glad you find it amusing.'
'I don't, Charley-mon. Not one goddamn bit,' answered Alex softly.
'Ayee…' Barak whistled as tiny spits of flame burst out of the
cistern's cracks. 'Charley, you got brains, mon! Here they are… Floyd,
mon, give me the tools.'
Floyd reached into his field jacket and produced a five-inch stone
chisel and an all-metal folding hammer. He handed them down to his
superior. 'You want help?' he asked.
'There is not room for two,' replied Barak as he started hammering
along the cracks.
Three minutes later Moore had managed to dislodge the first block
from its surrounding adhesive; he tugged at it, pulling it slowly out
of the-cistern wall. Whitehall held the flashlight now, his eyes intent
on Moore's manipulations. The block came loose; Floyd reached down and
took it from Barak's hands.
'What's behind?' Whitehall pierced the beam of light into the gaping
hole.
'Space, mon. Red dirt and space,' said Moore. 'And I think the top
of another box. A larger box.'
'For God's sake, hurry!'
'Okay, Charley-mon. There is no dinner engagement at the Mo'Bay
Hilton, mon.' Barak chuckled. 'Nothing will be rewritten by a hidden
mongoose.'
'Relax.' McAuliff did not look at Whitehall when he spoke. He did
not want to. 'We have all night, don't we? You killed a man out there.
He was the only one who could have interfered. And you decided he had
to die for that.'
Whitehall turned his head and stared at McAuliff. 'I killed him
because it was necessary.' Whitehall transferred his attention back to
Barak Moore. The second block came loose with far less effort than the
first. Barak reached into the space and rocked the stone until the
cracks widened and it slid out. Floyd took the block and placed it
carefully to one side.
Whitehall crouched opposite the hole, shining the flashlight into
it. 'It's an archive case. Let me have it.' He handed Floyd the
flashlight and reached across the pit as Barak pulled the receptacle
out of the dirt and gave it to him. 'Extraordinary!' said Charles,
fingering the oblong box, his knee pressed against the top of the first
receptacle on the floor beside him. Whitehall was not going to let
either out of his possession.
'The case you mean, mon?' asked Moore.
'Yes.' Whitehall turned the box over, then held it up as Floyd shone
the beam of light on it. 'I don't think any of you understand. Without
the keys or proper equipment, these bloody things take hours to open.
Watertight, airtight, vacuumed, and crushproof. Even a starbit drill
could not penetrate the metal… Here! See.' The scholar pointed to some
lettering on the bottom surface. 'Hitchcock Vault Company,
Indianapolis. The finest in the world. Museums, libraries… government
archives everywhere use Hitchcock. Simply extraordinary.'
When the sound came. It had the impact of an earth-shattering
explosion, although the noise was distant - that of the whining low
gear of an automobile racing up the long entrance drive from the road
below.
And then another.
The four men looked back and forth at one another. They were
stunned. Outside there was an intrusion that was not to be. Could
not be.
'Oh my God, Jesus, mon!' Barak jumped out of the pit.
'Take those tools, you damn fool!' cried Whitehall. 'Your
fingerprints!'
Floyd, rather than Barak, leaped into the cistern, grabbed the
hammer and chisel, and put them into the pockets of his field jacket.
'There is only the staircase, mon! No other way!'
Barak ran to the stairs. McAuliff reached down for the first
receptacle at Whitehall's side; simultaneously, Whitehall's hand was on
it.
'You can't carry both, Charley-mon,' said Alex in answer to
Whitehall's manic stare. 'This one's mine!' He grabbed the box, jerked
it out from under Whitehall's grip, and followed Moore to the stairs.
The automobiles, in grinding counterpoint, were getting nearer.
The four men leaped up the stairs in single file and raced through
the short corridor into the darkened, rugless living room, the beams of
headlights could be seen shining through the slits in the teak
shutters. The first car had reached the compact parking area; the
sounds of doors opening could be heard. The second vehicle roared in
only seconds behind. In the corner of the room could be seen, in the
strips of light, the cause for the intrusion: an open-line portable
radio. Barak ran to it and, with a single blow of his fist into the
metal, smashed the front and then tore off the back antennae.
Men outside began shouting. Predominately one name: 'Raymond!'
'Raymond!'
'Raymond! Where you at, mon!'
Floyd assumed the lead and raced to the rear centre door. 'This way!
Quick, mon!' he whispered to the others. He yanked the door open and
held it as they all gathered. McAuliff could see in the reflection of
the pool's light that Floyd held a pistol in his free hand. Floyd spoke
to Barak. 'I will deflect them, mon. To the west. I know the property
good, mon!'
'Be careful! You two,' said Barak to Whitehall and McAuliff. 'Go
straight into the woods; we'll meet at the raft. One-half hour from
now. No more. Whoever is there, leave. Pole down,
mon. The Martha Brae is no good without a raft, mon. Go!' He shoved
Alex through the door.
Outside, McAuliff started across the strangely peaceful lawn, with
the blue-green light of the pool illuminating the stately wrought-iron
furniture. He could hear the shouts from behind. Men had raced up from
the entrance drive to the sides of the house. Alex wondered if they
could see him; he was running as fast as he could towards the seemingly
impenetrable wall of forest beyond the sloping lawn. He gripped the
oblong receptacle under his right arm.
He got his answer instantly.
The insanity had started.
Gunshot!
Bullets cracked above him; abrupt detonations spaced erratically
behind him.
Men were firing pistols indiscriminately. Oh, Jesus; he was back there again!
Long-forgotten instructions returned once more. Diagonals; make
diagonals. Short, quick spurts; but not too short. Just enough to
give the enemy a half second to assume position-aim.
He had given those instructions to scores of men in the Korean hills.
The shouting became an overlapping chorus of hysteria: and then a
single scream pierced the symphony.
McAuliff hurled himself into the air, into the sudden growth of
dense foliage that bordered the lawn. He fell into a thicket and rolled
to his left. On the ground, out of sightlines, roll! Roll for all you're
worth into a second position.
Basics.
Fundamentals.
He was positive he would see men coming after him down the hill.
There weren't.
Instead, what he saw hypnotized him, as he had been hypnotized
watching the two black revolutionaries in the high grass pretending to
be wild pigs.
Up by the house - to the west of it, actually - Floyd was reeling
around and around, the light of the pool catching the dull green of his
field jacket. He was allowing himself to be an open target, firing a
pistol, pinning the police to the sides of the house. He ran out of
ammunition, reached into his pocket, withdrew another gun, and started
firing again - now racing to the edge of the pool, in full sacrificial
view.
He had been hit. Repeatedly. Blood was spreading throughout the
cloth of the field jacket and all over the trousers covering his legs.
The man had at least half a dozen bullets in him, ebbing away his life,
leaving him only moments to live.
'McAuliff!' The whispered shout was from his right. Barak Moore, his
grotesque shaven head glistening with sweat in the filtered moonlight,
threw himself down beside Alex. 'We get out of here, mon! Come!' He
tugged at McAuliff's drenched shirt.
'For God's sake! Can't you see what's happening up there? That man's
dying!'
Barak glanced up through the tangled overgrowth. He spoke calmly.
'We are committed till death. In its way, it is a luxury. Floyd knows
that.'
'For what, for Christ's sake? For goddamn stinking what?
You're goddamn madmen!'
'Let us go!' commanded Moore. 'They will follow us in
seconds. Floyd is giving us this chance, you white shit, mon!'
Alex grabbed Barak's hand, which was still gripping his shirt, and
threw it off. 'That's it, isn't it? I'm a white shit. And Floyd has to
die because you think so. And that guard had to die because Whitehall
thinks so!… You're sick.'
Barak Moore paused. 'You are what you are, mon. And you will not
take this island. Many, many will die, but this island will not be
yours… You will be dead, too, if you do not run with me.' Moore
suddenly stood up and ran into the forest darkness.
McAuliff looked after him, holding the black oblong box to his
chest. Then he rose from the ground and followed the black
revolutionary.
They waited at the water's edge, the raft bobbing up and down in the
onrushing current. They were waist deep in the river, Barak checking
his wristwatch, Alex shifting his feet in the soft mud to hold the
bamboo sides of the raft more firmly.
'We cannot wait much longer, mon,' said Barak. 'I can hear them in
the hills. They come closer!'
McAuliff could not hear anything but the sounds of the rushing river
and the slapping of water against the raft. And Barak. 'We can't leave
him here!'
'No choice. You want your head blown off, mon?'
'No. And it won't be. We stole papers from a dead man. At
his instructions. That's no call for being shot at. Enough's enough,
goddamn it!'
Barak laughed. 'You have a short memory, mon! Up in the tall grass
there is a dead policeman. Without doubt, Floyd took at least one other
life with him; Floyd was an expert shot… Your head will be blown off;
the Falmouth police will not hesitate.'
Barak Moore was right. Where the hell was Whitehall?
'Was he shot? Do you know if he was wounded?'
'I think not, mon. I cannot be sure… Charley-mon did not do as I
told him. He ran southwest into the field.'
A single shaft of light was seen a hundred yards upstream, streaking
down through the overgrown banks.
'Look!' cried Alex. Moore turned.
There was a second, then a third beam. Three dancing columns of
light, wavering towards the river below.
'No time now, mon! Get in and pole fast!'
The two of them shoved the raft towards the centre current and
jumped onto the bamboo-rodded surface.
'I get in front, mon!' yelled Moore, scrambling over the platformed,
high-backed seat used by tourists viewing the beauty of the Martha
Brae. 'You stay in the rear, mon! Use the pole and when I tell you,
stop and put your legs over the backside!'
McAuliff focused his eyes in the moonlight, trying to distinguish
which was the loose pole among the strapped cylinders of bamboo. It was
wedged between the low railing and the deck; he picked it up and
plunged it into the waters, into the mud below.
The raft entered the rapids and began careening downstream. Moore
stood up in the bow and used his pole as a deflector, warding the
racing bamboo float off the treacherous series of flesh-cutting rocks
that broke the surface of the water. They were approaching a bend in
the river. Barak shouted.
'Sit on the backside, mon! Put your feet into the water. Quick,
mon!'
Alex did as he was ordered; he soon understood. The drag created by
his weight and his feet gave Moore that slightly slower speed he needed
to navigate the raft through a miniature archipelago of hazardous
rocks. The bamboo sides crashed back and forth, into and over the
mounds of jagged stone; twice McAuliff thought the raft would list
right out of the water.
It was the sound of the harsh scrapings and his concentration on the
rapids that caused Alex to delay his realization of the gunshots. And
then that realization was complete with the stinging, searing pain in
his left arm. A bullet had grazed his flesh; the blood trickled down
his sleeve in the moonlight.
There was a staccato-burst of gunfire.
'You get down, mon!' yelled Barak. 'Get flat! They cannot follow us;
we get around the bend, there is a grotto. Many caves. They lead up to
the Brae Road, mon… .Ayeee!'
Moore buckled; he let go of the pole, grabbed his stomach, and fell
onto the bamboo deck. Alex reached down for the oblong archive case,
crammed it into his belt, and crawled as fast as he could to the front
of the raft. Barak Moore was writhing; he was alive.
'How bad are you hurt?'
'Pretty bad, mon!… Stay down! If we get stuck, jump out
and push us off… Around bend, mon.'
Barak was unconscious. The bamboo raft plunged over a shallow,
gravelled surface and then into the final curve of the bend, where the
water was deep, the current powerful and faster than before. The sounds
of gunfire stopped; they were out of sight of the Trelawny police.
McAuliff raised his shoulders; the archive case was cutting into his
skin beneath his belt, his left arm stung with pain. The river now
became a huge flat pool, the waters rushing under the surface. There
were stone cliffs diagonally across, rising sharply out of the river
bank.
Suddenly Alex saw the beam of a lone flashlight, and the terrible
pain of fear pierced his stomach. The enemy was not behind - he was
waiting.
Involuntarily, he reached into his pocket for his gun. The Smith
& Wesson given him by Westmore Tallon. He raised it as the raft
steered itself towards the stone cliffs and the flashlight.
He lowered himself over the unconscious body of Barak Moore and
waited, his arm outstretched, the pistol aimed at the body beyond the
flashlight.
He was within forty yards of the silent figure. He was about to
squeeze the trigger and take a life.
''Barak, mon,' came the words.
The man on the river bank was Lawrence.
Charles Whitehall waited in the high grass by the cluster of
breadfruit trees. The archive case was securely under his arm; he knelt
immobile in the moonlight and watched Piersall's house and grounds two
hundred yards away. The body of the dead guard had not been found.
Floyd's corpse had been carried into the house for the light necessary
for a complete search of the dead body.
One man remained behind. The others had all raced into the eastern
forests and down to the Martha Brae in pursuit of Moore and McAuliff.
That was precisely what Charles Whitehall thought would happen. And
why he had not done as Barak Moore commanded.
There was a better way. If one acted alone.
The single Trelawny policeman was fat. He waddled back and forth by
the wooded border of the lawn; he was pacing nervously, as if afraid to
be alone. He carried a rifle in his hands, jerking it towards every
sound he heard or thought he heard.
Suddenly there was gunfire far below in the distance, down at the
river. It was full, rapid. Either much ammunition was being wasted, or
Moore and McAuliff were having a bad time of it.
But it was his moment to move. The patrolman was hugging
the edge of the forest, peering down. The gunfire was both his
protection and the source of his fear. He cradled his rifle and
nervously lighted a cigarette.
Charles got up and, clutching the archive case, raced through the
tall grass behind the west flank of the field. He then turned right and
ran towards Piersall's house, through the diminishing woods to the
border of the entrance drive.
The two patrol cars stood peacefully in the moonlight, in front of
the wide stone steps to High Hill. Whitehall emerged from the woods and
crossed to the first vehicle. One door was open - the driver's door.
The dim interior light shone over the black leather.
The keys were in the ignition. He removed them and then reached
under the dashboard radio and ripped every wire out of the panel. He
closed the door silently, ran to the second car, and saw that its keys
were also in place. He walked rapidly back to the first car and as
quietly as possible unlatched the hood. He yanked off the distributor
cap and tugged at the rubber lid until it sprang loose from the wires.
He returned to the second vehicle, got in, and placed the archive
case beside him. He pressed the accelerator several times. He checked
the gearshift mechanism and was satisfied.
He turned the key in the ignition. The motor started instantly.
Charles Whitehall backed the patrol car out of the parking area,
swung the wheel, and sped off down the drive.
NINETEEN
The doctor closed the patio door and walked out onto the terrace
that connected Alison's and McAuliffs rooms. Barak Moore was in
Alison's bed. She had insisted; no comments were offered, the decision
was not debated.
Alex's upper left arm was bandaged; the wound was surface, painful,
and not serious. He sat with Alison on the waist-high terrace sea wall.
He did not elaborate on the night raid; there would be time later. Sam
Tucker and Lawrence had taken positions at each end of the patio in
order to keep any wanderers from coming into the small area.
The doctor, a black from Falmouth whom Lawrence had contacted at
midnight, approached McAuliff. 'I have done what I can. I wish I felt
more confident.'
'Shouldn't he be in a hospital?' Alison's words were as much a
rebuke as a question.
'He should be,' agreed the doctor wearily. 'I discussed it with him;
we concluded it was not feasible. There is only a government clinic in
Falmouth. I think this is cleaner.'
'Barak is wanted,' explained Alex quietly. 'He'd be put in prison
before they got the bullet out.'
'I sincerely doubt they would take the trouble to remove the bullet,
Mr McAuliff.'
'What do you think?' asked Alex, lighting a cigarette.
'He will have a chance if he remains absolutely still. But only a
chance. I have cauterized the abdominal wall; it could easily re
rupture. I have replaced blood… yes, my office has a discreet file of
certain individuals' blood classifications. He is extremely weak. If he
survives two or three days, there is hope.'
'But you don't think he will,' stated McAuliff.
'No. There was too much internal bleeding. My… portable operating
kit is not that good. Oh, my man is cleaning up. He will take out the
sheets, clothing, anything that has been soiled. Unfortunately, the
odour of ether and disinfectant will remain. Keep the outside doors
open when you can. Lawrence will make sure no one enters.'
Alex slid off the wall and leaned against it. 'Doctor? I gather
you're part of Barak's organization, if that's the word.'
'It is too precise at this juncture.'
'But you know what's going on.'
'Not specifically. Nor do I wish to. My function is to be available
for medical purposes. The less involvement otherwise, the better for
everyone.'
'You can get word to people, though, can't you?'
The doctor smiled. 'By "people" I assume you mean Barak's followers.'
'Yes.'
'There are telephone numbers… public telephones, and specific hours.
The answer is yes.'
'We're going to need at least one other man. Floyd was killed.'
Alison Booth gasped. Her eyes riveted on Alex; her hand reached out
for his arm. He covered it gently. 'Oh my God,' she whispered.
The doctor looked at Alison but did not comment on her reaction. He
turned back to McAuliff. 'Barak told me. There may be a problem; we do
not know yet. The survey is being watched. Floyd was part of it, and
the police will find out. You will be questioned, of course. Naturally,
you know absolutely nothing; wear long sleeves for a while - a few
days, until the wound can be covered with a large plaster. To replace
Floyd now with one of our men could be a self-induced trap.'
Reluctantly, Alex nodded. 'I see,' he said softly. 'But I need
another man. Lawrence can't do triple duty…'
'May I make a suggestion?' asked the doctor with a thin smile and a
knowing look in his eyes.
'What's that?'
'Use British Intelligence. You really should not ignore them.'
'Get some sleep, Sam. Lawrence, you do the same,' said Alex to the
two men on the terrace. The doctor had left; his assistant remained
with Barak Moore. Alison had gone into McAuliff's room and shut the
door. 'Nothing will happen tonight, except possibly the police… to ask
me questions about a crewman I haven't seen since early afternoon.'
'You know what to say, mon?' Lawrence asked the question with
authority, as if he would provide the answer.
'The doctor explained; Barak told him.'
'You must be angry, mon! Floyd all the time a nigger thief from
Ochee. Now you know: supplies stolen. You drum-drum angry, mon!'
'It doesn't seem fair, does it?' said Alex sadly.
'Do as he says, lad,' countered Sam Tucker. 'He knows what he's
talking about… I'll nap out here. Hate the goddamn bed, anyway.'
'It isn't necessary, Sam.'
'Has it occurred to you, boy, that the police may just come here
without announcing themselves? I'd hate like hell for them to get the
rooms mixed up.'
'Oh Lord…' McAuliff spoke with weariness. It was the exhaustion of
inadequacy, the pressure of continually being made aware of it. 'I
didn't think about that.'
'Neither did the goddamn doctor,' replied Sam. 'Lawrence and I have,
which is why we'll stand turns.'
'Then I'll join you.'
'You do enough tonight, mon,' said Lawrence firmly. 'You have been
hurt… Maybe policemen do not come so quick. Floyd carry no papers.
Early morning Sam Tuck and me take Barak away.'
'The doctor said he was to stay where he is.'
'The doctor is a kling-kling, mon! Two, three hours Barak will
sleep. If he is not dead, we take him to Braco Beach. The ocean is
still before sunrise; a flat-bottom is very gentle, mon. We take him
away.'
'He makes sense again, Alex.' Tucker gave his approval without
regret. 'Our medical friend notwithstanding, it's a question of
alternatives. And we both know most wounded men can travel gentle if
you give 'em a couple of hours.'
'What'll we do if the police come tonight? And search?'
Lawrence answered, again with authority. 'I tell Tuck, mon. The
person in that room has Indie Fever. The bad smell helps us. Falmouth
police plenty scared of Indie Fever.'
'So is everybody else,' added Sam, chuckling.
'You're inventive,' said McAuliff. And he meant it. 'Indie Fever'
was the polite term for a particularly nasty offshoot of encephalitis,
infrequent but nevertheless very much a reality, usually found in the
hill country. It could swell a man's testicles many times their size
and render him impotent as well as a figure of grotesque ridicule.
'You go get sleep now, McAuliff, mon… please.'
'Yes. Yes, I will. See you in a few hours.' Alex looked at Lawrence
for a moment before turning to go inside. It was amazing. Floyd was
dead, Barak barely alive, and the grinning, previously carefree
youngster who had seemed so naive and playful in comparison to his
obvious superiors was no longer the innocent. He had, in a matter of
hours, become the leader of his faction, lord of his pack. A hard
authority had been swiftly developed, although he still felt the need
to qualify the authority. Get sleep now… please.
In a day or two the 'please' would be omitted. The command would be
all.
So forever the office made the man.
Sam Tucker smiled at McAuliff in the bright Jamaican moonlight. He
seemed to be reading Alex's thoughts. Or was Sam remembering McAuliffs
first independent survey? Tucker had been there. It had been in the
Aleutians, in springtime, and a man had died because Alex had not been
firm enough in his disciplining the team regarding the probing of ice
fissures.
Alexander Tarquin McAuliff had matured quickly that springtime in
the Aleutians.
'See you later, Sam.'
Inside the room, Alison lay in bed, the table lamp on. By her side
was the archive case he had carried out of Carrick Foyle. She was
outwardly calm, but there was no mistaking the intensity beneath the
surface, McAuliff removed his shirt, threw it on a chair, and crossed
to the dial on the wall that regulated the overhead fan. He turned it
up; the four blades suspended from the ceiling accelerated, the whirr
matching the sound of the distant surf outside. He walked to the
bureau, where the bucket of ice had melted halfway. Cubes were bunched
together in the water, enough for drinks.
'Would you like a Scotch?' he asked without looking at her.
'No thank you,' she replied in her soft British accent. Soft, but
laced - as all British speech was laced - with that core of
understated, superior rationality.
'I would.'
'I should think so.'
He poured the whiskey into a hotel glass, threw in two ice cubes,
and
turned around. 'To answer you before you ask, I had no idea tonight
would turn out the way it did.'
'Would you have gone had you known?'
'Of course not… But it's over. We have what we need now.'
This?' Alison touched the archive case.
'Yes'
'From what you've told me… on the word of a dying savage. Told to
him by a dead fanatic.'
'I think those descriptions are a little harsh.' McAuliff went to
the chair by the bed and sat down facing her. 'But I won't defend
either one yet. I'll wait. I'll find out what's in here, do what they
say I should do, and see what happens.'
'You sound positively confident, and I can't imagine why. You've
been shot at. A bullet came within five inches of killing you. Now you
sit here calmly and tell me you'll simply bide your time and see what
happens? Alex! For God's sake, what are you doing?'
McAuliff smiled and swallowed a good deal of whiskey. 'What I never
thought was possible,' he said slowly, abruptly serious. 'I mean that…
And I've just seen a boy grow up into a man. In one hour. The act cost
a terrible price, but it happened… and I'm not sure I can understand
it, but I saw it. That transformation had something to do with belief.
We haven't got it. We act out of fear or greed or both… all of us. He
doesn't. He does what he does, becomes what he becomes, because he
believes… And, strangely enough, so does Charley-mon.'
'What in
heaven's name are you talking about?'
McAuliff lowered his glass and
looked at her. 'I have an idea we're about to turn this war over to the
people who should be fighting it.'
Charles Whitehall exhaled slowly, extinguished the acetylene flame,
and removed his goggles. He put the torch down on the long narrow table
and took off the asbestos gloves. He noted with satisfaction that his
every movement was controlled; he was like a confident surgeon, no
motion wasted, his mind ahead of his every muscle.
He rose from the stool and stretched. He turned to see that the door
of the small room was still bolted. A foolish thing to do, he thought;
he had bolted the door. He was alone.
He had driven over back roads nearly forty miles away from Carrick
Foyle, to the border of Saint Anne's. He had left the police car in a
field and walked the last mile into town.
Ten years ago St Anne's was a meeting place for those of the
Movement between Falmouth and Ocho Rios. The 'nigger rich,' they had
called themselves, with good-sized fields in Drax Hall, Chalky Hill,
and Davis Town. Men of property and certain wealth, which they had
forced from the earth and were not about to turn over to the
Commonwealth sycophants in Kingston. Charles Whitehall remembered
names, as he remembered most things… a necessary discipline - and
within fifteen minutes after he reached St Anne's, he was picked up by
a man in a new Pontiac, who cried at seeing him.
When his needs were made known, he was driven to the house of
another man in Drax Hall, whose hobby was machinery. The introductions
were brief; this second man embraced him, held on to him for such a
length of time - silently - that Charles found it necessary to
disengage him.
He was taken to a tool shack at the side of the house, where
everything he had requested was laid out on the long narrow tables that
butted against the wall, a sink at midpoint. Besides the overhead
light, there was a goose-necked lamp, whose bright illumination could
be directed at a small area. Charles was amused to see that along with
these requirements was a bowl of fresh fruit and a huge pewter tankard
filled with ice.
A messiah had returned.
And now the archive case was open. He stared down at the severed
end, the metal edges still glowing with dying orange, then yellow -
lingering - soon to be black again. Inside he could see the brown folds
of a document roll - the usual encasement for folded papers, each sheet
against the imperceptibly moist surface of the enveloping shield.
In the earth a living vault. Precise for a thousand years.
Walter Piersall had buried a rock for many ages in the event his own
overlooked it.
He was a professional.
As a physician might with a difficult birth, Charles reached in and
pulled the priceless child from its womb. He unravelled the document
and began reading. Acquaba. The tribe of Acquaba.
Walter Piersall had gone back into the Jamaican archives and found
the brief allusion in the records pertaining to the Maroon Wars. On 2 January, 1739 a descendant of the Coromanteen tribal
chieftains, one Acquaba, led his followers into the mountains. The
tribe of Acquaba would not be a party to the Cudjoe treaty with the
British, insofar as said treaty called upon the Africans to recapture
slaves for the white garrisons…
There was the name of an obscure army officer who had supplied the
information to His Majesty's Recorder in Spanish Town, the colony's
capital. Middlejohn, Robt. Maj. W.I. Reg. 641.
What made the name of 'Middlejohn, Robt.' significant was Piersall's
discovery of the following.
His Majesty's Recorder. Spanish Town. February 9 -1739. Docm'ts.
recalled. Middlejohn. W.I. Reg. 641.
And…
His Majesty's Recorder. Spanish Town. April 20 -1739. Docm'ts.
recalled. R.M. W.I. Reg. 641
Robert Middlejohn. Major. West Indian Regiment 641, in the Year of
Our Lord 1739, had been significant to someone.
Who?
Why?'
It took Walter Piersall weeks at the Institute to find the next
clue. A second name.
But not in the eighteenth century; instead, 144 years later, in the
year 1883. Fowler, Jeremy, Clerk, Foreign Service.
One Jeremy Fowler had removed several documents from the archives in
the new capital of Kingston on the instructions of Her Majesty's
Foreign Office, 7 June, 1883. Victoria Regina.
The colonial documents in question were labelled simply 'Middlejohn
papers.' 1739.
Walter Piersall speculated. Was it possible that the Middlejohn
papers continued to speak of the Tribe of Acquaba, as the first
document had done? Was the retention of that first document in the
archives an oversight? An omission committed by one Jeremy Fowler on 7
June, 1883?
Piersall flew to London and used his academic credentials to gain
access to the Foreign Office's West Indian Records. Since he was
dealing in matters of research nearly a hundred years old, the F.O. had
no objections. The archivists were most helpful.
And there were no transferred documents from Kingston in the year
1883.
Jeremy Fowler, clerk of the Foreign Service, had stolen the Middlejohn
papers.
If there was a related answer, Walter Piersall now had two specifics
to go on: the name 'Fowler' and the year in the colony of Jamaica.
Since he was in London, he traced the descendants of Jeremy Fowler.
It was not a difficult task.
The Fowlers - sons and uncles - were proprietors of their own
brokerage house on the London Exchange. The patriarch was Gordon
Fowler, Esquire, great-great-grandson of Jeremy Fowler, clerk, Foreign
Service, colony of Jamaica.
Walter Piersall interviewed old Fowler on the premise that he was
researching the last two decades of Victoria's rule in Jamaica; the
Fowler name was prominent. Flattered, the old gentleman gave him access
to all papers, albums, and documents relative to Jeremy Fowler.
These materials told a not unfamiliar story of the times: a young
man of 'middle breeding' entering the Colonial Service, spending a
number of years in a distant outpost, only to return to England far
richer than when he left.
Sufficiently rich to be able to buy heavily into the Exchange during
the last decade of the nineteenth century. A propitious time; the
source of the current Fowler wealth.
One part of the answer.
Jeremy Fowler had made his connection in the Colonial Service.
Walter Piersall returned to Jamaica to look for the second part.
He studied, day by day, week by week, the recorded history of
Jamaica for the year 1883. It was laborious.
And then he found it. 25 May, 1883.
A disappearance that was not given much attention insofar as small
groups of Englishmen - hunting parties - were constantly getting lost
in
the Blue Mountains and tropic jungles, usually to be found by scouting
parties of blacks led by other Englishmen.
As this lone man had been found. Her Majesty's Recorder, Jeremy Fowler.
Not a clerk, but the official Crown Recorder.
Which was why his absence justified the space in the papers. The
Crown Recorder was not insignificant. Not landed gentry, of course, but
a person.
The ancient newspaper accounts were short, imprecise, and strange.
A Mr Fowler had last been observed in his government office on the
evening of 25 May, a Saturday. He did not return on Monday and was not
seen for the rest of the work week. Nor had his quarters been slept in.
Six days later, Mr Fowler turned up in the garrison of Fleetcourse,
south of the impenetrable Cock Pit, escorted by several Maroon Negroes.
He had gone on horseback… alone… for a Sunday ride. His horse had
bolted him; he had got lost and wandered for days until found by the
Maroons.
It was illogical. In those years, Walter Piersall knew, men did not
ride alone into such territories. And if one did, a man who was
sufficiently intelligent to be Her Majesty's Recorder would certainly
know enough to take a left angle from the sun and reach the south coast
in a matter of hours, at best a day.
And one week later Jeremy Fowler stole the Middlejohn papers
from the archives. The documents concerning a sect led by a Coromanteen
chieftain named Acquaba… that had disappeared into the mountains 144
years before.
And six months later he left the Foreign - Colonial - Service and
returned to England a very, very wealthy man.
He had discovered the Tribe of Acquaba.
It was the only logical answer. And if that were so, there was a
second, logical speculation: Was the Tribe of Acquaba… the
Halidon?
Piersall was convinced it was. He needed only current proof.
Proof that there was substance to the whispers of the incredibly
wealthy sect high in the Cock Pit mountains. An isolated community that
sent its members out into the world, into Kingston, to exert influence.
Piersall tested five men in the Kingston government, all in
positions of trust, all with obscure backgrounds. Did any of them
belong to the Halidon?
He went to each, telling each that he alone was the recipient of his
startling information: the Tribe of Acquaba. The Halidon,
Three of the five were fascinated but bewildered. They did not
understand.
Two of the five disappeared.
Disappeared in the sense of being removed from Kingston. Piersall
was told one man had retired suddenly to an island in the Martinique
chain. The other was transferred out of Jamaica to a remote post.
Piersall had his current proof.
The Halidon was the Tribe of Acquaba.
It existed.
If he needed further confirmation, final proof, the growing
harassment against him was it. The harassment now included the selected
rifling and theft of his files and untraceable university enquiries
into his current academic studies. Someone beyond the Kingston
government was concentrating on him. These acts were not those of
concerned bureaucrats.
The Tribe of Acquaba… Halidon.
What was left was to reach the leaders. A staggeringly difficult
thing to do. For throughout the Cock Pit there were scores of insulated
sects that kept to themselves; most of them poverty-stricken, scraping
an existence off the land. The Halidon would not proclaim its
self-sufficiency; which one was it?
The anthropologist returned once again to the volumes of African
minutiae?, specifically seventeenth - and eighteenth-century
Coromanteen. The key had to be there.
Piersall had found the key; he had not footnoted its source.
Each tribe, each offshoot of a tribe, had a single sound
applicable to it only. A whistle, a slap, a word. This symbol was known
only within the highest tribal councils, understood by only a few, who
communicated it to their out-tribal counterparts.
The symbol, the sound, the word… was 'Halidon.'
Its meaning.
It took him nearly a month of sleepless days and nights, using
logarithmic charts of phonetics, hieroglyphs, and African symbols of
daily survival.
When he was finished, he was satisfied. He had broken the ancient
code.
It was too dangerous to include it in this summary. For in the event
of his death - or murder - this summary might fall into the wrong
hands. Therefore, there was a second archive case containing the secret.
The second without the first was meaningless.
Instructions were left with one man. To be acted upon in the event
he was no longer capable of doing so himself.
Charles Whitehall turned over the last page. His face and neck were
drenched with sweat. Yet it was cool in the shack. Two partially opened
windows in the south wall let in the breezes from the hills of Drax
Hall, but they could not put out the nervous fires of his anxiety.
Truths had been learned. A greater, overwhelming truth was yet to be
revealed.
That it would be now, he was certain.
The scholar and the patriot were one again.
The Praetorian of Jamaica would enlist the Halidon.
TWENTY
James Ferguson was exhilarated. It was the feeling he had when
momentous things happened in the lens of a microscope and he knew he
was the first observer - or, at least, the first witness who recognized
a casual effect for what it was.
Like the baracoa fibre.
He was capable of great imagination when studying the shapes and
densities of microscopic particles. A giant manipulating a hundred
million infinitesimal subjects.
It was a form of total control.
He had control now. Over a man who did not know what it was like to
have to protest too loudly over the inconsequential because no one paid
attention; to be forever down to his last few quid in the bank because
none paid him the value of his work.
All that was changing. He could think about a great many things that
were preposterous fantasies only yesterday: his own laboratories with
the most expensive equipment - electronic, computerized, databanked;
throwing away the little budget pads that told him whom he had last
borrowed from.
A Maserati. He would buy a Maserati. Arthur Craft had one, why
shouldn't he?
Arthur Craft was paying for it.
Ferguson looked at his watch - his goddamned inexpensive Timex - and
signalled the bartender to total his bill.
When the bartender did not come over in thirty seconds, Ferguson
reached for the tab in front of him and turned it over. It was simple
enough to add: a dollar and fifty cents, twice.
James Ferguson then did what he had never done in his life. He took
out a five-dollar bill, crumpled it up in his hand, got off the bar
stool, and threw the wadded bill towards the cash register several
yards in front of him. The bill bounced off the bottles on the lighted
shelf and arced to the floor.
He started for the entrance.
There was machismo in his gesture; that was the word, that
was the feeling.
In twenty minutes, he would meet the emissary from Craft the
Younger. Down off Harbour Street, near Parish Wharf, on Pier Number
Six. The man would be obsequious - he had no choice - and give him an
envelope containing one thousand dollars.
One thousand dollars.
In a single envelope; not saved in bits and pieces over months of
budgeting, nor with the tentacles of Inland Revenue or debtors-past
reaching out to cut it in half. It was his to do with as he pleased. To
squander, to throw away on silly things, to pay a girl to get undressed
and undress him and do things to him that were fantasies… only
yesterday.
He had borrowed - taken a salary advance, actually - from McAuliff.
Two hundred dollars. There was no reason to repay it. Not now. He would
simply tell McAuliff… 'Alex'; from now on it would be 'Alex,' or
perhaps 'Lex' - very informal, very sure… to deduct the silly money
from
his paycheque. All at once, it he felt like it. It was inconsequential;
it didn't really matter.
And it certainly didn't, thought Ferguson.
Every month Arthur Craft would give him an envelope. The agreed-upon
amount was a thousand dollars in each envelope, but that was subject to
change. Related to the increased cost of living, as it were. Increased
as his appetites and comforts increased.
Just the beginning.
Ferguson crossed St James Square and proceeded towards the
waterfront. It was a warm night, with no breeze, and humid. Fat clouds,
flying low and threatening rain, blocked the moon; the antiquated
street lamps threw a subdued light in counterpoint to the gaudy neons
of white and orange that announced the diversions of Montego Bay night
life.
Ferguson reached Harbour Street and turned left. He stopped under a
street lamp and checked his watch again. It was ten minutes past
midnight; Craft had specified 12.15. In five minutes, he would have a
thousand dollars.
Pier Six was directly ahead on his right, across the street. There
was no ship in the dock, no activity within the huge loading area
beyond the high linked fence; only a large naked bulb inside a wire
casing that lit up the sign:
PIER SIX
HAMMOND LINES
He was to stand under the lamp, in front of the sign, and wait for a
man to drive up in a Triumph sportscar. The man would ask him for
identification. Ferguson would show him his passport and the man would
give him the envelope.
So simple. The entire transaction would take less than thirty
seconds. And change his life.
Craft had been stunned; speechless, actually, until he had found his
voice and screamed a torrent of abuse… until, again, he realized the
futility of his position. Craft the Younger had gone too far. He had
broken laws and would be an object of scorn and embarrassment. James
Ferguson could tell a story of airport meetings and luggage and
telephone calls and industrial espionage… and promises.
Such promises.
But his silence could be purchased. Craft could buy his confidence
for a first payment of one thousand dollars. If Craft did not care to
do so, Ferguson was sure the Kingston authorities would display avid
interest in the details of his story.
No, he had not spoken to anyone… yet. But things had been written
down. (Lies Craft could not trace, of course.) That did not mean he was
incapable of finding the spoken words; such capability was very much
within his province… as the first payment was within Craft's province.
One cancelled the other; which would it be?
And so it was.
Ferguson crossed Harbour Street and approached the wire-encased
light and the sign. A block and a half away, crowds of tourists swelled
into the street, a one-way flow towards the huge passenger terminal and
the gangplanks of a cruise ship. Taxis emerged out of side streets and
alleys from the centre of Montego Bay, blowing their horns anxiously,
haltingly making their way to the dock. Three bass-toned whistles
filled the air, vibrating the night, signifying that the ship was
giving a warning: All passengers were to be on board.
He heard the Triumph before he saw it. There was the gunning of an
engine from the darkness of a narrow side street diagonally across from
Pier Six. The shiny, red, low-slung sportscar sped out of the dark
recess and coasted to a stop in front of Ferguson. The driver was
another Craft employee, one he recognized from a year ago. He did not
recall the man's name; only that he was a quick, physical person, given
to arrogance. He would not be arrogant now.
He wasn't. He smiled in the open car and gestured Ferguson to come
over. 'Hello, Fergy. It's been a long time.'
Ferguson hated the nickname 'Fergy'; it had dogged him for most of
his life. Just when he had come to think it was part of a schoolboy
past, someone - always someone unpleasant, he reflected - used it. He
felt like correcting the man, reminding him of his messenger status,
but he did not. He simply ignored the greeting.
'Since you recognize me, I assume there's no need to show you my
identification,' said James, approaching the Triumph.
'Christ, no! How've you been?'
'Well, thank you. Do you have the envelope? I'm in a hurry.'
'Sure. Sure, I do, Fergy… Hey, you're a pistol, buddy! Our friend is
pissing rocks! He's half out of his skull, you know
what I mean?'
'I know what you mean. He should be. The envelope, please.'
'Sure.' The driver reached into his jacket and withdrew an envelope.
He then leaned over and handed it to Ferguson. 'You're supposed to
count it. If it's all there, just give me back the envelope… make any
kind of mark on it you like. Oh, here's a pen.' The man opened the
glove compartment and took out a ballpoint pen and held it up for
Ferguson.
'That's not necessary. He wouldn't try to cheat me.'
'Hey, come on, Fergy! It's my ass that'll be in a sling! Count it,
mark it; what's the difference?'
Ferguson opened the bulky envelope. The denominations were all tens
and fives, over a hundred bills. He had not asked for small
denominations; it was convenient, though, he had to admit that. Less
suspicious than hundreds or fifties or even twenties.
He started counting the bills.
Twice Craft's man interrupted him with insignificant questions,
causing James to lose his count. He had to start over again both times.
When he had finished, the driver suddenly handed him a wrapped
package. 'Oh, because our friend wants to show there's no bad feeling -
he's a sport, you know what I mean? - he sent you one of those new
Yashica .35 millimeters. He remembered you're crazy about photography.'
Ferguson saw the Yashica label on the top of the package. A
seven-hundred-dollar instrument! One of the very best! Craft the
Younger was indeed a frightened man. 'Thank… Arthur for me. But tell
him this isn't deductible from any future payments.'
'Oh, I'll tell him… Now, I'm going to tell you something,
Fergy-baby. You're on fuckin' Candid Camera.' The driver
spoke quietly.
'What are you talking about?'
'Right behind you, Fergy-baby.'
Ferguson whipped around towards the high linked fence and the
deserted area beyond. There were two men in the shadows of a doorway.
They came out slowly, perhaps thirty yards away from him. And one of
the men carried a tripod with a camera attached. 'What have you done?'
'Just a little insurance, Fergy-baby. Our friend is
contract-conscious, you know what I mean? Infrared film, babe. I think
you know what that is. And you just gave a terrific performance
counting out money and taking Christ knows what from a guy who hasn't
been seen in public north of Caracas for over six months. You see, our
friend flew me out of Rio just to get my picture taken… with you.'
'You can't do this! Nobody would believe this!'
'Why not, babe? You're a hungry little prick, you know what I mean?
Hungry little pricks like you get hung easy… Now, you listen to me,
asshole. You and Arthur, you're one on one. Only his one is a little
heavier. That film would raise a lot of questions you couldn't find any
answers for. I'm a very unpopular man, Fergy. You'd get thrown off the
island… but probably you'd get thrown into the can first. You wouldn't
last fifteen minutes with those social rejects, you know what I mean?
They'd peel your white skin, babe, layer by layer… Now, you be a good
boy, Fergy. Arthur says for you to keep the thousand. You'll probably
earn it.' The man held up the empty envelope. 'Two sets of prints on
this. Yours and mine… Ciao, baby. I've got to get out of here and back
to non-extradition country.'
The driver gunned the engine twice and slapped the gearshift
effortlessly. He swung the Triumph expertly in a semicircle and roared
off into the darkness of Harbour Street.
Julian Warfield was in Kingston now. He had flown in three days ago
and used all of Dunstone's resources to uncover the strange activities
of Alexander McAuliff. Peter Jensen had followed instructions to the
letter; he had kept McAuliff under the closest scrutiny, paying desk
clerks and doormen and taxi drivers to keep him informed of the
American's every move.
And always he and his wife were out of sight, in no way associated
with that scrutiny.
It was the least he could do for Julian Warfield… He would do
anything Julian asked, anything Dunstone, Limited, demanded. He would
deliver nothing but his best to the man and the organization that had
taken him and his wife out of the valley of despair and given them a
world with which they could cope and in which they could function.
Work they loved, money and security beyond the reach of most
academic couples. Enough to forget.
Julian had found them nearly twenty years ago, beaten, finished,
destroyed by events… impoverished, with nowhere and no one to return
to. He and Ruth had been caught; it was a time of madness, of Klaus
Fuchs and Guy Burgess and convictions born of misplaced zeal. He and
his wife had supplemented their academic income by working for the
government on covert geological operations - oil, gold, minerals of
value. And they had willingly turned over everything in the classified
files to a contact at the Soviet Embassy.
Another blow for equality and justice.
And they were caught.
But Julian Warfield came to see them.
Julian Warfield offered them their lives again… in exchange for
certain assignments he might find for them. Inside the government and
out; on the temporary staffs of companies… within England and without;
always in the highest professional capacities, pursuing their
professional labours.
All charges were dropped by the Crown. Terrible mistakes had been
made against most respected members of the academic community. Scotland
Yard had apologized. Actually apologized.
Peter and Ruth never refused Julian; their loyalty was unquestioned.
Which was why Peter was now on his stomach in the cold, damp sand
while the light of a Caribbean dawn broke over the eastern horizon. He
was behind a mound of coral rock with a perfect view of McAuliff's
oceanside terrace. Julian's last instructions had been specific. Find out who comes to see him. Who's important to him. Get
identities, if you can. But for God's sake, stay in the background.
We'll need you both in the interior.
Julian had agreed that McAuliff's disappearances - into Kingston,
into taxis, into an unknown car at the gates of the Courtleigh Manor -
all meant that he had interests in Jamaica other than Dunstone, Limited.
It had to be assumed that he had broken the primary article of
faith. Secrecy.
If so, McAuliff could be transferred… forgotten without difficulty.
But before that happened, it was essential to discover the identity of
Dunstone's island enemy.
Or enemies.
In a very real sense, the survey itself was secondary to that
objective. Definitely secondary. If it came down to it, the survey
could be sacrificed if, by that sacrifice, identities were revealed.
And Peter knew he was nearer those identities now… in this early
dawn on the beach of Bengal Court.
It had begun three hours ago.
Peter and Ruth had retired a little past midnight. Their room was in
the east wing of the motel, along with Ferguson's and Charles
Whitehall's. McAuliff, Alison, and Sam Tucker were in the west wing,
the division signifying only old friends, new lovers, and late drinkers.
They heard it around one o'clock: an automobile swerving into the
front drive, its wheels screeching, then silent, as if the driver had
heard the noise and suddenly become alarmed by it.
It had been strange. Bengal Court was no kind of nightclub, no
'drum-drum' watering hole that catered to the swinging and/or younger
tourist crowds. It was quiet, with very little to recommend it to the
image of fast drivers. As a matter of fact, Peter Jensen could not
remember having heard any automobiles drive into Bengal Court
after nine o'clock in the evening since they had been there.
He had risen from the bed and walked out on the terrace, and had
seen nothing. He had walked around the east end of the motel to the
edge of the front parking lot, where he did see something; something
extremely alarming, barely visible.
In the far section of the lot, in shadows, a large black man - he
believed he was black - was lifting the unconscious figure of another
man out of the rear seat of an automobile. Then, farther beyond, a
white man ran across the lawn from around the corner of the west wing.
It was Sam Tucker. He approached the black carrying the unconscious
form, gave instructions - pointing to the direction from which he had
come - and continued to the automobile, silently closing the rear door.
Sam Tucker was supposed to be in Ocho Rios with McAuliff. It seemed
unlikely that he would have returned to Bengal Court alone.
And as Jensen pondered this, there was the outline of another figure
on the west lawn. It was Alison Booth. She gestured to the black man;
she was obviously excited, trying to remain in control of herself. She
led the large black man into the darkness around the far corner.
Peter Jensen suddenly had a sinking feeling. Was the unconscious
figure Alexander McAuliff? Then he rethought the immediate visual
picture. He could not be sure - he could barely see, and everything was
happening so rapidly - but as the black passed under the dim spill of a
parking light, the bobbing head of his charge extended beyond his arms.
Peter had been struck by the oddness of it. The head appeared to be
completely bald… as if shaven.
Sam Tucker looked inside the automobile, seemed satisfied, then
raced back across the west lawn after the others.
Peter remained crouched in his concealed position after the figure
had disappeared. It was extraordinary. Tucker and Alison Booth were not
in Ocho Rios; a man had been hurt, apparently quite seriously, and
instead of taking him directly inside the motel's front entrance, they
furtively carried him in, smuggled him in. And it might be conceivable
that Sam Tucker would come back to Bengal Court without McAuliff; it
was inconceivable that Alison Booth would do so.
What were they doing? What in heaven's name had happened… was
happening?
The simplest way to find out, thought Peter, was to get dressed,
return to the tiny bar, and, for reasons he had not yet created, call
McAuliff for a drink.
He would do this alone. Ruth would remain in their room. But first
Peter would walk down to the beach, to the water's edge, where he would
have a full view of the motel and the oceanside terraces.
Once in the miniature lounge, Peter invented his reason to phone
McAuliff. It was simple to the point of absurdity. He had been unable
to sleep, taken a stroll on the beach, seen a light beyond the drawn
curtains in Alexander's room, and gathered he had returned from Ocho
Rios. Would he and Alison be his guests for a nightcap?
Jensen went to the house phone at the end of the bar. When McAuliff
answered, his voice was laced with the frustration of a man forced to
be civil in the most undesirable of circumstances. And McAuliffs lie
was apparent.
'Oh, Jesus, Peter, thanks but we're beat. We just got
settled at the Sans Souci when Latham called from the Ministry. Some
damned bureaucratic problem with our interior permits; we had to drive
all the way back for some kind of goddamned… inspection first thing in
the morning… inoculation records, medical stuff. Crew, mainly.'
'Terribly inconsiderate, old boy. Nasty bastards, I'd say.'
'They are… We'll take a raincheck, though. Perhaps tomorrow.'
Peter had wanted to keep McAuliff on the phone a bit longer. The man
was breathing audibly; each additional moment meant the possibility of
Jensen's learning something. 'Ruth and I thought we'd hire a car and go
to Dunn's Falls around noon tomorrow. Surely you'll be finished by
then. Care to come along?'
'Frankly, Peter,' said McAuliff haltingly, 'we were hoping to get
back to Ochee, if we could.'
'Then that would rule out Dunn's Falls, of course. You've seen it,
though, haven't you? Is it all they say?'
'Yes… yes, it certainly is. Enjoy yourselves—'
'You will be back tomorrow night, then?' interjected
Jensen.
'Sure… Why?'
'Our raincheck, old boy.'
'Yes,' said McAuliff slowly, carefully. 'We'll be back tomorrow
night. Of course we'll be back tomorrow night… Good night, Peter.'
'Good night, chap. Sleep well.' Jensen hung up the house phone. He
carried his drink slowly back to a table in the corner, nodding
pleasantly to the other guests, giving the impression he was waiting
for someone, probably his wife. He had no wish to join anyone; he had
to think out his moves.
Which was why he was now lying in the sand behind a small mound of
surfaced coral on the beach, watching Lawrence and Sam Tucker talking.
He had been there for nearly three hours. He had seen things he knew
he was not supposed to see: two men arriving - one obviously a doctor
with the inevitable bag, the other some sort of assistant carrying a
large trunklike case and odd-shaped paraphernalia.
There had been quiet conferences between McAuliff, Alison, and the
doctor, later joined by Sam Tucker and the black crewman, Lawrence.
Finally, all left the terrace but Tucker and the black. They stayed
outside.
On guard.
Guarding not only Alexander and the girl, but also whoever was in
that adjoining room. The injured man with the oddly shaped head who had
been carried from the automobile.
Who was he?
The two men had stayed at their posts for three hours now. No one
had come or gone. But Peter knew he could not leave the beach. Not yet.
Suddenly, Jensen saw the black crewman, Lawrence, walk down the
terrace steps and start across the dunes towards the beach.
Simultaneously, Tucker made his way over the grass to the corner of the
building. He stood immobile on the lawn; he was waiting for someone. Or
watching.
Lawrence reached the surf, and Jensen lay transfixed as the huge
black man did a strange thing. He looked at his watch and then
proceeded to light two matches, one after the other, holding each aloft
in the breezeless dawn air for several seconds and throwing each into
the lapping water.
Moments later, the action was explained. Lawrence cupped his hand
over his eyes to block the blinding, head-on light of the sun as it
broke the space above the horizon, and Peter followed his line of sight.
Across the calm ocean surface, in the massive land shadows by the
point, there were two corresponding flickers of light. A small boat had
rounded the waters of the cove's entrance, its grey-black hull slowly
emerging in the early sunlight.
Its destination was that section of the beach where Lawrence stood.
Several minutes later, Lawrence struck another match and held it up
until there was an acknowledgment from the approaching craft, at which
instant both were extinguished and the black crewman started running
back over the sand towards Bengal Court.
On the lawn, by the corner of the building, Sam Tucker turned and
saw the racing Lawrence. He walked to the stairs in the sea wall and
waited for him. The black man reached the steps; he and Tucker spoke
briefly, and together they approached the terrace doors of the
adjoining room - Alison Booth's room. Tucker opened them, and the two
men went inside, leaving the double doors ajar.
Peter kept shifting his eyes from the motel to the beach. There was
no visible activity from the terrace; the small boat plodded its way
over the remarkably still waters towards the beach, now only three or
four hundred yards from shore. It was a long, flat-bottom fishing boat,
propelled by a muffled engine. Sitting in the stern was a black man in
what appeared to be ragged clothes and a wide straw sun hat. Hook poles
shot up from the small deck, nets were draped over the sides of the
hull; the effect was that of a perfectly normal Jamaican fisherman out
for the dawn catch.
When the boat came within several hundred feet of the shore, the
black skipper lit a match, then extinguished it quickly. Jensen looked
up at the terrace. In seconds, the figure of Sam Tucker emerged from
the darkness beyond the open doors. He held one end of a stretcher on
which a man lay wrapped in blankets; Lawrence followed, holding the
other end.
Gently but swiftly, the two men ran - glided - the stretcher across
the terrace, down the sea-wall steps, over the sand, and towards the
beach. The timing was precise, not a moment wasted. It seemed to Jensen
that the instant the boat hit shallow water, Tucker and Lawrence waded
into the calm surf with the stretcher and placed it carefully over the
sides onto the deck. The nets were swung over on top of the blanketed
man and the fishing boat was immediately pushed back into the water by
Sam Tucker as Lawrence slid onto the bow slat. Seconds later, Lawrence
had removed his shirt and from some recess in the boat lifted out a
torn, dishevelled straw hat, clamped it on his head, and yanked a hook
pole from its clasp. The transformation was complete. Lawrence the
conspirator was now a lethargic native fisherman.
The small flat-bottom craft turned, rippling the glasslike surface
of the water, and headed out. The motor chugged a bit louder than
before; the skipper wanted to get away from the beach with his
concealed human cargo.
Sam Tucker waved; Lawrence nodded and dipped the hook pole. Tucker
came out of the miniature surf and walked swiftly back towards Bengal
Court.
Peter Jensen watched as the fishing boat veered in open water
towards the point. Several times Lawrence leaned forward and down,
fingering nets but obviously checking the condition of the man on the
stretcher. Intermittently, he seemed to be issuing quiet commands to
the black at the engine tiller. The sun had now cleared the edge of the
Jamaican horizon. It would be a hot day.
Up at the terrace Peter saw that the double doors of Alison Booth's
room remained open. With the additional light, he could also see that
there was new activity inside. Sam Tucker came out twice, carrying tan
plastic bags, which he left on the patio. Then a second man - the
doctor's assistant, Peter realized - emerged, holding a large cylinder
by its neck and a huge black suitcase in his other hand. He placed them
on the stone, bent down below them on the sea wall, and stood up
moments later with two elongated cans - aerosol cans, thought Jensen -
and handed one to Tucker as he came through the door. The two men
talked briefly and then went back inside the room.
No more than three minutes had elapsed when Tucker and the doctor's
aide were seen again, this time somewhat comically as they backed into
the door frame simultaneously. Each held his arm outstretched; in each
hand was an aerosol can, clouds of mist spewing from both.
Tucker and the black aide had systematically sprayed the interior of
the room.
Once finished, they crossed to the plastic bags, the case, and the
large cylinder. They picked up the objects, spoke briefly again, and
started for the lawn.
Out on the water, the fishing boat was halfway to the point of the
cove. But something had happened. It had stopped; it bobbed gently on
the calm surface, no longer travelling forward. Peter could see the now
tiny figure of Lawrence standing up in the bow, then crouching, then
standing up again. The skipper was gesturing, his movements excited.
The boat pushed forward once more, only to turn slowly and change
direction. It did not continue on its course - if the point was,
indeed, its course. Instead, it headed for the open sea.
Jensen lay on the moist sand for the next fifteen minutes, watching
the small craft progressively become a black dot within a grey-black
ocean splashed with orange sunlight. He could not read the thoughts of
the two Jamaicans; he could not see the things that were happening on
that boat so illogically far out on the water. But his knowledge of
tides and currents, his observations during the last three hours, led
his conclusions to one end.
The man on the stretcher had died. His corpse would soon be stripped
of identification, weighted down with net lead, and thrown into the
water, eventually to be carried by floor currents far away from the
island of Jamaica. Perhaps to be washed ashore weeks or months from now
on some Cayan reef or, more fortuitously, torn apart and devoured by
the predators of the deep.
Peter knew it was time to call Julian, meet with Julian.
Immediately.
McAuliff rolled over on his side, the sharp pain in his shoulder
suddenly surging through his chest. He sat up quickly, momentarily
bewildered. He focused his thoughts; it was morning; the night before
had been a series of terrifying confusions. The pieces would have to be
put back together, plans made.
He looked down at Alison, beside him. She was breathing deeply,
steadily, in complete sleep. If the evening had been a nightmare for
him, it had been no less a torment for her. Perhaps worse. At least he
had been in motion, constant, unceasing movement. She had been waiting,
thinking; he had had no time for thoughts.
It was worse to wait. In some ways.
Slowly, as silently as he could, he swung his legs over the side of
the bed and stood up. His whole body was stiff; his joints pained him,
especially his kneecaps.
It was understandable. The muscles he had used last night were
dormant strings of an unused instrument, called into play by a panicked
conductor. The allusion was proper, thought Alex - about his thoughts.
He nearly smiled as he conjured up the phrase: so out of tune.
Everything was out of tune.
But the notes were forming recognizable chords… somewhere.
In the distance. There was a melody of sorts that could
be vaguely distinguished.
Yet not distinguished. Hardly noble.
Not yet.
An odour assaulted his nostrils. It was not the illusion of spice
and vanilla, but nevertheless sweet. If there was an association, it
was south Oriental… Java, the Sunda Trench, pungent, a bit sickening.
He crossed quietly to the terrace door, about to open it, when he
realized he was naked. He walked silently to a chair by the curtained
window, where he had thrown a pair of swimming trunks several days ago.
He removed them from the wooden rim and put them on.
'I hope they're not wet,' said Alison from the bed. 'The maid
service here is a touch lacking, and I didn't hang them up.'
'Go back to sleep,' Alex replied. 'You were asleep a moment ago.
Very much asleep.'
'I'm very much awake now… Good heavens, it's a quarter past eight.'
'And?'
'Nothing, really… I just didn't think we'd sleep this long.'
'It's not long. We didn't get to bed until after three. Considering
everything that happened, noon would have been too early.'
'How's your arm? The shoulder?'
'A little sore… like most of me. Not crippling.'
'What is that terrible smell?' Alison sat up; the sheet
fell away, revealing a curiously prim nightgown, opaque cotton with
buttons. She saw Alex's gaze, the beginning of a smile on his lips. She
glanced down and laughed. 'My granny nightshirt. I put it on after you
fell asleep. It was chilly, and you hadn't the slightest interest in
anything but philosophical discourse.'
He walked to the edge of the bed and sat down beside her. 'I was
long-winded, wasn't I?'
'I couldn't shut you up; there was simply no way. You drank a great
deal of Scotch - how's your head, incidentally?'
'Fine. As though I'd had Ovaltine…'
'… straight alcohol couldn't have stayed with you. I've seen that
before, too… Sorry. I forgot you object to my British pronouncements.'
'I made a few myself last night. I withdraw my objections.'
'Do you still believe them? Your pronouncements? As they say… in the
cold logic of the morning?'
'I think I do; the thrust of my argument being that no one fights
better for his own turf than he who lives on it, depends on it… Yes, I
believe it. I'd feel more confident if Barak hadn't been hurt.'
'Strange name, Barak.'
'Strange man. And very strong. He's needed, Alison. Boys can become
men quickly, but they're still not seasoned. His ken is needed.'
'By whom?'
McAuliff looked at her; at the lovely way her eyebrows rose
quizzically above her clear, light blue eyes. 'By his own side,' he
answered simply.
'Which is not Charles Whitehall's side.' There was no question
implied.
'No. They're very different. And I think it's necessary… at this
point, under these circumstances… that Barak's faction be as viable as
Charley-mon's.'
'That concern strikes me as dangerously close to interference,
darling.'
'I know. It's just that everything seems so complicated to me. But
it doesn't to Whitehall. And it doesn't to Barak Moore. They see a
simple division muddled up by second and third parties… Don't you see?
They're not distracted. They first go after one objective, then
another, and another; knowing ultimately they'll have to deal with each
other. Neither one loses sight of that. Each stores his apples as he
goes along.'
'What?' Alison leaned back on the pillow, watching McAuliff as he
stared blankly at the wall. 'I don't follow that.'
'I'm not sure I can explain it. A wolf pack surrounds its victims,
who huddle in the centre. The dogs set up an erratic rhythm of attack,
taking turns lunging in and out around the circle until the quarry's
confused to the point of exhaustion. Then the wolves close in.' Alex
stopped; he was uncertain.
'I gather Charles and this Barak are the victims,' said Alison,
trying to help him.
'Jamaica's the victim, and they're Jamaica. The wolves - the enemies
- are Dunstone and all it represents: Warfield and his crowd of… global
manipulators - the Chatelleraults of this world; British Intelligence,
with its elitists, like Tallon and his crowd of colonial
opportunists; the Crafts of this island… internal bleeders, you could
call them. Finally, maybe even this Halidon, because you can't control
what you can't find; and even if you find it, it may not be
controllable… There are a lot of wolves.'
'There's a lot of confusion,' added Alison.
McAuliff turned and looked at her. 'For us. Not for them.
That's what's remarkable. The victims have worked out a strategy: Take
each wolf as it lunges. Destroy it.'
'What's that got to do with… apples?'
'I jumped out of the circle and went into a straight line.'
'Aren't we abstract,' stated the girl.
'It's valid. As any army - and don't kid yourself, Charles Whitehall
and Barak Moore have their armies - as any army moves forward, it
maintains its lines of supply. In this case, support. Remember. When
all the wolves have been killed, they face each other. Whitehall and
Moore both are piling up apples… support.' McAuliff stopped again and
got up from bed. He walked to the window to the right of the terrace
doors, pulled the curtain, and looked out at the beach. 'Does any of
this make sense to you?' he asked softly.
'It's very political, I think, and I'm not much at that sort of
thing. But you're describing a rather familiar pattern, I'd say—'
'You bet your life I am,' interrupted Alex, speaking
slowly and turning from the windows. 'Historical precedents unlimited…
and I'm no goddamn historian. Hell, where do you want to
start? Caesar's Gaul? Rome's Ferrara? China in the thirties? The
Koreas, the Vietnams, the Cambodias? Half a dozen African states? The
words are there, over and over again. Exploitation from outside, inside
revolt - insurgence and counterinsurgence. Chaos, bloodbath, expulsion.
Ultimately reconstruction in so-called compromise. That's the pattern.
That's what Barak and Charley-mon expect to play out. And each knows
that while he's joining the other to kill a wolf, he's got to entrench
himself further in the turf at the same time. Because when the
compromise comes… as it must… he wants it more his way than
less.'
'What you're saying - getting away from circles and straight lines -
is that you don't approve of Barak's "army" being weakened. Is that it?'
'Not now. Not at this moment.'
'Then you are interfering. You're an outsider taking an
inside position. It's not your… turf, my darling.'
'But I brought Charley here. I gave him his respectability, his
cover. Charley's a son of a bitch.'
'Is Barak Moore a saint?'
'Not for a second. He's a son of a bitch, too. And it's important
that he is.' McAuliff returned to the window. The morning sun was
striking the panes of glass, causing tiny modules of condensation. It
was going to be a hot day.
'What are you going to do?' Alison sat forward, prepared to get up
as she looked over at Alex.
'Do?' he asked quietly, his eyes concentrating on something outside
the window. 'What I was sent here to do; what I'm being paid one
million dollars to do. Complete the survey or find this Halidon.
Whichever comes first. Then get us out of here… on our terms.'
'That sounds reasonable,' said Alison, rising from the bed. 'What is
that sickening odour?'
'Oh? I forgot to tell you. They were going to spray down your room,
get rid of the medicine smells.' McAuliff stepped closer to the window
and shaded his eyes from the rays of the morning sun.
'The ether or disinfectant or whatever it was was far more
palatable. My bathing suit's in there. May I get it?'
'What?' Alex was not listening, his attention on the object of his
gaze outside.
'My bathing suit, darling. It's in my room.'
McAuliff turned from the window, oblivious to her words. 'Wait here.
I'll be right back.' He walked rapidly to the terrace door, opened it,
and ran out.
Alison looked after him, bewildered. She crossed to the window to
see what Alex had seen. It took several seconds to understand; she was
helped by watching McAuliff run across the sand towards the water.
In the distance, down at the beach, was the lone figure of a large
black man staring out at the ocean. It was Lawrence.
Alex approached the tall Jamaican, wondering if he should call out.
Instinctively, he did not. Instead, he cleared his throat when he was
within ten yards; cleared it loud enough to be heard over the sound of
the lapping small waves.
Lawrence turned around. Tears were in his eyes, but he did not blink
or change the muscles of his face. He was a child-man accepting the
agonies of a very personal torment.
'What happened?' asked McAuliff softly, walking up to the shirtless
boy-giant.
'I should have listened to you, mon. Not to him. He was wrong, mon.'
'Tell me what happened,' repeated Alex.
'Barak is dead. I did what he ordered me to do and he is dead. I
listened to him and he is dead, mon.'
'He knew the risk; he had to take it. I think he was probably right.'
'No… He was wrong because he is dead. That makes him wrong, mon.'
'Floyd's gone… Barak. Who is there now?'
Lawrence's eyes bore into McAuliffs; they were red from silent
weeping, and beyond the pride and summoned strength, there was the
anguish of a child. And the pleading of a boy. 'You and me, mon. There
is no one else… You will help me, mon?'
Alex returned the rebel's stare; he did not speak.
Welcome to the seat of revolution, McAuliff thought to himself.
TWENTY ONE
The Trelawny police made Floyd's identification at 7.02 in the
morning. The delay was caused by the lack of any print facilities in
Falmouth and the further lack of cooperation on the part of several
dozen residents who were systematically routed from their beds during
the night to observe the corpse. The captain was convinced that any
number of them recognized the bullet-pierced body, but it was not until
two minutes past seven when one old man - a gardener from Carrick Foyle
- had reacted sufficiently to the face of the bloody mess on the table
for the captain to decide to apply sterner methods. He held a lighted
cigarette millimetres in front of the old man's left eye, which he
stretched open with his free hand. He told the trembling black that he
would burn the gelatine of his eyeball unless he told the. truth.
The ancient gardener screamed and told the truth. The man who was
the corpse on the table had worked for Walter Piersall. His name was
Floyd Cotter.
The captain then telephoned several parish precincts for further
information on one Cotter, Floyd. There was nothing; they had never
heard of him. But the captain had persisted; Kingston's interest in Dr
Walter Piersall, before and after his death, was all-inclusive. Even to
the point of around-the-clock patrols at the house on the hill in
Carrick Foyle. The captain did not know why; it was not his province to
question, much less analyse, Kingston's commands. That they were was
enough. Whatever the motives that resulted in the harassment of the
white scholar before his death, and the continued concern about his
residence after, was Kingston's bailiwick, not his. He simply followed
orders. He followed them well, even enthusiastically. That was why he
was the prefect captain of the parish police in Falmouth.
And that was why he kept making telephone calls about one Floyd
Cotter, deceased, whose corpse lay on the table and whose blood would
not stop oozing out of the punctures on his face and in his chest and
stomach and legs; blood that dried on the pages of The Gleamer,
hastily scattered about the floor.
At five minutes to eight, as the captain was about to lift the
receiver off its base and call the precinct in Sherwood Content, the
telephone rang. It was his counterpart in Puerto Seco, near Discovery
Bay, whom he had contacted twenty minutes ago. The man said that after
their conversation, he had talked with his deputies on the early shift.
One of the men reported that there was a Floyd with a survey team,
headed by an American named McAuliff, that had begun work about ten
days ago on the shoreline. The survey had hired a carrier crew out of
Ocho Rios. The Government Employment Office had been involved.
The captain then woke up the director of the GEO in Ochee. The man
was thoroughly awake by the time he got on the line, because he had no
telephone and consequently had had to leave his house and walk to a
Johnny Canoe store, where he - and most of the neighbourhood - took
calls. The employment chief recalled that among the crewmen hired by
the American named McAuliff, there had been a Floyd, but he
did not remember the last name. This Floyd had simply shown up with
other applicants who had heard of the available work from the Ochee
grapevine. He had not been listed in the employment files; neither had
one or two others eventually hired.
The captain listened to the director, thanked him, and said nothing
to contradict or enlighten him. But after hanging up the phone, he put
in a call to Gordon House in Kingston. To the inspector who headed the
search teams that had meticulously gone over Piersall's house in
Carrick Foyle.
The inspector's conclusion was the same as the captain's: The
deceased Floyd Cotter - former employee of Walter Piersall - had
returned with friends to loot the house and been interrupted.
Was anything missing?
Digging in the cellar? In an old cistern out of use for years?
The inspector would fly back to Falmouth by noon. In the meantime,
the captain might discreetly interrogate Mr McAuliff. If nothing else,
ascertain his whereabouts.
At twenty minutes past nine, the captain and his first deputy drove
through the gates of Bengal Court.
Alexander was convincingly agitated. He was appalled - and naturally
sorry - that Floyd Cotter had lost his life, but goddamn it, the
episode answered several questions. Some very expensive equipment was
missing from the supply truck, equipment that could bring high prices
in a thieves' market. This Floyd Cotter obviously had been the
perpetrator; he was a thief, had been the thief.
Did the captain want a list of the missing items? There was a
geodometer, a water scope, half a dozen jewelled compasses, three
Polaroid filter screens, five brand-new medicine kits in Royal Society
cases, a Rolleiflex camera, and a number of other things of lesser
value - but not inexpensive. The captain's deputy wrote as rapidly as
he could on a notepad as Alex rattled off the 'missing' items. Twice he
asked for spellings; once the point of his pencil broke. It was a
harried few minutes.
After the interview was over, the captain and his deputy shook hands
with the American geologist and thanked him for his cooperation.
McAuliff watched them get into the police car and waved a friendly
good-bye as the vehicle sped out of the parking lot through the gates.
A quarter of a mile down the road, the captain braked the patrol car
to a stop. He spoke quietly to his deputy.
'Go back through the woods to the beach, mon. Find out who he is
with, who comes to see him.'
The deputy removed his visor cap and the creased khaki shirt of his
uniform with the yellow insignias of his rank, and reached into the
back for a green T-shirt. He slipped it over his head and got out of
the car. He stood on the tarred pavement, unbuckled his belt, and slid
his holster off the leather strip. He handed it through the window to
the captain.
The captain reached down below the dashboard and pulled out a
rumpled black baseball cap that was discoloured with age and human
sweat. He gave it to the deputy and laughed.
'We all look alike, mon. Aren't you the fella who all the time sell coconuts?'
'Alia time John Crow, mon. Mongoose him not.'
The deputy grinned and started towards the woods beyond the bank of
the pavement, where there was a rusty, torn wire fence. It was the
demarcation of the Bengal Court property.
The patrol car roared off down the road. The prefect captain of the
Falmouth police was in a hurry. He had to drive to Halfmoon Bay and
meet a seaplane that was flying in from Kingston.
Charles Whitehall stood in the tall grass on a ridge overlooking the
road from Priory-on-the-Sea. Under his arm was the black archive case,
clamped shut and held together with three-inch strips of adhesive. It
was shortly after twelve noon, and McAuliff would be driving up the
road soon.
Alone.
Charles had insisted on it. That is, he had insisted before he had
heard McAuliffs words - spoken curtly, defensively - that Barak Moore
was dead.
Barak dead.
Bramwell Moore, schoolboy chum from so many years ago in
Savanna-la-Mar, dead from Jamaican bullets. Jamaican bullets.
Jamaican police bullets. That was better. In adding the
establishmentarian, there was a touch of compassionate logic - a
contradiction in terms, thought Whitehall; logic was neither good nor
evil, merely logic. Still words defined logic and words could be
interpreted - thus the mendacity of all official statistics:
self-serving logic.
His mind was wandering, and he was annoyed with himself. Barak had
known, as he knew, that they were not playing chicken-in-de-kitchen any
longer. There was no bandana-headed mother wielding a straw broom,
chasing child and fowl out into the yard, laughing and scolding
simultaneously. This was a different sort of insurgence. Bandana-headed
mothers were replaced by visor-capped men of the state; straw brooms
became high-powered rifles. The chickens were ideas… far more deadly to
the uniformed servants of the state than the loose feathers were to the
bandana-headed servants of the family.
Barak dead.
It seemed incredible. Yet not without its positive effect. Barak had
not understood the problems of their island; therefore, he had not
understood the proper solutions. Barak's solutions were decades away.
First there had to be strength. The many led by a very strong,
militant few.
Perhaps one.
In the downhill distance there was a billow of dust; a station wagon
was travelling much too fast over the old dirt road.
McAuliff was anxious too.
Charles started back across the field to the entrance drive of the
house. He had requested that his Drax Hall host be absent between the
hours of twelve and three. No explanations were given, and no questions
were asked.
A messiah had returned. That was enough.
'Here it is,' said McAuliff, standing in front of Whitehall in the
cool toolshed, holding the smaller archive case in his left hand. 'But
before you start fiddling around, I want a couple of things clear.'
Charles Whitehall stared at the American. 'Conditions are
superfluous. We both know what must be done.'
'What's not superfluous,' countered Alex, 'is that you understand
there'll be no… unilateral decisions. This isn't your private war, Charley-mon.'
'Are you trying to sound like Barak?'
'Let's say I'm looking after his interests. And mine.'
'Yours I can comprehend. Why his? They're not compatible, you know.'
'They're not even connected.'
'So why concern yourself?' Whitehall shifted his eyes to the archive
case. He realized that his breathing had become audible; his anxiety
was showing, and again he was annoyed with himself. 'Let me have that,
please.'
'You asked me a question. I'm going to answer it first,' replied
McAuliff. 'I don't trust you, Charley. You'll use anyone. Anything.
Your kind always does. You make pacts and agreements with anything that
moves. And you do it very well. You're so flexible you meet yourself
around corners. But all the time it's sturm-und-drang, and
I'm not much for that.'
'Oh, I see. You subscribe to Barak's canefield paratroopers. The
chaos of the Fidelisti, where the corporals spit and chew cigars and
rape the generals' daughters so society is balanced. Three-year plans
and five-year plans and crude uneducated bullies managing the affairs
of state. Into disaster, I might add. Don't be a fool, McAuliff. You're
better than that.'
'Cut it out, Charley. You're not on a podium addressing your chiefs
of staff,' said Alex wearily. 'I don't believe in that
oversimplification any more than I believe in your two-plus-two
solutions. Pull in your hardware. I'm still the head of this survey. I
can fire you in a minute. Very publicly. Now, that might not get you
off the island, but your situation won't be the same.'
'What guarantee do I have that you won't force me out?'
'Not much of one. You'll just have to take my word that I want those
bastards off my back as badly as you do. For entirely different
reasons.'
'Somehow I think you're lying.'
'I wouldn't gamble on that.'
Whitehall searched McAuliff's eyes. 'I won't. I said this
conversation was superfluous, and it is. Your conditions are accepted
because of what must be done… Now, may I have that case, please?'
Sam Tucker sat on the terrace, alternately reading the newspaper and
glancing over the sea wall to the beach, where Alison and James
Ferguson were in deck chairs near the water. Every now and then, when
the dazzling Caribbean sun had heated their skin temperatures
sufficiently, Alison and the young botanist waded into the water. They
did not splash or jump or dive; they simply fell onto the calm surface,
as though exhausted. It seemed to be an exercise of weariness for both
of them.
There was no joy sur la plage, thought Sam, who
nevertheless picked up a pair of binoculars whenever Alison began
paddling about and scanned the immediate vicinity around which she
swam. He focused on any swimmer who came near her; there were not many,
and all were recognizable as guests of Bengal Court.
None was a threat, and that's what Sam Tucker was looking for.
Ferguson had returned from Montego Bay a little before noon, just
after Alex had driven off to Drax Hall. He had wandered onto the
connecting terraces, startling Sam and the temporarily disoriented
Lawrence, who had been sitting on the sea wall talking quietly about
the dead Barak Moore. They had been stunned because Ferguson had been
expansive about his day-off plans in Mo'Bay.
Ferguson arrived looking haggard, a nervous wreck. The assumption
was that he had overindulged and was hung to his fuzzy-cheeked gills;
the jokes were along this line, and he accepted them with a singular
lack of humour. But Sam Tucker did not subscribe to the explanation.
James Ferguson was not ravaged by the whiskey input of the night
before;
he was a frightened young man who had not slept. His fear, thought Sam,
was not anything he cared to discuss; indeed, he would not even talk
about his night in Montego, brushing it off as as dull, unrewarding
interlude. He appeared only to want company, as if there was immediate
security in the familiar. He seemed to cling to the presence of Alison
Booth, offering to fetch and carry… A schoolboy's crush or a fagot's
devotion? Neither fit, for he was neither.
He was afraid.
Very inconsistent behaviour, concluded Sam Tucker.
Tucker suddenly heard the quiet, rapid footsteps behind him and
turned. Lawrence, fully clothed now, came across the terrace from the
west lawn. The black revolutionary walked over to Sam and knelt - not
in fealty, but in a conscious attempt to conceal his large frame behind
the sea wall. He spoke urgently.
'I don't like what I see and hear, mon.'
'What's the matter?'
'John Crow hide wid' block chicken!'
'We're being watched?' Tucker put down the newspaper and sat forward.
'Yes, mon. Three, four hours now.'
'Who?'
'A digger been walking on the sand since morning. Him keep circling
the west-cove beach too long for tourist leave-behinds. I watch him
good. His trouser pants rolled up, look too new, mon. I go behind in
the woods and find his shoes. Then I know the trouser pants, mon. Him
policeman.'
Sam's gnarled features creased in thought. 'Alex spoke with the
Falmouth police around 9.30. In the lobby… He said there were two: a
chief and an Indian.'
'What, mon?'
'Nothing… That's what you saw. What did you hear?'
'Not all I saw.' Lawrence looked over the sea wall, east towards the
centre beach. Satisfied, he returned his attention to Sam. 'I follow
the digger to the kitchen alley, where he waits for a man to come
outside to speak with him. It is the clerk from the lobby desk. Him
shake his head many times. The policeman angry, mon.'
'But what did you hear, boy?'
'A porter-fella was plenty near, cleaning snapper in his buckets.
When the digger-policeman left I ask him hard, mon. He tell me this
digger kep' asking where the American fella went, who had telephoned
him.'
'And the clerk didn't know.'
'That's right, mon. The policeman was angry.'
'Where is he now?'
'Him wait down at the east shore.' Lawrence pointed over the sea
wall, across the dunes to a point on the other side of the central
beach. 'See? In front of the sunfish boats, mon.'
Tucker picked up the binoculars and focused on the figure near the
shallow-bottomed sailboats by the water. The man and boats were about
four hundred yards away. The man was in a torn green T-shirt and
rumpled baseball cap; the trousers were a contradiction. They
were rolled up to the knees, like most scavengers of the beach wore
them, but Lawrence was right, they were creased, too clean. The man was
chatting with a cocoruru peddler, a thin, very black Jamaican
who rolled a wheelbarrow filled with coconuts up and down the beach,
selling them to the bathers, cracking them open with a
murderous-looking machete. From time to time the man glanced over
towards the west-wing terraces, directly into the binoculars, thought
Sam. Tucker knew the man did not realize he was being observed; if he
did, the reaction would appear on his face. The only reaction was one
of irritation, nothing else.
'We'd better supply him with the proper information, son,' said Sam,
putting down the binoculars.
'What, mon?'
'Give him something to soothe that anger… So he won't think about it
too much.'
Lawrence grinned. 'We make up a story, eh, mon?'
'Eh, mon,' replied
Sam smiling. 'A casual, very believable kind of story.'
'McAuliff went shopping at Ochee, maybe? Ochee is six, seven miles
from Drax Hall, mon. Same road.'
'Why didn't Mrs Booth… Alison go with
him?'
'Him buy the lady a present. Why not, mon?' Sam looked at
Lawrence, then down at the beach, where Alison was standing up,
prepared to go back into the water.
'It's possible, boy. We should make
it a little festive, though.' Tucker got out of the chair and walked to
the sea wall. 'I think Alison should have a birthday.'
The telephone rang in McAuliffs room. The doors were closed against
the heat, and the harsh bell echoed from beyond the slatted panels.
Tucker and Lawrence looked at each other, each knowing the other's
thoughts. Although McAuliff had not elaborated on his late-morning
departure from
Bengal Court, neither had he concealed it. Actually, he had asked the
desk for a road map, explaining only that he was going for a drive.
Therefore, the front desk knew that he was not in his room.
Tucker crossed rapidly to the double doors, opened them, and went
inside to the telephone.
'Mr McAuliff?' The soft, precise Jamaican voice answered Sam's
question with the obvious explanation. It was that of the switchboard
operator.
'No, Mr McAuliff is out. May I give him a message?'
'Please, sir, I have a call from Kingston. From a Mr Latham. Will
you hold the line, please?'
'Certainly. Tell Mr Latham you've got Sam Tucker on the phone. He
may want to speak with me.'
Sam held the telephone under his wrinkled chin as he struck a match
to a thin cigar. He had barely drawn the first smoke when he heard the
double click of the connecting line. The voice was now Latham's.
Latham, the proper bureaucrat from the Ministry who was also committed
to the cause of Barak Moore. As Latham spoke, Tucker made the decision
not to tell him of Barak's death.
'Mr Tucker?'
'Yes, Mr Latham. Alex drove into Ocho Rios.'
'Very well. You can handle this, I'm sure. We were able to comply
with McAuliff's request. He's got his interior runners several days
early. They're in Duanvale and will be driving on Route 11 into
Queenhythe later this afternoon.'
'Queenhythe's near here, isn't it?'
'Three or four miles from your motel, that's all. They'll telephone
when they get in.'
'What are their names?'
'They're brothers. Marcus and Justice Hedrik. They're Maroons, of
course. Two of the best runners in Jamaica; they know the Cock Pit
extremely well, and they're trustworthy.'
'That's good to hear. Alexander will be delighted.'
Latham paused but obviously was not finished. 'Mr Tucker… ?'
'Yes, Mr Latham?'
'McAuliff's altered the survey's schedule, it would appear. I'm not
sure we understand…'
'Nothing to understand, Mr Latham. Alex decided to work from a
geographical midpoint. Less room for error that way; like bisecting a
triangle from semicircular coordinates. I agree with him.' Tucker
inhaled on his thin cigar while Latham's silence conveyed his
bewilderment. 'Also,' continued Sam, 'it gives everyone a lot more to
do.'
'I see… The reasons, then, are quite compatible with… let us say,
professional curiosity?'
'Very professional, Mr Latham.' Tucker realized that Latham would
not speak freely on the telephone. Or felt he could not. 'Beyond
criticism, if you're worried about the Ministry's concerns. Actually,
Alexander could be saving you considerable sums of money. You'll get a
lot more data much quicker.'
Latham paused again, as though to telegraph the importance of the
following statement. 'Naturally, we're always interested in conserving
funds… And I assume you all agree with the decision to go in
so quickly. Into the Cock Pit, that is.'
Sam knew that Latham's statement could be translated into the
question: Does Barak Moore agree!
'We all agree, Mr Latham. We're all professionals.'
'Yes… Well, that's splendid. One last item, Mr Tucker.'
'Yes, Mr Latham?
'We want Mr McAuliff to use all the resources provided him. He's not
to stint in an effort to save money; the survey's too important for
that.'
Tucker again translated Latham's code easily: Alex was to
maintain contact with British Intelligence liaisons. If he avoided
them, suspicions would be aroused.
'I'll tell him that, Mr Latham, but I'm sure he's aware of it. These
past two weeks have been very routine, very dull - simple coastline
geodometrics. Not much call for equipment. Or resources.'
'As long as he knows our feelings,' said Latham rapidly, now anxious
to terminate the conversation. 'Goodbye, Mr Tucker.'
'Goodbye, Mr Latham.' Sam held his finger down on the telephone
button for several moments, then released it and waited for the
switchboard. When the operator came on the line, Tucker asked for the
front desk.
'Bengal Court, good afternoon.'
'This is Mr Tucker, west wing 6, Royal Society survey.'
'Yes, Mr Tucker?'
'Mr McAuliff asked me to make arrangements for tonight. He didn't
have time this morning; besides, it was awkward. Mrs Booth was with
him.' Sam paused, letting his words register.
The clerk automatically responded. 'Yes, Mr Tucker. What can we do
for you?'
'It's Mrs Booth's birthday. Do you think the kitchen could whip up a
little cake? Nothing elaborate, you understand.'
'Of course! We'd be delighted, sir.' The clerk was
effusive. 'Our pleasure, Mr Tucker.'
'Fine. That's very kind of you. Just put it on Mr McAuliff's bill—'
'There'll be no charge,' interrupted the clerk, fluidly subservient.
'Very kind indeed. We'll be dining around 8.30, I guess. Our usual
table.'
'We'll take care of everything…'
'That is, it'll be 8.30,' continued Sam, 'if Mr McAuliff finds his
way back in time…' Tucker paused again, listening for the
clerk's appropriate response.
'Oh? Is there a problem, Mr Tucker?'
'Well, the damn fool drove south of Ocho Rios, around Fern Gully, I
think, to locate some stalactite sculpture. He told me there were
natives who did that sort of thing down there.'
'That's true, Mr Tucker. There are a number of stalactite craftsmen
in the Gully. However, there are government restrictions—'
'Oh Lord, son!' interrupted Sam defensively. 'He's just going to
find Mrs Booth a little present, that's all.'
The clerk laughed, softly and obsequiously. 'Please don't mistake
me, Mr Tucker. Government interference is often most unwarranted. I
only meant that I hope Mr McAuliff is successful. When he asked for the
petrol map, he should have mentioned where he was going. I might have
helped him.'
'Well…' drawled Sam conspiratorially, 'he was probably embarrassed,
if you know what I mean. I wouldn't mention it; he'd be mad as hell at
me.'
'Of course.'
'And thanks for the cake tonight. That's really very nice of you,
son.'
'Not at all, sir.'
The good-byes were rapid, more so on the clerk's part. Sam replaced
the telephone and walked back out onto the terrace. Lawrence turned
from peering over the wall and sat on the flagstone deck, his back
against the sea wall, his body hidden from the beach.
'Mrs Booth and Jimbo-mon are out of water,' said the black
revolutionary. 'They are in chairs again.'
'Latham called. The runners will be here this afternoon… And I
talked with the front desk. Let's see if our information gets
transmitted properly.' Tucker lowered himself on the chair slowly and
reached for the binoculars on the table. He picked up the newspaper and
held it next to the binoculars as he focused on the swimming-pool patio
fronting the central beach .of Bengal Court.
Within ten seconds he saw the figure of a man dressed in a coat and
tie come out of the rear entrance of the motel. It was the front-desk
clerk. He walked around the edge of the pool, past a group of wooden,
padded sun chairs, nodding to guests, chatting with several. He reached
the stone steps leading to the sand and stood there several moments,
surveying the beach. Then he started down the steps and across the
white, soft sand. He walked diagonally to the right, to the row of
sunfish sail-boats.
Sam watched as the clerk approached the digger-policeman in the
sloppy baseball cap and the cocorum peddler. The cocoruru
man saw him coming, picked up the
handles of his wheelbarrow, and rolled it on the hard sand near the
water to get away. The digger-policeman stayed where he was and
acknowledged the clerk.
The magnified features in the glass conveyed all that was necessary
to Sam Tucker. The policeman's features contorted with irritation. The
man was apparently lamenting his waste of time and effort, commodities
not easily expended on such a hot day.
The clerk turned and started back across the sand towards the patio.
The digger-policeman began walking west, near the water's edge. His
gait was swifter now; gone was the stooped posture indigenous to a
scavenger of the beach.
He wasn't much of an undercover man, thought Sam Tucker as he
watched the man's progress towards the woods of Bengal Court's west
property. On his way to his shoes and the egress to the shore road, he
never once looked down at the sand for tourist leave-behinds.
McAuliff stood looking over Charles Whitehall's left shoulder as the
black scholar ridged the flame of the acetylene torch across the seamed
edge of the archive case. The hot point of flame bordered no more than
an eighth of an inch behind the seam, at the end of the case.
The top edge of the archive case cracked. Charles extinguished the
flame quickly and thrust the end of the case under the faucet in the
sink. The thin stream of water sizzled into vapour as it touched the
hot steel. Whitehall removed his tinted goggles, picked up a miniature
hammer, and tapped the steaming end.
It fell off, cracking and sizzling, into the metal sink. Within the
case could be seen the oilcloth of a packet. His hands trembling
slightly, Charles Whitehall pulled it out. He got off the stool,
carrying the rolled-up oilcloth to a deserted area of the bench, and
untied the nylon laces. He unwound the packet until it was flat,
unzipped the inner lining, and withdrew two sheets of single-spaced
typing. As he reached for the bench lamp, he looked at McAuliff.
Alex was fascinated by what he saw. Whitehall's eyes shone with a
strange intensity. It was a fever. A messianic fever.
A kind of victory rooted in the absolute.
A fanatic's victory, thought McAuliff.
Without speaking, Whitehall began to read. As he finished the first
page, he slid it across the bench to Alex.
The word 'Halidon' was in reality three words - or sounds - from the
African Ashanti, so corrupted by later phonetics as to be hardly
traceable. (Here Piersall included hieroglyphs that were meaningless to
Alex.) The root word, again a hieroglyph, was in the sound leedaw,
translated to convey the picture of a hollowed-out piece of wood that
could be held in the hand. The leedaw was a primitive
instrument of sound, a means of communication over distances in the
jungles and hills. The pitch of its wail was controlled by the breath
of the blower and the placement of his hand over slits carved through
the surface - the basic principle of the woodwind.
The historical parallel had been obvious to Walter Piersall. Whereas
the Maroon tribes, living in settlements, used an abeng - a
type of bugle made from the horns of cattle - to signal their warriors
or spread the alarm of an approaching white enemy, the followers of
Acquaba were nomadic and could not rely on animal products with any
certainty. They returned to the African custom of utilizing the most
prolific material of their surroundings: wood.
Once having established the root symbol as the primitive horn, it
remained for Piersall to specify the modification of the accompanying
sounds. He went back to the Ashanti-Coromanteen studies to extract
compatible noun roots. He found the final syllable, or sound, first. It
was in the hieroglyph depicting a deep river current, or undertow, that
perilled man or animal in the water. Its sonic equivalent was a
bass-toned wail or cry. The phonetic spelling was nwa.
The pieces of the primitive puzzle were nearly joined.
The initial sound was the symbol hayee, the Coromanteen
word meaning the council of their tribal gods. Hayee - leedaw - nwa.
The low cry of a jungle horn signifying peril, a supplication to the
council of the gods.
Acquaba's code. The hidden key that would admit an outsider into the
primitive tribal sect.
Primitive and not primitive at all. Halidon. Hollydawn. A wailing instrument whose cry was
carried by the wind to the gods.
This, then, was Dr Walter Piersalls last gift to his island
sanctuary. The means to reach, enlist, and release a powerful force for
the good of Jamaica. To convince 'it' to accept its responsibility.
There remained only to determine which of the isolated communities
in the Cock Pit mountains was the Halidon. Which would respond to the
code of Acquaba?
Finally, the basic scepticism of the scholar inserted itself into
Piersall's document. He did not question the existence of the Halidon;
what he did speculate on was its rumoured wealth and commitment. Were
these more myth than current fact? Had the myth grown out of proportion
to the conceivably diminished resources?
The answer was in the Cock Pit.
McAuliff finished the second page and looked over at Charles
Whitehall. The black fascist had walked from the workbench to the small
window overlooking the Drax Hall fields. Without turning, he spoke
quietly, as though he knew Alex was staring at him, expecting him to
speak.
'Now we know what must be done. But we must proceed cautiously, sure
of every step. A wrong move on our part and the cry of the Halidon will
vanish with the wind.'
TWENTY TWO
The caravel prop plane descended on its western approach to the
small Boscobel airfield in Oracabessa. The motors revved in short
bursts to counteract the harsh wind and rain of the sudden downpour,
forcing the aircraft to enter the strip cleanly. It taxied to the far
end, turned awkwardly, and rolled back towards the small, one level
concrete passenger terminal.
Two Jamaican porters ran through the low gates to the aircraft, both
holding umbrellas. Together they pushed the metal step unit to the side
of the plane, under the door; the man on the left then knocked rapidly
on the fuselage.
The door was slapped open by a large white man who immediately
stepped out, waving aside the offer of the two umbrellas. He jumped
from the top level to the ground and looked around in the rain.
His right hand was in his jacket pocket.
He turned up to the aircraft door and nodded. A second large white
man disembarked and ran across the muddy space towards the concrete
terminal. His right hand, too, was in his pocket. He entered the
building, glanced around, and proceeded out the exit to the parking
area.
Sixty seconds later the gate by the luggage depot was swung open by
the second man and a Mercedes 660 limousine drove through towards the
Caravel, its wheels spinning frequently in the drenched earth.
The two Jamaicans remained by the step unit, their umbrellas waiting.
The Mercedes pulled alongside the plane, and the tiny, ancient
figure of Julian Warfield was helped down the steps, his head and body
shielded by the blacks. The second white man held the door of the
Mercedes; his large companion was in front of the automobile, scanning
the distance and the few passengers who had come out of the terminal.
When Warfield was enclosed in the back seat, the Jamaican driver
stepped out and the second white man got behind the wheel. He honked
the horn once; his companion turned and raced around to the left front
door and climbed in.
The Mercedes's deep-throated engine roared as the limousine backed
up beyond the tail assembly of the Caravel, then belched forward and
sped through the gate.
With Julian Warfield in the back seat were Peter Jensen and his
wife, Ruth.
'We'll drive to Peale Court, it's not far from here,' said the
small, gaunt financier, his eyes alive and controlled. 'How long do you
have? With reasonable caution.'
'We rented a car for a trip to Dunns Falls,' replied Peter. 'We left
it in the lot and met the Mercedes outside. Several hours, at least.'
'Did you make it clear you were going to the Falls?'
'Yes. I invited McAuliff.'
Warfield smiled. 'Nicely done, Peter.'
The car raced over the Oracabessa road for several miles and turned
into a gravel drive flanked by two white stone posts. On both were
identical brass plaques reading 'PEALE COURT.' They were polished to a
high gloss, a rich mixture of gold and black.
At the end of the drive was a long parking area in front of a
longer, one-storey white stucco house with expensive wood in the doors,
and many windows. It was perched on top of a steep incline above the
beach.
Warfield and the Jensens were admitted by a passive, elderly black
woman in a white uniform, and Julian led the way to a veranda
overlooking the waters of Golden Head Bay.
The three of them settled in chairs, and Warfield politely asked the
Jamaican servant to bring refreshments. Perhaps a light rum punch.
The rain was letting up; streaks of yellow and orange could be seen
beyond the grey sheets in the sky.
'I've always been fond of Peale Court,' said Warfield. 'It's so
peaceful.'
The view is breathtaking,' added Ruth. 'Do you own it, Julian?'
'No, my dear. But I don't believe it would be difficult to acquire.
Look around, if you like. Perhaps you and Peter might be interested.'
Ruth smiled and, as if on cue, rose from her chair. 'I think I
shall.'
She walked back through the veranda doors into the larger living
room with the light brown marble floor. Peter watched her, then looked
over at Julian. 'Are things that serious?'
'I don't want her upset,' replied Warfield.
'Which, of course, gives me my answer.'
'Possibly. Not necessarily. We've come upon disturbing news. MI5.'
Peter reacted as though he'd been jolted unnecessarily. 'I thought
we had that area covered. Completely. It was passive.'
'On the island, perhaps. Sufficient for our purposes. Not in London.
Obviously.' Warfield paused and took a deep breath, pursing his narrow,
wrinkled lips. 'Naturally, we'll take steps immediately to intercede,
but it may have gone too far. Ultimately, we can control the Service…
if we must, right out of the Foreign Office. What bothers me now is the
current activity.'
Peter Jensen looked out over the veranda railing. The afternoon sun
was breaking through the clouds. The rain had stopped.
'Then we have two adversaries. This Halidon - whatever in blazes it
is. And British Intelligence.'
'Precisely. What is of paramount importance, however, is to keep the
two separate. Do you see?'
Jensen returned his gaze to the old man. 'Of course. Assuming they
haven't already joined forces.'
'They have not.'
'You're sure of that, Julian?'
'Yes. Don't forget, we first learned of this Halidon through MI5
personnel - specialist level. Dunstone's payrolls are diverse. If
contact had been made, we'd know it.'
Again Jensen looked out at the waters of the bay, his expression
pensive and questioning. 'Why? Why? The man was offered a
million dollars… There is nothing, nothing in his dossier
that would give an inkling of this. McAuliff is suspect of all
governmental interferences… quite rabid on the subject, actually. It
was one of the reasons I proposed him.'
'Yes,' said Warfield noncommittally. 'McAuliff was your idea, Peter…
Don't mistake me, I am not holding you responsible, I concurred with
your choice… Describe what happened last night. This morning.'
Jensen did so, ending with the description of the fishing boat
veering off into open water and the removal of the medical equipment
from the motel room. 'If it was an MI5 operation, it was crude, Julian.
Intelligence has too many facilities available to be reduced to motels
and fishing boats. If we only knew what happened.'
'We do. At least, I think we do,' replied Warfield. 'Late last night
the house of a dead white man, an anthropologist named Piersall, was
broken into; ten, twelve miles from the coast. There was a skirmish.
Two men were killed that we know of; others could have been wounded.
They officially called it a robbery, which, of course, it wasn't
really. Not in the sense of larceny.'
'I know the name "Piersall"—'
'You should. He was the university radical who filed that insane
Letter of Intent with the Department of Territories.'
'Of course! He was going to purchase half the Cock Pit! That was
months ago. He was a lunatic.' Jensen lighted his pipe; he gripped the
bowl as he did so, he did not merely hold it. 'So there is a third
intruder,' he said, his words drifting off quietly, nervously.
'Or one of the first two, Peter.'
'How? What do you mean?'
'You just ruled out MI5. It could be the Halidon.'
Jensen stared at Warfield. 'If so, it would mean McAuliff is working
with both camps. And if Intelligence has not made contact, it's because
McAuliff has not permitted it.'
'A very complicated young man.' The old financier placed his glass
down carefully on a tiled table next to his chair. He turned slightly
to look through the veranda doors; the voice of Ruth Jensen could be
heard chatting with the Jamaican maid inside the house. Warfield looked
back at Peter. He pointed his thin, bony finger to a black leather case
on a white wicker table across the open porch. 'That is for you, Peter.
Please get it.'
Jensen rose from his chair, walked to the table, and stood by the
case. It was smaller than the attache variety. And thicker. Its two
hasps were secured by combination locks. 'What are the numbers?'
'The left lock is three zeros. The right, three fives. You may alter
the combinations as you wish.' Peter bent down and began manipulating
the tiny vertical dials. Warfield continued. 'Tomorrow you will start
into the interior. Learn everything you can. Find out who comes to see
him, for certainly he will have visitors. And the minute you establish
the fact that he is in actual contact, and whom with, send out Ruth on
some medical pretext with the information… Then, Peter, you must kill
him. McAuliff is a keystone. His death will panic both camps, and we
shall know all we need to know.'
Jensen lifted the top of the black leather case. Inside, recessed in
the green felt, was a brand-new Luger pistol. Its steel glistened,
except for a dull space below the trigger housing where the serial
number had been removed. Below the weapon was a five-inch cylinder, one
end grooved.
A silencer.
'You've never asked this of me, Julian. Never… You mustn't.' Jensen
turned and stared at Warfield.
'I am not asking, Peter. I am demanding. Dunstone, Limited, has
given you everything. And now it needs you in a way it has not needed
you before. You must, you see.'
PART FOUR
The Cock Pit
TWENTY THREE
They began at midpoint of the western perimeter, two and a half
miles south of Weston Favel, on the edge of the Cock Pit range. They
made base camp on the bank of a narrow offshoot of the Martha Brae. All
but the runners, Marcus and Justice Hedrik, were stunned by the
seemingly impenetrable walls of jungle that surrounded them.
Strange, contradictory forests that were filled with the wet
verdancy of tropic growth and the cold massiveness of sky-reaching
black and green associated with northern climates. Dense macca-fat
palms stood next to silk-cotton, or ceiba, trees that soared out of
sight, their tops obscured by the midgrowth. Mountain cabbage and bull
thatch, orchid and moss, fungi and eucalyptus battled for their
individual rights to coexist in the Oz-like jungle primaeval.
The ground was covered with ensnaring spreads of fern and
pteridophyte, soft, wet and treacherous. Pools of swamplike mud were
hidden in the thick, crowded sprays of underbrush. Sudden hills rose
out of nowhere, remembrances of Oligocene upheavals, never to be
settled back into the cradle of the earth.
The sounds of the screeching bat and parrot and tanager intruded on
the forest's undertones; jungle rats and the mongoose could be heard
intermittently in their unseen games of death. Every now and then there
was the scream of a wild pig, pursuing or in panic.
And far in the distance, in the clearing of the river bank, were the
mountains, preceded by sudden stretches of untamed grassland. Strangely
grey with streaks of deep green and blue and yellow - rain and hot
sunlight in an unceasing interchange.
All this fifteen minutes by air from the gaudy strips of Montego.
Unbelievable.
McAuliff had made contact with the north-coast contacts of British
Intelligence. There were five, and he had reached each one.
They had given him another reason to consign R. C. Holcroft to the
despised realm of the manipulator. For the Intelligence people were of
small comfort. They stated perfunctorily their relief at his reporting,
accepted his explanations of routine geographic chores that kept him
occupied, and assured him - with more sound than conviction - that they
were at his beck and call.
One man, the MI5 contact from Port Maria, drove down the coast to
Bengal Court to meet with Alex. He was a portly black merchant who
limited his identification to the single name of 'Garvey.' He insisted
on a late-night rendezvous in the tiny bar of the motel, where he was
known as a liquor distributor.
It did not take McAuliff long to realize that Garvey, ostensibly
there to assure him of total cooperation and safety, was actually
interrogating him for a report that would be sent back to London.
Garvey had the stench and sight of a practiced informer about him. The
stench was actual: The man suffered from body odour, which could not be
concealed by liberal applications of bay rum. The sight was in his eyes
- ferretlike, and a touch bloodshot. Garvey was a man who sought out
opportunities and enjoyed the fruits thereof.
His questions were precise, McAuliffs answers apparently not
satisfactory. And all questions led to the one question, the only one
that mattered: Any progress concerning the Halidon?
Anything?
Unknown observers, strangers in the distance… a signal, a sign - no
matter how remote or subtle? Anything!
'Absolutely nothing' was a hard reply for Garvey to accept.
What about the blacks in the green Chevrolet who had followed him in
Kingston? Tallon had traced them to the anthropologist Walter Piersall.
Piersall had been a white agitator… common knowledge. Piersall had
telephoned McAuliff… the Courtleigh switchboard cooperated with MI5.
What did Piersall want?
Alex claimed he did not - could not - know, as Piersall had never
reached him. An agitator, white or black, was an unpredictable bearer
of unpredictable news. Predictably, this agitator had had an accident.
It might be presumed - from what little McAuliff had been told by
Tallon
and others - that Piersall had been closing in on Dunstone, Limited;
without a name, of course. If so, he McAuliff, was a logical person to
reach. But this was conjecture; there was no way to confirm it as fact.
What had happened to the late-arriving Samuel Tucker? Where had he
been?
Drinking and whoring in Montego Bay. Alex was sorry he had caused so
much trouble about Sam; he should have known better. Sam Tucker was an
incorrigible wanderer, albeit the best soil analyst in the business.
The perspiring Garvey was bewildered, frustrated by his confusion.
There was too much activity for McAuliff to remain so insulated.
Alex reminded the liaison in short, coarse words that there was far
too much survey activity - logistical, employment, above all government
paperwork - for him not to be insulated. What the hell did Garvey think
he had been doing?
The interview lasted until 1.30 in the morning. Before leaving, the
MI5 contact reached into his filthy briefcase and withdrew a metallic
object the size of a pen-and-pencil case, with its approximate
thickness. It was a miniaturized radio-signal transmitter, set to a
specific frequency. There were three thick, tiny glass lights across
the top of the small panel. The first, explained Garvey, was a white
light that indicated sufficient power for sending when turned on - not
unlike the illuminated filigree of a strobe light. The second, a red
light, informed the operator that his signal was being transmitted. The
third, a green light, confirmed the reception of the signal by a
corresponding device within a radius of twenty-five miles. There would
be two simple codes, one for normal conditions, one for emergency. Code
One was to be transmitted twice daily, once every twelve hours. Code
Two, when aid was needed.
The receiving set, said Garvey, was capable of defining the signal
within a diameter of one thousand yards by means of an attached
radarscope with terrain coordinates. Nothing was left to chance.
Unbelievable.
The incredible assumption, therefore, was that the Intelligence men
would never be more than twenty-five miles away, and Holcroft's
'guaranteed' safety factor was the even more ridiculous assumption that
the jungle distance could be traversed and the exact location
pinpointed within a time period that precluded danger.
R. C. Holcroft was a winner, thought McAuliff.
'Is this everything?' McAuliff asked the sweating Garvey. 'This
goddamn metal box is our protection?'
'There are additional precautions,' Garvey replied enigmatically. 'I
told you, nothing is left to chance—'
'What the hell does that mean?'
'It means you are protected. I am not authorized to speak further.
As a matter of fact, mon, I do not know anything further. I
am, like you, merely an employee. I do what I am told to do, say what I
am told to say… And now I have said enough. I have an uncomfortable
drive back to Port Maria.'
The man named Garvey rose from the table, picked up his tattered
briefcase, and waddled towards the door of the dimly lit room. Before
leaving, however, he could not help himself. He stopped at the bar,
where one of the motel's managers was standing, and solicited an order
of liquor.
McAuliff shook his thoughts loose as he heard the voices of Ruth and
Peter Jensen behind him. He was sitting on a dried mud flat above the
river bank; the Jensens were talking as they walked across the clearing
from their bivouac tent. It amazed Alex - they amazed him.
They walked so casually, so normally, over the chopped Cock Pit ground
cover; one might think they had entered Regent's Park for a stroll.
'Majestic place in its way, rather,' said Peter, removing the
ever-present pipe from between his teeth.
'It is the odd combination of colour and substance, don't you think,
Alex?' Ruth had her arm linked through her husband's. A noonday walk
down the Strand. 'One is so very sensuous, the other so massive and
intricate.'
'You make the terms sound contradictory, darling. They're not, you
know.' Peter chuckled as his wife feigned minor exasperation.
'He has an incorrigibly pornographic mind, Alex. Pay no attention.
Still, he's right. It is majestic. And positively dense.
Where's Alison?'
'With Ferguson and Sam. They're testing the water.'
'Jimbo-mon's going to use up all of his film, I dare say,' muttered
Peter as he helped his wife to sit down next to McAuliff. 'That new
camera he brought back from Montego has consumed him.'
'Frightfully expensive, I should think.' Ruth smoothed the
un-smoothable cloth of her bivouac slacks, like a woman not used to
being without a skirt. Or a woman who was nervous. 'For a boy who's
always saying he's bone-stony, quite an extravagance.'
'He didn't buy it; he borrowed it,' said Alex. 'From a friend he
knew last year in Port Antonio.'
'That's right, I forgot.' Peter relit his pipe as he spoke. 'You
were all here last year, weren't you?'
'Not all, Peter. Just Sam and me; we worked for Kaiser. And
Ferguson. He was with the Craft Foundation. No one else.'
'Well, Charles is Jamaican,' intruded Ruth nervously. 'Surely he
flies back and forth. Heaven knows, he must be rich enough.'
'That's a rather brass speculation, luv.'
'Oh, come off it, Peter. Alex knows what I mean.'
McAuliff laughed. 'I don't think he worries about money. He's yet to
submit his bills for the survey outfits. I have an idea they're the
most expensive in Harrod's Safari Shop.'
'Perhaps he's embarrassed,' said Peter, smiling. 'He looks as though
he had jumped right off the cinema screen. The black hunter; very
impressive image, if somewhat contrived.'
'Now you're the one who's talking brass, luv. Charles is
impressive.' Ruth turned to Alex. 'My overage Lochinvar is green with
envy.'
'That camera's damn well new… not the sort of thing one lends, I
shouldn't think.' Peter looked at McAuliff as he spoke the non sequitur.
'Depends on the friend, I guess,' replied Alex, aware that Peter was
implying something beyond his words. 'Ferguson can be a likable guy.'
' Very,' added Ruth. 'And so helpless, somehow. Except
when he's over his equipment. Then he's positively a whiz.'
'Which is all I really care about.' McAuliff addressed this judgment
to Peter. 'But then, you're all whizzes, cameras and fancy clothes and
aromatic pipes notwithstanding.' Alex laughed.
'Got me there, chap.' Peter removed his pipe and shook his head.
'Dreadful habit.'
'Not at all,' said McAuliff. 'I like the smell, I really do. I'd
smoke one myself but my tongue burns. Then stings.'
'There are preventive measures, but it's a dull subject… What's
fascinating is this jungle laboratory we're in. Have you decided on
crew assignments?'
'Vaguely,' answered Alex. 'Doesn't make an awful lot of difference.
Who do you want?'
'One of those brothers for me,' said Ruth. 'They seem to know exactly
where they are. I'd be lost in half a mo'!… Of course, that's selfish;
my work is least important…'
'We still don't want to lose you, do we, Peter?' McAuliff leaned
forward.
'Not as long as she behaves.'
'Take your pick,' said Alex. 'Marcus or Justice?'
'What marvellously dotty names!' cried Ruth. 'I choose Justice.' She
looked at her husband. 'Always justice.'
'Yes, of course, my dear.'
'All right,' agreed McAuliff. 'Then Marcus'll be with me. One of
them has to. And Alison asked for Lawrence, if you don't mind, Peter.'
'Not at all, chap. Sorry his friend… what was his name? Floyd? Yes,
Floyd. Sorry he jumped ship, as it were. Did you ever find out what
happened to him?'
'No,' replied Alex. 'He just disappeared. Unreliable guy. Something
of a thief, too, according to Lawrence.'
'Pity… He seemed rather intelligent.'
'That's condescending, darling. Worse than brassy.' Ruth
Jensen picked up a tiny stone and chucked it into the narrow river
offshoot.
'Then just pick out a stout fellow who'll promise to lead me back to
camp for meals and sleep.'
'Fine. I'll do that. We'll work four-hour field sessions, staying in
touch by radio. I don't want anyone going beyond a sonic mile from camp
for the first few days.'
'Beyond.' Ruth looked at McAuliff, her voice having risen
an octave. 'Dear Alex, if I stumble more than twenty feet into
that maze of overgrowth, commit me!'
'Rubbish,' countered her husband, 'when you start cracking rocks,
you lose time and distance… Speaking of which, Alex, old boy,
I presume there'll be a fairly steady flow of visitors. To observe our
progress; that sort of thing.'
'Why?' McAuliff was now aware that both husband and wife were
sending out abstract, perhaps unconscious signals. Peter less than
Ruth. He was subtler, surer of himself than she was. But not completely
sure. 'We'll bring out field reports every ten days or so. Rotate days
off that way. That'll be good enough.'
'Well, we're not exactly at the end of nowhere; although I grant
you, it looks like it. I should think the moneymen would want to check
up on what they're paying for.'
Peter Jensen had just made a mistake, and McAuliff was suddenly
alarmed. 'What moneymen?'
Ruth Jensen had picked up another stone, about to throw it into the
brackish river. Arm poised, she froze for a second before hurling it.
The moment was not lost on any of them. Peter tried to minimize it.
'Oh… some Royal Society titans or perhaps a few of these buggers
from the Ministry. I know the RS boys, and God knows the Jamaicans have
been less than cordial. I just thought… Oh, well, perhaps I'm
off-centre.'
'Perhaps,' said Alex quietly, 'you're ahead of me. On-site
inspectors aren't unusual. I was thinking about the convenience. Or
lack of it. It took us nearly a day to get here. Of course, we had the
truck and the equipment… Still, it seems like a lot of trouble.'
'Not really.' Peter Jensen tapped his pipe on his boots. 'I've been
checking the maps, looking about from the river clearing. The
grasslands are nearer than we think. Less than a couple of miles, I'd
say. Light planes could easily land.'
'That's a good point. I hadn't thought of it.' McAuliff leaned
forward once again to engage Peter, but Peter did not look at him now.
'I mean if we needed… equipment or supplies, we could get them much
quicker than I'd anticipated. Thanks, Peter.'
'Oh, don't thank him.' Ruth spoke with a nervous giggle.
'Don't cater to him.' She looked briefly at her husband;
McAuliff wished he could have seen her eyes. 'Peter just wants to
convince himself he's a hop-skip from a pub.'
'Rubbish. Just idle conversation, old girl…'
'I think he's bored with us, Ruth,' said Alex laughing softly,
almost intimately. 'I think he wants to see new faces.'
'As long as it's not new bodies, my dear, the tolerance is
possible,' retorted Ruth Jensen with throated caricature.
The three of them laughed out loud.
McAuliff knew the humour was forced. Mistakes had been made, and the
Jensens were afraid.
Peter was looking for new faces… or a new face. A face he
believed Alex expected.
Who was it?
Was it possible… remotely possible that the Jensens were not what
they seemed?
There was the sound of whistling from a path in the north bush.
Charles Whitehall emerged into the clearing, his safari uniform pressed
and clean, in counterpoint to the rumpled clothes of Marcus Hedrik, the
older brother of the two Cock Pit runners. Marcus remained a respectful
distance behind Whitehall, his passive black face inscrutable.
McAuliff rose from the ground and spoke to the Jensens. 'It's
Charley. There's a hill community several miles west of the river; he
was going to try to hire a couple of hands.'
Ruth and Peter took their cue, because they very much wanted to.
'Well, we've still got some equipment sorting to do,' said the husband,
rising quickly.
'Indeed we do! Help me up, luv.'
The Jensens waved to Charles Whitehall and rapidly started for their
tent.
McAuliff met Whitehall at the midpoint of the clearing. The black
scholar dismissed Marcus Hedrik, instructing him to issue preparation
orders to the rest of the crew about the evening patrols. Alex was
fascinated to watch and listen to Charley-mon speaking to the runner.
He fell easily into the hill country patois - damn near indecipherable
to McAuliff - and used his hands and eyes in gestures and looks that
were absolutely compatible with the obtuse speech.
'You do that very well,' said Alex as the runner trudged out of
hearing.
'I should. It's what you hired me for. I am the best there is.'
'That's one of the things I like about you, Charley. You take
compliments so gracefully.'
'You did not hire me for my graces. They are a bonus you don't
deserve.' Whitehall allowed himself a slight smile. 'You enjoy calling
me "Charley," McAuliff?' added the elegant black.
'Do you object?'
'Not really. Because I understand. It is a defence mechanism; you
Americans are rife with them. "Charley" is an idiomatic leveller,
peculiarly indigenous to the sixties and seventies. The Vietcong were
"Charley," so too the Cambodians and the Laotians; even your man on the
American street. It makes you feel superior. Strange that the name
should be Charley, is it not?'
'It happens to be your name.'
'Yes, of course, but I think that is almost beside the point.' The
black looked away briefly, then back at Alex. 'The name "Charles" is
Germanic in origin, actually. Its root meaning is "full grown" or
possibly - here scholars differ - "great size." Is it not interesting
that you Americans take just such a name and reverse its connotation?'
McAuliff exhaled audibly and spoke wearily. 'I accept the lesson for
the day and all its subtle anti-colonialism. I gather you'd prefer I
call you "Charles," or "Whitehall," or perhaps "Great Black Leader."'
'Not for a moment. "Charley" is perfectly fine. Even amusing. And,
after all, it is better than "Rufus."'
'Then what the hell is this all about?'
Whitehall smiled - again, only slightly - and lowered his voice.
'Until ten seconds ago, Marcus Hedrik's brother had been standing
behind the lean-to on our left. He was trying to listen to us. He is
gone now.'
Alex whipped his head around. Beyond the large tarpaulin lean-to,
erected to cover some camp furniture against a forest shower, Justice
Hedrik could be seen walking slowly towards two other crewmen across
the clearing. Justice was younger than his brother Marcus, perhaps in
his late twenties, and stockily muscular.
'Are you sure? I mean, that he was listening to us?'
'He was carving a piece of ceiba wood. There is too much to do to
waste time carving artifacts. He was listening. Until I looked over at
him.'
'I'll remember that.'
'Yes. Do. But do not give it undue emphasis. Runners are splendid
fellows when they are taking in tourist groups; the tips are generous.
I suspect neither brother is too pleased to be with us. Our trip is
professional - worse, academically professional. There is not much in
it for them. So there will be some hostility.'
McAuliff started to speak, then hesitated. He was bewildered. 'I… I
may have missed something. What's that got to do with his listening?'
Whitehall blinked slowly, as if patiently explaining to an inept
pupil - which, obviously, he felt was the case. 'In the primitive
intelligence, hostility is usually preceded by an overt, blunt
curiosity.'
'Thank you, Dr Strangelove.' Alex did not hide his irritation.
'Let's
get off this. What happened over in the hill community?'
'I sent a messenger to Maroon Tower. I asked for a very private
meeting with the Colonel of the Maroons. He will listen; he will
accept.'
'I wasn't aware a meeting was that tough to get. If I remember what
Barak said, and I do, we just offer money.'
'We do not want a tourist audience, McAuliff. No tribal artifacts or
Afro-Carib beads bought for an extra two-dollah-Jamaican. Our business
is more serious than tourist trade. I want to prepare the Colonel
psychologically; make him think.'
Alex paused; Whitehall was probably right. If what Barak Moore had
said had validity. If the Colonel of the Maroons was the sole contact
with the Halidon, the decision to make that contact would not be
lightly arrived at; a degree of psychological preparation would be
preferable to none at all. But not so much as to make him run, avoid
the decision.
'How do you think you accomplished that?' asked McAuliff.
'I hired the leader of the community to act as courier. I gave him
one hundred dollars, which is like offering either of us roughly a
quarter of a million. The message requests a meeting in four days, four
hours after the sun descends over the mountains—'
'The Arawak symbols?' interrupted Alex.
'Precisely. Completed by specifying that the meeting should take
place to the right of the Coromanteen crescent, which I would presume
to be the Colonel's residence. The colonel was to send back the exact
location with our courier… Remember, the Colonel of the Maroon Tribes
is an ancestral position; he is a descendant and, like all princes of
the realm, schooled in its traditions. We shall know soon enough if he
perceives us to be quite out of the ordinary.'
'How?'
'If the location he chooses is in some unit of four. Obviously.'
'Obviously… So for the next few days we wait.'
'Not just wait, McAuliff. We will be watched, observed very closely.
We must take extreme care that we do not appear as a threat. We must go
about our business quite professionally.'
'I'm glad to hear that. We're being paid to make a geological
survey.'
TWENTY FOUR
With the first penetration into the Cock Pit, the work of the survey
consumed each member of the team. Whatever their private fears or
foreign objectives, they were professionals, and the incredible
laboratory that was the Cock Pit demanded their professional attentions.
Portable tables, elaborately cased microscopes, geoscopes, platinum
drills, sediment prisms, and depository vials were transported by
scientist and carrier alike into the barely penetrable jungles and into
the grasslands. The four-hour field sessions were more honoured in the
breach; none cared to interrupt his experiments or analyses for such
inconveniences as meals and routine communications. The disciplines of
basic precautions were swiftly consigned to aggravating nuisances. It
took less than a full working day for the novelty of the ever-humming,
ever irritating walkie-talkies to wear off. McAuliff found it necessary
to remind Peter Jensen and James Ferguson angrily that it was mandatory
to leave the radio receiving switches on, regardless of the
intermittent chatter between stations.
The first evenings lent credence to the wisdom of Charles
Whitehall's purchases at Harrod's Safari Shop: The team sat around the
fires in canvas chairs, as though recuperating from the day's hunt. But
instead of talk of cat, horn, spore, and bird, other words flew around,
spoken with no less enthusiasm. Zinc, manganese and bauxite;
ochres, gypsum, and phosphate… Cretaceous, Eocene, shale, and igneous;
wynne grass, tamarind, bloodwood; guano, grosmichel, and woman's
tongue… arid and acid and peripatus; water runoffs,
gas pockets, and layers of vesicular lava - honeycombs of
limestone.
The overriding generalization was shared by everyone: The Cock Pit
was an extraordinarily fruitful land mass with abundant reserves of
rich soil, available water, and unbelievable deposits of gases and ores.
All this was accepted as fact before the morning of the third day.
McAuliff listened as Peter Jensen summed it up with frightening clarity.
'It's inconceivable that no one's gone in and developed. I dare say
Brasilia couldn't hold a candle! Three-quarters of the life force is
right here, waiting to be used!'
The reference to the city carved out of the Brazilian jungles made
Alex swallow and stare at the enthusiastic, middle-aged, pipe-smoking
mineral expert. We're going to build a city… Julian Warfield's words.
Unbelievable.
And viable.
It did not take great imagination to understand Dunstone, Limited,
now. The project was sound, taking only gigantic sums of capital to set
it in motion; sums available to Dunstone. And once set in motion, the
entire island could be tied to the incredible development… Armies of
workers, communities, one source.
Ultimately, the government.
Kingston could not, would not turn it off. Once in motion
- one source - the benefits would be overwhelming and
undeniable. The enormity of the cash flow alone could subvert the
parliament.
Slices of the gigantic pie.
Economically and psychologically, Kingston would become dependent on
Dunstone, Limited.
So complicated, yet so basically, ingeniously simple. Once they have Kingston, they have the laws of the land in their
vaults. To shape as they will. Dunstone will own a nation … R. C.
Holcroft's words.
It was nearly midnight; the couriers were banking the fires under
the scrutiny of the two runners. Marcus and Justice Hedrik. The black
revolutionary, Lawrence, was playing his role as one of the crew,
subservient and pleasant, but forever scanning the forests beyond,
never allowing himself to be too far away from Alison Booth.
The Jensens and Ferguson had gone to their tents. McAuliff, Sam
Tucker, and Alison sat around a small bivouac table, the light of the
dying fires flickering across their faces as they talked quietly.
'Jensen's right, Alexander,' said Tucker, lighting a thin cigar.
'Those behind this know exactly what they're doing. I'm no ore expert,
but one strike, one hint of the mother lode, and you couldn't stop the
speculation money.'
'It's a company named Dunstone.'
'What is?'
'Those behind… the company's called Dunstone; the man's name is
Warfield. Julian Warfield. Alison knows.'
Sam held the cigar between his fingers and looked at McAuliff. 'They
hired you.' Tucker's statement was spoken slowly, a touch gruffly.
'He did,' replied Alex. 'Warfield did.'
'Then this Royal Society grant… the Ministry, and the Institute, are
covers.'
'Yes.'
'And you knew it from the beginning.'
'So does British Intelligence. I wasn't just acting as an informer,
Sam. They trained me… as best they could over a couple of weeks.'
'Was there any particular reason why you kept it a secret,
Alexander?' Tucker's voice - especially as capped with McAuliff's name
- was not comforting. 'I think you should have told me. Especially
after that meeting in the hills. We've been together a long time, boy…
No, I don't think you acted properly.'
'He was generously proper, Sam,' said Alison, with a combination of
precision and warmth. 'For your benefit. I speak from experience. The
less you're aware of, the better your prospects. Take my word for it.'
'Why should I?' asked Tucker.
'Because I've been there. And because I was there, I'm here now.'
'She's tied in against Chatellerault. That's what I couldn't tell
you. She worked for Interpol. A data bank picked out her name; it was
made to look so completely logical. She wanted to get out of England—'
'Had to get out, my darling… Do you see, Sam? The computer
was Interpol's; all the intelligence services are first
cousins, and don't let anyone tell you otherwise. MI5 ran a
cross-reference, and here I am. Valuable bait, another complication…
Don't be anxious to learn too much. Alex was right.'
The ensuing silence was artificial. Tucker inhaled on his thin
cigar, the unasked questions more pronounced by their absence. Alison
whisked strands of hair, let down for the evening, off her forehead.
McAuliff poured himself a small quantity of Scotch. Finally Sam Tucker
spoke.
'It's fortunate I trust you, Alexander.'
'I know that. I counted on it.'
'But why?' continued Sam quietly. 'Why in hell did you do
it? You're not that hungry. Why did you work for them?'
'For whom? Or which? Dunstone or British Intelligence?'
Tucker paused, staring at Alex before he replied. 'Jesus, I
don't know. Both, I guess, boy.'
'I accepted the first before the second showed up. It was a good
contract, the best I'd ever been offered. Before I realized it, I was
locked in. I was convinced I couldn't get out… by both sides. At one
point, it was as simple as staying alive… Then there were guarantees
and promises… and more guarantees and more promises.' McAuliff stared
across the clearing; it was strange. Lawrence was crouched over the
embers of a fire, looking at them. 'Before you know it, you're in some
kind of crazy cell block, hurtling through space, bouncing off the
walls… that's not a very sane picture.'
'Move and counter-move, Sam,' interrupted Alison. 'They're experts.'
'Who? Which?' Tucker leaned forward in his chair, holding Alison
with his old eyes.
'Both,' answered the girl firmly. I saw what Chatellerault did to
my husband. I know what Interpol did to me.'
The silence returned once more, less strained than before. And once
again, Sam Tucker broke it softly.
'You've got to define your enemies, Alexander. I get the feeling you
haven't done that… present company excepted as allies, I sincerely
hope.'
'I've defined them as best I can. I'm not sure those definitions
will hold. It's complicated; at least for me.'
'Then simplify, boy. When you're finished, who wants you hanged the
quickest?'
McAuliff looked at Alison. 'Again, both. Dunstone literally; MI5
figuratively. One dead, the other dependent - subject to recall. A name
in a data bank. That's very real.'
'I agree,' said Tucker, relighting
his thin cigar. 'Now let's reverse the process. Who can you
hang the quickest? The surest?'
Alex laughed quietly, joined by Alison. The girl spoke. 'My Lord,
you do think alike.'
'Answer my question, son.'
'I can protect myself… ourselves… with what I know, what I've pieced
together. Both, I guess.'
'That doesn't answer the question. Who the quickest?'
'Dunstone, I imagine. At the moment, it's more vulnerable. Warfield
made a mistake; he thinks I'm really hungry. He thinks he
bought me because he made me a part of them. They fall, I fall… I'd
have to say Dunstone.'
'All right,' replied Sam, assuming the mantle of a soft-spoken
attorney. 'Enemy number one defined as Dunstone. You can extricate
yourself by simple blackmail: third-person knowledge, documents tucked
away in lawyers' offices. Agreed?'
'Yes.'
'That leaves enemy number two: Her Majesty's Intelligence boys.
Let's define them. What's their hook into you?'
'Protection. It's supposed to be protection.'
'Not noticeably successful, would you say, son?'
'Not noticeably successful,' said Alex in agreement. 'But we're not
finished yet.'
'We'll get to that; don't rush… what's your hook into them?'
McAuliff paused in thought. 'Their methods… and their contacts, I
think. Exposing their covert operations.'
'Really the same as with Dunstone, isn't it?' Tucker was zeroing in
on his target.
'Again, yes.'
'Let's go back a second. What does Dunstone offer?'
'Money. A great
deal of money. They need this survey.'
'Are you prepared to lose it?'
'Hell, yes! But I may not have to—'
'That's immaterial. I assume that's
part of the "guarantees and promises".'
'That's right.'
'But it's not a factor. You haven't stolen from the thieves. In any
way can they get you indicted as one of them?'
'Christ, no! They may
think so, but they're wrong.'
'Then there are your answers. Your
definitions. Eliminate the hooks and the offers. Theirs. The money and
the protection. Lose one - the money; make the other unnecessary - the
protection. You're dealing from strength, with your own hooks. You
make whatever offers you wish.' 'You jumped, Sam,' said McAuliff
slowly. 'Or you forgot. We're not finished; we may need the protection.
If we take it, we can't deny it. We'd be a joke. The Watergate
syndrome. Worms crawling over each other.'
Sam Tucker put down his thin cigar in the ashtray on the table and
reached for the bottle of Scotch. He was about to speak, but was
interrupted by the sight of Charles Whitehall walking out of a jungle
path into the clearing. Whitehall looked around, then crossed rapidly
to Lawrence, who was still over the coals of the banked fire, the
orange glow colouring his skin a bronzed black. The two men spoke.
Lawrence stood up, nodded once, and started towards the jungle path.
Whitehall watched him briefly, then turned and looked over at McAuliff,
Sam, and Alison. With urgency, he began walking across the clearing to
them.
'There's your protection, Alexander,' said Sam quietly as Whitehall
approached. 'The two of them. They may despise each other, but they've
got a common hate that works out fine for you. For all of us, goddamn
it… Bless their beautiful black hides.'
'The courier has returned.' Charles Whitehall adjusted the light of
the Coleman lantern in his tent. McAuliff stood inside the canvas flap
of the doorway - Whitehall had insisted that Alex come with him; he did
not wish to speak in front of Alison and Sam Tucker.
'You could have told the others.'
'That will be a… multilateral decision. Personally, I would not
subscribe to it.'
'Why not?'
'We must be extremely careful. The less that is known by the more,
the better.'
McAuliff pulled out a pack of cigarettes and walked to the single
nylon-strapped chair in the centre of the tent. He sat down, knowing
that Charley-mon would not; the black was too agitated, trying almost
comically to remain calm. 'That's funny. Alison used the same words a
little while ago. For different reasons… What's the message from Maroon
Town?'
'Affirmative! The Colonel will meet with us What's more important - so
much more important - is that his reply was in units of four!'
Whitehall approached the chair, his eyes filled with that messianic
anxiety Alex had seen in Drax Hall. 'He made a counter-proposal for our
meeting. Unless he hears otherwise, he will assume it is acceptable… He
asks for eight days. And rather than four hours after sundown, he
requests the same four hours after two in the morning. Two
in the morning! Diagramatically to the right
of the setting sun. Don't you see? He understands, McAuliff.
He understands! Piersall's first step is confirmed!'
'I thought it would be,' replied Alex lamely, not quite sure how to
handle Whitehall's agitation.
'It doesn't matter to you, does it?' The Jamaican stared at McAuliff
incredulously. 'A scholar had made an extraordinary discovery. He'd
followed elusive threads in the archives going back over two hundred
years. His work proved out; it could have enormous academic impact. The
story of Jamaica might well have to be rewritten… Can't you see?'
'I can see you're excited, and I can understand that. You should be…
But right now, I'm concerned with a less erudite problem. I don't like
the delay.'
Whitehall silently exploded in exasperation. He looked up at the
canvas ceiling, inhaled deeply, and quickly regained his composure. The
judgment he conveyed was obvious: The blunt mind in front of him was
incapable of being reached. He spoke with condescending resignation.
'It's good. It indicates progress.'
'Why?'
'I did not tell you, but I included a message with our request for a
meeting. It was admittedly a risk but I felt - unilaterally - that it
was worth taking. It could expedite our objective with greater speed. I
told the courier to say the request came from… new believers of
Acquaba.'
McAuliff tensed; he was suddenly angry with Whitehall, but had the
presence to minimize his anger. The horrible memory of the fate of the
first Dunstone survey came to mind. 'For such a brilliant guy, I think
that was pretty stupid, Charley-mon.'
'Not stupid. A calculated risk. If the Halidon decides to make
contact on the strength of Piersall's code, it will arrive at that
decision only after it learns more about us. It will send out for
information; it will see that I am part of the unit. The elders of the
Halidon will know of my credentials, my scholarship, my contributions
to the Jamaican story. These will be in our favour.'
Alex leaped out of the chair and spoke quietly, viciously. 'You
egomaniacal son of a bitch! Has it occurred to you that your… other
credentials may not be favourable? You could be the one piece
of rotten meat!' 'Impossible'
'You arrogant prick! I won't have the lives of this team jeopardized
by your inflated opinion of yourself! I want protection, and I'm going
to get it!'
There was a rustling outside the tent. Both men whipped around
towards the canvas flap of the entrance. The canvas parted, and the
black revolutionary, Lawrence, walked in slowly, his hands in front of
him, bound by rope. Behind Lawrence was another man. It was the runner
Marcus Hedrik. In his
hand was a gun. It was jabbed into the flesh of his prisoner.
Hedrik spoke quietly. 'Do not go for your weapons. Don't make noise.
Just stay exactly where you are.'
'Who are you?' asked McAuliff, amazed that Hedrik's voice had lost
the hesitant, dull tones he had heard for the better part of the week.
'For the moment, that is not important.'
'Garvey!' whispered Alex. 'Garvey said it! He said there
were others… he didn't know who. You're with British Intelligence!'
'No,' replied Marcus Hedrik softly, even politely. Two of your
couriers were English agents. They're dead. And the obese Garvey had an
accident on the road to Port Maria. He is dead also.'
'Then—'
'It is not you who will ask the questions, Mr McAuliff. It is I. You
will tell me… you new believers… what you know of Acquaba.'
TWENTY FIVE
They talked for several hours, and McAuliff knew that for the time
being he had saved their lives. At one point Sam Tucker interrupted,
only to receive and acknowledge the plea in Alexander's eyes: Sam had
to leave them alone. Tucker left, making it clear that he would be with
Alison. He expected Alex to speak with them before retiring. Sam did
not notice the ropes on Lawrence's hands in the shadowed corner and
McAuliff was grateful that he did not.
'Marcus Hedrik' was not the runner's name. Marcus and Justice Hedrik
had been replaced; where they were was of no consequence insisted this
unnamed member of the Halidon. What was of paramount consequence was
the whereabouts of the Piersall document. Always leave something to trade off… in the last extremity.
The words of R. C. Holcroft. The documents. McAuliffs ploy.
The Halidonite probed with infinite care every aspect of Piersall's
conclusions as related by Charles Whitehall. The black scholar traced
the history of the Acquaba sect, but he would not reveal the nagarro:
the meaning of the Halidon. The 'runner' neither agreed nor disagreed;
he was simply an interrogator. He was also a perceptive and cautious
man. Once satisfied that Charles Whitehall would tell him no more, he
ordered him to remain inside his tent with Lawrence. They were not to
leave; they would be shot if they tried. His fellow 'runner' would stay
on guard.
The Halidonite recognized the intransigence of McAuliffs position.
Alex would tell him nothing. Faced with that, he ordered Alex under
gunpoint to walk out of the campsite.
As they proceeded up a path towards the grasslands, McAuliff began
to understand the thoroughness of the Halidon - that small part of it
to which he was exposed. Twice along the alley of dense foliage, the
man with the weapon commanded him to stop. There followed a brief
series of guttural parrot calls, responded to in kind. Alex heard the
softly spoken words of the man with the gun.
'The bivouac is surrounded, Mr McAuliff. I'm quite sure Whitehall
and
Tucker, as well as your couriers, know that now. The birds we imitate
do not sing at night.'
'Where are we going?'
'To meet with someone. My superior, in fact. Continue, please.'
They climbed for another twenty minutes; a long jungle hill suddenly
became an open grassland, a field that seemed extracted from some other
terrain, imposed on a foreign land surrounded by wet forests and steep
mountains.
The moonlight was unimpeded by clouds; the field was washed with
dull yellow. And in the centre of the wild grass stood two men. As they
approached, McAuliff saw that one of the men was perhaps ten feet
behind the first, his back to them. The first man faced them.
The Halidonite facing them was dressed in what appeared to be ragged
clothes, but with a loose field jacket and boots. The combined effect
was a strange, unkempt paramilitary appearance. Around his waist was a
pistol belt and holster. The man ten feet away and staring off in the
opposite direction was in a caftan held together in the middle by a
single thick rope.
Priest like. Immobile.
'Sit on the ground, Dr McAuliff,' instructed the strangely ragged
paramilitary man, in clipped tones used to command.
Alex did so. The use of the title 'Doctor' told him the
unfamiliarity was more his than theirs.
The subordinate who had marched him up from the camp approached the
priest figure. The two men fell into quiet conversation, walking slowly
into the grass while talking. The two figures receded over a hundred
yards into the dull yellow field.
They stopped.
'Turn around, Dr McAuliff.' The order was abrupt; the black man
above him had his hand on his holster. Alex pivoted in his sitting
position and faced the descending forest from which he and the runner
had emerged.
The waiting was long and tense. Yet McAuliff understood that his
strongest weapon - perhaps his only viable strength - was calm
determination.
He was determined; he was not calm.
He was frightened in the same way he had experienced fear before. In
the Korean hills; alone, no matter the number of troops; waiting to
witness his own single annihilation.
Pockets of fear.
'It is an extraordinary story, is it not, Dr McAuliff?' That voice. My God! He knew that voice.
He pressed his arms against the ground and started to whip his head
and body around.
His temple crashed into the hard steel of a pistol; the agonizing
pain shot through his face and chest. There was a series of bright
flashes in front of his eyes as the pain reached a sensory crescendo.
It subsided to a numbing ache, and he could feel a trickle of blood
on his neck.
'You will remain the way you are while we talk,' said the familiar
voice. Where had he heard it before?
'I know you.'
'You don't know me, Dr McAuliff.'
'I've heard your voice… somewhere.'
'Then you have remarkable recall. So much has happened… I shall not
waste words. Where are Piersall's documents? I am sure it is
unnecessary to tell you that your life and the lives of those you
brought to Jamaica depend on our having them.'
'How do you know they'd do you any good? What if I told you I had
copies made?'
'I would say you were lying. We know the placement of every Xerox
machine, every photostat copier, every store, hotel, and
individual that does such work along the coast. Including Bueno, the
Bays, and Ocho Rios. You have had no copies made.'
'You're not very bright, Mr Halidon… It is Mr Halidon, isn't it?'
There was no response, so Alex continued. 'We photographed them.'
'Then the films are not developed. And the only member of your team
possessing a camera is the boy. Ferguson. He is hardly a confidant… But
this is immaterial, Dr McAuliff. When we say documents, we assume any
and all reproductions thereof. Should any surface… ever…
there will be, to put it bluntly, a massacre of innocents. Your survey
team, their families, children… all those held dear by everyone. A
cruel and unnecessary prospect.'… to the last extremity. R.
C. Holcroft.
'It would be the Halidon's last action, wouldn't it?'
McAuliff spoke slowly but sharply, stunned by his own calm. 'A kind of
final… beau geste before extinction. If you want it that way,
I don't give a damn.'
'Stop it, McAuliff.' The voice suddenly screamed, a
piercing shriek over the blades of wild grass, its echo muted by the
surrounding jungles.
Those words… They were the words he had heard before! Stop it. Stop it… stop it…
Where? For God's sake, where had he heard them? His mind raced;
images were blurred with blinding coloured lights, but he could not
focus.
A man. A black man - tall and lithe and muscular… A man following
orders. A man commanding but not with his own commands. The voice that
had just roared was the same voice from the past… following orders.
In panic… as before. Something…
'You said we would talk. Threats are one-sided conversations; you
take turns, you don't talk. I'm not on anybody's side. I want your…
superiors to know that.' Alex held his breath during the silence that
followed.
The quiet reply came with measured authority… and a small but
recognizable trace of fear. 'There are no superiors as far as
you are concerned. My temper is short. These have been difficult days…
You should realize that you are very close to losing your life.'
The man with the pistol had moved slightly; Alex could see him now
out of the corner of his eye. And what he saw convinced him he was on
the track of an immediate truth. The man's head had snapped up at the
priest figure; the man with the weapon dangling in his hand was
questioning the priest figure's words.
'If you kill me… or any member of the team, the Halidon will be
exposed in a matter of hours.'
Again silence. Again the measured authority; again the now
unmistakable undertone of fear. 'And how is this remarkable exposure
going to take place, Dr McAuliff?'
Alex drew a deep breath silently. His right hand was clasping his
left wrist; he pressed his fingers into his own flesh as he replied.
'In my equipment there is a radio signalling device. It is standard
and operates on a frequency that rides above interference. It's
functional within a radius of twenty-five miles… Every twelve hours I
send out one of two codes; a light on the miniature panel confirms
reception and pinpoints location-identification. The first
code says everything's normal, no problems. The second says something
else. It instructs the man on the receiving end to implement two
specific orders: fly the documents out and send help in. The absence of
transmission is the equivalent of the second code, only more so. It
alerts all the factions in Kingston, including British Intelligence.
They'll be forced in; they'll start with our last location and fan out.
The Cock Pit will be swarming with planes and troops… I'd better
transmit the code, Mr Halidon. And even when I do, you won't know which
one I'm sending, will you?' McAuliff stopped for precisely three
seconds. And then he said quietly, 'Checkmate, Mr Bones.'
A macaw's screech could be heard in the distance. From somewhere in
the wet forests a pride of wild pigs was disturbed. The warm breeze
bent the reeds of the tall grass ever so slightly; crickets were
everywhere. All these were absorbed by Alex's senses. And he
understood, too, the audible, trembling intake of breath from the
darkness behind him. He could feel the mounting, uncontrollable pitch
of anger.
'No, mon!' The man with the pistol cried out, lunging
forward.
Simultaneously, McAuliff felt the rush of air and heard the rustle
of cloth that precedes the instant of impact from behind. Too late to
turn; defence only in crouching, hugging the earth.
One man tried to stop the priest figure as he lunged forward; the
weight of two furious bodies descended on Alex's shoulders and back.
Arms were thrashing, fingers spastically clutched; hard steel and soft
cloth and warm flesh enveloped him. He reached above and grasped the
first objects his hands touched, yanked with all his strength, and
rolled forward.
The priest figure somersaulted over his back; Alex crashed his
shoulders downward, rising on one knee for greater weight, and threw
himself on the coarse cloth of the caftan. As he pinned the priest, he
felt himself instantly pulled backward, with such force that the small
of his back ached in pain.
The two Halidonites locked his arms, stretching his chest to the
breaking point; the man with the pistol held the barrel to his temple,
digging it into his skin. 'That will be enough, mon.'
Below him on the ground, the yellow moonlight illuminating a face
creased with fury, was the priest figure.
McAuliff instantly understood the bewildering, unfocused images of
blinding, coloured lights his mind had associated with the panicked
words stop it, stop it.
He had last seen this 'priest' of the Halidon in London's Soho.
During the psychedelic madness that was The Owl of Saint George. The
man lying on the ground in a caftan had been dressed in a dark suit
then, gyrating on the crowded dance floor. He had screamed at McAuliff
to Stop… stop it!. He had delivered a crushing fist
into Alex's
midsection; he had disappeared into the crowds, only to show up an hour
later in a government car on the street by a public telephone.
This 'priest' of the Halidon was an agent of British Intelligence.
'You said your name was Tallon.' McAuliff strained his speech
through the pain, the words interrupted by his lack of breath. 'In the
car that night you said your name was Tallon. And… when I called you on
it, you said you were… testing me.'
The priest figure rolled over and slowly began to rise. He nodded to
the two Halidonites to relax their grips and addressed them. 'I would
not have killed him. You know that.'
'You were angry, mon,' said the man who had taken Alex out of the
camp.
'Forgive us,' added the man who had cried out and lunged at the
priest figure. 'It was necessary.'
The 'priest' smoothed his cassock and tugged at the thick rope
around his waist. He looked down at McAuliff. 'Your recollection is
sharp, Doctor. I sincerely hope your ability to think clearly is
equally acute.'
'Does that mean we talk?'
'We talk.'
'My arms hurt like hell. Will you tell your sergeants to let go of
me?'
The 'priest' nodded once again, and flicked his wrist in accord.
Alex's arms were released; he shook them.
'My sergeants, as you call them, are more temperate men than I. You
should be grateful to them.'
The man with the pistol belt demurred, his voice respectful. 'Not
so, mon. When did you last sleep?'
'That does not matter. I should have more control… My friend refers
to a hectic several weeks, McAuliff. Not only did I have to get myself
out of England, avoiding Her Majesty's Service, but also a colleague
who had disappeared in a Bentley around a Soho corner… A West Indian in
London has a thousand hiding places.'
Alex remembered vividly. 'That Bentley tried to run me down. The
driver wanted to kill me. Only someone else was killed… because of a
neon light.'
The priest figure stared at McAuliff. He, too, seemed to recall the
evening vividly. 'It was a tragedy born of the instant. We thought a
trap had been set, the spring caught at the last moment.'
'Three lives were lost that night. Two with cyanide—'
'We are committed,' interrupted the Halidonite, who looked at his
two companions and spoke gently. 'Leave us alone, please.'
In warning, both men removed the weapons from their belts as they
pulled Alex to his feet. As ordered, they retreated into the field.
McAuliff watched them. A ragged-clothed twosome with the unlikely
jackets and pistol belts. 'They not only do as you say, they protect
you from yourself.'
The priest figure also looked at his retreating subordinates. 'When
we are in our formative years, we are all given batteries of tests.
Each is assigned areas of instruction and future responsibility from
the results. I often think grave errors are made.' The man tugged at
his caftan and turned to McAuliff. 'We must deal now with each other,
must we not?… As I am sure you have surmized, I was an impermanent
member of MI5.'
'An "infiltrator" is the word that comes to mind.'
'A very successful one, Doctor. Holcroft himself twice recommended
me for citations. I was one of the best West Indian specialists… I was
reluctant to leave. You - and those manoeuvring you - created the
necessity.'
'How?'
'Your survey suddenly contained too many dangerous components. We
could live with several, but when we found out that your closest
associate on the geological team - Mr Tucker - was apparently a friend
of Walter Piersall, we knew we had to keep you under a microscope…
Obviously, we were too late.'
'What were the other components?'
The priest figure hesitated. He touched his forehead, where a grass
burn had developed from his fall to the ground. 'Do you have a
cigarette? This very comfortable sheet has one disadvantage: There are
no pockets.'
'Why do you wear it?'
'It is a symbol of authority, nothing more.'
McAuliff reached into his pocket, withdrew a pack of cigarettes, and
shook one up for the Halidonite. As he lighted it for him, he saw that
the black hollows in the very black skin beneath the eyes were
stretched in exhaustion. 'What were the dangerous components?'
'Oh, come, Doctor, you know them as well as I do.'
'Maybe I don't; enlighten me. Or is that dangerous, too?'
'Not now. Not at this point. The reality is the danger.
Piersall's documents are the reality. The… components are
inconsequential.'
'Then tell me.'
The priest figure inhaled on his cigarette and blew the smoke into
the soft breeze of the dull yellow light. 'The woman you know about.
There are many who fear her on the Continent. Among those, one of the
Dunstone hierarchy… the Marquis de Chatellerault. Where she is, so is
an arm of the Intelligence service. The boy, Ferguson, is deep with the
Craft interests; actually, they fear him. Or did. And rightly so. He
never understood the calamitous economic potential of his fibre work.'
'I think he did,' interrupted Alex. 'And does. He expects to make
money out of Craft.'
The Halidonite laughed quietly. 'They will never let him. But he is
a component. Where does Craft stand? Is he part of Dunstone? Nothing
happens in Jamaica that the soiled hand of Craft has not touched…
Samuel Tucker I have told you about: his association with the suddenly
vital Walter Piersall. Whose summons did he answer? Is he on the island
because of his old friend McAuliff? Or his new friend Piersall? Or is
it coincidence?'
'It is coincidence,' said Alex. 'You'd have to know Sam to
understand that.'
'But we do not, you see. We only understand that among the first
telephone calls he made was to a man who was disturbing us profoundly.
Who was walking around Kingston with the secrets of two hundred years
in his brain… and somewhere on paper.' The priest figure looked at
McAuliff - stared at him, really. His eyes in the moonlight conveyed a
supplication for Alex to understand. He looked away and continued.
'Then there is Charles Whitehall. A very… very dangerous and
unpredictable component. You must know his background; Holcroft
certainly did. Whitehall feels his time on the island has come. His is
the hot mysticism of the fanatic. The black Caesar come to ride up
Victoria Park on nigger-Pompei's horse. He has followers throughout
Jamaica. If there is anyone who might expose Dunstone - wittingly or
otherwise - it could well be Whitehall and his fascists.'
'Holcroft didn't know that,' protested McAuliff. 'He made it clear
that you… the Halidon… were the only ones who could stop Dunstone.'
'Holcroft is a professional. He creates internal chaos, knowing that
his breakthrough can come at any instant during the panic. Would it
surprise you to know that Holcroft is in Kingston now?'
Alex thought for a moment. 'No… I'm surprised he hasn't let me know
it.'
'There is a sound reason. He doesn't want you to fall back on him.
He wants the forces to remain on collision courses. He flew in when
word was received that Chatellerault was in Savanna-la-Mar… You knew that,
didn't you?'
'He knows it because I told Westmore Tallon.'
'And then
there are the Jensens. That charming, devoted couple. So normal, so
lovable, really… who send back word to Julian Warfield of every move
you make, of every person you make contact with; who bribe Jamaicans to
spy on you… The Jensens made a huge mistake once, years ago. Dunstone,
Limited, stepped in and recruited them. In exchange for obliterating
that mistake.' McAuliff looked up at the clear night sky. A single
elongated cloud was drifting from a distant mountain towards the yellow
moon. He wondered if the condensation would disappear before it reached
the shining satellite, or blur it from beneath… envelope it from the
ground.
As he was so enveloped.
'So those are the components,' said Alex aimlessly. 'The Halidon
knows a lot more than anyone else, it seems. And I'm not sure what that
means.'
'It means, Doctor, that we are the silent caretakers of our land.'
'I don't recall any election. Who gave you the job?'
'To quote an American writer: "It comes with the territory." It is
our heritage. We do not swim in the political rivers, however. We leave
those to the legitimate competitors. We do try our best to
keep the pollution to a minimum.' The priest figure finished his
cigarette and crushed the burning end under his sandalled foot.
'You're killers,' said McAuliff simply. 'I know that. I think that's
the worst kind of human pollution.'
'Are you referring to Dunstone's previous survey?'
'I am.'
'You don't know the circumstances. And I'm not the one to define
them. I am here only to persuade you to give me Piersall's documents.'
'I won't do that.'
'Why?' The Halidonite's voice rose in anger, as before. His
black eyes above the black hollows pierced into McAuliffs.
'Mon?' came the shouted query from the field. The priest figure
waved his arm in dismissal.
'This is not your business, McAuliff. Understand that and get out.
Give me the documents and take your survey off the island before it is
too late.'
'If it was that simple, I would. I don't want your fight,
goddamn it. It has no appeal for me… on the other hand, I don't relish
being chased all over the globe by Julian Warfield's guns. Can't you
understand that?'
The priest figure stood immobile. His eyes softened; his lips parted
in concentration as he stared at Alexander He spoke slowly; he was
barely audible. 'I warned them that it might come to this. Give me the nagarro,
doctor. What is the meaning of the Halidon?'
McAuliff told him.
TWENTY SIX
They returned to the river campsite, McAuliff and the runner who had
assumed the name and function of 'Marcus Hendrik.' There was no
pretence now. As they neared the bivouac area, black men in rags could
be seen in the bush, the early dawn light shafting through the dense
foliage, intermittently reflecting off the barrels of their weapons.
The survey camp was surrounded, the inhabitants prisoners of the
Halidon.
A hundred yards from the clearing, the runner - now preceding Alex
on the narrow jungle path, pistol secure in his field jacket belt -
stopped and summoned a Halidon patrol. He did so by snapping his
fingers repeatedly until a large black man emerged from between the
trees.
The two men spoke briefly, quietly, and when they were finished the
patrol returned to his post in the tropic forest. The runner turned to
McAuliff.
'Everything is peaceful. There was a skirmish with Charles
Whitehall, but it was anticipated. He severely wounded the guard, but
others were nearby. He is bound and back in his tent.'
'What about Mrs Booth?'
'The woman? She is with Samuel Tucker. She was asleep half an hour
ago… That Tucker, he will not sleep. He sits in the chair in front of
his tent, a rifle in his hands. The others are quiet. They will be
rising soon.'
'Tell me,' said Alex while the runner still faced him, 'what
happened to all that Arawak language? The Maroon Colonel, the units of
four, the eight days?'
'You forgot, Doctor. I led the Whitehall-mon to his courier. The
Colonel of the Maroons never got the message. The reply you received
came from us.' The runner smiled. Then he turned, gesturing for Alex to
follow him into the clearing.
Under the eyes of the runner, McAuliff waited for the white light of
the miniature panel to reach full illumination. When it did, he pressed
the signal-transmitter button, holding his left hand over his fingers
as he did so. He knew the concealment was unnecessary; he would not
radio for aid. He would not jam the frequency with cries of emergency.
It had been made clear that at the first sight of hostile forces, each
member of the survey team would be shot through the head, Alison Booth
and Sam Tucker the first to be executed.
The remainder of the understanding was equally clear. Sam Tucker
would continue to send the signals every twelve hours. Alexander would
return with the runner into the grassland. From there, with the
'priest' he would be taken to the hidden community of the Halidon.
Until he returned, the team was a collective hostage.
Alison, Sam, Charles Whitehall and Lawrence would be told the truth.
The others would not. The Jensens, James Ferguson and the crew would be
given another explanation, a bureaucratic one readily acceptable to
professional surveyors: During the night a radio message from Kingston
had been relayed by Falmouth; the Ministry of the Interior required
McAuliffs presence in Ocho Rios; there were difficulties with the
Institute. It was the sort of complication to which survey directors
were subjected. Field work was constantly interrupted by administrative
foul-ups.
When the priest figure suggested the time of absence be no less than
three full days, Alex demanded to know the reason for so long a
period. 'I can't answer that, McAuliff.'
'Then why should I agree to
it?'
'It is only time. Then, too, are we not at checkmate… Mr Bones? We
fear exposure perhaps more than you fear for your lives.'
'I won't
concede that.'
'You do not know us. Give yourself the margin to learn. You will not
be disappointed.'
'You were told to say three days, then?'
'I was.'
'Which presumes that whoever told you to say it expected you to
bring me to them.'
'It was a distinct probability.'
Alexander agreed to
three full days.
The black revolutionary, Lawrence, was rubbing a penicillin salve
over Charles Whitehall's bare back. The rope burns were deep; whoever
had lashed Charley-mon had done so in fever-pitch anger. The ropes on
both men had been removed after McAuliffs talk with them.
Alexander had made it clear he would brook no further interference.
Their causes were expendable.
'Your arrogance is beyond understanding, McAuliff!' said Charles
Whitehall, suppressing a grimace as Lawrence touched a sensitive burn.
'I accept the rebuke. You're very qualified in that department.'
'You are not equipped to deal with these people. I have
spent my life, my entire life, stripping away the layers of
Jamaican - Caribbean - history!'
'Not your entire life, Charley-mon,' replied Alex, calmly but
incisively. 'I told you last night. There's the little matter of your
extra-scholastic activity. "The black Caesar riding up Victoria Park on
nigger-Pompei's horse…"'
'What?'
'They're not my words, Charley.' Lawrence suddenly pressed his fist
into a raw lash mark on Whitehall's shoulder. The scholar arched his
neck back in pain. The revolutionary's other hand was close to his
throat. Neither man moved; Lawrence spoke.
'You don't ride no nigger horse, mon. You den walk like everybody
else.'
Charles Whitehall stared over his shoulder at the blur of the
brutal, massive hand poised for assault. 'You play the fool, you know.
Do you think any political entity with a power structure based in
wealth will tolerate you! Not for a minute, you egalitarian
jackal. You will be crushed.'
'You do not seek to crush us, mon?'
'I
seek only what is best for Jamaica. Everyone's energies will be used to
that end.'
'You're a regular Pollyanna,' broke in Alex, walking towards the two
men.
Lawrence looked up at McAuliff, his expression equal parts of
suspicion and dependence. He removed his hand and reached for the tube
of penicillin salve. 'Put on your shirt, mon. Your skin is covered,' he
said, twisting the small cap onto the medicine tube.
'I'm leaving in a few minutes,' said McAuliff, standing in front of
Whitehall. 'Sam will be in charge; you're to do as he says. Insofar as
possible, the work is to continue normally. The Halidon will stay out
of sight… at least as far as the Jensens and Ferguson are concerned.'
'How can that be?' asked Lawrence.
'It won't be difficult,' answered Alex. 'Peter is drilling for
gaspocket sediment a mile and a half southwest. Ruth is due east in a
quarry; the runner we know as "Justice" will be with her. Ferguson is
across the river working some fern groves. All are separated, each will
be watched.'
'And me?' Whitehall buttoned his expensive cotton safari shirt as
though dressing for a concert at Covent Garden. 'What do you propose
for me?'
'You're confined to the clearing, Charley-mon. For your own sake,
don't try to leave it. I can't be responsible if you do.'
'You think you have any say about anything now, McAuliff?'
'Yes, I do. They're as much afraid of me as I am of them. Just don't
try to upset the balance, either one of you. I buried a man on an
Alaskan job a number of years ago. Sam will tell you. I know the
standard prayers.'
Alison stood on the river bank, looking down at the water. The heat
of the early sun was awakening the late sleepers of the forest. The
sounds were those of combative foraging; flyer against flyer, crawler
fighting crawler. The green vines dangling from the tall macca-fat
palms glistened with the moisture rising from below; fern and moss and
matted cabbage growth bordered the slowly flowing currents of the
Martha Brae offshoot. The water was morning-clear, bluish-green.
'I went to your tent,' said McAuliff, walking up to her. 'Sam said
you were out here.'
She turned and smiled. 'I wasn't really disobeying, my darling. I'm
not running anywhere.'
'Nowhere to go… You'll be all right… The runner's waiting for me.'
Alison took two steps and stood in front of him. She spoke quietly,
barely above a whisper. 'I want to tell you something, Alexander T.
McAuliff. And I refuse to be dramatic or tearful or anything remotely
theatrical… because those are crutches… And both of us can walk without
them. Six weeks ago I was running. Quite desperately, trying my
goddamnedest to convince myself that by running I was escaping - which
I knew underneath was absurd. In Kingston I told you how absurd it was.
They can find you. Anywhere. The computers, the data banks, the horrid,
complicated tracers they have in their cellars and in their hidden
rooms are too real now. Too thorough. And there is no life underground,
in remote places, always wondering . I don't expect you to understand
this, and, in a way, it's why what you're doing is right… "Do unto
others before they do unto you." That's what you said. I
believe that's a terrible way to think. And I also believe it's the
only way we're going to have a life of our own.'
McAuliff touched her face with his fingers. Her eyes were bluer than
he had ever seen them. 'That sounds dangerously like a proposal.'
'My wants are simple, my expressions uncomplicated, and, as you said
once, I'm a damned fine professional.'
'"McAuliff and Booth. Surveyors. Offices: London and New York."
That'd look good on the letterhead.'
'You wouldn't consider "Booth and McAuliff"? I mean, alphabetically—'
'No, I wouldn't,' he interrupted gently as he put his arms around
her.
'Do people always say silly, things when they're afraid?' she asked,
her face buried in his chest.
'I think so,' he replied.
Peter Jensen reached down into the full pack and felt his way among
the soft articles of clothing. The canvas was stuffed. Jensen winced as
he slid the object of his search up the sides of the cloth.
It was the Luger. It was wrapped in plastic, the silencer
detached, tied to the barrel and in plastic also.
His wife stood by the entrance flap of their tent, the slit folded
back just sufficiently for her to look outside. Peter unwrapped both
sections of the weapon and put the silencer in the pocket of his field
jacket. He pressed the release, slid out the magazine, and reached into
his other pocket for a box of cartridges. Methodically he inserted the
shells until the spring of the magazine was taut, the top bullet ready
for chamber insertion. He slid the magazine back into the handle slot
and cracked it into position.
Ruth heard the metallic click and turned around. 'Do you have to do
this?'
'Yes. Julian was very clear. McAuliff was my selection, his
concurrence a result of that choice. McAuliff's made contact. With
whom? With what? I must find out.' Peter pulled open his jacket and
shoved the Luger down between a triangle of leather straps sewn into
the lining. He buttoned the field jacket and stood up straight. 'Any
bulges, old girl? Does it show?'
'No.'
'Good. Hardly the fit of Whitehall's uniform, but I dare say a bit
more comfortable.'
'You will be careful? It's so dreadful out there.'
'All that camping you dragged me on had a purpose. I see that now,
my dear.' Peter smiled and returned to his pack, pushing down the
contents, pulling the straps into buckling position. He inserted the
prongs, tugged once more, and slapped the bulging outsides. He lifted
the canvas sack by the shoulder harness and let it fall to the dirt.
'There! I'm set for a fortnight if need be.'
'How will I know?'
'When I don't come back with my carrier. If I pull it off right, he
might even be too petrified to return himself.' Peter saw
the tremble on his wife's lips, the terrible fear in her eyes. He
motioned for her to come to him, which she did. Rushing into his arms.
'Oh, God, Peter—
'Please, Ruth. Shhh. You mustn't,' he said, stroking her
hair. 'Julian has been everything to us. We both know that. And Julian
thinks we'd be very happy at Peale Court. Dunstone will need many
people in Jamaica, he said. Why not us?'
When the unknown carrier came into camp, James Ferguson could see
that the runner, Marcus Hedrik, was as angry as he was curious. They
were all curious. McAuliff had left early that morning for the coast;
it seemed strange that the carrier had not met him on the river. The
carrier insisted he had seen no one but wandering hill people, some
fishing, some hunting - no white man.
The carrier had been sent by the Government Employment Office, a
branch in Falmouth that knew the survey was looking for additional
hands. The carrier was familiar with the river offshoot, having grown
up in Weston Favel, and was anxious for work. Naturally, he had the
proper papers, signed by some obscure functionary at GEO, Falmouth.
At 2.30 in the afternoon, James Ferguson, having rested after lunch,
sat on the edge of his cot, prepared to gather up his equipment and
head back into the field. There was a rustling outside his tent. He
looked up, and the new carrier suddenly slapped open the flap and
walked in. He was carrying a plastic tray.
'I say—'
'I pick up dishes, mon,' said the carrier rapidly. 'Alia time be
very neat.'
'I have no dishes here. There's a glass or two need washing…'
The carrier lowered his voice. 'I got message for Fergumon. I give
it to you. You read it quick.' The black reached into his pocket and
withdrew a sealed envelope. He handed it to Ferguson.
James ripped the back and pulled out a single page of stationery. It
was the stationery of The Craft Foundation, and Ferguson's eyes were
immediately pulled to the signature. It was known throughout Jamaica -
the scrawl of Arthur Craft, Senior, the semiretired but all-powerful
head of the Craft enterprises.
My dear James Ferguson:
Apologies from a distance are always most
awkward and often the most
sincere. Such is the present case.
My son has behaved badly, for which he,
too, offers his regrets. He
sends them from the South of France where he will be residing for an
indeterminate - but long - period of time.
To the point: your contributions in our
laboratories on the baracoa
experiments are immense. They led the way to what we believe can be a
major breakthrough that can have a widespread industrial impact. We
believe this breakthrough can be accelerated by your immediate return
to us. Your future is assured, young man, in the way all genius should
be rewarded. You will be a very wealthy man.
However, time is of the essence.
Therefore I recommend that you
leave the survey forthwith - the messenger will explain the somewhat
odd fashion of departure but you may be assured that I have appraised
Kingston of my wishes and they are in full agreement. (The baracoa is
for all Jamaica.) We are also in mutual agreement that it is
unnecessary to involve the survey director, Dr McAuliff, as his
immediate interests are rightfully in conflict with ours. A substitute
botanist will join the survey within a matter of days.
I look forward to renewing our
acquaintance.
Very truly yours, Arthur Craft,
Senior
James Ferguson held his breath in astonishment as he reread the
letter.
He had done it.
He had really done it. Everything.
He looked up at the carrier, who smiled and spoke softly.
'We leave late this afternoon, mon. Before dark. Come back early
from your work. I will meet you on the river bank and we will go.'
TWENTY SEVEN
The priest figure identified himself by the single name of
'Malcolm.' They travelled south on hidden routes that alternated
between steep rocky climbs, winding grottoes, and dense jungle. The
Halidonite in the ragged clothes and the field jacket led the way,
effortlessly finding concealed paths in the forests and covered
openings that led through long dark tunnels of ancient stone - the dank
smell of deep grotto waters ever present, the bright reflection of
stalactites, suspended in alabaster isolation, caught in the beams of
flashlights.
It seemed to McAuliff that at times they were descending into the
cellars of the earth, only to emerge from the darkness of a grotto onto
higher ground. A geological phenomenon, tunnelled caves that inexorably
progressed upward, evidence of oceanic-terrestrial upheavals that
bespoke an epoch of incredible geophysical combustion. The cores of
mountains rising out of the faults and trenches, doing infinite battle
to reach the heat of the sun.
Twice they passed hill communities by circling above them on ridges
at the edge of the forest. Malcolm both times identified the sects,
telling of their particular beliefs and the religious justification for
their withdrawal from the outside world. He explained that there were
approximately twenty-three Cock Pit communities dedicated to isolation.
The figure had to be approximate, for there was ever-present the
rebellion of youth who found in their intermit tent journeys to the
marketplace temptations outweighing the threats of Obeah. Strangely
enough, as one community, or two or three, disintegrated, there were
always others that sprang up to take their places… and often their
small villages.
'The "opiate of the people" is often an escape from simple hardship
and the agonizing pointlessness of the coastal towns.'
'Then eliminate the pointlessness.' Alex remembered the sights of
Old Kingston, the corrugated-tin shacks across from the abandoned,
filthy barges peopled by outcasts; the emaciated dogs, the bone-thin
cats, the eyes of numbed futility on the young-old women. The men with
no teeth praying for the price of a pint of wine, defecating in the
shadows of dark alleys.
And three blocks above, the shining, immaculate banks with their
shining, tinted windows.
Shining, immaculate, and obscene in their choice of location.
'Yes, you are right,' replied Malcolm the Halidonite. 'It is the
pointlessness that erodes the people most rapidly. It is so easy to say
"give meaning." And so difficult to know how. So many complications.'
They continued their journey for eight hours, resting after
difficult sections of jungle and steep clifflike inclines and endless
caves. McAuliff judged that they had gone no farther than seventeen,
perhaps eighteen miles into the Cock Pit country, each mile more
treacherous and enervating than the last.
Shortly after five in the afternoon, while high in the Flagstaff
Range, they came to the end of a mountain pass. Suddenly in front of
them was a plateau of grassland about a half-mile long and no more than
five hundred yards wide. The plateau fronted the banks of a mountain
cliff, at three-quarters altitude. Malcolm led them to the right, to
the western edge. The slope of the plateau descended into thick jungle,
as dense and forbidding as any McAuliff had ever seen.
'That is called the Maze of Acquaba,' said Malcolm, seeing the look
of astonishment on Alex's face. 'We have borrowed a custom from ancient
Sparta. Each male child, on his eleventh birthday, is taken into the
core and must remain for a period of four days and nights.'
'Units of four…' McAuliff spoke as much to himself as to Malcolm as
he stared down at the unbelievably cruel density of jungle beneath.
'The odyssey of death.'
'We're neither that Spartan nor Arawak,' said Malcolm, laughing
softly. 'The children do not realize it, but there are others with
them… Come.' The two Halidonites turned and started towards the
opposite ledge of the plateau. Alex took a last look at the Maze of
Acquaba and joined them.
At the eastern edge, the contradictory effect was immediate.
Below was a valley no more than a half a mile in length, perhaps a
mile wide, in the centre of which was a quiet lake. The valley itself
was enclosed by hills that were the first inclines of the mountains
beyond. On the north side were mountain streams converging into a high
waterfall that cascaded down into a relatively wide, defined avenue of
water.
On the far side of the lake were fields - pastures, for there were
cattle grazing lazily. Cows, goats, a few burros, and several horses.
This area had been cleared and seeded generations ago, thought
McAuliff.
On the near side of the lake, below them, were thatched huts,
protected by tall ceiba trees. At first glance, there seemed to be
seventy or eighty such dwellings. They were barely visible because of
the trees and arcing vines and dense tropical foliage that filled
whatever spaces might have been empty with the bright colours of the
Caribbean. A community roofed by nature, thought Alex.
Then he pictured the sight from the air. Not as he was seeing it, on
a vertical-diagonal, but from above, from a plane. The village - and it
was a village - would look like any number of isolated hill communities
with thatched roofs and nearby grazing fields. But the difference was
in the surrounding mountains. The plateau was an indentation formed at
high altitude. This section of the Flagstaff Range was filled with
harsh updraughts and uncontrollable wind variants; jets would remain at
a six-thousand-foot minimum, light aircraft would avoid direct
overhead. The first would have no place to land, the second would
undoubtedly crash if it attempted to do so.
The community was protected by natural phenomena above it and by a
torturous passage on the ground that could never be defined on a
map.
'Not very prepossessing, is it?' Malcolm stood next to McAuliff. A
stream of children were running down a bordered path towards the lake,
their shouts carried on the wind. Natives could be seen walking around
the huts; larger groups strolled by the avenue of water that flowed
from the waterfall.
'It's all… very neat.' It was the only word McAuliff could think of
at the moment.
'Yes,' replied the Halidonite. 'It's orderly. Come, let's go down.
There is a man waiting for you.'
The runner-guide led them down the rocky slope. Five minutes later
the three of them were on the western level of the thatched community.
From above Alex had not fully realized the height of the trees that
were on all sides of the primitive dwellings. Thick vines sloped and
twisted, immense ferns sprayed out of the ground and from within dark
recesses of the underbrush.
Had the view from the plateau above been fifty feet higher, thought
McAuliff, none of what he had seen would have been visible.
Roofed by nature.
The guide started across a path that seemed to intersect a cluster
of huts within the junglelike area.
The inhabitants were dressed, like most Jamaican hill people, in a
variety of soft, loose clothing, but there was something different that
McAuliff could not at first discern. There was a profusion of rolled-up
Khaki trousers and dark-coloured skirts and white cotton shirts and
printed blouses - all normal, all seen throughout the island. Seen
really in all outback areas - Africa, Australia, New Zealand - where
the natives had taken what they could - stolen what they could - of the
white invaders' protective comforts. Nothing unusual… But something was
very different, and Alex was damned if he could pinpoint that
difference.
And then he did so. At the same instant that he realized there was
something else he had been observing.
Books.
A few - three or four or five, perhaps - of the dozens of natives
within this jungle community were carrying books. Carrying books
under their arms and in their hands.
And the clothing was clean. It was as simple as that.
There were stains of wetness, of sweat, obviously, and the dirt of
field work and the mud of the lake… but there was a cleanliness, a
neatness, that was not usual in the hill or outback
communities. Africa, Australia, New Guinea, or Jacksonville, Florida.
It was a normal sight to see clothing worn by natives in varying
stages of disrepair - torn, ripped, even shredded. But the garments
worn by these hill people were whole, untorn, unripped.
Not castoffs, not ill-fitting stolen property.
The Tribe of Acquaba was deep within a jungle primeval but it was
not - like so many of the isolated hill people - a wornout race of
poverty-stricken primitives scratching a bare subsistence from the land.
Along the paths and around the dwellings Alex could see strong black
bodies and clear black eyes, the elements of balanced diets and sharp
intelligences.
'We shall go directly to Daniel's,' said Malcolm to the guide. 'You
are relieved now. And thank you.'
The guide turned right down a dirt path that seemed to be tunnelled
under a dense web of thick jungle vines. He was removing his pistol
belt, unbuttoning his field jacket. The commando was home, reflected
McAuliff. He could take off his costume - so purposely ragged.
Malcolm gestured, interrupting Alex's thoughts. The path on which
they had been walking under an umbrella of macca-fats and ceibas veered
left into a clearing of matted spider grass. This open area extended
beyond the conduit of rushing water that shot out from the base of the
high waterfall streaming down the mountain. On the other side of the
wide, banked gulley the ground sloped towards a barricade of rock;
beyond were the grazing fields that swung right, bordering the eastern
shore of the lake.
In the huge pasture, men could be seen walking with staffs towards
the clusters of livestock. It was late afternoon, the heat of the sun
was lessening. It is time to shelter the cattle for the night, thought
McAuliff.
He had been absently following Malcolm, more concerned with
observing everything he could of the strange, isolated village, when he
realized where the Halidonite was leading them.
Towards the base of the mountain and the waterfall.
They reached the edge of the lake-feeding channel and turned left.
Alex saw the conduit of water was deeper than it appeared from a
distance. The banks were about eight feet in height; the definition he
had seen from the plateau was a result of carefully placed rocks,
imbedded in the earth of the embankments. This natural phenomenon had
been controlled by man, like the seeded fields generations ago.
There were three crossings of wooden planks with waist-high
railings, each buttressed into the sides of the embankments, where
there were stone steps… placed decades ago. The miniature bridges were
spaced about fifty yards apart.
Then McAuliff saw it; barely saw it, as it was concealed behind a
profusion of tall trees, immense giant-fern, and hundreds of flowering
vines at the base of the mountain.
It was a wooded structure. A large cabinlike dwelling whose base
straddled the channel, the water rushing out from under the huge
pilings that supported the hidden edifice. On each side of the pilings
were steps - again in stone, again placed generations ago - that led up
to a wide catwalk fronting the building. In the centre of the planked
catwalk was a door. It was closed.
From any distance - certainly from the air - the building was
completely concealed.
Its length was perhaps thirty feet; its width impossible to
determine, as it seemed to disappear into the jungle and the crashing
waterfall.
As they approached the stone steps, McAuliff saw something else,
which so startled him that he had to stop and stare.
On the west side of the building, emerging from within and scaling
upward into the tangling mass of foliage, were thick black cables.
Malcolm turned and smiled at Alex's astonishment. 'Our contact with
the outside, McAuliff. Radio signals that are piped into telephone
trunk lines throughout the island. Not unlike the radio-phones in taxis
and private automobiles. Generally much clearer than the usual
telephone service. All untraceable, of course. Now let us see Daniel.'
'Who is Daniel?'
'He is our Minister of Council. His is an elective office. Except
that his term is not guided by the calendar.'
'Who elects him?'
The Halidonite's smile faded somewhat. 'The council.'
'Who elects it?'
'The tribe.'
'Sounds like regular politics.'
'Not exactly,' said Malcolm enigmatically. 'Come. Daniel's waiting.'
The Halidonite opened the door, and McAuliff walked into a large
high-ceilinged room with windows all around the upper wall. The sounds
of the waterfall could be heard; these were mingled with the myriad
noises of the jungle outside.
There were wooden chairs - chairs fashioned by hand, not machinery.
In the centre of the back wall, in front of a second, very large, thick
door was a table, at which sat a black girl in her late twenties. On
her 'desk' were papers, and at her left was an office typewriter on a
regulation typewriter table. The incongruity of such equipment in such
a place caused Alex to stare.
And then he swallowed as he saw a telephone - a regular, pushbutton
telephone - on a stand to the girl's right. 'This is Jeanine, Dr
McAuliff. She works for Daniel.' The girl stood, her smile brief and
tenuous. She acknowledged Alex with a hesitant nod; her eyes were
concerned as she spoke to Malcolm. 'Was the trip all right?'
'Since I
brought back our guest, I cannot say it was wildly successful.'
'Yes,'
replied Jeanine, her expression of concern now turned to fear. 'Daniel
wants to see you right away. This way… Dr
McAuliff.'
The girl crossed to the door and rapped twice. Without waiting for a
reply, she twisted the knob and opened it. Malcolm came alongside Alex
and gestured him inside. McAuliff walked hesitantly through the door
frame and into the office of the Halidon's Minister of Council.
The room was large, with a single, enormous leaded glass window
taking up most of the rear wall. The view was both strange and awesome.
Twenty feet beyond the glass was the midsection of a waterfall; it took
up the entire area; there was nothing but endless tons of crashing
water, its sound muted but discernible. In front of the window was a
long, thick hatch table, its dark wood glistening. Behind it stood the
man named Daniel, Minister of Council.
He was a black Jamaican with sharp Afro-European features, slightly
more than medium height and quite slender. His shoulders were broad,
however; his body tapered like that of a long-distance runner. He was
in his early forties, perhaps. It was difficult to tell; his face had
lean youth, but his eyes were not young.
He smiled - briefly, cordially, but not enthusiastically - at
McAuliff and came around the table, his hand extended.
As he did so, Alex saw that Daniel wore white casual slacks and a
dark blue shirt open at the neck. Around his throat was a white silk
kerchief, held together by a gold ring. It was a kind of uniform,
thought Alex. As Malcolm's robes were a uniform.
'Welcome, Doctor. I will not ask you about your trip, I have made it
too many times myself. It is a bitch.'
Daniel shook McAuliff's hand. 'It is a bitch,' said Alex warily.
The minister abruptly turned to Malcolm. 'What's the report? I can't
think of any reason to give it privately. Or is there?'
'No… Piersall's documents are valid. They're sealed, and McAuliff
has them ready to fly out from a location within a twenty-five-mile
radius of the Martha Brae base camp. Even he doesn't know where… We
have three days, Daniel.'
The minister stared at the priest figure. Then he walked slowly back
to his chair behind the hatch table without speaking. He stood
immobile, his hands on the surface of the wood, and looked up at Alex.
'So by the brilliant persistence of an expatriate island fanatic we
face… castration. Exposure renders us impotent, you know, Dr McAuliff.
We will be plundered. Stripped of our possessions. And the
responsibility is yours… You. A geologist in the employ of
Dunstone, Limited. And a most unlikely recruit in the service of
British Intelligence.' Daniel looked over at Malcolm. 'Leave us alone,
please. And be ready to start out for Montego.'
'When?' asked Malcolm.
'That will depend on our visitor. He will be accompanying you.'
'I will?
'Yes, Dr McAuliff. If you are alive.'
TWENTY EIGHT
'There is but a single threat one human being can make against
another that must be listened to. That threat is obviously the taking
of life.' Daniel had walked to the enormous window framing the
cascading, unending columns of water. 'In the absence of overriding
ideological issues, usually associated with religion or national
causes, I think you will agree.'
'And because I'm not motivated religiously or nationally, you expect
the threat to succeed.' McAuliff remained standing in front of the
long, glistening hatch table. He had not been offered a chair.
'Yes,' replied the Halidon's Minister of Council, turning from the
window. 'I am sure it has been said to you before that Jamaica's
concerns are not your concerns.'
'It's… "not my war" is the way it was phrased.'
'Who said that to you? Charles Whitehall or Barak Moore?'
'Barak Moore is dead,' said Alex.
The minister was obviously surprised. His reaction, however, was a
brief moment of thoughtful silence. Then he spoke quietly. 'I am sorry.
His was a necessary check to Whitehall's thrust. His faction has no one
else, really. Someone will have to be brought up to take his place…'
Daniel walked to the table, reached down for a pencil, and wrote a note
on a small pad. He tore off the page and put it to the side.
McAuliff saw without difficulty the words the minister had written.
They were: 'Replace Barak Moore.' In this day of astonishments, the
implication of the message was not inconsiderable.
'Just like that?' asked Alex, nodding his head in the direction of
the page of notepaper.
'It will not be simple, if that is what you mean,' replied Daniel.
'Sit down, Dr McAuliff. I think it is time you understood. Before we go
further.
Alexander Tarquin McAuliff, geologist, with a company on 38th Street
in New York City, United States of America, sat down in a native-made
chair in an office room high in the inaccessible mountains of the
Flagstaff Range, deep within the core of the impenetrable Cock Pit
country on the island of Jamaica, and listened to a man called Daniel,
Minister of Council for a covert sect with the name of Halidon.
He could not think any longer. He could only listen.
Daniel covered the initial groundwork rapidly. He asked Alex if he
had read Walter Piersall's papers. McAuliff nodded.
The minister then proceeded to confirm the accuracy of Piersall's
studies by tracing the Tribe of Acquaba from its beginnings in the
Maroon Wars in the early eighteenth century.
'Acquaba was something of a mystic, but essentially a simple man. A
Christ figure without the charity or extremes of mercy associated with
the Jesus beliefs. After all, his forebears were born to the violence
of the Coromanteen jungles. But his ethics were sound…'
'What is the source of your wealth?' asked Alex, his faculties
returning. 'If there is wealth. And a source.'
'Gold,' replied Daniel simply.
'Where?'
'In the ground. On our lands.'
'There is no gold in Jamaica.'
'You are a geologist. You know better than that. There are traces of
crystalline deposits in scores of minerals throughout the island—'
'Infinitesimal,' broke in McAuliff. 'Minute, and so impacted with
worthless ores as to make any attempt at separation prohibitive. More
expensive than the product.'
'But… gold, nevertheless.'
'Worthless.'
Daniel smiled. 'How do you think the crystalline traces became
impacted? I might even ask you - theoretically, if you like - how the
island of Jamaica came to be.'
'As any isolated land mass in the oceans. Geologic upheavals—' Alex
stopped. The theory was beyond imagination, made awesome because of its
simplicity. A section of a vein of gold, millions upon millions of
years ago, exploding out of the layers of earth beneath the sea,
impacting deposits throughout the mass that was disgorged out of the
waters. 'My God… there's a vein…'
'There is no point in pursuing this,' said Daniel. 'For centuries
the colonial law of Jamaica spelled out an absolute: All precious
metals discovered on the island were the possession of the Crown. It
was the primary reason no one searched.'
'Fowler? said McAuliff softly. 'Jeremy Fowler…'
'I beg your pardon?'
'The Crown Recorder in Kingston. Almost a hundred years ago…'
Daniel paused. 'Yes. In 1883, to be exact… so that was Piersall's
fragment.' The minister of the Halidon wrote on another page of
notepaper. 'It will be removed.'
'This Fowler,' asked Alex softly. 'Did he know?'
Daniel looked up from the paper, tearing it off the pad as he did
so. 'No. He believed he was carrying out the wishes of a dissident
faction of Maroons conspiring with a group of north-coast landowners.
The object was to destroy the records of a tribal treaty so thousands
of acres could be cleared for plantations. It was what he was told and
what he was paid for.'
'The family in England still believes it.'
'Why not? It was' - the minister smiled - 'Colonial Service.
Shall we return to more currently applicable questions? You see, Dr
McAuliff, we want you to understand. Thoroughly'
'Go ahead.'
According to Daniel, the Halidon had no ambitions for political
power. It never had such ambitions; it remained outside the body
politic, accepting the historical view that order emerges out of the
chaos of different, even conflicting ideologies, ideas were greater
monuments than cathedrals, and a people must have free access to them.
That was the lesson of Acquaba. Freedom of mobility, freedom of
thought… freedom to do battle, if need be. The religion of the Halidon
was essentially humanist, its jungle gods symbols of continuously
struggling forces battling for the mortals' freedom. Freedom to survive
in the world in the manner agreed upon within the tribe, without
imposing that manner on the other tribes.
'Not a bad premise, is it?' asked Daniel confidently, again rapidly.
'No,' answered McAuliff. 'And not particularly original, either.'
'I disagree,' said the minister. 'The thought may have a hundred
precedents, but the practice is almost unheard of… Tribes, as they
develop self-sufficiency, tend to graduate to the point where they are
anxious to impose themselves on as many other tribes as possible. From
the Pharaohs to Caesar; from the Empire - several empires, Holy Roman,
British, et cetera - to Adolf Hitler; from Stalin to your own
conglomeratized government of self-righteous proselytizers. Beware the
pious believers, McAuliff. They were all pious in their fashions. Too
many are still.'
'But you're not.' Alex looked over at the enormous leaded glass
window and the rushing, plummeting water beyond. 'You just decide who
is… and act accordingly. Free to "do battle," as you call it.'
'You think that is a contradiction of purpose?'
'You're goddamned right I do. When "doing battle" includes killing
people… because they don't conform to your idea of what's
acceptable.'
'Who have we killed?'
Alex shifted his gaze from the waterfall to Daniel. 'I can start
with last night. Two carriers on the survey who were probably picking
up a few dollars from British Intelligence; for what? Keeping their
eyes open? Reporting what we had for dinner? Who came to see us? Your
runner, the one I called "Marcus," said they were agents; he killed
them. And a fat pig named Garvey, who was a pretty low-level,
uninformed
liaison and I grant you, smelled bad. But I think a fatal accident on
the road to Port Maria was a bit drastic.' McAuliff paused for a moment
and leaned forward in the chair. 'You massacred an entire survey team -
every member - and for all you know, they were hired by Dunstone the
same way I was: just looking for work. Now, maybe you can justify all
those killings, but neither you nor anyone else can justify the death
of Walter Piersall… Yes. Mr High and Mighty Minister, I think you're
pretty violently pious yourself.'
Daniel had sat down in the chair behind the hatch table during
Alex's angry narrative. He now pushed his foot against the floor,
sending the chair gently to his right, towards the huge window. 'Over a
hundred years ago, this office was the entire building. One of my early
predecessors had it placed here. He insisted that the minister's room
-"chamber", it was called then - overlook this section of our
waterfall. He claimed the constant movement and the muffled sound
forced a man to concentrate, blocked out small considerations… That
long-forgotten rebel proved right. I never cease to wonder at the
different bursts of shapes and patterns. And while wondering, the mind
really concentrates.'
'Is that by way of telling me those who were killed were… small
considerations?'
Daniel pushed the chair back in place and faced McAuliff. 'No,
Doctor. I was trying to think of a way to convince you. I shall tell
you the truth, but I am not sure you will believe it. Our runners, our
guides - our infiltrators, if you will - are trained to use effect
whenever possible. Fear, McAuliff, is an extraordinary weapon. A
nonviolent weapon; not that we are necessarily nonviolent… Your
carriers are not dead. They were taken prisoner, blindfolded, led to
the outskirts of Weston Favel, and released. They were not hurt, but
they were frightened severely. They will not work for MI5 again. Garvey
is dead, but we did not kill him. Your Mr Garvey sold
anything
he could get his hands on, including women, especially young girls. He
was shot on the road to Port Maria by a distraught father, the motive
obvious. We simply took the credit… You say we massacred the Dunstone
survey. Reverse that, Doctor. Three of the four white men tried to
massacre our scouting party. They killed six of our young men after
asking them into the camp for a conference.'
'One of those… white men was a British agent.'
'So Malcolm tells us.'
'I don't believe a trained Intelligence man would kill
indiscriminately.'
'Malcolm agrees with you. But the facts are there. An Intelligence
agent is a man first. In the sudden pitch of battle, a man takes sides.
This man, whichever one he was, chose his side… He did not have to
choose the way he did.'
'The fourth man? He was different, then?'
'Yes.' Daniel's eyes were suddenly reflective. 'He was a good man. A
Hollander. When he realized what the others were doing, he objected
violently. He ran out to warn the rest of our party. His own men shot
him.'
For several moments, neither spoke. Finally McAuliff asked, 'What
about Walter Piersall? Can you find a story for that?'
'No.' said Daniel. 'We do not know what happened. Or who killed him.
We have ideas, but nothing more. Walter Piersall was the last man on
earth we wanted dead. Especially under the circumstances. And if you do
not understand that, then you're stupid.'
McAuliff got out of the chair and walked aimlessly to the huge
window. He could feel Daniel's eyes on him. He forced himself to watch
the crashing streams of water in front of him. 'Why did you bring me
here? Why have you told me so much? About you… and everything else.'
'We had no choice. Unless you lied or unless Malcolm was deceived,
neither of which I believe… And we understand your position as well as
your background. When Malcolm flew out of England, he brought with him
MI5's complete dossier on you. We are willing to make you an offer.'
Alex turned and looked down at the minister. 'I'm sure it's one I
can't refuse.'
'Not readily. Your life. And, not incidentally, the lives of your
fellow surveyors.'
'Piersall's documents?'
'Somewhat more extensive, but those, too, of course,' answered
Daniel.
'Go on.' McAuliff remained by the window. The muted sound of the
waterfall was his connection to the outside somehow. It was comforting.
'We know what the British want: the list of names that comprise the
Dunstone hierarchy. The international financiers that fully expect to
turn this island into an economic sanctuary, another Switzerland. Not
long ago, a matter of weeks, they gathered here on the island from all
over the world. In Port Antonio. A few used their real names, most did
not. The timing is propitious. The Swiss banking institutions are
breaking down their traditional codes of account-secrecy one after
another. They are under extraordinary pressures, of course… We have the
Dunstone list. We will make an exchange.'
'It for our lives? And the documents…'
Daniel laughed, neither cruelly nor kindly. It was a genuine
expression of humour. 'Doctor, I am afraid it is you who are obsessed
with small considerations. It is true we place great value on
Piersall's documents, but the British do not. We must think as our
adversaries think. The British want the Dunstone list above all things.
And above all things, we want British Intelligence, and everything it
represents, out of Jamaica. That is the exchange we offer.'
McAuliff stood motionless by the window. 'I don't understand you.'
The minister leaned forward. 'We demand an end to English influence…
as we demand an end to the influence of all other nations - tribes,
if you wish, Doctor - over this island. In short words, Jamaica is to
be left to the Jamaicans.'
'Dunstone wouldn't leave it to you,' said Alex, groping.
'I'd say its influence was a hell of a lot more dangerous than
anyone else's.'
'Dunstone is our fight; we have our own plans.
Dunstone was organized by financial geniuses. But once confined in our
territory, our alternatives are multiple. Among other devices,
expropriation… But these alternatives take time, and we both know the
British do not have the time. England cannot afford the loss of
Dunstone, Limited.'
McAuliff's mind raced back to the room in the Savoy Hotel… and R. C.
Holcroft's quiet admission that economics were a factor. A rather
significant one.
Holcroft the manipulator.
Alex walked back to the armchair and sat down. He realized Daniel
was allowing him the time to think, to absorb the possibilities of the
new information. There were so many questions; most, he knew, could not
be answered, but several touched him. He had to try.
'A few days ago,' he began awkwardly, 'when Barak Moore died, I
found myself concerned that Charles Whitehall had no one to oppose him.
So did you. I saw what you wrote down—'
'What is your question?' asked Daniel civilly.
'I was right, wasn't I? They're the two extremes. They have
followers. They're not just hollow fanatics.'
'Whitehall and Moore?'
'Yes.'
'Hardly. They're the charismatic leaders. Moore was,
Whitehall is. In all new emerging nations there are generally
three factions: right, left, and the comfortable middle - the
entrenched holdovers who have learned the daily functions. The middle
is eminently corruptible; it continues the same dull, bureaucratic
chores with sudden new authority. It is the first to be replaced. The
healthiest way is by an infusion of the maturest elements from both
extremes. Peaceful balance.'
'And that's what you're waiting for? Like a referee? An umpire?'
'Yes. That's very good, Doctor. There's merit in the struggle, you
know; neither side is devoid of positive factors…
Unfortunately, Dunstone makes our task more difficult. We must observe
the combatants carefully.'
The minister's eyes had strayed again; and, again, there was that
brief, nearly imperceptible reflection. 'Why?'
Daniel seemed at first reluctant to answer. And then he sighed
audibly. 'Very well… Barak Moore's reaction to Dunstone would be
violent. A bloodbath… chaos. Whitehall's would be equally dangerous. He
would seek temporary collusion, the power base being completely
financial. He could be used as many of the German industrialists
honestly believed they were using Hitler. Only the association feeds on
absolute power… absolutely.'
McAuliff leaned back in the chair. He was beginning to understand.
'So if Dunstone's out, you're back to the… what was it… the healthy
struggle?'
'Yes,' said Daniel quietly.
'Then you and the British want the same thing. How can you make
conditions?'
'Because our solutions are different. We have the time and the
confidence of final control. The English… and the French and the
Americans and the Germans… do not have either. The economic disasters
they would suffer could well be to our advantage. And that is all I
will say on the subject… We have the Dunstone list. You will make the
offer.'
'I go with Malcolm to Montego—'
'You will be escorted and guarded,' interrupted Daniel harshly. 'The
members of your geological survey are hostages. Each will be summarily
executed should there be the slightest deviation from our instructions.'
'Suppose British Intelligence doesn't believe you? What the hell am
I supposed to do then?'
Daniel stood up. 'They will believe you, McAuliff. For your trip to
Montego Bay is merely part of news that will soon be worldwide. There
will be profound shock in several national capitals. And you will tell
British Intelligence that this is our proof. It is only the tip of the
Dunstone
iceberg… Oh, they will believe you, McAuliff. Precisely at noon,
London time. Tomorrow.'
'That's all you'll tell me?'
'No. One thing more. When the acts take place, the panicked giant -
Dunstone - will send out its killers. Among others you will be a
target.'
McAuliff found himself standing up in anger. 'Thank you for the
warning,' he said.
'You are welcome,' replied Daniel. 'Now, if you will come with me.'
Outside the office, Malcolm, the priest figure, was talking quietly
with Jeanine. At the sight of Daniel, both fell silent. Jeanine blocked
Daniel's path and spoke.
'There is news from the Martha Brae.'
Alex looked at the minister and then back at the girl. 'Martha Brae'
had to mean the survey's campsite. He started to speak, but was cut off
by Daniel.
'Whatever it is, tell us both.'
'It concerns two men. The young man, Ferguson, and the ore
specialist, Peter Jensen…'
Alex breathed again.
'What happened?' asked Daniel. 'The young man first.'
'A runner came into camp bringing him a letter from Arthur Craft,
senior. In it Craft made promises, instructing Ferguson to leave the
survey, come up to Port Antonio, to the foundation. Our scouts followed
and intercepted them several miles down the river. They are being held
there, south of Weston Favel.'
'Craft found out about his son,' said Alex. 'He's trying to buy off
Ferguson.'
'The purchase might well be to Jamaica's advantage. And Ferguson is
not a hostage high on your scale of values.'
'I brought him to the island. He is valuable to me,' answered Alex
coldly.
'We shall see.' Daniel turned to the girl. 'Tell the scouts to stay
where they are. Hold Ferguson and the runner; instructions will follow.
What about the Jensen man?'
'He is all right. The scouts are tracking him.'
'He left camp?'
'He's pretending to be lost, our men think. Early this morning, soon
after Dr McAuliff left, he had his carrier stretch what is called an…
azimuth line. He had the man walk quite a distance while he reeled out
the nylon string. The signals were by tugs, apparently—'
'And Jensen cut the line and tied his end to a sapling,' interrupted
Alex in a rapid monotone. 'With a loop around a nearby limb.'
'How do you know this?' Daniel seemed fascinated.
'It's a very old, unfunny trick in the field. A distasteful joke.
It's played on green recruits.'
Daniel turned again to the girl. 'So his carrier could not find him.
Where is Jensen now?'
'He tried to pick up Malcolm's trail,' replied the secretary. 'The
scouts say he came very close. He gave up and circled back to the west
hill. From there he can watch the entire campsite. All means of
entrance.'
'He will wait the full three days, starving and trapped by cats, if
he thinks it will help him. He does not dare go back to Warfield
without something.' Daniel looked at Alex. 'Did you know you were his
choice to direct the survey?'
'I was his. . .' McAuliff did not finish the statement.
There was no point, he thought.
'Tell our people to stay with him,' ordered the minister. 'Get
close, but don't take him… unless he uses a radio that could reach the
coast. If he does, kill him.'
'What the hell are you saying?' demanded McAuliff angrily. 'Goddamn
it, you have no right!'
'We have every right, Doctor. You adventurers come to this island!
Soil it with your filth' Don't speak to me of rights,
McAuliff!' And then, as suddenly as he had raised his voice, he lowered
it. He spoke to the girl. 'Convene the Council.'
TWENTY NINE
Daniel led McAuliff down the steps into the matted grass on the left
bank of the miniature channel of rushing water. Neither man spoke. Alex
looked at his watch; it was nearly eight o'clock. The rays of the
twilight sun shot up from behind the western mountains in spectral
shafts of orange; the intercepting hills were silhouetted in brownish
black, emphasizing their incredible height, their fortress-immensity.
The lake was a huge sheet of very dark glass, polished beyond the
ability of man, reflecting the massive shadows of the mountains and the
streaks of the orange sun.
They walked down the slope of the clearing to the stone fence
bordering the grazing field. At the far left was a gate; Daniel
approached it, unlatched the large single bolt, and swung it open. He
gestured McAuliff to go through.
'I apologize for my outburst,' said the minister as they walked into
the field. 'It was misdirected. You were a victim, not an aggressor. We
realize that.'
'And what are you? Are you a victim? Or an aggressor?'
'I am the Minister of Council. And we are neither. I
explained that.'
'You explained a lot of things, but I still don't know anything
about you,' said McAuliff, his eyes on a lone animal approaching them
in the darkening field. It was a young horse, and it whinnied and
pranced hesitantly as it drew near.
'This colt is forever breaking out,' laughed Daniel as he patted the
neck of the nervous animal. 'He will be difficult to train, this one… Hyee!
Hyee!' cried the Halidonite as he slapped the colt's flank,
sending it kicking and prancing and snorting towards the centre of the
field.
'Maybe that's what I mean,' said Alex. 'How do you train… people?
Keep them from breaking out?'
Daniel stopped and looked at McAuliff. They were alone in the large
pasture, awash with the vivid colours of the dying Jamaican sun. The
light silhouetted the minister and caused McAuliff to shield his face.
He could not see Daniel's eyes, but he could feel them.
'We are an uncomplicated people in many ways,' said the Halidonite.
'What technology we require is brought in, along with our medical
supplies, basic farm machinery, and the like. Always by our own
members, using untraceable mountain routes. Other than these, we are
self-sufficient on our lands. Our training - as you call it - is a
result of understanding the immense riches we possess. Our isolation is
hardly absolute. As you will see.'
From childhood, Daniel explained, the Halidonite was told he was
privileged and must justify his birthright by his life's actions. The
ethic of contribution was imbued in him early in his education; the
need to use his potential to the fullest. The outside world was shown
in all its detail - its simplicities, its complications, its peace and
its violence; its good and its evil. Nothing was concealed;
exaggeration was not left to young imaginations. Realistic temptation
was balanced - perhaps a bit strongly, admitted Daniel - with realistic
punishment.
As near to his or her twelfth birthday as possible, the Halidonite
was tested extensively by teachers, the Elders of the Council, and
finally by the minister himself. On the basis of these examinations,
individuals were selected for training for the outside world. There
followed three years of preparation, concentrating on specific skills
or professions.
When he or she reached sixteen, the Halidonite was taken from the
community and brought to a family residence on the outside, where the
father and mother were members of the tribe. Except for infrequent
returns to the community and reunions with his own parents, the outside
family would be the Halidonite's guardians for a number of years to
come.
'Don't you have defections?' asked Alex.
'Rarely,' replied Daniel. 'The screening process is most thorough.'
'What happens if it isn't thorough enough? If there are—'
'That is an answer I will not give you,' interrupted the minister.
'Except to say the Maze of Acquaba is a threat no prison can compete
with. It keeps offenders - within and without - to a minimum.
Defections are extremely rare.'
From the tone of Daniel's voice, Alex had no desire to pursue the
subject. 'They're brought back?'
Daniel nodded.
The population of the Halidon was voluntarily controlled. Daniel
claimed that for every couple that wanted more children, there
invariably was a couple that wanted fewer or none. And, to McAuliffs
astonishment, the minister added: 'Marriages take place between
ourselves and those of the outside. It is, of course, unavoidable and,
by necessity, desirable. But it is a complicated procedure taking place
over many months and with stringent regulations.'
'A reverse screening process?'
'The harshest imaginable. Controlled by the guardians.'
'What happens if the marriage doesn't…'
'That answer, too, is not in bounds, Doctor.'
'I have an idea the penalties are stiff,' said Alex softly.
'You may have all the ideas you like,' said Daniel, starting up
again across the field. 'But what is of the greatest importance is that
you understand that we have scores… hundreds of guardians - halfway
houses - throughout the countries of the world. In every profession, in
all governments, in dozens of universities and institutions everywhere…
You will never know who is a member of the Halidon. And that is our
threat, our ultimate protection.'
'You're saying that if I reveal what I know, you'll have me killed?'
'You and every member of your family. Wife, children, parents… in
the absence of the formal structure, lovers, closest associates, every
person who was or is an influence on your life. Your identity, even
your memory, will be erased.'
'You can't know every person I talk to, every telephone call I make.
Where I am every minute. No one can!
I could mount an army; I could find you!'
'But you will not,' said Daniel quietly, in counterpoint to
McAuliffs outburst. 'For the same reason others have not… Come. We are
here.'
They were standing now on the edge of the field. Beyond was the
tentacled foliage of the Cock Pit forest, in shadowed blackness.
Suddenly, startlingly, the air was filled with a penetrating sound
of terrible resonance. It was a wailing, inhuman lament. The tone was
low, breathless, enveloping everything and echoing everywhere. It was
the sound of a giant woodwind, rising slowly, receding into a simple,
obscure theme and swelling again to the plaintive cry of the higher
melody.
It grew louder and louder, the echoes now picking up the bass tones
and hurling them through the jungles, crashing them off the sides of
the surrounding mountains until the earth seemed to vibrate.
And then it stopped, and McAuliff stood transfixed as he saw in the
distance the outlines of figures walking slowly, purposefully, in
measured cadence, across the fields in the chiaroscuro shadows of the
early darkness. A few carried torches, the flames low.
At first there were only four or five, coming from the direction of
the gate. Then there were some from the south bank of the black,
shining lake; others from the north, emerging out of the darkness.
Flat-bottomed boats could be seen crossing the surface of the water,
each with a single torch.
Within minutes there were ten, then twenty, thirty… until McAuliff
stopped counting. From everywhere. Dozens of slowly moving bodies
swaying gently as they walked across the darkened fields.
They were converging towards the spot where Alex stood with Daniel.
The inhuman wailing began again. Louder - if possible - than before,
and McAuliff found himself bringing his hands up to his ears; the
vibrations in his head and throughout his body were causing pain -
actual pain.
Daniel touched him on the shoulder; Alex whipped around as if he had
been struck violently. For an instant he thought he had been, so severe
were the agonizing sensations brought on by the deafening sound of the
horrible lament.
'Come,' said Daniel gently. 'The hollydawn can injure you.'
McAuliff heard him accurately; he knew that. Daniel had pronounced
the word: not 'halidon' but 'hollydawn.' As though the echoing,
deafening sound had caused him to revert to a more primitive tongue.
Daniel walked rapidly ahead of Alex into what McAuliff thought was a
wall of underbrush. Then the Halidonite suddenly began to descend into
what appeared to be a trench dug out of the jungle. Alex ran to catch
up, and nearly plummeted down a long, steep corridor of steps carved
out of rock.
The strange staircase widened, flaring out more on both sides the
deeper it went, until McAuliff could see that they had descended into a
primitive amphitheater, the walls rising thirty or forty feet to the
surface of the earth.
What was the staircase became an aisle, the curving rock on both
sides forming rows of descending seats.
And suddenly the deafening, agonizing sound from above was no more.
It had stopped. Everything was silent.
The amphitheater, carved out of some kind of quarry, blocked out all
other sound.
McAuliff stood where he was and looked down at the single source of
light: a low flame that illuminated the wall of rock at the centre rear
of the amphitheater. In that wall was embedded a slab of dull yellow
metal. And on that slab of metal was a withered corpse. In front of the
corpse was a latticework of thin reeds made of the same yellow
substance.
McAuliff needed to go no closer to realize what the substance was:
gold.
And the withered, ancient body - once huge - was that of the mystic
descendant of the Coromanteen chieftains.
Acquaba.
The preserved remains of the progenitor… spanning the centuries. The
true cross of the Tribe of Acquaba. For the believers to see. And sense.
'Down here,' Daniel's words were whispered, but Alex heard them
clearly. 'You will sit with me. Please, hurry.'
McAuliff walked down the remaining staircase to the floor of the
quarry shell and over to the Halidonite on the right side of the
primitive stage. Jutting out from the wall were two stone blocks;
Daniel pointed to one: the seat nearest the corpse of Acquaba, less
than eight feet away.
McAuliff lowered himself on to the hard stone, his eyes drawn to the
open catafalque of solid and webbed gold. The leathered corpse was
dressed in robes of reddish black; the feet and hands were bare… and
huge, as the head was huge. Allowing for the contraction of two
centuries, the man must have been enormous - nearer seven feet than six.
The single torch below the coffin of gold shot flickering shadows
against the wall; the thin reeds crisscrossing the front of the
carved-out casket picked up the light in dozens of tiny reflections.
The longer one stared, thought Alex, the easier it would be to convince
oneself this was the shell of a god lying in state. A god who had
walked the earth and worked the earth - two hundred years could not
erase the signs on the enormous hands and feet. But this god, this man
did not toil as other men…
He heard the sounds of muted steps and looked up into the small
amphitheater. Through the entrance, hidden in darkness, and down the
staircase they came, a procession of men and women separating and
spreading throughout the lateral stone aisles, taking their seats.
In silence.
Those with torches stood equidistant from each other on graduating
levels against opposite walls.
All eyes were on the withered body beyond the latticework of gold.
Their concentration was absolute; it was as if they drew sustenance
from it.
In silence.
Suddenly, without warning, the sound of the hollydawn shattered
the stillness with the impact of an explosion. The
thunderous, wailing lament seemed to burst from the bowels of
rock-covered earth, crashing upward against the stone, thrusting out of
the huge pit that was the grave of Acquaba.
McAuliff felt the breath leaving his lungs, the blood rushing to his
head. He buried his face between his knees, his hands clamped over his
ears, his whole body shaking.
The cry reached a crescendo, a terrible screaming rush of air that
swelled to a pitch of frenzy. No human ears could stand it!
thought Alex as he trembled… as he had never before trembled in his
life.
And then it was over and the silence returned.
McAuliff slowly sat up, lowering his hands, gripping the stone
beneath him in an effort to control the violent spasms he felt shooting
through his flesh. His eyes were blurred from the blood which had raced
to his temples; they cleared slowly, in stages, and he looked out at
the row of Halidonites, at these chosen members of the Tribe of Acquaba.
They were - each one, all - still staring, eyes fixed on the
ancient, withered body behind the golden reeds.
Alex knew they had remained exactly as they were throughout the
shattering madness that had nearly driven him out of his mind.
He turned to Daniel; involuntarily he gasped. The Minister of
Council, too, was transfixed, his black eyes wide, his jaw set, his
face immobile. But he was different from all the others; there were
tears streaming down Daniel's cheeks.
'You're mad… all of you,' said Alex quietly. 'You're insane…'
Daniel did not respond. Daniel could not hear him. He was in a
hypnotic state.
They all were. Everyone in that carved-out shell beneath the earth.
Nearly a hundred men and women inextricably held by some force beyond
his comprehension.
Autosuggestion. Self-somnipathy. Group hypnosis. Whatever the
catalyst, each individual in that primitive amphitheatre was
mesmerized beyond reach. On another plane… time and space unfamiliar.
Alexander felt himself an intruder; he was observing a ritual too
private for his eyes.
Yet he had not asked to be here. He had been forced in - ripped out
of place - and made to bear witness.
Still, the witnessing filled him with sorrow. And he could not
understand. So he looked over at the body that was once the giant,
Acquaba.
He stared at the shrivelled flesh of the once-black face. At the
closed eyes, so peaceful in death. At the huge hands folded so strongly
across the reddish black robe.
Then back at the face… the eyes… the eyes… Oh, my God! Oh, Christ!
The shadows were playing tricks… terrible, horrible tricks. The body of Acquaba moved. The eyes opened; the fingers of the immense hands spread, the
wrists turned, the arms raised… inches above the ancient cloth. In supplication.
And then there was nothing.
Only a shrivelled corpse behind a latticework of gold.
McAuliff pressed himself back against the wall of stone, trying
desperately to find his sanity. He closed his eyes and breathed deeply,
gripping the rock beneath him.
He did not know how long it was - a minute, an hour, a decade of
terror - until he heard Daniel's words.
'You saw it.' A statement made gently. 'Do not be afraid. We shall
never speak of it again. There is no harm. Only good.'
Alexander could not talk. The perspiration rolled down his
face. And the carved-out council ground was cool.
Daniel stood up and walked to the centre of the platform of rock.
Instead of addressing the Tribe of Acquaba, he turned to McAuliff. His
words were whispered, but, as before, they were clear and precise,
echoing off the walls.
'The lessons of Acquaba touch all men, as the lessons of all
prophets touch all men. But few listen. Still, the work must go on. For
those who can do it. It is really as simple as that. Acquaba was
granted the gift of great riches… beyond the imaginations of those who
will never listen; who will only steal and corrupt… So we go out into
the world without the world's knowledge. And we do what we can… It must
ever be so, for if the world knew, the world would impose itself and
the Halidon, the Tribe of Acquaba, and the lessons of Acquaba would be
destroyed… We are not fools, Dr McAuliff. We know with whom we speak,
with whom we share our secrets. And our love… But do not mistake us. We
can kill; we will kill to protect the vaults of Acquaba. In that we are
dangerous. In that we are absolute. We will destroy ourselves and
the vaults if the world outside interferes with us.
'I, as Minister of Council, ask you to rise, Dr McAuliff. And turn
yourself away from the Tribe of Acquaba, from this Council of the
Halidon, and face the wall. What you will hear, staring only at stone,
are voices, revealing locations and figures. As I mentioned, we are not
fools. We understand the specifics of the marketplace. But you will not
see faces, you will never know the identities of those who speak. Only
know that they go forth bearing the wealth of Acquaba.
'We dispense vast sums throughout the world, concentrating as best
we can on the areas of widespread human suffering. Pockets of famine,
displacement… futility. Untold thousands are helped, daily by the
Halidon. Daily. In practical ways.
'Please rise and face the wall, Dr McAuliff.'
Alexander got up from the block of stone and turned. For a brief
instant his eyes fell on the corpse of Acquaba. He looked away and
stared at the towering sheet of rock.
Daniel continued. 'Our contributions are made without thought of
political gain or influence. They are made because we have the
concealed wealth and the commitment to make them. The lessons of
Acquaba.
'But the world is not ready to accept our ways, Acquaba's ways. The
global mendacity would destroy us, cause us to destroy ourselves,
perhaps. And that we cannot permit.
'So understand this, Dr McAuliff. Beyond the certainty of your own
death, should you reveal what you know of the Tribe of Acquaba, there
is another certainty of far greater significance than your life: the
work of the Halidon will cease. That is our ultimate threat…'
One by one, the voices recited their terse statements:
'Afro axis. Ghana. Fourteen thousand bushels of grain. Conduit:
Smythe Brothers, Capetown. Barclay's Bank…'
'Sierra Leone. Three tons medical supplies. Conduit: Baldazi
Pharmaceuticals, Algiers. Bank of Constantine…'
'Indo-China axis. Vietnam, Mekong , Quan Tho provinces Radiology and
laboratory personnel and supplies. Conduit: Swiss Red Cross. Bank of
America…'
'Southwest Hemisphere axis. Brazil. Rio de Janiero. Typhoid serum.
Conduit: Surgical Salizar. Banco Terceiro, Rio…'
'Northwest Hemisphere axis. West Virginia. Appalachia. Twenty-four
tons food supplies. Conduit: Atlantic Warehousing. Chase Manhattan, New
York…'
'India axis. Dacca. Refugee camps. Inoculation serums, medicals.
Conduit: International Displacement Organization. World Bank, Burma…'
The voices of men and women droned on, the phrases clipped, yet
somehow gentle. It took nearly an hour, and McAuliff began to recognize
that many spoke twice, but always with different information. Nothing
was repeated.
Finally there was silence.
A long period of silence. And then Alexander felt a hand on his
shoulder. He turned, and Daniel's eyes bore in on him.
'Do you understand?'
'Yes, I understand,' McAuliff said.
They walked across the field towards the lake. The sounds of the
forest mingled with the hum of the mountains and the crashing of the
waterfall nearly a mile to the north.
They stood on the embankment, and Alex bent down, picked up a small
stone, and threw it into the black, shining lake that reflected the
light of the moon. He looked at Daniel.
'In a way, you're as dangerous as the rest of them. One man… with so
much… operating beyond reach. No checks, no balances. It would be so
simple for good to become evil, evil good. Malcolm said your… term
isn't guided by a calendar.'
'It is not. I am elected for life. Only I can terminate my office.'
'And pick your successor?'
'I have influence. The council, of course, has the final
disposition.'
'Then I think you're more dangerous.'
'I do not deny it.'
THIRTY
The trip to Montego was far easier than the circuitous march from
the Martha Brae. To begin with, most of the journey was by vehicle.
Malcolm, his robes replaced by Savile Row clothing, led Alexander
around the lake to the southeast, where they were met by a runner who
took them to the base of a mountain cliff, hidden by jungle. A steel
lift, whose thick chains were concealed by mountain rocks, carried them
up the enormous precipice to a second runner, who placed them in a
small tram, which was transported by cable on a path below the skyline
of the forest.
At the end of the cable ride, a third runner took them through a
series of deep caves, identified by Malcolm as the Quick Step Grotto.
He told Alex that the Quick Step was named for seventeenth-century
buccaneers who raced from Bluefield's Bay overland to bury treasure at
the bottom of the deep pools within the caves. The other derivation -
the one many believed more appropriate - was that if a traveller did
not watch his feet, he could easily slip and plummet into a crevice.
Injury was certain, death not impossible.
McAuliff stayed close to the runner, his flashlight beamed at the
rocky darkness in front of him.
Out of the caves, they proceeded through a short stretch of jungle
to the first definable road they had seen. The runner activated a
portable radio; ten minutes later a 'desert jeep' came out of the
pitch-black hollows from the west and the runner bid them good-bye.
The crude-looking vehicle travelled over a criss-cross pattern of
back-country roads, the driver keeping his engine as quiet as possible,
coasting on descending hills, shutting off his headlights whenever they
approached a populated area. The drive lasted a half-hour. They passed
through the Maroon village of Accompong and swung south several miles
to a flat stretch of grassland.
In the darkness, on the field's edge, a small aeroplane was rolled
out from under a camouflage of fern and acacia. It was a two-seater
Comanche; they climbed in, and Malcolm took the controls.
'This is the only difficult leg of the trip,' he said as they taxied
for takeoff. 'We must fly close to the ground to avoid interior radar.
Unfortunately, so do the ganga aircraft, the drug smugglers. But we
will worry less about the authorities than we will about collision.'
Without incident, but not without signalling several ganga planes,
they landed on the grounds of an outlying farm, southwest of Unity
Hall. From there it was a fifteen-minute ride into Montego Bay.
'It would arouse suspicions for us to stay in the exclusively black
section of the town. You, for your skin, me, for my speech and my
clothes. And tomorrow we must have mobility in the white areas.'
They drove to the Cornwall Beach Hotel and registered ten minutes
apart. Reservations had been made for adjoining but not connecting
rooms.
It was two o'clock in the morning, and McAuliff fell into bed
exhausted. He had not slept in nearly forty-eight hours. And yet, for a
very long time, sleep did not come.
He thought about so many things. The brilliant, lonely, awkward
James Ferguson and his sudden departure to the Craft Foundation.
Defection, really. Without explanation. Alex hoped Craft was
Jimbo-mon's solution. For he would never be trusted again.
And of the sweetly charming Jensens… up to their so-respectable
chins in the manipulations of Dunstone, Limited.
Of the 'charismatic leader' Charles Whitehall, waiting to ride
'nigger-Pompei's horse' through Victoria Park. Whitehall was no match
for the Halidon. The Tribe of Acquaba would not tolerate him.
Nor did the lessons of Acquaba include the violence of Lawrence, the
boy-man giant… successor to Barak Moore.
Lawrence's 'revolution' would not come to pass. Not the way he
conceived it.
Alex wondered about Sam Tucker. Tuck, the gnarled rocklike force of
stability. Would Sam find what he was looking for in Jamaica? For
surely he was looking.
But most of all McAuliff thought about Alison. Of her lovely half
laugh and her clear blue eyes and the calm acceptance that was her
understanding. How very much he loved her.
He wondered, as his consciousness drifted into the grey, blank void
that was sleep, if they would have a life together.
After the madness.
If he was alive.
If they were alive.
He had left a wake-up call for 6.45. Quarter to twelve, London time.
Noon. For the Halidon.
The coffee arrived in seven minutes. Eight minutes to twelve.
The telephone rang three minutes later. Five minutes to noon, London
time. It was Malcolm, and he was not in his hotel room. He was at the
Associated Press Bureau, Montego Bay office on St James Street. He
wanted to make sure that Alex was up and had his radio on. Perhaps his
television as well.
McAuliff had both instruments on.
Malcolm the Halidonite would call him later.
At three minutes to seven - twelve, London time - there was a rapid
knocking on the hotel door. Alexander was startled. Malcolm had said
nothing about visits; no one knew he was in Montego Bay. He approached
the door.
'Yes?'
The words from the other side of the wood were spoken hesitantly, in
a deep, familiar voice.
'Is that you… McAuliff?'
And instantly Alexander understood. The symmetry, the timing was
extraordinary; only extraordinary minds could conceive and execute such
a symbolic coup.
He opened the door.
R. C. Holcroft, British Intelligence, stood in the corridor, his
slender frame rigid, his face an expression of suppressed shock.
'Good God. It is you… I didn't believe them. Your signals from the
river… There is nothing irregular, nothing at all!'
'That,' said Alex, 'is about as disastrous a judgment as I've ever
heard.'
'They dragged me out of my room in Kingston… before daylight. Drove
me up into the hills—'
'And flew you to Montego,' completed McAuliff, looking at his watch.
'Come in, Holcroft. We've got a minute and fifteen seconds to go.'
'For what?'
'We'll both find out.'
The lilting, high-pitched Caribbean voice on the radio proclaimed
over the music the hour of seven in the 'sunlight paradise of Montego
Bay.' The picture on the television set was a sudden fade-in shot of a
long expanse of white beach… a photograph. The announcer, in overly
Anglicized tones, was extolling the virtues of 'our island life' and
welcoming 'all visitors from the cold climates,' pointing out
immediately that there was a blizzard in New York.
Twelve o'clock London time.
Nothing unusual.
Nothing.
Holcroft stood by the window, looking out at the blue-green waters
of the bay. He was silent; his anger was the fury of a man who had lost
control because he did not know the moves his opponents were making.
And, more important, why they were making them.
The manipulator manipulated.
McAuliff sat on the bed, his eyes on the television set, now a
travelogue fraught with lies about the 'beautiful city of Kingston.'
Simultaneously, the radio on the bedside table blared its combination
of cacophonic music and frantic commercials for everything from
Coppertone to Hertz.
Intermittently, there was the syrupy female
Voice-of-the-Ministry-of-Health, telling the women of the island that
'you do not have to get pregnant,' followed by the repetition of the
weather… the forecasts never 'partly cloudy,' always 'partly sunny.'
Nothing unusual.
Nothing.
It was eleven minutes past twelve London time.
Still nothing.
And then it happened.
'We interrupt this broadcast....'
And, like an insignificant wave born of the ocean depths - unnoticed
at first, but gradually swelling, suddenly bursting out of the waters
and cresting in controlled fury - the pattern of terror was clear.
The first announcement was merely the prelude - a single flute
outlining the significant notes of a theme shortly to be developed.
Explosion and death in Port Antonio.
The east wing of the estate of Arthur Craft had been blown up by
explosives, the resulting conflagration gutting most of the house.
Among the dead was feared to be the patriarch of the Foundation.
There were rumours of rifle fire preceding the series of explosions.
Port Antonio was in panic.
Rifle fire. Explosives.
Rare, yes. But not unheard of on this island of scattered violence.
Of contained anger.
The next 'interruption' followed in less than ten minutes. It was -
appropriately, thought McAuliff - a news report out of London. This
intrusion warranted a line of moving print across the television
screen: 'Killings in London Full Report on News Hour.' The radio
allowed a long musical commercial to run its abrasive course before the
voice returned, now authoritatively bewildered.
The details were still sketchy, but not the conclusions. Four
high-ranking figures in government and industry had been slain. A
director of Lloyds, an accounts official of Inland Revenue, and two
members of the House of Commons, both
chairing trade committees of consequence. The methods: two now
familiar, two new - dramatically oriented.
A high-powered rifle fired from a window into a canopied entrance in
Belgravia Square. A dynamited automobile, blown up in the Westminster
parking area. Then the new: poison - temporarily identified as
strychnine - administered in a Beefeater martini, causing death in ten
minutes; a horrible, contorted, violent death… the blade of a knife
thrust into moving flesh on a crowded corner of The Strand.
Killings accomplished; no killers apprehended. R. C. Holcroft stood
by the hotel window listening to the excited tones of the Jamaican
announcer. When Holcroft spoke, his shock was clear.
'My God… Every one of those men at one time or another was
under the glass—'
'The what?'
'Suspected of high crimes. Malfeasance, extortion, fraud… Nothing
was ever proved out.'
'Something's been proved out now.'
Paris was
next. Reuters sent out the first dispatches picked up by all the wire
services within minutes. Again the number was… four. Four Frenchmen -
actually, three French men and one woman. But still four.
Again, they were prominent figures in industry and government. And
the MOs were identical: rifle, explosives, strychnine, knife.
The French woman was a proprietor of a Paris fashion house. A
ruthless, hated, sadistic lesbian long considered an associate of the
Corsicans. She was shot from a distance as she emerged from a doorway
on the St Germain des Pres. Of the three men, one was a member of the
president's all-important Elysee Financial; his Citroen exploded when
he turned his ignition on in the Rue de Bac. The two other Frenchmen
were powerful executives in shipping companies - Marseilles-based,
under Paraguyan flag - owned by the Marquis de Chatellarault. The first
spastically lurched and died over a cafe table in the Montmarte
- strychnine in his late-morning espresso. The second had his chest
torn
open by a butcher's knife on the crowded sidewalk outside the Georges
Cinque Hotel.
Minutes after Paris came Berlin. The Berlin of the Bonn government.
There were only rumours out of the East - sirens were heard beyond the
bridges, the Wall; police radios were intercepted - but nothing was
clear.
On the Kurfurstendam Strasse, the Unter Schriftfuhrer of
the Bundestag's AuBenpolitik was shot from the roof of a
nearby building as he was on his way to a luncheon appointment. A Direktor
of Mercedes Benz stopped for a traffic light on the Autobahn, where two
grenades were thrown into the front seat of his car, demolishing
automobile and driver in seconds. A known narcotics dealer was given
poison in his glass of heavy lager at the Grand Hotel, and an appointee
of the Einkunfte Finanzamt was stabbed expertly - death
instantaneous - through the heart in the crowded lobby of the
government building.
Rome followed. A financial strategist for the Vatican, a despised
cardinal devoted to the church militants' continuous extortion of the
uninformed poor, was dropped by an assassin firing a rifle from behind
a Bernini in St Peter's Square. A funzionario of Milan's
Mondadori drove into a cul-de-sac on the Via Condotte, where his
automobile exploded. A lethal dose of strychnine was administered with
cappuccino to a direttore of customs at Rome's Fiumicino
Airport. A knife was plunged into the ribs of a powerful broker of the Borsa
Valori as he walked down the Spanish Steps into the Via Due
Macelli.
London, Paris, Berlin, Rome.
And always the figure was four… and the methods identical: rifle,
explosives, strychnine, knife. Four diverse, ingenious modi operandi.
Each strikingly news-conscious, oriented for shock. All killings the
work of expert professionals; no killers caught at the scenes of
violence.
The radio and the television stations no longer made attempts to
continue regular programming. As the names came, so too did
progressively illuminating biographies.
And another pattern emerged, lending credence to Holcroft's summary
of the four slain Englishmen: The victims were not ordinary men of
stature in industry and government. There was a common stain running
through the many that aroused suspicions about the rest. They were
individuals not alien to official scrutinies. As the first hints began
to surface, curious newsmen dug swiftly and furiously, dredging up
scores of rumours, and more than rumour - facts: indictments (generally
reduced to the inconsequential), accusations from injured competitors,
superiors, and subordinates (removed, recanted… unsubstantiated),
litigations (settled out of court or dropped for lack of evidence).
It was an elegant cross section of the suspected. Tarnished, soiled,
an aura of corruption.
All this before the hands on McAuliff's watch read nine o'clock. Two
hours past twelve, London time. Two o'clock in the afternoon in Mayfair.
Commuter-time in Washington and New York.
There was no disguising the apprehension felt as the sun made its
way from the east over the Atlantic. Speculation was rampant, growing
in hysteria; a conspiracy of international proportions was suggested, a
cabal of self-righteous fanatics violently implementing its vengeances
throughout the civilized world.
Would it touch the shores of the United States?
But, of course, it had.
Two hours ago.
The awkward giant was just beginning to stir, to recognize the
signs of the spreading plague.
The first news reached Jamaica out of Miami. Radio Montego picked up
the overlapping broadcasts, sifting, sorting… finally relaying by tape
the words of the various newscasters as they rushed to verbalize the
events spewing out of the wire service teletypes.
Washington. Early morning. The undersecretary of the budget - a
patently political appointment resulting from openly questioned
campaign contributions - was shot while jogging on a back-country road
near his residence in Arlington; the weapon was a high-powered rifle,
probably with a
telescopic sight, fired from a hill above the road. The body was
discovered by a motorist at 8.20; the time of death estimated to be
within two hours.
Noon. London time.
New York. At approximately seven o'clock in the morning, when one
Angelo Dellacroce - reputed Mafia figure - stepped into his Lincoln
Continental in the attached garage of his Scarsdale home, there was an
explosion that ripped the entire enclosure out of its foundation,
instantly killing Dellacroce and causing considerable damage to the
rest of the house. Dellacroce was rumoured to be…
Noon. London time.
Phoenix, Arizona. At approximately 5.15 in the morning, one Harrison
Renfield, international financier and real-estate magnet with extensive
Caribbean holdings, collapsed in his private quarters at the
Thunderbird Club after a late party with associates. He had ordered a
pre-dawn breakfast; poison was suspected, as a Thunderbird waiter was
found unconscious down the hall from Renfield's suite. An autopsy was
ordered… Five o'clock, Mountain time.
Twelve, noon. London.
Los Angeles, California. At precisely 4.00A.M. the junior Senator
from Nevada - recently implicated (but not indicted) in a Las Vegas tax
fraud - stepped off a launch on to a pier in Marina del Ray. The launch
was filled with guests returning from the yacht of a motion-picture
producer. Somewhere between the launch and the base of the pier, the
junior Senator from Nevada had his stomach ripped open with a blade so
long and a cut so deep that the cartilage of his backbone protruded
through spinal lacerations. He fell among the revellers, carried along
by the boisterous crowd until the eruptions of the warm fluid that
covered so many was recognized for the blood it was. Panic resulted,
the terror alcoholic but profound. Four in the morning. Pacific time.
Twelve noon. London.
McAuliff looked over at the silent, stunned Holcroft.
'The last death reported was four in the morning… twelve o'clock in
London. In each country four died, with four corresponding - identical
- methods of killing… The Arawak units of four - the death odyssey…
that's what they call it.'
'What are you talking about?'
'Deal with the Halidon, Holcroft. You have no choice; this is their
proof… They said it was only the tip.'
The tip?'
'The tip of the Dunstone iceberg.'
'Impossible demands!' roared R. C. Holcroft, the
capillaries in his face swollen, forming splotches of red anger over
his skin. 'We will not be dictated to by goddamn niggers'.'
'Then you won't get the list.'
'We'll force it out of them. This is no time for treaties
with savages'
Alexander thought of Daniel, of Malcolm, of the incredible lakeside
community, of the grave of Acquaba… the vaults of Acquaba. Things he
could not, would not, talk about. He did not have to, he considered.
'You think what's happened is the work of savages? Not the killings, I
won't defend that. But the methods, the victims… Don't kid yourself.'
'I don't give a damn for your opinions…' Holcroft walked
rapidly to the telephone on the bedside table. Alex remained in a chair
by the television set. It was the sixth time Holcroft had tried to
place his call. The Britisher had only one telephone number he could
use in Kingston; embassy telephones were off-limits for clandestine
operations. Each time he had managed to get a line through to Kingston
- not the easiest feat in Montego - the number was busy.
'Damn! Goddamn it!' exploded the agent.
'Call the embassy before you have a coronary,' said McAuliff. 'Deal
with them.'
'Don't be an ass,' replied Holcroft. 'They don't know who I am. We
don't use embassy personnel.'
'Talk to the ambassador.'
'What in God's name for? What am I supposed to say? "Pardon me, Mr
Ambassador, but my name's so-and-so. I happen to be…" The bloody
explanation - if he'd listen to it without cutting me off - would take
the better part of an hour. And then the damn fool would start sending
cables to Downing Street!' Holcroft marched back to the window.
'What are you going to do?'
'They've isolated me, you understand that, don't you?' Holcroft
remained at the window, his back to McAuliff.
'I think so.'
'The purpose is to cut me off, force me to absorb the full impact of
the… past three hours…' The Britisher's voice trailed off in thought.
McAuliff wondered. 'That presupposes they know the Kingston
telephone; that they shorted it out somehow.'
'I don't think so,' said Holcroft, his eyes still focused on the
waters of the bay. 'By now Kingston knows I've been taken. Our men are
no doubt activating every contact on the island, trying to get a
bearing on my whereabouts. The telephone would be in constant use.'
'You're not a prisoner; the door's not locked.' Alex suddenly
wondered if he was correct. He got out of the chair, crossed to the
door and opened it.
Down the corridor were two Jamaicans by the bank of elevators. They
looked at McAuliff, and although he did not know them, he recognized
the piercing, controlled calm of their expressions. He had seen such
eyes, such expressions high in the Flagstaff mountains. They were
members of the Halidon.
Alex closed the door and turned to Holcroft, but before he could say
anything, the Britisher spoke, his back still to Alex.
'Does that answer you?' he asked quietly.
'There are two men in the corridor,' said McAuliff, pointlessly.
'You knew that.'
'I didn't know it, I merely presumed it. There are fundamental
rules.'
'And you still think they're savages?'
'Everything is relative.' Holcroft turned from the window and faced
Alex. 'You're the conduit now. I'm sure they've told you that.'
'If "conduit" means I take back your answer, then yes.'
'Merely the answer? They've asked for no substantive guarantees?'
The Englishman seemed bewildered.
'I think that comes in Phase Two. This is a step contract, I gather.
I don't think they'll take the word of Her Majesty's obedient servant.
He uses the term "nigger" too easily.'
'You're an ass,' said Holcroft.
'You're an autocratic cipher,' replied McAuliff, with equal disdain.
'They've got you, agent-mon. They've also got the Dunstone list. You
play in their sandbox… with their "fundamental rules."'
Holcroft hesitated, repressing his irritation. 'Perhaps not. There's
an avenue we haven't explored. They'll take you back… I should like to
be taken with you.'
'They won't accept that.'
'They may not have a choice—'
'Get one thing straight,' interrupted Alex. 'There's a survey team
in the Cock Pit - white and black - and no one's
going to jeopardize a single life.'
'You forget,' said Holcroft softly - aloofly. 'We know the location
within a thousand yards.'
'You're no match for those guarding it. Don't think you are… One
misstep, one deviation, and there are mass executions.'
'Yes,' said the Britisher. 'I believe just such a massacre took
place previously. The executioners being those whose methods and
selections you admire so.'
'The circumstances were different. You don't know the truth.'
'Oh, come off it, McAuliff! I shall do my best to protect the lives
of your team, but I'm forced to be honest with you. They are no more
the first priority for me than they are for the Halidon! There are more
important considerations.' The Englishman stopped briefly, for
emphasis. 'And I can assure you, our resources are considerably more
than those of a sect of fanatic… coloureds. I'd advise you not to
change your allegiances at this late hour.'
The announcer on the television screen had been droning, reading
from pages of script handed to him by others in the studio. Alex
couldn't be sure - he had not been listening - but he thought he had
heard the name, spoken differently… as if associated with new or
different information. He looked down at the set, holding up his hand
for Holcroft to be quiet.
He had heard the name.
And as the first announcement three hours ago had been the prelude -
a single instrument marking a thematic commencement - McAuliff
recognized this as the coda. The terror had been orchestrated to a
conclusion.
The announcer looked earnestly into the camera, then back to the
papers in his hand.
'To repeat the bulletin. Savanna-la-Mar. Shooting broke out at the
private Negril airfield. A band of unidentified men ambushed a party of
Europeans as they were boarding a small plane for Weston Favel. The
French industrialist Henri Salanne, the Marquis de Chatellerault, was
killed along with three men said to be in his employ… No motive is
known. The marquis was the houseguest of the Wakefield family. The
pilot, a Wakefield employee, reported that his final instructions from
the marquis were to fly south of Weston Favel at low altitude towards
the interior grasslands. The parish police are questioning…'
Alex walked over to the set and switched it off. He turned to
Holcroft; there was very little to say, and he wondered if the
Intelligence man would understand.
'That was a priority you forgot about, wasn't it, Holcroft? Alison
Booth. Your filthy link to Chatellerault… The expendable Mrs Booth, the
bait from Interpol… Well, you're here, agent-mon, and
Chatellerault is dead. You're in a hotel room in Montego Bay. Not in
the Cock Pit. Don't talk to me about resources, you son of a bitch.
You've only got one. And it's me.'
The telephone rang. McAuliff reached it first.
'Yes?'
'Don't interrupt me; there is no time' came the agitated words from
Malcolm. 'Do as I say. I have been spotted. MI5… native. One I knew in
London. We realized they would fan out; we did not think they would
reach Montego so quickly—'
'Stop running,' broke in Alex, looking at Holcroft, 'MI5 will
co-operate. They have no choice—'
'You damn fool. I said listen… There are two men in the
corridor. Go out and tell them I called. Say the word "Ashanti." Have
you got that, mon? "Ashantee."'
Alex had not heard the Anglicized Malcolm use 'mon' before. Malcolm
was in a state of panic. 'I've got it.'
'Tell them I said to get out! Now!' The hotels will be
watched. You will all have to move fast—'
'Goddamn it!' interrupted Alex again. 'Now you listen to me.
Holcroft's right here and—'
'McAuliff.' The sound of Malcolm's voice was low, cutting,
demanding attention. 'British Intelligence, Caribbean Operations, has a
total of fifteen West Indian specialists. That is the budget. Of those
fifteen, seven have been bought by Dunstone, Limited.'
The silence was immediate, the implication clear. 'Where are you?'
'In a pay phone outside McNabs. It is a crowded street; I will do my
best to melt.'
'Be careful in crowded streets. I've been listening to the news.'
'Listen well, my friend. That is what this is all about.'
'You said they spotted you. Are they there now?'
'It is difficult to tell. We are dealing with Dunstone now. Even we
do not know everyone on its payroll… But they will not want to kill me.
Any more than I want to be taken alive… Good luck, McAuliff… We are
doing the right thing.'
With these words, Malcolm hung up the telephone. Alexander instantly
recalled a dark field at night on the outskirts of London, near the
banks of the river Thames. And the sight of two dead West Indians in a
government automobile. Any more than I want to be taken alive…
Cyanide. We are doing the right thing…
Death.
Unbelievable. Yet very, very real.
McAuliff gently replaced the telephone in its cradle. As he did, he
had the fleeting thought that his gesture was funereal.
This was no time to think of funerals.
'Who was that?' asked Holcroft.
'A fanatic nigger who, in my opinion - which I realize doesn't
interest you - is worth a dozen men like you. You see, he doesn't lie.'
'I've had enough of your sanctimonious claptrap, McAuliff!' The
Englishman spat out his words in indignation. 'Your fanatic doesn't pay
one million dollars, either. Nor, I suspect, does he jeopardize his own
interests for your well-being, as we have done constantly.
Furthermore—'
'He just did,' interrupted Alex as he crossed the room. 'And if I'm
a target, so are you.'
McAuliff reached the door, opened it swiftly, and ran out into the
corridor towards the bank of elevators. He stopped.
There was no one there.
THIRTY ONE
It was a race in blinding sunlight, somehow macabre because of the
eye-jolting reflections from the glass and chrome and brightly coloured
metals on the Montego streets. And the profusion of people. Crowded,
jostling, black and white; thin men and fat women - the former with
their goddamned cameras, the latter in foolish-looking rhinestone
sunglasses. Why did he notice these things? Why did they irritate him?
There were fat men, too. Always with angry faces; silently, stoically
reacting to the vacuous-looking, thin women at their sides.
And the hostile black eyes staring out from wave after wave of black
skin. Thin, black faces - somehow always thin - on top of bony, black
bodies - angular, beaten, slow.
These then were the blurred, repeating images imprinted on the
racing pages of his mind.
Everything… everyone was instantly categorized in the frantic,
immediate search for an enemy.
The enemy was surely there.
It had been there… minutes ago.
McAuliff had rushed back into the room. There was no time to explain
to the furious Holcroft; it was only necessary to make the angry
Britisher obey. Alex did so by asking him if he had a gun, then
pulling out his own, furnished him by Malcolm on the night before.
The sight of McAuliffs weapon caused the agent to accept the moment.
He removed a small, inconspicuous Rycee automatic from a belt holster
under his jacket.
Alexander had grabbed the seersucker coat - this too furnished by
Malcolm on the previous night - and thrown it over his arm, concealing
his revolver.
Together the two men had slipped out of the room and run down the
corridor to the staircase beyond the bank of elevators. On the concrete
landing they found the first of the Halidonites.
He was dead. A thin line of blood formed a perfect circle around his
neck below the swollen skin of his face and the extended tongue and
blank, dead, bulging eyes. He had been garrotted swiftly,
professionally.
Holcroft had bent down; Alexander was too repelled by the sight to
get closer. The Englishman had summarized. Professionally.
'They know we're on this floor. They don't know which rooms. The
other poor bastard's probably with them.'
'That's impossible. There wasn't time. Nobody knew where
we were.'
Holcroft had stared at the lifeless black, and when he spoke,
McAuliff recognized the profound shock of the Intelligence man's anger.
'Oh, God, I've been blind? In that instant,
Alexander, too, understood. British Intelligence, Caribbean
Operations, has a total of fifteen West Indian specialists. That's the
budget. Of those fifteen, seven have been bought by Dunstone, Limited
The words of Malcolm the Halidonite. And Holcroft the manipulator had
just figured it out. The two men had raced down the staircase. When
they reached the lobby floor, Holcroft stopped and did a strange thing.
He removed his belt, slipping the holster off and placing it in his
pocket. He then wound the belt in a tight circle, bent down, and placed
it in a corner. He stood up, looked around, and crossed to a
cigarette-butt receptacle and moved it in front of the belt.
'It's a signalling device, isn't it?' McAuliff had said.
'Yes.
Long-range. External scanner reception; works on verticle arcs. No damn
good inside a structure. Too much interference… thank heaven.'
'You
wanted to be taken?'
'No, not actually. It was always a possibility, I knew that… Any
ideas, chap? At the moment, it's your show.'
'One. I don't know how good it is. An airfield; it's a farm, I
guess. West, on the highway, near a place called Unity Hall… Let's go.'
Alex reached for the knob on the door to the lobby.
'Not that way,' said Holcroft. They'll be watching the lobby. The
street too, I expect. Downstairs. Delivery entrance… maintenance, that
sort of thing. There's bound to be one in the cellars.'
'Wait a minute.' McAuliff had grabbed the English man's arm,
physically forcing him to respond. 'Let's you and I get something
clear. Right now… You've been had. Taken. Your own people
sold
you out. So there won't be any stopping for phone calls, for signalling
anyone on the street. We run but we don't stop. For anything. You do
and you're on your own. I disappear. I don't think you can handle that.'
'Who in hell do you think I'm going to get in touch with? The Prime
Minister?'
'I don't know. I just know that I don't trust you. I don't trust
liars. Or manipulators. And you're both, Holcroft.'
'We all do what we can,' replied the agent coldly, his eyes
unwavering. 'You've learned quickly, Alexander. You're an apt pupil.'
'Reluctantly. I don't think much of the school.'
And the race in the blinding sunlight had begun.
They ran up the curving driveway of the basement garage, directly
into a tan Mercedes sedan that was not parked at that particular
entrance by coincidence. Holcroft and Alexander saw the startled look
on the face of the white driver; then the man reached over across the
seat for a miniature transistorized radio.
In the next few seconds Alex, witnessed an act of violence he would
never forget as long as he lived. An act performed with cold precision.
R. C. Holcroft reached into both his pockets and took out the Rycee
automatic in his right hand, a steel cylinder in his left. He slapped
the cylinder onto the barrel of the weapon, snapped in a clip, and
walked directly to the door of the tan Mercedes Benz. He opened it,
held his hand low, and fired two shots into the driver, killing him
instantly.
The shots were spits. The driver fell onto the dashboard; Holcroft
reached down and picked up the radio with his left hand.
The sun was bright; the strolling crowds kept moving. If any knew an
execution had taken place, none showed it.
The British agent closed the door almost casually.
'My God…' It was as far as Alex got.
'It was the last thing he expected,' said Holcroft rapidly. 'Let's
find a taxi.'
The statement was easier made than carried out. Cabs did not cruise
in Montego Bay. The drivers homed like giant pigeons back to appointed
street corners, where they lined up in European fashion, as much to
discuss the progress of the day with their peers as to find additional
fares. It was a maddening practice; during these moments it was a
frightening one for the two fugitives. Neither knew where the cab
locations were, except the obvious - the hotel entrance - and that was
out.
They rounded the corner of the building, emerging on a free-port
strip. The sidewalks were steaming hot; the crowds of gaudy, perspiring
shoppers were pushing, hauling, tugging, pressing faces against the
window fronts, foreheads and fingers smudging the glass, envying the
unenviable… the shiny. Cars were immobilized in the narrow street, the
honking of horns interspersed with oaths and threats as Jamaican tried
to out-chauffeur Jamaican for the extra tip… and his manhood.
Alexander saw him first, under a green and white sign that read
'MIRANDA HILL' with an arrow pointing south. He was a heavyset,
dark-haired white man in a brown gabardine suit, the jacket buttoned,
the cloth stretched across muscular shoulders. The man's eyes were
scanning the streams of human traffic, his head darting about like that
of a huge pink ferret. And clasped in his left hand, buried in the
flesh of his immense left hand, was a transistorized walkie-talkie
identical to the one Holcroft had taken out of the Mercedes.
Alex knew it would be only seconds before the man spotted them. He
grabbed Holcroft's arm and wished to God both of them were shorter than
they were.
'At the corner! Under the sign… Miranda Hill. The brown suit.'
'Yes. I see.' They were by a low-hanging awning of a free-port
liquor store. Holcroft swung into the entrance, begging his pardon
through the swarm of tourists, their Barbados shirts and Virgin Island
palm hats proof of yet another cruise ship. McAuliff followed
involuntarily; the Britisher had locked Alex's arm in a vicelike grip,
propelling the American in a semicircle, forcing him into the crowded
doorway.
The agent positioned the two of them inside the store, at the far
corner of the display window. The line of sight was direct; the man
under the green and white sign could be seen clearly, his eyes still
searching the crowds. 'It's the same radio,' said Alex.
'If we're lucky, he'll use it. I'm sure they've set up relays… I
know him. He's Unio Corso.'
'That's like a Mafia, isn't it?'
'Not unlike. And far more efficient. He's a Corsican gun. Very
high-priced. Warfield would pay it.' Holcroft clipped his phrases in a
quiet monotone; he was considering strategies. 'He may be our way out.'
'You'll have to be clearer than that,' said Alex.
'Yes, of course.' The
Englishman was imperiously polite. And maddening. 'By now they've
circled the area, I should think. Covering all streets. Within minutes
they'll know we've left the hotel. The signal won't fool them for
long.' Holcroft lifted the radio as unobtrusively as possible to the
side of his head and snapped the circular switch. There was a brief
burst of static; the agent reduced the volume. Several nearby tourists
looked curiously; Alexander smiled foolishly at them. Outside on the
corner, underneath the sign, the Corsican suddenly brought his radio to
his ear. Holcroft looked at McAuliff. 'They've just reached your room.'
'How do you know?'
'They report a cigarette still burning in the ashtray. Nasty habit.
Radio on… I should have thought of that.' The Englishman pursed his
lips abruptly; his eyes indicated recognition. 'An outside vehicle is
circling. The… WIS claims the signal is still inside.'
'WIS?'
Holcroft replied painfully. 'West Indian Specialist. One of my men.'
'Past tense,' corrected Alex.
'They can't raise the Mercedes,' said Holcroft quickly. 'That's it.'
He swiftly shut off the radio, jammed it into his pocket, and looked
outside. The Corsican could be seen listening intently to his
instrument. Holcroft spoke again. 'We'll have to be very quick. Listen
and commit… When our Italian finishes his report, he'll put the radio
to his side. At that instant we'll break through at him. Get your hands
on that radio. Hold it no matter what.'
'Just like that?' asked McAuliff apprehensively. 'Suppose he pulls a
gun?'
'I'll be beside you. He won't have time.'
And the Corsican did not.
As Holcroft predicted, the man under the sign spoke into the radio.
The agent and Alex were beneath the low awning on the street, concealed
by the crowds. The second the Corsican's arm began to descend from the
side of his head, Holcroft jabbed McAuliffs ribs. The two men broke
through the flow of people towards the professional killer.
Alexander reached him first; the man started. His right hand went
for his belt, his left automatically raised the radio. McAuliff grabbed
the Corsican's wrist and threw his shoulder into the man's chest,
slamming him against the pole supporting the sign.
Then the Corsican's whole face contorted spastically; a barking,
horrible sound emerged from his twisted mouth. And McAuliff felt a
burst of warm blood exploding below.
He looked down. Holcroft's hand held a long switchblade. The agent
had ripped the Corsican's stomach open from pelvis to rib cage,
severing the belt, cutting the cloth of the brown gabardine suit.
'Get the radio!' commanded the agent. 'Run south on the east side of
the street. I'll meet you at the next corner. Quickly now!'
Alex's shock was so profound that he obeyed without thought. He
grabbed the radio from the dead hand and plunged into the crowds
crossing the intersection. Only when he was halfway across did he
realize what Holcroft was doing: He was holding up the dead Corsican
against the pole. He was giving him time to get away!
Suddenly he heard the first screams behind him. Then a mounting
crescendo of screams and shrieks and bellowing roars of horror. And
within the pandemonium, there was the piercing shrill of a whistle…
then more whistles, then the thunder of bodies running in the
steaming-hot street.
McAuliff raced… was he running south? was he on
the east side?… he could not think. He could only feel panic. And the
blood.
The blood! The goddamn blood was all over him! People had to see
that!
He passed an outdoor restaurant, a sidewalk cafe. The diners were
all rising from their seats, looking north towards the panicked crowds
and the screams and the whistles… and now the sirens There was an empty
table by a row of planter boxes. On the table was the traditional
red-checked tablecloth beneath a sugar bowl and shakers of salt and
pepper.
He reached over the flowers and yanked the cloth, sending the
condiments crashing to the cement deck, one or all smashing to pieces;
he did not, could not, tell. His only thought was to cover the goddamn
blood, now saturated through his shirt and trousers.
The corner was thirty feet away. What the hell was he supposed to
do? Suppose Holcroft had not got away? Was he supposed to stand there
with the goddamn tablecloth over his front looking like an imbecile
while the streets were in chaos?
'Quickly now,' came the words.
McAuliff turned, grateful beyond his imagination. Holcroft was
directly behind him, and Alex could not help but notice his hands. They
were deep red and shining; the explosion of Corsican blood had left its
mark.
The intersecting street was wider; the sign read 'QUEEN'S DRIVE.' It
curved upward towards the west, and Alex thought he recognized the
section. On the diagonal corner an automobile pulled to a stop; the
driver peered out the window, looking north at the racing people and
sounds of riot.
Alex had to raise his voice to be heard. 'Over there!' he said to
Holcroft. 'That car!'
The Englishman nodded in agreement.
They dashed across the street. McAuliff by now had his wallet out of
his pocket, removing bills. He approached the driver - a middle-aged
black Jamaican - and spoke rapidly.
'We need a ride. I'll pay you whatever you want!'
But the Jamaican just stared at Alexander, his eyes betraying his
sudden fear. And then McAuliff saw: the tablecloth was under his arm -
how did it get under his arm? - and the huge stain of dark red blood
was everywhere.
The driver reached for the gearshift. Alex thrust his right hand
through the window and grabbed the man's shoulder, pulling his arm away
from the dashboard. He threw his wallet to Holcroft, unlatched the
door, and yanked the man out of the seat. The Jamaican yelled and
screamed for help. McAuliff took the bills in his hand and dropped them
on the kerb as he pummelled the black across the sidewalk.
A dozen pedestrians looked on, and most ran, preferring
noninvolvement; others watched, fascinated by what they saw. Two white
teenagers ran towards the money and bent down to pick it up.
McAuliff did not know why, but that bothered him. He took the
necessary three steps and lashed his foot out, smashing one of the
young men in the side of the head.
'Get the hell out of here!' he roared as the teenager fell back,
blood matted instantly along his blond hairline.
'McAuliff!' yelled Holcroft, racing around the car towards
the opposite front door. 'Get in and drive, for God's sake!'
As Alex climbed into the seat, he saw what he knew instantly was the
worst sight he could see at that moment. A block away, from out of the
milling crowds on the street, a tan Mercedes Benz had suddenly
accelerated, its powerful, deep-throated engine signifying its
anticipated burst of speed.
McAuliff pulled the gearshift into drive and pressed the pedal to
the floor. The car responded, and Alex was grateful for the surge of
the racing wheels. He steered into the middle of Queen's Drive, on what
had to be Miranda Hill, and immediately passed two cars… dangerously
close, nearly colliding.
'The Mercedes was coming down the street,' he said to Holcroft. 'I
don't know if they spotted us.'
The Britisher whipped around in the seat, simultaneously withdrawing
the Rycee automatic and the transistorized radio from both pockets. He
snapped on the radio; the static was interspersed with agitated voices
issuing commands and answering excitedly phrased questions.
The language, however, was not English.
Holcroft supplied the reason. 'Dunstone has half the Unio Corso in
Jamaica.'
'Can you understand?'
'Sufficiently… They're at the corner of Queen's Drive and Essex. In
the Miranda Hill district. They've ascertained that the secondary
commotion was us.'
'Translated: They've spotted us.'
'Can this car get a full throttle?'
'It's not bad; no match for a Mercedes, though.'
Holcroft kept the radio at full volume, his eyes still on the rear
window. There was a burst of chatter from the tiny speaker, and at the
same instant McAuliff saw a speeding black Pontiac come over the
incline in front of him, on the right, its brakes screeching, the
driver spinning the wheel. 'Jesus!' he yelled.
'It's theirs!' cried Holcroft. 'Their west patrol just reported
seeing us. Turn! The first chance you get.'
Alex sped to the top of the hill. 'What's he doing?' He yelled
again, his concentration on the road in front, on whatever automobiles
might lie over the crest.
'He's turning… side-slipped halfway down. He's righting it now.'
At the top of the incline, McAuliff spun the wheel to the right,
pressed the accelerator to the floor, and raced past three automobiles
on the steep descent, forcing a single approaching car to crowd the
kerb. 'There's some kind of park about a half a mile down.' He couldn't
be sure of the distance; the blinding sun was careening off a thousand
metal objects… or so it seemed. But he couldn't think of that; he could
only squint. His mind was furiously abstracting flashes of recent
memory. Flashes of another park… in Kingston: St George's. And another
driver… a versatile Jamaican named Rodney.
'So?' Holcroft was bracing himself now, his right hand, pistol
firmly gripped, against the dashboard, the radio, at full volume,
against the seat.
'There's not much traffic. Not too many people either…' Alex swerved
the car once again to pass another automobile. He looked in the
rear-view mirror. The black Pontiac was at the top of the hill behind
them; there were now four cars between them.
'The Mercedes is heading west on Gloucester,' said Holcroft,
breaking in on Alex's thoughts. 'They said Gloucester… Another car is
to proceed along… Sewell…' Holcroft translated rapidly as the voices
spoke, overlapping each other.
'Sewell's on the other side of the district,' said McAuliff, as much
to himself as to the agent. 'Gloucester's the shore road.'
'They've alerted two vehicles. One at North and Fort streets, the
other at Union.'
'That's Montego proper. The business area. They're trying to cut off
at all points… For Christ's sake, there is nothing else left!'
'What are you talking about?' Holcroft had to shout; the screaming
tyres, the wind, the roaring engine did not permit less.
Explanations took time, if only seconds - there were no seconds
left. There would be no explanations, only commands… as there had been
commands years ago. Issued in the frozen hills with no more confidence
than McAuliff felt now.
'Get in the back seat,' he ordered, firmly but not tensely. 'Smash
the rear window; get yourself a clear area… When I swing into the park,
he'll follow. As soon as I'm inside. I'm
going to swerve right and stop. Hard. Start firing the
second you see the Pontiac behind us. Do you have extra clips?'
'Yes.'
'Put in a full one. You've used two shells. Forget that goddamn
silencer, it'll throw you off. Try to get clean shots. Through the
front and side windows. Stay away from the gas tank and the tyres.'
The stone gates to the park were less than a hundred yards away,
seconds away. Holcroft stared at Alex - for but an instant - and began
climbing over the seat to the rear of the automobile.
'You think we can switch cars—'
Perhaps it was a question; McAuliff did not care. He interrupted. 'I
don't know. I just know we can't use this one any longer and we have to
get to the other side of Montego.'
'They'll surely spot their own vehicle…'
'They won't be looking for it. Not for the next ten minutes… if you
can aim straight.'
The gates were on the left now. Alex whipped the steering wheel
around; the car skidded violently as Holcroft began smashing the glass
in the rear window. The automobile behind swerved to the right to avoid
a collision, its horn blaring, the driver screaming. McAuliff sped
through the gate, now holding down the bar of his own horn as a warning.
Inside the gates he slammed on the brakes, spun the wheel to the
right, pressed the accelerator, and jumped the kerb of the drive over
onto the grass. He crashed his foot once again onto the brake pedal;
the car jolted to a stop on the soft turf. In the distance strollers in
the park turned; a couple picnicking stood up.
Alex was not concerned. In seconds the firing would start; the
pedestrians would run for cover, out of the danger zone. Away from the
fire base. Danger zone. Fire base. Cover. Terms from centuries ago.
So then it followed that the strollers in the park were not
pedestrians at all.
They were civilians.
It was war.
Whether the civilians knew it or not.
There was the sudden, ear-shattering screech of tyres.
Holcroft fired through the smashed rear window. The Pontiac swerved
off the drive, hurtled over the opposite kerb, careened off a cluster
of tropic shrubbery, and slammed into a mound of loose earth, dug for
one of a thousand unending park projects. The engine continued at high
speed, but the gears had locked, the wheels still, the horn blasting in
counterpoint to the whining roar of the motor.
Screams could be heard in the distance.
From the civilians.
McAuliff and Holcroft jumped out of the car and raced over grass and
concrete onto grass again. Both had their weapons drawn; it was not
necessary. R. C. Holcroft had performed immaculately. He had fired with
devastating control through the open side window of the Pontiac. The
automobile was untouched but the driver was dead, sprawled over the
wheel. Dead weight against the horn.
The two fugitives divided at the car, each to a door of the front
seat, Alexander on the driver's side. Together they pulled the lifeless
body away from the wheel; the blaring horn ceased, the engine continued
to roar. McAuliff reached in and turned the ignition key.
The silence was incredible.
Yet, still, there were the screams from the distance, from the grass.
The civilians.
They yanked at the dead man and threw the body over the plastic seat
onto the floor behind. Holcroft picked up the transistor radio. It was
in 'on' position. He turned it off. Alexander got behind the wheel and
feverishly tugged at the gearshift.
It did not move, and the muscles in McAuliff's stomach tensed; he
felt his hands trembling.
From out of a boyhood past, long, long forgotten, came the recall.
There was an old car in an old garage; the gears were always sticking.
Start the motor for only an instant.
Off - on. Off - on.
Until the gear teeth unlocked.
He did so. How many times, he would never remember. He would only
remember the cold, calm eyes of R. C. Holcroft watching him.
The Pontiac lurched. First into the mound of earth; then, as Alex
jammed the stick into R, backward - wheels spinning furiously
- over the grass.
They were mobile.
McAuliff whipped the steering wheel into a full circle, pointing the
car towards the cement drive. He pressed the accelerator, and the
Pontiac gathered speed on the soft grass in preparation for its jarring
leap over the kerb.
Four seconds later they sped through the stone gates.
And Alexander turned right. East. Back towards Miranda Hill.
He knew Holcroft was stunned; that did not matter. There was still
no time for explanations, and the Englishman seemed to understand. He
said nothing.
Several minutes later, at the first intersecting road, McAuliff
jumped the light and swung left. North. The sign read 'CORNICHE ANNEX.'
Holcroft spoke.
'You're heading towards the shore road?'
'Yes. It's called Gloucester: It goes through Montego and becomes
Route One.'
'So you're behind the Dunstone car… the Mercedes.'
'Yes.'
'And may I presume that since the last word' - here Holcroft held up
the transistorized walkie-talkie - 'any of them received was from that
park, there's a more direct way back to it? A faster way?'
'Yes. Two. Queen's Drive and Corniche Road. They branch off from
Gloucester.'
'Which, of course, would be the routes they would take.'
'They'd better.'
'And naturally, they would search the park.'
'I hope so.'
R. C. Holcroft pressed his back into the seat. It was a gesture of
temporary relaxation. Not without a certain trace of admiration.
'You are a very apt student, Mr McAuliff.'
'To repeat myself, it's a rotten school,' said Alexander.
They waited in the darkness, in the overgrowth at the edge of the
field. The crickets hammered out the passing seconds. They had left the
Pontiac miles away on a deserted back road in Catherine Mount and
walked to the farm on the outskirts of Unity Hall. They had waited
until nightfall before making the last few miles of the trip.
Cautiously, shelter to shelter; when on the road, as far out of sight
as possible. Finally using the tracks of the Jamaica Railway as their
guideline.
There had been a road map in the glove compartment of the
automobile, and they studied it. It was maddening. Most of the streets
west of Montego proper were unmarked, lines without names, and always
there were the alleys without lines. They passed through a number of
ghetto settlements, aware that the inhabitants had to be sizing them up
- two white men without conceivable business in the area. There was
profit in an assault on such men.
Holcroft had insisted that they both carry their jackets, their
weapons very much in evidence in their belts.
Subalterns crossing through hostile colonial territory, letting the
nigger natives know they carried the magic firesticks that spat death.
Ludicrous.
But there was no assault.
They crossed the Montego River at Westgate; a half-mile away were
the railroad tracks. They ran into an itinerant tramp enclave - a hobo
camp, Jamaica-style - and Holcroft did the talking.
They were insurance inspectors for the company; they had no
objections to the filthy campsite so long as there was no interference
with the line. But should there be interference the penalties would be
stiff indeed.
Ludicrous.
Yet no one bothered them, although the surrounding black eyes were
filled with hatred.
There was a tiny freight pickup at Unity Hall. A single platform
with two wire-encased light bulbs illuminating the barren site. Inside
the weather-beaten rain shelter was an old man drunk on cheap rum.
Painstakingly they elicited enough information from him for McAuliff to
get his bearings. Vague, to be sure, but enough to determine the
related distances from the highway, which veered inland at Parish
Wharf, to the farm district in the southwest section.
By 9.30 they had reached the field.
Now, Alex looked at his watch. It was 10.30.
He was not sure he had made the right decision. He was only sure
that he could not think of any other. He had recalled the lone
farmhouse on the property, remembered seeing a light on inside. There
was no light now. It was deserted.
There was nothing else to do but wait.
An hour passed, and the only sounds were those of the Jamaican
night: the predators foraging, victims taken, unending struggles -
immaterial to all but the combatants.
It was nearly the end of the second hour when they heard it.
Another sound.
An automobile. Driving slowly, its low-geared, muted engine
signalling its apprehension. An intruder very much aware of its
transgression.
Minutes later, in the dim light of a moon sheeted with clouds, they
watched a long figure run across the field, first to the north end,
where a single torch was ignited, then to the south - perhaps four
hundred yards - where the action was repeated. Then the figure dashed
once more to the opposite end.
Another sound. Another intruder. Also muted - this from the darkness
of the sky.
An aeroplane, its engine idling, was descending rapidly.
It touched the ground, and simultaneously the torch at the north end
was extinguished. Seconds later the aircraft came to a stop by the
flame at the south end. A man jumped out of the small cabin; the fire
was put out instantly.
'Let's go!' said McAuliff to the British agent. Together the two men
started across the field.
They were no more than fifty yards into the grass when it happened.
The impact was so startling, the shock so complete, that Alex
screamed involuntarily and threw himself to the ground, his pistol
raised, prepared to fire.
Holcroft remained standing.
For two immensely powerful searchlights had caught them in the
blinding convergence of the cross-beams.
'Put down your weapon, McAuliff,' came the words from beyond the
blinding glare.
And Daniel, Minister of Council for the Tribe of Acquaba, walked
through the light.
THIRTY TWO
'When you came into the area you tripped the photoelectric alarms.
Nothing mysterious.'
They were in the automobile, Daniel in front with the driver,
Holcroft and Alexander in the back seat. They had driven away from the
field, out of Unity Hall, along the coast into Lucea Harbour. They
parked on a deserted section of a dirt road overlooking the water. The
road was one of those native offshoots on the coastal highway unspoiled
by trespassing tourists. The moon was brighter by the ocean's edge,
reflecting off the rippling surface, washing soft yellow light over
their faces.
As they were driving, McAuliff had a chance to study the car they
were in. From the outside it looked like an ordinary,
not-very-distinguished automobile of indeterminate make and vintage -
like hundreds of island vehicles, made from the parts of other cars.
Yet inside the fundamental difference was obvious: It was a
precision-tooled mobile fortress… and communications centre. The
windows were of thick, bullet-proof glass; rubber slots were evident in
the rear and side sections - slots that were for the high-blasting,
short barrelled shotguns clamped below the back of the front seat.
Under the dashboard was a long panel with dials and switches; a
telephone was locked into a recess between two microphones. The engine,
from the sound of it, was one of the most powerful Alex had ever heard.
The Halidon went first class in the outside world.
Daniel was in the process of dismissing McAuliffs astonishment at
the events of the past two hours. It seemed important to the minister
that he convey the reality of the situation. The crisis was
sufficiently desperate for Daniel to leave the community; to risk his
life to be in command.
It was as though he wanted very much for R. C. Holcroft to realize
he was about to deal with an extremely sensible and hard-nosed
adversary.
'We had to make sure you were alone… the two of you, of course. That
you were not somehow followed. There were tense moments this afternoon.
You handled yourselves expertly, apparently. We could not help you.
Congratulations.'
'What happened to Malcolm?' asked Alex.
Daniel paused, then spoke quietly, sadly. 'We do not know yet. We
are looking… He is safe - or dead. There is no middle ground.' Daniel
looked at Holcroft. 'Malcolm is the man you know as Joseph Myers,
Commander Holcroft.'
McAuliff shifted his gaze to the agent. So Holcroft the manipulator
was a Commander. Commander Holcroft, liar, manipulator… and
risker-of-life to save another's.
Holcroft reacted to Daniel's words by closing his eyes for precisely
two seconds. The information was a professional burden he did not care
for; the manipulator was outflanked again.
'Do I have a single black man working for me? For the Service?'
The minister smiled gently. 'By our count, seven. Three, however,
are quite ineffectual.'
'Thank you for enlightening me. I'm sure you can furnish me with
identities… They all look so much alike, you see.'
Daniel accepted the
cliched insult calmly, his smile disappearing, his eyes cold in the
yellow moonlight. 'Yes. I understand the problem. There appears to be
so little to distinguish us… from such a viewpoint. Fortunately, there
are other standards. You will not be needing the identities.'
Holcroft returned Daniel's look without intimidation. 'McAuliff
conveyed your demands. I say to you what I said to him. They're
impossible, of course—'
'Please, Commander Holcroft,' said Daniel rapidly, interrupting,
'there are so many complications, let us not compound them with lies.
From the beginning your instructions were clear. Would you prefer we
deal with the Americans? Or the French? The Germans, perhaps?'
The silence was abrupt. There was a cruelty to it, a blunt execution
of pain. Alexander watched as the two enemies exchanged stares. He saw
the gradual, painful cognizance in Holcroft's eyes.
'Then you know,' said the Englishman softly.
'We know,' replied Daniel simply.
Holcroft remained silent and looked out the window.
The Minister of Halidon turned to McAuliff. 'The global mendacity,
Doctor. Commander Holcroft is the finest Intelligence officer in the
British service. The unit he directs is a co-ordinated effort between
the aforementioned governments. It is, however, co-ordinated in name
only. For MI5 - as the prime investigatory agency - does not apprise
its fellow signatories of its progress.'
'There are good and sufficient reasons for our actions,' said
Holcroft, still looking out the window.
'Reduced to one, is that not right, Commander?… Security. You cannot
trust your allies.'
'Our counterparts are leak-prone. Experience has confirmed this.'
The agent did not take his eyes off the water.
'So you mislead them,' said Daniel. 'You give false information,
tell them you are concentrating in the Mediterranean, then South
America - Argentina, Nicaragua. Even nearby Haiti… But never Jamaica.'
The minister paused for emphasis. 'No, never Jamaica.'
'Standard procedure,' answered Holcroft, allowing Daniel a brief,
wary look.
'Then it will not surprise you to learn that this mistrust is shared
by your foreign confederates. They have sent out teams, their
best men. They are presently tracing down every scrap of information
MI5 has made available. They are working furiously.'
Holcroft snapped his head back to Daniel. 'That is contrary to our
agreement,' he said in an angry monotone. The minister did not smile.
'I
do not think you are in a position to be sanctimonious, Commander.'
Daniel shifted his eyes again to Alexander. 'You see, McAuliff, since
Dunstone, Limited, was a London-based conglomerate, it was agreed to
give the first-level assignment to British.'
Intelligence. It was understandable; MI5 is the best in the free
world; the Commander its best. On the theory that the fewer clandestine
services operating, the less likely were breaches of security, the
British agreed to function alone and keep everyone current. Instead,
they continuously furnished erroneous data.' Daniel now permitted
himself a minor smile. 'In a sense, they were justified. The Americans,
the French, and the Germans were all breaking the agreement,
none had any intention of keeping it. Each was going after Dunstone,
while claiming to leave the field to the English… Dunstone has
to be dismantled. Taken apart economic brick by economic brick. The
world markets can accept no less. But there are so many bricks… Each
government believes that if only it can get there first - get the
Dunstone list before the others… well, arrangements can be made.'
Holcroft could not remain silent. 'I submit - whoever you are - that
we are the logical… executors.'
'The terms "logic" being interchangeable with "deserving". I will
say this for your cause. God, Queen, and Empire have paid heavily in
recent decades. Somewhat out of proportion to their relative sins… But
that is not our concern, Commander. As I said, your instructions were
clear at the outset: Get the Dunstone list at all costs. The cost is
now clear. We will give you the list. You will get out of Jamaica. That
is the price.'
Again, the silence; once more, the exchange of analysing stares. A
cloud passed over the Montego moon, causing a dark shadow to fall over
the faces. Holcroft spoke.
'How can we be sure of its authenticity?'
'Can you doubt us after the events of the day? Remember, it is in
our mutual interest that Dunstone be eliminated.'
'What guarantees do you expect from us?'
Daniel laughed. A laugh formed in humour. 'We do not need guarantees,
Commander. We will know. Can you not understand that? Our
island is not a continent; we know every liaison, conduit, and contact
with whom you function.' The smile from the laugh formed in humour
disappeared. 'These operations will stop. Make whatever settlements you
must, but then no more… Give - really give - Jamaica to its rightful
owners. Struggles, chaos, and all.'
'And' - the Englishman spoke softly - 'if these decisions are
outside of my control—'
'Make no mistake, Commander Holcroft!' Daniel's voice rose, cutting
off the agent. 'The executions that took place today began at noon.
London time. And each day, the chimes in Parliament's clock tower ring
out another noon. When you hear them, remember. What we were capable of
today, we are capable of tomorrow. And we will add the truth of our
motives. England will be a pariah in the community of nations. You
cannot afford that.'
'Your threat is ludicrous!' countered Holcroft, with equal fever.
'As you said, this island is not a continent. We'd go in and destroy
you.'
Daniel nodded and replied quickly. 'Quite possibly. And you should
know that we are prepared for that eventuality. We have been
for over two hundred years. Remarkable, isn't it?… By all you believe
holy, pay the price, Holcroft; take the list and salvage what you can
from Dunstone. You do deserve that. Not that you'll salvage
much; the vultures will fly in from their various geographies and dive
for the carrion. We offer you time, perhaps only a few days. Make the
best of it!'
A red light on the panel beneath the dashboard lit up, throwing a
glow over the front seat. There were the sharp, staccato repeats of a
high-pitched buzzer. The driver reached for the telephone and pulled it
to his ear, held it there for several seconds, and then handed the
instrument to Daniel.
The Minister of the Halidon listened. Alexander saw his face in the
rear-view mirror. Daniel could not conceal his alarm.
And then his anger.
'Do what you can but risk no lives. Our men are to pull
out. No one is to leave the community. That is final. Irreversible!'
He replaced the telephone in its upright recess firmly and turned in
the seat. He looked first at Alexander and then at Holcroft, keeping
his eyes on the Englishman as he spoke sarcastically. 'British expertise,
Commander. John Bull know-how… The West Indian Specialists,
MI5, Caribbean, have just received their orders from Dunstone. They are
to go into the Cock Pit and intercept the survey. They are to make sure
it does not come out.'
'Oh, my-God!' McAuliff pitched forward on the seat. 'Can they reach
them?'
'Ask the eminent authority,' said Daniel bitingly, his eyes wide on
Holcroft. 'They are his men.'
The agent was rigid, as though he had stopped breathing.
Yet it was obvious his mind was operating swiftly, silently.
'They were in contact with the radio receivers… the signals
transmitted from the campsite. The location can be pinpointed—'
'Within a thousand yards,' cut in Alex, completing
Holcroft's statement. 'Yes.'
'You've got to stop them!'
'I'm not sure there's a way—'
'Find one. For Christ's sake, Holcroft, they're going to be
killed!' McAuliff grabbed Holcroft by the lapels of his jacket, yanking
him forward viciously. 'You move, mister. Or I'll kill you!'
'Take your hands—'
Before the agent could finish the obvious, Alexander whipped his
right hand across Holcroft's face, breaking the skin on the
Englishman's lips. 'There isn't anything more, Commander. I
want those guarantees! Now!'
The agent spoke through rivulets of blood. 'I'll do my best. All
I've ever given you was… our best efforts.'
'You son of a bitch!' McAuliff brought his hand back once again. The
driver and Daniel grabbed his arm. 'McAuliff! You'll accomplish nothing!'
roared the minister.
'You tell him to start accomplishing!' Then Alexander
stopped and turned to Daniel, releasing the Englishman.
'You've got people there.' And then McAuliff remembered the terrible
words Daniel had spoken into the telephone: Risk no lives. Our
men… pull back. No one is to leave the community. 'You've got to
get on that phone. Take back what you said. Protect them!'
The minister spoke quietly. 'You must try to understand. There are
traditions, revelations… a way of life extending over two hundred
years. We cannot jeopardize these things.'
Alexander stared at the black man. 'You'd watch them die…
My God, you can't!'
'I am afraid we could. And would. And we should then be faced with
the taking of your life… It would be taken as swiftly…' Daniel turned
up the collar of his shirt, revealing a tiny bulge in the cloth. Tablets,
sewn into the fabric. '… as I would bite into these, should I ever
find myself in a position where it is necessary. I would not think
twice about it.'
'For God's sake, that's you! They're not you; they're no
part of you. They don't know you. Why should they pay with
their lives?'
Holcroft's voice was startling in its quiet incisiveness.
'Priorities, McAuliff. I told you. For them… for us.'
'The accidents of war, Doctor. Combat's slaughter of innocents,
perhaps.' Daniel spoke simply, denying the implication of his words.
'Things written and unwritten—'
'Bullshit!' screamed McAuliff.
The driver removed a pistol from his belt; his action was obvious.
Alexander looked rapidly back and forth between the Minister of the
Halidon and the British Intelligence officer. 'Listen to me. You said
on that phone for them to do what they can. You. Holcroft. You offered
your… goddamned "best efforts." All right. Give me a chance!'
'How?' asked Daniel. 'There can be no Jamaican police, no Kingston
troops.'
The words came back to Alexander. Words spoken by Sam Tucker in the
glow of the campsite fire. A quiet statement made as Sam watched the
figure of Charles Whitehall and the black giant, Lawrence, talking in
the compound. They're
our protection. They may hate each other… They're our protection.
McAuliff whirled on Holcroft. 'How many defectors have you got here?'
'I brought six specialists from London—'
'All but one has sold out
to Dunstone,' interrupted Daniel.
'That's five. How many others could
they pick up?' McAuliff addressed the Halidonite.
'On such short notice, perhaps three or four; probably mercenaries.
That is only a guess… They would be more concerned with speed than
numbers. One automatic rifle in the hands of a single soldier—'
'When did they get the Dunstone orders?' asked Alex swiftly,
breaking off Daniel's unnecessary observations.
'Within the hour is our estimate. Certainly no more than an hour.'
'Could they get a plane?'
'Yes. Ganga aircraft are always for hire. It would take a little
time; ganga pilots are a suspicious breed, but it could be done.'
Alex turned to Holcroft. The agent was wiping his lips with his
fingers… his goddamn fingers, as if dusting the pastry crumbs of his
mouth during tea at the Savoy! 'Can you raise the people monitoring the
signals from the campsite? With that radio?' McAuliff pointed to the
panel under the dashboard. 'I have the frequency—'
'Does that mean yes?'
'Yes.'
'What is the point,' asked Daniel. 'To see if his goddamn
specialists have reached them. To get the position—'
'You want our plane?' interrupted the Minister of the Halidon,
knowing the answer to his question.
'Yes!'
Daniel signalled the driver
to start the car. 'You don't need the position. There is only one place
to land: the grassland two miles southwest of the campsite. We have the
coordinates.'
The automobile lurched out of the parking area, careened off the
primitive border, and sped into the darkness towards the highway.
Holcroft gave the frequency-band decimals to Daniel; the minister
transmitted them, handing a microphone to the British agent.
There was no pickup.
No answer over the airwaves.
'It will take time to get a plane…' Daniel spoke quietly as the car
roared over the wide roadway.
Alex suddenly put his hand on the minister's shoulder. 'Your runner,
the one who used the name of "Marcus." Tell him to get word to Sam
Tucker.'
'I have instructed our men to pull out,' answered Daniel icily.
'Please remember what I told you.'
'For Christ's sake, send him back. Give them a chance!'
'Don't you mean… give her a chance?'
McAuliff wanted - as he had never wanted anything before - to kill
the man. 'You had to say it, didn't you?'
'Yes,' replied Daniel, turning in his seat to look Alexander in the
eye. 'Because it is related to the condition on which you have use of
the plane… If you fail, if the woman is killed, your life is taken
also. You will be executed. Quite simply, with her death you could
never be trusted.'
Alexander acknowledged the penetrating stare of Daniel the
Halidonite. 'Quite simply,' he said, 'my answer is easy. I'll give the
firing order myself.'
R. C. Holcroft leaned forward. His speech was measured precise as
ever. 'I am going in with you, McAuliff.'
Both Daniel and Alex looked at the Englishman. Holcroft, in a few
words, had quietly moved into a strangely defenceless position. It
astonished both men.
'Thank you.' It was all McAuliff could say, but he meant it
profoundly.
'I'm afraid that is not possible, Commander,' said Daniel. 'You and
I… we have matters between us. If McAuliff goes, he goes alone.'
'You're a barbarian.' Holcroft spoke sharply.
'I am the Halidon. And we do have priorities. Both of us.
THIRTY THREE
McAuliff nosed the small plane above cloud cover. He loosened the
field jacket provided him by the driver of the car. It was warm in the
tiny cabin. The Halidon aircraft was different from the plane he and
Malcolm had flown from the field west of Accompong. It was similar to
the two-seater Comanche in size and appearance, but its weight and
manoeuvrability were heavier and greater.
McAuliff was not a good pilot. Flying was a skill he had half
mastered through necessity, not from any devotion. Ten years ago, when
he had made the decision to go field-commercial, he had felt the
ability to fly would come in handy, and so he had taken the prescribed
lessons that eventually led to a very limited license.
It had proved worthwhile. On dozens of trips over most continents.
In small, limited aircraft.
He hoped to Christ it would prove worthwhile now. If it did not,
nothing mattered anymore.
On the seat beside him was a small blackboard, a slate common to
grammar school, bordered by wood. On it was chalked his primitive
flight plan in white lettering that stood out in the dim light of the
instrument panel.
Desired air speed, compass points, altitude requirements, and
sightings that, with luck and decent moonlight, he could distinguish.
From the strip outside Unity Hall he was to reach a height of one
thousand feet, circling the field until he had done so. Leaving the
strip perimeter, he was to head southeast at 115 degrees, air speed 90.
In a few minutes he would be over Mount Carey - two brush fires would
be burning in a field; he would spot them.
He did.
From Mount Carey, maintaining air speed and dropping to 700 feet, he
was to swing east-northeast at 84 degrees and proceed to Kempshot Hill.
An automobile with a spotlight would be on a road below; the spotlight
would flicker its beam into the sky.
He saw it and followed the next line on the chalkboard.
His course change was minor - 8 degrees to 92 on the compass,
maintaining air speed and altitude. Three minutes and thirty seconds
later, he was over Amity Hall. Again brush fires, again a fresh
instruction; this too, was minimal.
East-northeast at 87 degrees into Weston Favel.
Drop altitude to 500 feet, maintain airspeed, look for two
automobiles facing each other with blinking headlights at the south
section of the town. Correct course to exactly degrees and reduce air
speed to 75.
The instant he reached the Martha Brae River, he was to alter course
35 degrees southeast, to precisely 122 on the compass.
At this point he was on his own. There would be no more signals from
the ground, and, of course, no radio contact whatsoever.
The coordination of air speed, direction, and timing was all he had…
everything he had. Altitude was by pilotage - as low as possible,
cognizant of the gradual ascent of the jungle hills. He might spot
campfires, but he was not to assume any to be necessarily those of the
survey. There were roving hill people, often on all-night hunts. He was
to proceed on course for exactly four minutes and fifteen seconds.
If he had followed everything precisely and if there were no
variants of magnitude such as sudden wind currents or rainfall, he
would be in the vicinity of the grasslands. Again, if the night was
clear and if the light of the moon was sufficient, he would see them.
And - most important - if he spotted other aircraft, he was to dip
his right wing twice. This would indicate to any other plane that he
was a ganga runner. It was the current courtesy-of-recognition between
such gentlemen of the air. The hills rose suddenly, far more rapidly
than McAuliff had expected. He pulled back the half wheel and felt the
updraughts carry him into a one-o'clock soar. He reduced the throttle
and countered the high bank with pressure on the left pedal; the
turbulence continued, the winds grew.
Then he realized the cause of the sudden shifts and cross currents.
He had entered a corridor of harsh jungle showers. Rain splattered
against the glass and pelted the fuselage; wipers were inadequate. In
front of him was a mass of streaked, opaque grey. He slammed down the
left window panel, pulled out the throttle, went into a swift
ten-o'clock bank, and peered down. His altimeter inched towards 650;
the ground below was dense black… nothing but jungle forest, no breaks
in the darkness. He retraced the leg from the Martha Brae in his mind.
Furiously, insecurely. His speed had been maintained, so too his
compass. But there had been slippage; not much but recognizable. He was
not that good a pilot - only twice before had he flown at night; his
lapsed license forbade it - and slippage, or drift, was an instrument
or
pilotage problem corrected by dials, sightings, or radio.
But the slight drift had been there. And it had come from aft
starboard. Jesus, he was better in a sailboat! He levelled the aircraft
and gently banked to the right, back into the path of the rain squall.
The windshield was useless now; he reached across the seat and pulled
down the right window panel. The burst of noise from the
cross-draughted openings crashed abruptly through the small cabin. The
wind roared at high velocity; the rain swept in streaking sheets,
covering the seats and the floor and the instrument panel. The
blackboard was soaked, its surface glistening, the chalk marks
seemingly magnified by the rushing water sloshing within the borders.
And then he saw it… them. The plateau of grassland. Through the
starboard - goddamn it, right window. A stretch of less-black
in the middle of the total blackness. A dull grey relief in the centre
of the dark wood.
He had overshot the fields to the left, no more than a mile, perhaps
two.
But he had reached them. Nothing else mattered at the moment. He
descended rapidly, entering a left bank above the trees - the top of a
figure eight for landing. He made a 280-degree approach and pushed the
half wheel forward for touch down.
He was at the fifty-foot reading when behind him, in the west, was a
flash of heat lightning. He was grateful for it; it was an additional,
brief illumination in the night darkness. He trusted the instruments
and could distinguish the approaching grass in the beam of the
forelamps, but the dull, quick fullness of dim light gave him extra
confidence.
And it gave him the visibility to detect the outlines of another
plane. It was on the ground, stationary, parked on the north border of
the field.
In the area of the slope that led to the campsite two miles away.
Oh, God! He had not made it at all. He was too late!
He touched earth, revved the engine, and taxied towards the immobile
aircraft, removing his pistol from his belt as he manipulated the
controls.
A man waved in the beam of the front lights. No weapon was drawn;
there was no attempt to run or seek concealment. Alex was bewildered.
It did not make sense; the Dunstone men were killers, he knew that. The
man in the beam of light, however, gave no indication of hostility.
Instead, he did a peculiar thing. He stretched out his arms at his
sides, lowering the right and raising the left simultaneously. He
repeated the gesture several times as McAuliffs craft approached.
Alex remembered the instructions at the field in Unity Hall. If you
sight other planes, dip your right wing. Lower your right
wing… arm.
The man in the beam of light was a ganga pilot!
McAuliff pulled to a stop and switched off the ignition, his hand
gripped firmly around the handle of his weapon, his finger poised in
the trigger frame.
The man came up behind the wing and shouted through the rain to Alex
in the open window. He was a white man, his face framed in the canvas
of a poncho hood. His speech was American… Deep South, Delta origins.
'Gawddamn! This is one busy
fuckin' place! Good to see your white
skin, man! I'll fly 'em an' I'll fuck 'em, but I don' lak
'em!' The pilot's voice was high-pitched and
strident, easily carried over the sound of the rain. He was medium
height, and, if his face was any indication, he was slender but flabby;
a thin man unable to cope with the middle years. He was past forty.
'When did you get in?' asked Alex loudly, trying not to show his
anxiety.
'Flew in these six niggers 'bout ten minutes ago. Mebbe a little
more, not much. You with 'em, I sup'oze? You runnin' things?'
'Yes.'
'They don' get so uppity when there's trouble, huh?
Nothin' but trouble in these mountain fields. They sure need whitey,
then, you betcha balls!'
McAuliff put his pistol back in his belt beneath the panel. He had
to move fast now. He had to get past the ganga pilot. 'They said there
was trouble?' Alex asked the question casually as he opened the cabin
door, stepped on the wing into the rain, and jumped to the wet ground.
'Gawddamn! The way they tell it, they got stole blind by a
bunch of fuckin' bucks out here. Resold a bundle after takin' their
cash. Let me tell you, those niggers are loaded with hardware!'
'That's a mistake,' said McAuliff with conviction. 'Jesus… goddamned
idiots!'
'They're lookin' for black blood, man! Those niggers gonna' lay out
a lotta brothers! Eeeaww!'
'They do and New Orleans will go up in smoke!… Christ!' Alexander
knew the Louisiana city was the major port of entry for narcotics
throughout the Southern and Southwestern states. This particular ganga
pilot would know that. 'Did they head down the slope?' McAuliff
purposely gestured a hundred yards to the right, away from the vicinity
of the path he remembered.
'Damned if they was too fuckin' sure man! They got one of them
Geigers like an air-radar hone, but not so good. They took off more
like down there.' The pilot pointed to the left
of the hidden jungle path.
Alex calculated rapidly. The scanner used by the Dunstone men was
definitive only in terms of a thousand-yard radius.
The signals would register, but there were no hot or cold levels that
would be more specific. It was the weakness of miniaturized
long-distance radio arcs, operating on vertical principles.
One thousand yards was three thousand feet - over a half a mile
within the dense, almost impenetrable jungle of the Cock Pit. If the
Dunstone team had a ten-minute advantage, it was not necessarily fatal.
They did not know the path - he didn't know it either, but he
had travelled it. Twice. Their advantage had to be reduced. And if
their angle of entry was indirect - according to the ganga pilot, it
was - and presuming they kept to a relatively straight line,
anticipating a sweep… the advantage conceivably might be removed.
If… if he could find the path and keep to it.
He pulled up the lapels of his field jacket to ward off the rain and
turned towards the cabin door above the wing of the plane. He opened
it, raised himself with one knee to the right of the strut, and reached
into the small luggage compartment behind the seat. He pulled out a
short-barrelled, high-powered automatic rifle - one of the two that had
been strapped below the front seat of the Halidon car. The clip was
inserted, the safety on. In his pockets were four additional clips;
each clip held twenty cartridges.
One hundred shells.
His arsenal.
'I've got to reach them,' he yelled through the downpour at the
ganga pilot. 'I sure as hell don't want to answer to New Orleans!'
'Them New Orleens boys is a tense bunch. I don't fly for 'em if I
got other work. They don' lak nobody!'
Without replying, McAuliff raced towards the edge of the grassland
slope. The path was to the right of a huge cluster of nettled fern - he
remembered that; his face had been scratched because his hand had not
been quick enough when he had entered the area with the Halidon runner.
Goddamn it! Where was it?
He began feeling the soaked foliage, gripping every leaf, every
branch, hoping to find his hand scratched, scraped by nettles. He had
to find it; he had to start his entry at precisely the right point. The
wrong spot would be fatal. Dunstone's advantage would be too great; he
could not overcome it.
'What are you lookin' for?'
'What! Alex whipped around into the harsh glare of light.
His concentration was such that he found himself unlatching the safety
on the rifle. He had been about to fire in shock.
The ganga pilot had walked over. 'Gawddamn. Ain't you got a
flashlight, man? You expect to find your way in that mess without no
flashlight?'
Jesus! He had left the flashlight in the Halidon plane. Daniel had
said something about being careful… with the flashlight. So he had left
it behind! 'I forgot. There's one in the plane.'
'I hope to fuck there is,' said the pilot.
'You take mine. Let me
use yours, okay?'
'You promise to shoot me a couple o' niggers, you got
it, man.' The pilot handed him the light. 'This rain's too fuckin' wet,
I'm going back inside. Good huntin', hear!' McAuliff watched the pilot
run towards his aircraft and then quickly turned back to the jungle's
edge. He was no more than five feet from the cluster of fern; he could
see the matted grass at the entry point of the concealed path. He
plunged in.
He ran as fast as he could, his feet ensnared by the underbrush, his
face and body whipped by the unseen tentacles of overgrowth. The path
twisted - right, left, right, right, right, Jesus! circles -
and then became straight again for a short stretch at the bottom of the
slope.
But it was still true. He was still on it. That was all that
mattered.
Then he veered off. The path wasn't there. It was gone!
There was an ear-shattering screech in the darkness, magnified by
the jungle downpour. In the beam of his flashlight, deep within a
palm-covered hole below him, was a wild pig suckling its blind young.
The hairy, monstrous face snarled and screeched once more and started
to rise, shaking its squealing offspring from its teats. McAuliff ran
to his left, into the wall of jungle. He stumbled on a rock. Two, three
rocks. He fell to the wet earth, the flashlight rolling on the ground.
The ground was flat, unobstructed. He had found the path again!
He got to his feet, grabbed the light, shifted the rifle under his
arm, and raced down the relatively clear jungle corridor.
Clear for no more than a hundred yards, where it was intersected by
a stream, bordered by soft, foot-sucking mud. He remembered the stream.
The runner who had used the name of 'Marcus' had turned left. Was it
left? Or was that from the opposite direction?… No, it was
left. There had been palm trunks and rocks showing through the surface
of the water, crossing the narrow stream. He ran to the left, his
flashlight aimed at the midpoint of the water. There were the logs! The
rocks. A hastily constructed bridge to avoid the ankle-swallowing mud.
And on the right palm trunk were two snakes in lateral slow motion,
curving their way towards him. Even the Jamaican mongoose did not have
the stomach for Jamaica's Cock Pit.
Alexander knew these snakes. He had seen them in Brazil. Anaconda
strain. Blind, swift-striking, vicious. Not fatal, but capable of
causing paralysis - for days. If flesh came within several feet of the
flat heads, the strikes were inevitable.
He turned back to the overgrowth, the beam of light crisscrossing
the immediate area. There was a dangling branch of a ceiba tree about
six feet long. He ran to it, bending it back and forth until it broke
off. He returned to the logs. The snakes had stopped, alarmed. Their
oily, ugly bodies were entwined, the flat heads poised near each other,
the blind, pinlike eyes staring fanatically in the direction of the
scent. At him.
Alex shoved the ceiba limb out on the log with his left hand, the
rifle and flashlight gripped awkwardly in his right.
Both snakes lunged simultaneously, leaping off the surface of the
log, whipping their bodies violently around the branch, their heads
zeroing towards McAuliffs hand, soaring through the soft leaves.
Alex threw - dropped? he would never know - the limb into the water.
The snakes thrashed; the branch reeled in furious circles and sank
beneath the surface.
McAuliff ran across the logs and picked up the path.
He had gone perhaps three-quarters of a mile, certainly no more than
that. The time elapsed was twelve minutes by his watch. As he
remembered it, the path veered sharply to the right through a
particularly dense section of fern and maidenhead to where there was a
small clearing recently used by a band of hill-country hunters. Marcus
- the man who used the name of 'Marcus' - had remarked on it.
From the clearing it was less than a mile to the banks of the Martha
Brae and the campsite. The Dunstone advantage had to be diminishing.
It had to be.
He reached the nearly impossible stretch of overgrowth, his
flashlight close to the earth, inspecting the ground for signs of
passage. If he stepped away from the path now - if he moved into
underbrush that had not seen human movement - it would take him hours
to find it again. Probably not until daylight - or when the rains
stopped.
It was painfully slow, agonizingly concentrated. Bent weeds, small
broken branches, swollen borders of wet ground where once there had
been the weight of recent human feet; these were his signs, his codes.
He could not allow the tolerance of a single error. 'Hey, mon!' came
the muted words. McAuliff threw himself to the ground and held his
breath. Behind him, to his left, he could see the beam of another
flashlight. Instantly he snapped off his own.
'Hey, mon, where are you? Contact, please. You went off your
pattern. Or I did.' Contact, please… Off your pattern. The terms of an agent,
not the language of a carrier. The man was MI5. Past tense. Was.
Now Dunstone, Limited.
The Dunstone team had separated, each man assigned an area… a
pattern. That could only mean they were in radio contact.
Six men in radio contact. Oh, Jesus!
The beam of light came nearer, dancing, flickering through the
impossible foliage.
'Here, mon!' whispered Alex gutturally, hoping against
reasonable hope that the rain and the whisper would not raise an alarm
in the Dunstone ear.
Put on your light, please, mon.'
'Trying to, mon.' No more, thought McAuliff. Nothing. The dancing
beam reflected off a thousand shining, tiny mirrors in the darkness,
splintering the light into hypnotically flickering shafts. Closer.
Alex rolled silently off the path into the mass of wet earth and
soft growth, the rifle under him cutting into his thighs. The beam of
light was nearly above him, its shaft almost clear of interference. In
the spill he could see the upper body of the man. Across his chest were
two wide straps: One was connected to an encased radio, the other to
the stock of a rifle, its thick barrel silhouetted over his shoulder.
The flashlight was in the left hand; in the right was a large,
ominous-looking pistol.
The MI5 defector was a cautious agent. His instincts had been
aroused.
McAuliff knew he had to get the pistol; he could not allow the man
to fire. He did not know how near the others were, how close the other
patterns. Now!'
He lashed his right hand up, directly on to the barrel of the
pistol, jammming his thumb into the curvature of the trigger housing,
smashing his shoulder into the man's head, crashing his left knee up
under the man's legs into his testicles. With the impact, the man
buckled and expunged a tortured
gasp; his hand went momentarily limp, and Alex ripped the pistol from
it, propelling the weapon into the darkness.
From his crouched agony the Jamaican looked up, his left hand still
holding the flashlight, its beam directed nowhere at the earth, his
face contorted… about to take the necessary breath to scream.
McAuliff found himself thrusting his fingers into the man's mouth,
tearing downward with all his strength. The man lurched forward,
bringing the hard metal of the flashlight crashing into Alex's head,
breaking the skin. Still McAuliff ripped at the black's mouth, feeling
the teeth puncturing his flesh, sensing the screams.
They fell, twisting in midair, into the overgrowth. The Jamaican
kept smashing the flashlight into McAuliff's temple; Alex kept tearing
grotesquely, viciously, at the mouth that could sound the alarm he
could not allow.
They rolled over into a patch of sheer jungle mud. McAuliff felt a
rock, he tore his left hand loose, ripped the rock up from the ground,
and brought it crashing into the black mouth, over his own fingers. The
man's teeth shattered; he choked on his own saliva. Alex whipped out
his bleeding hand and instantly grabbed the matted hair, twisting the
entire head into the soft slime of the mud. There were the muffled
sounds of expulsion beneath the surface. A series of miniature filmy
domes burst silently out of the soggy earth in the spill of the fallen
flashlight.
And then there was nothing.
The man was dead.
And no alarms had been sent.
Alexander reached over, picked up the light, and looked at the
fingers of his right hand. The skin was slashed, there were teeth
marks, but the cuts were not deep; he could move his hand freely, and
that was all he cared about.
His left temple was bleeding, and the pain terrible, but not
immobilizing. Both would stop… sufficiently.
He looked over at the dead Jamaican and he felt like being sick.
There was no time. He crawled back to the path and started once again
the painstaking task of following it. And he tried to focus his eyes
into the jungle. Twice, in the not-too-distant denseness, he saw sharp
beams of flashlights. The Dunstone team was continuing its sweep. It
was zeroing in.
There was not an instant to waste in thought.
Eight minutes later he reached the clearing. He felt the accelerated
pounding in his chest; there was less than a mile to go. The easiest
leg of the terrible journey.
He looked at his watch. It was exactly four minutes after twelve
midnight.
Twelve was also the hour of noon. Four was the ritual Arawak unit.
The odyssey of death. No time for thought.
He found the path at the opposite side of the small clearing and
began to run, gathering speed as he raced towards the banks of the
Martha Brae. There was no air left in his lungs now, not breath as he
knew it; only the steady explosions of exhaustion from his throat,
blood and perspiration falling from his head, rivering down his neck
onto his shoulders and chest.
There was the river. He had reached the river! It was only then that
he realized the pounding rain had stopped; the jungle storm was over.
He swung the flashlight to his left; there were the rocks of the path
bordering the final few hundred yards into the campsite.
He had heard no rifle fire. There had been no shots. There were five
experienced killers in the darkness behind him, and the terrible night
was not over… but he had a chance.
That's all he had asked for, all that was between him and his
command to a firing squad ending his life.
Willingly, if he failed. Willingly to end it without Alison.
He ran the last fifty yards as fast as his exhausted muscles could
tolerate. He held the flashlight directly in front of him; the first
object caught by its beam was the lean-to at the mouth of the campsite
area. He raced into the clearing.
There were no fires, no signs of life. Only the dripping of a
thousand reminders of the jungle storm, the tents silent monuments of
recent living.
He stopped breathing. Cold terror gripped him. The silence was an
overpowering portent of horror.
'Alison. Alison' he screamed, and raced blindly towards
the
tent. 'Sam! Sam!'
When the words came out of the darkness, he knew what it was to be
taken from death and be given life again.
'Alexander… You damn near got killed, boy,' said Sam Tucker
from the black recesses of the jungle's edge.
THIRTY FOUR
Sam Tucker and the runner called 'Marcus' walked out of the bush.
McAuliff stared at the Halidonite, bewildered. The runner saw his
expression and spoke.
'There is no time for lengthy explanations. I have exercised an
option, that is all.'
The runner pointed to the lapel of his jacket.
Alex needed no clarification. Sewn into the cloth were the tablets he
had seen in the wash of yellow moonlight on the back road above Lucea
Harbour. I would not think twice about it, Daniel had said.
'Where is Alison?'
'With Lawrence and Whitehall. They're farther down the river,'
answered Sam.
'What about the Jensens?'
Tucker paused. 'I don't know, Alexander.'
'What?'
'They disappeared. That's all I can tell you… Yesterday Peter was
lost; his carrier returned to camp, he couldn't find him. Ruth bore up
well, poor girl… a lot of guts in her. We sent out a search. Nothing…
And then this morning, I can't tell you why - I don't know -I went to
the Jensen tent. Ruth was gone. She hasn't been seen since.' McAuliff
wondered. Had Peter Jensen seen something? Sensed something? And fled
with his wife? Escaped past the Tribe of Acquaba?
Questions for another time.
'The carriers?' asked Alex warily, afraid to hear the answer.
'Check with our friend here,' replied Tucker, nodding to the
Halidonite.
'They have been sent north, escorted north on the river,' said the
man with the usurped name of Marcus. 'Jamaicans will not die tonight
unless they know why they are dying. Not in this fight.'
'And you? Why you? Is this your fight?'
'I know the men who come for you. I have the option to fight.'
'The limited freedoms of Acquaba?' asked Alex softly.
Marcus
shrugged; his eyes betrayed nothing. 'An individual's freedom of
choice, Doctor.'
There was a barely perceptible cry of a bird, or the muted screech
of a bat, from the dense, tropic jungle. Then there followed another.
And another. McAuliff would not have noticed… there were so many
sounds, so continuously. A never-ending nocturnal symphony; pleasant to
hear, not pleasant to think about.
But he was compelled to notice now.
Marcus snapped his head up reacting to the sound. He swiftly reached
over and grabbed Alexander's flashlight and ripped it out of his hand
while shouldering Tucker away.
'Get down!' he cried, as he pushed McAuliff violently,
reeling him backward, away from the spot where he was standing.
Seven rifle shots came out of the darkness, some thumping into
trees, others cracking into the jungle distance, two exploding into the
dirt of the clearing.
Alex rolled on the ground, pulling his rifle into position and aimed
in the direction of the firing. He kept his finger on the trigger; a
shattering fusillade of twenty bullets sprayed the area. It was over in
seconds. The stillness returned.
He felt a hand grabbing his leg. It was Marcus.
'Pull back. Down to the river, mon,' he whispered harshly.
McAuliff scrambled backward in the darkness. More shots were fired
from the bush; the bullets screamed above him to the right.
Suddenly there was a burst of rifle fire from only feet away. Marcus
had leaped up to the left and delivered a cross-section barrage that
drew the opposing fire away. Alex knew Marcus's action was his cover.
He lurched to the right, to the edge of the clearing. He heard Sam
Tucker's voice.
'McAuliff Over here.'
As he raced into the brush, he saw Sam's outline on the ground.
Tucker was crouched on one knee, his rifle raised. 'Where. For
Christ's sake, where's Alison? The others'?'
'Go down to the river, boy, South, about three hundred yards. Tell
the blacks. We'll hold here '
'No, Sam! Come with me . . Show me.'
'I'll be there, son 'Another volley of shots spat out of the jungle.
Marcus answered from the opposite side of the clearing. Tucker
continued speaking as he grabbed the cloth in Alex's field jacket and
propelled him beyond. 'That black son of a bitch is willing to get his
tar ass shot off for us! Maybe he's given me a little time I don't
deserve. He's my countryman, boy. My new landsmann. Jesus! I
knew I liked this fucking island. Now get the hell down there and watch
out for the girl. We'll join you, don't you worry about that. The girl,
Alexander!'
'There are five men out there, Sam. I killed one of them a mile
back. They must have seen my flashlight when I was running. I'm sorry .
.' With these words McAuliff plunged into the soaking-wet forest and
slashed his way to the river bank. He tumbled down the short slope, the
rifle clattering against the metal buttons of his jacket, and fell into
the water.
South Left.
Three hundred yards. Nine hundred feet… a continent.
He stayed close to the river bank, where he could make the best
time. As he slopped through the mud and the growth and over fallen
trunks, he realized his magazine clip was empty Without stopping he
reached into his pocket and pulled out a fresh clip, snapping the old
one out of its slot and slamming the new one in. He cracked back the
insertion bar; the cartridge entered the chamber.
Gunfire broke his non-thoughts. Behind him men were trying to kill
other men.
There was a bend in the narrow river. He had travelled over a
hundred yards; nearer two, he thought my new landsmann .
Christ, Sam Tucker, itinerant wanderer
of the globe, schooler of primitives, lover of all lands - in search of
one to call his own, at this late stage of life. And he had found it in
a violent moment of time in the cruellest wilds of Jamaica's Cock Pit.
In a moment of sacrifice.
Suddenly, in an instant of terror, from out of the darkness above, a
huge black form descended. A giant arm fell vicelike around his neck,
clawing fingers tore at his face, his kidneys were being hammered by a
vicious, powerful fist. He slammed the rifle butt into the body behind
him, sank his teeth into the flesh below his mouth, and lunged forward
into the water. 'Mon! Jesus, mon.'
The voice of Lawrence cried as he pummelled McAuliffs shoulder.
Stunned, each man released the other; each held up his hands, Alex's
awkwardly thrusting out the rifle, Lawrence's holding a long knife.
'My God!' said McAuliff. 'I could have shot you!'
There was another fusillade of gunfire to the north.
'I might have put the blade in… not the handle,' said the black
giant, waist-deep in water. 'We wanted a hostage.'
Both men recognized there was no time for explanations. 'Where are
you? Where's Alison and Whitehall?'
'Downstream, mon. Not far '
'Is she all right?'
'She is frightened . But she is a brave woman. For a white English
lady. You see, mon?'
'I saw, mon,' replied Alexander. 'Let's go.'
Lawrence preceded him, jumping out of the water about thirty yards
beyond the point of the near-fatal encounter. McAuliff saw that the
revolutionary had tied a cloth around his forearm; Alex spat the blood
out of his mouth as he noticed it, and rubbed the area of his kidneys
in abstract justification.
The black pointed up the slope with his left hand and put his right
hand to his mouth at the same time. A whistled treble emerged from his
lips A bird, a bat, an owl . . it made no difference. There was a
corresponding sound from the top of the river bank, beyond in the
jungle.
'Go up, mon. I will wait here,' said Lawrence.
McAuliff would never know whether it was the panic of the moment or
whether his words spoke the truth as he saw it, but he grabbed the
black revolutionary by the shoulder and pushed him forward. 'There
won't be any more orders given. You don't know what's back there. I do!
Get your ass up there!'
An extended barrage of rifle fire came from the river.
Lawrence blinked. He blinked in the new moonlight that flooded the
river bank of this offshoot of the Martha Brae.
'Okay, mon! Don't push!'
They crawled to the top of the slope and started into the overgrowth.
The figure came rushing out of the tangled darkness, a darker,
racing object out of a void of black. It was Alison. Lawrence reached
back to McAuliff and took the flashlight out of Alex's hand. A gesture
of infinite understanding.
She ran into his arms. The world… the universe stopped its insanity
for an instant, and there was stillness. And peace. And comfort. But
only for an instant.
There was no time for thought. Or reflection.
Or words.
Neither spoke.
They held each other, and then looked at each other in the dim spill
of the new moonlight in the isolated space that was their own on the
banks of the Martha Brae.
In a terrible, violent moment of time.
And sacrifice.
Charles Whitehall intruded, as Charley-mon was wont to do. He
approached, his safari outfit still creased, his face an immobile mask,
his eyes penetrating.
'Lawrence and I agreed he would stay down at the river. Why have you
changed that?'
'You blow my mind, Charley…'
'You bore me, McAuliff!' replied Whitehall. 'There was
gunfire up there!'
'I was in the middle of it, you black son of a bitch!' Jesus,
why did he have to say that! 'And you're going to learn
what the problem is. Do you understand that?'
Whitehall smiled. 'Do
tell… whitey.' Alison slapped her hands off McAuliff and
looked at both men. 'Stop it!'
'I'm sorry,' said Alex quickly.
'I'm not,' replied Whitehall. 'This is his moment of
truth. Can't you see that, Miss Alison?'
Lawrence's great hands interfered. They touched both men, and his
voice was that of a thundering child-man. 'Neither, no more, mon!
McAuliff, mon, you say what you know! Now.'
Alexander did. He spoke of the grasslands, the plane - a
plane, not the Halidon's - the redneck ganga pilot who had brought six
men into the Cock Pit to massacre the survey, the race to the campsite,
the violent encounter in the jungle that ended in death in a small
patch of jungle mud. Finally, those minutes ago when the runner called
'Marcus' saved their lives by hearing a cry in the tropic bush.
'Five men, mon,' said Lawrence, interrupted by a new burst of
gunfire, closer now but still in the near-distance to the north. He
turned to Charles Whitehall. 'How many do you want, fascisti!'
'Give me a figure, agricula.'
'Goddamn it!' yelled McAuliff. 'Cut it out. Your games don't count
any more.'
'You do not understand,' said Whitehall. 'It is the only thing that
does count. We are prepared. We are the viable contestants.
Is this not what the fictions create? One on one, the victor sets the
course?'
… The charismatic leaders are not the foot soldiers… They
change or are replaced… The words of Daniel, Minister of the Tribe
of Acquaba.
'You're both insane,' said Alex, more rationally than he thought was
conceivable. 'You make me sick, and goddamn you — '
'Alexander! Alexander The cry came from the river bank
less than twenty yards away. Sam Tucker was yelling.
McAuliff began running to the edge of the jungle.
Lawrence raced ahead, his huge body crashing through the foliage,
his hands, pulverizing into sudden diagonals everything in their path.
The black giant jumped to the water's edge; Alex started down the
short slope and stopped.
Sam Tucker was cradling the body of Marcus the runner in his arms.
The head protruding out of the water was a mass of blood, sections of
the skull were shot off.
Still, Sam Tucker would not let go.
'One of them circled and caught us at the bank. Caught me
at the bank… Marcus jumped out between us and took the fire. He killed
the son of a bitch; he kept walking right up to him. Into the gun.'
Tucker lowered the body into the mud of the river bank.
McAuliff thought. Four men remained, four killers left of the
Dunstone team.
They were five. But Alison Booth could not be counted now.
They were four, too.
Killers.
Four. The Arawak four.
The death odyssey.
Alex felt the girl's hands on his shoulders, her face pressed
against his back in the moonlight.
The grasslands.
Escape was in the grasslands and the two aircraft that could fly
them out of the Cock Pit.
Yet Marcus had implied there was no other discernible route but the
narrow, twisting jungle path - a danger in itself.
The path was picked up east of the river at the far right end of the
campsite clearing. It would be watched; the MI5 defectors were
experienced agents. Egress was a priority; the single avenue
of escape would have automatic rifles trained on it.
Further, the Dunstone killers knew their prey was downstream. They
would probe, perhaps, but they would not leave the hidden path
unguarded.
But they had to separate. They could not gamble on the unknown, on
the possibility that the survey team might slip through, try to
penetrate the net.
It was this assumption that led McAuliff and Sam Tucker to accept
the strategy. A variation on the deadly game proposed by Lawrence and
Charles Whitehall. Alexander would stay with Alison. The others would
go out. Separately. And find the enemy.
Quite simply, kill or be killed.
Lawrence lowered his immense body into the black waters. He hugged
the bank and pulled his way slowly upstream, his pistol just above the
surface, his long knife out of its leather scabbard, in his belt -
easily, quickly retrievable.
The moon was brighter now. The rain clouds were gone; the towering
jungle overgrowth obstructed but did not blot out the moonlight. The
river currents were steady; incessant, tiny whirlpools spun around
scores of fallen branches and protruding rocks, the latter's tips
glistening with buffeted moss and matted green algae.
Lawrence stopped; he dropped farther into the water, holding his
breath, his eyes just above the surface. Diagonally across the narrow
river offshoot a man was doing exactly what he was doing, but without
the awareness Lawrence now possessed.
Waist-deep in water, the man held a lethal-looking rifle in front of
and above him. He took long strides, keeping his balance by grabbing
the overhanging foliage on the river bank, his eyes straight ahead.
In seconds, the man would be directly opposite him.
Lawrence placed his pistol on a bed of fern spray. He reached below
and pulled the long knife from his belt.
He sank beneath the surface and began swimming underwater.
Sam Tucker crawled over the ridge above the river bank and rolled
towards the base of the ceiba trunk. The weight of his body pulled down
a loose vine; it fell like a coiled snake across his chest, startling
him.
He was north of the campsite now, having made a wide half circle
west, on the left side of the river. His reasoning was simple, he hoped
not too simple. The Dunstone patrol would be concentrating downstream;
the path was east of the clearing. They would guard it, expecting any
who searched for it to approach from below, not above the known point
of entry.
Tucker shouldered his way up the ceiba trunk into a sitting
position. He loosened the strap of his rifle, lifted the weapon, and
lowered it over his head diagonally across his back. He pulled the
strap taut. Rifle fire was out of the question, to be used only in the
last extremity, for its use meant - more than likely - one's own
execution. That was not out of the question, thought Sam, but it
surely would take considerable persuasion.
He rolled back to a prone position and continued his reptilelike
journey through the tangled labyrinth of jungle underbrush.
He heard the man before he saw him. The sound was peculiarly human,
a casual sound that told Sam Tucker his enemy was casual, not primed
for alarm. A man who somehow felt his post was removed from immediate
assault, the patrol farthest away from the area of contention.
The man had sniffed twice. A clogged nostril, or nostrils, caused a
temporary blockage and a passage for air was casually demanded.
Casually obtained. It was enough.
Sam focused in the direction of the sound. His eyes of fifty-odd
years were strained, tired from lack of sleep and from peering for
nights on end into the tropic darkness. But they would serve him, he
knew that.
The man was crouched by a giant fern, his rifle between his legs,
stock butted against the ground. Beyond, Tucker could see in the
moonlight the outlines of the lean-to at the far left of the clearing.
Anyone crossing the campsite was in the man's direct line of fire.
The fern ruled out a knife. A blade that did not enter precisely at
the required location could cause a victim to lunge, to shout. The fern
concealed the man's back too well. It was possible, but awkward.
There was a better way. Sam recalled the vine that had dropped from
the trunk of the ceiba tree.
He reached into his pocket and withdrew a coil of ordinary azimuth
line. Thin steel wire encased in nylon, so handy for so many things…
He crept silently towards the giant spray of tiny leaves.
His enemy sniffed again.
Sam rose, half inch by half inch, behind the fern. In front of him
now, unobstructed, was the silhouette of the man's neck and head.
Sam Tucker slowly separated his gnarled, powerful hands. They were
connected by the thin steel wire encased in nylon.
Charles Whitehall was furious. He had wanted to use the river; it
was the swiftest route, far more direct than the torturously slow
untangling that was demanded in the bush. But it was agreed that since
Lawrence had been on guard at the river, he knew it better. So the
river was his.
Whitehall looked at the radium dial of his watch; there were still
twelve minutes to go before the first signal. If there was one.
Simple signals.
Silence meant precisely that. Nothing.
The short, simulated, guttural cry of a wild pig meant success. One
kill.
If two, two kills.
Simple.
If he had been given the river, Charles was convinced, he would have
delivered the first cry. At least one.
Instead, his was the southwest sweep, the least likely of the three
routings to make contact. It was a terrible waste. An old man,
authoritative, inventive, but terribly tired, and a plodding, unskilled
hill boy, not without potential, perhaps, but still a misguided,
awkward giant.
A terrible waste! Infuriating.
Yet not as infuriating as the sharp, hard steel that suddenly made
contact with the base of his skull. And the words that followed,
whispered in a harsh command: 'Open your mouth and I blow your head
off, mon!' He had been taken! His anger had caused his concentration to
wander. Stupid.
But his captor had not fired. His taker did not want the alarm of a
rifle shot any more than he did. The man kept thrusting the barrel
painfully into Charles's head, veering him to the right, away from the
supposed line of Whitehall's march. The man obviously wanted to
interrogate, discover the whereabouts of the others. Stupid.
The release-seizure was a simple manoeuvre requiring only
a hard surface to the rear of the victim for execution. And it was,
indeed, execution.
It was necessary for the victim to rebound following impact, not be
absorbed in space or elastically swallowed by walled softness. The
impact was most important; otherwise, the trigger of the rifle might be
pulled. There was an instant of calculated risk - nothing was perfect -
but the reverse jamming of the weapon into the victim allowed for that
split second of diagonal slash that invariably ripped the weapon out of
the hands of the hunter. Optimally, the slash coincided with the
impact. It was all set forth clearly in the Oriental training manuals.
In front of them, to the left, Whitehall could distinguish the
sudden rise of a hill in the jungle darkness. One of those abrupt
protrusions out of the earth that was so common to the Cock Pit. At the
base of the hill was a large boulder reflecting the wash of moonlight
strained through the trees. It would be sufficient… actually, more than
sufficient; very practical, indeed.
He stumbled, just slightly, as if his foot had been ensnared by an
open root. He felt the prod of the rifle barrel. It was the moment.
He slammed his head back into the steel and whipped to his right,
clasping the barrel with his hands and jamming it forward. As the
victim crashed into the boulder, he swung the weapon violently away,
ripping it out of the man's grasp.
As the man blinked in the moonlight, Charles Whitehall rigidly
extended three fingers on each hand and completed the assault with
enormous speed and control. The hands were trajectories - one towards
the right eye, the other into the soft flesh below the throat.
McAuliff had given Alison his pistol. He had been startled to see
her check the clip with such expertise, releasing it from its chamber,
pressing the spring, and reinserting it with a heel-of-the-palm impact
that would have done justice to Bonnie and Clyde notoriety. She had
smiled at him and mentioned the fact that the weapon had been in the
water.
There were eight minutes to go. Two units of four; the thought was
not comforting.
He wondered if there would be any short cries in the night. Or
whether a measured silence would signify an extension of the nightmare.
Was any of them good enough? Quick enough? Sufficiently alert?
'Alex!' Alison grabbed his arm, whispering softly but with sharp
intensity. She pulled him down and pointed into the forest, to the west.
A beam of light flicked on and off.
Twice.
Someone had been startled, in the overgrowth; some thing
perhaps. There was a slapping flutter and short, repeated screeches
that stopped as rapidly as they had started.
The light went on once again, for no more than a second, and then
there was darkness.
The invader was perhaps thirty yards away. It was difficult to
estimate in the dense surroundings. But it was an opportunity. And if
Alexander Tarquin McAuliff had learned anything during the past weeks
of agonizing insanity, it was to accept opportunities with the minimum
of analysis.
He pulled Alison to him and whispered instructions into her ear. He
released her and felt about the ground for what he knew was there.
Fifteen seconds later he silently clawed his way up the trunk of a
ceiba tree, rifle across his back, his hands noiselessly testing the
low branches, discomforted by the additional weight of the object held
in place inside his field jacket by the belt.
In position, he scratched twice on the bark of the tree.
Beneath him Alison whistled - a very human whistle, the abrupt notes
of a signalling warble. She then snapped on her flashlight for
precisely one second, shut it off, and dashed away from her position.
In less than a minute the figure was below him - crouched, rifle
extended, prepared to kill.
McAuliff dropped from the limb of the ceiba tree, the sharp point of
the heavy rock on a true, swift course towards the top of the invader's
skull.
The minute hand on his watch reached twelve; the second hand was on
one. It was time.
The first cry came from the river. An expert cry, the sound of a
wild pig.
The second came from the southwest, quite far in the distance but
equally expert, echoing through the jungle.
The third came from the north, a bit too guttural, not expert at
all, but sufficient unto the instant. The message was clear.
McAuliff looked at Alison, her bright, stunningly blue eyes bluer
still in the Caribbean moonlight.
He lifted his rifle in the air and shattered the stillness of the
night with a burst of gunfire. Perhaps the ganga pilot in the
grasslands would laugh softly in satisfaction. Perhaps, with luck, one
of the stray bullets might find its way to his head.
It did not matter.
It mattered only that they had made it. They were good enough, after
all.
He held Alison in his arms and screamed joyfully into the darkness
above. It did not sound much like a wild pig, but that did not matter,
either.
THIRTY FIVE
They sat at the table on the huge free-form pool deck overlooking
the beds of coral and the blue waters beyond. The conflict between wave
and rock resulted in cascading arcs of white spray surging upwards and
forwards, blanketing the jagged crevices.
They had flown from the grasslands directly to Port Antonio. They
had done so because Sam Tucker had raised Robert Hanley on the
aeroplane's radio, and Hanley had delivered his instructions in
commands that denied argument. They had landed at the small Sam Jones
Airfield at 2.35 in the morning. A limousine sent from the Trident
Villas awaited them.
So, too, did Robert Hanley. And the moment Sam Tucker alighted from
the plane, Hanley shook his hand and proceeded to crash his fist into
Tucker's face. He followed this action by reaching down and picking Sam
up off the ground, greeting him a bit more cordially but explaining in
measured anger that the past several weeks had caused him unnecessary
anxiety, obviously Sam Tucker's responsibility. The two very young old
reprobates then drank the night through at the bar of Trident Villas.
The young manager, Timothy Durell, surrendered at 5.10 in the morning,
dismissed the bartender, and turned the keys over to Hanley and Sam.
Durell was not aware that in a very real sense, the last strategies of
Dunstone, Limited, had been created at Trident that week when strangers
had converged from all over the world. Strangers, and not strangers at
all… only disturbing memories now.
Charles Whitehall left with Lawrence, the revolutionary. Both black
men said their good-byes at the airfield; each had places to go to,
things to do, men to see. There would be no questions, for there would
be no answers. That was understood.
They would separate quickly.
But they had communicated; perhaps that was all that could be
expected.
Alison and McAuliff had been taken to the farthest villa on the
shoreline. She had bandaged his hand and washed the cuts on his face
and made him soak for nearly an hour in a good British tub of hot
water. They were in Villa Twenty. They had slept in each other's arms
until noon.
It was now a little past one o'clock. They were alone at the table,
a note having been left for Alexander from Sam Tucker. Sam and Robert
Hanley were flying to Montego Bay to see an attorney. They were going
into partnership.
God help the island, thought McAuliff.
At 2.30 Alison touched his arm and nodded towards the alabaster
portico across the lawn. Down the marble steps came two men, one black,
one white, dressed in proper business suits.
R. C. Holcroft and Daniel, Minister of Council for the Tribe of
Acquaba, high in the Flagstaff Range.
'We'll be quick,' said Holcroft, taking the chair indicated by
Alexander. 'Mrs Booth, I am Commander Holcroft.'
'I was sure you were,' said Alison, her voice warm, her smile cold.
'May I present… an associate? Mr Daniel. Jamaican Affairs. I believe
you two have met, McAuliff?'
'Yes.'
Daniel nodded pleasantly and sat down. He looked at Alex and spoke
sincerely. 'There is much to be thankful for. I am very relieved.'
'What about Malcolm?'
The sadness flickered briefly across Daniel's eyes. 'I am sorry.'
'So am I,' said McAuliff. 'He saved our lives.'
'That was his job,' replied the Minister of the Halidon.
'May I assume,' interrupted Holcroft gently, 'that Mrs Booth has
been apprised… up to a point?'
'You certainly may assume that, Commander Holcroft.' Alison gave the
answer herself.
'Very well.' The British agent reached into his pocket, withdrew the
yellow paper of a cablegram, and handed it to Alexander. It was a
deposit confirmation from Barclay's Bank, London. The sum of $660,000
had been deposited to the account of A. T. McAuliff, Chase Manhattan,
New York. Further, a letter of credit had been forwarded to said A. T.
McAuliff that could be drawn against all taxes upon receipt of the
proper filing papers approved by the United States Treasury Department,
Bureau of Internal Revenue.
Alex read the cable twice and wondered at his own indifference. He
gave it to Alison. She started to read it but did not finish; instead,
she lifted McAuliffs cup and saucer and placed it underneath.
She said nothing.
'Our account is settled, McAuliff.'
'Not quite, Holcroft… In simple words, I never want to hear from you
again. We never want to hear from you. Because if we do, the
longest deposition on record will be made public—'
'My dear man,' broke in the Englishman wearily, 'let me
save you the time. Gratitude and marked respect would obligate me
socially any time you're in London. And, I should add, I think you're
basically a quite decent chap. But I can assure you that professionally
we shall remain at the farthest distance. Her Majesty's Service has no
desire to involve itself with international irregularities. I might as
well be damned blunt about it.'
'And Mrs Booth?'
'The same, obviously.' Here Holcroft looked directly, even
painfully, at Alison. 'Added to which it is our belief she has gone
through a great deal. Most splendidly and with our deepest
appreciation. The terrible past is behind you, my dear. Public
commendation is uncalled for, we realize. But the highest citation will
be entered into your file. Which shall be closed. Permanently.'
'I want to believe that,' said Alison.
'You may, Mrs Booth.'
'What about Dunstone?' asked McAuliff. 'What's going to happen?
When?'
'It has already begun,' replied Holcroft. 'The list was cabled in
the early hours of the morning.'
'Several hours ago,' said Daniel quietly. 'Around noon, London time.'
'In all the financial centres, the work is proceeding,' continued
Holcroft. 'All the governments are co-operating… it is to everyone's
benefit.'
McAuliff looked up at Daniel. 'What does that do for global
mendacity?'
Daniel smiled. 'Perhaps a minor lesson has been learned. We shall
know in a few years, will we not?'
'And Piersall? Who killed him?'
Holcroft replied. 'Real-estate interests along the North Coast who
stood to gain by the Dunstone purchase. His work was important, not
those who caused his death. They were tragically insignificant.'
'And so it is over,' said Daniel, pushing back his chair. 'The
Westmore Tallons will go back to selling fish, the disciples of Barak
Moore will take up the struggle against Charles Whitehall, and the
disorderly process of advancement continues. Shall we go, Commander
Holcroft?'
'By all means, Mr Daniel.' Holcroft rose from the chair, as did the
Minister of Council for the Tribe of Acquaba.
'What happened to the Jensens?' Alexander looked at Daniel, for it
was the Halidonite who could answer him.
'We allowed him to escape. To leave the Cock Pit. We knew Julian
Warfield was on the island, but we did not know where. We only knew
that Peter Jensen would lead us to him. He did so. In Oracabessa…
Julian Warfield's life was ended on the balcony of a villa named Peale
Court.'
'What will happen to them? The Jensens?' McAuliff shifted his eyes
to Holcroft.
The commander glanced briefly at Daniel. 'There is an understanding.
A man and a woman answering the description of the Jensens boarded a
Mediterranean flight this morning at Palisados. We think he is retired.
We shall leave him alone. You see, he shot Julian Warfield… because
Warfield had ordered him to kill someone else. And he could not do
that.'
'It is time, Commander,' said Daniel.
'Yes, of course. There's a fine woman in London I've rather
neglected. She liked you very much that night in Soho, McAuliff. She
said you were attentive.'
'Give her my best,'
'I shall.' The Englishman looked up at the clear sky and the hot
sun. 'Retirement in the Mediterranean. Interesting.' R. C. Holcroft
allowed himself a brief smile, and replaced the chair quite properly
under the table.
They walked on the green lawn in front of the cottage that was
called a villa and looked out at the sea. A white sheet of ocean spray
burst up from the coral rock and appeared suspended, the pitch-blue
waters of the Caribbean serving as a backdrop, not a source. The spray
cascaded forward and downward and then receded back over the crevices
that formed the coral overlay. It became ocean again, at one with its
source; another form of beauty.
Alison took McAuliffs hand.
They were free.
dummy
The Cry of the Halidon
by Robert Ludlum
For Marge and Don Wilde Wonder
Bread and hibiscus and quiet
flights to the islands, and for God's sake, stay out of the sun! Watch
your language; they cut off telephones! Best always…
PART ONE
Port Antonio/London
ONE
Port Antonio, Jamaica
The white sheet of ocean spray burst up from the coral rock and
appeared suspended, the pitch-blue waters of the Caribbean serving as a
backdrop. The spray cascaded forward and downward and asserted itself
over the thousands of tiny, sharp, ragged crevices that were the coral
overlay. It became ocean again, at one with its source.
Timothy Durell walked out on the far edge of the huge free-form pool
deck, imposed over the surrounding coral, and watched the increasing
combat between water and rock. This isolated section of the Jamaican
north coast was a compromise between man and natural phenomenon.
Trident Villas were built on top of a coral sheet, surrounded by it on
three sides, with a single drive that led to the road in front. The
villas were miniature replicas of their names: guest houses that
fronted the sea and the fields of coral. Each an entity in itself; each
isolated from the others, as the entire complex was isolated from the
adjoining territory of Port Antonio.
Durell was the young English manager of Trident Villas, a graduate
of London's College of Hotel Management, with a series of letters after
his name indicating more knowledge and experience than his mid-twenties
appearance would seem to support. But Durell was good; he knew it, the
Trident's owners knew it. He never stopped looking for the unexpected -
that, along with routine smoothness, was the essence of superior
management.
He had found the unexpected now. And it troubled him.
It was a mathematical impossibility. Or, if not impossible,
certainly improbable in the extreme.
It simply did not make sense.
'Mr Durell?'
He turned. His brown Jamaican secretary, her skin and features
bespeaking the age-old coalition of Africa and Empire, had walked out
on the deck with a message. 'Yes?'
'Lufthansa flight 16 from Munich will be late getting into Montego.'
'That's the Keppler reservation, isn't it?'
'Yes. They'll miss the
in-island connection.'
'They should have come into Kingston…'
'They
didn't,' said the girl, her voice carrying the same disapproval as
Durell's statement, but not so sternly. 'They obviously don't wish to
spend the night in Montego; they had Lufthansa radio ahead. You're to
get them a charter…'
'On three hours' notice? Let the Germans do it!
It's their equipment that's late…'
'They tried. None available in Mo'bay.'
'Of course, there isn't…
I'll ask Hanley. He'll be back from Kingston with the Warfields by five
o'clock.'
'He may not wish to…'
'He will. We're in a spot. I trust it's not indicative of the week.'
'Why do you say that? What bothers you?'
Durell turned back to the
railing overlooking the fields and cliffs of coral. He lighted a
cigarette, cupping the flame against the burst of warm breeze. 'Several
things. I'm not sure I can put my finger on them all. One I do
know.' He looked at the girl, but his eyes were remembering. 'A little
over twelve months ago, the reservations for this particular week began
coming in. Eleven months ago they were complete. All the villas were
booked… for this particular week.'
'Trident's popular. What is so unusual?'
'You don't understand.
Since eleven months ago, every one of those reservations has stood
firm. Not a single cancellation, or even a minor change of dates. Not
even a day.'
'Less bother for you. I'd think you'd be pleased.'
'Don't you see?
It's a mathematical imp - well, inconsistency, to say the least. Twenty
villas. Assuming couples, that's forty families, really - mothers,
fathers, aunts, uncles, cousins… For eleven months nothing has happened
to change anyone's plans. None of the principals died - and at our
rates we don't cater exclusively to the young. No misfortunes of
consequence, no simple business interferences, or measles or mumps or
weddings or funerals or lingering illness. Yet we're not the Queen's
coronation; we're just a week-in-Jamaica.'
The girl laughed. 'You're playing with numbers, Mr Durell. You're
put out because your well-organized waiting list hasn't been used.'
'And the way they're all arriving,' continued the young manager, his
words coming faster. 'This Keppler, he's the only one with a problem,
and how does he solve it? Having an aircraft radio ahead from somewhere
over the Atlantic. Now, you grant that's a bit much… The
others? No one asks for a car to meet them, no in-island confirmations
required, no concerns about luggage or distances. Or anything. They'll
just be here.'
'Not the Warfields. Captain Hanley flew to Kingston for the
Warfields.'
'But we didn't know that. Hanley assumed that we did, but
we didn't. The arrangements were made privately from London. He thought
we'd given them his name; we hadn't. I hadn't.'
'No one else would…' The girl stopped. 'But everyone's… from all
over.'
'Yes. Almost evenly divided. The States, England, France, West
Germany, and; . . Haiti.'
'What's your point?' asked the girl, seeing the concern on Durell's
face.
'I have a strange feeling that all our guests for the week are
acquainted. But they don't want us to know it.' London, England
The tall, light-haired American in the unbuttoned Burberry trench
coat walked out the Strand entrance of the Savoy Hotel. He stopped for
an instant and looked up at the English sky between the buildings in
the court. It was a perfectly normal thing to do - to observe the sky,
to check
the elements after emerging from shelter - but this man did not give
the normally cursory glance and form a judgment based primarily on the
chill factor.
He looked.
Any geologist who made his living developing geophysical surveys for
governments, companies and foundations knew that the weather was
income; it connoted progress or delay.
Habit.
His clear grey eyes were deeply set beneath wide eyebrows, darker
than the light brown hair that fell with irritating regularity over his
forehead. His face was the colour of a man's exposed to the weather,
the tone permanently stained by the sun, but not burned. The lines at
the sides and below his eyes seemed stamped more from his work than
from age; again a face in constant conflict with the elements. The
cheekbones were high, the mouth full, the jaw casually slack; for there
was a softness also about the man… in abstract contrast to the hard
professional look.
This softness, too, was in his eyes. Not weak, but inquisitive; the
eyes of a man who probed… perhaps because he had not probed
sufficiently in the past.
Things… things… had happened to this man.
The instant of observation over, he greeted the uniformed doorman
with a smile and a brief shake of his head, indicating a negative.
'No taxi, Mr McAuliff?'
'Thanks, no, Jack. I'll walk.'
'A bit nippy, sir.'
'It's refreshing - only going a few blocks.'
The doorman tipped his cap and turned his attention to an incoming
Jaguar sedan. Alexander McAuliff continued down the Savoy Court, past
the theatre and the American Express office to the Strand. He crossed
the pavement and I entered the flow of human traffic heading north
towards Waterloo Bridge. He buttoned his raincoat, pulling the lapels
up to ward off London's February chill.
It was nearly one o'clock; he was to be at the Waterloo intersection
by one. He would make it with only minutes to spare.
He had agreed to meet the Dunstone company man this way, but he
hoped his tone of voice had conveyed his annoyance. He had been
perfectly willing to take a taxi, or rent a car, or hire a chauffeur…
if any or all were necessary; but if Dunstone was sending an automobile
for him, why not send it to the Savoy? It wasn't that he minded the
walk; he just hated to meet people in automobiles in the middle of
congested streets. It was a goddamn nuisance.
The Dunstone man had had a short, succinct explanation that was, for
the Dunstone man, the only reason necessary - for all things: 'Mr
Julian Warfield prefers it this way.'
He spotted the automobile immediately. It had to be Dunstone's -
and/or Warfield's. A St James Rolls-Royce, its glistening black,
hand-tooled body breaking space majestically, anachronistically, among
the petrol-conscious Austins, MGs, and European imports. He waited on
the kerb, ten feet from the crosswalk into the bridge. He would not
gesture or acknowledge the slowly approaching Rolls. He waited until
the car stopped directly in front of him, a chauffeur driving, the rear
window open.
'Mr McAuliff?' said the eager, young-old face in the frame.
'Mr Warfield?' asked McAuliff, knowing that this fiftyish,
precise-looking executive was not.
'Good heavens, no. The, name's Preston. Do hop in; I think we're
holding up the line.'
'Yes, you are.' Alex got into the back seat as Preston moved over.
The Englishman extended his hand.
'It's a pleasure. I'm the one you've been talking to on the
telephone.'
'Yes… Mr Preston.'
'I'm really very sorry for the inconvenience, meeting like this. Old
Julian has his quirks, I'll grant you.'
McAuliff decided he might have misjudged the Dunstone man. 'It was a
little confusing, that's all. If the object was precautionary - for
what reason I can't imagine - he picked a hell of a car to send.'
Preston laughed. 'True. But then, I've learned over the years that
Warfield, like God, moves in mysterious ways that basically are quite
logical. He's really all right. You're having lunch with him, you know.'
'Fine. Where?'
'Belgravia.'
'Aren't we going the wrong way?'
'Julian and God - basically logical, chap.'
The St James Rolls crossed Waterloo, proceeded south to The Cut,
turned left until Blackfriars Road, then left again, over Blackfriars
Bridge and north into Holborn. It was a confusing route.
Ten minutes later the car pulled up to the entrance canopy of a
white stone building with a brass plate to the right of the glass
double doors that read 'SHAFTSBURY ARMS.' The doorman pulled at the
handle and spoke jovially.
'Good afternoon, Mr Preston.'
'Good afternoon, Ralph.'
McAuliff followed Preston into the building, to a bank of three
elevators in the well-appointed hallway. 'Is this Warfield's place?' he
asked, more to pass the moment than for inquiry.
'No, actually. It's mine. Although I won't be joining you for lunch.
However, I trust cook implicitly; you'll be well taken care of.'
'I won't try to follow that… "Julian and God."'
Preston smiled noncommittally as the elevator door opened.
Julian Warfield was talking on the telephone when Preston ushered
McAuliff into the tastefully - elegantly - decorated living room. The
old man was standing by an antique table in front of a tall window
overlooking Belgravia Square. The size of the window, flanked by long
white drapes, emphasized Warfield's shortness. He is really quite a
small man, thought Alex as he acknowledged Warfield's wave with a nod
and a smile.
'You'll send the accrual statistics on to Macintosh, then,' said
Warfield deliberately into the telephone; he was not asking a
question. 'I'm sure he'll disagree, and you can both hammer it out.
Good-bye.' The diminutive old man replaced the receiver and looked over
at Alex.
'Mr McAuliff, is it?' Then he chuckled. 'That was a prime lesson in
business. Employ experts who disagree on just about everything and take
the best arguments from both for a compromise.'
'Good advice generally, I'd say,' replied McAuliff. 'As long as the
experts disagree on the subject matter and not just chemically.'
'You're quick. I like that… Good to see you.' Warfield crossed to
Preston. His walk was like his speech: deliberate, paced slowly.
Mentally confident, physically unsure. 'Thank you for the use of your
flat, Clive. And Virginia, of course. From experience, I know the lunch
will be splendid.'
'Not at all, Julian. I'll be off.'
McAuliff turned his head sharply, without subtlety, and looked at
Preston. The man's first-name familiarity with old Warfield was the
last thing he expected. Clive Preston smiled and walked rapidly out of
the room as Alex watched him, bewildered.
'To answer your unspoken questions,' said Warfield, 'although you
have been speaking with Preston on the telephone, he is not with
Dunstone, Limited, Mr McAuliff.'
Alexander turned back to the diminutive businessman. 'Whenever I
phoned the Dunstone offices for you, I had to give a number for someone
to return the call—'
'Always within a few minutes,' interrupted Warfield. 'We never kept
you waiting; that would have been rude. Whenever you telephoned - four
times, I believe - my secretary informed Mr Preston. At his offices.'
'And the Rolls at Waterloo was Preston's,' said Alex.
'Yes.'
'So if anyone was following me, my business is with Preston. Has
been since I've been in London.'
'That was the object.'
'Why?'
'Self-evident, I should think. We'd rather not have anyone know
we're discussing a contract with you. Our initial call to you in New
York stressed that point, I believe.'
'You said it was confidential. Everyone says that. If you meant it
to this degree, why did you even use the name of Dunstone?'
'Would you have flown over otherwise?'
McAuliff thought for a moment. A week of skiing in Aspen
notwithstanding, there had been several other projects. But
Dunstone was Dunstone, one of the largest corporations in the
international market. 'No, I probably wouldn't have.'
'We were convinced of that. We knew you were about to negotiate with
ITT about a little matter in southern Germany.'
Alex stared at the old man. He couldn't help but smile. 'That, Mr
Warfield, was supposed to be as confidential as anything you might be
considering.'
Warfield returned the good humour. 'Then we know who deals best in
confidence, don't we? ITT is patently obvious… Come, we'll have a
drink, then lunch. I know your preference: Scotch with ice. Somewhat
more ice than I think is good for the system.'
The old man laughed softly and led McAuliff to a mahogany bar across
the room. He made drinks rapidly, his ancient hands moving deftly, in
counterpoint to his walk. He offered Alex a glass and indicated that
they should sit down. 'I've learned quite a bit about you, Mr McAuliff.
Rather fascinating.'
'I heard someone was asking around.'
They were across from one another, in armchairs. At McAuliff's
statement, Warfield took his eyes off his glass and looked sharply,
almost angrily, at Alex. 'I find that hard to believe.'
'Names weren't used, but the information reached me. Eight sources.
Five American, two Canadian, one French.'
'Not traceable to Dunstone.' Warfield's short body seemed
to stiffen; McAuliff understood that he had touched an exposed nerve.
'I said names weren't mentioned.'
'Did you use the Dunstone name in any ensuing
conversations? Tell me the truth, Mr McAuliff.'
'There'd be no reason not to tell the truth,' answered Alex, a touch
disagreeably. 'No, I did not.'
'I believe you.'
'You should.'
'If I didn't, I'd pay you handsomely for your time and suggest you
return to America and take up with ITT.'
'I may do that anyway, mightn't I? I do have that option.'
'You like money.'
'Very much.'
Julian Warfield placed his glass down and brought his thin, small
hands together. 'Alexander T. McAuliff. The "T" is for Tarquin, rarely,
if ever, used. It's not even on your stationery; rumour is you don't
care for it…'
'True. I'm not violent about it.'
'Alexander Tarquin McAuliff, thirty-eight years old. BS, MS, PhD,
but the title of Doctor is used as rarely as his middle name. The
geology departments of several leading American universities, including
California Tech and Columbia, lost an excellent research fellow when Dr
McAuliff decided to put his expertise to more commercial pursuits.' The
man smiled, his expression one of how-am-I-doing; but, again, not a
question.
'Faculty and laboratory pressures are no less aggravating than those
outside. Why not get paid for them?'
'Yes. We agreed you like money?'
'Don't you?'
Warfield laughed, and his laugh was genuine and loud. His thin,
short body fairly shook with pleasure as he brought Alex his glass.
'Excellent reply. Really quite fine.'
'It wasn't that good…'
'But you're interrupting me,' said Warfield as he returned to his
chair. 'It's my intention to impress you.'
'Not about myself, I hope.'
'No. Our thoroughness… You are from a close-knit family, secure
academic surroundings—'
'Is this necessary?' asked McAuliff, fingering his glass,
interrupting the old man.
'Yes, it is,' replied Warfield simply, continuing as though his line
of thought was unbroken. 'Your father was - and is, in retirement - a
highly regarded agro-scientist; your mother, unfortunately deceased, a
delightfully romantic soul adored by all. It was she who gave you the
"Tarquin," and until she died you never denied the initial or the name.
You had an older brother, a pilot, shot down in the last days of the
World War; you yourself made a splendid record in Korea… Upon receipt
of your doctorate, it was assumed that you would continue the family's
academic tradition. Until personal tragedy propelled you out of the
laboratory. A young woman - your fiancee - was killed on the streets of
New York. At night. You blamed yourself… and others. You were to have
met her. Instead, a hastily called, quite unnecessary research meeting
prohibited it… Alexander Tarquin McAuliff fled the university. Am I
drawing an accurate picture?'
'You're invading my privacy. You're repeating information that may
be personal but hardly… classified. Easy to piece together. You're also
extremely obnoxious. I don't think I want to have lunch with you.'
'A few more minutes. Then - it is your decision.'
'It's my decision right now.'
'Of course. Just a bit more… Dr McAuliff embarked on a new career
with extraordinary precision. He hired out to several established
geological-survey firms, where his work was outstanding; then left the
companies and underbid them on upcoming contracts. Industrial
construction knows no national boundaries: Fiat builds in Moscow;
Moscow in Cairo; General Motors in Berlin; British Petroleum in Buenos
Aires; Volkswagen in New Jersey, USA; Renault in Madrid - I could go on
for hours. And everything begins with a single file folder profuse with
complicated technical paragraphs describing what is and what is not
possible in terms of construction upon the land. Such a simple,
taken-for-granted exercise. But without that file, nothing else is
possible.'
'Your few minutes are about up, Warfield. And, speaking for the
community of surveyors, we thank you for acknowledging our necessity.
As you say, we're so often taken for granted.' McAuliff put his glass
down on the table next to his armchair and started to get up.
Warfield spoke quietly, precisely. 'You have twenty-three bank
accounts, including four in Switzerland; I can supply the code numbers
if you like. Others in Prague, Tel Aviv, Montreal, Brisbane, Sao Paulo,
Kingston, Los Angeles, and, of course, New York, among others.'
Alexander remained immobile at the edge of his chair and stared at
the little old man. 'You've been busy.'
'Thorough… Nothing patently illegal; none of the accounts is
enormous. Altogether they total three hundred and eighteen thousand
four hundred-odd US dollars, as of several days ago when you flew from
New York. Unfortunately, the figure is meaningless. Due to
international tax agreements regarding financial transfers, the money
cannot be centralized.'
'Now I know I don't want to have lunch with you.'
'Perhaps not. But how would you like one million dollars? Free and
clear, all American taxes paid. Deposited in the bank of your choice.'
McAuliff continued to stare at Warfield. It was several moments
before he spoke.
'You're serious, aren't you?'
'Utterly.'
'For a survey?'
'Yes.'
'There are five good houses right here in London. For that kind of
money, why call on me? Why not use them?'
'We don't want a firm. We want an individual. A man we have
investigated thoroughly; a man we believe will honour the most
important aspect of the contract. Secrecy.'
'That sounds ominous.'
'Not at all. A financial necessity. If word got out, the speculators
would move in. Land prices would skyrocket, the project would become
untenable. It would be abandoned.'
'What is it? Before I give you my answer, I have to know that.'
'We're planning to build a city. In Jamaica.'
TWO
McAuliff politely rejected Warfield's offer to have Preston's car
brought back to Belgravia for him. Alex wanted to walk, to think in the
cold winter air. It helped him to sort out his thoughts while in
motion; the brisk, chilling winds somehow forced his concentration
inward.
Not that there was so much to think about as to absorb. In a sense,
the hunt was over. The end of the intricate maze was in sight, after
eleven years of complicated wandering. Not for the money per se. But
for money as the conveyor belt to independence.
Complete. Total. Never having to do what he did not wish to do.
Ann's death - murder - had been the springboard. Certainly the
rationalization, he understood that. But the rationalization had solid
roots, beyond the emotional explosion. The research meeting -
accurately described by Warfield as 'quite unnecessary' - was
symptomatic of the academic system.
All laboratory activities were geared to justify whatever grants
were in the offing. God! How much useless activity! How many pointless
meetings! How often useful work went unfinished because a research
grant did not materialize or a department administrator shifted
priorities to achieve more obvious progress for progress-oriented
foundations.
He could not fight the academic system; he was too angry to join its
politics. So he left it.
He could not stand the companies, either. Jesus! A
different set of priorities, leading to only one objective: profit.
Only profit. Projects that didn't produce the most favourable 'profit
picture' were abandoned without a backward glance. Stick to business. Don't waste time.
So he left the companies and went out on his own. Where a man could
decide for himself the price of immediate values. And whether they were
worth it.
All things considered, everything… everything Warfield proposed was
not only correct and acceptable, it was glorious. An unencumbered,
legitimate million dollars for a survey Alex knew he could handle.
He knew vaguely the area in Jamaica to be surveyed: east and south
of Falmouth, on the coast as far as Duncan's Bay; in the interior into
the Cock Pit. It was actually the Cock Pit territory that Dunstone
seemed most interested in: vast sections of uninhabited - in some
cases, unmapped - mountains and jungles. Undeveloped miles ten minutes
by air to the sophistication of Montego Bay, fifteen to the expanding,
exploding New Kingston.
Dunstone would deliver him the specific degree marks within the next
three weeks, during which time he was to assemble his team.
He was back on the Strand now, the Savoy Court several blocks away.
He hadn't resolved anything, really; there was nothing to resolve,
except perhaps the decision to start looking for people at the
university. He was sure there would be no lack of interested
applicants; he only hoped he could find the level of qualification he
needed.
Everything was fine. Really fine.
He walked down the alley into the court, smiled at the doorman, and
passed the thick glass doors of the Savoy. He crossed to the
reservations desk on the right and asked for any messages.
There were none.
But there was something else. The tuxedoed clerk behind the counter
asked him a question.
'Will you be going upstairs, Mr McAuliff?'
'Yes… yes, I'll be going upstairs,' answered Alex, bewildered at the
inquiry. 'Why?'
'I beg your pardon?'
'Why do you ask?' McAuliff smiled.
'Floor service, sir,' replied the man, with intelligence in his
eyes, assurance in his soft British voice. 'In the event of any
cleaning or pressing. These are frightfully busy hours.'
'Of course. Thank you.' Alex smiled again, nodded his appreciation,
and started for the small brass-grilled elevator. He had tried to pry
something else from the Savoy man's eyes, but he could not. Yet he knew
something else was there. In the six years he had been staying at the
hotel, no one had ever asked him if he was 'going upstairs.'
Considering English… Savoy propriety, it was an unlikely question.
Or were his cautions, his Dunstone cautions, asserting themselves
too quickly, too strongly?
Inside his room, McAuliff stripped to shorts, put on a bathrobe, and
ordered ice from the floor steward. He still had most of a bottle of
Scotch on the bureau. He sat in an armchair next to the window and
opened a newspaper, considerately left by room service.
With the swiftness for which the Savoy stewards were known, there
was a knock on his corridor door. McAuliff got out of the chair and
then stopped.
The Savoy stewards did not knock on hallway doors - they let
themselves into the foyers. Room privacy was obtained by locking the
bedroom doors, which opened on to the foyers.
Alex walked rapidly to the door and opened it. There was no steward.
Instead, there was a tall, pleasant-looking middle-aged man in a tweed
overcoat.
'Mr McAuliff?'
'Yes?'
'My name is Holcroft. May I speak with you, sir?'
'Oh? Sure… certainly.' Alex looked down the hallway as he gestured
the man to pass him. 'I rang for ice; I thought you were the steward.'
'Then may I step into your… excuse me, your lavatory, sir? I'd
rather not be seen.'
'What? Are you from Warfield?'
'No, Mr McAuliff. British Intelligence.'
THREE
'That was a sorry introduction, Mr McAuliff. Do you mind if I begin
again?' Holcroft walked into the bedroom-sitting room. Alex dropped ice
cubes into a glass.
'No need to. I've never had anyone knock on my hotel door, say he's
with British Intelligence, and ask to use the bathroom. Has kind of a
quaint ring to it… Drink?'
'Thank you. Short, if you please; a touch of soda will be fine.'
McAuliff poured as requested and handed Holcroft his glass. 'Take
off your coat. Sit down.'
'You're most hospitable. Thank you.' The Britisher removed his tweed
overcoat and placed it carefully on the back of a chair.
'I'm most curious, that's what I am, Mr Holcroft.' McAuliff sat by
the window, the Englishman across from him. 'The clerk at the desk; he
asked if I was going upstairs. That was for you, wasn't it?'
'Yes, it was. He knows nothing, however. He thinks the managers
wished to see you unobtrusively. It's often done that way. Over
financial matters, usually.'
'Thanks very much.'
'We'll set it right, if it disturbs you.'
'It doesn't.'
'I was in the cellars. When word reached me, I came up the service
elevator.'
'Rather elaborate—'
'Rather necessary,' interrupted the Englishman. 'For the past few
days, you've been under continuous surveillance. I don't mean to alarm
you.'
McAuliff paused, his glass halfway to his lips. 'You just have. I
gather the surveillance wasn't yours.'
'Well, you could say we observed - from a distance - both the
followers and their subject.' Holcroft sipped his whiskey
and smiled.
'I'm not sure I like this game,' said McAuliff quietly.
'Neither do we. May I introduce myself more completely?'
'Please do.'
Holcroft removed a black leather identification case from his jacket
pocket, rose from the chair, and crossed to McAuliff. He held out the
flat case and flipped it open. 'There is a telephone number below the
seal. I'd appreciate it if you would place a call for verification, Mr
McAuliff.'
'It's not necessary, Mr Holcroft. You haven't asked me for anything.'
'I may.'
'If you do, I'll call.'
'Yes, I see… Very well.' Holcroft returned to his chair. 'As my
credentials state, I'm with Military Intelligence. What they do not say
is that I have been assigned to the Foreign Office and Inland Revenue.
I'm a financial analyst.'
'In the Intelligence service?' Alex got out of his chair and went to
the ice bucket and the whiskey. He gestured at them; Holcroft shook his
head. 'That's unusual, isn't it? I can understand a bank or a brokerage
office, not the cloak-and-dagger business.'
'The vast majority of… Intelligence gathering is allied with
finance, Mr McAuliff. In greater or lesser degrees of subtlety, of
course.'
'I stand corrected.' Alex replenished his drink and realized that
the ensuing silence was Holcroft's waiting for him to return to his
chair. 'When I think about it, I see what you mean,' he said, sitting
down.
'A few minutes ago, you asked if I were with Dunstone, Limited.'
'I don't think I said that.'
'Very well. Julian Warfield - same thing.'
'It was a mistake on my part. I'm afraid I don't remember asking you
anything.'
'Yes, of course. That's an essential part of your agreement. There
can be no reference whatsoever to Mr Warfield or Dunstone or any one
or thing
related. We understand. Quite frankly, at this juncture we approve
wholeheartedly. Among other reasons, should you violate the demands of
secrecy, we think you'd be killed instantly.'
McAuliff lowered his glass and stared at the Englishman, who spoke
so calmly, precisely. 'That's preposterous,' he said simply.
'That's Dunstone, Limited,' replied Holcroft softly.
'Then I think you'd better explain.'
'I shall do my best… To begin with, the geophysical survey that
you've contracted for is the second such team to be sent out—'
'I wasn't told that,' interrupted Alex.
'With good reason. They're dead. I should say, "disappeared and
dead." No one's been able to trace the Jamaican members; the whites are
dead, of that we are sure.'
'How so? I mean, how can you be sure?'
'The best of all reasons, Mr McAuliff. One of the men was a British
agent.'
McAuliff found himself mesmerized by the soft-spoken Intelligence
man's narrative. Holcroft might have been an Oxford don going over the
blurred complexities of a dark Elizabethan drama, patiently clarifying
each twist of an essentially inexplicable plot. He supplied conjectures
where knowledge failed, making sure that McAuliff understood that they
were conjectures.
Dunstone, Limited, was not simply an industrial-development company;
that was to say, its objectives went far beyond those of a
conglomerate. And it was not solely British, as its listed board of
directors implied. In actuality, Dunstone, Limited, London, was the
'corporate' headquarters of an organization of international financiers
dedicated to building global cartels beyond the interferences and
controls of the European Common Market and its trade alliances. That
was to say - by conjecture - eliminating the economic intervention of
governments: Washington, London, Berlin, Paris, The Hague, and all
other points of the financial compass. Ultimately, these were to be
reduced to the status of clients, not origins of resource or
negotiation.
'You're saying, in essence, that Dunstone is in the process of
setting up its own government.'
'Precisely. A government based solely on economic trade factors. A
concentration of financial resources unheard of since the pharaohs.
Along with this economic catastrophe, and no less important, is the
absorption of the government of Jamaica by Dunstone, Limited. Jamaica
is Dunstone's projected base of operations. They can succeed, Mr
McAuliff.'
Alex put his glass on the wide windowsill. He began slowly, trying
to find words, looking out at the slate rooftops converging into the
Savoy Court. 'Let me try to understand… from what you've told me and
from what I know. Dunstone anticipates investing heavily in Jamaican
development. All right, we agree on that, and the figures are
astronomical. Now, in exchange for this investment, they expect to be
awarded a lot of clout from a grateful Kingston government. At least,
that's what I'd expect if I were Dunstone. The normal tax credits,
importing concessions, employment breaks, real estate… general
incentives. Nothing new.' McAuliff turned his head and looked at
Holcroft. 'I'm not sure I see any financial catastrophe… except, maybe,
an English financial catastrophe.'
'You stood corrected; I stand rebuked,' said Holcroft. 'But only in
a minor way. You're quite perceptive; it's true that our concerns were
- at first - UK-oriented. English perversity, if you will.
Dunstone is an important factor in Britain's balance of trade. We'd
hate to lose it.'
'So you build a conspiracy—'
'Now, just a minute, Mr McAuliff,' the agent broke in, without
raising his voice. 'The highest echelons of the British government do
not invent conspiracies. If Dunstone were what it is
purported to be, those responsible in Downing Street would fight openly
for our interests. I'm afraid that is not the case. Dunstone reaches
into extremely sensitive areas in London, Berlin, Paris, Rome… and,
most assuredly, in Washington. But I shall return to that… I'd like to
concentrate on Jamaica for the moment. You used the terms "concessions."
"tax breaks"… "clout" and "incentives." I say "absorption." '
'Words.'
'Laws, Mr McAuliff. Sovereign; sanctioned by prime
ministers and cabinets and parliament. Think for a minute, Mr McAuliff.
An existing, viable government in a strategically located independent
nation controlled by a huge industrial monopoly with world markets.
It's not outlandish. It's around the corner.'
Alex did think about it. For more than a minute. Prodded by
Holcroft's gently spoken, authoritatively phrased 'clarifications.'
Without disclosing MI5's methods of discovery, the Britisher
explained Dunstone's modus operandi. Enormous sums of capital
had been transferred from Swiss banks to Kingston's King Street, that
short stretch of the block that housed major international banking
institutions. But the massive cash flow was not deposited in British,
American or Canadian banks. Those went begging, while the less secure
Jamaican banks were stunned by an influx of hard money unheard of in
their histories.
Few knew that the vast new Jamaican riches were solely Dunstone's.
But for these few, proof was supplied by the revolving transfers of a
thousand accounts within an eight-hour business day.
Heads spun in astonishment. A few heads. Selected men in
extraordinarily high places were shown incontrovertibly that a new
force had invaded Kingston, a force so powerful that Wall Street and
Whitehall would tremble at its presence.
'If you know this much, why don't you move in? Stop them.'
'Not possible,' answered Holcroft. 'All transactions are covered;
there's no one to accuse. It's too complex a web of financing. Dunstone
is masterminded by Warfield. He operates on the premise that a closed
society is efficient only when its various arms have little or no
knowledge of each other.'
'In other words, you can't prove your case and—'
'We cannot expose what we cannot prove,' interrupted Holcroft. 'That
is correct.'
'You could threaten. I mean, on the basis of what you know damn well
is true, you could raise one hell of a cry… But you can't chance it. It
goes back to those "sensitive" areas in Berlin, Washington, Paris, et
cetera. Am I correct about that, too?'
'You are.'
'They must be goddamn sensitive.'
'We believe they comprise an international cross section of
extraordinarily powerful men.'
'In governments?'
'Allied with major industries.'
'For instance?'
Holcroft held Alex's eyes with his own. His message was clear. 'You
understand that what I say is merely… conjecture.'
'All right. And my memory is short.'
'Very well.' The Britisher got out of the chair and walked around
it. His voice remained quiet, but there was no lack of precision. 'Your
own country: conceivably the Vice-President of the United States or
someone in his office and, certainly, unknown members of the Senate and
the President's cabinet. England: prominent figures in the House of
Commons and undoubtedly various department directors at Inland Revenue.
Germany: ranking vorsitzen in the Bundestag. France: elitist
holdovers from the pre-Algerian Gaullists… Such men as I have
described must exist relative to Warfield. The progress made
by Dunstone would have been impossible without influence in such
places. Of that we are certain.'
'But you don't know who, specifically.'
'No.'
'And you think, somehow, I can help you?'
'We do, Mr McAuliff.'
'With all the resources you have, you come to me? I've been
contracted for a Dunstone field survey, nothing else.'
'The second Dunstone survey, Mr McAuliff.'
Alexander stared at the Englishman.
'And you say that team is dead.'
Holcroft returned to his chair and sat down once more. 'Yes, Mr
McAuliff. Which means Dunstone has an adversary. One that's either
quite powerful or very knowledgeable or both. And we haven't the
slightest idea what it is… who they are. Only that it exists, they
exist. We wish to make contact with those who want the same thing we
do. We can guarantee the safety of your expedition. You are the key.
Without you, we're stymied. Without us, you and your people might well
be in extreme jeopardy.'
McAuliff shot out of the chair and stood above the British agent. He
took several short, deep breaths and walked purposefully away from
Holcroft; then he aimlessly paced the Savoy room. The Englishman seemed
to understand Alex's action. He let the moment subside; he said nothing.
'Jesus! You're something, Holcroft!' McAuliff returned to
his chair, but he did not sit down. He reached for his drink on the
windowsill, not so much for the whiskey as to hold the glass. 'You come
in here, build a case against Warfield by way of an economics lecture,
and then calmly tell me that I've signed what amounts to my last
contract if I don't cooperate with you.'
'That's rather black and white, chap…'
'That's rather exactly what you just said! Suppose you're mistaken?'
'We're not.'
'You know goddamn well I can't prove that either. If I go
back to Warfield and tell him about this little informal chat, I'll
lose the contract the second I open my mouth. And the largest fee any
surveyor was ever offered.'
'May I ask the amount? Just academic interest.'
McAuliff looked at Holcroft. 'What would you say to a million
dollars?'
'I'd say I'm surprised he didn't offer two. Or three… Why not? You
wouldn't live to spend it.'
Alex held the Englishman's eyes. 'Translated, that means if
Dunstone's enemies don't kill me, Dunstone will?'
'It's what we believe. There's no other logical conclusion. Once
your work is finished.'
'I see…' McAuliff walked slowly to the whiskey and poured
deliberately, as if measuring. He did not offer anything to Holcroft.
'If I confront Warfield with what you've told me, you're really saying
that he'd…'
'Kill you? Are those the words that stick, Mr McAuliff?'
'I don't have much cause to employ those kind of words, Mr Holcroft.'
'Naturally. No one ever gets used to them… Yes, we think he would
kill you. Have you killed, of course. After picking your brains.'
McAuliff leaned against the wall, staring at the whiskey in his
glass, but not drinking. 'You're not giving me an alternative, are you?'
'Of course we are. I can leave these rooms; we never met.'
'Suppose someone sees you? That surveillance you spoke of.'
'They won't see me; you will have to take my word for that.'
Holcroft leaned back in the chair. He brought his fingers together
pensively. 'Of course, under the circumstances, we'd be in no position
to offer protection. From either faction—'
'Protection from the unprovable,' interjected Alex softly.
'Yes.'
'No alternative…' McAuliff pushed himself away from the wall and
took several swallows of whiskey. 'Except one, Holcroft. Suppose I
cooperate, on the basis that there may be substance to your
charges… or theories, or whatever you call them. But I'm not
accountable to you.'
'I'm not sure I understand.'
'I don't accept orders blindly. No puppet strings. I want that
condition - on the record. If that's the phrase.'
'It must be. I've used it frequently.'
McAuliff crossed in front of the Englishman to the arm of his chair.
He sat on the edge. 'Now, put it in simple words. What am I supposed to
do?'
Holcroft's voice was calm and precise. 'There are two objectives.
The first is Dunstone's opposition; those who destroyed - killed the
first survey team. It is conceivable that they will lead you to the
second and, obviously, primary objective: the names of Dunstone's
unknown hierarchy. The faceless men in London, Paris, Berlin,
Washington… even one or two. We'd be grateful for anything specific.'
'How do I begin?'
'With very little, I'm afraid. But we do have something. It's only a
word, a name, perhaps. We don't know. But we have every reason to think
it's terribly important.'
'A word?'
'Yes…"Halidon."'
FOUR
It was like working in two distinct spheres of reality, neither
completely real. During the days, McAuliff conferred with the men and
women in the University of London's geophysics laboratories, gathering
personnel data for his survey team. The university was Dunstone's cover
- along with the Royal Historical Society - and neither was aware that
Dunstone's finances were behind the expedition.
During the nights, into the early morning hours, he met with R. C.
Holcroft, British Intelligence, in small, guarded houses on dimly lit
streets in Kensington and Chelsea. These locations were reached by two
changes of vehicles - taxis driven by MI5. And for each meeting Alex
was
provided with a cover story regarding his whereabouts: a dinner party,
a girl, a crowded restaurant he was familiar with; nothing out of the
ordinary, everything easily explained and verifiable.
The sessions with Holcroft were divided into areas of instruction:
the political and financial climate of Jamaica, MI5 contacts throughout
the island, and basic skills - with instruments - in communication and
counter-surveillance.
At several sessions, Holcroft brought in West Indian 'specialists' -
black agents ,who were capable of answering just about any question
McAuliff might raise. McAuliff had few questions; he had surveyed for
the Kaiser bauxite interests near Oracabessa a little over a year ago,
a fact he suspected had led Julian Warfield to him.
When they were alone, R. C. Holcroft droned on about the attitudes
and reactions Alex should foster. Always build on part of the truth… keeping it simple… the basics
easily confirmed… You'll find it quite acceptable to operate on different levels…
naturally, instinctively. Your concentration will separate
independently… Very rapidly your personal antennae will be activated… second
nature. You'll fall into a rhythm… the connecting link between your
divided objectives…
The British agent was never emphatic, simply redundant. Over and
over again, he repeated the phrases, with minor variations in the words.
Alex understood. Holcroft was providing him with fundamentals: tools
and confidence.
'Your contact in Kingston will be given you in a few days; we're
still refining. Kingston's a mess; trust isn't easily come by there.'
'Whose trust?' asked McAuliff.
'Good point,' replied the agent. 'Don't dwell on it. That's our job.
Memorize everyone else.'
Alex looked at the typewritten names on the paper that was not to be
removed from the house in Kensington. 'You've got a lot of people on
your payroll.'
'A few too many. Those that are crossed out were on double rosters.
Ours and the CIA's. Your Central Intelligence Agency has become too
political in recent years.'
'Are you concerned about leaks?'
'Yes. Dunstone, Limited, is alive in Washington. Elusive, but very
much alive.'
The mornings found him entering the other sphere of reality, the
University of London. He discovered that it was easier than he'd
thought to shut out the previous night's concerns. Holcroft's theory of
divided objectives was borne out; he did fall into a rhythm. His
concentration was now limited to professional concerns - the building
of his survey team.
It was agreed that the number should not exceed eight, preferably
fewer. The areas of expertise would be the normal ones: shale,
limestone, and bedrock stratification; water and gas-pocket analyses;
vegetation - soil and botanical research; and finally, because the
survey extended into the interior regions of the Cock Pit country,
someone familiar with the various dialects and outback customs.
Warfield had thought this last was superfluous; Alex knew better.
Resentments ran high in Jamaica.
McAuliff had made up his mind about one member of the team, a soil
analyst from California named Sam Tucker. Sam was an immense, burly man
in his fifties, given to whatever excesses could be found in any
immediate vicinity, but a top professional in his field. He was also
the most reliable man Alex had ever known, a strong friend who had
worked surveys with him from Alaska to last year's Kaiser job in
Oracabessa. McAuliff implied that if Julian Warfield withheld approval
from Sam, he might have to find himself another surveyor.
It was a hollow threat, all things considered, but it was worth the
embarrassment of having to back down. Alex wanted Sam with him in
Jamaica. The others would be new, unproven; Tucker had worn well over
the years. He could be trusted.
Warfield ran a Dunstone check on Sam Tucker and agreed there was
nothing prejudicial beyond certain minor idiosyncrasies. But Sam was to
be no different from any other member; none was to be informed of
Dunstone's interest. Obviously.
None would be. Alex meant it. More than Warfield realized. If there
was any truth to R. C. Holcroft's astonishing pronouncements.
Everyone on the survey would be told the same story. Given a set of
facts engineered by Dunstone, Limited. Even the organizations involved
accepted the facts as truth; there was no reason not to. Financial
grants were not questioned; they were academic holy writ. Coveted,
revered, never debated.
The geological survey had been made possible through a grant from
the Royal Historical Society, encouraged by the Commonwealth Activities
Committee, House of Lords. The expedition was to be a joint endeavour
of the University of London and the Jamaican Ministry of Education.
All salaries, expenses, disbursements of any kind were to be made
through the bursar's office at the university. The Royal Society would
establish lines of bank credit, and the university was to draw on these
funds.
The reason for the survey was compatible with the endeavours of the
Commonwealth Committee at Lords, whose members peopled and paid for
most royal societies. It was a patrimonial gift to the new, independent
nation -another not-to-be-forgotten link with Britannia. A study which
would be acknowledged in textbooks for years to come. For, according to
the Jamaican Ministry, there were no records of this particular
territory having been subjected to a geophysical survey of any
dimensions.
Obviously.
And if there were, certainly no one was going to bring them up.
Academic holy writ.
The university rip-off. One did not question.
The selection of Alexander McAuliff for the post of survey director
was acknowledged to be an embarrassment to both the society and the
university. But the American was the Jamaican Ministry's choice. One
suffered such insults from the colonies.
One took the money; one did not debate.
Holy writ.
Everything was just complicated enough to be academically viable,
thought McAuliff. Julian Warfield understood the environs through which
he manoeuvred.
As did R. C. Holcroft of British Intelligence.
And Alex began to realize that he would have to catch up. Both
Dunstone, Limited, and MI5 were committed to specific objectives. He
could get lost in those commitments.
In some ways, he had lost already.
He intended doing something about that in the not-too-distant
future. Certain… things would have to be made clear.
But choosing the team was his immediate concern.
McAuliffs personnel approach was one he had used often enough to
know it worked. He would not interview anyone whose work he had not
read thoroughly; anyone he did interview had already proven himself on
paper. Beyond the specific areas of expertise, he cared about
adaptability to the physical and climatic requirements, and to the
give-and-take of close-quarters association.
He had done his work. He was ready.
'My secretary said you wanted to see me, Dr McAuliff.' The speaker
at the door was the chairman of the geophysics department, a
bespectacled, gaunt academician who tried not to betray his resentment
of Alex. It was obvious that the man felt cheated by both the Royal
Society and Kingston for not having been chosen for McAuliff's job. He
had recently completed an excellent survey in Anguilla; there were too
many similarities between that assignment and the Jamaican grant for
comfort.
'Good Lord,' said Alex. 'I expected to come to your office.' He
crossed to his desk and smiled awkwardly. He had been standing by the
single window, looking out over a miniature quadrangle, watching
students carrying books, thankful that he was no longer part of that
world. 'I think I'll be ready to start the interviews this afternoon.'
'So soon?'
'Thanks mainly to you, Professor Ralston. Your recommendations were
excellent.' McAuliff wasn't being polite; the academician's candidates
were good - on paper. Of the ten final prospects, exactly half were
from Ralston; the remaining five were free-lancers highly thought of by
two London survey firms. 'I'm inclined just to take your people without
seeing any others,' continued Alex, now being polite. 'But the Kingston
Ministry is adamant that I interview these.' McAuliff handed Ralston a
sheet of paper with the five non-university names.
'Oh, yes. I recognize several,' said Ralston, his voice now
pleasantly acknowledging Alex's compliment. 'A couple here are… a
couple, you know.'
'What?'
'Man-and-wife team. The Jensens.'
'There's one Jensen. Who's the woman?'
'R. L. Wells. That's Ruth Wells, Jensen's wife.'
'I didn't realize… I can't say that fact is in their favour.'
'Why not?'
'I'm not sure,' answered Alex sincerely. 'I've never had a married
couple on a survey. Silly reaction, isn't it? Do you know anybody else
there?'
'One fellow. I'd rather not comment.'
'Then I wish you would.'
'Ferguson. James Ferguson. He was a student of mine. Very outspoken
chap. Quite opinionated, if you know what I mean.'
'But he's a botanist, a plant specialist, not a geology man.'
'Survey training; geophysics was his curriculum secondary. Of
course, it was a number of years ago.'
McAuliff sorted out some papers on the desk. 'It couldn't have been
too many. He's only been on three tours, all in the past four years.'
'It wasn't, actually. And you should see him. He's considered quite
good, I'm told.'
'Here are your people,' said Alex, offering a second page to
Ralston. 'I chose five out of the eight you submitted. Any more
surprises there? Incidentally, I hope you approve.'
Ralston read the list, adjusting his spectacles and pursing his lips
as he did so. 'Yes, I thought you'd select these. You realize, of
course, that this Whitehall chap is not one of us. He was recommended
by the West Indies Studies. Brilliant fellow, according to the chairs.
Never met him myself. Makes quite a lot of money on the lecture
circuits.'
'He's black, isn't he?'
'Oh, certainly. He knows every tongue, every dialect, every cultural
normality and aberration in the Antilles. His doctoral thesis traced no
fewer than twenty-seven African tribes to the islands. From the
Bushwadie to the Coromantees. His research of Indian-African
integration is the standard reference. He's quite a dandy, too, I
believe.'
'Anyone else you want to talk about?'
'No, not actually. You'll have a difficult time deciding between
your shale-bedrock experts. You've two very decent ones here. Unless
your… immediate reactions take precedence. One way or the other.'
'I don't understand.'
Ralston smiled. 'It would be presumptuous of me to comment further.'
And then the professor added quickly, 'Shall I have one of our girls
set up the appointments?'
'Thanks, I'd appreciate it. If schedules can be organized with all
ten, I'd like an hour apiece over the next few days; whatever order is
convenient for everyone.'
'An hour…'
'I'll call back those I want to talk with further - no sense in
wasting everyone's time.'
'Yes, of course.'
One applicant disqualified himself the moment he walked into
McAuliff's cubicle. The fact that he was more drunk than sober at one
o'clock in the afternoon might have been explained, but, instead, it
was used as the excuse to eliminate him for a larger problem: He was
crippled in his right leg. Three men were crossed off for identical
conditions: Each was obviously hostile to West Indians - a spreading
English virus, Britain's parallel to Americus Redneckus.
The Jensens - Peter Jensen and Ruth Wells - were delightful
surprises, singly and together. They were in their early fifties,
bright, confident, and good-natured. A childless couple, they were
financially secure and genuinely interested both in each other and in
their work. His expertise was ore minerals; hers, the sister science of
palaeontology - fossils. His had direct application, hers was removed
but academically justifiable.
'Might I ask you some questions, Dr McAuliff?' Peter Jensen packed
his pipe, his voice pleasant.
'By all means.'
'Can't say that I know much about Jamaica, but this seems like a
damned curious trip. I'm not sure I understand - what's the point?'
Alex was grateful for the opportunity to recite the explanation
created by Dunstone, Limited. He watched the ore man closely as he
spoke, relieved to see the light of recognition in the geologist's
eyes. When he finished, he paused and added, 'I don't know if that
clears up anything.'
'Oh, my word, it certainly does, chap. Burke's Peerage strikes
again!' Peter Jensen chuckled, glancing at his wife. 'The
royal H has been hard
pressed to find something to do. Its members at
Lords simply provided it. Good show… I trust the university will make a
pound or two.'
'I'm afraid the budget's not that loose.'
'Really?' Peter Jensen held his pipe as he looked at McAuliff. 'Then
perhaps I don't understand. You'll forgive me, but you're not
known in the field as a particularly inexpensive director… quite
rightfully, let me add; your reputation precedes you.'
'From the Balkans to Australia,' added Ruth Wells Jensen, her
expression showing minor irritation with her husband. 'And if you have
a separate arrangement, it's none of Peter's bloody business.'
Alex laughed softly. 'You're kind, both of you. But there's nothing
special. I got caught, it's as simple as that. I've worked for
companies on the island; I hope to again. Often. All geophysical
certificates are issued by Kingston, and Kingston asked for me. Let's
call it an investment.'
Again McAuliff watched Peter Jensen closely; he had rehearsed the
answer. The Britisher looked once more at his wife. Briefly. Then he
chuckled, as he had done seconds before.
'I'd do the same, old chap. But God help the survey I was director
on.'
'It's one I'd avoid like a May Day in Trafalgar,' said Ruth,
matching her husband's quiet laugh. 'Who have you set, if it's proper
to ask. Anyone we might know?'
'Nobody yet. I've really just started—'
'Well,' interrupted Peter Jensen, his eyes alive with humour, 'since
you suffer from inadequate freight charges, I should tell you we'd
rather not be separated. Somewhat used to each other by now. If you're
interested in one of us, the other would take half-till to straggle
along.'
Whatever doubts that remained for Alex were dispelled by Ruth Wells
Jensen's words. She mimicked her husband's professional tones with good
natured accuracy. 'Half-till, old chap, can be negotiated. Our flat's
damned cold this time of year.'
The Jensens would be hired.
The third non-university name, James Ferguson, had been accurately
described by Ralston as outspoken and opinionated. These traits,
however, were the results of energy and impatience, it seemed to
McAuliff. Ferguson was young - twenty-six - and was not the sort to
survive, much less thrive in an academic environment. Alex recognized
in Ferguson much of his younger self: consummate interest in his
subject, intolerance of the research world in which it was studied. A
contradiction, if not a conflict of objectives. Ferguson free-lanced
for agro-industry companies, and his best recommendation was that he
rarely was out of work, in a market not famous for excessive
employment. James Ferguson was one of the best vegetation specialists
around.
'I'd love to get back to Jamaica,' said the young man within seconds
after the preliminary interview began. 'I was in Port Maria for the
Craft Foundation two years ago. It's my judgment the whole bloody
island is in the middle of a gold mine if the fruit and synthetic
industries would allow development.'
'What's the gold?' asked McAuliff.
'The baracoa fibres. In the second growth stages. A banana strain
could be developed that would send the nylon and the tricot boys into
panic, to say nothing of the fruit shippers.'
'Can you prove it?'
'Damn near did,I think. That's why I was thrown out by the
foundation.'
'You were thrown out?'
'Quite unceremoniously. No sense hiding the fact; don't care to,
really. They told me to stick to business. Can you imagine? You'll
probably run across a few negatives about me, if you're interested.'
'I'm interested, Mr Ferguson.'
The interview with Charles Whitehall disturbed McAuliff. That was to
say, the man disturbed him, not the quality of information received.
Whitehall was a black cynic, a now-Londoner whose roots and expertise
were in the West Indies but whose outlook was aggressively
self-perpetuating. His appearance startled McAuliff. For a man who had
written three volumes of Caribbean history, whose work was, in
Ralston's words, 'the standard reference,' Charles Whitehall looked
barely as old as James Ferguson.
'Don't let my appearance fool you, Mr McAuliff,' said Whitehall,
upon entering the cubicle and extending his hand to Alex. 'My tropic
hue covers the years better than paler skin. I'm forty-two years old.'
'You read my thoughts.'
'Not necessarily. I'm used to the reaction,' replied the black,
sitting down, smoothing his expensive blazer, and crossing his legs,
which were encased in flared pin-striped trousers.
'Since you don't waste words, Dr Whitehall, neither will I. Why are
you interested in this survey? As I gather, you can make a great deal
more money on the lecture circuit. A geophysical survey isn't the most
lucrative employment.'
'Let's say the financial aspects are secondary; one of the few times
in my life that they will be, perhaps.' Whitehall spoke while removing
a silver cigarette case from his pocket. 'To tell you the truth, Mr
McAuliff, there's a certain ego fulfillment in returning to one's
country as an expert under the aegis of the Royal Historical Society.
It's really as simple as that.'
Alex believed the man. For, as he read him, Whitehall was a scholar
far more honoured abroad than at home. It seemed that Charles Whitehall
wanted to achieve an acceptance commensurate with his scholarship that
had been denied him in the intellectual - or was it social? - houses of
Kingston.
'Are you familiar with the Cock Pit country?'
'As much as anyone who isn't a runner. Historically and culturally,
much more so, of course.'
'What's a runner?'
'Runners are hill people. From the mountain communities. They hire
out as guides… when you can find one. They're primitives, really. Who
have you hired for the survey?'
'What?' Alex's thoughts were on runners.
'I asked who was going with you. On the survey team. I'd be
interested.'
'Well… not all the posts have been filled. There's a couple named
Jensen - ores and palaeo; a young botanist, Ferguson. An American
friend of mine, a soil analyst, name of Sam Tucker.'
'I've heard of Jensen, I believe. I'm not sure, but I think so. I
don't know the others.'
'Did you expect to?'
'Frankly, yes. Royal Society projects generally attract very
high-calibre people.' Whitehall delicately tapped his cigarette on the
rim of an ashtray.
'Such as yourself?' asked McAuliff, smiling.
'I'm not modest,' replied the black scholar, returning Alex's smile
with an open grin. 'And I'm very much interested. I think I could be of
service to you.'
So did McAuliff.
The second shale-bedrock analyst was listed as A. Gerrard Booth.
Booth was a university applicant personally recommended by Ralston in
the following manner:
'I promised Booth I'd bring these papers and articles to your
attention. I do believe Booth would be a fine asset to the survey.'
Ralston had given McAuliff a folder filled with A. Gerrard Booth's
studies of sheet strata in such diverse locations as Iran, Corsica, and
southern Spain. Alex recalled having read several of the articles in
the National Geologist, and remembered them as lucid and
professional. Booth was good; Booth was better than good.
Booth was also a woman. A. Gerrard Booth was known to her colleagues
as Alison Booth; no one bothered with the middle name.
She had one of the most genuine smiles McAuliff had ever seen. It
was more a half laugh - one might even say masculine, but the word was
loudly denied by her complete femininity. Her eyes were blue and alive
and level - the eyes of a professional. Her handshake was firm, again
professional. Her light brown hair was long and soft and slightly waved
- brushed repeatedly, thought Alex, for the interview. Her age was
anywhere from late twenties to middle thirties; there was no way to
tell by observation, except that there were laugh lines at the corners
of her eyes.
Alison Booth was not only good and a woman; she was also, at least
on first meeting, a very attractive, outgoing person. The term
'professional' kept recurring to McAuliff as they spoke.
'I made Roily promise to omit the fact that I was a woman. Don't
hold him responsible.'
'Were you so convinced I was anti-liberation?'
The girl raised her hand and brushed her long, soft hair away from
the side of her lovely face. 'No preformed hostility, Dr McAuliff. I
just understand the practical obstacles. It's part of my job to
convince you I'm qualified.'
And then, as if she were aware of the possible double-entendre,
Alison Booth stopped smiling and smoothed her skirt… professionally.
'In field work and the laboratory, I'm sure you are
qualified…'
'Any other considerations would be extraneous, I should think,' said
the girl, with a slight trace of English aloofness.
'Not necessarily. There are environmental problems, degrees of
physical discomfort, if not hardship.'
'I can't conceive of Jamaica being in that league with Iran or
Corsica. I've surveyed in those places.'
'I know—'
'Roily told me,' interrupted Alison Booth, 'that you would not
accept tour references until you had interviewed us.'
'Group isolation tends to create fallible judgments. Insupportable
relationships. I've lost good men in the past because other good men
reacted negatively to them for the wrong reasons.'
'What about women?'
'I used the term inclusively, not exclusively.'
'I have very good references, Dr McAuliff. For the right reasons.'
'I'll request them.'
'I have them with me.' Alison unbuckled the large leather purse on
her lap, extracted two business envelopes, and placed them on the edge
of McAuliff's desk. 'My references, Dr McAuliff.'
Alex laughed as he reached for the envelopes. He looked over at the
girl; her eyes locked with his. There was both a good-humoured
challenge and a degree of supplication in her expression. 'Why is this
survey so important to you, Miss Booth?'
'Because I'm good and I can do the job,' she answered simply.
'You're employed by the university, aren't you?'
'On a part-time basis, lecture and laboratory. I'm not permanent… by
choice, incidentally.'
'Then it's not money.' McAuliff made a statement.
'I could use it; I'm not desperate, however.'
'I can't imagine your being desperate anywhere,' he said, with a
partial smile. And then Alex saw - or thought he saw - a trace of a
cloud across the girl's eyes, an instant of concern that left as
rapidly as it had come. He instinctively pressed further. 'But why this
tour? With your qualifications, I'm sure there are others. Probably
more interesting, certainly more money.'
'The timing is propitious,' she replied softly, with precise
hesitation. 'For personal reasons that have absolutely nothing to do
with my qualifications.'
'Are there reasons why you want to spend a prolonged period in
Jamaica?'
'Jamaica has nothing to do with it. You could be surveying Outer
Mongolia for all that it matters.'
'I see.' Alex replaced the two envelopes on the desk. He
intentionally conveyed a trace of indifference. The girl reacted.
'Very well, Dr McAuliff. It's no secret among my friends.' The girl
held her purse on her lap. She did not grip it; there was no intensity
about her whatsoever. When she spoke, her voice was steady, as were her
eyes. She was the total professional again. 'You called me "Miss
Booth"; that's incorrect. "Booth" is my married name. I regret to say
the marriage was not successful; it was terminated recently. The
solicitousness of well-meaning people during such times can be boring.
I'd prefer to be out of touch.'
McAuliff returned her steady gaze, trying to evoke something beyond
her words. There was something, but he would not allow his
prying further; her expression told him that… professionally.
'It's not relevant. I apologize. But I appreciate your telling me.'
'Is your… responsibility satisfied?'
'Well, my curiosity, at any rate.' Alex leaned forward, elbows on
the desk, his hands folded under his chin. 'Beyond that, and I hope
it's not improper, you've made it possible for me to ask you to have
dinner with me.'
'I think that would depend on the degree of relevance you ascribed
to my acceptance.' Alison's voice was polite but not cold. And there
was that lovely humour in her eyes.
'In all honesty, I do make it a point to have dinner or a
long lunch… even a fair amount of drinks with those I'm thinking about
hiring. But right now, I'm reluctant to admit it.'
'That's a very disarming reply, Dr McAuliff,' said the girl, her
lips parted, laughing her half laugh. 'I'd be delighted to have dinner
with you.'
'I'll do my damnedest not to be solicitous. I don't think it's
necessary at all.'
'And I'm sure you're never boring.'
'Not relevantly.'
FIVE
McAuliff stood on the corner of High Holborn and Chancery and looked
at his watch. The radium hands glowed in the mist-laden London
darkness; it was 11.40. Preston's Rolls-Royce was ten minutes late. Or
perhaps it would not appear at all. His instructions were that if the
car did not arrive by midnight, he was to return to the Savoy. Another
meeting would be scheduled.
There were times when he had to remind himself whose furtive
commands he was following, wondering whether he in turn was being
followed. It was a degrading way to live, he reflected: the constant
awareness that locked a man into a pocket of fear. All the fictions
about the shadow world of conspiracy omitted the fundamental indignity
intrinsic to the world. There was no essential independence; it was
strangling.
This particular evening's rendezvous with Warfield had necessitated
a near-panic call to Holcroft, for the British agent had scheduled a
meeting himself, for one in the morning. That is, McAuliff had
requested it, and Holcroft had set the time and the place. And at 10.20
that night the call had come from Dunstone: Be at High Holborn and
Chancery at 11.30, an hour and ten minutes from then.
Holcroft could not, at first, be found. His highly secret, private
telephone at the Foreign Office simply did not answer. Alex had been
given no other number, and Holcroft had told him repeatedly never to
call the FO and leave his name. Nor was he ever to place a call to the
agent from his rooms at the Savoy. Holcroft did not trust the
switchboards at either establishment.
So Alex had to go out on to the Strand, into succeeding pubs and
chemists' shops to public telephones until Holcroft's line answered. He
was sure he was being observed - by someone - and thus he had to
pretend annoyance each time he hung up after an unanswered call. He
found that he had built the fabric of a lie, should Warfield question
him. His lie was that he was trying to reach Alison Booth and cancel a
lunch date they had for the following day. They did have a lunch date
which he had no intention of cancelling, but the story possessed
sufficient truth to be valid. Build on part of the truth… Attitude and reaction. MI5.
Finally, Holcroft's telephone was answered, by a man who stated
casually that he had gone out for a late supper.
A late supper! Good God!… Global cartels, international collusion in
the highest places, financial conspiracies, and a late supper.
In reasoned tones, as opposed to McAuliff's anxiety, the man told
him that Holcroft would be alerted. Alex was not satisfied; he insisted
that Holcroft be at his telephone - if he had to wait all night - until
he, Alex, made contact after the Warfield appointment.
It was 11.45. Still no St James Rolls-Royce. He looked around at the
few pedestrians on High Holborn, walking through the heavy mist. He
wondered which, if any, was concerned with him.
The pocket of fear.
He wondered, too, about Alison. They had had dinner for the third
night in succession; she had claimed she had a lecture to prepare, and
so the evening was cut short. Considering the complications that
followed, it was a good thing.
Alison was a strange girl. The professional who covered her
vulnerability well; who never strayed far from that circle of quiet
humour that protected her. The half laugh, the warm blue eyes, the
slow, graceful movement of her hands… these were her shields, somehow.
There was no problem in selecting her as his first choice…
professionally. She was far and away the best applicant for the team.
Alex considered himself one of the finest rock-strata specialists on
both continents, yet he wasn't sure he wanted to pit his expertise
against hers. Alison Gerrard Booth was good.
And lovely.
And he wanted her in Jamaica.
He had prepared an argument for Warfield, should Dunstone's goddamn
security computers reject her. The final clearance of his selections
was the object of the night's conference.
Where was that goddamned black ship of an automobile? It
was ten minutes to midnight.
'Excuse me, sir,' said a deep, almost guttural voice behind
McAuliff. He turned, and saw a man about his own age, in a brown
mackinaw; he looked like a longshoreman or a construction worker.
'Yes?'
'It's m' first time in London, sir, and I thinks I'm lost.'
The man then pointed up at the street sign, barely visible in the
spill of the lamp through the mist. 'This says Chancery Lane, which is supposed
to be near a place called Hatton, which is where I'm supposed to meet
m' friends. I can't find it, sir.'
Alex gestured to his left. 'It's up there two or three blocks.'
The man pointed again, as a simpleton might point, in the direction
of McAuliffs gesture. 'Up there, sir?'
'That's right.'
The man shook his arm several times, as if emphasizing. 'You're
sure, sir?' And then the man lowered his voice and spoke rapidly.
'Please don't react, Mr McAuliff. Continue as though you are
explaining. Mr Holcroft will meet you in Soho; there's an all-night
club called The Owl of Saint George. He'll be waiting. Stay at the bar,
he'll reach you. Don't worry about the time… He doesn't want you to
make any more telephone calls. You're being watched.'
McAuliff swallowed, blanched, and waved his hand - a little too
obviously, he felt - in the direction of Hatton Garden. He, too, spoke
quietly, rapidly. 'Jesus! I'm being watched, so are you!'
'We calculate these things—'
'I don't like your addition! What am I supposed to tell Warfield? To
let me off in Soho!'
'Why not? Say you feel like a night out. You've nothing scheduled in
the morning. Americans like Soho; it's perfectly natural. You're not a
heavy gambler, but you place a bet now and then.'
'Christ! Would you care to describe my sex life?'
'I could, but I won't.' The guttural, loud North Country voice
returned. 'Thank you, sir. You're very kind, sir. I'm sure I'll find m'
friends.'
The man walked swiftly away, into the night mist toward Hatton
Garden. McAuliff felt his whole body shiver; his hands trembled. To
still them, he reached into his pocket for cigarettes. He was grateful
for the opportunity to grip the metal of his lighter.
It was five minutes to twelve. He would wait several minutes past
midnight and then leave. His instructions were to 'return to the
Savoy'; another meeting would be set. Did that mean it was to be
scheduled later that night? In the morning hours? Or did 'return to the
Savoy' simply mean that he was no longer required to remain at the
corner of High Holborn and Chancery Lane? He was free for the evening?
The words were clear, but the alternate interpretation was entirely
feasible. If he chose, he could - with a number of stops - make his way
into Soho, to Holcroft. The network of surveillance would establish the
fact that Warfield had not appeared for the appointment. The option was
open. My God! thought Alex. What's happening to me? Words
and meanings… options and alternates. Interpretations of… orders!
Who the hell gave him orders!
He was not a man to be commanded!
But when his hand shook as he raised his cigarette to his lips, he
knew that he was… for an indeterminate period of time. Time in a hell
he could not stand; he was not free.
The radium hands on his wristwatch converged. It was midnight. To
goddamn hell with all of them! He would leave! He would call
Alison and tell her he wanted to come over for a drink… ask her if she
would let him. Holcroft could wait all night in Soho. Where was it? The
Owl of Saint George. Silly fucking name!
To hell with him!
The Rolls-Royce sped out of the fog from the direction of Newgate,
its deep-throated engine racing, a powerful intrusion on the otherwise
still street. It swung alongside the kerb in front of McAuliff and
stopped abruptly. The chauffeur got out of his seat, raced around the
long hood of the car, and opened the rear door for Alex.
It all happened so quickly that McAuliff threw away his cigarette
and climbed in, bewildered; he had not adjusted to the swift change of
plans. Julian Warfield sat in the far right corner of the huge rear
seat, his tiny frame dwarfed by the vehicle's expansive interior.
'I'm sorry to have kept you waiting until the last minute, Mr
McAuliff. I was detained.'
'Do you always do business with one eye on secrecy, the other on
shock effect?' asked Alex, settling back in the seat, relieved to feel
he could speak with confidence.
Warfield replied by laughing his hard, old-man's laugh. 'Compared to
Howard Hughes, I'm a used-car salesman.'
'You're still damned unsettling.'
'Would you care for a drink? Preston has a bar built in right
there.' Warfield pointed to the felt back of the front seat. 'Just pull
on that strap.'
'No, thank you. I may do a little drinking later, not now.' Easy.
Easy, McAuliff, he thought to himself. For Christ's sake,
don't be obvious. Holcroft can wait all night. Two minutes ago, you
were going to let him do just that!
The old man took an envelope from his jacket pocket. 'I'll give you
the good news straight off. There's no one we objected to strenuously,
subject to minor questions. On the contrary, we think you finalized
your selections rather ingeniously…'
According to Warfield, the initial reaction at Dunstone to his list
of first choices was negative. Not from security - subject to those
minor questions; nor in quality - McAuliff had done his homework. But
from a conceptual viewpoint. The idea of female members on a geological
survey expedition was rejected out-of-hand, the central issue being
that of less strength, not necessarily weakness. Any project entailing
travel had, by tradition, a masculine identification; the intrusion of
the female was a disquieting component. It could only lead to
complications - any number of them.
'So we crossed off two of your first choices, realizing that by
eliminating the Wells woman, you would also lose her husband, Jensen…
Three out of the first five rejected; knew you'd be unhappy, but then,
you did understand… Later, it came to me. By George, you'd
out-thought the lot of us!'
'I wasn't concerned with any strategies, Warfield. I was putting
together the best team I could.' McAuliff felt he had to interject the
statement.
'Perhaps not consciously, and qualitatively you have a splendid
group. But the inclusion of the two ladies, one a wife and both
superior in their fields, was a profound improvement.'
'Why?'
'It provides - they provide - a unique ingredient of innocence. A
patina of scholarship, actually; an aspect we had overlooked. A
dedicated team of men and women - on a grant from the Royal Society… so
different somehow from an all-male survey expedition. Really, most
remarkable.'
'That wasn't my intention. I hate to disabuse you.'
'No disabusement whatsoever. The result is the same. Needlessly
said, I pointed out this consideration to the others, and they agreed
instantly.'
'I have an idea that whatever you might "point out" would be
instantly agreed to. What are the minor questions?'
'"Incidental information you might wish to consider" is a better
description.' The old man reached up and snapped on a reading lamp. He
then removed several pages from his overcoat, unfolded them, and placed
them in front of the envelope. He adjusted his glasses and scanned the
top paper. 'The husband and wife, this Jensen and Wells. They're quite
active in leftish political circles. Peace marches, ban-the-bombing,
that sort of thing.'
'That doesn't have any bearing on their work. I doubt they'll be
organizing the natives.' McAuliff spoke wearily - on purpose. If
Warfield intended to raise such 'questions,' he wanted the financier to
know he thought them irrelevant.
'There is a great deal of political instability in Jamaica; unrest,
to be precise. It would not be in our interests for any of your people
to be outspoken on such matters.'
McAuliff shifted in his seat and looked at the little old man - tiny
lips pursed, the papers held in his thin, bony fingers under the pin
spot of yellow light, giving his ancient flesh a sallow colour. 'Should
the occasion arise - and I can't conceive of it - when the Jensens make
political noises, I'll quiet them… On the other hand, the inclusion of
such people might be an asset to you. They'd hardly, knowingly, work
for Dunstone.'
'Yes,' said Warfield quietly. 'That, too, occurred to us… This chap,
Ferguson. He ran into trouble with the Craft Foundation.'
'He ran into a potentially vital discovery concerning baracoa
fibres, that's what he ran into. It scared the hell out of Craft and
Craft's funding resources.'
' We have no fight with Craft. We don't want one. The fact
that he's with you could raise eyebrows. Craft's well thought of in
Jamaica.'
'There's no one as good as Ferguson, certainly not the alternate,
and he was the best of those remaining. I'll keep Ferguson
away from Craft.'
'That is essential. We cannot permit him otherwise.'
Charles Whitehall, the black scholar-dandy, was a psychological
mess, according to Dunstone's data banks. Politically he was a
conservative, a black conservative who might have led the Kingston
reactionaries had he remained on the island. But his future was not in
Jamaica, and he had recognized it early. He was bitter over the fact.
Warfield hastened to add, however, that this negative information was
balanced - and more so - by Whitehall's academic standing. His interest
in the survey was ultimately a positive factor; his inclusion tended to
remove any commercial stain from the project. To compound the
complications of this very complex man, Whitehall was a Class Triple A
Black Belt practitioner of Jukato, a more intricate and deadly
development of Judo.
'Our contacts in Kingston are quite impressed with his being with
you. I suspect they'll offer him a chair at the West Indies University.
I think he'll probably accept, if they pay him enough… Now, we come to
the last submission.' Warfield removed his glasses, placed them on his
lap with the papers, and rubbed the bridge of his thin, bony nose. 'Mrs
Booth… Mrs Alison Gerrard Booth.'
Alex felt the stirrings of resentment. Warfield had already told him
that Alison was acceptable; he did not want to hear intimate, private
information dredged up by Dunstone's faceless men or whirring machines.
'What about her?' asked McAuliff, his voice careful. 'Her record
speaks for itself.'
'Unquestionably. She's extremely qualified… And extremely anxious to
leave England.'
'She's explained that. I buy it. She's just been divorced, and the
circumstances, I gather, are not too pleasant… socially.'
'Is that what she told you?'
'Yes. I believe her.'
Warfield replaced his glasses and flipped the page in front of him.
'I'm afraid there's a bit more to it than that, Mr McAuliff. Did she
tell you who her husband was? What he did for a living?'
'No. And I didn't ask her.'
'Yes… Well, I think you should know. David Booth is from a socially
prominent family - viscount status, actually - that hasn't had the cash
flow of a pound sterling for a generation. He is a partner in an
export-import firm whose books indicate a barely passable subsistence…
Yet Mr Booth lives extremely well. Several homes - here and on the
Continent - drives expensive cars, belongs to the better clubs.
Contradictory, isn't it?'
'I'd say so. How does he do it?'
'Narcotics,' said Julian Warfield, as if he had just given the time
of day. 'David Booth is a courier for Franco-American interests
operating out of Corsica, Beirut, and Marseilles.'
For the next few moments both men were silent. McAuliff understood
the implication, and finally spoke. 'Mrs Booth was on surveys in
Corsica, Iran… and southern Spain. You're suggesting that she's
involved.'
'Possibly; not likely. If so, unwittingly. After all, she did
divorce the chap. What we are saying is that she undoubtedly learned of
her husband's involvement; she's afraid to remain in England. We don't
think she plans to return.'
Again, there was silence, until McAuliff broke it.
'When you said "afraid," I presume you mean she's been threatened.'
'Quite possibly. Whatever she knows could be damaging. Booth didn't
take the divorce action very well. Not from the point of view of
affection - he's quite a womanizer - but, we suspect, for reasons
related to his travels.' Warfield refolded the pages and put them back
into his overcoat pocket.
'Well,' said Alex, 'that's quite a… minor explosion. I'm not sure
I'm ready for it.'
'I gave you this information on Mrs Booth because we thought you'd
find out for yourself. We wanted to prepare you… not to dissuade you.'
McAuliff turned sharply and looked at Warfield. 'You want her along
because she might… might possibly be valuable to you. And not 'for
geological reasons.' Easy, McAuliff. Easy!
'Anything is conceivable in these complicated times.'
'I don't like it!'
'You haven't thought about it. It is our opinion that she's
infinitely safer in Jamaica than in London… You are concerned, aren't
you? You've seen her frequently during the past week.'
'I don't like being followed, either.' It was all Alex could think
to say.
'Whatever was done was minimal and for your protection,' replied
Warfield quickly.
'Against what? For Christ's sake, protection from whom?' McAuliff
stared at the little old man, realizing how much he disliked him. He
wondered if Warfield would be any more explicit than Holcroft on the
subject of protection. Or would he admit the existence of a prior
Jamaican survey? 'I think I have a right to be told,' he added angrily.
'You shall be. First, however, I should like to show you these
papers. I trust everything will be to your satisfaction.' Warfield
lifted the flap of the unsealed envelope and withdrew several thin
pages stapled together on top of a single page of stationery. They were
onionskin carbons of his lengthy Letter of Agreement signed in
Belgravia Square over a week ago. He reached above, snapped on his own
reading lamp, took the papers from Warfield and flipped over the
carbons to the thicker page of stationery. Only it wasn't stationery;
it was a Xerox copy of a Letter Deposit Transfer from the Chase Bank in
New York. The figures were clear: On the left was the amount paid into
his account by a Swiss concern; on the right, the maximum taxes on that
amount, designated as income, to the Swiss authorities and the United
States Internal Revenue Service.
The net figure was $333,000.
He looked over at Warfield. 'My first payment was to have been
twenty-five per cent of the total contract upon principal work of the
survey. We agreed that would be the team's arrival in Kingston. Prior
to that date, you're responsible only for my expenses and, if we
terminate, two hundred a day for my time. Why the change?'
'We're very pleased with your preliminary labours. We wanted to
indicate our good faith.'
'I don't believe you—'
'Besides,' continued Warfield, raising his voice over Alex's
objection, 'there's been no contractual change.'
'I know what I signed.'
'Not too well, apparently… Go on, read the agreement. It states
clearly that you will be paid a minimum of twenty-' five per
cent, no later than the end of the business day we determined
to be the start of the survey. It says nothing about an excess of
twenty-five per cent; no prohibitions as to an earlier date… We thought
you'd be pleased.' The old man folded his small hands like some kind of
Ghandi of peace in Savile Row clothes.
McAuliff reread the transfer letter from Chase. 'This bank transfer
describes the money as payment for services rendered as of today's
date. That's past tense, free and clear. You'd have a hard time
recouping if I didn't go to Jamaica. And considering your paranoia over
secrecy, I doubt you'd try too hard… No, Mr Warfield, this is out of
character.'
'Faith, Mr McAuliff. Your generation overlooks it.' The financier
smiled benignly.
'I don't wish to be rude, but I don't think you ever had it. Not
that way. You're a manipulator, not an ideologue… I repeat: out of
character.'
'Very well.' Warfield unfolded his delicate hands, still retaining
the Ghandi pose under the yellow light. 'It leads to the protection of
which I spoke and which, rightly, you question… You are one of us,
Alexander Tarquin McAuliff. A very important and essential part of
Dunstone's plans. In recognition of your contributions, we have
recommended to our Directors that you be elevated - in confidence - to
their status. Ergo, the payments made to you - in gross terms,
amounting to close to a million - are the initial monies due one of our
own. As you say, it would be out of character for such excessive
payments to be made otherwise.'
'What the hell are you driving at?'
'In rather abrupt words, don't ever try to deny us. You are a
consenting participant in our work. Should you at any time, for
whatever motive, decide you do not approve of Dunstone, don't try to
separate yourself. You'd never be believed.'
McAuliff stared at the now smiling old man. 'Why would I do that?'
he asked softly.
'Because we have reason to believe there are… elements most anxious
to stop our progress. They may try to reach you; perhaps they have
already. Your future is with us. No one else. Financially, perhaps
ideologically… certainly, legally.'
Alex looked away from Warfield. The Rolls had proceeded west into
New Oxford, south on Charing Cross, and west again on Shaftesbury. They
were approaching the outer lights of Piccadilly Circus, the gaudy
colours diffused by the heavy mist.
'Who were you trying to call so frantically this evening?' The old
man was not smiling now.
McAuliff turned from the window. 'Not that it's any of your damned
business but I was calling - not frantically - Mrs Booth. We're having
lunch tomorrow. Any irritation was due to your hastily scheduled
meeting and the fact that I didn't want to disturb her after midnight.
Who do you think?'
'You shouldn't be hostile—'
'I forgot,' interrupted Alex. 'You're only trying to protect me.
From… elements.'
'I can be somewhat more precise.' Julian Warfield's eyes bore into
Alex's, with an intensity he had not seen before. 'There would be no
point in your lying to me, so I expect the truth. What does the word
"Halidon" mean to you, Mr McAuliff?'
SIX
The screaming, hysterical cacophony of the acid-rock music caused a
sensation of actual pain in the ears. The eyes were attacked next, by
tear-provoking layers of heavy smoke, thick and translucent - the
nostrils reacting immediately to the pungent sweetness of tobacco laced
with grass and hashish.
McAuliff made his way through the tangled network of soft flesh,
separating thrusting arms and protruding shoulders gently but firmly,
finally reaching the rear of the bar area.
The Owl of Saint George was at its undulating peak. The psychedelic
lights exploded against the walls and ceiling in rhythmic crescendos;
bodies were concave and convex, none seemingly upright, all swaying,
writhing violently.
Holcroft was seated in a circular booth with five others: two men
and three women. Alex paused, concealed by drinkers and dancers, and
looked at Holcroft's gathering. It was funny; not sardonically funny,
humorously funny. Holcroft and his middle-aged counterpart across the
table were dressed in the 'straight' fashion, as were two of the three
women, straight and past forty. The remaining couple was young, hip,
and profuse with beads and suede and flowing hair held back with
headbands. The picture was instantly recognizable: parents indulging
the generation gap, uncomfortable but game.
McAuliff remembered the man's words on High Holborn. Stay at
the bar, he'll reach you. He manoeuvred his way to within arm's
length of the mahogany and managed to shout his order to the black Soho
bartender with an Afro haircut. He wondered when Holcroft would make
his move; he did not want to wait long. He had a great deal to say to
the British agent.
'Pardon, but you are a chap named McAuliff, aren't you?'
The shouted question caused Alex to spill part of his drink. The
shouter was the young mod from Holcroft's table. Holcroft was not
wasting time.
'Yes. Why?'
'My girl's parents recognized you. Asked me to invite you over.'
The following moments, McAuliff felt, were like a play within a
play. A brief, staged exercise with acutely familiar dialogue, acted
out in front of a bored audience of other, more energetic actors. But
with a surprise that made Alex consider Holcroft's skill in a very
favourable light.
He did know the middle-aged man across from Holcroft. And
his wife. Not well, of course, but they were acquaintances. He'd met
them two or three times before, on previous London trips. They weren't
the sort of memorable people one recognized on the street - or in The
Owl of Saint George - unless the circumstances were recalled.
Holcroft was introduced by his correct name, and McAuliff was seated
next to him.
'How the hell did you arrange this?' asked Alex after five
excruciating minutes remembering the unmemorable with the
acquaintances. 'Do they know who you are?'
'Laugh occasionally,' answered Holcroft with a calm, precise smile.
'They believe I'm somewhere in that great government pyramid, juggling
figures in poorly lit rooms… The arrangements were necessary. Warfield
has doubled his teams on you. We're not happy about it; he may have
spotted us, but, of course, it's unlikely.'
'He's spotted something, I guarantee it.' Alex bared his teeth, but
the smile was false. 'I've got a lot to talk to you about. Where can we
meet?'
'Here. Now,' was the Britisher's reply. 'Speak occasionally to the
others, but it's perfectly acceptable that we strike up a conversation.
We might use it as a basis for lunch or drinks in a day or two.'
'No way. I leave for Kingston the morning after next.'
Holcroft paused, his glass halfway to his lips. 'So soon? We didn't
expect that.'
'It's insignificant compared to something else… Warfield knows
about Halidon. That is, he asked me what I knew about it.'
' What?'
'Mr McAuliff?' came the shouted enquiry from across the table.
'Surely you know the Bensons, from Kent…'
The timing was right, thought Alex. Holcroft's reaction to his news
was one of astonishment. Shock that changed swiftly to angered
acceptance. The ensuing conversation about the unremembered Bensons
would give Holcroft time to think. And Alex wanted him to think.
'What exactly did he say?' asked Holcroft. The revolving
psychedelic lights now projected their sharp patterns on the table,
giving the agent a grotesque appearance. 'The exact words.'
'"What does the word 'Halidon' mean to you?" That's what he said.'
'Your answer?'
'What answer? I didn't have one. I told him it was a town in New
Jersey.'
'I beg your pardon?'
'Halidon, New Jersey. It's a town.'
'Different spelling, I believe. And pronunciation… Did he accept
your ignorance?'
'Why wouldn't he? I'm ignorant.'
'Did you conceal the fact that you'd heard the word? It's terribly
important!'
'Yes… yes, I think I did. As a matter of fact, I was thinking about
something,else. Several other things—'
'Did he bring it up later?' broke in the agent.
'No, he didn't. He stared hard, but he didn't mention it again… What
do you think it means?'
Suddenly a gyrating, spaced-out dancer careened against the table,
his eyes half focused, his lips parted without control. 'Well, if it
ain't old Mums and Dadsies!' he said, slurring his words with rough
Yorkshire. 'Enjoying the kiddie's show-and-tell, Mums?'
'Damn!' Holcroft had spilled part of his drink.
'Ring for the butler, Pops! Charge it to old Edinburgh. He's a
personal friend! Good old Edinburgh.'
The solo, freaked-out dancer bolted away as quickly as he had
intruded. The other middle-aged straights were appropriately solicitous
of Holcroft, simultaneously scathing of The Owl's patrons; the
youngsters did their best to mollify.
'It's all right, nothing to be concerned with,' said the agent
good-naturedly. 'Just a bit damp, nothing to it.' Holcroft removed his
handkerchief and began blotting his front. The table returned to its
prior and individual conversations. The Britisher turned to McAuliff,
his resigned smiling belying his words. 'I have less than a minute;
you'll be contacted tomorrow if necessary.'
'You mean that… collision was a signal?'
'Yes. Now, listen and commit. I haven't time to repeat myself. When
you reach Kingston, you'll be on your own for a while. Quite frankly,
we weren't prepared for you so soon—'
'Just a minute!' interrupted McAuliff, his voice low, angry.
'Goddamn you! You listen… and commit! You guaranteed complete
safety, contacts twenty-four hours a day. It was on that basis I
agreed—'
'Nothing has changed.' Holcroft cut in swiftly, smiling
paternalistically - in contradiction to the quiet hostility between
them. 'You have contacts; you've memorized eighteen, twenty
names—'
'In the north country, not Kingston! You're supposed to deliver the
Kingston names!'
'We'll do our best for tomorrow.'
'That's not good enough!'
'It will have to be, Mr McAuliff,' said Holcroft coldly.
'In Kingston, east of Victoria Park on Duke Street, there is a fish
store called Tallon's. In the last extremity - and only then - should
you wish to transmit information, see the owner. He's quite arthritic
in his right hand. But, mind you, all he can do is transmit. He's of no
other use to you… Now, I really must go.'
'I've got a few other things to say.' Alex put his hand on
Holcroft's arm.
'They'll have to wait—'
'One thing… Alison Booth. You knew, didn't you?'
'About her husband?'
'Yes.'
'We did. Frankly, at first, we thought she was a Dunstone plant. We
haven't ruled it out… Oh, you asked about Warfield's mention of
Halidon; what he meant. In my judgment, he knows no more than we do.
And he's trying just as hard to find out.'
With the swiftness associated with a much younger man, Holcroft
lifted himself up from the booth, sidled past McAuliff, and excused
himself from the group. McAuliff found himself seated next to the
middle-aged woman he presumed had come with Holcroft. He had not
listened to her name during the introductions, but as he looked at her
now, he did not have to be told. The concern - the fear -was in her
eyes; she tried to conceal it, but she could not. Her smile was
hesitant, taut.
'So you're the young man…' Mrs Holcroft stopped and brought the
glass to her lips.
'Young and not so young,' said McAuliff, noting that the woman's
hand shook, as his had shaken an hour ago with Warfield. 'It's
difficult to talk in here with all the blaring. And those godawful
lights.'
Mrs Holcroft seemed not to hear or be concerned with his words. The
psychedelic oranges and yellows and sickening greens played a visual
tattoo on her frightened features. It was strange, thought Alex, but he
had not considered Holcroft as a private man with personal possessions
or a wife or even a private, personal life.
And as he thought about these unconsidered realities, the woman
suddenly gripped his forearm and leaned against him. Under the
maddening sounds and through the wild, blinding lights, she whispered
in McAuliff's ear: 'For God's sake, go after him!'
The undulating bodies formed a violently writhing wall. He lunged
through, pushing, pulling, shoving, finally shouldering a path for
himself amid the shouted obscenities. He tried looking around for the
spaced-out intruder who had signalled Holcroft by crashing into the
table. He was nowhere to be found.
Then, at the rear of the crowded, flashing dance floor, he could see
the interrupted movements of several men pushing a single figure back
into a narrow corridor. It was Holcroft!
He crashed through the writhing wall again, towards the back of the
room. A tall black man objected to Alex's assault.
'Hey, mon! Stop it! You own The Owl, I think not!'
'Get out of my way! Goddamn it, take your hands off me!'
'With pleasure, mon!' The black removed his hands from McAuliffs
coat, pulled back a tight fist, and hammered it into Alex's stomach.
The force of the blow, along with the shock of its utter surprise,
caused McAuliff to double up.
He rose as fast as he could, the pain sharp, and lurched for the
man. As he did so, the black twisted his wrist somehow, and McAuliff
fell into the surrounding, nearly oblivious dancers. When he got to his
feet, the black was gone.
It was a curious and very painful moment.
The smoke and its accompanying odours made him dizzy; then he
understood. He was breathing deep breaths; he was out of breath. With
less strength but no less intensity, he continued through the dancers
to the narrow corridor.
It was a passageway to the restrooms, 'Chicks' to the
right, 'Roosters' to the left. At the end of the narrow
hallway was a door with a very large lock, an outsized padlock, that
was meant, apparently, to remind patrons that the door was no egress;
The Owl of Saint George expected tabs to be paid before departure.
The lock had been pried open. Pried open and then reset in the round
hasps, its curving steel arm a half inch from insertion.
McAuliff ripped it off and opened the door.
He walked out into a dark, very dark, alleyway filled with garbage
cans and refuse. There was literally no light but the night sky, dulled
by fog, and a minimum spill from the windows in the surrounding
ghettolike apartment buildings. In front of him was a high brick wall;
to the right the alley continued past other rear doorways, ending in a
cul-de-sac formed by the sharply angled wall. To his left, there was a
break between The Owl's building and the brick; it was a passageway to
the street. It was also lined with garbage cans, and the stench that
had to accompany their presence.
McAuliff started down the cement corridor, the light from the street
lamps illuminating the narrow confines. He was within twenty feet of
the pavement when he saw it. Them: small pools of deep red fluid.
He raced out into the street. The crowds were thinning out; Soho was
approaching its own witching hour. Its business was inside now: the
private clubs, the all-night gambling houses, the profitable beds where
sex was found in varying ways and prices. He looked up and down the
sidewalk, trying to find a break in the patterns of human traffic: a
resistance, an eruption.
There was none.
He stared down at the pavement; the rivulets of blood had been
streaked and blotted by passing feet, the red drops stopping abruptly
at the kerb. Holcroft had been taken away in an automobile.
Without warning, McAuliff felt the impact of lunging hands against
his back. He had turned sideways at the last instant, his eyes drawn
by the flickering of a neon light, and that small motion kept him from
being hurled into the street. Instead, his attacker - a huge black -
plunged over the kerb, into the path of an onrushing Bentley,
travelling at extraordinary speed. McAuliff felt a stinging pain on his
face: Then man and vehicle collided; the anguished scream was the
scream at the moment of death; the screeching wheels signified the
incredible to McAuliff. The Bentley raced forward, crushing its victim,
and sped off. It reached the corner and whipped violently to the left,
its tyres spinning above the kerb, whirring as they touched stone
again, propelling the car out of sight. Pedestrians screamed, men ran,
whores disappeared into doorways, pimps gripped their pockets, and
McAuliff stood above the bloody, mangled corpse in the street and knew
it was meant to be him.
He ran down the Soho street; he did not know where, just away. Away
from the gathering crowds on the pavement behind. There would be
questions, witnesses… people placing him at the scene - involved,
not placed, he reflected. He had no answers, and instinctively he knew
he could not allow himself to be identified - not until he had some
answers.
The dead black was the man in The Owl of Saint George, of that he
was certain: the man who had stunned him with a savage blow to the
stomach on the dance floor and twisted his wrist, throwing him onto the
surrounding gyrating bodies. The man who had stopped him from reaching
Holcroft in the narrow corridor that led past the 'Chicks' and
the 'Roosters' into the dark alleyway beyond.
Why had the black stopped him? Why for Christ Almighty's sake had he
tried to kill him?
Where was Holcroft?
He had to get to a telephone. He had to call Holcroft's number and
speak to someone, anyone who could give him some answers.
Suddenly, Alex was aware that people in the street were staring at
him. Why?… Of course. He was running - well, walking too rapidly. A man
walking rapidly at this hour on a misty Soho street was conspicuous. He
could not be conspicuous; he slowed his walk, his aimless walk, and
aimlessly crossed unfamiliar streets.
Still they stared. He tried not to panic. What was it?
And then he knew. He could feel the warm blood trickling down his
cheek. He remembered now: the sting on his face as the huge black hands
went crashing past him over the kerb. A ring, perhaps. A fingernail…
what difference? He had been cut, and he was bleeding. He reached into
his coat pocket for a handkerchief. The whole side of his jacket had
been ripped.
He had been too stunned to notice or feel the jacket ripping, or the
blood.
Christ! What a sight! A man in a torn jacket with blood on his face
running away from a dead black in Soho.
Dead? Deceased? Life spent?
No. Murdered.
By the method meant for him: a violent thrust into the street, timed
to meet the heavy steel on an onrushing, racing Bentley.
In the middle of the next block - what block? - there was a
telephone booth. An English telephone booth, wider and darker than its
American cousin. He quickened his pace as he withdrew coins from his
pocket. He went inside; it was dark, too dark, Why was it so dark? He
took out his metal cigarette lighter, gripping it as though it were a
handle that, if released, would send him plunging into an abyss. He
pressed the lever, breathed deeply, and dialled by the light of the
flame.
'We know what's happened, Mr McAuliff,' said the clipped, cool
British voice. 'Where precisely are you calling from?'
'I don't know. I ran… I crossed a number of streets.'
'It's urgent we know where you are… When you left The Owl, which way
did you walk?'
'I ran, goddamn it! I ran. Someone tried to kill
me!'
'Which way did you run, Mr McAuliff?'
'To the right… four or five blocks. Then right again; then left, I
think, two blocks later.'
'All right. Relax, now… You're phoning from a call booth?'
'Yes. No, damn it, I'm calling from a phone
booth!… Yes. For Christ's sake, tell me what's happening! There aren't
any street signs; I'm in the middle of the block.'
'Calm down, please.' The Englishman was maddening: imperviously
condescending. 'What are the structures outside the booth? Describe
anything you like, anything that catches your eye.'
McAuliff complained about the fog and described as best he could the
darkened shops and buildings. 'Christ, that's the best I can do… I'm
going to get out of here. I'll grab a taxi somehow; and then I want to
see one of you! Where do I go?'
'You will not go anywhere, Mr McAuliff!' The cold British
tones were suddenly loud and harsh. 'Stay right where you are. If there
is a light in the booth, smash it. We know your position. We'll pick
you up in minutes.'
Alex hung up the receiver. There was no light bulb in the booth, of
course. The tribes of Soho had removed it… He tried to think. He hadn't
gotten any answers. Only orders. More commands.
It was insane. The last half hour was madness. What was he doing!
Why was he in a darkened telephone booth with a bloody face and a torn
jacket, trembling and afraid to light a cigarette? Madness!
There was a man outside the booth, jingling coins in his hand and
pointedly shifting his weight from foot to foot in irritation. The
command over the telephone had instructed Alex to wait inside, but to
do so under the circumstances might cause the man on the pavement to
object vocally, drawing attention. He could call someone else, he
thought. But who?… Alison? No… He had to think about Alison now, not
talk with her.
He was behaving like a terrified child! With terrifying
justification, perhaps. He was actually afraid to move, to walk outside
a telephone booth and let an impatient man jingling coins go in. No, he
could not behave like that. He could not freeze. He had learned that
lesson years ago - centuries ago - in the hills of Panmunjung. To
freeze
was to become a target. One had to be flexible within the perimeters of
commonsense. One had to, above all, use his natural antennae and stay
intensely alert. Staying alert, retaining the ability and capacity to
move swiftly, these were the important things.
Jesus! He was correlating the murderous fury of Korea with a back
street in Soho. He was actually drawing a parallel and forcing himself
to adjust to it. Too goddamn much!
He opened the door, blotted his cheek, and mumbled apologies to the
man jingling coins. He walked to a recessed doorway opposite the booth
and waited.
The man on Holcroft's telephone was true to his word. The wait
wasn't long, and the automobile recognizable as one of those Alex and
the agent had used several times. It came down the street at a steady
pace and stopped by the booth, its motor running.
McAuliff left the darkness of the recessed doorway and walked
rapidly to the car. The rear door was flung open for him and he climbed
in.
And he froze again.
The man in the back seat was black. The man in the back seat was
supposed to be dead, a mangled corpse in the street in front of The Owl
of Saint George!
'Yes, Mr McAuliff. It is I,' said the black who was supposed to be
dead. 'I apologize for having struck you, but then, you were intruding.
Are you all right?'
'Oh, my God!' Alex was rigid on the edge of the seat as the
automobile lurched forward and sped off down the street. 'I thought… I
mean, I saw. . .'
'We're on our way to Holcroft. You'll understand better then. Sit
back. You've had a very strenuous past hour… Quite unexpectedly,
incidentally.'
'I saw you killed.'
McAuliff blurted out the words
involuntarily.
'You saw a black man killed; a large black man like myself. We do
weary of the bromide that we all look alike. It's both unflattering
and untrue. By the way, my name is Tallon.'
McAuliff stared at the man. 'No, it's not. Tallon is the name of a
fish store near Victoria Park. In Kingston.'
The black laughed softly. 'Very good, Mr McAuliff. I was testing
you. Smoke?'
Alex took the offered cigarette gratefully. 'Tallon held a match
for him, and McAuliff inhaled deeply, trying to find a brief moment of
sanity.
He looked at his hands. He was both astonished and disturbed.
He was cupping the glow of the cigarette as he had done… centuries
ago as an infantry officer in the hills of Panmunjung.
They drove for nearly twenty minutes, travelling swiftly through the
London streets to the outskirts. McAuliff did not try to follow their
route out of the window; he did not really care. He was consumed with
the decision he had to make. In a profound way it was related to the
sight of his hands - no longer trembling - cupping the cigarette. From
the non-existent wind? From betraying his position? From enemy snipers?
No. He was not a soldier, had never been one really. He had
performed because it was the only way to survive. He had no motive
other than survival; no war was his or ever would be his. Certainly not
Holcroft's.
'Here we are, Mr McAuliff,' said the black who called himself
'Tallon.'
'Rather deserted place, isn't it?'
The car had entered a road by a field - a field, but not
grass-covered. It was a levelled expanse of ground, perhaps five acres,
that looked as though it was being primed for construction. Beyond the
field was a river bank; Alex presumed it was the Thames, it had to be.
In the distance were large square structures that looked like
warehouses. Warehouses along a river bank. He had no idea where they
were.
The driver made a sharp left turn, and the automobile bounced as it
rolled over a primitive car path on the rough ground. Through the
windshield, McAuliff saw in the glare of the headlamps two vehicles
about a hundred yards away, both sedans. The one on the right had its
inside lights on. Within seconds, the driver had pulled up parallel
with the second car.
McAuliff got out and followed 'Tallon' to the lighted automobile.
What he saw bewildered him, angered him, perhaps, and unquestionably
reaffirmed his decision to remove himself from Holcroft's war.
The British agent was sitting stiffly in the rear seat, his shirt
and overcoat draped over his shoulders, an open expanse of flesh at his
midsection revealing wide, white bandages. His eyes were squinting
slightly, betraying the fact that the pain was not negligible. Alex
knew the reason; he had seen the sight before - centuries ago - usually
after a bayonet encounter.
Holcroft had been stabbed.
'I had you brought here for two reasons, McAuliff. And I warrant
you, it was a gamble,' said the agent as Alex stood by the open door.
'Leave us alone, please,' he added to the black.
'Shouldn't you be in a hospital?'
'No, it's not a severe laceration—'
'You got cut, Holcroft,' interrupted McAuliff. 'That's no
laceration.'
'You're melodramatic; it's unimportant. You'll notice, I trust, that
I am very much alive.'
'You're lucky.'
'Luck, sir, had nothing whatsoever to do with it! That's part of
what I want you to understand.'
'All right. You're Captain Marvel, indestructible nemesis of the
evil people.'
'I am a fifty year old veteran of Her Majesty's Service who was
never very good at football… soccer, to you.' Holcroft winced and
leaned forward. 'And it's quite possible I would not be in these
extremely tight bandages had you followed my instructions and not made
a scene on the dance floor.' 'What?'
'But you provoke me into straying. First things first. The instant
it was apparent that I was in danger, that danger was removed. At no
time, no moment, was my life in jeopardy.'
'Because you say so? With a ten-inch bandage straddling your
stomach? Don't try to sell water in the Sahara.'
'This wound was delivered in panic caused by you! I was in the
process of making the most vital contact on our schedule, the contact
we sought you out to make.'
'Halidon?'
'It's what we believed. Unfortunately, there's no way to verify.
Come with me.' Holcroft gripped the side strap, and with his right hand
supported himself on the front seat as he climbed painfully out of the
car. Alex made a minor gesture of assistance, knowing that it would be
refused. The agent led McAuliff to the forward automobile, awkwardly
removing a flashlight from his draped overcoat as they approached.
There were several other men in shadows; they stepped away, obviously
under orders.
Inside the car were two lifeless figures: one sprawled over the
wheel, the other slumped across the rear seat. Holcroft shot the beam
of light successively on both corpses. Each was male, black, in his
mid-thirties, perhaps, and dressed in conservative, though not
expensive business suits. McAuliff was confused: There were no signs of
violence, no shattered glass, no blood. The interior of the car was
neat, clean, even peaceful. The two dead men might have been a pair of
young executives taking a brief rest off the highway in the middle of a
long business trip. Alex's bewilderment was ended with Holcroft's next
word.
'Cyanide.'
'Why?'
'Fanatics, obviously. It was preferable to revealing information…
unwillingly, of course. They misread us. It began when you made such an
obvious attempt to follow me out of The Owl of Saint George. That was
their first panic; when they inflicted… this.' Holcroft waved his hand
just once at his midsection.
McAuliff did not bother to conceal his anger. 'I've about had it
with your goddamn caustic deductions!'
'I told you it was a gamble bringing you here—'
'Stop telling me things!'
'Please bear in mind that without us you had a life expectancy of
four months - at the outside.'
'Your version, Holcroft.' But the agent's version had more substance
than McAuliff cared to think about at the moment.
'Do men take their lives because versions are false? Even fanatics?'
Alex turned away from the unpleasant sight. For no particular
reason, he ripped the torn lining from the base of his jacket and
leaned against the hood of the car. 'Since you hold me responsible for
so much tonight, what happened?'
The Britisher told him. Several days ago, MI5's surveillance had
picked up a second 'force' involved with Dunstone's movements. Three,
possibly four, unidentifiable subjects who kept reappearing. The
subjects were black. Photographs were taken, fingerprints obtained by
way of restaurants, discarded objects - cigarette packs, newspapers,
and the like - and all the data fed into the computers at New Scotland
Yard and Emigration. There were no records; the subjects were in the
country illegally. Holcroft had been elated; the connection was so
possible. It was obvious that the subjects were 'negative' insofar as
Dunstone was concerned. Obvious… then proven without doubt earlier in
the evening, when one of the subjects killed a Dunstone man who spotted
him.
'We knew then,' said Holcroft, 'that we had centred in; the target
was accurate. It remained to make positive contact, sympathetic
contact. I even toyed with the idea of bringing these men and you
together in short order, perhaps this morning. So much resolved so
damned quickly…'
A cautious preliminary contact was made with the subjects: so
harmless and promising, we damn near offered what was left of the
Empire. They were concerned, of course, with a trap.
A rendezvous was arranged at The Owl of Saint George, a racially
integrated club that offered a comfortable environment. It was
scheduled for 2.30 in the morning, after Holcroft's meeting with
McAuliff.
When Alex made his panicked - and threatening - call to Holcroft's
number, insisting that they meet regardless of time, the agent left his
options open. And then made his decision. Why not The Owl of Saint
George? Bring the American into Soho, to the club, and if it proved the
wrong decision, McAuliff could be stopped once inside. If the decision
was the right one, the circumstances would be optimal - all parties
present.
'What about Warfield's men?' asked Alex. 'You said he doubled his
teams on me.'
'I lied. I wanted you to remain where you were. Warfield had a
single man on you. We diverted him. The Dunstone people had their own
anxieties: One of their men had been killed. You couldn't be held
responsible for that.'
The night progressed as Holcroft had anticipated: without incident.
The agent made arrangements for the table - 'we know just about
everyone you've met in London, chap' - and awaited the compatible
merging of elements.
And then, in rapid succession, each component fell apart. First was
Alex's statement that the survey team was leaving in two days - MI5 was
not ready for it in Kingston. Then the information that Warfield had
spoken the name of 'Halidon'; it was to be expected, of course.
Dunstone would be working furiously to find the killers of the first
survey team. But, again, MI5 had not expected Dunstone to have made
such progress. The next breakdown was the spaced-out agent who crashed
into the table and used the word 'Edinburgh' - used it twice.
'Each twenty-four-hour period we circulate an unusual word that has
but one connotation: "abort, extreme prejudice." If it's repeated, that
simply compounds the meaning: Our cover is blown. Or misread. Weapons
should be ready.'
At that moment, Holcroft saw clearly the massive error that had been
made. His agents had diverted Warfield's men away from Alex, but not
one of the blacks. McAuliff had been observed in Warfield's company at
midnight for a considerable length of time. Within minutes after he had
walked into The Owl, his black surveillance had followed, panicked that
his colleagues had been led into a trap.
The confrontation had begun within the gyrating, psychedelic madness
that was The Owl of Saint George.
Holcroft tried to stop the final collapse.
He broke the rules. It was not yet 2.30, but since Alexander
McAuliff had been seen with him, he dared not wait. He tried to
establish a bridge, to explain, to calm the raging outburst.
He had nearly succeeded when one of the blacks - now dead behind the
wheel - saw McAuliff leap from his seat in the booth and plunge into
the crowds, whipping people out of his way, looking frantically -
obviously - for Holcroft.
This sight triggered the panic. Holcroft was cut, used as a shield,
and propelled out the rear door into the alley by two of the subjects
while the third fled through the crowds in front to alert the car for
escape.
'What happened during the next few minutes was as distressing as it
was comforting,' said Holcroft. 'My people would not allow my physical
danger, so the instant my captors and I emerged on the pavement, they
were taken. We put them in this car and drove off, still hoping to
reestablish good will. But we purposely allowed the third man to
disappear - an article of faith on our part.'
The MI5 had driven out to the deserted field. A doctor was summoned
to patch up Holcroft. And the two subjects - relieved of weapons, car
key removed unobtrusively - were left alone to talk by themselves,
hopefully to resolve their doubts, while Holcroft was being bandaged.
'They made a last attempt to get away but, of course, there were no
keys in the vehicle. So they took their deadly little vials or tablets
and, with them, their lives. Ultimately, they could not trust us.'
McAuliff said nothing for several moments. Holcroft did not
interrupt the silence.
'And your "article of faith" tried to kill me.'
'Apparently. Leaving one man in England we must try to find: the
driver… You understand that we cannot be held accountable: you
completely disregarded our instructions—'
'We'll get to that,' broke in McAuliff. 'You said you brought me out
here for two reasons. I get the first: Your people are quick, safety
guaranteed… if instructions aren't "disregarded."' Alex mimicked
Holcroft's reading of the word. 'What's the second reason?'
The agent walked directly in front of McAuliff and, through the
night light, Alex could see the intensity in his eyes. 'To tell you you
have no choice but to continue now. Too much has happened. You're too
involved.'
That's what Warfield said.'
'He's right,'
'Suppose I refuse? Suppose I just pack up and leave?'
'You'd be suspect, and expendable. You'd be hunted down. Take my
word for that, I've been here before.'
'That's quite a statement from a… what was it, a financial analyst?'
'Labels, Mr McAuliff. Titles. Quite meaningless.'
'Not to your wife.'
'I beg your—' Holcroft inhaled deeply, audibly. When he continued,
he did not ask a question. He made a quiet, painful statement. 'She
sent you after me.'
'Yes.'
It was Holcroft's turn to remain silent. And Alex's option not to
break that silence. Instead, McAuliff watched the fifty year old agent
struggle to regain his composure.
'The fact remains, you disregarded my instructions.'
'You must be a lovely man to live with.'
'Get used to it,' replied Holcroft with cold precision. 'For the
next several months, our association will be very close. And you'll do
exactly as I say. Or you'll be dead.'
PART TWO
Kingston
SEVEN
The red-orange sun burned a hole in the streaked blue tapestry that
was the evening sky. Arcs of yellow rimmed the lower clouds; a
purplish-black void was above. The soft Caribbean night would soon
envelope this section of the world. It would be dark when the plane
landed at Port Royal.
McAuliff stared out at the horizon through the tinted glass of the
aircraft's window. Alison Booth was in the seat beside him, asleep.
The Jensens were across the 747's aisle, and for a couple whose
political persuasions were left of centre, they adapted to BOAC's
first-class accommodations with a remarkable lack of guilt, thought
Alex. They ordered the best wine, the foie gras, duck a l'orange, and
Charlotte Malakof as if they had been used to them for years. And Alex
wondered if Warfield was wrong. All the left-oriented he knew, outside
the Soviet block, were humourless; the Jensens were not.
Young James Ferguson was alone in a forward seat. Initially, Charles
Whitehall had sat with him, but Whitehall had gone up to the lounge
early in the flight, found an acquaintance from Savanna La-Mar, and
stayed. Ferguson used the unoccupied seat for a leather bag containing
photographic equipment. He was currently changing lens filters,
snapping shots of the sky outside.
McAuliff and Alison had joined Charles Whitehall and his friend for
several drinks in the lounge. The friend was white, rich, and a heavy
drinker. He was also a vacuous inheritor of old southwest Jamaican
money, and Alex found it contradictory that Whitehall would care to
spend much time with him, and it was a little disturbing to watch
Whitehall respond with such alacrity to his friend's alcoholic,
unbright, unfunny observations.
Alison had touched McAuliffs arm after the second drink. It had been
a signal to return to their seats; she had had enough. So had he.
Alison?
During the last two days in London there had been so much to do that
he had not spent the time with her he had wanted to, intended to. He
was involved with all-day problems of logistics: equipment purchases
and rentals, clearing passports, ascertaining whether inoculations were
required (none was), establishing bank accounts in Montego, Kingston,
and Ocho Rios, and scores of additional items necessary for a long
geological survey. Dunstone stayed out of the picture but was of
enormous help behind the scenes. The Dunstone people told him precisely
who to see where; the tangled webs of bureaucracy - governmental and
commercial - were untangled.
He had spent one evening bringing everyone together - everyone but
Sam Tucker, who would join them in Kingston. Dinner at Simpsons. It was
sufficiently agreeable; all were professionals. Each sized up the
others and made flattering comments where work was known. Whitehall
received the most recognition - as was appropriate. He was an authentic
celebrity of sorts. Ruth Jensen and Alison seemed genuinely to like
each other, which McAuliff had thought would happen. Ruth's husband,
Peter, assumed a paternalistic attitude towards Ferguson, laughing
gently, continuously at the young man's incessant banter. And Charles
Whitehall had the best manners, slightly aloof and very proper, with
just the right traces of scholarly wit and unfelt humility. But Alison.
He had kept their luncheon date after the madness at The Owl of
Saint George and the insanity that followed in the deserted field on
London's outskirts. He had approached her with ambiguous feelings. He
was annoyed that she had not brought up the questionable activities of
her recent husband. But he did not accept Holcroft's vague concern that
Alison was a Warfield plant. It was senseless. She was nothing if not
independent - as he was. To be a silent emissary from Warfield meant
losing independence - as he knew. Alison could not do that, not without
showing it.
Still, he tried to provoke her into talking about her husband. She
responded with humorously civilized cliches such as leaving sleeping
dogs lie, which he had. Often. She would not, at this point, discuss
David Booth with him.
It was not relevant.
'Ladies and gentlemen,' said the very masculine, in-charge tones
over the aircraft's speaker. 'This is Captain Thomas. We are nearing
the northeast coast of Jamaica; in several minutes we shall be over
Port Antonio, descending for our approach to Palisados Airport, Port
Royal. May we suggest that all passengers return to their seats. There
may be minor turbulence over the Blue Mountain range. Time of arrival
is now anticipated at 8.20, Jamaican. The temperature in Kingston is
seventy-eight degrees, weather and visibility clear…'
As the calm, strong voice finished the announcement, McAuliff
thought of Holcroft. If the British agent spoke over a loudspeaker, he
would sound very much like Captain Thomas, Alex considered.
Holcroft.
McAuliff had not ended their temporary disassociation - as Holcroft
phrased it - too pleasantly. He had countered the agent's caustic
pronouncement that Alex do as Holcroft instructed with a volatile
provision of his own: He had six hundred sixty-odd thousand dollars
coming to him from Dunstone, Limited, and he expected to collect it.
From Dunstone or some other source.
Holcroft had exploded. What good was a million dollars to a dead
geologist? Alex should be paying for the warnings and the protection
afforded him. But, in the final analysis, Holcroft recognized the
necessity for something to motivate Alexander's cooperation. Survival
was too abstract; lack of survival could not be experienced.
In the early morning hours, a Letter of Agreement was brought to
McAuliff by a temporary Savoy floor steward; Alex recognized him as the
man in the brown mackinaw on High Holborn. The letter covered the
conditions of reimbursement in
the event of loss of fees' with a very clear ceiling of
six hundred and sixty thousand dollars.
If he remained in one piece - and he had every expectation of so
doing - the loss was six thousand dollars.
He would live with it. He mailed the agreement to New York.
Holcroft.
He wondered what the explanation was; what could explain a wife
whose whispered voice could hold such fear? He wondered about the
private, personal Holcroft, yet knew instinctively that whatever
private questions he had would never be answered.
Holcroft was like that. Perhaps all the people who did what Holcroft
did were like that. Men in shadows; their women in unending tunnels of
fear. Pockets of fear.
And then there was… Halidon.
What did it mean? What was it?
Was it black?
Possibly. Probably not, however, Holcroft had said. At least, not
exclusively. It had too many informational resources, too much apparent
influence in powerful sectors. Too much money.
The word had surfaced under strange and horrible circumstances. The
British agent attached to the previous Dunstone survey had been one of
two men killed in a bush fire that began inside a bamboo camp on the
banks of the Martha Brae River, deep within the Cock Pit country.
Evidence indicated that the two dead members of the survey had tried to
salvage equipment within the fire, collapsed from the smoke, and burned
in the bamboo inferno.
But there was something more; something so appalling that even
Holcroft found it difficult to recite it.
The two men had been bound by bamboo shoots to separate trees, each
next to valuable survey equipment. They had been consumed in the
conflagration, for the simple reason that neither could run from it.
But the agent had left a message, a single word scratched on the metal
casing of a geoscope. Halidon.
Inspection under a microscope gave the remainder of the horror
story: particles of human tooth enamel. The agent had scratched the
letters with broken teeth.
Halidon… holly-dawn.
No known definition. A word? A name? A man? A three-beat sound?
What did it mean?
'It's beautiful, isn't it,' said Alison, looking beyond him through
the window.
'You're awake.'
'Someone turned on a radio and a man spoke… endlessly.' She smiled
and stretched long legs. She then inhaled in a deep yawn, which caused
her breasts to swell against the soft white silk of her blouse.
McAuliff watched. And she saw him watching, and smiled again - in
humour, not provocation. 'Relevancy, Dr McAuliff. Remember?'
'That word's going to get you into trouble, Ms Booth.'
'I'll stop saying it instantly. Come to think, I don't believe I
used it much until I met you.'
'I like the connection; don't stop.'
She laughed, and reached for her pocketbook, on the deck between
them.
There was a sudden series of rise-and-fall motions as the plane
entered air turbulence. It was over quickly, but during it Alison's
open purse landed on its side - on Alex's lap. Lipstick, compact,
matches, and a short thick tube fell out, wedging themselves between
McAuliff's legs. It was one of those brief, indecisive moments.
Pocketbooks were unfair vantage points, somehow unguarded extensions of
the private self. And Alison was not the type to reach swiftly between
a man's legs to retrieve property.
'Nothing fell on the floor,' said Alex awkwardly, handing Alison the
purse. 'Here.'
He picked out the lipstick and the compact with his left hand, his
right on the thick tube, which, at first, seemed to have a very
personal connotation. As his eyes were drawn to the casing, however,
the connotation became something else. The tube was a weapon, a
compressor. On the cylinder's side were printed words:
312 GAS CONTENTS
FOR MILITARY AND/OR POLICE USE ONLY
AUTHORISATION NUMBER 4316
RECORDED: 1-6
The authorization number and the date had been handwritten in
indelible ink. The gas compressor had been issued by British
authorities a month ago.
Alison took the tube from his hand. 'Thank you' was all she said.
'You planning to hijack the plane? That's quite a lethal-looking
object.'
'London has its problems for girls… women these days. There were
incidents in my building. May I have a cigarette? I seem to be out.'
'Sure.' McAuliff reached into his shirt pocket and withdrew his
cigarettes, shaking one up for her. He lighted it, then spoke softly,
very gently. 'Why are you lying to me, Alison?'
'I'm not. I think it's presumptuous of you to think so.'
'Oh, come on.' He smiled, reducing the earnestness of his inquiry.
'The police, especially the London police, do not issue compressors of
gas because of "incidents." And you don't look like a colonel in the
Women's Auxiliary Army.' As he said the words, Alex suddenly had the
feeling that perhaps he was wrong. Was Alison Booth an emissary from
Holcroft? Not Warfield, but British Intelligence?
'Exceptions are made. They really are, Alex.' She locked her eyes
with his; she was not lying.
'May I venture a suggestion? A reason?'
'If you like.'
'David Booth?'
She looked away, inhaling deeply on her cigarette. 'You know about
him. That's why you kept asking questions the other night.'
'Yes. Did you think I wouldn't find out?'
'I didn't care… no, that's not right; I think I wanted you to find
out if it helped me get the job. But I couldn't tell you.'
'Why not?'
'Oh, Lord, Alex! Your own words; you wanted the best professionals,
not personal problems! For all I knew, you'd have scratched me
instantly.' Her smile was gone now. There was only anxiety.
'This Booth must be quite a fellow.'
'He's a very sick, very vicious man… But I can handle David. I was
always able to handle him. He's an extraordinary coward.'
'Most vicious people are.'
'I'm not sure I subscribe to that. But it wasn't David. It was
someone else. The man he worked for.'
'Who?'
'A Frenchman. A marquis. Chatellerault is his name.'
The team took separate taxis into Kingston. Alison remained behind
with McAuliff while he commandeered the equipment with the help of the
Jamaican government people attached to the Ministry of Education. Alex
could feel the same vague resentment from the Jamaicans that he had
felt with the academicians in London; only added now was the aspect of
pigmentation. Were there no black geologists? they seemed to be
thinking.
The point was emphasized by the Customs men, their khaki uniforms
creased into steel. They insisted on examining each box, each carton,
as though each contained the most dangerous contraband imaginable. They
decided to be officially thorough as McAuliff stood helplessly by long
after the aircraft had taxied into a Palisados berth. Alison remained
ten yards away, sitting on a luggage dolly.
An hour and a half later, the equipment had been processed and
marked for in-island transport to Boscobel Airfield, in Ocho Rios.
McAuliff's temper was stretched to the point of gritted teeth and a
great deal of swallowing. Hegrabbed Alison's arm and marched
them both towards the terminal.
'For heaven's sake, Alex, you're bruising my elbow!' said Alison
under her breath, trying to hold back her laughter.
'Sorry… I'm sorry. Those goddamned messiahs think they
inherited the earth! The bastards!'
'They recently inherited their own island—'
'I'm in no mood for anti-colonial lectures,' he interrupted. I'm in
the mood for a drink. Let's stop at the lounge.'
'What about our bags?'
'Oh, Christ! I forgot… it's this way, if I remember,' said Alex,
pointing to a gate entrance on the right.
'Yes,' replied Alison. "Incoming Flights" usually means that.'
'Be quiet. My first order to you as a subordinate is not to say
another word until we get our bags and I have a drink in my hand.'
But McAuliffs command, by necessity, was rescinded. Their luggage
was nowhere in sight. And apparently no one knew where it might be; all
passenger baggage stored on Flight 640 from London had been picked up.
An hour ago.
'We were on that flight. We did not pick up our
bags. So, you see, you're mistaken,' said Alex curtly to the luggage
manager.
'Then you look-see, mon,' answered the Jamaican, irritated by the
American's implication that he was less than efficient. 'Every suitcase
taken - nothing left. Flight 640 all here, mon! No place
other.'
'Let me talk to the BOAC representative. Where is he?'
'Who?'
'Your boss, goddamn it!'
'I top mon!' replied the black angrily.
Alex held himself in check. 'Look, there's been a mix-up. The
airline's responsible, that's all I'm trying to say.'
'I think not, mon,' interjected the luggage manager defensively as
he turned to a telephone on the counter. 'I will call Bo-Ack.'
'BOAC.' McAuliff spoke softly to Alison. 'Our bags are probably on
the way to Buenos Aires.' They waited while the man spoke briefly on
the phone.
'Here, mon.' The manager held the phone out for Alex. 'You talk,
please.'
'Hello?'
'Dr McAuliff?' said the British voice.
'Yes. McAuliff.'
'We merely followed the instructions in your note, sir.'
'What note?'
'To First Class Accommodations. The driver brought it to us. The
taxi. Mrs Booth's and your luggage was taken to Courtleigh Manor. That is
what you wished, is it not, sir?' The voice was laced with a trace of
over-clarification, as if the speaker were addressing someone who had
had an extra drink he could not handle.
'I see… Yes, that's fine,' said Alex quietly. He hung up the
telephone and turned to Alison. 'Our bags were taken to the hotel'
'Really? Wasn't that nice.' A statement.
'No, I don't think it was,' answered McAuliff. 'Come on, let's find
that bar.'
They sat at a corner table in the Palisados observation lounge. The
red-jacketed waiter brought their drinks while humming a Jamaican folk
tune softly. Alex wondered if the island's tourist bureau instructed
all those who served visitors to hum tunes and move rhythmically. He
reached for his glass and drank a large portion of his double Scotch.
He noticed that Alison, who was not much of a drinker, seemed as
anxious as he was to put some alcohol into her system.
All things considered - all things - it was conceivable that his
luggage might be stolen. Not hers. But the note had specified his and
Mrs Booth's.
'You didn't have any more artillery, did you?' asked Alex quickly.
'Like that compressor?'
'No. It would have set off bells in the airline X-ray. I declared
this prior to boarding.' Alison pointed to her purse.
'Yes, of course,' he mumbled.
'I must say, you're remarkably calm. I should think you'd be
telephoning the hotel, see if the bags got there… oh, not for me. I
don't travel with the Crown jewels.'
'Oh, Lord, I'm sorry, Alison.' He pushed his chair back. 'I'll call
right away.'
'No, please.' She reached out and put her hand over his. 'I think
you're doing what you're doing for a reason. You don't want to appear
upset. I think you're right. If they're gone, there's nothing I can't
replace in the morning.'
'You're very understanding. Thanks.'
She withdrew her hand and drank again. He pulled his chair back and
shifted his position slightly, towards the interior of the lounge.
Unobtrusively, he began scanning the other tables.
The observation lounge was half filled, no more than that. From his
position - their position - in the far west corner of the room, Alex
could see nearly every table. And he slowly riveted his attention on
every table, wondering, as he had wondered two nights ago on High
Holborn, who might be concerned with him.
There was movement in the dimly lighted entrance. McAuliffs eyes
were drawn to it: the figure of a stocky man in a white shirt and no
jacket standing in the wide frame. He spoke to the lounge's hostess,
shaking his head slowly, negatively, as he looked inside. Suddenly,
Alex blinked and focused on the man.
He knew him.
A man he had last seen in Australia, in the fields of Kimberly
Plateau. He had been told the man had retired to Jamaica.
Robert Hanley, a pilot.
Hanley was standing in the entranceway of the lounge, looking for
someone inside. And Alex knew instinctively that Hanley was looking for
him.
'Excuse me,' he said to Alison. 'There's a fellow I know. Unless I'm
mistaken, he's trying to find me.'
McAuliff thought, as he threaded his way around the tables and
through the subdued shadows of the room, that it was somehow right that
Robert Hanley, of all the men in the Caribbean, would be involved.
Hanley, the open man who dealt with a covert world because he was,
above all, a man to be trusted. A laughing man, a tough man, a
professional with expertise far beyond that required by those employing
him. Someone who had miraculously survived six decades when all the
odds indicated nearer to four. But then, Robert Hanley did not look
much over forty-five. Even his close-cropped, reddish-blond hair was
devoid of grey.
'Robert!'
'Alexander!'
The two men clasped hands and held each other's shoulders.
'I said to the lady sitting with me that I thought you were looking
for me. I'll be honest, I hope I'm wrong.'
'I wish you were, lad.'
'That's what I was afraid of. What is it? Come on in.'
'In a minute. Let me tell you the news first. I wouldn't want the
lady to see you uncork your temper.' Hanley led Alex away from the
door; they stood alone by the wall. 'It's Sam Tucker.'
'Sam? Where is he?'
'That's the point, lad. I don't know. Sam flew into Mo'Bay three
days ago and called me at Port Antone'; the boys in Los Angeles told
him I was here. I hopped over, naturally, and it was a grand reunion. I
won't go into the details. The next morning, Sam went down to the
lobby to get a paper, I think. He never came back.'
EIGHT
Robert Hanley was flying back to Port Antonio in an hour. He and
McAuliff agreed not to mention Sam Tucker to Alison. Hanley also agreed
to keep looking for Sam; he and Alex would stay in touch.
The three of them took a taxi from Port Royal into Kingston, to the
Courtleigh. Hanley remained in the cab and took it on to the small
Tinson Pen Airfield, where he kept his plane.
At the hotel desk, Alex enquired nonchalantly, feeling no casualness
whatsoever, 'I assume our luggage arrived?'
'Indeed, yes, Mr McAuliff,' replied the clerk, stamping both
registration forms and signalling a bellhop. 'Only minutes ago. We had
them brought to your rooms. They're adjoining.'
'How thoughtful,' said Alex softly, wondering if Alison had heard
the man behind the desk. The clerk did not speak loudly, and Alison was
at the end of the counter, looking at tourist brochures. She glanced
over at McAuliff; she had heard. The expression on her face was
noncommittal. He wondered.
Five minutes later, she opened the door between their two rooms, and
Alex knew there was no point speculating further.
'I did as you ordered, Mister Bossman,' said Alison, walking in. 'I
didn't touch the—'
McAuliff held up his hand quickly, signalling her to be quiet. 'The bed,
bless your heart! You're all heart, luv!'
The expression now on Alison's face was definitely committal. Not
pleasantly. It was an awkward moment, which he was not prepared for; he
had not expected her to walk deliberately into his room. Still, there
was no point standing immobile, looking foolish.
He reached into his jacket pocket and withdrew a small,
square-shaped metal instrument the size of a cigarette pack. It was one
of several items given him by Holcroft. (Holcroft had cleared his
boarding pass with BOAC in London, eliminating the necessity of his
declaring whatever metallic objects were on his person.)
The small metal box was an electronic scanner with a miniaturized
high-voltage battery. Its function was simple, its mechanism complex,
and Holcroft claimed it was in very common use these days. It detected
the presence of electronic listening devices within a nine-by-nine-foot
area. Alex had intended to use it the minute he entered the room.
Instead, he absentmindedly had opened the doors to his small balcony
and gazed for a brief time at the dark, majestic rise of the Blue
Mountains beyond in the clear Kingston night.
Alison Booth stared at the scanner and then at McAuliff. Both anger
and fear were in her eyes, but she had the presence of mind to say
nothing.
As he had been taught, Alex switched on the instrument and made half
circles laterally and vertically, starting from the far corner of the
room. This pattern was to be followed in the other three corners. He
felt embarrassed, almost ludicrous, as he waved his arm slowly, as
though administering some occult benediction. He did not care to look
at Alison as he went through the motions.
Then, suddenly, he was not embarrassed at all. Instead, he felt a
pain in the centre of his upper stomach, a sharp sting as his breath
stopped and his eyes riveted on the inch-long, narrow bar in the dial
of the scanner. He had seen that bar move often during the practice
sessions with Holcroft; he had been curious, even fascinated at its
wavering, stuttering, movements. He was not fascinated now. He was
afraid.
This was not a training session in an out-of-the-way, safe practice
room with Holcroft patiently, thoroughly explaining the importance of
overlapping areas. It was actually happening; he had not really thought
that it would happen. It all had been… well, basically insincere,
somehow so improbable.
Yet now, in front of him, the thin, inch-long bar was vibrating,
oscillating with a miniature violence of its own. The tiny sensors were
responding to an intruder.
Somewhere within the immediate area of his position was a foreign
object whose function was to transmit everything being said in this room.
He motioned to Alison; she approached him warily. He gestured and
realized that his gestures were those of an unimaginative charade
contestant. He pointed to the scanner and then to his lips. When she
spoke he felt like a goddamned idiot.
'You promised me a drink in that lovely garden downstairs. Other
considerations will have to wait… luv
.' She said the words quietly,
simply. She was very believable!
'You're right,' he answered, deciding instantly that he was no
actor. 'Just let me wash up.'
He walked swiftly into the bathroom and turned the faucets on in the
basin. He pulled the door to within several inches of closing; the
sound of the rushing water was discernible, not obvious. He returned to
where he had been standing and continued to operate the scanner,
reducing the semicircles as the narrow bar reacted, centering in on the
location of the object as he had been taught to do by Holcroft.
The only non-stunning surprise was the fact that the scanner's tiny
red light went on directly above his suitcase, against the wall on a
baggage rack.
The red light indicated that the object was within twelve inches of
the instrument.
He handed Alison the scanner and opened the case cautiously. He
separated his clothes, removing shirts, socks, and underwear, and
placing them - throwing them - on the bed. When the suitcase was more
empty than full, he stretched the elasticized liner and ran his fingers
against the leather wall.
McAuliff knew what to feel for; Holcroft had showed him dozens of
bugs of varying sizes and shapes.
He found it.
It was attached to the outer lining: a small bulge the size of a
leather-covered button. He let it stay and, as Holcroft had instructed,
continued to examine the remainder of the suitcase for a second,
back-up device. It was there, too. On the opposite side. He took the
scanner from Alison, walked away from the area, and rapidly 'half
circled' the rest of the room. As Holcroft had told him to expect,
there was no further movement on the scanner's dial. For, if a
transmitter was planted on a movable host, it usually indicated that it
was the only source available.
The rest of the room was clean. 'Sterile' was the word Holcroft had
used.
McAuliff went into the bathroom; it, too, was safe. He turned off
the faucets and called out to Alison.
'Are you unpacked?' Now why the hell did he say that? Of all
the stupid…
'I'm an old hand at geo trips,' came the relaxed reply. 'All my
garments are double-knit; they can wait. I really want to see that lovely
garden. Do hurry.'
He pulled the door open and saw that the girl was closing the
balcony door, drawing the curtains across the floor-to-ceiling glass.
Alison Booth was doing the right thing, he reflected. Holcroft had
often repeated the command: When you find a transmitter, check
outside sightlines; assume visual surveillance.
He came out of the bathroom; she looked across at him… No, he
thought, she did not look at him, she stared at him.
'Good,' she said. 'You're ready. I think you missed most of your
beard, but you're presentable. Let's go… luv'
Outside the room, in the hotel corridor, Alison took his arm, and
they walked to the elevator. Several times he began to speak, but each
time he did so, she interrupted him.
'Wait till we're downstairs,' she kept repeating softly.
In the patio garden, it was Alison who, after they had been seated,
requested another table. One on the opposite side of the open area; a
table, Alex realized, that had no palms or plants in its vicinity.
There were no more than a dozen other couples, no single men or
unescorted women. McAuliff had the feeling that Alison had observed
each couple closely.
Their drinks arrived; the waiter departed, and Alison Booth spoke.
'I think it's time we talked to each other… about things we haven't
talked about.'
Alex offered her a cigarette. She declined, and so he lighted one
for himself. He was buying a few seconds of time before answering her,
and both of them knew it.
'I'm sorry you saw what you did upstairs. I don't want you to give
it undue importance.'
'That would be funny, darling, except that you were
halfway to hysterics.'
'That's nice.'
'What?'
'You said "darling."'
'Please. May we stay professional?'
'Good Lord! Are you? Professional, I mean?'
'I'm a geologist. What are you?'
McAuliff ignored her. 'You said I was… excited upstairs. You were
right. But it struck me that you weren't. You did all the correct
things while I was fumbling.'
'I agree. You were fumbling. Alex… were you told to hire me?'
'No. I was told to think twice or three times before accepting you.'
'That could have been a ploy. I wanted the job badly; I would have
gone to bed with you to get it… Thank you for not demanding that,'
'There was no pressure one way or the other about you. Only a
warning. And that was because of your recent husband's sideline
occupation, which, incidentally, apparently accounts for most of his
money. I say money because it's not considered income, I gather.'
'It accounts for all his money, and is not reported as
income. And I don't for a minute believe the Geophysics Department of
London University would have access to such information. Much less the
Royal Society.'
'Then you'd be wrong. A lot of the money for this survey is a
grant from the government funnelled through the society and the
university. When governments spend money, they're concerned about
personnel and payrolls.' McAuliff was pleasantly surprised at
himself. He was responding as Holcroft said he would: creating instant,
logical replies. Build on part of the truth, keep it simple…
Those had been Holcroft's words.
'We'll let that dubious, American-oriented assessment pass,' said
Alison, now reaching for his cigarettes. 'Surely you'll explain what
happened upstairs.'
The moment had come, thought Alex, wondering if he could carry it
off the way Holcroft said: Reduce any explanation to very few
words, rooted in common sense and simplicity, and do not vary. He
lighted her cigarette and spoke as casually as possible.
'There's a lot of political jockeying in Kingston. Most of it's
petty, but some of it gets rough. This survey has controversial
overtones. Resentment of origin, jealousies, that sort of thing. You
saw it at Customs… There are people who would like to discredit us. I
was given that goddamned scanner to use in case I thought something
very unusual happened. I thought it had, and I was right.' Alex drank
the remainder of his drink and watched the girl's reaction. He did his
best to convey only sincerity.
'Our bags, you mean,' said Alison.
'Yes. That note didn't make sense, and the clerk at the desk said
they got here just before we did. But they were picked up at Palisados
over two hours ago.'
'I see. And a geological survey would drive people to those
extremes? That's hard to swallow, Alex.'
'Not if you think about it. Why are surveys made? What's generally
the purpose? Isn't it usually because someone - some people - expect to
build something?'
'Not one like ours, no. It's too spread out over too great an area.
I'd say it's patently, obviously academic. Anything else
would—' Alison stopped as her eyes met McAuliffs. 'Good Lord! If it was
anything else, it's unbelievable!'
'Perhaps there are those who do believe it. If they did,
what do you think they'd do?' Alex signalled the waiter by holding up
two fingers for refills. Alison Booth's lips were parted in
astonishment.
'Millions and millions and millions,' said the girl
quietly. 'My God, they'd buy up everything in sight!'
'Only if they were convinced they were right.'
Alison forced him to look at her. When, at first, he refused, and
glanced over at the waiter, who was dawdling, she put her hand on top
of his and made him pay attention. 'They are right, aren't
they, Alex?'
'I wouldn't have any proof of it. My contract's with London
University, with countersigned approvals from the Society and the
Jamaican Ministry. What they do with the results is their business.' It
was pointless to issue a flat denial. He was a professional surveyor,
not a clairvoyant.
'I don't believe you. You've been primed.'
'Not primed. Told to be on guard, that's all.'
'Those… deadly little instruments aren't given to people who've only
been told to be on guard.'
'That's what I thought. But you know something? You and I are wrong,
Alison. Scanners are in… common use these days. Nothing out of the
ordinary. Especially if you're working outside home territory. Not a
very nice comment on the state of trust, is it?'
The waiter brought their drinks. He was humming and moving
rhythmically to the beat of his own tune. Alison continued to stare at
McAuliff. He wasn't sure, but he began to think she believed him. When
the waiter left, she leaned forward, anxious to speak.
'And what are you supposed to do now? You found those awful… things.
What are you going to do about them?'
'Nothing. Report them to the Ministry in the morning, that's all.'
'You mean you're not going to take them out and step on them or
something? You're just going to leave them there?'
It was not a pleasant prospect, thought Alex, but Holcroft had been
clear: If a bug was found, let it remain intact and use it.
It could be invaluable. Before eliminating any such device, he was to
report it and await instructions. A fish store named Tallon's, near
Victoria Park.
'They're paying me… paying us. I suppose they'll want to quietly
investigate. What difference does it make? I don't have any secrets.'
'And you won't have,' said the girl softly but pointedly,
removing her hand from his.
McAuliff suddenly realized the preposterousness of his position. It
was at once ridiculous and sublime, funny and not funny at all.
'May I change my mind and call someone now?' he asked.
Alison slowly - very slowly - began to smile her lovely smile. 'No.
I was being unfair… And I do believe you. You're the most
maddeningly unconcerned man I've ever known. You are either supremely
innocent or superbly ulterior. I can't accept the latter; you were far
too nervous upstairs.' She put her hand back on top of his free one.
With his other, he finished the second drink.
'May I ask why you weren't? Nervous.'
'Yes. It's time I told you. I owe you that… I shan't be returning to
England, Alex. Not for many years, if ever. I can't. I spent several
months… cooperating with Interpol. I've had experience with those
horrid little buggers. That's what we called them. Buggers.'
McAuliff felt the stinging pain in his stomach again. It was fear,
and more than fear. Holcroft had said British Intelligence doubted she
would return to England. Julian. Warfield suggested that she might be
of value for abstract reasons having nothing to do with her
contributions to the survey.
He was not sure how - or why - but Alison was being used.
Just as he was being used.
'How did that happen?' he asked with appropriate
astonishment.
Alison touched on the highlights of her involvement. The marriage
was sour before the first anniversary. Succinctly put, Alison Booth
came to the conclusion very early that her husband had pursued and
married her for reasons having more to do with her professional travels
than for anything else.
'… it was as though he had been ordered to take me, use me, absorb
me…'
The strain came soon after they were married: Booth was inordinately
interested in her prospects. And, from seemingly nowhere, survey offers
came out of the blue, from little-known but good-paying firms, for
operations remarkably exotic.
'… among them, of course, Beirut, Corsica, southern Spain. He joined
me each time. For days, weeks at a time…'
The first confrontation with David Booth came about in Corsica. The
survey was a coastal-offshore expedition in the Capo Senetosa area.
David arrived during the middle stages for his usual two - to
three-week
stay, and during this period a series of strange telephone calls and
unexplained conferences took place, which seemed to disturb him
beyond his limited abilities to cope. Men flew into Ajaccia in small,
fast planes; others came by sea in trawlers and small ocean-going
craft. David would disappear for hours, then for days at a time.
Alison's field work was such that she returned nightly to the team's
seacoast hotel; her husband could not conceal his behaviour, nor the
fact that his presence in Corsica was not an act of devotion to her.
She forced the issue, enumerating the undeniable, and brutally
labelling David's explanations for what they were: amateurish lies. He
had broken down, wept, pleaded, and told his wife the truth.
In order to maintain a life style David Booth was incapable of
earning in the marketplace, he had moved into international narcotics.
He was primarily a courier. His partnership in a small
importing-exporting business was ideal for the work. The firm had no
real identity; indeed, it was rather nondescript, catering - as
befitted the owners -to a social rather than a commercial clientele,
dealing in art objects on the decorating level. He was able to travel
extensively without raising official eyebrows. His introduction to the
world of the contrabandists was banal: gambling debts
compounded by an excess of alcohol and embarrassing female alliances.
On the one hand, he had no choice; on the other, he was well paid and
had no moral compunctions.
But Alison did. The geological surveys were legitimate, testimonials
to David's employers' abilities to ferret out unsuspecting
collaborators. David was given the names of survey teams in selected
Mediterranean sites and told to contact them, offering the services of
his very respected wife, adding further that he would confidentially
contribute to her salary if she was hired. A rich, devoted husband only
interested in keeping an active wife happy. The offers were invariably
accepted. And, by finding her 'situations,' his travels were given a
twofold legitimacy. His courier activities had grown beyond the
dilettante horizons of his business.
Alison threatened to leave the Corsican job.
David was hysterical. He insisted he would be killed, and Alison as
well. He painted a picture of such widespread, powerful
corruption-without-conscience that Alison, fearing for both their
lives, relented. She agreed to finish the work in Corsica, but made it
clear their marriage was finished. Nothing would alter that
decision.
So she believed at the time.
But one late afternoon in the field - on the water, actually -
Alison was taking bore samples from the ocean floor several hundred
yards offshore. In the small cabin cruiser were two men. They were
agents of Interpol. They had been following her husband for a number of
months. Interpol was gathering massive documentation of criminal
evidence. It was closing in.
'Needless to say, they were prepared for his arrival. My room was as
private as yours was intended to be this evening…'
The case they presented was strong and clear. Where her husband had
described a powerful network of corruption, the Interpol men told of
another world of pain and suffering and needless, horrible death.
'Oh, they were experts,' said Alison, her eyes remembering, her
smile compassionately sad. 'They brought photographs, dozens of them.
Children in agony; young men, girls destroyed. I shall never forget
those pictures. As they intended I would not…'
Their appeal was the classic recruiting approach: Mrs David Booth
was in a unique position; there was no one like her. She could do so
much, provide so much. And if she walked away in the manner
she had described to her husband - abruptly, without explanation -
there was the very real question of whether she would be allowed to do
so. My God, thought McAuliff as he listened, the more
things change… The Interpol men might have been Holcroft speaking in a
room at the Savoy Hotel.
The arrangements were made, schedules created, a reasonable period
of time specified for the 'deterioration' of the marriage. She told a
relieved Booth that she would try to save their relationship, on the
condition that he never again speak to her of his outside activities.
For half a year Alison Gerrard Booth reported the activities of her
husband, identified photographs, planted dozens of tiny listening
devices in hotel rooms, automobiles, their own apartment. She did so
with the understanding that David Booth - whatever the eventual charges
against him - would be protected from physical harm. To the best of
Interpol's ability.
Nothing was guaranteed.
'When did it all come to an end?' asked Alex.
Alison looked away, briefly, at the dark, ominous panorama of the
Blue Mountains, rising in blackness several miles to the north. 'When I
listened to a very painful recording. Painful to hear; more painful
because I had made the recording possible.'
One morning after a lecture at the university, an Interpol man
arrived at her office in the geology department. In his briefcase he
had a cassette machine and a cartridge that was a duplicate of a
conversation recorded between her husband and a liaison from the
Marquis de Chatellerault, the man identified as the overlord of the
narcotics operation. Alison sat and listened to the voice of a broken
man drunkenly describing the collapse of his marriage to a woman he
loved very much. She heard him rage and weep, blaming himself for the
inadequate man that he was. He spoke of his refused entreaties for the
bed, her total rejection of him. And at the last, he made it clear
beyond doubt that he loathed using her; that if she ever found out, he
would kill himself. What he had done, almost too perfectly, was to
exonerate her from any knowledge whatsoever of Chatellerault's
operation. He had done it superbly.
'Interpol reached a conclusion that was as painful as the recording.
David had somehow learned what I was doing. He was sending a message.
It was time to get out.'
A forty-eight-hour divorce in Haiti was arranged. Alison Booth was
free.
And, of course, not free at all.
'… within a year, it will all close in on Chatellerault, on David…
on all of them. And somewhere, someone will put it together: Booth's
wife…'
Alison reached for her drink and drank and tried to smile.
'That's it?' said Alex, not sure it was at all.
'That's it, Mr McAuliff… Now, tell me honestly, would you have hired
me had you known?'
'No, I would not… I wonder why I didn't know.'
'It's not the sort of information the university, or Emigration, or
just about anyone else would have.'
'Alison?' McAuliff tried to conceal the sudden fear he felt. 'You did
hear about this job from the university people, didn't you?'
The girl laughed and raised her lovely eyebrows in mock protest.
'Oh, Lord, it's tell-all time!… No, I admit to having a jump; it gave
me time to compile that very impressive portfolio for you.'
'How did you learn of it?'
'Interpol. They'd been looking for months. They called me about ten
or twelve days before the interview.'
McAuliff did not have to indulge in any rapid calculations. Ten or
twelve days before the interview would place the date within reasonable
approximation of the afternoon he had met with Julian Warfield at
Belgravia Square.
And later with a man named Holcroft from British Intelligence.
The stinging pain returned to McAuliffs stomach. Only it was sharper
now, more defined. But he could not dwell on it. Across the
dark-shadowed patio, a man was approaching. He was walking to their
table unsteadily. He was drunk, thought Alex.
'Well, for God's sake, there you are! We wondered where
the hell you were! We're all in the bar inside. Whitehall's an absolute
riot on the piano! A bloody black Noel Coward!… Oh, by the way, I trust
your luggage got here. I saw you were having problems, so I scribbled a
note for the bastards to send it along. If they could read my whiskey
slant.'
Young James Ferguson dropped into an empty chair and smiled
alcoholically at Alison. He then turned and looked at McAuliff, his
smile fading as he was met by Alex's stare.
'That was very kind of you,' said McAuliff quietly.
And then Alexander saw it in Ferguson's eyes. The focused
consciousness behind the supposedly glazed eyes.
James Ferguson was nowhere near as drunk as he pretended to be.
NINE
They expected to stay up most of the night. It was their silent,
hostile answer to the 'horrid little buggers.' They joined the others
in the bar and, as a good captain should, McAuliff was seen talking to
the maitre'd ; all knew the evening was being paid for by their
director.
Charles Whitehall lived up to Ferguson's judgment. His talent was
professional; his island patter songs - filled with Caribbean idiom and
Jamaican black wit - were funny, brittle, cold, and episodically hot.
His voice had the clear, high-pitched thrust of a Kingston balladeer;
only his eyes remained remote. He was entertaining and amusing, but he
was neither entertained nor amused himself, thought Alex.
He was performing.
And finally, after nearly two hours, he wearied of the chore,
accepted the cheers of the half-drunken room, and wandered to the
table. After receiving individual shakes, claps and hugs from Ferguson,
the Jensens, Alison Booth, and Alex, he opted for a chair next to
McAuliff. Ferguson had been sitting there - encouraged by Alex - but
the young botanist was only too happy to move. Unsteadily.
'That was remarkable!' said Alison, leaning across McAuliff,
reaching for Whitehall's hand. Alex watched as the Jamaican responded;
the dark Caribbean hand - fingernails manicured, gold ring glistening -
curled delicately over Alison's as another woman's might. And then, in
contradiction, Whitehall raised the girl's wrist and kissed her fingers.
A waiter brought over a bottle of white wine for Whitehall's
inspection. He read the label in the nightclub light, looked up at the
smiling attendant, and nodded. He turned back to McAuliff; Alison was
now chatting with Ruth Jensen across the table. 'I should like to speak
with you privately,' said the Jamaican casually. 'Meet me in my room,
say, twenty minutes after I leave.'
'Alone?'
'Alone.'
'Can't it wait until morning?'
Whitehall levelled his black eyes at McAuliff and spoke softly but
sharply. 'No, it cannot.'
James Ferguson suddenly lurched up from his chair at the end of the
table and raised his glass to Whitehall. He weaved and gripped the edge
with his free hand; he was the picture of a very drunk young man.
'Here's to Charles the First of Kingston! The bloody black Sir Noel!
You're simply fantastic, Charles!'
There was an embarrassing instant of silence as the word 'black' was
absorbed. The waiter hurriedly poured Whitehall's wine; it was no
moment for sampling.
'Thank you,' said Whitehall politely. 'I take that as a high
compliment, indeed… Jimbo-mon.'
'Jimbo-mon!' shouted Ferguson with delight. 'I love it! You
shall call me Jimbo-mon! And now, I should like—' Ferguson's
words were cut short, replaced by an agonizing grimace on his pale
young face. It was suddenly abundantly clear that his alcoholic
capacity had been reached. He set his glass down with wavering
precision, staggered backward and, in a slow motion of his own,
collapsed to the floor.
The table rose en masse; surrounding couples turned. The waiter put
the bottle down quickly and started towards Ferguson; he was joined by
Peter Jensen, who was nearest.
'Oh, Lord,' said Jensen, kneeling down. 'I think the poor fellow's
going to be sick. Ruth, come help… You there, waiter. Give me a hand,
chap!'
The Jensens, aided by two waiters now, gently lifted the young
botanist into a sitting position, unloosened his tie, and generally
tried to reinstate some form of consciousness. And Charles Whitehall,
standing beside McAuliff, smiled, picked up two napkins, and lobbed
them across the table onto the floor near those administering aid. Alex
watched the Jamaican's action; it was not pleasant. Ferguson's head was
nodding back and forth; moans of impending illness came from his lips.
'I think this is as good a time as any for me to leave,' said
Whitehall. 'Twenty minutes?'
McAuliff nodded. 'Or thereabouts.'
The Jamaican turned to Alison, delicately took her hand, kissed it,
and smiled. 'Good night, my dear.'
With minor annoyance, Alex sidestepped the two of them and walked
over to the Jensens, who, with the waiters' help, were getting Ferguson
to his feet.
'We'll bring him to his room,' said Ruth. 'I warned him about the
rum; it doesn't go with whiskey. I don't think he listened.' She smiled
and shook her head.
McAuliff kept his eyes on Ferguson's face. He wondered if he would
see what he saw before. What he had been watching for for over an hour.
And then he did. Or thought he did.
As Ferguson's arms went limp around the shoulders of a waiter and
Peter Jensen, he opened his eyes. Eyes that seemingly swum in their
sockets. But for the briefest of moments, they were steady, focused,
devoid of glaze. Ferguson was doing a perfectly natural thing any
person would do in a dimly lit room. He was checking his path to avoid
obstacles.
And he was - for that instant - quite sober.
Why was James Ferguson putting on such a splendidly embarrassing
performance? McAuliff would have a talk with the young man in the
morning. About several things including a 'whiskey-slanted' note that
resulted in a suitcase that triggered the dial of an electronic scanner.
'Poor lamb. He'll feel miserable in the morning.' Alison had come
alongside Alex. Together they watched the Jensens take Ferguson out the
door.
'I hope he's just a poor lamb who went astray for the night and
doesn't make a habit of it.'
'Oh, come on, Alex, don't be old-auntie. He's a perfectly nice young
man who's had a pint too many.' Alison turned and looked at the
deserted table. 'Well, it seems the party's over, doesn't it?'
'I thought we agreed to keep it going.'
'I'm fading fast, darling; my resolve is weakening. We also agreed
to check my luggage with your little magic box. Shall we?'
'Sure.' McAuliff signalled the waiter.
They walked down the hotel corridor; McAuliff took Alison's key as
they approached her door. 'I have to see Whitehall in a few minutes.'
'Oh? How come? It's awfully late.'
'He said he wanted to speak to me. Privately. I have no idea why.
I'll make it quick.' He inserted the key, opened the door, and found
himself instinctively barring Alison in the frame until he had switched
on the lights and looked inside.
The single room was empty, the connecting door to his still open, as
it had been when they left hours ago.
'I'm impressed,' whispered Alison, resting her chin playfully on the
outstretched, forbidding arm that formed a bar across the entrance.
'What?' He removed his arm and walked towards the connecting door.
The lights in his room were on - as he had left them. He closed the
door quietly, withdrew the scanner from his jacket, and crossed to the
bed, where Alison's two suitcases lay alongside each other. He held the
instrument above them; there was no movement on the dial. He walked
rapidly about the room, laterally and vertically blessing it from all
corners. The room was clean. 'What did you say?' he asked softly.
'You're protective. That's nice.'
'Why were the lights off in this room and not in mine?' He had not
heard her words.
'Because I turned them off. I came in here, got my purse, used some
lipstick, and went back into your room. There's a switch by the door. I
used it.'
'I don't remember.'
'You were upset at the time. I gather my room isn't the centre of
attention yours is.' Alison walked in and closed the corridor door.
'No, it's not, but keep your voice low… Can those goddamn things
listen through doors and walls?'
'No, I don't think so.' She watched him take her suitcases from the
bed and carry them across the room. He stood by the closet, looking for
a luggage rack. There was none. 'Aren't you being a little obvious?'
'What?'
'What are you doing with my bags? I haven't unpacked.'
'Oh.' McAuliff could feel the flush on his face. He felt like a
goddamn idiot. 'I'm sorry. I suppose I could say I'm compulsively neat.'
'Or just compulsive.'
He carried the bags back to the bed and turned to look at her, the
suitcases still in his hands. He was so terribly tired. 'It's been a
rotten day… a very confusing day,' he said. 'The fact that it's not
over yet is discouraging as hell; there's still Whitehall to go… And in
the next room, if I snore or talk in my sleep or go to the bathroom
with the door open, everything is recorded somewhere on a tape. I can
say it doesn't bother me, but it doesn't make me feel any better,
either… I'll tell you something else, too, while I'm rambling. You are
a lovely, lovely girl… and you're right, I'm compulsive… for example,
at this moment I have the strongest compulsion to hold you and kiss you
and feel your arms around me, and… you are so goddamn desirable… and
you have such a beautiful smile and laugh… when you laugh I just want
to watch you and touch your face… and all I want to do is hold you and
forget everything else… Now I'm finished rambling, and you can tell me
to go to hell because I'm not relevant.'
Alison Booth stood silently, looking at McAuliff for what seemed to
him far too long. Then she walked slowly, deliberately, to him.
'Do you know how silly you look holding those suitcases?' she
whispered as she leaned forward and kissed him on the lips.
He dropped the bags; the noise of their contact with the floor made
them both smile. He pulled her to him and the comfort was splendid, the
warm, growing excitement a special thing. And as he kissed her, their
mouths moistly exploring, pressing, widening, he realized Alison was
trembling, gripping him with a strength that was more than a desire to
be taken. Yet it was not fear; there was no hesitancy, no holding back,
only anxiety.
He lowered her gently to the bed; as he did so, she unbuttoned the
silk blouse and guided his hand to her breasts. She closed her eyes as
he caressed her and whispered.
'It's been a terribly long time, Alex. Do you think Whitehall could
wait a while longer? You see, I don't think I can.'
They lay beside each other, naked, under the soft covers. She rose
on her elbow, her hair falling over her face, and looked at him. She
traced his lips with her fingers and bent down, kissing him, outlining
his lips now with her tongue.
'I'm absolutely shameless,' she said, laughing softly. 'I want to
make love to you all night long. And most of the day… I'm parched and
I've been to the well and I want to stay here.'
He reached up and let her hair fall through his fingers. He followed
the strands downward to the swell of her body and cupped her left
breast. 'We'll take the minimum time out for food and sleep.'
There was the faint ring of a telephone. It came from the direction
of the connecting door. From his room.
'You're late for Charles Whitehall,' said Alison. 'You'd better go
answer it.'
'Our goddamn Sir Noel.' He climbed out of the bed, walked rapidly to
the door, opened it, and went into the room. As he picked up the
telephone, he looked at the drawn curtains of his balcony doors; he was
grateful for Alison's experience. Except for his socks - why his socks?
-he was naked.
'I said twenty minutes, Mr McAuliff. It's nearly an hour.'
Whitehall's voice was quietly furious.
'I'm sorry. I told you "thereabouts." For me, an hour is
"thereabouts." Especially when someone gives me orders at this time of
night and he's not bleeding.'
'Let's not argue. Will you be here soon?'
'Yes.'
'When?'
'Twenty minutes.' Alex hung up the telephone a bit harder than was
necessary and looked over at his suitcase. Whoever was on the other end
of that line knew he was going out of the room to meet
someone who had tried to issue him orders at three o'clock in the
morning. He would think about it later.
'Do you know how positively handsome you are? All over,' said Alison
as he came back into the room.
'You're right, you're shameless.'
'Why do you have your knee socks on? It looks peculiar.' She sat up,
pulling the sheet over her breasts, and reached for the cigarettes on
the night table.
'Light me one, will you please? I've got to get dressed.' McAuliff
looked around the bed for the clothing he had removed in such haste a
half hour ago.
'Was he upset?' She handed him a cigarette as he pulled on his
trousers and picked up his shirt from the floor.
'He was upset. He's also an arrogant son of a bitch.'
'I think Charles Whitehall wants to strike back at someone, or
something,' said Alison, watching him absently. 'He's angry.'
'Maybe it's recognition. Not granted to the extent he thinks it
should be.' McAuliff buttoned his shirt.
'Perhaps. That would account for his dismissing the compliments.'
'The what?' he asked.
'His little entertainment downstairs tonight was frighteningly
thought out. It wasn't prepared for a nightclub. It was created for
Covent Garden. Or the grand hall of the United Nations.'
He tapped gently on Whitehall's door, and when it opened, McAuliff
found the Jamaican dressed in an embroidered Japanese hopi
coat. Beneath the flowery garment, Whitehall wore his flared pin-stripe
trousers and velvet slippers.
'Come in, please. This time you're early. It's not yet fifteen
minutes.'
'You're obsessed with time. It's after three in the morning; I'd
rather not look at my watch.' Alex closed the door behind him. 'I hope
you have something important to tell me. Because if you don't, I'm
going to be damned angry.'
The black had crossed to the bureau; he picked up a folded piece of
paper from the top and indicated a chair for McAuliff. 'Sit down,
please. I, too, am quite exhausted, but we must talk.'
Alex walked to the armchair and sat down. 'Go ahead.'
'I think it's time we had an understanding. It will in no way affect
my contributions to the survey.'
'I'm relieved to hear that. I didn't hire you to entertain the
troops downstairs.'
'A dividend,' said Whitehall coldly. 'Don't knock it; I'm very good.'
'I know you are. What else is new?'
The scholar tapped the paper in his hands. 'There'll be periods when
it will be necessary for me to be absent. Never more than a day or two
at a time. Naturally, I'll give you advance notice, and if there are
problems - where possible - I shall rearrange my schedule.'
'You'll what?' McAuliff sat forward in the chair. 'Where… possible…
you'll fit your time to mine! That's goddamn nice of you. I
hope the survey won't be a burden.'
Whitehall laughed, impersonally. 'Not at all. It was just what I was
looking for. And you'll see, you'll be quite pleased… although I'm not
sure why I should be terribly concerned. You see, I cannot accept the
stated reasons for this survey. And I suspect there are one or two
others, if they spoke their thoughts, who share my doubts.'
'Are you suggesting that I hired you under false pretences?'
'Oh, come now,' replied the black scholar, his eyes narrowing in
irritation. 'Alexander McAuliff, a highly confidential, one-man survey
company whose work takes him throughout the world… for very large fees,
abruptly decides to become academically charitable? To take
from four to six months away from a lucrative practice to head up a university
survey! Whitehall laughed like a nervous jackal, walked rapidly to
the curtains of the room's balcony doors, and flipped one side
partially open. He twisted the latch and pulled the glass panel several
inches inward; the curtain billowed in the night breeze.
'You don't know the specifics of my contract,' said Alex
noncommittally.
'I know what universities and royal societies and
ministries of education pay. It's not your league, McAuliff.' The
Jamaican returned to the bed and sat down on the edge. He brought the
folded paper to his chin and stared at Alex.
McAuliff hesitated, then spoke slowly. 'In a way, aren't you
describing your own situation? There were several people in London who
didn't think you'd take the job. It was quite a drop in income for you.'
'Precisely. Our positions are similar; I'm sure for very different
reasons… Part of my reasoning takes me to Savanna-la-Mar in
the morning.'
'Your friend on the plane?'
'A bore. Merely a messenger.' Whitehall held up the folded piece of
paper. 'He brought me an invitation. Would you care to read it?'
'You wouldn't offer unless it was pertinent.'
'I have no idea whether it is or not. Perhaps you can tell
me.'
Alex took the paper extended to him and unfolded it. It was hotel
stationery. The George V, Paris. The handwriting was slanted, the
strokes rapid, words joined in speed.
My dear Whitehall—
Forgive this hastily
written note but I have just learned that we
are both en route to Jamaica. I for a welcome rest and you, I
understand, for more worthwhile pursuits.
I should deem it an
honour and a pleasure to meet with you. Our
mutual friend will give you the details. I shall be staying in
Savanna-la-Mar, albeit incognito. He will explain.
I do believe our
coming together at the earliest would be mutually
beneficial. I have long admired your past (?) island activities. I ask
only that our meeting and my presence in Jamaica remain confidential.
Since I so admire your endeavours, I know you will understand.
Chatellerault
Chatellerault… ? The Marquis de Chatellerault.
David Booth's 'employer.' The man behind a narcotics network that
spread throughout most of Europe and the Mediterranean. The man Alison
feared so terribly that she carried a lethal-looking cylinder of gas
with her at all times!
McAuliff knew that Whitehall was observing him. He forced himself to
remain immobile, betraying only numbness on his face and in his eyes.
'Who is he?' asked McAuliff blandly. 'Who's this Chatel…
Chatellerault?'
'You don't know?'
'Oh, for Christ's sake, Whitehall,' said Alex in weary
exasperation. 'Stop playing games. I've never heard of him.'
'I thought you might have.' The scholar was once again staring at
McAuliff. 'I thought the connection was rather evident.'
'What connection?'
'To whatever your reasons are for being in Jamaica.
Chatellerault is… among other things… a financier with considerable
resources. The coincidence is startling, wouldn't you agree?'
'I don't know what you're talking about.' McAuliff glanced down at
Chatellerault's note. 'What does he mean by your past question mark
island activities?'
Whitehall paused before replying. When he did, he spoke quietly,
thus lending emphasis to his words. 'Ten years ago I left my homeland
because the political faction for which I worked… devotedly, and in
secret… was forced underground. Further underground, I should say. For
a decade we have remained dormant - on the surface. But only on the
surface… I have returned now. Kingston knows nothing. It never
associated me with the movement. But Chatellerault knows, and therefore
demands confidentiality. I have, with considerable risk, broken this
confidence as an article of faith. For you… please. Why are you here,
McAuliff? Perhaps it will tell me why such a man as Chatellerault
wishes a conference.'
Alex got out of the chair and walked aimlessly towards the balcony
doors. He moved because it helped him concentrate. His mind was racing;
some abstract thoughts signalling a warning that Alison was in danger…
others balking, not convinced.
He crossed to the back of the chair facing Whitehall's bed and
gripped the cloth firmly. 'All right, I'll make a deal with you. I'll
tell you why I'm here, if you'll spell out this… activity of yours.'
'I will tell you what I can,' replied Charles, his eyes devoid of
deceit. 'It will be sufficient, you will see. I cannot tell you
everything. It would not be good for you.'
'That's a condition I'm not sure I like.' 'Please. Trust me.'
The man was not lying, that much was clear to Alex. 'Okay… I know
the north coast; I worked for Kaiser's bauxite. I'm considered very pro
- that is, I've put together some good teams and I've got a decent
reputation—'
'Yes, yes. To the point, please!'
'By heading up this job, the Jamaican government has guaranteed me
first refusal on fifty per cent of any industrial development for the
next six years. That could mean hundreds of thousands of dollars… It's
as simple as that.'
Whitehall sat motionless, his hands still folded beneath his chin,
an elegant little boy in a concerned man's body. 'Yes, that is
plausible,' he said finally. 'In much of Kingston, everything's for
sale. It could be a motive for Chatellerault.'
Alex remained behind the chair. 'All right. Now, that's why I'm
here. Why are you?'
'It is good you told me of your arrangement… I shall do my best to
see that it is lived up to. You deserve that.'
'What the hell does that mean?'
'It means I am here in a political capacity. A solely Jamaican
concern. You must respect that condition… and my confidence. I'd deny
it anyway, and you would soil your foreigner's hands in things
Jamaican. Ultimately, however, we will control Kingston.'
'Oh, Christ! Comes the goddamn revolution!'
'Of a different sort, Mr McAuliff. Put plainly, I'm a fascist.
Fascism is the only hope for my island.'
TEN
McAuliff opened his eyes, raised his wrist from beneath the covers,
and saw that it was 10.25. He had intended to get up by 8.30 - 9.00 at
the latest.
He had a man to see. A man with arthritis at a fish store called
Tallon's.
He looked over at Alison. She was curled up away from him, her hair
sprayed over the sheets, her face buried in the pillow. She had been
magnificent, he thought. No, he thought again, they had been
magnificent together. She had been… what was the word she used?
Parched. She had said: 'I've been parched and I've been to the well…'
And she had been.
Magnificent.
Yet still the thoughts came back.
A name that meant nothing to him twenty-four hours ago was suddenly
an unknown force to be reckoned with, separately put forward by two
people who were strangers a week ago.
Chatellerault. The Marquis de Chatellerault.
Currently in Savanna-la-Mar, on the southwest coast of Jamaica.
Charles Whitehall would be seeing him shortly, if they had not met
by now. The black fascist and the French financier. It sounded like a
vaudeville act.
But Alison Booth carried a deadly cylinder in her handbag, in the
event she ever had occasion to meet him. Or meet with those who worked
for him.
What was the connection? Certainly there had to be one.
He stretched, taking care not to wake her. Although he wanted to
wake her and hold her and run his hands over her body and make warm
love to her in the morning.
He couldn't. There was too much to do. Too much to think about…
He wondered what his instructions would be. And how long it would
take to receive them. And what the man with arthritis at a fish store
named Tallon's would be like.
And, no less important, where in God's name was Sam Tucker? He was
to be in Kingston by tomorrow. It wasn't like Sam to just take his
leave without a word; he was too kind a man. And yet, there had been
times…
When would they get the word to fly north and begin the actual work
on the survey?
He was not going to get the answers staring up at the ceiling from
Alison Booth's bed. And he was not going to make any telephone calls
from his room.
He smiled as he thought about the 'horrid little buggers' in his
suitcase. Were there horrid little men crouched over dials in dark
rooms waiting for sounds that never came?
There was a certain comfort in that.
'I can hear you thinking.' Alison's voice was muffled in the pillow.
'Isn't that remarkable.'
'It's frightening.'
She rolled over, her eyes shut, and smiled and reached under the
blankets for him. 'You also stretch quite sensually.' She caressed the
flatness of his stomach, and then his thighs, and then McAuliff knew
answers would have to wait. He pulled her to him; she opened her eyes
and raised the covers so there was nothing between them.
The taxi let him off at Victoria's South Parade. The thoroughfare
was aptly named, in the nineteenth-century sense. The throngs of people
flowing in and out of the park's entrance were like crowds of brightly
coloured peacocks, strutting, half acknowledging, quickening steps only
to stop and gape.
McAuliff walked into the park, doing his best to look like a
strolling tourist. Intermittently he could feel the hostile,
questioning glances as he made his way up the gravel path to the centre
of the park. It occurred to him that he had not seen a single other
white person; he had not expected that. He had the distinct feeling
that he was an object, to be tolerated but watched. Not essentially to
be trusted.
He was a strange-toned outsider who had invaded the heart of this
Man's playground. He nearly laughed when a young Jamaican mother guided
a smiling child to the opposite side of the path as he approached. The
child obviously had been fascinated by the tall, pinkish figure; the
mother, quietly, efficiently, knew better. With dignity.
He saw the rectangular white sign with the brown lettering: QUEEN
STREET, EAST. The arrow pointed to the right, at another, narrower
gravel path. He started down it.
He recalled Holcroft's words: Don't be in a hurry. Ever, if
possible. And never when you are making a contact. There's nothing so
obvious as a man in a rush in a crowd that's not; except a woman. Or
that same man stopping every five feet to light the same cigarette over
and over again, so he can peer around at everyone. Do the natural
things, depending on the day, the climate, the surroundings…
It was a warm morning… noon. The Jamaican sun was hot, but there
were breezes from the harbour, less than a mile away. It would be
perfectly natural for a tourist to sit down and take the sun and the
breeze; to unbutton his collar, remove his jacket, perhaps. To look
about with pleasant tourist curiosity.
There was a bench on the left; a couple had just got up. It was
empty. He took off his jacket, pulled at his tie, and sat down. He
stretched his legs and behaved as he thought was appropriate.
But it was not appropriate. For the most self-conscious of reasons:
He was too free, too relaxed in this Man's playground. He felt it
instantly, unmistakably. The discomfort was heightened by an old man
with a cane who walked by and hesitated in front of him. He was a touch
drunk, thought Alex; the head swayed slightly, the legs a bit unsteady.
But the eyes were not unsteady. They conveyed mild surprise mixed with
disapproval.
McAuliff rose from the bench and swung his jacket under his arm. He
smiled blankly at the old man and was about to proceed down the path
when he saw another man, difficult to miss. He was white - the only
other white man in Victoria Park. At least, the only one he could see.
He was quite far away, diagonally across the lawns, on the north-south
path, about a hundred and fifty yards in the distance.
A young man with a slouch and a shock of untrained dark hair.
And he had turned away. He had been watching him. Alex was sure of
that. Following him.
James Ferguson. The young man who had put on the second-best
performance of the night at the Courtleigh Manor last evening. The
drunk who had the presence of mind to keep sharp eyes open for
obstacles in a dimly lit room.
McAuliff took advantage of the moment and walked rapidly down the
path, then cut across the grass to the trunk of a large palm. He was
nearly two hundred yards from Ferguson now. He peered around the tree,
keeping his body out of sight. He was aware that a number of Jamaicans
sitting about on the lawn were looking at him; he was sure,
disapprovingly.
Ferguson, as he expected, was alarmed that he had lost the subject
of his surveillance. (It was funny, thought Alex. He could think the
word 'surveillance' now. He doubted he had, used the word a dozen
times in his life before three weeks ago.) The young botanist began
walking rapidly past the brown-skinned strollers. Holcroft was right,
thought McAuliff. A man in a hurry in a crowd that wasn't was obvious.
Ferguson reached the intersection of the Queen Street path and
stopped. He was less than forty yards from Alex now; he hesitated, as
if not sure whether to retreat back to the South Parade or go on.
McAuliff pressed himself against the palm trunk. Ferguson thrust
forward, as rapidly as possible. He had decided to keep going, if only
to get out of the park. The bustling crowds on Queen Street East
signified sanctuary. The park had become unsafe.
If these conclusions were right - and the nervous expression on
Ferguson's face seemed to confirm them -McAuliff realized that he had
learned something else about this strange young man: He was doing what
he was doing under duress and with very little experience. Look for the small things, Holcroft had said. They'll
be there; you'll learn to spot them. Signs that tell you there is valid
strength or real weakness…
Ferguson reached the East Parade gate, obviously relieved. He
stopped and looked carefully in all directions.
The unsafe field was behind him.
The young man checked his watch while waiting for the uniformed
policeman to halt the traffic for pedestrians. The whistle blew,
automobiles stopped with varying levels of screeches, and Ferguson
continued down Queen Street. Concealing himself as best he could in the
crowd. Alex followed. The young man seemed more relaxed now. He wasn't
as aggressive in his walk, in his darting glances. It was as though,
having lost the enemy, he was more concerned with explanations than
with reestablishing contact.
But McAuliff wanted that contact reestablished. It was as good a
time as any to ask young Ferguson those questions he needed answered.
Alex started across the street, dodging the traffic, and jumped over
the kerb out of the way of a Kingston taxi. He made his way through the
stream of shoppers to the far side of the walk.
There was a side street between Mark Lane and Duke. Ferguson
hesitated, looked around, and apparently decided it was worth trying.
He abruptly turned and entered.
McAuliff realized that he knew that street. It was a free-port strip
interspersed with bars. He and Sam Tucker had been there late one
afternoon a year ago, following a Kaiser conference at the Sheraton. He
remembered, too, that there was a diagonally connecting alley that
intersected the strip from Duke Street. He remembered because Sam had
thought there might be native saloons in the moist, dark brick
corridor, only to discover it was used for deliveries. Sam had been
upset; he was fond of backstreet native saloons.
Alex broke into a run. Holcroft's warning about drawing attention
would have to be disregarded. Tallon's could wait; the man with
arthritis could wait. This was the moment to reach James Ferguson.
He crossed Queen Street again, now paying no attention to the
disturbance he caused, or the angry whistle from the harassed Kingston
policeman. He raced down the block; there was the diagonally connecting
alley. It seemed even narrower than he remembered. He entered and
pushed his way past a half a dozen Jamaicans, muttering apologies,
trying to avoid the hard stares of those walking in the opposite
direction towards him - silent challenges, grownup children playing
king-of-the-road. He reached the end of the passageway and stopped. He
pressed his back against the brick and peered around the edge, up the
side street. His timing was right.
James Ferguson, his expression ferretlike, was only ten yards away.
Then five.
And then McAuliff walked out of the alley and confronted him.
The young man's face paled to a deathly white. Alex gestured him
against the stucco wall; the strollers passed in both directions,
several complaining.
Ferguson's smile was false, his voice strained, 'Well, hello, Alex…
Mr McAuliff. Doing a bit of shopping? This is the place for it.'
''Have I been shopping, Jimbo-mon? You'd know if I had,
wouldn't you?'
'I don't know what you… I wouldn't—'
'Maybe you're still drunk,' interrupted Alex. 'You had a lot to
drink last night.'
'Made a bloody fool of myself, I expect. Please accept my apologies.'
'No apologies necessary. You stayed just within the lines. You were
very convincing.'
'Really, Alex, you're a bit much.' Ferguson moved back. A Jamaican
woman, basket balanced on her head, hurried past. 'I said I was sorry.
I'm sure you've had occasion to overindulge.'
'Very often. As a matter of fact, I was a hell of a lot drunker than
you last night.'
'I don't know what you're implying, chap, and frankly, my head's too
painful to play anagrams. Now, for the last time, I apologize.'
'For the wrong sins, Jimbo-mon. Let's go back and find some real
ones. Because I have some questions.'
Ferguson awkwardly straightened his perennial slouch and whisked
away the shock of hair on his forehead. 'You're really quite abusive. I
have shopping to do.'
The young man started to walk around McAuliff. Alex grabbed his arm
and slammed him back into the stucco wall. 'Save your money. Do it in
London.'
'No!' Ferguson's body stiffened; the taut flesh around his
eyes stretched further. 'No, please,' he whispered.
'Then let's start with the suitcases.' McAuliff released the arm,
holding Ferguson against the wall with his stare.
'I told you,' the young man whined. 'You were having
trouble. I tried to help.'
'You bet your ass I had trouble! And not only with Customs. Where
did my luggage go? Our luggage? Who took it?'
'I don't know. I swear I don't!'
'Who told you to write that note?'
'No one told me! For God's sake, you're crazy!'
'Why did you put on that act last night?'
'What act?'
'You weren't drunk - you were sober.'
'Oh, Christ Almighty, I wish you had my hangover. Really—'
'Not good enough, Jimbo-mon. Let's try again. Who told you to write
that note?'
'You won't listen to me—'
'I'm listening. Why are you following me? Who told you to follow me
this morning?'
'By God, you're insane!'
'By God, you're fired!'
'No!… You can't. Please.' Ferguson's voice was frightened
again, a whisper.
'What did you say?' McAuliff placed his right hand against the wall,
over Ferguson's frail shoulder. He leaned into the strange young man.
'I'd like to hear you say that again. What can't I do?'
'Please… don't send me back. I beg you.' Ferguson was breathing
through his mouth; spots of saliva had formed on his thin lips. 'Not
now.'
'Send you back? I don't give a goddamn where you go! I'm not your
keeper, little boy.' Alex removed his hand from the wall and yanked his
jacket from under his left arm. 'You're entitled to return-trip
airfare. I'll draw it for you this afternoon, and pay for one more
night at the Courtleigh. After that, you're on your own. Go wherever
the hell you please. But not with me; not with the survey.'
McAuliff turned and abruptly walked away. He entered the narrow
alleyway and took up his position in the line of laconic strollers. He
knew the stunned Ferguson would follow. It wasn't long before he heard
him. The whining voice had the quality of controlled hysteria. Alex did
not stop or look back.
'McAuliff! Mr McAuliff! Please!' The English tones echoed
in the narrow brick confines, creating a dissonant counterpoint to the
lilting hum of a dozen Jamaican conversations. 'Please, wait…
Excuse me, excuse me, please. I'm sorry, let me pass, please…'
'What you do, mon?! Don't push you.'
The verbal objections did not deter Ferguson; the bodily
obstructions were somewhat more successful. Alex kept moving, hearing
and sensing the young man closing the gap slowly. It was eerily comic:
a white man chasing another white man in a dark, crowded passageway
that was exclusively - by civilized cautions - a native thoroughfare.
McAuliff was within feet of the exit to Duke Street when he felt
Ferguson's hand gripping his arm.
'Please. We have to talk… not here.'
'Where?'
They emerged on the sidewalk. A long horse-drawn wagon filled with
fruits and country vegetables was in front of them at the kerb. The
sombreroed owner was arguing with customers by a set of ancient scales;
several ragged children stole bananas from the rear of the vehicle.
Ferguson still held McAuliffs arm. 'Go to the Devon House. It's a
tourist—'
'I know.'
'There's an outside restaurant.'
'When?'
'Twenty minutes.'
The taxi drove into the long entrance of Devon House, a Georgian
monument to an era of English supremacy and white, European money.
Circular floral gardens fronted the spotless columns; rinsed gravelled
paths wove patterns around an immense fountain. The small outdoor
restaurant was off to the side, the tables behind tall hedges, the
diners obscured from the front. There were only six tables, McAuliff
realized. A very small restaurant; a difficult place in which to follow
someone without being observed.
Perhaps Ferguson was not as inexperienced as he appeared to be.
'Well, hello, chap!'
Alex turned. James Ferguson had yelled from the central path to the
fountain; he now carried his camera and the cases and straps and meters
that went with it. 'Hi,' said McAuliff, wondering what role the young
man intended to play now.
'I've got some wonderful shots. This place has quite a history, you
know.' Ferguson approached him, taking a second to snap Alex's picture.
'This is ridiculous,' replied McAuliff quietly. 'Who the hell are
you trying to fool?'
'I know exactly what I'm doing. Please cooperate.' And
then Ferguson returned to his play-acting, raising his voice and his
camera simultaneously. 'Did you know that this old brick was the
original courtyard? It leads to the rear of the house, where the
soldiers were housed in rows of brick cubicles.'
'I'm fascinated.'
'It's well past elevenses, old man,' continued an enthusiastic, loud
Ferguson. 'What say to a pint? Or a rum punch? Perhaps a spot of lunch.'
There were only two other separate couples within the small
courtyard restaurant. The men's straw hats and bulging walking shorts
complemented the women's rhinestone sunglasses; they were tourists,
obviously unimpressed with Kingston's Devon House. They would soon be
talking with each other, thought McAuliff, making happier plans to
return to the bar of the cruise ship or, at least, to a free-port
strip. They were not interested in Ferguson or himself, and that was
all that mattered.
The Jamaican rum punches were delivered by a bored waiter in a dirty
white jacket. He did not hum or move with any rhythmic punctuation,
observed Alex. The Devon House restaurant was a place of inactivity.
Kingston was not Montego Bay.
'I'll tell you exactly what happened,' said Ferguson suddenly, very
nervously; his voice once more a panicked whisper. 'And it's everything
I know. I worked for the Craft Foundation, you knew all about that.
Right?'
'Obviously,' answered McAuliff. 'I made it a condition of your
employment that you stay away from Craft. You agreed.'
'I didn't have a choice. When we got off the plane, you and Alison
stayed behind; Whitehall and the Jensens went on ahead to the luggage
pickup. I was taking some infrared photographs of the airport… I was in
between, you might say. I walked through the arrival gate, and the
first person I saw was Craft himself; the son, of course, not the old
fellow. The son runs the foundation now. I tried to avoid him. I had
every reason to; after all, he sacked me. But I couldn't. And I was
amazed - he was positively effusive. Filled with apologies; what
outstanding work I had done, how he personally had come to the airport
to meet me when he heard I was with the survey.' Ferguson swallowed a
portion of his punch, darting his eyes around the brick courtyard. He
seemed to have reached a block, as if uncertain how to continue.
'Go on,' said Alex. 'All you've described is an unexpected welcome
wagon.'
'You've got to understand. It was all so strange… as you
say, unexpected. And as he was talking, this chap in uniform comes
through the gate and asks me if I'm Ferguson. I say yes and he tells me
you'll be delayed, you're tied up; that you want me to have
your bags sent on to the hotel. I should write a note to that effect so
BOAC will release them. Craft offered to help, of course. It all seemed
minor, quite plausible, really, and everything happened so fast. I
wrote the note and this chap said he'd take care of it. Craft tipped
him. Generously, I believe.'
'What kind of uniform was it?'
'I don't know. I didn't think. Uniforms all look alike when you're
out of your own country.'
'Go on.'
'Craft asked me for a drink. I said I really couldn't. But he was
adamant, and I didn't care to cause a scene, and you were delayed. You do
see why I agreed, don't you?'
'Minor and plausible. Go on.'
'We went to the lounge upstairs… the one that looks out over the
field. It's got a name…'
'"Observation."'
'What?'
'It's called the "Observation Lounge." Please, go on.'
'Yes. Well, I was concerned. I mean, I told him there were my own
suitcases and Whitehall, the Jensens. And you, of course. I didn't want
you wondering where I was… especially under the circumstances.'
Ferguson drank again; McAuliff held his temper and spoke simply.
'I think you'd better get to the point, Jimbo-mon.'
'I hope that name doesn't stick. It was a bad evening.'
'It'll be a worse afternoon if you don't go on.'
'Yes… Craft told me you'd be in Customs for another hour and the
chap in uniform would tell the others I was taking pictures; I was to
go on to the Courtleigh. I mean, it was strange. Then he changed the
subject - completely. He talked about the foundation. He said they were
close to a major breakthrough in the baracoa fibres; that much of the
progress was due to my work. And, for reasons ranging from the legal to
the moral, they wanted me to come back to Craft. I was actually to be
given a percentage of the market development… Do you realize what that
could mean?'
'If this is what you had to tell me, you can join them today.'
'Millions!' continued Ferguson, oblivious to Alex's interruption.
'Actually millions… over the years, of course. I've never had
any money. Stony, most of the time. Had to borrow the cash for my
camera equipment, did you know that?'
'It wasn't something I dwelled on. But that's all over with. You're
with Craft now…'
'No. Not yet. That's the point. After the survey. I must
stay with the survey - stay with you.' Ferguson finished
his rum punch and looked around for the waiter.
'Merely stay with the survey? With me? I think you've left out
something.'
'Yes. Actually.' The young man hunched his shoulders over the table;
he avoided McAuliffs eyes. 'Craft said it was harmless, completely
harmless. They only want to know the people you deal with in the
government… which is just about everyone you deal with, because most
everyone's in the government. I am to keep a log. That's all;
simply a diary.' Ferguson looked up at Alex, his eyes pleading. 'You do
see, don't you? It is harmless.'
McAuliff returned the young man's stare. 'That's why you followed me
this morning?'
'Yes. But I didn't mean to do it this way. Craft suggested that I
could accomplish a great deal by just… tagging along with you. Asking
if I could join you when you went about survey business. He said I was
embarrassingly curious and talked a lot anyway; it would be normal.'
'Two points for Craft.'
'What?'
'An obsolete American expression… Nevertheless, you followed me.'
'I didn't mean to. I rang your room. Several times. There was no
answer. Then I called Alison… I'm sorry. I think she was upset.'
'What did she say?'
'That she thought she heard you leave your room only minutes ago. I
ran down to the lobby. And outside. You were driving away in a taxi. Then
I followed you, in another cab.'
McAuliff put his glass aside. 'Why didn't you come up to me in
Victoria Park? I saw you and you turned away.'
'I was confused… and frightened. I mean, instead of asking to tag
along, there I was, really following you.'
'Why did you pretend you were so drunk last night?'
Ferguson took a long nervous intake of breath. 'Because when I got
to the hotel, I asked if your luggage had arrived. It hadn't. I
panicked, I'm afraid… You see, before Craft left, he told me about your
suitcases—'
'The bugs?' interrupted Alex angrily.
'The what?' Instantly, James understood. 'No. No! I swear
to you, nothing like that. Oh, God, how awful.'
Ferguson paused, his expression suddenly pensive. 'Yet, of course, it
makes sense…'
No one could have rehearsed such a reversal of reactions, thought
Alex. It was pointless to explode. 'What about the suitcases?'
'What?… Oh, yes, Craft. At the very end of the conversation, he said
they were checking your luggage - checking, that's all he
said.
He suggested, if anyone asked, that I say I'd taken it upon myself to
write the note; that I saw you were having trouble. But I wasn't to
worry, your bags would get to the hotel. But they weren't there,
you see.'
McAuliff did not see. He sighed wearily. 'So you pretended to be
smashed?'
'Naturally. I realized you'd have to know about the note; you'd ask
me about it, of course, and be terribly angry if the luggage was lost;
blame me for it… Well, it's a bit unsporting to be hard on a fellow
who's squiffed and tried to do you a good turn. I mean, it is, really.'
'You've got a very active imagination, Jimbo-mon. I'd go so far as
to say convoluted.'
'Perhaps. But you didn't get angry, did you? And here we are and
nothing has changed. That's the irony: Nothing has changed.'
'Nothing changed? What do you mean?'
'I think something very basic has changed.
You've told me about Craft.'
'Yes. I would have anyway; that was my purpose this morning. Craft
need never know; no way he could find out. I'll just tag along with
you. I'll give you a portion of the money that's coming to me. I
promise you that. I'll write it out, if you like. I've never had any
money. It's simply a marvellous opportunity. You do see that, don't
you?'
ELEVEN
He left Ferguson at the Devon House and took a cab into Old
Kingston. If he was being followed, he didn't give a damn. It was a
time for sorting out thoughts again, not worrying about surveillance.
He wasn't going anywhere.
He had conditionally agreed to cooperate with Ferguson. The
condition was that theirs was a two-way street; the botanist could keep
his log - freely supplied with controlled names - and McAuliff would be
kept informed of this Craft's inquiries.
He looked up at the street signs; he was at the corner of Tower and
Matthew, two blocks from the harbour. There was a coin telephone on a
stanchion halfway down the sidewalk. He hoped it was operable.
It was.
'Has a Mr Sam Tucker checked in?' he asked the clerk on the other
end of the line.
'No, Mr McAuliff. As a matter of fact, we were going over the
reservations list a few minutes ago. Check-in time is three o'clock.'
'Hold the room. It's paid for.'
'I'm afraid it isn't, sir. Our instructions are only that you're
responsible; we're trying to be of service.'
'You're very kind. Hold it, nevertheless. Are there any messages for
me?'
'Just one minute, sir. I believe there are.'
The silence that ensued gave Alex the time to wonder about Sam.
Where the hell was he? McAuliff had not been as alarmed as
Robert Hanley over Tucker's disappearance. Sam's eccentricities
included sudden wanderings, impulsive treks through native areas. There
had been a time in Australia when Tucker stayed four weeks with an
outback aborigine community, travelling daily in a Land Rover to the
Kimberly survey site twenty-six miles away. Old Tuck was always looking
for the unusual - generally associated with the customs and life styles
of whatever country he was in. But his deadline was drawing near in
Kingston.
'Sorry for the delay,' said the Jamaican, his lilt denying the
sincerity of the statement. 'There are several messages. I was putting
them in the order of their sequence.
'Thank you. What are—'
'They're all marked urgent, sir,' interrupted the clerk. 'Eleven
fifteen is the first; from the Ministry of Education. Contact Mr Latham
as soon as possible. The next at 11.20 is from a Mr Piersall at the
Sheraton. Room 51. Then a Mr Hanley called from Montego Bay at 12.06;
he stressed the importance of your reaching him. His number is—'
'Wait a minute,' said Alex, removing a pencil and a notebook from
his pocket. He wrote down the names
'Latham,'
'Piersall,'
'Hanley.'
'Go
ahead.'
'Montego exchange, 8227. Until five o'clock. Mr Hanley said to call
him in Port Antonio after 6.30.'
'Did he leave that number?'
'No, sir. Mrs Booth left word at 1.35 that she would be back in her
room at 2.30. She asked that you ring through if you telephoned from
outside. That's everything, Mr McAuliff.'
'All right. Thank you. Let me go back, please.' Alex repeated the
names, the jists of the messages, and asked for the Sheraton's
telephone number. He had no idea who 'Mr Piersall' was. He mentally
scanned the twelve contact names provided by Holcroft; there was no
Piersall.
'Will that be all, sir?'
'Yes. Put me through to Mrs Booth, if you please.'
Alison's phone rang several times before she answered. 'I was taking
a shower,' she said, out of breath. 'Rather hoping you were here.'
'Is there a towel around you?'
'Yes. I left it on the knob with the door open, if you must know. So
I could hear the telephone.'
'If I was there, I'd remove it. The towel, not the phone.'
'I should think it appropriate to remove both.' Alison laughed, and
McAuliff could see the lovely half smile in the haze of the afternoon
sun on Tower Street.
'You're right, you're parched. But your note said it was urgent. Is
anything the matter?' There was a click within the interior of the
telephone box; his time was nearly up. Alison heard it, too.
'Where are you? I'll call you right back,' she said quickly.
The number had been deliberately, maliciously scratched off the
dial's centre. 'No way to tell. How urgent? I've got another call to
make.'
'It can wait. Just don't speak to a man named Piersall until we
talk. 'Bye now, darling.'
McAuliff was tempted to call Alison right back; who was Piersall?
But it was more important to reach Hanley in Montego. It would be
necessary to call collect; he didn't have enough change.
It took the better part of five minutes before Hanley's phone rang
and another three while Hanley convinced a switchboard operator at a
less-than-chic hotel that he would pay for the call.
'I'm sorry, Robert,' said Alex. I'm in a coin box in Kingston.'
'It's all right, lad. Have you heard from Tucker?' There was an
urgency in Hanley's rapidly asked question.
'No. He hasn't checked in. I thought you might have something.'
'I have, indeed, and I don't like it at all… I flew back to Mo'Bay a
couple of hours ago, and these damn fools here tell me that two blacks
picked up Sam's belongings, paid the bill, and walked out without a
word.'
'Can they do that?'
'This isn't the Hilton, lad. They had the money and they did it.'
'Then where are you?'
'Goddamn it, I took the same room for the afternoon. In case Sam
tries to get in touch, he'll start here, I figured. In the meantime,
I've got some friends asking around town. You still don't want the
police?'
McAuliff hesitated. He had agreed to Holcroft's command not to go to
the Jamaican police for anything until he had checked with a contact
first and received clearance. 'Not yet, Bob.'
'We're talking about an old friend!'
'He's still not overdue, Robert. I can't legitimately report him
missing. And, knowing our old friend, I wouldn't want him embarrassed.'
'I'd sure as hell raise a stink over two strangers picking up his
belongings!' Hanley was angry, and McAuliff could not fault him for it.
'We're not sure they're strangers. You know Tuck; he hires
attendants like he's the court of Eric the Red. Especially if he's got
some money and he can spread it around the outback. Remember Kimberly,
Bob.' A statement. 'Sam blew two months' wages setting up an
agricultural commune, for Christ's sake.'
Hanley chuckled. 'Aye, lad, I do. He was going to put the hairy
bastards in the wine business. He's a one-man Peace Corps with a
vibrating crotch… All right, Alex. We'll wait until tomorrow. I have to
get back to Port Antone'. I'll phone you in the morning.'
'If he's not here by then, I'll call the police and you can activate
your subterranean network - which I'm sure you've developed by now.'
'Goddamn right. We old travellers have to protect ourselves. And
stick together.'
The blinding sun on the hot, dirty Caribbean street and the stench
of the telephone mouthpiece was enough to convince McAuliff to return
to Courtleigh Manor.
Later, perhaps early this evening, he would find the fish store
called Tallon's and his arthritic contact.
He walked north on Matthew Lane and found a taxi on Barry Street; a
half-demolished touring car of indeterminate make, and certainly not of
this decade, or the last. As he stepped in, the odour of vanilla
assaulted his nostrils. Vanilla and bay rum, the scents of black
Jamaica; delightful in the evening, oppressive during the day under the
fiery equatorial sun.
As the cab headed out of Old Kingston - harbour-front Kingston -
where man-made decay and cascading tropical flora struggled to coexist,
Alex found himself staring with uncomfortable wonder at the suddenly
emerging new buildings of New Kingston. There was something obscene
about the proximity of such bland, clean structures of stone and tinted
glass to the rows of filthy, tin, corrugated shacks - the houses of
gaunt children who played slowly, without energy, with bony dogs, and
of pregnant young-old women hanging rags on ropes salvaged from the
waterfront, their eyes filled with the bleak, hated prospects of
getting through another day. And the new, bland, scrubbed obscenities
were less than two hundred yards from even more terrible places of
human habitation: rotted, rat-infested barges, housing those who had
reached the last cellars of dignity. Two hundred yards.
McAuliff suddenly realized what these buildings were: banks. Three,
four, five… six banks. Next to, and across from each other, all within
an easy throw of a safe-deposit box.
Banks.
Clean, bland, tinted glass.
Two hundred yards.
Eight minutes later, the odd, ancient touring car entered the
palm-lined drive of Courtleigh Manor. Ten yards in from the gates, the
driver stopped, briefly, with a jerk. Alex, who was sitting forward,
taking out his wallet, braced himself against the front seat as the
driver quickly apologized. Then McAuliff saw what the Jamaican was
doing. He was removing a lethal, thirty-inch machete from the worn felt
next to him, and putting it under the seat. The driver grinned.
'I take a fare into old town, mon. Shack town. I keep long knife by
me all the time there.'
'Is it necessary?'
'Oh, mon! True, mon. Bad people; dirty people. Not Kingston, mon.
Better to shoot all the dirty people. No good, mon. Put 'em in boats
back to Africa. Sink boats; yes mon!'
'That's quite a solution.' The car pulled up to the kerb, and
McAuliff got out. The driver smiled obsequiously as he stated an
inflated charge. Alex handed him the precise amount. 'I'm sure you
included the tip,' he said as he dropped the bills through the window.
At the front desk, McAuliff took the messages handed to him; there
was an addition. Mr Latham of the Ministry of Education had telephoned
again.
Alison was on the small balcony, taking the afternoon sun in her
bathing suit. McAuliff entered the room from his connecting door.
She reached out and he took her hand. 'Have you any idea what a
lovely lady you are, lovely lady?'
'Thank you, lovely man.'
He gently released her hand. 'Tell me about Piersall,' he said.
'He's at the Sheraton.'
'I know. Room 51.'
'You spoke to him.' Alison obviously was concerned.
'No. That was his message. Phone him in room 51. Very urgent.'
'He may be there now; he wasn't when you called.'
'Oh? I got the message just before I talked to you.'
'Then he must have left it downstairs. Or used a pay phone in the
lobby. Within minutes.'
'Why?'
'Because he was here. I talked with him.'
'Do tell.'
She did.
Alison had finished sorting out research notes she had prepared for
the north coast, and was about to take her shower when she heard a
rapid knocking from Alex's room. Thinking it was one of their party,
Alison opened her own door and looked out in the corridor. A tall, thin
man in a white Palm Beach suit seemed startled at her appearance. It
was an awkward moment for both. Alison volunteered that she had heard
the knocking and knew McAuliff was out; would the gentleman care to
leave a message?
'He seemed very nervous. He stuttered slightly, and said he'd been
trying to reach you since eleven o'clock. He asked if he could trust
me. Would I speak only to you? He was really quite upset. I invited him
into my room, but he said no, he was in a hurry. Then he blurted it
out. He had news of a man named Sam Tucker. Isn't he the American who's
to join us here?'
Alex did not bother to conceal his alarm. He bolted from his
reclining position and stood up. 'What about Tucker?'
'He didn't go into it. Just that he had word from him or about
him. He wasn't really clear.'
'Why didn't you tell me on the phone?'
'He asked me not to. He said I was to tell you when I saw you, not
over the telephone. He implied that you'd be angry, but you should get
in touch with him before you went to anyone else. Then he left… Alex,
what the hell was he talking about?'
McAuliff did not answer; he was on his way to her telephone. He
picked up the receiver, glanced at the connecting door, and quickly
replaced the phone. He walked rapidly to the open door, closed it, and
returned to the telephone. He gave the Sheraton's number and waited.
'Mr Piersall, room 51, please.'
The interim of silence was infuriating to McAuliff. It was broken by
the soothing tones of a subdued English voice, asking first the
identity of the caller and then whether the caller was a friend or,
perhaps, a relative of Dr Piersall's. Upon hearing Alex's replies, the
unctuous voice continued, and as it did so, McAuliff remembered a cold
night on a Soho street outside The Owl of Saint George. And the
flickering of a neon light that saved his life and condemned his
would-be killer to death.
Dr Walter Piersall had been involved in a terrible, tragic accident.
He had been run down by a speeding automobile in a Kingston street.
He was dead.
TWELVE
Walter Piersall, American, PhD, anthropologist, student of the
Caribbean, author of a definitive study on Jamaica's first known
inhabitants, the Arawak Indians, and the owner of a house called 'High
Hill' near Carrick Foyle in the parish of Trelawny.
That was the essence of the information supplied by the Ministry's
Mr Latham.
'A tragedy, Mr McAuliff. He was an honoured man, a titled man.
Jamaica will miss him greatly.'
'Miss him! Who killed him, Mr Latham?'
'As I understand it, there is very little to go on; the vehicle sped
away, the description is contradictory.'
'It was broad daylight, Mr Latham.'
There was a pause on Latham's part. 'I know, Mr McAuliff. What can I
say? You are an American; he was an American. I am Jamaican, and the
terrible thing took place on a Kingston street. I grieve deeply for
several reasons. And I did not know the man.'
Latham's sincerity carried over the wire. Alex lowered his voice.
'You say "the terrible thing." Do you mean more than an accident?'
'No. There was no robbery, no mugging. It was an accident. No doubt
brought on by rum and inactivity. There is a great deal of both in
Kingston, Mr McAuliff. The men… or children who committed the crime are
undoubtedly well into the hills now. When the rum wears off, the fear
will take its place; they will hide. The Kingston police are not
gentle.'
'I see.' McAuliff was tempted to bring up the name 'Sam Tucker,' but
he held himself in check. He had told Latham only that Piersall had
left a message for him. He would say no more for the time being. 'Well,
if there's anything I can do…'
'Piersall was a widower, he lived alone in Carrick Foyle. The police
said they were getting in touch with a brother in Cambridge,
Massachusetts… Do you know why he was calling you?'
'No idea.'
'A great deal of the survey will take place in Trelawny Parish.
Perhaps he had heard and was offering you hospitality.'
'Perhaps… Mr Latham, is it logical that he would know about the
survey?' Alex listened intently to Latham's reply. Again, Holcroft: Learn
to spot the small things.
'Logical? What is logical in Jamaica, Mr McAuliff? It is a poorly
kept secret that the Ministry - with the gracious help of our recent
mother country - is undertaking an overdue scientific evaluation. A
secret poorly kept is not really much of a secret. Perhaps it is not
logical that Dr Piersall knew; it is certainly possible, however.' No hesitations, no overly quick responses, no rehearsed words.
'Then I guess that's what he was calling about. I'm sorry.'
'I grieve.' Again Latham paused; it was not for effect. 'Although it
may seem improper, Mr McAuliff, I should like to discuss the business
between us.'
'Of course. Go ahead.'
'All of the survey permits came in late this morning… less than
twenty-four hours. It generally takes the best part of a week…'
The processing was unusual, but Alex had come to expect the unusual
with Dunstone, Limited. The normal barriers fell with abnormal ease.
Unseen expediters were everywhere, doing the bidding of Julian Warfield.
Latham said that the Ministry had anticipated more, rather than
less, difficulty, as the survey team would be entering the territory of
the Cock Pit, miles of uninhabited country - jungle, really. Escorts
were required, guides trained in the treacherous environs. And
arrangements had to be made with the recognized descendants of the
Maroon people, who, by a treaty of 1739, controlled much of the
territory. An arrogant, warlike people, brought to the islands as
slaves, the Maroons knew the jungles far better than their white
captors. The British sovereign, George the First, had offered the
Maroons their independence, with a treaty that guaranteed the Cock Pit
territories in perpetuity. It was a wiser course than continuing
bloodshed. Besides, the territory was considered unfit for white
habitation.
For over 235 years that treaty was often scoffed at but never
violated, said Latham. Formal permission was still sought by Kingston
from the 'Colonel of the Maroons' for all those who wished to enter
their lands.
The Ministry was no exception.
Yet the Ministry, thought McAuliff, was in reality Dunstone,
Limited. So permissions were granted, permits obtained with alacrity.
'Your equipment was air-freighted to Boscobel,' said Latham. 'Trucks
will transport it to the initial point of the survey.'
'Then I'll leave tomorrow afternoon or, at the latest, early the
next day. I'll be hiring out of Ocho Rios; the others can follow when
I'm finished. It shouldn't take more than a couple of days.'
'Your escort-guides, we call them "runners," will be available in
two weeks. You will not have any need for them until then, will you? I
assume you will be working the coast to begin with.'
'Two weeks'll be fine… I'd like a choice of runners, please.'
'There are not that many to choose from, Mr McAuliff. It is not a
career that appeals to many young people; the ranks are thinning. But I
shall do what I can.'
'Thank you. May I have the approved maps in the morning?'
'They will be sent to your hotel by ten o'clock. Goodbye, Mr
McAuliff. And again, my deeply felt regrets over Dr Piersall.'
'I didn't know him either, Mr Latham,' said Alex. 'Good-bye.'
He did not know Piersall, thought McAuliff, but he had heard
the name 'Carrick Foyle,' Piersall's village. He could not
remember where he had heard it, only that it was familiar.
Alex replaced the telephone and looked over at Alison, on the small
balcony. She had been watching him, listening. She could not conceal
her fear. A thin, nervous man in a white Palm Beach suit had told her -
less than two hours ago - that he had confidential information, and now
he was dead.
The late afternoon sun was a Caribbean orange, the shadows shafts of
black across the miniature balcony. Behind her was the near deep green
of the high palms, behind them the awesome rise of the mountain range.
Alison Booth seemed to be framed within a tableau of chiaroscuro tropic
colours. As though she were a target.
'He said it was an accident.' Alex walked slowly to the balcony
doors. 'Everyone's upset. Piersall was liked on the island. Apparently,
there's a lot of drunken hit-and-runs in Kingston.'
'And you don't believe him for an instant.'
'I didn't say that.' He lighted a cigarette; he did not want to look
at her.
'You don't have to. You didn't say one word about your friend
Tucker, either. Why not?'
'Common sense. I want to talk to the police, not an associate
director of the Ministry. All he can do is babble and create confusion.'
'Then let's go to the police.' Alison rose from the deck chair.
'I'll get dressed.'
'Wo!' McAuliff realized as he said the word that he was too
emphatic.
'I mean, I'll go. I don't want you involved.'
'I spoke to the man. You didn't.'
'I'll relay the information.'
'They won't accept it from you. Why should they hear it second-hand?'
'Because I say so.' Alex turned away, ostensibly to find an ashtray.
He was not convincing, and he knew it. 'Listen to me, Alison.' He
turned back. 'Our permits came in. Tomorrow I'm going to Ocho Rios to
hire drivers and carriers; you people will follow in a couple of days.
While I'm gone
I don't want you - or any member of the team - involved with the police
or anybody else. Our job here is the survey. That's my responsibility;
you're my responsibility. I don't want delays.'
She walked down the single step, out of the frame of colour, and
stood in front of him. 'You're a dreadful liar, Alex. Dreadful in the
sense that you're quite poor at it.'
'I'm going to the police now. Afterwards, if it's not too late, I
may drop over to the Ministry and see Latham. I was a little rough with
him.'
'I thought you ended on a very polite note.'
It was Alison who spotted Holcroft's small things, thought McAuliff.
She was better than he was. 'You only heard me. You didn't hear him… If
I'm not back by seven, why not call the Jensens and have dinner with
them? I'll join you as soon as I can.'
'The Jensens aren't here.'
'What?'
'Relax. I called them for lunch. They left word at the desk that
since it was a day off, they were touring. Port Royal, Spanish Town,
Old Harbour. The manager set up their tour.'
'I hope they enjoy themselves.'
He told the driver that he wanted a half-hour's tour of the city. He
had thirty minutes to kill before cocktails in Duke Street - he'd spot
the restaurant; he didn't know the specific address - so the driver
could do his imaginative best within the time span.
The driver protested: Thirty minutes was barely sufficient to reach
Duke Street from the Courtleigh in the afternoon traffic. McAuliff
shrugged and replied that the time was not absolute.
It was precisely what the driver wanted to hear. He drove out
Trafalgar, south on Lady Musgrave, into Old Hope Road. He extolled the
commercial virtues of New Kingston, likening the progress to Olympian
feats of master planning. The words droned on, filled with idiomatic
exaggerations of the 'all the time big American millions' that were
turning the tropical and human overgrowth that was Kingston into a
Caribbean financial mecca. It was understood that the millions would be
German or English or French, depending on the accent of the passenger.
It didn't matter. Within minutes, McAuliff knew that the driver knew
he was not listening. He was staring out the rear window, watching the
traffic behind them.
It was there.
A green Chevrolet sedan, several years old. It stayed two to three
cars behind, but whenever the taxi turned or sped ahead of other
vehicles, the green Chevrolet did the same.
The driver saw it, too.
'You got trouble, mon?'
There was no point in lying. 'I don't know.'
'I know, mon. Lousy green car be'n d'ere all the time. It stay in
big parking lot at Courtleigh Manor. Two block son of a bitch drivin'.'
McAuliff looked at the driver. The Jamaican's last statement
triggered his memory of Robert Hanley's words from Montego Bay. Two
blacks picked up Sam's things. Alex knew the connection was
far-fetched, coincidental at best in a black country, but it was all he
had to go on. 'You can earn twenty dollars, friend,' he said quickly to
the driver. 'If you can do two things.'
'You tell me, mon!'
'First, let the green car get close enough so I can read the license
plate, and when I've got it, lose them. Can you do that?'
'You watch, mon!' The Jamaican swung the wheel to the right; the
taxi veered briefly into the right lane, narrowly missing an oncoming
bus, then lurched back into the left, behind a Volkswagen. McAuliff
crouched against the seat, his head pressed to the right of the rear
window. The green Chevrolet duplicated the taxi's movements, taking up
a position two cars behind.
Suddenly the cab driver accelerated again, passing the Volks and
speeding ahead to a traffic light that flashed the yellow caution
signal. He swung the car into the left intersection; Alex read the
street sign and the wording on the large shield-shaped sign beneath:
TORRINGTON ROAD
ENTRANCE
GEORGE VI MEMORIAL PARK
'We head into race course, mon!' shouted the driver. 'Green son of a
bitch have to stop at Snipe Street light. He come out'a d'ere fast. You
watch good now!'
The cab sped down Torrington, swerving twice out of the left lane to
pass three vehicles, and through the wide-gated entrance into the park.
Once inside, the driver slammed on the brakes, backed the taxi into
what looked like a bridle path, spun the wheel, and lurched forward
into the exit side of the street.
'You catch 'em good now, mon!' yelled the Jamaican as he slowed the
car down and entered the flow of traffic leaving the George VI Memorial
Park.
Within seconds the green Chevrolet came into view, hemmed between
automobiles entering the park. And then McAuliff realized precisely
what the driver had done. It was early track time; George VI Memorial
Park housed the sport of kings. Gambling Kingston was on the way to the
races.
Alex wrote down the license number, keeping himself out of sight but
seeing clearly enough to know that the two blacks in the Chevrolet did
not realize that they had passed within feet of the car they were
following.
'Them sons of bitches got to drive all way 'round, mon! Them dumb
block sons of bitches!… Where you want to go, mon? Plenty of time, now.
They don't catch us.'
McAuliff smiled. He wondered if the Jamaican's talents were listed
in Holcroft's manual somewhere. 'You just earned yourself an extra five
dollars. Take me to the corner of Queen and Hanover streets, please. No
sense wasting time, now.'
'Hey, mon! You hire my taxi all the time in Kingston. I do what you
say. I don't ask questions, mon.'
Alex looked at the identification behind the dirty plastic frame
above the dashboard. 'This isn't a private cab… Rodney.'
'You make a deal with me, mon; I make a deal with the taxi boss.'
The driver grinned in the rear-view mirror.
'I'll think about it. Do you have a telephone number?'
The Jamaican quickly produced an outsized business card and handed
it back to McAuliff. It was the taxi company's card, the type that was
left on hotel counters. Rodney's name was printed childishly in ink
across the bottom. 'You telephone company number, say you gotta have
Rodney. Only Rodney, mon. I get the message real quick. All' time they
know where Rodney is. I work hotels and Palisados. Them get me quick.'
'Suppose I don't care to leave my name—'
'No, name, mon!' broke in the Jamaican, grinning in the mirror. 'I
got lousy son-of-a-bitch memory. Don't want no name! You tell taxi
phone… you the fella at the race course. Give place; I get to you, mon.'
Rodney accelerated south to North Street, left to Duke, and south
again past the Gordon House, the huge new complex of the Kingston
legislature.
Out on the sidewalk, McAuliff straightened his jacket and his tie
and tried to assume the image of an average white businessman not
entirely sure of which government entrance he should use. Tallon's was
not listed in any telephone or shopping directory; Holcroft had
indicated that it was below the row of government houses, which meant
below Queen, but he was not specific.
As he looked for the fish store, he checked the people around him,
across the street, and in the automobiles that seemed to go slower than
the traffic allowed.
For a few minutes he felt himself in the pocket of fear again;
afraid that the unseen had their eyes on him.
He reached Queen Street and hurried across with the last contingent
making the light. On the kerb he turned swiftly to watch those behind
on the other side.
The orange sun was low on the horizon, throwing a corridor of
blinding light from the area of Victoria Park several hundred yards to
the west. The rest of the street was in dark, sharply defined shadows
cast from the structures of stone and wood all around. Automobiles
passed east and west, blocking a clear vision of those on the north
corner. Corners.
He could tell nothing. He turned and proceeded down the block.
He saw the sign first. It was filthy, streaked with runny print that
had not been refinished in months, if not years:
TALLON'S
FINE FISH & NATIVE DELICACIES
1/2 QUEEN'S ALLEY
1 BLOCK—DUKE ST WEST
He walked the block. The entrance to Queen's Alley was barely ten
feet high, cut off by grillework covered with tropical flowers. The
cobblestone passage did not go through to the next street. It was a
dead end, a lightless cul-de-sac; the sort of hidden back street common
to Paris and Rome and Greenwich Village. Although it was in the middle
of a commercial market area, there was a personal quality about its
appearance, as though an unwritten sign proclaimed this section
private: residents only, keys required, not for public usage. All that
was needed, thought McAuliff, was a gate.
In Paris and Rome and Greenwich Village, such wide alleys held some
of the best restaurants in the world, known only to those who cared.
In Saigon and Macao and Hong Kong, they were the recesses where
anything could be had for a price.
In Kingston, this one housed a man with arthritis who worked for
British Intelligence.
Queen's Alley was no more than fifty feet long. On the right was a
bookstore with subdued lighting in the windows, illuminating a variety
of wares from heavy academic leather to non-glossy pornography. On the
left was Tallon's.
He had pictured casements of crushed ice supporting rows of
wide-eyed dead fish, and men in soiled, cheap white aprons running
around scales, arguing with customers.
The crushed ice was in the window; so were several rows of
glassy-eyed fish. But what impressed him was the other forms of ocean
merchandise placed artistically: squid, octopus, shark, and exotic
shellfish.
Tallon's was no Fulton Market.
As if to add confirmation to his thoughts, a uniformed chauffeur
emerged from Tallon's entrance carrying a plastic shopping bag,
insulated, Alex was sure, with crushed ice.
The double doors were thick, difficult to open. Inside, the counters
were spotless; the sawdust on the floor was white. The two attendants
were just that: attendants, not countermen. Their full-length aprons
were striped blue and white and made of expensive linen. The scales
behind the chrome-framed glass cases had shiny brass trimmings. Around
the shop, stacked on shelves lighted by tiny spotlights in the ceiling,
were hundreds of tins of imported delicacies from all parts of the
world.
It was not quite real.
There were three other customers: a couple and a single woman. The
couple was at the far end of the store, studying labels on the shelves;
the woman was ordering from a list, being overly precise, arrogant.
McAuliff approached the counter and spoke the words he had been
instructed to speak.
'A friend in Santo Domingo told me you had north-coast trout.'
The light-skinned black behind the white wall barely looked at Alex,
but within that instant there was recognition. He bent down, separating
shellfish inside the case, and answered casually. Correctly. 'We have
some freshwater trout from Martha Brae, sir.'
'I prefer salt-water trout. Are you sure you can't help me?'
'I'll see, sir.' The man shut the case, turned, and walked down a
corridor in the wall behind the counter, a passageway Alex assumed led
to large refrigerated rooms.
When a man emerged from a side door within the corridor, McAuliff
caught his breath, trying to suppress his astonishment. The man was
black and slight and old; he walked with a cane, his right forearm
stiff, and his head trembled slightly with age.
It was the man in Victoria Park: the old man who had stared at him
disapprovingly in front of the bench on the Queen Street path.
He walked to the counter and spoke, his voice apparently stronger
than his body. 'A fellow salt-water trout lover,' he said, in an accent
more British than Jamaican, but not devoid of the Caribbean. 'What are
we to do with those fresh-water aficionados who cost me so much money?
Come, it is nearly closing. You shall have your choice from my own
selection.'
A hinged panel of the butcher-block counter was lifted by the
light-skinned black in the striped apron. Alex followed the arthritic
old man down the short corridor and through a narrow door into a small
office that was a miniature extension of the expensive outer design.
The walls were panelled in fruitwood; the furniture was a single
mahogany desk with a functional antique swivel chair, a soft leather
couch against the wall, and an armchair in front of the desk. The
lighting was indirect, from a lone china lamp on the desk. With the
door closed, Alex saw oak file cabinets lined against the inner wall.
Although the room was confining in size, it was eminently comfortable -
the isolated quarters of a contemplative man.
'Sit, Mr McAuliff,' said the proprietor of Tallon's, indicating the
armchair as he hobbled around the desk and sat down, placing his cane
against the wall. 'I've been expecting you.'
'You were in Victoria Park this morning.'
'I did not expect you then. To be quite frank, you startled me, I'd
been looking at your photograph minutes before I took my stroll. From
nowhere the face of this photograph was in front of my eyes in
Victoria.' The old man smiled and gestured with his palms up,
signifying unexpected coincidence. 'Incidentally, my name is "Tallon."
Westmore Tallon. We're a fine old Jamaican family, as I'm sure you've
been
told.'
'I hadn't, but one look at your… fish store would seem to confirm
it.'
'Oh, yes. We're frightfully expensive, very exclusive. Private
telephone number. We cater only to the wealthiest on the island. From
Savanna to Montego to Antonio and Kingston. We have our own delivery
service - by private plane, of course… It's most convenient.'
'I should think so. Considering your extracurricular activities.'
'Which, of course, we must never consider to the point of
discussion, Mr McAuliff,' replied Tallon quickly.
'I've got several things to tell you. I expect you'll transmit the
information and let Holcroft do what he wants.'
'You sound angry.'
'On one issue, I am. Goddamned angry… Mrs Booth. Alison Booth. She
was manipulated here through Interpol. I think that smells. She made
one painful - and dangerous - contribution. I should think you people
would let her alone.'
Tallon pushed his foot against the floor, turning the silent antique
swivel to his right. He aimlessly reached over for his cane and
fingered it. 'I am merely a… liaison, Mr McAuliff, but from what I
understand, no pressure was exerted on you to employ Mrs Booth. You did
so freely. Where was the manipulation?'
Alex watched the small, arthritic man toy with the handle of the
cane. He was struck by the thought that in some strange way Westmore
Tallon was like an artist's composite of Julian Warfield and Charles
Whitehall. The communion of elements was disturbing. 'You people are
very professional,' he said quietly, a touch bitterly. 'You're
ingenious when it comes to presenting alternatives.'
'She can't go home, Mr McAuliff. Take my word for that.'
'From a certain point of view, she might as well… The Marquis de
Chatellerault is in Jamaica.'
Tallon spun in the antique chair to face McAuliff. For an instant he
seemed frozen. He stared at Alex, and when he blinked it was as though
he silently rejected McAuliffs statement. 'This is impossible,' he said
simply.
'It's not only possible, I don't even think it's a secret. Or if it
is, it's poorly kept; and as somebody said about an hour ago, that's
not much of a secret.'
'Who gave you this information?' Tallon held onto his cane, his
grasp visibly firmer.
'Charles Whitehall. At three o'clock this morning. He was invited to
Savanna-la-Mar to meet Chatellerault.'
'What were the circumstances?'
'The circumstances aren't important. The important fact is that
Chatellerault is in Savanna-la-Mar. He is the houseguest of a family
named Wakefield. They're white and rich.'
'We know them,' said Tallon, writing a note awkwardly with his
arthritic hand. 'They're customers. What else do you have?'
'A couple of items. One is extremely important to me, and I warn
you, I won't leave here until something's done about it.'
Tallon looked up from his notepaper. 'You make pronouncements
without regard for realistic appraisal. I have no idea whether I can do
anything about anything. Your camping here would not change that.
Please continue.'
Alex described James Ferguson's unexpected meeting with Craft at the
Palisados Airport and the manipulation that resulted in the electronic
devices in his luggage. He detailed Craft's offer of money in exchange
for information about the survey.
'It's not surprising. The Craft people are notoriously curious,'
said Tallon, writing painfully on his notepaper. 'Shall we get to the
item you say is so vital?'
'I want to summarize first.'
'Summarize what?' Tallon put down his pencil.
'What I've told you.'
Tallon smiled. 'It's not necessary, Mr McAuliff. I take notes
slowly, but my mind is quite alert.'
'I'd like us to understand each other… British Intelligence wants
the Halidon. That was the purpose - the only purpose - of my
recruitment. Once the Halidon could be reached, I was finished.
Complete protection still guaranteed to the survey team.'
'And so?'
'I think you've got the Halidon. Chatellerault and Craft.'
Tallon continued to stare at McAuliff. His expression was totally
neutral. 'You have arrived at this conclusion?'
'Holcroft said this Halidon would interfere. Eventually try to stop
the survey. Diagrams aren't necessary. The marquis and Craft fit the
prints. Go get them.'
'I see…' Tallon reached once more for his cane. His personal
sceptre, his sword Excalibre. 'So, in one extraordinary simplification,
the American geologist has solved the riddle of the Halidon.'
Neither man spoke for several moments. McAuliff broke the silence
with equally quiet anger. 'I could get to dislike you, Mr Tallon.
You're a very arrogant man.'
'My concerns do not include your approval, Mr McAuliff. Jamaica is
my passion - yes, my passion, sir. What you think is not
important to me… except when you make absurd pronouncements that could
affect my work… Arthur Craft, pere et fils, have been raping
this island for half a century. They subscribe to the belief that
theirs is a mandate from God. They can accomplish too much in the name
of Craft; they would not hide behind a symbol. And Halidon is
a symbol, Mr McAuliff… The Marquis de Chatellerault? You were quite
correct. Mrs Booth was manipulated - brilliantly, I think -
into your survey. It was cross-pollination, if you like; the
circumstances were optimum. Two kling-klings in a hibiscus, one
inexorably forcing the other to reveal himself. She was bait, pure and
simple, Mr McAuliff. Chatellerault has long been suspected of being an
associate of Julian Warfield. The marquis is with Dunstone, Limited.'
Tallon lifted his cane up laterally, placed it across his desk, and
continued to gaze blankly at Alex.
McAuliff said finally, 'You withheld information; you didn't tell me
things I should have been told. Yet you expect me to function as one of
you. That smells, Tallon.'
'You exaggerate. There is no point in complicating further an
already complicated picture.'
'I should have been told about Chatellerault, instead of hearing his
name from Mrs Booth.'
Tallon shrugged. 'An oversight. Shall we proceed?'
'All right. There's a man named Tucker. Sam Tucker.'
'Your friend from California? The soil analyst?'
'Yes.'
McAuliff told Hanley's story without using Hanley's name. He
emphasized coincidence of the two blacks who had removed Tucker's
belongings and the two Jamaicans who had followed his taxi in the green
Chevrolet sedan. He described briefly the taxi owner's feats of driving
skills in the racetrack park, and gave Tallon the license-plate number
of the Chevrolet.
Tallon reached for his telephone and dialled without speaking to
Alex. 'This is Tallon,' he said quietly into the phone. 'I want MV
information. It is urgent. The license is KYB-448. Call me back on this
line.' He hung up and shifted his eyes to McAuliff. 'It should take no
longer than five minutes.'
'Was that the police?'
'Not in any way the police would know… I understand the Ministry
received your permits today. Dunstone does facilitate things, doesn't
it?'
'I told Latham I was leaving for Ocho Rios tomorrow afternoon. I
won't if Tucker doesn't show up. That's what I want you to know.'
Once again, Westmore Tallon reached for his cane, but not with the
aggressiveness he had displayed previously. He was suddenly a rather
thoughtful, even gentle, man. 'If your friend was taken against his
will, it would be kidnapping. A very serious crime, and insofar as he's
American, the sort of headline attraction that would be an anathema. It
doesn't make sense, Mr McAuliff… You say he's due today, which could be
extended to this evening, I presume?'
'Yes.'
'Then I suggest we wait… I cannot believe the parties involved could
- or would - commit such a gargantuan mistake. If Mr Tucker is not
heard from by… say ten o'clock, call me.' Tallon wrote a number on a
piece of paper and handed it to Alex. 'Commit this to memory, please;
leave the paper here.'
'What are you going to do if Tucker doesn't show?'
'I will use perfectly legitimate connections and have the matter
directed to the most authoritative officials in the Jamaican police. I
will alert highly placed people in the government: the
governor-general, if necessary. St Croix has had its murders; tourism
is now practically nonexistent. Jamaica could not tolerate an American
kidnapping… Does that satisfy you?'
'I'm satisfied.' Alex crushed out his cigarette in the ashtray, and
as he did so, he remembered Tallon's reaction to
Chatellerault's appearance in Savanna-la-Mar. 'You were surprised that
Chatellerault was on the island. Why?'
'As of two days ago, he was registered at the George V in Paris.
There's been no word of his leaving, which means he flew here
clandestinely, probably by way of Mexico. It is disturbing. You must
keep a close watch on Mrs Booth… you have a weapon, I assume?'
'Two rifles in the equipment. An .030 Remington telescopic and a
long-power .22 automatic. Nothing else.'
Tallon seemed to debate with himself, then made a decision. He took
a key ring from his pocket, selected a key, and opened a lower drawer
of his desk. He removed a bulky manila envelope, opened the flap, and
shook a pistol onto his blotter. A number of cartridges fell out with
the gun. 'This is a .38 Smith and Wesson, short barrel. All markings
have been destroyed. It's untraceable. Take it, please; it's wiped
clean. The only fingerprints will be yours. Be careful.'
McAuliff looked at the weapon for several seconds before reaching
out and slowly picking it up. He did not want it; there was a finality
of commitment somehow attached to his having it. But again, there was
the question of alternatives: Not having it might possibly be foolish,
though he did not expect to use it for anything more than a show of
force.
'Your dossier includes experience in small-arms fire. But it could
be a long time. Would you care to refresh yourself at a pistol range?
We have several, within minutes by plane.'
'No, thank you,' replied Alex. 'Not too long ago, in Australia, it
was the only diversion we had.'
The telephone rang with a muted bell. Tallon picked it up and
acknowledged with a simple 'Yes?'
He listened without speaking to the party on the other end of the
line. When he terminated the call, he looked at McAuliff .
'The green Chevrolet sedan is registered to a dead man. The
vehicle's license is in the name of Walter Piersall. Residence: High
Hill, Carnck Foyle, parish of Trelawny.'
THIRTEEN
McAuliff spent another hour with Westmore Tallon, as the old
Jamaican aristocrat activated his informational network. He had sources
all over the island.
Before the hour was up, one important fact had been uncovered: The
deceased, Walter Piersall of Carrick Foyle, parish of Trelawny, had in
his employ two black assistants with whom he invariably travelled. The
coincidence of the two men who had removed Sam Tucker's belongings from
the hotel in Montego Bay and the two men who followed Alex in the green
Chevrolet was no longer far-fetched. And since Piersall had brought up
Sam's name with Alison Booth, the conclusion was now to be assumed.
Tallon ordered his own people to pick up Piersall's men. He would
telephone McAuliff when they had done so.
Alex returned to Courtleigh Manor. He stopped at the desk for
messages. Alison was at dinner; she hoped he would join her. There was
nothing else.
No word from Sam Tucker.
'If there are any calls for me, I'll be in the dining room,' he said
to the clerk.
Alison sat alone in the middle of the crowded room, which was
profuse with tropical plants and open-grilled windows. In the centre of
each table was a candle within a lantern, these were the only sources
of light. Shadows flickered against the dark red and green and yellow
foliage; the hum was the hum of contentment, rising but still quiet
crescendos of laughter; perfectly groomed, perfectly dressed manikins
in slow motion, all seemingly waiting for the nocturnal games to begin.
This was the manikins' good hour. When manners and studied grace and
minor subtleties were important. Later it would be different; other
things would become important… and too often ugly. Which is why James
Ferguson knew his drunken pretence had been plausible last night.
And why Charles Whitehall arrogantly, quietly, had thrown the
napkins across the table onto the floor. To clean up the foreigner's
mess.
'You look pensive. Or disagreeable,' said Alison as he pulled out
the chair to sit down.
'Not really.'
'What happened? What did the police say? I half expected a call from
them.'
McAuliff had rehearsed his reply, but before delivering it he
gestured at the cup of coffee and the brandy glass in front of Alison.
'You've had dinner, I guess.'
'Yes. I was famished. Haven't you?'
'No. Keep me company?'
'Of course. I'll dismiss the eunuchs.'
He ordered a drink. 'You have a lovely smile. It's sort of a laugh.'
'No sidetracking. What happened?'
McAuliff lied quite well, he thought. Certainly better - at least
more persuasively - than before. He told Alison he had spent nearly two
hours with the police. Westmore Tallon had furnished him with the
address and even described the interior of the main headquarters; it
had been Tallon's idea for him to know the general details. One could
never tell when they were important.
'They backed up Latham's theory. They say it's hit-and-run. They
also hinted that Piersall had a diversion or two that was closeted. He
was run down in a very rough section.'
'That sounds suspiciously pat to me. They're covering themselves.'
The girl's eyebrows furrowed, her expression one of disbelief.
'They may be,' answered Alex casually, sincerely. 'But they can't
tie him to Sam Tucker, and that's my only concern.'
'He is tied. He told me.'
'And I told them. They've sent men to Carrick Foyle,
that's where Piersall lived. In Trelawny. Others are going over his
things at the Sheraton. If they find anything, they'll call me.'
McAuliff felt that he was carrying off the lie. He was, after all, only
bending the truth. The arthritic Westmore Tallon was doing these things.
'And you're satisfied with that? You're just going to take their
word for it? You were awfully troubled about Mr Tucker a few hours ago.'
'I still am,' said Alex, putting down his glass and looking at her.
He had no need to lie now. 'If I don't hear from Sam by late tonight…
or tomorrow morning, I'm going to go to the American Embassy and yell
like hell.'
'Oh… all right. Did you mention the little buggers this morning? You
never told me.'
'The what?'
'Those bugs in your luggage. You said you were supposed to report
them.'
Again McAuliff felt a wave of inadequacy; it irked him that he
wasn't keeping track of things. Of course, he hadn't seen Tallon
earlier, had not received his instructions, but that was no
explanation. 'I should have listened to you last night. I can just get
rid of them; step on them, I guess.'
'There's a better way.'
'What's that?'
'Put them someplace else.'
'For instance?'
'Oh, somewhere harmless but with lots of traffic. It keeps the tapes
rolling and people occupied.'
McAuliff laughed; it was not a false laugh. 'That's very funny. And
very practical. Where?'
Alison brought her hands to her chin; a mischievous little girl
thinking mischievously. 'It should be within a hundred yards or so -
that's usually the range tolerance. And where there's a great deal of
activity… Let's see. I complimented the headwaiter on the red snapper.
I'll bet he'd bring me to the chef to get the recipe.'
'They love that sort of thing,' added Alex. 'It's perfect. Don't go
away. I'll be right back,'
Alison Booth, former liaison to Interpol, reported that two
electronic devices were securely attached to the permanent laundry
hamper under the salad table in the Courtleigh Manor kitchen. She had
slipped them in - and pushed them down - along with a soiled napkin, as
an enthusiastic chef described the ingredients of his Jamaican red
snapper sauce.
'The hamper was long, not deep,' she explained as McAuliff finished
the last of his dinner. 'I pressed rather hard; the adhesive will hold
quite well, I think.'
'You're incredible,' said Alex, meaning it.
'No, just experienced,' she replied, without much humour. 'You were
only taught one side of the game, my darling.'
'It doesn't sound much like tennis.'
'Oh, there are compensations. For example, do you have any idea how
limitless the possibilities are? In that kitchen, for the next three
hours or so, until it's tracked?'
I'm not sure I know what you mean.'
'Depending upon who's on the tapes, there'll be a mad scramble
writing down words and phrases. Kitchen talk has its own contractions,
its own language, really. It will be assumed you've taken your suitcase
to a scheduled destination, for reasons of departure, naturally.
There'll be quite a bit of confusion.' Alison smiled, her eyes again
mischievous, as they had been before he had gone upstairs to pry loose
the bugs.
'You mean "Sauce Bearnaise" is really a code for submachine gun?
"BLT" stands for "hit the beaches"?'
'Something like that. It's quite possible, you know.'
'I thought that sort of thing only happened in World War Two movies.
With Nazis screaming at each other, sending panzer divisions in the
wrong directions.' McAuliff looked at his watch. It was 9.15. 'I have a
phone call to make, and I want to go over a list of supplies with
Ferguson. He's going to—'
He stopped. Alison had reached over, her hand suddenly on his arm.
'Don't turn your head,' she commanded softly, 'But I think your little
buggers provoked a reaction. A man just came through the dining room
entrance very rapidly, obviously looking for someone.'
'For us?'
'For you, to be precise, I'd say.'
'The kitchen codes didn't fool them very long.'
'Perhaps not. On the other hand, it's quite possible they've been
keeping loose tabs on you and were double checking. It's too small a
hotel for round-the-clock—'
'Describe him,' interrupted McAuliff. 'As completely as you can. Is
he still facing this way?'
'He saw you and stopped. He's apologizing to the man on the
reservations book, I think. He's white; he's dressed in light trousers,
a dark jacket, and a white - no, a yellow shirt. He's shorter than you
by a bit; fairly chunky—'
'What?'
'You know, bulky. And middle-young, thirties, I'd say. His hair is
long, not mod, but long. It's dark blond or light brown; it's hard to
tell in this candlelight.'
'You've done fine. Now I've got to get to a telephone.'
'Wait till he leaves; he's looking over again,' said Alison,
feigning interested, intimate laughter. 'Why don't you leer a little
and signal for the check. Very casually, my darling.'
'I feel like I'm in some kind of nursery school. With the prettiest
teacher in town.' Alex held up his hand, spotted the waiter, and made
the customary scribble in the air. 'I'll take you to your room, then
come back downstairs and call.'
'Why? Use the phone in the room. The buggers aren't there.' Damn! Goddamn! It had happened again; he wasn't prepared. The
little things, always the little things. They were the traps. Holcroft
said it over and over again… Holcroft. The Savoy. Don't make calls on
the Savoy phone.
'I was told to use the pay telephone. They must have their reasons.'
'Who?'
'The Ministry. Latham… the police, of course.'
'Of course. The police.' Alison withdrew her hand from his arm as
the waiter presented the bill for Alex to sign. She didn't believe him;
she made no pretence of believing him. Why should she? He was a rotten
actor; he was caught… But it was preferable to an ill-phrased statement
or an awkward response to Westmore Tallon over the phone while Alison
watched him. And listened. He had to feel free in his conversation with
the arthritic liaison; he could not have one eye, one ear on Alison as
he talked. He could not take the chance that the name Chatellerault, or
even a hint of the man, was heard. Alison was too quick.
'Has he left yet?'
'As you signed the check. He saw we were leaving.' Her reply was
neither angry nor warm, merely neutral.
They walked out of the candlelit dining room, past the cascading arc
of green foliage into the lobby, towards the bank of elevators. Neither
spoke. The ride up to their floor continued in silence, made bearable
by other guests in the small enclosure.
He opened the door and repeated the precautions he had taken the
previous evening - minus the scanner. He was in a hurry now; if he
remembered, he would bless the room with electronic benediction later.
He checked his own room and locked the connecting door from her side.
He looked out on the balcony and in the bathroom. Alison stood in the
corridor doorway, watching him.
He approached her. 'Will you stay here until I get back?'
'Yes,' she answered simply.
He kissed her on the lips, staying close to her, he knew, longer
than she expected him to; it was his message to her. 'You are a lovely
lady.'
'Alex?' She placed her hands carefully on his arms and looked up at
him. 'I know the symptoms. Believe me, I do. They're not easy to
forget… There are things you're not telling me and I won't ask. I'll
wait.'
'You're overdramatizing, Alison.'
'That's funny.'
'What is?'
'What you just said. I used the words with David. In Malaga. He was
nervous, frightened. He was so unsure of himself. And of me. And I said
to him: David, you're being overly dramatic… I know now that it was at
that moment he knew.'
McAuliff held her eyes with his own. 'You're not David and I'm not
you. That's as straight at I can put it. Now, I have to get to a
telephone. I'll see you later. Use the latch.'
He kissed her again, went out the door, and closed it behind him. He
waited until he heard the metallic sounds of the inserted bolt, then
turned towards the elevators.
The doors closed; the elevator descended. The soft music was piped
over the heads of assorted businessmen and tourists; the cubicle was
full. McAuliff's thoughts were on his imminent telephone call to
Westmore Tallon, his concerns about Sam Tucker.
The elevator stopped at an intermediate floor. Alex looked up at the
lighted digits absently, vaguely wondering how another person could fit
in the cramped enclosure. There was no need to think about the problem;
the two men who waited by the parting doors saw the situation, smiled,
and gestured that they would wait for the next elevator.
And then McAuliff saw him. Beyond the slowly closing panels, far
down in the corridor. A stocky man in a dark jacket and light trousers.
He had unlocked a door and was about to enter a room; as he did so, he
pulled back his jacket to replace the key in his pocket. The shirt was
yellow.
The door closed.
'Excuse me! Excuse me, please!' said McAuliff rapidly as he reached
across a tuxedoed man near the panel of buttons and pushed the one
marked 2, the next number in descent. 'I forgot my floor. I'm terribly
sorry.'
The elevator, its thrust suddenly, electrically interrupted, jerked
slightly as it mindlessly prepared for the unexpected stop. The panels
opened and Alex sidled past the irritated but accommodating passengers.
He stood in the corridor in front of the bank of elevators and
immediately pushed the Up button. Then he reconsidered. Where
were the stairs?
The 'EXIT—STAIRCASE' sign was blue with white letters. That seemed
peculiar to him; exit signs were always red. It was at the far end of
the hallway. He walked rapidly down the heavily carpeted corridor,
nervously smiling at a couple who emerged from a doorway at midpoint.
The man was in his fifties and drunk; the girl was barely in her
twenties, sober and mulatto. Her clothes were the costume of a
high-priced whore. She smiled at Alex; another sort of message. He
acknowledged, his eyes telling her he wasn't interested but good luck,
take the company drunk for all she could.
He pushed the crossbar on the exit door. Its sound was too loud; he
closed it carefully, quietly, relieved to see there was a knob on the
inside of the door.
He ran up the concrete stairs on the balls of his feet, minimizing
the sound of his footsteps. The steel panel had the Roman numeral III
stencilled in black over the beige paint. He twisted the knob slowly
and opened the door on to the third-floor corridor.
It was empty. The nocturnal games had begun below; the players would
remain in the competitive arenas until the prizes had been won or lost
or forgotten in alcoholic oblivion. He had only to be alert for
stragglers, or the overanxious, like the pigeon on the second floor who
was being manoeuvred with such precision by the child-woman mulatto. He
tried to recall at which door the man in the yellow shirt had stood. He
had been quite far down the hallway, but not at the end. Not by the
staircase; two-thirds of the way, perhaps. On the right; he had pulled
back his jacket with his right hand, revealing the yellow shirt. That
means he was now inside a door on Alex's left. Reversing the viewpoint,
he focused on three… no, four doors on his left that were possible.
Beginning with the second door from the staircase, one-third the
distance to the elevators.
Which one?
McAuliff began walking noiselessly on the thick carpet down the
corridor, hugging the left wall. He paused before each door as he
passed, his head constantly turning, his eyes alert, his ears listening
for the sound of voices, the tinkling of glasses. For anything.
Nothing.
Silence. Everywhere.
He looked at the brass numbers. 218, 216, 214, 212. Even 210. Any
farther would be incompatible with what he remembered.
He stopped at the halfway point and turned. Perhaps he knew enough.
Enough to tell Westmore Tallon. Alison had said that the tolerance
range for the electronic bugs was one hundred yards from first
positioning to the receiving equipment. This floor, this section of the
hotel, was well within that limit. Behind one of those doors was a tape
recorder activated by a man in front of a speaker or with earphones
clamped to his head.
Perhaps it was enough to report those numbers. Why should he look
further?
Yet he knew he would. Someone had seen fit to intrude on his life in
a way that filled him with revulsion. Few things caused him to react
violently, but one of them was the actual, intended invasion of his
privacy. And greed. Greed, too, infuriated him. Individual, academic,
corporate.
Someone named Craft - because of his greed - had instructed his
minions to invade Alex's personal moments.
Alexander Tarquin McAuliff was a very angry man.
He started back towards the staircase, retracing his steps, close to
the wall, closer to each door, where he stopped and stood immobile.
Listening.
214, 216, 218…
And back once again. It was a question of patience. Behind one of
those doors was a man in a yellow shirt. He wanted to find that man.
He heard it.
Room 214.
It was a radio. Or a television set. Someone had turned up the
volume of a television set. He could not distinguish the words, but he
could hear the excitement behind the rapid bursts of dialogue from a
clouded speaker, too loud to avoid distortion.
Suddenly, there was the sound of a harsh, metallic crack of a door
latch. Inches away from McAuliff someone had pulled back the bolt and
was about to open the door.
Alex raced to the staircase. He could not avoid noise, he could only
reduce it as much as possible as he lurched into the dimly lit concrete
foyer. He whipped around, pushing the heavy steel door closed as fast
and as quietly as he could; he pressed the fingers of his left hand
around the edge, preventing the door from shutting completely, stopping
the sound of metal against metal at the last half second.
He peered through the crack. The man in the yellow shirt came out of
the room, his attention still within it. He was no more than fifty feet
away in the silent corridor - silent except for the sound of the
television set. He seemed angry, and before he closed the door he
looked inside and spoke harshly in a Southern drawl.
'Turn that fuckin' thing down, you goddamn ape!'
The man in the yellow shirt then slammed the door and walked rapidly
towards the elevators. He remained at the end of the corridor,
nervously checking his watch, straightening his tie, rubbing his shoes
over the back of his trousers until a red light, accompanied by a soft,
echoing bell, signalled the approach of an elevator. McAuliff watched
from the stairwell two hundred feet away.
The elevator doors closed, and Alex walked out into the corridor. He
crossed to Room 214 and stood motionless for a few moments. It was a
decision he could abandon, he knew that. He could walk away, call
Tallon, tell him the room number, and that would be that.
But it would not be very satisfying. It would not be satisfying at
all. He had a better idea: He would take whoever was in that room to
Tallon himself. If Tallon didn't like it, he could go to hell. The same
for Holcroft. Since it was established that the electronic devices were
planted by a man named Craft, who was in no way connected with the
elusive Halidon, Arthur Craft could be taught a lesson. Alex's
arrangements with Holcroft did not include abuses from third and fourth
parties.
It seemed perfectly logical to get Craft out of the chess game.
Craft clouded the issues, confused the pursuit.
McAuliff had learned two physical facts about Arthur Craft: He was
the son of Craft the elder and he was American. He was also an
unpleasant man.
It would have to do.
He knocked on the door beneath the numerals 214.
'Yes, mon? Who is it, mon?' came the muffled reply from within.
Alex waited and knocked again. The voice inside came nearer the door.
'Who is it, please, mon?'
'Arthur Craft, you idiot!'
'Oh! Yes sir, Mr Craft, mon!' The voice was clearly frightened. The
knob turned; the bolt had not been inserted.
The door had opened no more than three inches when McAuliff slammed
his shoulder against it with the full impact of his near two hundred
pounds. The door crashed against the medium-sized Jamaican inside,
sending him reeling into the centre of the room. Alex gripped the edge
of the vibrating door and swung it back into place, the slam of the
heavy wood echoing throughout the corridor.
The Jamaican steadied himself, in his eyes a combination of fury and
fear. He whipped around to the room's writing desk; there were boxed
speakers on each side. Between them was a pistol.
McAuliff lurched forward, his left hand aiming for the gun, his
right grabbing any part of the man it could reach. Their hands met
above the warm steel of the pistol; Alex gripped the black's and dug
his fingers into the man's throat.
The man shook loose; the gun went careening off the surface of the
desk onto the floor. McAuliff lashed out with the back of his fist at
the black's face, instantaneously opening his hand and yanking forward,
pulling the man's head down by the hair. As the head went down, Alex
brought his left knee crashing up into the man's chest, then into his
face.
Voices from a millennium ago came back to him: Use your knees!
Your feet! Grab! Hold! Slash at the eyes! The blind can't fight!…
Rupture!
It was over. The voices subsided. The man collapsed at his feet.
McAuliff stepped back. He was frightened; something had happened to
him. For a few terrifying seconds, he had been back in the Korean
hills. He looked down at the motionless Jamaican beneath him. The head
was turned, flat against the carpet; blood was oozing from the pink
lips.
Thank God the man was breathing.
It was the gun. The goddamned gun!' He had not expected a
gun. A fight, yes. His anger justified that. But he had thought of it
as a scuffle - intense, over quickly. He would confront, embarrass,
forcibly make whoever was monitoring the tapes go with him. To
embarrass; to teach an avaricious employer a lesson.
But not this.
This was deadly. This was the violence of survival.
The tapes. The voices. The excited voices kept coming out
of the speakers on the desk.
It was not a television set he had heard. The sounds were the sounds
of the Courtleigh Manor kitchen. Men shouting, other men responding
angrily; the commands of superiors, the whining complaints of
subordinates. All frantic, agitated… mostly unintelligible. They must
have driven those listening furious.
Then Alex saw the revolving reels of the tape deck. For some reason,
it was on the floor, to the right of the desk. A small compact
Wollensak recorder, spinning as if nothing had happened.
McAuliff grabbed the two speakers and crashed them repeatedly
against each other until the wood splintered and the cases cracked
open. He tore out the black shells and the wires and threw them across
the room. He crossed to the right of the desk and crushed his heel into
the Wollensak, grinding the numerous flat switches until a puff of
smoke emerged from the interior and the reels stopped their movement.
He reached down and ripped off the tape; he could burn it, but there
was nothing of consequence recorded. He rolled the two reels across the
floor, the thin strand of tape forming a narrow V on the
carpet.
The Jamaican groaned; his eyes blinked as he swallowed and coughed.
Alex picked up the pistol on the floor, and squeezed it into his
belt. He went into the bathroom, turned on the cold water, and threw a
towel into the basin.
He pulled the drenched towel from the sink and walked back to the
coughing, injured Jamaican. He knelt down, helped the man into a
sitting position, and blotted his face. The water flowed down on the
man's shirt and trousers… water mingled with blood.
'I'm sorry,' said Alex. 'I didn't mean to hurt you. I wouldn't have
if you hadn't reached for that goddamned pistol.'
'Mon!' The Jamaican coughed his interruption. 'You crazy-mon!'
The Jamaican held his chest and winced painfully as he struggled to his
feet. 'You break up… everyt'ing, mon!' said the injured man, looking
at the smashed equipment.
'I certainly did! Maybe your Mr Craft will get the message. If he
wants to play industrial espionage, let him play in somebody else's
backyard. I resent the intrusion… Come on, let's go.' Alex took the man
by the arm and began leading him to the door.
'No, mon!' shouted the black, resisting.
'Yes, mon,' said McAuliff quietly. 'You're coming with me.'
'Where, mon?'
'To see a little old man who runs a fish store, that's all.' Alex
shoved him; the Negro gripped his side. His ribs were broken, thought
McAuliff.
'Please, mon! No police, mon! I lose everyt'ing!' The
Jamaican's dark eyes were pleading as he held his ribs.
'You went for a gun, mon! That's a very serious thing to do.'
'Them not my gun. Them gun got no bullets, mon.'
'Look-see, mon! Please! I got good job… I don' hurt nobody.'
Alex wasn't listening. He reached into his belt for the pistol.
It was no weapon at all.
It was a starter's gun; the kind held up by referees at track meets.
'Oh, for Christ's sake…' Arthur Craft, Junior, played games - little
boys' games with little boys' toys.
McAuliff looked at the panicked Jamaican.
'Okay, mon. You just tell your employer what I said. The next time,
I'll haul him into court.'
It was a silly thing to say, thought Alex, as he walked out into the
corridor, slamming the door behind him. There'd be no courts; Julian
Warfield or his adversary, R. C. Holcroft, was far more preferable.
Alongside Dunstone, Limited, and British Intelligence, Arthur Craft was
a cipher.
An unimportant intrusion that in all likelihood was no more.
He walked out of the elevator and tried to recall the location of
the telephone booths. They were to the left of the entrance, past the
front desk, he remembered.
He nodded to clerks while thinking of Westmore Tallon's private
number.
'Mr McAuliff, sir?' The speaker was a tall Jamaican with very broad
shoulders, emphasized by a tight nylon jacket.
'Yes?'
'Would you come with me, please?'
Alex looked at the man. He was neat, the trousers pressed, a white
shirt and a tie in evidence beneath the jacket. 'No… why should I?'
'Please, we have very little time. A man is waiting for you outside.
A Mr Tucker.'
'What? How did—'
''Please, Mr McAuliff. I cannot stay here.'
Alex followed the Jamaican out the glass doors of the entrance. As
they reached the driveway, he saw the man in the yellow shirt - Craft's
man - walking on the path from the parking lot; the man stopped and
stared at him, as if unsure what to do.
'Hurry, please,' said the Jamaican, several steps in front of
McAuliff, breaking into a run. 'Down past the gates. The car is
waiting!'
They ran down the drive, past the stone gateposts.
The green Chevrolet was on the side of the road, its motor running.
The Jamaican opened the back door for Alex.
'Get in!'
McAuliff did so.
Sam Tucker, his massive frame taking up most of the back seat, his
shock of red hair reflecting the outside lights, extended his hand.
'Good to see you, boy!'
'Sam!'
The car lurched forward, throwing Alex into the felt. In the front
seat, McAuliff saw that there were three men. The driver wore a
baseball cap; the third man - nearly as large as Sam Tucker - was
squeezed between the driver and the Jamaican who had met him inside the
Courtleigh lobby. Alex turned back to Tucker.
'What is all this, Sam? Where the hell have you been?'
The answer, however, did not come from Sam Tucker. Instead, the
black by the window, the man who had led Alex down the driveway, turned
and spoke quietly.
'Mr Tucker has been with us, Mr McAuliff… If events can be
controlled, we are your link to the Halidon.'
FOURTEEN
They drove for nearly an hour. Always climbing, higher and higher,
it seemed to McAuliff. The winding roads snaked upward, the turns
sudden, the curves hidden by sweeping waterfalls of tropic greenery.
There were stretches of unpaved road. The automobile took them poorly;
the whining of the low gear was proof of the strain.
McAuliff and Sam Tucker spoke quietly, knowing their conversation
was overheard by those in front. That knowledge did not seem to bother
Tucker.
Sam's story was totally logical, considering his habits and life
style. Sam Tucker had friends, or acquaintances, in many parts of the
world no one knew about. Not that he intentionally concealed their
identities, only that they were part of his personal, not professional,
life.
One of these people had been Walter Piersall.
'I mentioned him to you last year, Alexander,' said Tucker in the
darkness of the back seat. 'In Ocho Rios.'
'I don't remember.'
'I told you I'd met an academic fellow in Carrick Foyle. I was going
to spend a couple of weekends with him.' That was it, thought McAuliff. The name 'Carrick Foyle'; he
had heard it before. 'I remember now. Something about a
lecture series at the Kingston Institute.'
'That's right. Walter was a very classy type - an anthro man who
didn't bore you to death. I cabled him I was coming back.'
'You also got in touch with Hanley. He's the one who set off the
alarms'
'I called Bob after I got into Montego. For a little sporting life.
There was no way I could reach him later. We travelled fast, and when
we got where we were going, there was no telephone. I figured he'd be
mad as hell.'
'He was worried, not mad. It was quite a disappearing act.'
'He should know better. I have friends on this island, not enemies.
At least, none either of us knows about.'
'What happened? Where did you go?'
Tucker told him.
When Sam arrived in Montego Bay, there was a message from Piersall
at the arrivals desk. He was to call the anthropologist in Carrick
Foyle after he was settled. He did, but was told by a servant in
Carrick Foyle that Piersall might not return until late that night.
Tucker then phoned his old friend Hanley, and the two men got drunk,
as was their established custom at reunions.
In the morning, while Hanley was still sleeping, Sam left the hotel
to pick up cigars.
'It's not the sort of place that's large on room service, boy.'
'I gathered that,' said Alex.
'Out on the street, our friends here—' Tucker gestured towards the
front seat - 'were waiting in a station wagon—'
'Mr Tucker was being followed,' interrupted the black by the window.
'Word of this reached Dr Piersall. He sent us to Mo'Bay to look after
his friend. Mr Tucker gets up early.'
Sam grinned. 'You know me. Even with the juice, I can't sleep long.'
'I know,' said Alex, remembering too many hotel rooms and survey
campsites in which Tucker had wandered about at the first light of dawn.
'There was a little misunderstanding,' continued Sam. 'The boys here
said Piersall was waiting for me. I figured, what the hell, the lads
thought enough of me to stick out the night, I'd go with 'em straight
off. Old Robert wouldn't be up for an hour or so… I'd call him from
Piersall's house. But, goddamn it, we didn't go to Carrick Foyle. We
headed for a bamboo camp down the Martha Brae. It took us damn near two
hours to get there, a godforsaken place, Alexander.'
When they arrived at the bamboo camp, Walter Piersall greeted Sam
warmly. But within minutes Tucker realized that something had happened
to the man. He was not the same person that Sam had known a year ago.
There was a zealousness, an intensity not in evidence twelve months ago.
Walter Piersall was caught up in things Jamaican. The quiet
anthropologist had become a fierce partisan in the battles being waged
between social and political factions within Jamaica. He was suddenly a
jealous guardian of the islanders' rights, an enemy of the outside
exploiters.
'I've seen it happen dozens of times, Alexander,' said Sam. 'From
the Tasman to the Caribbean; it's a kind of island fever. Possession…
oneness, I think. Men migrate for taxes or climate or whatever the hell
and they turn into self-proclaimed protectors of their sanctuaries… the
Catholic convert telling the pope he's not with it…'
In his cross-island proselytizing, Piersall began to hear whispers
of an enormous land conspiracy. In his own backyard in the parish of
Trelawny. At first he dismissed them; they involved men with whom one
might disagree, but whose integrity was not debated. Men of
extraordinary stature.
The conspiratorial syndrome was an ever-present nuisance in any
infant, growing government; Piersall understood that. In Jamaica it was
given credence by the influx of foreign capital looking for tax havens,
by a parliament ordering more reform programmes than it could possibly
control, and by a small, wealthy island aristocracy trying to protect
itself - the bribe was an all-too-prevalent way of life.
Piersall had decided, once and for all, to put the whispered rumours
to rest. Four months ago he'd gone to the Ministry of Territories and
filed a Resolution of Intent to purchase by way of syndication twenty
square miles of land on the north border of the Cock Pit. It was a
harmless gesture, really. Such a purchase would take years in the
courts and involve the satisfactory settling of historic island
treaties; his point was merely to prove Kingston's willingness to
accept the filing. That the land was not controlled by outsiders.
'Since that day, Alexander, Piersall's life was made a hell.' Sam
Tucker lit a thin native cigar; the aromatic smoke whipped out the open
window into the onrushing darkness. 'He was harassed by the police,
pulled into the parish courts dozens of times for nonsense; his
lectures were cancelled at the university and the Institute; his
telephone tapped - conversations repeated by government attorneys…
Finally, the whispers he tried to silence killed him.'
McAuliff said nothing for several moments. 'Why was Piersall so
anxious to contact you?' he asked Tucker.
'In my cable I told him I was doing a big survey in Trelawny. A
project out of London by way of Kingston. I didn't want him to think I
was travelling six thousand miles to be his guest; he was a busy man,
Alexander.'
'But you were in Kingston tonight. Not in a bamboo camp on the
Martha Brae. Two of these men' - McAuliff gestured front - 'followed me
this afternoon. In this car.'
'Let me answer you, Mr McAuliff,' said the Jamaican by the window,
turning and placing his arm over the seat. 'Kingston intercepted Mr
Tuck's cable; they made kling-kling addition, mon. They thought Mr Tuck
was mixed up with Dr Piersall in bad ways. Bad ways for them, mon. They
sent dangerous men to Mo'Bay. To find out what Mr Tuck was doing—'
'How do you know this?' broke in Alex.
For the briefest instant, the black by the window glanced at the
driver. It was difficult to tell in the dim light and rushing shadows,
but McAuliff thought the driver nodded imperceptibly.
'We took the men who came to Mo'Bay after Mr Tuck. That is all you
need to know, mon. What was learned caused Dr Piersall much concern. So
much, mon, that we flew to Kingston. To reach you, mon… Dr Piersall was
killed for that.'
'Who killed him?'
'If we knew, there would be dead men hung in Victoria Park.'
'What did you learn… from the men in Montego?'
Again, the black who spoke seemed to glance at the driver. In
seconds he replied, 'That people in Kingston believed Dr Piersall would
interfere further. When he went to find you, mon, it was their proof.
By killing him they took a big sea urchin out of their foot.'
'And you don't know who did it—'
'Hired niggers, mon,' interrupted the black.
'It's insane!' McAuliff spoke to himself as much as to Sam Tucker.
'People killing people… men following other men. It's goddamn crazy!'
'Why is it crazy to a man who visits Tallon's Fish Market?' asked
the black suddenly.
'How did—' McAuliff stopped. He was confused; he had been so
careful. 'How did you know that? I lost you at the racetrack!'
The Jamaican smiled, his bright teeth catching the light from the
careening reflections through the windshield. 'Ocean trout is not
really preferable to the fresh-water variety, mon.'
The counterman! The nonchalant counterman in the striped linen
apron. 'The man behind the counter is one of you. That's pretty good,'
said McAuliff quietly.
'We're very good. Westmore Tallon is a British agent… So
like the English: Enlist the clandestine help of the vested interests.
And so fundamentally stupid. Tallon's senile Etonian classmates might
trust him; his countrymen do not.'
The Jamaican removed his arm from the seat and turned front. The
answer was over.
Sam Tucker spoke pensively, openly. 'Alexander… now tell me what the
hell is going on. What have you done, boy?'
McAuliff turned to Sam. The huge, vital, capable old friend was
staring at him in the darkness, the rapid flashes of light bouncing
across his face. Tucker's eyes held confusion and hurt. And anger.
What in hell had he done, thought Alex.
'Here we are, mon,' said the driver in the baseball cap, who had not
spoken throughout the trip.
McAuliff looked out the windows. The ground was flat now, but high
in the hills and surrounded by them. Everything was sporadically
illuminated by a Jamaican moon filtering through the low-flying clouds
of the Blue Mountains. They were on a dirt road; in the distance,
perhaps a quarter of a mile away, was a structure, a small cabinlike
building. A dim light could be seen through a single window. On the
right were two other… structures. Not buildings, not houses or cabins,
nothing really definable; just free-form, sagging silhouettes…
translucent? Yes… wires, cloth. Or netting… They were large tentlike
covers, supported by numerous poles. And then Alex understood: beyond
the tents the ground was matted flat and along the border, spaced every
thirty or forty feet apart, were unlit cradle torches. The tents were
camouflaged hangars; the ground a landing strip.
They were at an unmarked airfield in the mountains.
The Chevrolet slowed down as it approached what turned out to be a
small farmhouse. There was an ancient tractor beyond the edge of the
building; field tools -ploughs, shoulder yokes, pitchforks - were
scattered about carelessly. In the moonlight the equipment looked like
stationary relics. Unused, dead remembrances only.
Camouflage.
As the hangars were camouflaged.
An airfield no map would indicate.
'Mr McAuliff? Mr Tucker? If you would come with me, please.' The
black spokesman by the window opened the door and stepped out. Sam and
Alex did the same. The driver and the third Jamaican remained inside,
and when the disembarked passengers stepped away from the car, the
driver accelerated the motor and sped off down the dirt road.
'Where are they going?' asked McAuliff anxiously.
'To conceal the automobile,' answered the black. 'Kingston sends out
ganga air patrols at night, hoping to find such fields as these. With
luck to spot light aircraft on narcotics runs.'
'This ganga country? I thought it was north,' said Tucker.
The Jamaican laughed. 'Ganga, weed, poppy… north, west, east. It is
a healthy export industry, mon. But not ours… Come, let us go inside.'
The door of the miniature farmhouse opened as the three of them
approached. In the frame stood the light-skinned black whom Alex had
first seen in a striped apron behind the counter at Tallon's.
The interior of the small house was primitive: wooden chairs, a
thick round table in the centre of the single room, an army cot against
the wall. The jarring contradiction was a complicated radio set on a
table to the right of the door. The light in the window was from the
shaded lamp in front of the machinery; a generator could be heard
providing what electricity was necessary.
All this McAuliff observed within seconds of entering. Then he saw a
second man, standing in shadows across the room, his back towards the
others. The body - the cut of the coat, the shoulders, the tapered
waist, the tailored trousers - was familiar.
The man turned around; the light from the table lamp illuminated his
features.
Charles Whitehall stared at McAuliff and then nodded once, slowly.
The door opened, and the driver of the Chevrolet entered with the
third black. He walked to the round table in the centre of the room and
sat down. He removed his baseball cap, revealing a large shaven head.
'My name is Moore. Barak Moore, Mr McAuliff. To ease your concerns,
the woman, Alison Booth, has been called. She was told that you went
down to the Ministry for a conference.'
'She won't believe that,' replied Alex.
'If she cares to check further, she will be informed that you are
with Latham at a warehouse. There is nothing to worry about, mon.'
Sam Tucker stood by the door; he was relaxed but curious. And
strong; his thick arms were folded across his chest, his lined features
- tanned by the California sun -showed his age and accentuated his
leathery strength. Charles Whitehall stood by the window in the left
wall, his elegant, arrogant face exuding contempt.
The light-skinned black from Tallon's Fish Market and the two
Jamaican 'guerrillas' had pulled their chairs back against the far
right wall, away from the centre of attention. They were telegraphing
the fact that Barak Moore was their superior.
'Please, sit down.' Barak Moore indicated the chairs around the
table. There were three. Tucker and McAuliff looked at each other;
there was no point in refusing. They walked to the table and sat down.
Charles Whitehall remained standing by the window. Moore glanced up at
him. 'Will you join us?'
'If I feel like sitting,' answered Whitehall.
Moore smiled and spoke while looking at Whitehall. 'Charley-mon
finds it difficult to be in the same room with me, much less at the
same table.'
'Then why is he here?' asked Sam Tucker.
'He had no idea he was going to be until a few minutes before
landing. We switched pilots in Savanna-la-Mar.'
'His name is Charles Whitehall,' said Alex, speaking to Sam. 'He's
part of the survey. I didn't know he was going to be here either.'
'What's your field, boy?' Tucker leaned back in his chair and spoke
to Whitehall.
'Jamaica… boy.'
'I meant no offence, son.'
'You are offensive' was Whitehall's simple reply.
'Charley and me,' continued Barak Moore, 'we are at the opposite
poles of the politic. In your country, you have the term "white trash";
he considers me "black garbage." For roughly the same reasons: He
thinks I'm too crude, too loud!, too unwashed. I am an uncouth
revolutionary in Charley-mon's eyes… he is a graceful rebel, you see.'
Moore swept his hand in front of him, balletically, insultingly. 'But
our rebellions are different, very different, mon. I want
Jamaica for all the people. He wants it for only a few.'
Whitehall stood motionless as he replied. 'You are as blind now as
you were a decade ago. The only thing that has changed is your name,
Bramwell Moore.' Whitehall sneered vocally as he continued. ''Barak
… as childish and meaningless as the social philosophy you espouse; the
sound of a jungle toad.'
Moore swallowed before he answered. 'I'd as soon kill you, I think
you know that. But it would be as counterproductive as the solutions
you seek to impose on our homeland. We have a common enemy, you and I.
Make the best of it, fascisti-mon.'
'The vocabulary of your mentors. Did you learn it by rote, or did
they make you read?'
'Look,' McAuliff interrupted angrily. 'You can fight or
call names, or kill each other for all I give a damn, but I want to get
back to the hotel!' He turned to Barak Moore. 'Whatever you have to
say, get it over with.'
'He has a point, Charley-mon,' said Moore. 'We come later… I will,
as they say, summarize. It is a brief summary, mon… That there are
development plans for a large area of the island - plans that exclude
the people - is now established. Dr Piersall's death confirms it. That
your geological survey is tied to those plans, we logically assume;
therefore, the Ministry and the Royal Society are - knowingly or
unknowingly - concealing the identity of the financial interest.
Furthermore, Mr McAuliff here is not unaware of these facts, because he
deals with British Intelligence through the despicable Westmore Tallon…
That is the summary. Where do we go?' Moore stared at Alex, his eyes
small black craters in a huge mountain of dark skin. 'We have a right
to go somewhere, Mr McAuliff.'
'Before you shove him against the wall, boy,' interjected Sam
Tucker, to Alex's surprise, 'remember, I'm no part of you. I don't say
I won't be, but I'm not now.'
'I should think you'd be as interested as we are, Tucker.' The
absence of the "Mister," McAuliff thought, was Moore's hostile response
to Sam's use of the word "boy." Moore did
not realize that Tucker used the term for everyone.
'Don't mistake me,' added Sam. 'I'm interested. Just don't go
running off too fast at the mouth… I think you should say what you
know, Alex.'
McAuliff looked at Tucker, then Moore, then over at Whitehall.
Nothing in Holcroft's instructions included such a confrontation.
Except the admonition to keep it simple; build on part of the truth.
'The people in British Intelligence - and everything they represent
- want to stop this development as much as you do. But they need
information. They think the Halidon has it. They want to make contact
with the Halidon. I'm supposed to try and make that contact.'
Alex wasn't sure what to expect from his statement, but certainly
not what happened. Barak Moore's blunt features, grotesque under the
immense shaven head, slowly changed from immobility to amusement, from
amusement to the pinched flesh of outright mirth; it was a humour based
in cruelty, however. His large mouth opened, and a coughing, malevolent
laugh emerged.
From the window there was another sound, another laugh: higher and
jackal-like. Charles Whitehall's elegant neck was stretched back, his
head tilted towards the ceiling, his arms folded across his tailored
jacket. He looked like some thin, black Oriental priest finding
amusement in a novice's ignorance.
The three Jamaicans in the row of chairs, their white teeth gleaming
in the shadows, were smiling, their bodies shaking slightly in silent
laughter.
'What's so goddamn funny?' asked McAuliff, annoyed by the undefined
humiliation.
'Funny, mon? Many times more than funny. The mongoose
chases the deadly snake, so the snake wants to make friends?' Moore
laughed his hideous laugh once again. 'It is not in any law of nature,
mon!'
'What Moore is telling you, Mr McAuliff,' broke in Whitehall,
approaching the table, 'is that it's preposterous to think the Halidon
would cooperate with the English. It is inconceivable. It is the
Halidons of this island that drove the British from Jamaica. Put
simply, MI5 is not to be trusted.'
'What is the Halidon?' Alex watched the black scholar, who
stood motionless, his eyes on Barak Moore.
'It is a force,' said Whitehall quietly.
McAuliff looked at Moore; he was returning Whitehall's stare. 'That
doesn't say very much, does it?'
'There is no one in this room who can tell you more, mon.' Barak
Moore shifted his gaze to Alex.
Charles Whitehall spoke. 'There are no identities, McAuliff. The
Halidon is an unseen curia, a court that has no chambers. No one is
lying to you. Not about this… This small contingent here, these three
men; Moore's elite corps, as it were—'
'Your words, Charley-mon! We don't use them! Elite!' Barak
spat out the word.
'Immaterial,' continued Whitehall. 'I venture to say there are no
more than five hundred people in all Jamaica who have heard of the
Halidon. Less than fifty who know for certain any of its members. Those
that do would rather face the pains of Obeah than reveal identities.'
'Obeah,' Sam Tucker's comment was in his voice. He had no
use for the jingoistic diabolism that filled thousands upon thousands
of native minds with terror - Jamaica's counterpart of the Haitian
voodoo. 'Obeah's horseshit, boy! The sooner your hill and village
people learn that, the better off they'll be!'
'If you think it's restricted to the hills and the villages, you are
sadly mistaken,' said Whitehall. 'We in Jamaica do not offer Obeah as a
tourist attraction. We have too much respect for it.'
Alex looked up at Whitehall. 'Do you have respect for it?
Are you a believer?'
Whitehall levelled his gaze at McAuliff, his eyes knowing - with a
trace of humour. 'Yes, Mr McAuliff, I have respect for Obeah. I have
traced its strains to its origins in Mother Africa. I have seen what
it's done to the veldt, in the jungles. Respect; I do not say
commitment or belief.'
'Then the Halidon is an organization.' McAuliff took out his
cigarettes. Barak Moore reached over to accept one; Sam Tucker leaned
forward in his chair. Alex continued. 'A secret society that has a lot
of clout. Why?… Obeah?'
'Partly, mon,' answered Moore, lighting his cigarette like a man who
does not smoke often. 'It is also very rich. It is whispered that it
possesses wealth beyond anyone's thinking, mon.'
Suddenly, McAuliff realized the obvious. He looked back and forth
between Charles Whitehall and Barak Moore.
'Christ Almighty! You're as anxious to reach the Halidon as I am! As
British Intelligence is!'
'That is so, mon.' Moore crushed out his barely smoked cigarette on
the surface of the table.
'Why?' asked Alex.
Charles Whitehall replied. 'We are dealing with two giants, Mr
McAuliff. One black, one white. The Halidon must win.'
FIFTEEN
The meeting in the isolated farmhouse high in the hills of the Blue
Mountains lasted until two o'clock in the morning.
The common objective was agreed to: contact with the Halidon.
And since Barak Moore's and Charles Whitehall's judgment that the
Halidon would not deal directly with British Intelligence was
convincing, McAuliff further agreed to cooperate with the two black
antagonists. Barak and his 'elite' guerrillas would provide additional
safety for the survey team. Two of the three men sitting against the
wall of the farmhouse would fly to Ocho Rios and be hired as carriers.
If the Jamaicans suspected he knew more than he was telling them,
they did not press him, thought Alex. They accepted his story - now
told twice to Whitehall - that initially he had taken the survey as an
investment for future work. From Kingston. MI5 was a complication
thrust upon him.
It was as if they understood he had his own concerns, unrelated to
theirs. And only when he was sure those concerns were not in conflict
would he be completely open.
Insane circumstances had forced him into a war he wanted no part of,
but one thing was clear above all other considerations: the safety of
those he had brought to the island.
… Two things.
One million dollars.
From either enemy. Dunstone, Limited, or British Intelligence.
'MI5 has not told you, then, who is behind this land rape,' said
Barak Moore - not asking a question - continuing immediately. 'It goes
beyond the Kingston flunkies, mon.'
'If the British reach the Halidon, they'll tell them what they
know,' said McAuliff. I'm sure of that. They want to pool their
information, that much they've told me.'
'Which means the English assume the Halidon know a great deal,'
added Whitehall pensively. 'I wonder if that is so.'
'They have their reasons,' said Alex cautiously. 'There was a
previous survey team.'
The Jamaicans knew of it. Its disappearance was either proof of the
Halidon's opposition or an isolated act of theft and murder by a roving
band of primitive hill people in the Cock Pit.
There was no way to tell.
Circles within circles.
What of the Marquis de Chatellerault? Why had he insisted upon
meeting with Whitehall in Savanna-la-Mar?
'The marquis is a nervous man,' said Whitehall. 'He claims to have
widespread interests on the island. He smells bad fish with this
survey.'
'Has it occurred to you that Chatellerault is himself involved?'
McAuliff spoke directly to the black scholar. 'MI5 thinks so. Tallon
told me that this afternoon.'
'If so, the marquis does not trust his colleagues.'
'Did Chatellerault mention anyone else on the team?' asked Alex,
afraid of the answer.
Whitehall looked at McAuliff and replied simply. 'He made several
allusions, and I told him that I wasn't interested in side issues. They
were not pertinent; I made that clear.'
'Thank you.'
'You're welcome.'
Sam Tucker raised his scraggy eyebrows, his expression dubious.
'What the hell was pertinent? What did he want?'
'To be kept informed of the survey's progress. Report all
developments.'
'Why did he think you'd do that?' Sam leaned forward in the chair.
'I would be paid handsomely, to begin with. And there could be other
areas of interest, which, frankly, there are not.'
'Ha, mon!' interjected Moore. 'You see, they believe
Charley-mon can be bought! They know better with Barak Moore!'
Whitehall looked at the revolutionary, dismissing him. There is
little to pay you for.' He opened his silver cigarette case; Moore
grinned at the sight of it. Whitehall closed it slowly, placed it at
his right, and lighted his cigarette with a match. 'Let's get on. I'd
rather not be here all night.'
'Okay, mon.' Barak glanced at each man quickly. 'We want the same as
the English. To reach the Halidon.' Moore pronounced the word in the
Jamaican dialect: hollydawn. 'But the Halidon must come to
us. There must be a strong reason. We cannot cry out for them. They
will not come into the open.'
'I don't understand a damn thing about any of this,' said Tucker,
lighting a thin cigar, 'but if you wait for them, you could be sitting
on your asses a long goddamn time.'
'We think there is a way. We think Dr Piersall provided it.' Moore
hunched his shoulders, conveying a sense of uncertainty, as if he was
not sure how to choose his words. 'For months Dr Piersall tried to…
define the Halidon. To seek it out, to understand. He went back into
Caribe history, to the Arawak, to Africa. To find meaning.' Moore
paused and looked at Whitehall. 'He read your books, Charley-mon. I
told him you were a bad liar, a diseased goat. He said you did not lie
in your books… From many small things, Dr Piersall put together pieces
of the puzzle, he called it. His papers are in Carrick Foyle.'
'Just a minute.' Sam Tucker was irritated. 'Walter talked a
goddamned streak for two days. On the Martha Brae, in the plane, at the
Sheraton. He never mentioned any of this. Why didn't he?' Tucker looked
over at the Jamaicans against the wall, at the two who had been with
him since Montego Bay.
The black who had spoken in the Chevrolet replied. 'He would have,
mon. It was agreed to wait until McAuliff was with you. It is not a
story one repeats often.'
'What did the puzzle tell him?' asked Alex.
'Only part, mon,' said Barak Moore. 'Only part of the puzzle was
complete. But Dr Piersall arrived at several theories. To begin with,
Halidon is an offshoot from the Coromanteen tribe. They isolated
themselves after the Maroon wars, for they would not agree to the
treaties that called upon the Maroon nation - the Coromantees - to run
down and capture runaway slaves for the English. The Halidon would not
become bounty hunters of brother Africans. For decades they were
nomadic. Then, perhaps two hundred, two hundred and fifty years ago,
they settled in one location. Unknown, inaccessible to the outside
world. But they did not divorce themselves from the outside world.
Selected males were sent out to accomplish what the elders believed
should be accomplished. To this day it is so. Women are brought in to
bear children so that the pains of inbreeding are avoided… And two
final points: The Halidon community is high in the mountains where the
winds are strong, of that Piersall was certain. And last, the Halidon
has great riches… These are the pieces of the puzzle; there are many
missing.'
No one spoke for a while. Then Tucker broke the silence.
'It's a hell of a story,' said Sam 'but I'm not sure where it gets
us. Our knowing it won't bring them out. And you said we can't go after
them. Goddamn! If this… tribe has been in the mountains for two hundred
years and nobody's found them, we're not likely to, boy! Where is "the
way" Walter provided?' _,
Charles Whitehall answered. 'If Dr Piersall's conclusions are true,
the way is in the knowledge of them, Mr Tucker.'
'Would you explain that?' asked Alex.
In an unexpected show of deference, the erudite scholar turned to
the rough-hewn guerrilla. I think… Barak Moore should amplify. I
believe the key is in what he said a few minutes ago. That the Halidon
must have a strong reason to contact us.'
'You are not mistaken, mon. Dr Piersall was certain that if word got
to the Halidon that their existence - and their great wealth - had been
confirmed by a small band of responsible men, they would send an
emissary. They guard their wealth above all things, Piersall believed.
But they have to be convinced beyond doubt… That is the way.'
'Who do you convince?' asked Alex.
'Someone must travel to Maroon Town, on the border of the Cock Pit.
This person should ask for an audience with the Colonel of the Maroon
people, offer to pay much, much money. It was Dr Piersall's belief that
this man, whose title is passed from one generation to the next within
the same tribal family, is the only link to the Halidon.'
'The story is told him, then?'
'No, McAuliff, mon! Not even the Colonel of the Maroons is to be so
trusted. At any rate, it would be meaningless to him. Dr Piersall's
studies hinted that the Halidon kept open one perpetual line to the
African brothers. It was called "nagarro"—
'The Akwamu tongue,' broke in Whitehall. 'The language is extinct,
but derivations exist in the Ashanti and Mossai-Grusso dialects. "Nagarro"
is an abstraction, best translated to mean "a spirit materialized."'
'A spirit…' Alex began to repeat the phrase, then stopped. 'Proof…
proof of something real.'
'Yes,' replied Whitehall.
'Where is it?' asked McAuliff.
'The proof is in the meaning of another word,' said Barak Moore. The
meaning of the word "Halidon."'
'What is it?'
'I do not know—'
'Goddamn!' Sam Tucker exploded. Barak Moore held up his
hand, silencing him.
'Piersall found it. It is to be delivered to the Colonel of the
Maroon people. For him to take up into the mountains.'
McAuliff's jaws were tense; he controlled himself as best he could.
'We can't deliver what we don't have.'
'You will have it, mon.' Barak settled his gaze on Alexander. 'A
month ago Dr Piersall brought me to his home in Carrick Foyle. He gave
me my instructions. Should anything happen to him, I was to go to a
place in the forests of his property. I have committed this place to
memory, mon. There, deep under the ground, is an oilcloth packet.
Inside the packet is a paper; on it is written the meaning of the
Halidon.'
The driver on the ride back to Kingston was the Jamaican who was
obviously Barak Moore's second-in-command, the black who had done the
talking on the trip out to the airfield. His name was Floyd. Charles
Whitehall sat in the front seat with him; Alex and Sam Tucker sat in
back.
'If you need stories to say where you were,' said Floyd to all of
them, 'there was a long equipment meeting at a Ministry warehouse. On
Crawford Street, near the docks. It can be verified.'
'Who were we meeting with?' asked Sam.
'A man named Latham. He is in charge—'
'Latham?' broke in Alex, recalling all too vividly his
telephone conversation with the ministry man that afternoon. 'He's the
one—'
'We know,' interrupted Floyd, grinning in the rearview mirror at
McAuliff. 'He's one of us, mon.'
He let himself into the room as quietly as possible. It was nearly
3.30; the Courtleigh Manor was quiet, the nocturnal games concluded.
He closed the door silently and started across the soft carpet. A
light was on in Alison's room, the door open perhaps a foot. His own
room was dark. Alison had turned off all the lamps; they had been on
when he left her five hours ago.
Why had she done that?
He approached the slightly open door, removing his jacket as he did
so.
There was a click behind him. He turned. A second later, the bedside
lamp was snapped on, flooding the room with its dim light, harsh only
at the source.
Alison was sitting up in his bed. He could see that her right hand
gripped the small deadly weapon 'issued by the London police'; she was
placing it at her side, obscuring it with the covers.
'Hello, Alex.'
'Hello.'
It was an awkward moment.
'I stayed here because I thought your friend Tucker might call. I
might not have heard the telephone.'
'I could think of better reasons.' He smiled and approached the bed.
She picked up the cylinder and twisted it. There was the same click he
had heard seconds ago. She placed the strange weapon on the night table.
'Also, I wanted to talk.'
'You sound ominous.' He sat down. 'I wasn't able to call you…
everything happened so fast. Sam showed up; he just walked through the
goddamn lobby doors and wondered why I was so upset… Then, as he was
registering, the call came from Latham. He was really in a hurry. I
think I threw him with Ocho Rios tomorrow. There was a lot of equipment
that hadn't been shipped to Boscobel—'
'Your phone didn't ring,' interrupted Alison quietly.
'What?'
'Mr Latham didn't ring through to your room.'
McAuliff was prepared; he had remembered a little thing.
'Because I'd left word we were having dinner. They were sending a page
to the dining room.'
'That's very good, Alex.'
'What's the matter with you? I told the clerk to call you and
explain. We were in a hurry; Latham said we had to get to the
warehouse… down on Crawford Street, by the docks… before they closed
the check-in books for the night.'
'That's not very good. You can do better.'
McAuliff saw that Alison was deadly serious. And angry. 'Why do you
say that?'
'The front desk did not call me; there was no explaining clerk.
. .' Alison pronounced the word 'clerk' in the American fashion,
exaggerating the difference from English speech. It was insulting. 'An
"assistant" of Mr Latham's telephoned. He wasn't very good, either. He
didn't know what to say when I asked to speak to Latham; he didn't
expect that… Did you know that Gerald Latham lives in the Barbican
district of Kingston? He's listed right in the telephone book.'
The girl stopped; the silence was strained. Alex spoke softly as he
made the statement. 'He was home.'
'He was home,' replied Alison. 'Don't worry. He didn't know who
called him. I spoke to a woman first, and when he got on the phone I
hung up.'
McAuliff inhaled a deep breath and reached into his shirt pocket for
his pack of cigarettes. He wasn't sure there was anything to say. 'I'm
sorry.'
'So am I,' she said quietly. 'I'll write you out a proper letter of
resignation in the morning. You'll have to accept a promissory note for
the airfare and whatever other expenses I'm liable for. I'll need what
money I have for a while. I'm sure I'll find a situation.'
'You can't do that.' McAuliff found himself saying the words with
strength, in utter conviction. And he knew why. Alison was perfectly
willing to leave the survey; she was going to leave it. If
her motive - or motives - for coming to Jamaica were not what she had
said they were, she would not do that. 'For Christ's sake, you can't
resign because I lied about a few hours! Damn it, Alison, I'm not
accountable to you!'
'Oh, stop behaving like a pompous, wounded ass! You don't do that
very well, either… I will not go through the labyrinth again;
I'm sick to death of it. No more, do you hear!' Suddenly her voice fell
and she caught her breath - and the fear was in her eyes. 'I can't
stand
it any longer.'
He stared at her. 'What do you mean?'
'You elaborately described a long interview with the Jamaican police
this afternoon. The station, the district, the officers… very detailed,
Alex. I called them after I hung up on Latham. They'd never heard of
you.'
SIXTEEN
He knew he had to go back to the beginning - to the very beginning
of the insanity. He had to tell her the truth. There was relief in
sharing it.
All of it. So it made sense, what sense there was to make.
He did.
And as he told the story, he found himself trying to understand all
over again. He spoke slowly, in a monotone actually; it was the drone
of a man speaking through the mists of confusion.
Of the strange message from Dunstone, Limited, that brought him to
London from New York, and a man named 'Julian Warfield.' Of a
'financial analyst' at the Savoy Hotel whose plastic card identified
him as 'Holcroft, R. C., British Intelligence.' The pressurized days of
living in two worlds that denied their own realities - the covert
training, the secret meetings, the vehicle transfers, the hiring of
survey personnel under basically false pretences. Of a panicked, weak
James Ferguson, hired to spy on the survey by a man named 'Arthur Craft
the Younger,' who was not satisfied being one of the richest men in
Jamaica. Of an arrogant Charles Whitehall, whose brilliance and
scholarship could not lift him above a fanatic devotion to an outworn,
outdated, dishonoured concept. Of an arthritic little islander, whose
French and African blood had strained its way into the Jamaican
aristocracy and MI5 by way of Eton and Oxford.
Of Sam Tucker's odd tale of the transformation of Walter Piersall,
anthropologist, converted by 'island fever' into a self-professed
guardian of his tropic sanctuary.
And finally of a shaven-headed guerrilla revolutionary named 'Barak
Moore.' And everyone's search for an 'unseen curia' called 'the
Halidon.'
Insanity. But all very, very real.
The sun sprayed its shafts of early light into the billowing grey
clouds above the Blue Mountains. McAuliff sat in the frame of the
balcony door; the wet scents of the Jamaican dawn came up from the
moist grounds and down from the tall palms, cooling his nostrils and so
his skin.
He was nearly finished now. They had talked - he had talked - for an
hour and forty-five minutes. There remained only the Marquis de
Chatellerault.
Alison was still in the bed, sitting up against the pillows. Her
eyes were tired, but she did not take them off him.
He wondered what she would say - or do - when he mentioned
Chatellerault. He was afraid.
'You're tired; so am I. Why don't I finish in the morning?'
'It is the morning.'
'Later, then.'
'I don't think so. I'd rather hear it all at once.'
'There isn't much more.'
'Then I'd say you saved the best for last. Am I right?' She could
not conceal the silent alarm she felt. She looked away from him, at the
light coming through the balcony doors. It was brighter now, that
strange admixture of pastel yellow and hot orange that is peculiar to
the Jamaican dawn.
'You know it concerns you…'
'Of course I know it. I knew it last night.' She returned her eyes
to him. 'I didn't want to admit it to myself… but I knew it. It was all
too tidy.'
'Chatellerault,' he said softly. 'He's here.'
'Oh, God,' she whispered.
'He can't touch you. Believe me.'
'He followed me. Oh my God…'
McAuliff got up and crossed to the bed. He sat on the edge and
gently stroked her hair. 'If I thought he could harm you, I never would
have told you. I'd simply have him… removed.' Oh, Christ,
thought Alex. How easily the new words came. Would he soon be using kill,
or eliminate!
'Right from the very start, it was all programmed. I was
programmed.' She stared at the balcony, allowing his hand to caress the
side of her face, as if oblivious to it. 'I should have realized; they
don't let you go that easily.'
'Who?'
'All of them, my darling,' she answered, taking his hand, holding it
to her lips. 'Whatever names you want to give them, it's not important.
The letters, the numbers, the official-sounding nonsense… I was warned,
I can't say I wasn't.'
'How?' He pulled her hand down, forcing her to look at him. 'How
were you warned? Who warned you?'
'In Paris one night. Barely three months ago. I'd finished the last
of my interviews at the… underground carnival, we called it.'
'Interpol?'
'Yes. I met a chap and his wife. In a waiting room, actually. It's
not supposed to happen; isolation is terribly important, but someone
got their rooms mixed up… They were English. We agreed to have a late
supper together… He was a Porsche automobile dealer from Macclesfield.
He and his wife were at the end of their tethers. He'd been recruited
because his dealership - the cars, you see - were being used to
transport stolen stock certificates from European exchanges. Every time
he thought he was finished, they found reasons for him to continue -
more often than not, without telling him. It was almost three years; he
was about out of his mind. They were going to leave England. Go to
Buenos Aires.'
'He could always say no. They couldn't force him.'
'Don't be naive, darling. Every name you learn is another hook, each
new method of operation you report is an additional notch in your
expertise.' Alison laughed sadly. 'You've travelled to the land of the
informer. You've got a stigmata all your own.'
'I'll tell you again: Chatellerault can't touch you.'
She paused before acknowledging his words, his anxiety. 'This may
sound strange to you, Alex. I mean, I'm not a brave person - no
brimfuls of courage for me - but I have no great fear of him. The
appalling thing… the fear is them. They wouldn't let me go.
No matter the promises, the
agreements, the guarantees. They couldn't resist. A file somewhere, or
a computer, was activated and came up with his name;
automatically mine appeared in a data bank. That was it: factor X
plus factor Y, subtotal - your life is not your own. It never
stops. You live with the fear all over again.'
Alex took her by the shoulders. 'There's no law, Alison. We can
pack; we can leave.'
'My darling, my darling… You can't. Don't you see? Not
that way. It's what's behind you: the agreements, the countless files
filled with words, your words… you can't deny them. You cross borders,
you need papers; you work, you need references. You drive a car or take
a plane or put money in a bank… They have all the weapons. You can't
hide. Not from them.'
McAuliff let go of her and stood up. He picked up the smooth, shiny
cylinder of gas from the bedside table and looked at the printing and
the inked date of issue. He walked aimlessly to the balcony doors and
instinctively breathed deeply; there was the faint, very faint, aroma
of vanilla with the slightest trace of a spice.
Bay rum and vanilla.
Jamaica.
'You're wrong, Alison. We don't have to hide. For a lot of reasons,
we have to finish what we've started; you're right about that. But
you're wrong about the conclusion. It does stop. It will stop.' He
turned back to her. 'Take my word for it.'
'I'd like to. I really would. I don't see how.'
'An old infantry game. Do unto others before they can do unto you.
The Holcrofts and the Interpols of this world use us because we're
afraid. We know what they can do to what we think are our well-ordered
lives. That's legitimate; they're bastards. And they'll admit it… But
have you ever thought about the magnitude of disaster we can cause them!
That's also legitimate, because we can be bastards, too. We'll play
this out - with armed guards on all our flanks. And when we're
finished, we'll be finished. With them.
Charles Whitehall sat in the chair, the tiny glass of Pernod on the
table beside him. It was six o'clock in the morning; he had not been to
bed. There was no point in trying to sleep; sleep would not come.
Two days on the island and the sores of a decade ago were disturbed.
He had not expected it; he had expected to control everything. Not be
controlled.
His enemy now was not the enemy - enemies - he had waited ten years
to fight: the rulers in Kingston; worse, perhaps, the radicals like
Barak Moore. It was a new enemy, every bit as despicable, and
infinitely more powerful, because it had the means to control his
beloved Jamaica.
Control by corruption; ultimately own… by possession.
He had lied to Alexander McAuliff. In Savanna-la-Mar, Chatellerault
openly admitted that he was part of the Trelawny Parish conspiracy.
British Intelligence was right. The marquis's wealth was intrinsic to
the development of the raw acreage on the north coast and in the Cock
Pit, and he intended to see that his investment was protected. Charles
Whitehall was his first line of protection, and if Charles Whitehall
failed, he would be destroyed. It was as simple as that. Chatellerault
was not the least obscure about it. He had sat opposite him and smiled
his thin Gallic smile and recited the facts… and names… of the covert
network Whitehall had developed on the island over the past decade.
He had capped his narrative with the most damaging information of
all: the timetable and the methods Charles and his political party
expected to follow on their road to power in Kingston.
The establishment of a military dictatorship with one, non-military
leader to whom all were subservient - the Praetorian of Jamaica was the
title, Charles Whitehall the man.
If Kingston knew these things… well, Kingston would react.
But Chatellerault made it clear that their individual objectives
were not necessarily in conflict. There were areas - philosophical,
political, financial - in which their interests might easily be merged.
But first came the activity on the north coast. That was immediate; it
was the springboard to everything else.
The marquis did not name his partners - Whitehall got the distinct
impression that Chatellerault was not entirely sure who they all were -
but it was manifestly clear that he did not trust them. On one level he
seemed to question motives, on another it was a matter of abilities. He
spoke briefly about previous interference and/or bungling, but did not
dwell on the facts.
The facts obviously concerned the first survey.
What had happened?
Was the Halidon responsible?
Was the Halidon capable of interference?
Did the Halidon really exist?
The Halidon.
He would have to analyse the anthropologist Piersall's papers;
separate a foreigner's exotic fantasies from island reality. There was
a time, ten years ago, when the Ras Tafarians were symbols of African
terror, before they were revealed to be children stoned on grass with
mud-caked hair and a collective desire to avoid work. And there were
the Pocomanians, with their bearded high priests inserting the sexual
orgy into the abstract generosities of the Christian ethic: a
socio-religious excuse for promiscuity. Or the Anansi sects -
inheritors of the long-forgotten Ashanti belief in the cunning of the
spider, on which all progress in life was patterned.
There were so many. So often metaphysically paranoid; so fragmented,
so obscure.
Was the Halidon - Hollydawn - any different?
At this juncture, for Charles Whitehall it didn't really matter.
What mattered was his own survival and the survival of his plans. His
aims would be accomplished by keeping Chatellerault at bay and
infiltrating the structure of Chatellerault's financial hierarchy.
And working with his first enemy, Barak Moore.
Working with both enemies.
Jamaica's enemies.
James Ferguson fumbled for the light switch on the bedside lamp. His
thrusts caused an ashtray and a glass to collide, sending both crashing
to the floor. Light was coming through the drawn curtains; he was
conscious of it in spite of the terrible pain in his eyes and through
his head, from temple to temple. Pain that caused flashes of darkness
to envelope his inner eye. He looked at his watch as he shaded his face
from the dim spill of the lamp. It was 6.15.
Oh, Christ! His head hurt so, tears welled in the far corners of his
eyes. Shafts of pain - sharp, immobilizing - shot down into his neck
and
seemed to constrict his shoulders, even his arms. His stomach was in a
state of tense, muscular suspension; if he thought about it, he knew he
would be sick and vomit.
There was no pretence regarding the amount of alcohol he had
consumed last night. McAuliff could not accuse him of play-acting now.
He had gotten drunk. Very drunk. And with damn good reason.
He had been elated.
Arthur Craft had telephoned him in panic. In panic
Craft the Younger had been caught. McAuliff had found the room where
the taping was being done and beaten someone up, physically beaten
him up! Craft had yelled over the telephone, demanding where
McAuliff had got his name.
Not from him! Certainly not from Jimbo-mon. He had said nothing.
Craft had roared, swearing at the goddamned nigger on the tape
machine, convinced the black fucker had confessed to McAuliff, adding
that the goddamned nigger would never get near a courtroom.
'If it came to that.' If it came to that.
'You never saw me,' Craft the Younger had screamed. 'We
never talked! We didn't meet! You get that absolutely clear, you shaky
son of a bitch!'
'Of course… of course, Mr Craft,' he had replied. 'But then, sir… we
did talk, didn't we? This doesn't have to change anything.'
He had been petrified, but he had said the words. Quietly, with no
great emphasis. But his message had been clear.
Arthur Craft, Junior, was in an awkward position. Craft the Younger
should not be yelling; he should be polite. Perhaps even solicitous.
After all, they had talked…
Craft understood. The understanding was first indicated by his
silence, then confirmed by his next statement.
'We'll be in touch.'
It had been so simple. And if Craft the Younger wanted it different,
wanted things as they were not, well, Craft controlled an enormously
wealthy foundation. Certainly he could find something for a very, very
talented botanist.
When he hung up the telephone last night, James had felt a wave of
calm come over him. The sort of quiet confidence he experienced in a
laboratory, where his eye and mind were very sure indeed.
He would have to be cautious, but he could do it.
He had gotten drunk when he realized that.
And now his head and stomach were in pain. But he could stand them;
they were bearable now. Things were going to be different.
He looked at his watch. His goddamn Timex. It was 6.25. A cheap
watch, but accurate.
Instead of a Timex there might be a Piaget Chronometer in his
future. And new, very expensive camera equipment. And a real bank
balance.
And a new life.
If he was cautious.
The telephone rang on Peter Jensen's side of the bed, but his wife
heard it first.
'Peter… Peter! For heaven's sake, the phone.'
'What?… What, old girl?' Peter Jensen blinked his eyes; the room was
dark, but there was daylight beyond the drawn curtains.
The telephone rang again. Short bursts of bell; the kind of rapid
blasts hotel switchboards practice. Nimble fingers, irritated guests.
Peter Jensen reached over and switched on the light. The travelling
clock read ten minutes to eight.
Again the shrill bell, now steady.
'Damn!' sputtered Peter as he realized the instrument was beyond the
lamp, requiring him to reach farther. 'Yes, yes! Hello?'
'Mr Peter Jensen, please?' said the unfamiliar male voice.
'Yes. What is it? This is Jensen.'
'Cable-International, Mr Jensen. A wire arrived for you several
minutes ago. From London. Shall I read it? It's marked urgent, sir.'
'No!' replied Peter quickly, firmly. 'No, don't do that. I've been
expecting it; it's rather long, I should think.'
'Yes, sir, it is.'
'Just send it over right away, if you please. Can you do that? The
Courtleigh Manor. Room 401. It won't be necessary to stop at the desk.'
'I understand, Mr Jensen. Right away. There'll be a charge for an
unscheduled—'
'Of course, of course,' interrupted Peter. 'Just send it over,
please.'
'Yes, sir.'
Twenty-five minutes later, the messenger from Cable-International
arrived. Moments before, room service had wheeled in a breakfast of
melon, tea, and scones. Peter Jensen opened the two-page cablegram and
spread it out over the linen cloth on his side of the table. There was
a pencil in his hand.
Across from him, Ruth held up a page of paper, scanning it over the
rim of her cup. She, too, had a pencil, at the side of the saucer.
The company name is "Parkhurst,"' said Peter.
'Check,' said Ruth, putting down her tea. She placed the paper
alongside, picked up the pencil, and made a mark on the page.
'The address is "Sheffield By The Glen."' Peter looked over at her.
'Go ahead,' replied Ruth, making a second notation.
'The equipment to be inspected is microscopes.'
'Very well.' Ruth made a third mark on the left of the page, went
back to her previous notes, and then darted her eyes to the bottom
right. 'Are you ready?'
'Yes.'
Ruth Wells Jensen, palaeontologist, proceeded to recite a series of
numbers. Her husband started at the top of the body of the cablegram
and began circling words with his pencil. Several times he asked his
wife to repeat a number. As she did so, he counted from the previous
circle and circled another word.
Three minutes later, they had finished the exercise. Peter Jensen
swallowed some tea and reread the cablegram to himself. His wife spread
jam on two scones and covered the teapot with the cozy.
'Warfield is flying over next week. He agrees. McAuliff has been
reached.'
PART THREE
The North Coast
SEVENTEEN
Holcroft's words kept coming back to McAuliff: You'll find it
quite acceptable to operate on different levels. Actually, it evolves
rather naturally, even instinctively. You'll discover that you tend to
separate your concentrations.
The British Intelligence agent had been right. The survey was in its
ninth day, and Alex found that for hours at a time he had no other
thoughts but the immediate work at hand.
The equipment had been trucked from Boscobel Airfield straight
through to Puerto Seco, on Discovery Bay. Alex, Sam Tucker, and Alison
Booth flew into Ocho Rios ahead of the others and allowed themselves
three days of luxury at the San Souci while McAuliff ostensibly hired a
crew - two of the five of which had been agreed upon in an isolated
farmhouse high in the hills of the Blue Mountains. Alex found - as he'd
expected - that Sam and Alison got along extremely well. Neither was
difficult to like; each possessed an easy humour, both were
professionals. And there was no reason to conceal from Sam the fact
that they were lovers. As Tucker phrased it: 'I'd be shocked if you
weren't, Alexander.'
Sam's approval was important to McAuliff. For at no time was Alison
to be left alone when he was away. Under no circumstances. Ever.
Sam Tucker was the ideal protective escort. Far superior to himself,
Alex realized. Tuck was the most resourceful man he had ever known, and
just about the hardest. He had within him an aggressiveness that when
called upon was savage. He was not a man to have as an enemy. Alison
was as safe as a human being could be in his care.
The fourth day had been the first day of the survey work. The team
was housed halfway between Puerto Seco and Rio Bueno Harbour, in a
pleasant beach motel called Bengal Court. Work began shortly after six
in the morning.
The initial objective of the survey was to plot the coastline
definitely. Alex and Sam Tucker operated the equipment.
Azimuths were shot along the shoreline, recorded by transit cameras.
The angular degree demarcations were correlated with the coastal charts
provided by the Jamaican Institute. By and large, these charts were
sectional and imperfect, acceptable for the details of road maps and
small-craft navigation, but inadequate for geophysical purposes. To set
up accurate perimeters, McAuliff employed sonic geodometers which
bounced sound waves back and forth between instruments, giving what
amounted to perfect bearings. Each contour, each elevation was recorded
on both sonic graphs and transit cameras.
These chores were dull, laborious, and sweat-provoking under the hot
sun. The single relief was the constant presence of Alison, as much as
she herself objected to it. Alex was adamant, however. He instructed
Barak Moore's two men to stay within a hundred yards of her at all
times, and then commanded Alison not to stroll out of his sight.
It was an impossible demand, and McAuliff realized he could not
prolong it more than a few days. Alison had work to do; minor over the
coastal area, a great deal once they started inland. But all beginnings
were awkward under pressure; he could not separate this particular
concentration that easily, nor did he wish to. Very rapidly your own personal antennae will be activated
automatically. Their function will be second nature, as it were. You
will fall into a rhythm, actually. It is the connecting link between
your divided objectives. You will recognize it and build a degree of
confidence in the process.
Holcroft.
But not during the first few days; there was no confidence to speak
of. He did grant, however, that the fear was lessening… partially,
imperceptibly. He thought this was due to the constant physical
activity and the fact that he could require such men as Sam
and Barak Moore's 'special forces' to take up posts around Alison. And
at any given moment he could turn his head and there she was - on the
beach, in a small boat - chipping rocks, instructing one of the crew in
the manipulation of a drill bore.
But, again, were not all these his antennae? And was not the
lessening of fear the beginnings of confidence? R. C. Holcroft. Supercilious son of a bitch. Manipulator.
Speaker of truths.
But not the whole truth.
The areas bordering Braco Beach were hazardous. Sheets of coral
overlay extended hundreds of yards out into the surf. McAuliff and Sam
Tucker crawled over the razor-sharp miniature hills of ocean polyps and
set up their geodometers and cameras. Both men incurred scores of minor
cuts, sore muscles, and sorer backs.
That was the third day, marked by the special relief of Alison's
somehow commandeering a fisherman's flat-bottom boat and, with her two
'escorts,' bringing a picnic lunch of cold chicken out to the reef.
It was a comfortable hour on the most uncomfortable picnic grounds
imaginable.
The black revolutionary, Floyd, who had guided the boat into its
precarious coral mooring, succinctly observed that the beach was
flatter and far less wet.
'But then they'd have to crawl all the way out here again,' Alison
had replied, holding onto her wide-brimmed cloth sun hat.
'Mon, you have a good woman!' This observation came from Floyd's
companion, the huge, quiet Negro named Lawrence…
The five of them perched - there was no other description - on the
highest ridges of the coral jetty, the spray cascading up from the base
of the reef, creating faint rainbow prisms of colour in its mist. Far
out on the water two freighters were passing each other, one heading
for the open sea, the second aiming for the bauxite docks east of
Runaway Bay. A luxurious cabin cruiser rigged for deep-sea fishing
sliced through the swells several hundred yards in front of them, the
passengers pointing in astonishment at the strange sight of five humans
picnicking on a reef.
McAuliff watched the others respond to the cruiser's surprised
riders. Sam Tucker stood up, gestured at the coral, and yelled,
'Diamonds!'
Floyd and Lawrence, their black, muscular bodies bared to the waist,
roared at Sam's antics. Lawrence pried loose a coral stone and held it
up, then chucked it to Tucker, who caught it and shouted again, 'Twenty
carats!'
Alison, her bluejeans and light field blouse drenched with the
spray, joined in the foolish game. She elaborately accepted the coral
stone, presented by Sam, and held it on top of her outstretched hand as
though it were a jewelled ring of great value. A short burst of breeze
whipped across the reef; Alison dropped the stone in an effort to hold
her hat, whose brim had caught the wind. She was not successful; the
hat glided off and disappeared over a small mound of coral. Before Alex
could rise and go after it, Lawrence was on his feet, dashing
sure-footedly over the rocks and down towards the water. Within seconds
he had the hat, now soaked, and effortlessly leaped back up from the
water's edge and handed it to Alison.
The incident had taken less than ten seconds.
'You keep the hat on the head, Miss Aleesawn. Them sun
very hot; roast skin like cooked chicken, mon.'
'Thank you, Lawrence,' said Alison gratefully, securing the wet hat
over her head. 'You run across this reef as though it were a golf
green!'
'Lawrence is a fine caddy, Miss Alison,' said Floyd smiling, still
sitting. 'At the Negril Golf Club he is a favourite, is that not so,
Lawrence?'
Lawrence grinned and glanced at McAuliff knowingly. 'Eh, mon. At
Negril they all the time ask for me. I cheat good, mon. Alia time I
move them golf balls out of bad places to the smooth grass. I think
everybody know. Alia time ask for Lawrence.'
Sam Tucker chuckled as he sat down again. 'Alia time big goddamn
tips, I'd say.'
'Plenty good tips, mon,' agreed Lawrence.
'And probably something more,' added McAuliff, looking at Floyd and
remembering the exclusive reputation of the Negril Golf Club. 'Alia
time plenty of information.'
'Yes, mon.' Floyd smiled conspiratonally. 'It is as they say: The
rich Westmorelanders talk a great deal during their games of golf.'
Alex fell silent. It seemed strange, the whole scene. Here they
were, the five of them, eating cold chicken on a coral reef three
hundred yards from shore, playing children's games with passing cabin
cruisers and joking casually about the surreptitious gathering of
information on a golf course.
Two black revolutionaries - recruits from a band of hill country
guerrillas. A late-middle aged 'soldier of fortune'. (Sam Tucker would
object to the cliche, but if it was ever applicable, he was the
applicant.) A strikingly handsome… lovely English divorcee whose
background just happened to include undercover work for an
international police organization. And one thirty-eight year old
ex-infantryman who six weeks ago flew to London thinking he was going
to negotiate a geological survey contract.
The five of them. Each knowing that he was not what he appeared to
be; each doing what he was doing… she was doing… because there were no
alternatives. Not really.
It wasn't strange; it was insane.
And it struck McAuliff once again that he was the least qualified
among these people, under the circumstances. Yet because of the
circumstances - having nothing to do with qualifications - he was their
leader. Insanity.
By the seventh day, working long hours with few breaks, Alex and Sam
had charted the coastline as far as Burwood, five miles from the mouth
of the Martha Brae, their western perimeter. The Jensens and James
Ferguson kept a leisurely parallel pace, setting up tables with
microscopes, burners, vials, scales, and chemicals as they went about
their work. None found anything exceptional, nor did they expect to in
the coastal regions. The areas had been studied fairly extensively for
industrial and resort purposes; there was nothing of consequence not
previously recorded. And since Ferguson's botanical analyses were
closely allied with Sam Tucker's soil evaluations, Ferguson volunteered
to make the soil
tests, freeing Tucker to finish the topographies with Alex.
These were the geophysical concerns. There was something else, and
none could explain it.
It was first reported by the Jensens.
A sound. Only a sound. A low wail or cry that seemed to follow them
throughout an entire afternoon.
When they first heard it, it came from the underbrush beyond the
dunes. They thought that perhaps it was an animal in pain. Or a small
child in some horrible anguish, an agony that went beyond a child's
tears.
In a very real sense, it was terrifying.
So the Jensens raced beyond the dunes into the underbrush, thrashing
at the tangled foliage to find the source of the dreadful, frightening
cry.
They had found nothing.
The animal or the child, or whatever it was, had fled.
Shortly thereafter - late in the same afternoon - James Ferguson
came running down to the beach, his face an expression of bewildered
panic. He had been tracing a giant mollusk fern to its root source; the
trek had taken him up into a rocky precipice above the shore. He had
been in the centre of the overhanging vines and maccafats when a
vibration - at first a vibration - caused his whole body to tremble.
There followed a wild, piercing screech, both high-pitched yet full,
that pained his ears beyond - he said -endurance.
He had gripped the vines to keep from plummeting off the precipice.
Terrified, he had scrambled down hysterically to firmer ground and
raced back to the others.
James had not been more than a few hundred yards away.
Yet none but he had heard the terrible thing.
Whitehall had another version of the madness. The black scholar had
been walking along the shoreline, half sand, half forest, of Bengal
Bay. It was an aimless morning constitutional; he had no destination
other than the point, perhaps.
About a mile east of the motel's beach, he rested briefly on a large
rock overlooking the water. He heard a noise from behind, and so he
turned, expecting to see a bird or a mongoose fluttering or scampering
in the woods.
There was nothing.
He turned back to the lapping water beneath him, when suddenly there
was an explosion of sound - sustained, hollowlike, a dissonant
cacophony of wind.
And then it stopped.
Whitehall had gripped the rock and stared into the forest. At
nothing.
Aware only that he was afflicted with a terrible pain in his temples.
But Charles was a scholar, and a scholar was a sceptic. He had
concluded that, somewhere in the forest, an enormous unseen tree had
collapsed from the natural weight of ages. In its death fall, the tons
of ripping, scraping wood-against-wood within the huge trunk had caused
the phenomenon.
And none was convinced.
As Whitehall told his story, McAuliff watched him. He did not think
Charles believed it himself.
Things not explicable had occurred, and they were all - if nothing
else - scientists of the physical. The explainable.
Perhaps they all took comfort in Whitehall's theory of sonics.
Alexander thought, so; they could not dwell on it. There was work to do. Divided objectives.
Alison thought she had found something, and with Floyd's and
Lawrence's help she made a series of deep bores arcing the beaches and
coral jetties. Her samplings showed that there were strata of soft
lignite interspersed throughout the limestone beds on the ocean floor.
Geologically it was easily explained: Hundreds of thousands of years
ago, volcanic disturbances swallowed whole land masses of wood and
pulp. Regardless of explanations, however, if there were plans to sink
pilings for piers or even extended docks, the construction firms were
going to have to add to their base supports.
Alison's concentrations were a relief to McAuliff. She was absorbed,
and so complained less about his restrictions, and, more important, he
was able to observe Floyd and Lawrence as they went about the business
of watching over her. The two blacks were extremely thorough. And
gracefully subtle. Whenever Alison wandered along the beach or up into
the shore grass, one or both had her flanked or preceded or followed.
They were like stalking panthers prepared to spring, yet they did not
in their tracking call attention to themselves. They seemed to become
natural appendages, always carrying something - binoculars, sampling
boxes, clipboards… whatever was handy - to divert any zeroing in on
their real function.
And during the nights, McAuliff found a protective bonus he had
neither asked for nor expected: Floyd and Lawrence alternated patrols
around the lawns and in the corridors of the Bengal Court motel. Alex
discovered this on the night of the eighth day, when he got up at four
in the morning to get himself a plastic bucket of ice from the machine
down the hall. He wanted ice water.
As he turned the corner into the outside alcove where the machine
was situated, he was suddenly aware of a figure behind the latticework
that fronted the lawn. The figure had moved quickly; there had been no
sound of footsteps.
McAuliff rapidly scooped the cubes into the small bucket, closed the
metal door, and walked back around the corner into the hallway. The
instant he was out of sight, he silently placed the ice at his feet and
pressed his back against the wall's edge.
There was movement.
McAuliff whipped around the corner, with every intention of hurling
himself at whoever came into view. His fists were clenched, his spring
accurate; he lunged into the figure of Lawrence. It was too late to
regain his footing.
'Eh, mon! cried the black softly as he recoiled and fell
back under Alex's weight. Both men rolled out of the alcove onto the
lawn.
'Christ!' whispered McAuliff, next to Lawrence on the ground. 'What
the hell are you doing here?'
Lawrence smiled in the darkness; he shook his hand, which had been
pinned by Alex under his back. 'You're a big fella, mon! You pretty
quick, too.'
'I was pretty damned excited… What are you doing out here?'
Lawrence explained briefly, apologetically. He and Floyd had made an
arrangement with the night watchman, an old fisherman who prowled
around at night with a shotgun neither guerrilla believed he knew how
to use. Barak Moore had ordered them to stand evening patrols; they
would have done so whether commanded to or not, said Lawrence.
'When do you sleep?'
'Sleep good, mon,' replied Lawrence. 'We take turns all
the time.'
Alex returned to his room. Alison sat up in bed when he closed the
door.
'Is everything all right?' she asked apprehensively.
'Better than I expected. We've got our own miniature army. We're
fine.'
On the afternoon of the ninth day, McAuliff and Tucker reached the
Martha Brae River. The geodometer charts and transit photographs were
sealed hermetically and stored in the cool vaults of the equipment
truck. Peter Jensen gave his summary of the coastal ore and mineral
deposits; his . wife, Ruth, had found traces of plant fossils embedded
in the coral, but her findings were of little value, and James
Ferguson, covering double duty in soil and flora, presented his
unstartling analyses. Only Alison's discovery of the lignite strata was
unexpected.
All reports were to be driven into Ocho Rios for duplication.
McAuliff said he would do this himself; it had been a difficult nine
days, and the tenth was a day off.
Those who wanted to go into Ochee could come with him; the others
could go to Montego or laze around the Bengal Court beach, as they
preferred. The survey would resume on the morning of the eleventh day.
They made their respective plans on the river bank, with the
inevitable picnic lunches put up by the motel. Only Charles Whitehall,
who had done little but lie around the beach, knew precisely
what he wanted to do, and he could not state it publicly. He spoke to
Alex alone.
'I really must see Piersall's papers. Quite honestly,
McAuliff, it's been driving me crazy.'
'We wait for Moore. We agreed to that.'
'When? For heaven's sake, when will he show up? It will be ten days
tomorrow; he said ten days.'
'There were no guarantees. I'm as anxious as you. There's an
oilcloth packet buried somewhere on his property, remember?'
'I haven't forgotten for an instant.' Separation of concentrations; divided objectives.
Holcroft.
Charles Whitehall was as concerned academically as he was
conspiratorially. Perhaps more so, thought Alex. The black scholar's
curiosity was rooted in a lifetime of research.
The Jensens remained at Bengal Court. Ferguson requested an advance
from McAuliff and hired a taxi to drive him into Montego Bay. McAuliff,
Sam Tucker, and Alison Booth drove the truck to Ocho Rios. Charles
Whitehall followed in an old station wagon with Floyd and Lawrence; the
guerillas insisted that the arrangements be thus.
Barak Moore lay in the tall grass, binoculars to his eyes. It was
sundown; rays of orange and yellow light filtered through the green
trees above him and bounced off the white stone of Walter Piersall's
house, four hundred yards away. Through the grass he saw the figures of
the Trelawny Parish police circling the house, checking the windows and
the doors; they would leave at least one man on watch. As usual.
The police had finished the day's investigation, the longest
investigation, thought Barak, in the history of the parish. They had
been at it nearly two weeks. Teams of civilians had come up from
Kingston: men in pressed clothes, which meant they were more than
police.
They would find nothing, of that Barak Moore was certain.
If Walter Piersall had accurately described his caches.
And Barak could not wait any longer. It would be a simple matter to
retrieve the oilcloth packet - he was within a hundred and fifty yards
of it at the moment - but it was not that simple. He needed Charles
Whitehall's total cooperation - more than Whitehall realized - and that
meant he had to get inside Piersall's house and bring out the rest of
Piersall's legacy. The anthropologist's papers. The papers. They were cemented in the wall of an old,
unused cistern in Piersall's basement.
Walter Piersall had carefully removed several cistern blocks, dug
recesses in the earth beyond, and replaced the stones. It was in one of
these recesses that he had buried his studies of the Halidon.
Charles Whitehall would not help unless he saw those papers. Barak
needed Charley-mon's help.
The Trelawny police got into their vehicles; a single uniformed
guard waved as the patrol cars started down the road.
He, Barak, the people's revolutionary, had to work with Whitehall,
the political criminal. Their own war - perhaps a civil war - would
come
later, as it had in so many new lands.
First, there was the white man. And his money and his companies and
his unending thirst for the sweat of the black man. That was first,
very much first, mon!
Barak's thoughts had caused him to stare blindly into the
binoculars. The guard was nowhere in sight now. Moore scanned the area,
refocusing the Zeiss Ikon lenses as he covered the sides and the
sloping back lawn of Piersalls house. It was a comfortable white man's
home, thought Barak.
It was on top of a hill, the entrance road a long climb from
George's Valley to the west and the Martha Brae to the east. Mango
trees, palms, hibiscus, and orchids lined the entrance and surrounded
the one-and-a-half-storeyed white stone structure. The house was long,
most of the wide, spacious rooms on the first floor. There was black
iron grillework everywhere, across the windows and over the door
entrances. The only glass was in the second-floor bedrooms; all the
windows had teak shutters.
The rear of High Hill, as the house was called, was the most
striking. To the east of the old pasture of high grass, where Barak
lay, the gently sloping back lawn had been carved out of the forests
and the fields, seeded with a Caribbean fescue that was as smooth as a
golf course; the rocks, painted a shiny white, gave the appearance of
whitecaps in a green sea.
In the centre of the area was a medium-sized pool, installed by
Piersall, with blue and white tiles that reflected the sun as sharply
as the blue-green water in it. Around the pool and spreading out over
the grass were tables and chairs - white wrought iron - delicate in
appearance, sturdy in design.
The guard came into view again, and Moore caught his breath, as much
in astonishment as in anger. The guard was playing with a dog, a
vicious-looking Doberman. There had been no dogs before. It was a bad
thing, thought Barak… yet, perhaps, not so bad. The presence of the dog
probably meant that this policeman would stay alone at his post longer
than the normal time span. It was a police custom to leave dogs with
men for two reasons: because the district they patrolled was dangerous,
or because the men would remain for a relatively long time at their
watches. Dogs served several purposes; they were alarms, they
protected, and they helped pass the hours.
The guard threw a stick; the Doberman raced beyond the pool, nearly
crashing into a wrought-iron table, and snatched it up in his mouth.
Before the dog could bring it back the policeman threw another stick,
bewildering the Doberman, who dropped the first retrieval and went
after the second.
He is a stupid man, thought Barak, watching the laughing guard. He
did not know animals, and a man who did not know animals was a man who
could be trapped.
He would be trapped tonight.
EIGHTEEN
It was a clear night. The Jamaican moon - three-quarters of it -
shone brightly between the high banks of the river. They had poled a
stolen bamboo raft down the rushing waters of the Martha Brae until
they had reached the point of shortest distance to the house in Carrick
Foyle. They manoeuvred the raft into a pitch-black recess and pulled it
out of the water, hiding it under cascading umbrellas of full-leaved
mangroves and maiden palms.
They were the raiding party: Barak, Alex, Floyd and Whitehall. Sam
Tucker and Lawrence had stayed at Bengal Court to protect Alison.
They crept up the slope through the dense, ensnaring foliage. The
slope was steep, the travelling slow and painfully difficult. The
distance to the High Hill property was no more than a mile - perhaps a
mile and a quarter - but it took the four of them nearly an hour to
reach it. Charles Whitehall thought the route was foolish. If there was
one guard and one dog, why not drive to the road below the winding,
half-mile entrance and simply walk up to the outer gates?
Barak's reasoning held more sophistication than Whitehall conceded
to the Trelawny police. Moore thought it possible that the parish
authorities had set up electronic tripwires along the entrance drive.
Barak knew that such instruments had been in use in Montego Bay,
Kingston, and Port Antonio hotels for months. They could not take the
chance of setting one off.
Breathing heavily, they stood at the southern border of Piersall's
sloping lawn and looked up at the house called 'High Hill'. The moon's
illumination on the white stone made the house stand out like an
alabaster monument, still, peaceful, graceful, and solid. Light spilled
out of the teak shutters in two areas of the house: the downstairs back
room opening onto the lawn and the centre bedroom on the second floor.
All else was in darkness.
Except the underwater spotlights in the pool. A slight breeze caused
ripples on the water; the bluish light danced from underneath.
'We must draw him out,' said Barak. 'Him and the dog, mon.'
'Why? What's the point?' asked McAuliff, the sweat from the climb
rolling down into his eyes. 'He's one, we're four.'
'Moore is right,' answered Charles Whitehall. 'If there are
electronic devices outside, then certainly he has the equivalent
within.'
'He would have a police radio, at any rate, mon,' interjected Floyd.
'I know those doors; by the time we broke one down, he would have time
- easy to reach others'
'It's a half hour from Falmouth; the police are in Falmouth,'
pressed Alex. 'We'd be in and out by then.'
'Not so, mon,' argued Barak. 'It will take us a while to select and
pry loose the cistern stones… We'll dig up the oilcloth packet first.
Come!'
Barak Moore led them around the edge of wooded property, to the
opposite side, into the old grazing field. He shielded the glass of his
flashlight with his fingers and raced to a cluster of breadfruit trees
at the northern end of the rock-strewn pasture. He crouched at the
trunk of the farthest tree; the others did the same. Barak spoke
- whispered.
'Talk quietly. These hill-winds carry voices. The packet is buried
in the earth forty-four paces to the right of the fourth large rock on
a northwest diagonal from this tree.'
'He was a man who knew Jamaica,' said Whitehall softly.
'How do you mean?' McAuliff saw the grim smile on the scholar's face
in the moonlight.
'The Arawak symbols for a warrior's death march were in units of
four, always to the right of the setting sun.'
'That's not very comforting,' said Alex.
'Like your American Indians,' replied Whitehall, 'the Arawaks were
not comforted by the white man.'
'Neither were the Africans, Charley-mon.' Barak locked eyes with
Whitehall in the moonlight. 'Sometimes I think you forget that.' He
addressed McAuliff and Floyd. 'Follow me. In a line.'
They ran in crouched positions through the tall grass behind the
black revolutionary, each man slapping a large prominent rock as he
came upon it. One, two, three, four.
At the fourth rock, roughly a hundred and fifty yards from the base
of the breadfruit tree, they knelt around the stone. Barak cupped his
flashlight and shone it on the top. There was a chiselled marking,
barely visible. Whitehall bent over it.
'Your Dr Piersall had a progressive imagination; progressive in the
historical sense. He's jumped from Arawak to Coromantee. See?'
Whitehall traced his index finger over the marking under the beam of
the flashlight and continued softly. 'This twisted crescent is an
Ashanti moon the Coromantees used to leave a trail for members of the
tribe perhaps two or three days behind in a hunt. The chips on the
convex side of the crescent determine the direction: one - to the left;
two - to the right. Their placement on the rim shows the angle. Here:
two chips, dead centre; therefore, directly to the right of the stone
facing the base of the crescent.' Whitehall gestured with his right
hand northeast.
'As Piersall instructed.' Barak nodded his head; he did not bother
to conceal his pique at Charley-mon's explanation. Yet there was
respect in that pique, thought McAuliff, as he watched Moore begin
pacing off the forty-four steps.
Piersall had disguised the spot chosen for burial. There was a
thicket of mollusk ferns spreading out in a free-form spray within the
paced-off area of the grass. They had been rerooted expertly; it was
illogical to assume any sort of digging had taken place there in years.
Floyd took a knapsack shovel from his belt, unfolded the stem, and
began removing the earth. Charles Whitehall bent down on his knees and
joined the revolutionary, clawing at the dirt with his bare hands.
The rectangular black box was deep in the ground. Had not the
instructions been so precise, the digging might have stopped-before
reaching it. The depth was over three feet. Whitehall suspected it was
exactly four feet when deposited. The Arawak unit of four.
The instant Floyd's small shovel struck the metal casing, Whitehall
lashed his right hand down, snatched the box out of the earth, and
fingered the edges, trying to pry it apart. It was not possible and
Whitehall realized it within seconds. He had used this type of
receptacle perhaps a thousand times: It was a hermetically sealed
archive case whose soft, rubberized edges created a vacuum within. It
had two locks, one at each end, with separate keys; once the keys were
inserted and turned, air was allowed in, and after a period of minutes
the box could be forced open. It was the sort of repository used in the
most heavily endowed libraries to house old manuscripts, manuscripts
that were studied by scholars no more than once every five years or so
and thus preserved with great care. The name 'archive case' was well
suited for documents in archives for a millennium.
'Give me the keys!' whispered Charles urgently to Barak.
'I have no keys, mon. Piersall said nothing about keys.' 'Damn'
'Keep quiet!' ordered McAuliff.
'Put that dirt back,' said Moore to Floyd. 'So it is not so obvious,
mon. Push back the ferns.'
Floyd did as he was told; McAuliff helped him. Whitehall stared at
the rectangular box in his hands; he was furious.
'He was paranoid!' whispered the scholar, turning to Barak. 'You
said it was a packet. An oilcloth packet! Not this. This will take a
blowtorch to open!'
'Charley's got a point,' said Alex, shovelling in dirt with his
hands, realizing that he had just called Whitehall 'Charley.'
'Why did
he go to this trouble? Why didn't he just put the box with the rest of
the papers in the cistern?'
'You ask questions I cannot answer, mon. He was very concerned,
that's all I can tell you.'
The dirt was back in the hole. Floyd smoothed out the surface and
pushed the roots of the mollusk ferns into the soft earth. That will
do, I think, mon,' he said, folding the stem of the shovel and
replacing it in his belt.
'How are we going to get inside?' asked McAuliff. 'Or get the guard
outside?'
'I have thought of this for several hours,' replied Barak. 'Wild
pigs, I think.'
'Very good, mon!' interrupted Floyd.
'In the pool?' added Whitehall knowingly.
'Yes.'
'What the hell are you talking about?' Alex watched the faces of the
three blacks in the moonlight.
Barak answered. 'In the Cock Pit there are many wild pigs. They are
vicious and troublesome. We are perhaps ten miles from the Cock Pit's
borders. It is not unusual for pigs to stray this far… Floyd and I will
imitate the sounds. You and Charley-mon throw rocks into the pool.'
'What about the dog?' asked Whitehall. 'You'd better shoot it.'
'No shooting, mon! Gunfire would be heard for miles. I will take
care of the dog.' Moore withdrew a small anaesthetizing dart gun from
his pocket. 'Our arsenal contains many of these. Come.'
Five minutes later McAuliff thought he was part of some demonic
children's charade. Barak and Floyd had crept to the edge of the tall
grass bordering the elegant lawn. On the assumption that the Doberman
would head directly to the first human smell, Alex and Whitehall were
in parallel positions ten feet to the right of the revolutionaries, a
pile of stones between them. They were to throw the rocks as accurately
as possible into the lighted pool sixty feet away at the first sounds
emanating from Moore and his comrade.
It began.
The shrieks intruded on the stillness of the night with terrible
authenticity. They were the bellows of panicked beasts, shrill and
somehow horrible. 'Eeeowahhee… gnnrahha, gnnrahhaaa… eeaww, eeaww… eeeowahhee…""
McAuliff and Whitehall lobbed rocks into the pool; the splashes were
interspersed with the monstrous shrieks. A weird cacophony filled the
air.
The shutters from the first floor room were thrown open. The guard
could be seen behind the grillework, a rifle in his hand.
Suddenly a stone hit Alex's cheek. The blow was gentle, not
stunning. He whipped his head towards the direction of the throw. Floyd
was waving his arm in the tall grass, commanding McAuliff to stop
hurling the rocks. Alex grabbed Whitehall's hand. They stopped.
The shrieks then became louder, accompanied by blunt thuds of
pounding earth. Alex could see Barak and Floyd in the moonlight. They
were slapping the ground like crazed animals; the horrible noises
coming from their shaking heads reached a crescendo.
Wild pigs fighting in the high grass.
The door of Piersall's house crashed open. The guard, rifle in hand,
released the dog at his side. The animal lurched out onto the lawn and
raced towards the hysterical sounds and all-too-human odours.
McAuliff knelt, hypnotized by what followed in the Jamaican
moonlight. Barak and Floyd scrambled back into the field without
raising their bodies above the grass and without diminishing the pitch
of their animal screams. The Doberman streaked across the lawn and
sprang headlong over the border of the field and into the tall grass.
The continuing shrieks and guttural roars were joined by the savage
barking of the vicious dog. And, amid the terrible sounds, Alex could
distinguish a series of spits; the dart gun was being fired repeatedly.
A yelping howl suddenly drowned out the man-made bellowing; the
guard ran to the edge of the lawn, his rifle raised to fire. And before
McAuliff could absorb or understand the action, Charles Whitehall
grabbed a handful of rocks and threw them towards the lighted pool. And
then, a second handful hard upon the first.
The guard spun around to the water; Whitehall slammed Alex out of
the way, raced along the edge of the grass, and suddenly leaped out on
the lawn at the black patrolman.
McAuliff watched, stunned.
Whitehall, the elegant academic - the delicately boned Charley-mon -
lashed his arm out into the base of the guard's neck, crashed his foot
savagely into the man's midsection, and seized a wrist, twisting it
violently so that the rifle flew out of the guard's hands; the man
jerked off his feet, spun into the air, and whipped to the ground. As
the guard vibrated off the grass, Whitehall took swift aim and crashed
his heel into the man's skull below his forehead.
The body contorted, then lay still.
The shrieking stopped; all was silent.
It was over.
Barak and Floyd raced out from the high grass onto the lawn. Barak
spoke.
'Thank you, Charley-mon. Indiscriminate gunfire might have found us.'
'It was necessary,' replied Whitehall simply. 'I must see those
papers.'
'Then let us go,' said Barak Moore. 'Floyd, take this real pig
inside; tie him up somewhere.'
'Don't waste time,' countered Whitehall, starting for the house, the
receptacle under his arm. 'Just throw him into the grass. He's dead.'
Inside, Floyd led them to the cellar stairs and down into Piersall's
basement. The cistern was in the west section, about six feet deep and
five wide. The walls were dry; cobwebs laced the sides and the top.
Barak brushed aside the filmy obstructions and lowered himself into the
pit.
'How do you know which are the blocks?' asked Whitehall urgently,
the black rectangular box clasped in his hand.
'There is a way; the Doctor explained,' replied Moore, taking out a
small box of safety matches. He struck one and stared at the north
centre line, revolving slowly clock-wise, holding the lighted match
against the cracks in the blocks on the lower half of the pit.
'Ground phosphorus,' stated Whitehall quietly. 'Packed into the
concrete edges.'
'Yes, mon. Not much; enough to give a little flame, or a sputter,
perhaps.'
'You're wasting time!' Whitehall spat out the words. 'Swing to your left,
towards the northwest point! Not to your right.'
The three men looked abruptly at the scholar. 'What,
Charley-mon?' Barak was bewildered.
'Do as I say!… Please.'
'The Arawak symbols?' asked McAuliff. 'The… odyssey to death, or
whatever you called it? To the right of the setting sun?'
I'm glad you find it amusing.'
'I don't, Charley-mon. Not one goddamn bit,' answered Alex softly.
'Ayee…' Barak whistled as tiny spits of flame burst out of the
cistern's cracks. 'Charley, you got brains, mon! Here they are… Floyd,
mon, give me the tools.'
Floyd reached into his field jacket and produced a five-inch stone
chisel and an all-metal folding hammer. He handed them down to his
superior. 'You want help?' he asked.
'There is not room for two,' replied Barak as he started hammering
along the cracks.
Three minutes later Moore had managed to dislodge the first block
from its surrounding adhesive; he tugged at it, pulling it slowly out
of the-cistern wall. Whitehall held the flashlight now, his eyes intent
on Moore's manipulations. The block came loose; Floyd reached down and
took it from Barak's hands.
'What's behind?' Whitehall pierced the beam of light into the gaping
hole.
'Space, mon. Red dirt and space,' said Moore. 'And I think the top
of another box. A larger box.'
'For God's sake, hurry!'
'Okay, Charley-mon. There is no dinner engagement at the Mo'Bay
Hilton, mon.' Barak chuckled. 'Nothing will be rewritten by a hidden
mongoose.'
'Relax.' McAuliff did not look at Whitehall when he spoke. He did
not want to. 'We have all night, don't we? You killed a man out there.
He was the only one who could have interfered. And you decided he had
to die for that.'
Whitehall turned his head and stared at McAuliff. 'I killed him
because it was necessary.' Whitehall transferred his attention back to
Barak Moore. The second block came loose with far less effort than the
first. Barak reached into the space and rocked the stone until the
cracks widened and it slid out. Floyd took the block and placed it
carefully to one side.
Whitehall crouched opposite the hole, shining the flashlight into
it. 'It's an archive case. Let me have it.' He handed Floyd the
flashlight and reached across the pit as Barak pulled the receptacle
out of the dirt and gave it to him. 'Extraordinary!' said Charles,
fingering the oblong box, his knee pressed against the top of the first
receptacle on the floor beside him. Whitehall was not going to let
either out of his possession.
'The case you mean, mon?' asked Moore.
'Yes.' Whitehall turned the box over, then held it up as Floyd shone
the beam of light on it. 'I don't think any of you understand. Without
the keys or proper equipment, these bloody things take hours to open.
Watertight, airtight, vacuumed, and crushproof. Even a starbit drill
could not penetrate the metal… Here! See.' The scholar pointed to some
lettering on the bottom surface. 'Hitchcock Vault Company,
Indianapolis. The finest in the world. Museums, libraries… government
archives everywhere use Hitchcock. Simply extraordinary.'
When the sound came. It had the impact of an earth-shattering
explosion, although the noise was distant - that of the whining low
gear of an automobile racing up the long entrance drive from the road
below.
And then another.
The four men looked back and forth at one another. They were
stunned. Outside there was an intrusion that was not to be. Could
not be.
'Oh my God, Jesus, mon!' Barak jumped out of the pit.
'Take those tools, you damn fool!' cried Whitehall. 'Your
fingerprints!'
Floyd, rather than Barak, leaped into the cistern, grabbed the
hammer and chisel, and put them into the pockets of his field jacket.
'There is only the staircase, mon! No other way!'
Barak ran to the stairs. McAuliff reached down for the first
receptacle at Whitehall's side; simultaneously, Whitehall's hand was on
it.
'You can't carry both, Charley-mon,' said Alex in answer to
Whitehall's manic stare. 'This one's mine!' He grabbed the box, jerked
it out from under Whitehall's grip, and followed Moore to the stairs.
The automobiles, in grinding counterpoint, were getting nearer.
The four men leaped up the stairs in single file and raced through
the short corridor into the darkened, rugless living room, the beams of
headlights could be seen shining through the slits in the teak
shutters. The first car had reached the compact parking area; the
sounds of doors opening could be heard. The second vehicle roared in
only seconds behind. In the corner of the room could be seen, in the
strips of light, the cause for the intrusion: an open-line portable
radio. Barak ran to it and, with a single blow of his fist into the
metal, smashed the front and then tore off the back antennae.
Men outside began shouting. Predominately one name: 'Raymond!'
'Raymond!'
'Raymond! Where you at, mon!'
Floyd assumed the lead and raced to the rear centre door. 'This way!
Quick, mon!' he whispered to the others. He yanked the door open and
held it as they all gathered. McAuliff could see in the reflection of
the pool's light that Floyd held a pistol in his free hand. Floyd spoke
to Barak. 'I will deflect them, mon. To the west. I know the property
good, mon!'
'Be careful! You two,' said Barak to Whitehall and McAuliff. 'Go
straight into the woods; we'll meet at the raft. One-half hour from
now. No more. Whoever is there, leave. Pole down,
mon. The Martha Brae is no good without a raft, mon. Go!' He shoved
Alex through the door.
Outside, McAuliff started across the strangely peaceful lawn, with
the blue-green light of the pool illuminating the stately wrought-iron
furniture. He could hear the shouts from behind. Men had raced up from
the entrance drive to the sides of the house. Alex wondered if they
could see him; he was running as fast as he could towards the seemingly
impenetrable wall of forest beyond the sloping lawn. He gripped the
oblong receptacle under his right arm.
He got his answer instantly.
The insanity had started.
Gunshot!
Bullets cracked above him; abrupt detonations spaced erratically
behind him.
Men were firing pistols indiscriminately. Oh, Jesus; he was back there again!
Long-forgotten instructions returned once more. Diagonals; make
diagonals. Short, quick spurts; but not too short. Just enough to
give the enemy a half second to assume position-aim.
He had given those instructions to scores of men in the Korean hills.
The shouting became an overlapping chorus of hysteria: and then a
single scream pierced the symphony.
McAuliff hurled himself into the air, into the sudden growth of
dense foliage that bordered the lawn. He fell into a thicket and rolled
to his left. On the ground, out of sightlines, roll! Roll for all you're
worth into a second position.
Basics.
Fundamentals.
He was positive he would see men coming after him down the hill.
There weren't.
Instead, what he saw hypnotized him, as he had been hypnotized
watching the two black revolutionaries in the high grass pretending to
be wild pigs.
Up by the house - to the west of it, actually - Floyd was reeling
around and around, the light of the pool catching the dull green of his
field jacket. He was allowing himself to be an open target, firing a
pistol, pinning the police to the sides of the house. He ran out of
ammunition, reached into his pocket, withdrew another gun, and started
firing again - now racing to the edge of the pool, in full sacrificial
view.
He had been hit. Repeatedly. Blood was spreading throughout the
cloth of the field jacket and all over the trousers covering his legs.
The man had at least half a dozen bullets in him, ebbing away his life,
leaving him only moments to live.
'McAuliff!' The whispered shout was from his right. Barak Moore, his
grotesque shaven head glistening with sweat in the filtered moonlight,
threw himself down beside Alex. 'We get out of here, mon! Come!' He
tugged at McAuliff's drenched shirt.
'For God's sake! Can't you see what's happening up there? That man's
dying!'
Barak glanced up through the tangled overgrowth. He spoke calmly.
'We are committed till death. In its way, it is a luxury. Floyd knows
that.'
'For what, for Christ's sake? For goddamn stinking what?
You're goddamn madmen!'
'Let us go!' commanded Moore. 'They will follow us in
seconds. Floyd is giving us this chance, you white shit, mon!'
Alex grabbed Barak's hand, which was still gripping his shirt, and
threw it off. 'That's it, isn't it? I'm a white shit. And Floyd has to
die because you think so. And that guard had to die because Whitehall
thinks so!… You're sick.'
Barak Moore paused. 'You are what you are, mon. And you will not
take this island. Many, many will die, but this island will not be
yours… You will be dead, too, if you do not run with me.' Moore
suddenly stood up and ran into the forest darkness.
McAuliff looked after him, holding the black oblong box to his
chest. Then he rose from the ground and followed the black
revolutionary.
They waited at the water's edge, the raft bobbing up and down in the
onrushing current. They were waist deep in the river, Barak checking
his wristwatch, Alex shifting his feet in the soft mud to hold the
bamboo sides of the raft more firmly.
'We cannot wait much longer, mon,' said Barak. 'I can hear them in
the hills. They come closer!'
McAuliff could not hear anything but the sounds of the rushing river
and the slapping of water against the raft. And Barak. 'We can't leave
him here!'
'No choice. You want your head blown off, mon?'
'No. And it won't be. We stole papers from a dead man. At
his instructions. That's no call for being shot at. Enough's enough,
goddamn it!'
Barak laughed. 'You have a short memory, mon! Up in the tall grass
there is a dead policeman. Without doubt, Floyd took at least one other
life with him; Floyd was an expert shot… Your head will be blown off;
the Falmouth police will not hesitate.'
Barak Moore was right. Where the hell was Whitehall?
'Was he shot? Do you know if he was wounded?'
'I think not, mon. I cannot be sure… Charley-mon did not do as I
told him. He ran southwest into the field.'
A single shaft of light was seen a hundred yards upstream, streaking
down through the overgrown banks.
'Look!' cried Alex. Moore turned.
There was a second, then a third beam. Three dancing columns of
light, wavering towards the river below.
'No time now, mon! Get in and pole fast!'
The two of them shoved the raft towards the centre current and
jumped onto the bamboo-rodded surface.
'I get in front, mon!' yelled Moore, scrambling over the platformed,
high-backed seat used by tourists viewing the beauty of the Martha
Brae. 'You stay in the rear, mon! Use the pole and when I tell you,
stop and put your legs over the backside!'
McAuliff focused his eyes in the moonlight, trying to distinguish
which was the loose pole among the strapped cylinders of bamboo. It was
wedged between the low railing and the deck; he picked it up and
plunged it into the waters, into the mud below.
The raft entered the rapids and began careening downstream. Moore
stood up in the bow and used his pole as a deflector, warding the
racing bamboo float off the treacherous series of flesh-cutting rocks
that broke the surface of the water. They were approaching a bend in
the river. Barak shouted.
'Sit on the backside, mon! Put your feet into the water. Quick,
mon!'
Alex did as he was ordered; he soon understood. The drag created by
his weight and his feet gave Moore that slightly slower speed he needed
to navigate the raft through a miniature archipelago of hazardous
rocks. The bamboo sides crashed back and forth, into and over the
mounds of jagged stone; twice McAuliff thought the raft would list
right out of the water.
It was the sound of the harsh scrapings and his concentration on the
rapids that caused Alex to delay his realization of the gunshots. And
then that realization was complete with the stinging, searing pain in
his left arm. A bullet had grazed his flesh; the blood trickled down
his sleeve in the moonlight.
There was a staccato-burst of gunfire.
'You get down, mon!' yelled Barak. 'Get flat! They cannot follow us;
we get around the bend, there is a grotto. Many caves. They lead up to
the Brae Road, mon… .Ayeee!'
Moore buckled; he let go of the pole, grabbed his stomach, and fell
onto the bamboo deck. Alex reached down for the oblong archive case,
crammed it into his belt, and crawled as fast as he could to the front
of the raft. Barak Moore was writhing; he was alive.
'How bad are you hurt?'
'Pretty bad, mon!… Stay down! If we get stuck, jump out
and push us off… Around bend, mon.'
Barak was unconscious. The bamboo raft plunged over a shallow,
gravelled surface and then into the final curve of the bend, where the
water was deep, the current powerful and faster than before. The sounds
of gunfire stopped; they were out of sight of the Trelawny police.
McAuliff raised his shoulders; the archive case was cutting into his
skin beneath his belt, his left arm stung with pain. The river now
became a huge flat pool, the waters rushing under the surface. There
were stone cliffs diagonally across, rising sharply out of the river
bank.
Suddenly Alex saw the beam of a lone flashlight, and the terrible
pain of fear pierced his stomach. The enemy was not behind - he was
waiting.
Involuntarily, he reached into his pocket for his gun. The Smith
& Wesson given him by Westmore Tallon. He raised it as the raft
steered itself towards the stone cliffs and the flashlight.
He lowered himself over the unconscious body of Barak Moore and
waited, his arm outstretched, the pistol aimed at the body beyond the
flashlight.
He was within forty yards of the silent figure. He was about to
squeeze the trigger and take a life.
''Barak, mon,' came the words.
The man on the river bank was Lawrence.
Charles Whitehall waited in the high grass by the cluster of
breadfruit trees. The archive case was securely under his arm; he knelt
immobile in the moonlight and watched Piersall's house and grounds two
hundred yards away. The body of the dead guard had not been found.
Floyd's corpse had been carried into the house for the light necessary
for a complete search of the dead body.
One man remained behind. The others had all raced into the eastern
forests and down to the Martha Brae in pursuit of Moore and McAuliff.
That was precisely what Charles Whitehall thought would happen. And
why he had not done as Barak Moore commanded.
There was a better way. If one acted alone.
The single Trelawny policeman was fat. He waddled back and forth by
the wooded border of the lawn; he was pacing nervously, as if afraid to
be alone. He carried a rifle in his hands, jerking it towards every
sound he heard or thought he heard.
Suddenly there was gunfire far below in the distance, down at the
river. It was full, rapid. Either much ammunition was being wasted, or
Moore and McAuliff were having a bad time of it.
But it was his moment to move. The patrolman was hugging
the edge of the forest, peering down. The gunfire was both his
protection and the source of his fear. He cradled his rifle and
nervously lighted a cigarette.
Charles got up and, clutching the archive case, raced through the
tall grass behind the west flank of the field. He then turned right and
ran towards Piersall's house, through the diminishing woods to the
border of the entrance drive.
The two patrol cars stood peacefully in the moonlight, in front of
the wide stone steps to High Hill. Whitehall emerged from the woods and
crossed to the first vehicle. One door was open - the driver's door.
The dim interior light shone over the black leather.
The keys were in the ignition. He removed them and then reached
under the dashboard radio and ripped every wire out of the panel. He
closed the door silently, ran to the second car, and saw that its keys
were also in place. He walked rapidly back to the first car and as
quietly as possible unlatched the hood. He yanked off the distributor
cap and tugged at the rubber lid until it sprang loose from the wires.
He returned to the second vehicle, got in, and placed the archive
case beside him. He pressed the accelerator several times. He checked
the gearshift mechanism and was satisfied.
He turned the key in the ignition. The motor started instantly.
Charles Whitehall backed the patrol car out of the parking area,
swung the wheel, and sped off down the drive.
NINETEEN
The doctor closed the patio door and walked out onto the terrace
that connected Alison's and McAuliffs rooms. Barak Moore was in
Alison's bed. She had insisted; no comments were offered, the decision
was not debated.
Alex's upper left arm was bandaged; the wound was surface, painful,
and not serious. He sat with Alison on the waist-high terrace sea wall.
He did not elaborate on the night raid; there would be time later. Sam
Tucker and Lawrence had taken positions at each end of the patio in
order to keep any wanderers from coming into the small area.
The doctor, a black from Falmouth whom Lawrence had contacted at
midnight, approached McAuliff. 'I have done what I can. I wish I felt
more confident.'
'Shouldn't he be in a hospital?' Alison's words were as much a
rebuke as a question.
'He should be,' agreed the doctor wearily. 'I discussed it with him;
we concluded it was not feasible. There is only a government clinic in
Falmouth. I think this is cleaner.'
'Barak is wanted,' explained Alex quietly. 'He'd be put in prison
before they got the bullet out.'
'I sincerely doubt they would take the trouble to remove the bullet,
Mr McAuliff.'
'What do you think?' asked Alex, lighting a cigarette.
'He will have a chance if he remains absolutely still. But only a
chance. I have cauterized the abdominal wall; it could easily re
rupture. I have replaced blood… yes, my office has a discreet file of
certain individuals' blood classifications. He is extremely weak. If he
survives two or three days, there is hope.'
'But you don't think he will,' stated McAuliff.
'No. There was too much internal bleeding. My… portable operating
kit is not that good. Oh, my man is cleaning up. He will take out the
sheets, clothing, anything that has been soiled. Unfortunately, the
odour of ether and disinfectant will remain. Keep the outside doors
open when you can. Lawrence will make sure no one enters.'
Alex slid off the wall and leaned against it. 'Doctor? I gather
you're part of Barak's organization, if that's the word.'
'It is too precise at this juncture.'
'But you know what's going on.'
'Not specifically. Nor do I wish to. My function is to be available
for medical purposes. The less involvement otherwise, the better for
everyone.'
'You can get word to people, though, can't you?'
The doctor smiled. 'By "people" I assume you mean Barak's followers.'
'Yes.'
'There are telephone numbers… public telephones, and specific hours.
The answer is yes.'
'We're going to need at least one other man. Floyd was killed.'
Alison Booth gasped. Her eyes riveted on Alex; her hand reached out
for his arm. He covered it gently. 'Oh my God,' she whispered.
The doctor looked at Alison but did not comment on her reaction. He
turned back to McAuliff. 'Barak told me. There may be a problem; we do
not know yet. The survey is being watched. Floyd was part of it, and
the police will find out. You will be questioned, of course. Naturally,
you know absolutely nothing; wear long sleeves for a while - a few
days, until the wound can be covered with a large plaster. To replace
Floyd now with one of our men could be a self-induced trap.'
Reluctantly, Alex nodded. 'I see,' he said softly. 'But I need
another man. Lawrence can't do triple duty…'
'May I make a suggestion?' asked the doctor with a thin smile and a
knowing look in his eyes.
'What's that?'
'Use British Intelligence. You really should not ignore them.'
'Get some sleep, Sam. Lawrence, you do the same,' said Alex to the
two men on the terrace. The doctor had left; his assistant remained
with Barak Moore. Alison had gone into McAuliff's room and shut the
door. 'Nothing will happen tonight, except possibly the police… to ask
me questions about a crewman I haven't seen since early afternoon.'
'You know what to say, mon?' Lawrence asked the question with
authority, as if he would provide the answer.
'The doctor explained; Barak told him.'
'You must be angry, mon! Floyd all the time a nigger thief from
Ochee. Now you know: supplies stolen. You drum-drum angry, mon!'
'It doesn't seem fair, does it?' said Alex sadly.
'Do as he says, lad,' countered Sam Tucker. 'He knows what he's
talking about… I'll nap out here. Hate the goddamn bed, anyway.'
'It isn't necessary, Sam.'
'Has it occurred to you, boy, that the police may just come here
without announcing themselves? I'd hate like hell for them to get the
rooms mixed up.'
'Oh Lord…' McAuliff spoke with weariness. It was the exhaustion of
inadequacy, the pressure of continually being made aware of it. 'I
didn't think about that.'
'Neither did the goddamn doctor,' replied Sam. 'Lawrence and I have,
which is why we'll stand turns.'
'Then I'll join you.'
'You do enough tonight, mon,' said Lawrence firmly. 'You have been
hurt… Maybe policemen do not come so quick. Floyd carry no papers.
Early morning Sam Tuck and me take Barak away.'
'The doctor said he was to stay where he is.'
'The doctor is a kling-kling, mon! Two, three hours Barak will
sleep. If he is not dead, we take him to Braco Beach. The ocean is
still before sunrise; a flat-bottom is very gentle, mon. We take him
away.'
'He makes sense again, Alex.' Tucker gave his approval without
regret. 'Our medical friend notwithstanding, it's a question of
alternatives. And we both know most wounded men can travel gentle if
you give 'em a couple of hours.'
'What'll we do if the police come tonight? And search?'
Lawrence answered, again with authority. 'I tell Tuck, mon. The
person in that room has Indie Fever. The bad smell helps us. Falmouth
police plenty scared of Indie Fever.'
'So is everybody else,' added Sam, chuckling.
'You're inventive,' said McAuliff. And he meant it. 'Indie Fever'
was the polite term for a particularly nasty offshoot of encephalitis,
infrequent but nevertheless very much a reality, usually found in the
hill country. It could swell a man's testicles many times their size
and render him impotent as well as a figure of grotesque ridicule.
'You go get sleep now, McAuliff, mon… please.'
'Yes. Yes, I will. See you in a few hours.' Alex looked at Lawrence
for a moment before turning to go inside. It was amazing. Floyd was
dead, Barak barely alive, and the grinning, previously carefree
youngster who had seemed so naive and playful in comparison to his
obvious superiors was no longer the innocent. He had, in a matter of
hours, become the leader of his faction, lord of his pack. A hard
authority had been swiftly developed, although he still felt the need
to qualify the authority. Get sleep now… please.
In a day or two the 'please' would be omitted. The command would be
all.
So forever the office made the man.
Sam Tucker smiled at McAuliff in the bright Jamaican moonlight. He
seemed to be reading Alex's thoughts. Or was Sam remembering McAuliffs
first independent survey? Tucker had been there. It had been in the
Aleutians, in springtime, and a man had died because Alex had not been
firm enough in his disciplining the team regarding the probing of ice
fissures.
Alexander Tarquin McAuliff had matured quickly that springtime in
the Aleutians.
'See you later, Sam.'
Inside the room, Alison lay in bed, the table lamp on. By her side
was the archive case he had carried out of Carrick Foyle. She was
outwardly calm, but there was no mistaking the intensity beneath the
surface, McAuliff removed his shirt, threw it on a chair, and crossed
to the dial on the wall that regulated the overhead fan. He turned it
up; the four blades suspended from the ceiling accelerated, the whirr
matching the sound of the distant surf outside. He walked to the
bureau, where the bucket of ice had melted halfway. Cubes were bunched
together in the water, enough for drinks.
'Would you like a Scotch?' he asked without looking at her.
'No thank you,' she replied in her soft British accent. Soft, but
laced - as all British speech was laced - with that core of
understated, superior rationality.
'I would.'
'I should think so.'
He poured the whiskey into a hotel glass, threw in two ice cubes,
and
turned around. 'To answer you before you ask, I had no idea tonight
would turn out the way it did.'
'Would you have gone had you known?'
'Of course not… But it's over. We have what we need now.'
This?' Alison touched the archive case.
'Yes'
'From what you've told me… on the word of a dying savage. Told to
him by a dead fanatic.'
'I think those descriptions are a little harsh.' McAuliff went to
the chair by the bed and sat down facing her. 'But I won't defend
either one yet. I'll wait. I'll find out what's in here, do what they
say I should do, and see what happens.'
'You sound positively confident, and I can't imagine why. You've
been shot at. A bullet came within five inches of killing you. Now you
sit here calmly and tell me you'll simply bide your time and see what
happens? Alex! For God's sake, what are you doing?'
McAuliff smiled and swallowed a good deal of whiskey. 'What I never
thought was possible,' he said slowly, abruptly serious. 'I mean that…
And I've just seen a boy grow up into a man. In one hour. The act cost
a terrible price, but it happened… and I'm not sure I can understand
it, but I saw it. That transformation had something to do with belief.
We haven't got it. We act out of fear or greed or both… all of us. He
doesn't. He does what he does, becomes what he becomes, because he
believes… And, strangely enough, so does Charley-mon.'
'What in
heaven's name are you talking about?'
McAuliff lowered his glass and
looked at her. 'I have an idea we're about to turn this war over to the
people who should be fighting it.'
Charles Whitehall exhaled slowly, extinguished the acetylene flame,
and removed his goggles. He put the torch down on the long narrow table
and took off the asbestos gloves. He noted with satisfaction that his
every movement was controlled; he was like a confident surgeon, no
motion wasted, his mind ahead of his every muscle.
He rose from the stool and stretched. He turned to see that the door
of the small room was still bolted. A foolish thing to do, he thought;
he had bolted the door. He was alone.
He had driven over back roads nearly forty miles away from Carrick
Foyle, to the border of Saint Anne's. He had left the police car in a
field and walked the last mile into town.
Ten years ago St Anne's was a meeting place for those of the
Movement between Falmouth and Ocho Rios. The 'nigger rich,' they had
called themselves, with good-sized fields in Drax Hall, Chalky Hill,
and Davis Town. Men of property and certain wealth, which they had
forced from the earth and were not about to turn over to the
Commonwealth sycophants in Kingston. Charles Whitehall remembered
names, as he remembered most things… a necessary discipline - and
within fifteen minutes after he reached St Anne's, he was picked up by
a man in a new Pontiac, who cried at seeing him.
When his needs were made known, he was driven to the house of
another man in Drax Hall, whose hobby was machinery. The introductions
were brief; this second man embraced him, held on to him for such a
length of time - silently - that Charles found it necessary to
disengage him.
He was taken to a tool shack at the side of the house, where
everything he had requested was laid out on the long narrow tables that
butted against the wall, a sink at midpoint. Besides the overhead
light, there was a goose-necked lamp, whose bright illumination could
be directed at a small area. Charles was amused to see that along with
these requirements was a bowl of fresh fruit and a huge pewter tankard
filled with ice.
A messiah had returned.
And now the archive case was open. He stared down at the severed
end, the metal edges still glowing with dying orange, then yellow -
lingering - soon to be black again. Inside he could see the brown folds
of a document roll - the usual encasement for folded papers, each sheet
against the imperceptibly moist surface of the enveloping shield.
In the earth a living vault. Precise for a thousand years.
Walter Piersall had buried a rock for many ages in the event his own
overlooked it.
He was a professional.
As a physician might with a difficult birth, Charles reached in and
pulled the priceless child from its womb. He unravelled the document
and began reading. Acquaba. The tribe of Acquaba.
Walter Piersall had gone back into the Jamaican archives and found
the brief allusion in the records pertaining to the Maroon Wars. On 2 January, 1739 a descendant of the Coromanteen tribal
chieftains, one Acquaba, led his followers into the mountains. The
tribe of Acquaba would not be a party to the Cudjoe treaty with the
British, insofar as said treaty called upon the Africans to recapture
slaves for the white garrisons…
There was the name of an obscure army officer who had supplied the
information to His Majesty's Recorder in Spanish Town, the colony's
capital. Middlejohn, Robt. Maj. W.I. Reg. 641.
What made the name of 'Middlejohn, Robt.' significant was Piersall's
discovery of the following.
His Majesty's Recorder. Spanish Town. February 9 -1739. Docm'ts.
recalled. Middlejohn. W.I. Reg. 641.
And…
His Majesty's Recorder. Spanish Town. April 20 -1739. Docm'ts.
recalled. R.M. W.I. Reg. 641
Robert Middlejohn. Major. West Indian Regiment 641, in the Year of
Our Lord 1739, had been significant to someone.
Who?
Why?'
It took Walter Piersall weeks at the Institute to find the next
clue. A second name.
But not in the eighteenth century; instead, 144 years later, in the
year 1883. Fowler, Jeremy, Clerk, Foreign Service.
One Jeremy Fowler had removed several documents from the archives in
the new capital of Kingston on the instructions of Her Majesty's
Foreign Office, 7 June, 1883. Victoria Regina.
The colonial documents in question were labelled simply 'Middlejohn
papers.' 1739.
Walter Piersall speculated. Was it possible that the Middlejohn
papers continued to speak of the Tribe of Acquaba, as the first
document had done? Was the retention of that first document in the
archives an oversight? An omission committed by one Jeremy Fowler on 7
June, 1883?
Piersall flew to London and used his academic credentials to gain
access to the Foreign Office's West Indian Records. Since he was
dealing in matters of research nearly a hundred years old, the F.O. had
no objections. The archivists were most helpful.
And there were no transferred documents from Kingston in the year
1883.
Jeremy Fowler, clerk of the Foreign Service, had stolen the Middlejohn
papers.
If there was a related answer, Walter Piersall now had two specifics
to go on: the name 'Fowler' and the year in the colony of Jamaica.
Since he was in London, he traced the descendants of Jeremy Fowler.
It was not a difficult task.
The Fowlers - sons and uncles - were proprietors of their own
brokerage house on the London Exchange. The patriarch was Gordon
Fowler, Esquire, great-great-grandson of Jeremy Fowler, clerk, Foreign
Service, colony of Jamaica.
Walter Piersall interviewed old Fowler on the premise that he was
researching the last two decades of Victoria's rule in Jamaica; the
Fowler name was prominent. Flattered, the old gentleman gave him access
to all papers, albums, and documents relative to Jeremy Fowler.
These materials told a not unfamiliar story of the times: a young
man of 'middle breeding' entering the Colonial Service, spending a
number of years in a distant outpost, only to return to England far
richer than when he left.
Sufficiently rich to be able to buy heavily into the Exchange during
the last decade of the nineteenth century. A propitious time; the
source of the current Fowler wealth.
One part of the answer.
Jeremy Fowler had made his connection in the Colonial Service.
Walter Piersall returned to Jamaica to look for the second part.
He studied, day by day, week by week, the recorded history of
Jamaica for the year 1883. It was laborious.
And then he found it. 25 May, 1883.
A disappearance that was not given much attention insofar as small
groups of Englishmen - hunting parties - were constantly getting lost
in
the Blue Mountains and tropic jungles, usually to be found by scouting
parties of blacks led by other Englishmen.
As this lone man had been found. Her Majesty's Recorder, Jeremy Fowler.
Not a clerk, but the official Crown Recorder.
Which was why his absence justified the space in the papers. The
Crown Recorder was not insignificant. Not landed gentry, of course, but
a person.
The ancient newspaper accounts were short, imprecise, and strange.
A Mr Fowler had last been observed in his government office on the
evening of 25 May, a Saturday. He did not return on Monday and was not
seen for the rest of the work week. Nor had his quarters been slept in.
Six days later, Mr Fowler turned up in the garrison of Fleetcourse,
south of the impenetrable Cock Pit, escorted by several Maroon Negroes.
He had gone on horseback… alone… for a Sunday ride. His horse had
bolted him; he had got lost and wandered for days until found by the
Maroons.
It was illogical. In those years, Walter Piersall knew, men did not
ride alone into such territories. And if one did, a man who was
sufficiently intelligent to be Her Majesty's Recorder would certainly
know enough to take a left angle from the sun and reach the south coast
in a matter of hours, at best a day.
And one week later Jeremy Fowler stole the Middlejohn papers
from the archives. The documents concerning a sect led by a Coromanteen
chieftain named Acquaba… that had disappeared into the mountains 144
years before.
And six months later he left the Foreign - Colonial - Service and
returned to England a very, very wealthy man.
He had discovered the Tribe of Acquaba.
It was the only logical answer. And if that were so, there was a
second, logical speculation: Was the Tribe of Acquaba… the
Halidon?
Piersall was convinced it was. He needed only current proof.
Proof that there was substance to the whispers of the incredibly
wealthy sect high in the Cock Pit mountains. An isolated community that
sent its members out into the world, into Kingston, to exert influence.
Piersall tested five men in the Kingston government, all in
positions of trust, all with obscure backgrounds. Did any of them
belong to the Halidon?
He went to each, telling each that he alone was the recipient of his
startling information: the Tribe of Acquaba. The Halidon,
Three of the five were fascinated but bewildered. They did not
understand.
Two of the five disappeared.
Disappeared in the sense of being removed from Kingston. Piersall
was told one man had retired suddenly to an island in the Martinique
chain. The other was transferred out of Jamaica to a remote post.
Piersall had his current proof.
The Halidon was the Tribe of Acquaba.
It existed.
If he needed further confirmation, final proof, the growing
harassment against him was it. The harassment now included the selected
rifling and theft of his files and untraceable university enquiries
into his current academic studies. Someone beyond the Kingston
government was concentrating on him. These acts were not those of
concerned bureaucrats.
The Tribe of Acquaba… Halidon.
What was left was to reach the leaders. A staggeringly difficult
thing to do. For throughout the Cock Pit there were scores of insulated
sects that kept to themselves; most of them poverty-stricken, scraping
an existence off the land. The Halidon would not proclaim its
self-sufficiency; which one was it?
The anthropologist returned once again to the volumes of African
minutiae?, specifically seventeenth - and eighteenth-century
Coromanteen. The key had to be there.
Piersall had found the key; he had not footnoted its source.
Each tribe, each offshoot of a tribe, had a single sound
applicable to it only. A whistle, a slap, a word. This symbol was known
only within the highest tribal councils, understood by only a few, who
communicated it to their out-tribal counterparts.
The symbol, the sound, the word… was 'Halidon.'
Its meaning.
It took him nearly a month of sleepless days and nights, using
logarithmic charts of phonetics, hieroglyphs, and African symbols of
daily survival.
When he was finished, he was satisfied. He had broken the ancient
code.
It was too dangerous to include it in this summary. For in the event
of his death - or murder - this summary might fall into the wrong
hands. Therefore, there was a second archive case containing the secret.
The second without the first was meaningless.
Instructions were left with one man. To be acted upon in the event
he was no longer capable of doing so himself.
Charles Whitehall turned over the last page. His face and neck were
drenched with sweat. Yet it was cool in the shack. Two partially opened
windows in the south wall let in the breezes from the hills of Drax
Hall, but they could not put out the nervous fires of his anxiety.
Truths had been learned. A greater, overwhelming truth was yet to be
revealed.
That it would be now, he was certain.
The scholar and the patriot were one again.
The Praetorian of Jamaica would enlist the Halidon.
TWENTY
James Ferguson was exhilarated. It was the feeling he had when
momentous things happened in the lens of a microscope and he knew he
was the first observer - or, at least, the first witness who recognized
a casual effect for what it was.
Like the baracoa fibre.
He was capable of great imagination when studying the shapes and
densities of microscopic particles. A giant manipulating a hundred
million infinitesimal subjects.
It was a form of total control.
He had control now. Over a man who did not know what it was like to
have to protest too loudly over the inconsequential because no one paid
attention; to be forever down to his last few quid in the bank because
none paid him the value of his work.
All that was changing. He could think about a great many things that
were preposterous fantasies only yesterday: his own laboratories with
the most expensive equipment - electronic, computerized, databanked;
throwing away the little budget pads that told him whom he had last
borrowed from.
A Maserati. He would buy a Maserati. Arthur Craft had one, why
shouldn't he?
Arthur Craft was paying for it.
Ferguson looked at his watch - his goddamned inexpensive Timex - and
signalled the bartender to total his bill.
When the bartender did not come over in thirty seconds, Ferguson
reached for the tab in front of him and turned it over. It was simple
enough to add: a dollar and fifty cents, twice.
James Ferguson then did what he had never done in his life. He took
out a five-dollar bill, crumpled it up in his hand, got off the bar
stool, and threw the wadded bill towards the cash register several
yards in front of him. The bill bounced off the bottles on the lighted
shelf and arced to the floor.
He started for the entrance.
There was machismo in his gesture; that was the word, that
was the feeling.
In twenty minutes, he would meet the emissary from Craft the
Younger. Down off Harbour Street, near Parish Wharf, on Pier Number
Six. The man would be obsequious - he had no choice - and give him an
envelope containing one thousand dollars.
One thousand dollars.
In a single envelope; not saved in bits and pieces over months of
budgeting, nor with the tentacles of Inland Revenue or debtors-past
reaching out to cut it in half. It was his to do with as he pleased. To
squander, to throw away on silly things, to pay a girl to get undressed
and undress him and do things to him that were fantasies… only
yesterday.
He had borrowed - taken a salary advance, actually - from McAuliff.
Two hundred dollars. There was no reason to repay it. Not now. He would
simply tell McAuliff… 'Alex'; from now on it would be 'Alex,' or
perhaps 'Lex' - very informal, very sure… to deduct the silly money
from
his paycheque. All at once, it he felt like it. It was inconsequential;
it didn't really matter.
And it certainly didn't, thought Ferguson.
Every month Arthur Craft would give him an envelope. The agreed-upon
amount was a thousand dollars in each envelope, but that was subject to
change. Related to the increased cost of living, as it were. Increased
as his appetites and comforts increased.
Just the beginning.
Ferguson crossed St James Square and proceeded towards the
waterfront. It was a warm night, with no breeze, and humid. Fat clouds,
flying low and threatening rain, blocked the moon; the antiquated
street lamps threw a subdued light in counterpoint to the gaudy neons
of white and orange that announced the diversions of Montego Bay night
life.
Ferguson reached Harbour Street and turned left. He stopped under a
street lamp and checked his watch again. It was ten minutes past
midnight; Craft had specified 12.15. In five minutes, he would have a
thousand dollars.
Pier Six was directly ahead on his right, across the street. There
was no ship in the dock, no activity within the huge loading area
beyond the high linked fence; only a large naked bulb inside a wire
casing that lit up the sign:
PIER SIX
HAMMOND LINES
He was to stand under the lamp, in front of the sign, and wait for a
man to drive up in a Triumph sportscar. The man would ask him for
identification. Ferguson would show him his passport and the man would
give him the envelope.
So simple. The entire transaction would take less than thirty
seconds. And change his life.
Craft had been stunned; speechless, actually, until he had found his
voice and screamed a torrent of abuse… until, again, he realized the
futility of his position. Craft the Younger had gone too far. He had
broken laws and would be an object of scorn and embarrassment. James
Ferguson could tell a story of airport meetings and luggage and
telephone calls and industrial espionage… and promises.
Such promises.
But his silence could be purchased. Craft could buy his confidence
for a first payment of one thousand dollars. If Craft did not care to
do so, Ferguson was sure the Kingston authorities would display avid
interest in the details of his story.
No, he had not spoken to anyone… yet. But things had been written
down. (Lies Craft could not trace, of course.) That did not mean he was
incapable of finding the spoken words; such capability was very much
within his province… as the first payment was within Craft's province.
One cancelled the other; which would it be?
And so it was.
Ferguson crossed Harbour Street and approached the wire-encased
light and the sign. A block and a half away, crowds of tourists swelled
into the street, a one-way flow towards the huge passenger terminal and
the gangplanks of a cruise ship. Taxis emerged out of side streets and
alleys from the centre of Montego Bay, blowing their horns anxiously,
haltingly making their way to the dock. Three bass-toned whistles
filled the air, vibrating the night, signifying that the ship was
giving a warning: All passengers were to be on board.
He heard the Triumph before he saw it. There was the gunning of an
engine from the darkness of a narrow side street diagonally across from
Pier Six. The shiny, red, low-slung sportscar sped out of the dark
recess and coasted to a stop in front of Ferguson. The driver was
another Craft employee, one he recognized from a year ago. He did not
recall the man's name; only that he was a quick, physical person, given
to arrogance. He would not be arrogant now.
He wasn't. He smiled in the open car and gestured Ferguson to come
over. 'Hello, Fergy. It's been a long time.'
Ferguson hated the nickname 'Fergy'; it had dogged him for most of
his life. Just when he had come to think it was part of a schoolboy
past, someone - always someone unpleasant, he reflected - used it. He
felt like correcting the man, reminding him of his messenger status,
but he did not. He simply ignored the greeting.
'Since you recognize me, I assume there's no need to show you my
identification,' said James, approaching the Triumph.
'Christ, no! How've you been?'
'Well, thank you. Do you have the envelope? I'm in a hurry.'
'Sure. Sure, I do, Fergy… Hey, you're a pistol, buddy! Our friend is
pissing rocks! He's half out of his skull, you know
what I mean?'
'I know what you mean. He should be. The envelope, please.'
'Sure.' The driver reached into his jacket and withdrew an envelope.
He then leaned over and handed it to Ferguson. 'You're supposed to
count it. If it's all there, just give me back the envelope… make any
kind of mark on it you like. Oh, here's a pen.' The man opened the
glove compartment and took out a ballpoint pen and held it up for
Ferguson.
'That's not necessary. He wouldn't try to cheat me.'
'Hey, come on, Fergy! It's my ass that'll be in a sling! Count it,
mark it; what's the difference?'
Ferguson opened the bulky envelope. The denominations were all tens
and fives, over a hundred bills. He had not asked for small
denominations; it was convenient, though, he had to admit that. Less
suspicious than hundreds or fifties or even twenties.
He started counting the bills.
Twice Craft's man interrupted him with insignificant questions,
causing James to lose his count. He had to start over again both times.
When he had finished, the driver suddenly handed him a wrapped
package. 'Oh, because our friend wants to show there's no bad feeling -
he's a sport, you know what I mean? - he sent you one of those new
Yashica .35 millimeters. He remembered you're crazy about photography.'
Ferguson saw the Yashica label on the top of the package. A
seven-hundred-dollar instrument! One of the very best! Craft the
Younger was indeed a frightened man. 'Thank… Arthur for me. But tell
him this isn't deductible from any future payments.'
'Oh, I'll tell him… Now, I'm going to tell you something,
Fergy-baby. You're on fuckin' Candid Camera.' The driver
spoke quietly.
'What are you talking about?'
'Right behind you, Fergy-baby.'
Ferguson whipped around towards the high linked fence and the
deserted area beyond. There were two men in the shadows of a doorway.
They came out slowly, perhaps thirty yards away from him. And one of
the men carried a tripod with a camera attached. 'What have you done?'
'Just a little insurance, Fergy-baby. Our friend is
contract-conscious, you know what I mean? Infrared film, babe. I think
you know what that is. And you just gave a terrific performance
counting out money and taking Christ knows what from a guy who hasn't
been seen in public north of Caracas for over six months. You see, our
friend flew me out of Rio just to get my picture taken… with you.'
'You can't do this! Nobody would believe this!'
'Why not, babe? You're a hungry little prick, you know what I mean?
Hungry little pricks like you get hung easy… Now, you listen to me,
asshole. You and Arthur, you're one on one. Only his one is a little
heavier. That film would raise a lot of questions you couldn't find any
answers for. I'm a very unpopular man, Fergy. You'd get thrown off the
island… but probably you'd get thrown into the can first. You wouldn't
last fifteen minutes with those social rejects, you know what I mean?
They'd peel your white skin, babe, layer by layer… Now, you be a good
boy, Fergy. Arthur says for you to keep the thousand. You'll probably
earn it.' The man held up the empty envelope. 'Two sets of prints on
this. Yours and mine… Ciao, baby. I've got to get out of here and back
to non-extradition country.'
The driver gunned the engine twice and slapped the gearshift
effortlessly. He swung the Triumph expertly in a semicircle and roared
off into the darkness of Harbour Street.
Julian Warfield was in Kingston now. He had flown in three days ago
and used all of Dunstone's resources to uncover the strange activities
of Alexander McAuliff. Peter Jensen had followed instructions to the
letter; he had kept McAuliff under the closest scrutiny, paying desk
clerks and doormen and taxi drivers to keep him informed of the
American's every move.
And always he and his wife were out of sight, in no way associated
with that scrutiny.
It was the least he could do for Julian Warfield… He would do
anything Julian asked, anything Dunstone, Limited, demanded. He would
deliver nothing but his best to the man and the organization that had
taken him and his wife out of the valley of despair and given them a
world with which they could cope and in which they could function.
Work they loved, money and security beyond the reach of most
academic couples. Enough to forget.
Julian had found them nearly twenty years ago, beaten, finished,
destroyed by events… impoverished, with nowhere and no one to return
to. He and Ruth had been caught; it was a time of madness, of Klaus
Fuchs and Guy Burgess and convictions born of misplaced zeal. He and
his wife had supplemented their academic income by working for the
government on covert geological operations - oil, gold, minerals of
value. And they had willingly turned over everything in the classified
files to a contact at the Soviet Embassy.
Another blow for equality and justice.
And they were caught.
But Julian Warfield came to see them.
Julian Warfield offered them their lives again… in exchange for
certain assignments he might find for them. Inside the government and
out; on the temporary staffs of companies… within England and without;
always in the highest professional capacities, pursuing their
professional labours.
All charges were dropped by the Crown. Terrible mistakes had been
made against most respected members of the academic community. Scotland
Yard had apologized. Actually apologized.
Peter and Ruth never refused Julian; their loyalty was unquestioned.
Which was why Peter was now on his stomach in the cold, damp sand
while the light of a Caribbean dawn broke over the eastern horizon. He
was behind a mound of coral rock with a perfect view of McAuliff's
oceanside terrace. Julian's last instructions had been specific. Find out who comes to see him. Who's important to him. Get
identities, if you can. But for God's sake, stay in the background.
We'll need you both in the interior.
Julian had agreed that McAuliff's disappearances - into Kingston,
into taxis, into an unknown car at the gates of the Courtleigh Manor -
all meant that he had interests in Jamaica other than Dunstone, Limited.
It had to be assumed that he had broken the primary article of
faith. Secrecy.
If so, McAuliff could be transferred… forgotten without difficulty.
But before that happened, it was essential to discover the identity of
Dunstone's island enemy.
Or enemies.
In a very real sense, the survey itself was secondary to that
objective. Definitely secondary. If it came down to it, the survey
could be sacrificed if, by that sacrifice, identities were revealed.
And Peter knew he was nearer those identities now… in this early
dawn on the beach of Bengal Court.
It had begun three hours ago.
Peter and Ruth had retired a little past midnight. Their room was in
the east wing of the motel, along with Ferguson's and Charles
Whitehall's. McAuliff, Alison, and Sam Tucker were in the west wing,
the division signifying only old friends, new lovers, and late drinkers.
They heard it around one o'clock: an automobile swerving into the
front drive, its wheels screeching, then silent, as if the driver had
heard the noise and suddenly become alarmed by it.
It had been strange. Bengal Court was no kind of nightclub, no
'drum-drum' watering hole that catered to the swinging and/or younger
tourist crowds. It was quiet, with very little to recommend it to the
image of fast drivers. As a matter of fact, Peter Jensen could not
remember having heard any automobiles drive into Bengal Court
after nine o'clock in the evening since they had been there.
He had risen from the bed and walked out on the terrace, and had
seen nothing. He had walked around the east end of the motel to the
edge of the front parking lot, where he did see something; something
extremely alarming, barely visible.
In the far section of the lot, in shadows, a large black man - he
believed he was black - was lifting the unconscious figure of another
man out of the rear seat of an automobile. Then, farther beyond, a
white man ran across the lawn from around the corner of the west wing.
It was Sam Tucker. He approached the black carrying the unconscious
form, gave instructions - pointing to the direction from which he had
come - and continued to the automobile, silently closing the rear door.
Sam Tucker was supposed to be in Ocho Rios with McAuliff. It seemed
unlikely that he would have returned to Bengal Court alone.
And as Jensen pondered this, there was the outline of another figure
on the west lawn. It was Alison Booth. She gestured to the black man;
she was obviously excited, trying to remain in control of herself. She
led the large black man into the darkness around the far corner.
Peter Jensen suddenly had a sinking feeling. Was the unconscious
figure Alexander McAuliff? Then he rethought the immediate visual
picture. He could not be sure - he could barely see, and everything was
happening so rapidly - but as the black passed under the dim spill of a
parking light, the bobbing head of his charge extended beyond his arms.
Peter had been struck by the oddness of it. The head appeared to be
completely bald… as if shaven.
Sam Tucker looked inside the automobile, seemed satisfied, then
raced back across the west lawn after the others.
Peter remained crouched in his concealed position after the figure
had disappeared. It was extraordinary. Tucker and Alison Booth were not
in Ocho Rios; a man had been hurt, apparently quite seriously, and
instead of taking him directly inside the motel's front entrance, they
furtively carried him in, smuggled him in. And it might be conceivable
that Sam Tucker would come back to Bengal Court without McAuliff; it
was inconceivable that Alison Booth would do so.
What were they doing? What in heaven's name had happened… was
happening?
The simplest way to find out, thought Peter, was to get dressed,
return to the tiny bar, and, for reasons he had not yet created, call
McAuliff for a drink.
He would do this alone. Ruth would remain in their room. But first
Peter would walk down to the beach, to the water's edge, where he would
have a full view of the motel and the oceanside terraces.
Once in the miniature lounge, Peter invented his reason to phone
McAuliff. It was simple to the point of absurdity. He had been unable
to sleep, taken a stroll on the beach, seen a light beyond the drawn
curtains in Alexander's room, and gathered he had returned from Ocho
Rios. Would he and Alison be his guests for a nightcap?
Jensen went to the house phone at the end of the bar. When McAuliff
answered, his voice was laced with the frustration of a man forced to
be civil in the most undesirable of circumstances. And McAuliffs lie
was apparent.
'Oh, Jesus, Peter, thanks but we're beat. We just got
settled at the Sans Souci when Latham called from the Ministry. Some
damned bureaucratic problem with our interior permits; we had to drive
all the way back for some kind of goddamned… inspection first thing in
the morning… inoculation records, medical stuff. Crew, mainly.'
'Terribly inconsiderate, old boy. Nasty bastards, I'd say.'
'They are… We'll take a raincheck, though. Perhaps tomorrow.'
Peter had wanted to keep McAuliff on the phone a bit longer. The man
was breathing audibly; each additional moment meant the possibility of
Jensen's learning something. 'Ruth and I thought we'd hire a car and go
to Dunn's Falls around noon tomorrow. Surely you'll be finished by
then. Care to come along?'
'Frankly, Peter,' said McAuliff haltingly, 'we were hoping to get
back to Ochee, if we could.'
'Then that would rule out Dunn's Falls, of course. You've seen it,
though, haven't you? Is it all they say?'
'Yes… yes, it certainly is. Enjoy yourselves—'
'You will be back tomorrow night, then?' interjected
Jensen.
'Sure… Why?'
'Our raincheck, old boy.'
'Yes,' said McAuliff slowly, carefully. 'We'll be back tomorrow
night. Of course we'll be back tomorrow night… Good night, Peter.'
'Good night, chap. Sleep well.' Jensen hung up the house phone. He
carried his drink slowly back to a table in the corner, nodding
pleasantly to the other guests, giving the impression he was waiting
for someone, probably his wife. He had no wish to join anyone; he had
to think out his moves.
Which was why he was now lying in the sand behind a small mound of
surfaced coral on the beach, watching Lawrence and Sam Tucker talking.
He had been there for nearly three hours. He had seen things he knew
he was not supposed to see: two men arriving - one obviously a doctor
with the inevitable bag, the other some sort of assistant carrying a
large trunklike case and odd-shaped paraphernalia.
There had been quiet conferences between McAuliff, Alison, and the
doctor, later joined by Sam Tucker and the black crewman, Lawrence.
Finally, all left the terrace but Tucker and the black. They stayed
outside.
On guard.
Guarding not only Alexander and the girl, but also whoever was in
that adjoining room. The injured man with the oddly shaped head who had
been carried from the automobile.
Who was he?
The two men had stayed at their posts for three hours now. No one
had come or gone. But Peter knew he could not leave the beach. Not yet.
Suddenly, Jensen saw the black crewman, Lawrence, walk down the
terrace steps and start across the dunes towards the beach.
Simultaneously, Tucker made his way over the grass to the corner of the
building. He stood immobile on the lawn; he was waiting for someone. Or
watching.
Lawrence reached the surf, and Jensen lay transfixed as the huge
black man did a strange thing. He looked at his watch and then
proceeded to light two matches, one after the other, holding each aloft
in the breezeless dawn air for several seconds and throwing each into
the lapping water.
Moments later, the action was explained. Lawrence cupped his hand
over his eyes to block the blinding, head-on light of the sun as it
broke the space above the horizon, and Peter followed his line of sight.
Across the calm ocean surface, in the massive land shadows by the
point, there were two corresponding flickers of light. A small boat had
rounded the waters of the cove's entrance, its grey-black hull slowly
emerging in the early sunlight.
Its destination was that section of the beach where Lawrence stood.
Several minutes later, Lawrence struck another match and held it up
until there was an acknowledgment from the approaching craft, at which
instant both were extinguished and the black crewman started running
back over the sand towards Bengal Court.
On the lawn, by the corner of the building, Sam Tucker turned and
saw the racing Lawrence. He walked to the stairs in the sea wall and
waited for him. The black man reached the steps; he and Tucker spoke
briefly, and together they approached the terrace doors of the
adjoining room - Alison Booth's room. Tucker opened them, and the two
men went inside, leaving the double doors ajar.
Peter kept shifting his eyes from the motel to the beach. There was
no visible activity from the terrace; the small boat plodded its way
over the remarkably still waters towards the beach, now only three or
four hundred yards from shore. It was a long, flat-bottom fishing boat,
propelled by a muffled engine. Sitting in the stern was a black man in
what appeared to be ragged clothes and a wide straw sun hat. Hook poles
shot up from the small deck, nets were draped over the sides of the
hull; the effect was that of a perfectly normal Jamaican fisherman out
for the dawn catch.
When the boat came within several hundred feet of the shore, the
black skipper lit a match, then extinguished it quickly. Jensen looked
up at the terrace. In seconds, the figure of Sam Tucker emerged from
the darkness beyond the open doors. He held one end of a stretcher on
which a man lay wrapped in blankets; Lawrence followed, holding the
other end.
Gently but swiftly, the two men ran - glided - the stretcher across
the terrace, down the sea-wall steps, over the sand, and towards the
beach. The timing was precise, not a moment wasted. It seemed to Jensen
that the instant the boat hit shallow water, Tucker and Lawrence waded
into the calm surf with the stretcher and placed it carefully over the
sides onto the deck. The nets were swung over on top of the blanketed
man and the fishing boat was immediately pushed back into the water by
Sam Tucker as Lawrence slid onto the bow slat. Seconds later, Lawrence
had removed his shirt and from some recess in the boat lifted out a
torn, dishevelled straw hat, clamped it on his head, and yanked a hook
pole from its clasp. The transformation was complete. Lawrence the
conspirator was now a lethargic native fisherman.
The small flat-bottom craft turned, rippling the glasslike surface
of the water, and headed out. The motor chugged a bit louder than
before; the skipper wanted to get away from the beach with his
concealed human cargo.
Sam Tucker waved; Lawrence nodded and dipped the hook pole. Tucker
came out of the miniature surf and walked swiftly back towards Bengal
Court.
Peter Jensen watched as the fishing boat veered in open water
towards the point. Several times Lawrence leaned forward and down,
fingering nets but obviously checking the condition of the man on the
stretcher. Intermittently, he seemed to be issuing quiet commands to
the black at the engine tiller. The sun had now cleared the edge of the
Jamaican horizon. It would be a hot day.
Up at the terrace Peter saw that the double doors of Alison Booth's
room remained open. With the additional light, he could also see that
there was new activity inside. Sam Tucker came out twice, carrying tan
plastic bags, which he left on the patio. Then a second man - the
doctor's assistant, Peter realized - emerged, holding a large cylinder
by its neck and a huge black suitcase in his other hand. He placed them
on the stone, bent down below them on the sea wall, and stood up
moments later with two elongated cans - aerosol cans, thought Jensen -
and handed one to Tucker as he came through the door. The two men
talked briefly and then went back inside the room.
No more than three minutes had elapsed when Tucker and the doctor's
aide were seen again, this time somewhat comically as they backed into
the door frame simultaneously. Each held his arm outstretched; in each
hand was an aerosol can, clouds of mist spewing from both.
Tucker and the black aide had systematically sprayed the interior of
the room.
Once finished, they crossed to the plastic bags, the case, and the
large cylinder. They picked up the objects, spoke briefly again, and
started for the lawn.
Out on the water, the fishing boat was halfway to the point of the
cove. But something had happened. It had stopped; it bobbed gently on
the calm surface, no longer travelling forward. Peter could see the now
tiny figure of Lawrence standing up in the bow, then crouching, then
standing up again. The skipper was gesturing, his movements excited.
The boat pushed forward once more, only to turn slowly and change
direction. It did not continue on its course - if the point was,
indeed, its course. Instead, it headed for the open sea.
Jensen lay on the moist sand for the next fifteen minutes, watching
the small craft progressively become a black dot within a grey-black
ocean splashed with orange sunlight. He could not read the thoughts of
the two Jamaicans; he could not see the things that were happening on
that boat so illogically far out on the water. But his knowledge of
tides and currents, his observations during the last three hours, led
his conclusions to one end.
The man on the stretcher had died. His corpse would soon be stripped
of identification, weighted down with net lead, and thrown into the
water, eventually to be carried by floor currents far away from the
island of Jamaica. Perhaps to be washed ashore weeks or months from now
on some Cayan reef or, more fortuitously, torn apart and devoured by
the predators of the deep.
Peter knew it was time to call Julian, meet with Julian.
Immediately.
McAuliff rolled over on his side, the sharp pain in his shoulder
suddenly surging through his chest. He sat up quickly, momentarily
bewildered. He focused his thoughts; it was morning; the night before
had been a series of terrifying confusions. The pieces would have to be
put back together, plans made.
He looked down at Alison, beside him. She was breathing deeply,
steadily, in complete sleep. If the evening had been a nightmare for
him, it had been no less a torment for her. Perhaps worse. At least he
had been in motion, constant, unceasing movement. She had been waiting,
thinking; he had had no time for thoughts.
It was worse to wait. In some ways.
Slowly, as silently as he could, he swung his legs over the side of
the bed and stood up. His whole body was stiff; his joints pained him,
especially his kneecaps.
It was understandable. The muscles he had used last night were
dormant strings of an unused instrument, called into play by a panicked
conductor. The allusion was proper, thought Alex - about his thoughts.
He nearly smiled as he conjured up the phrase: so out of tune.
Everything was out of tune.
But the notes were forming recognizable chords… somewhere.
In the distance. There was a melody of sorts that could
be vaguely distinguished.
Yet not distinguished. Hardly noble.
Not yet.
An odour assaulted his nostrils. It was not the illusion of spice
and vanilla, but nevertheless sweet. If there was an association, it
was south Oriental… Java, the Sunda Trench, pungent, a bit sickening.
He crossed quietly to the terrace door, about to open it, when he
realized he was naked. He walked silently to a chair by the curtained
window, where he had thrown a pair of swimming trunks several days ago.
He removed them from the wooden rim and put them on.
'I hope they're not wet,' said Alison from the bed. 'The maid
service here is a touch lacking, and I didn't hang them up.'
'Go back to sleep,' Alex replied. 'You were asleep a moment ago.
Very much asleep.'
'I'm very much awake now… Good heavens, it's a quarter past eight.'
'And?'
'Nothing, really… I just didn't think we'd sleep this long.'
'It's not long. We didn't get to bed until after three. Considering
everything that happened, noon would have been too early.'
'How's your arm? The shoulder?'
'A little sore… like most of me. Not crippling.'
'What is that terrible smell?' Alison sat up; the sheet
fell away, revealing a curiously prim nightgown, opaque cotton with
buttons. She saw Alex's gaze, the beginning of a smile on his lips. She
glanced down and laughed. 'My granny nightshirt. I put it on after you
fell asleep. It was chilly, and you hadn't the slightest interest in
anything but philosophical discourse.'
He walked to the edge of the bed and sat down beside her. 'I was
long-winded, wasn't I?'
'I couldn't shut you up; there was simply no way. You drank a great
deal of Scotch - how's your head, incidentally?'
'Fine. As though I'd had Ovaltine…'
'… straight alcohol couldn't have stayed with you. I've seen that
before, too… Sorry. I forgot you object to my British pronouncements.'
'I made a few myself last night. I withdraw my objections.'
'Do you still believe them? Your pronouncements? As they say… in the
cold logic of the morning?'
'I think I do; the thrust of my argument being that no one fights
better for his own turf than he who lives on it, depends on it… Yes, I
believe it. I'd feel more confident if Barak hadn't been hurt.'
'Strange name, Barak.'
'Strange man. And very strong. He's needed, Alison. Boys can become
men quickly, but they're still not seasoned. His ken is needed.'
'By whom?'
McAuliff looked at her; at the lovely way her eyebrows rose
quizzically above her clear, light blue eyes. 'By his own side,' he
answered simply.
'Which is not Charles Whitehall's side.' There was no question
implied.
'No. They're very different. And I think it's necessary… at this
point, under these circumstances… that Barak's faction be as viable as
Charley-mon's.'
'That concern strikes me as dangerously close to interference,
darling.'
'I know. It's just that everything seems so complicated to me. But
it doesn't to Whitehall. And it doesn't to Barak Moore. They see a
simple division muddled up by second and third parties… Don't you see?
They're not distracted. They first go after one objective, then
another, and another; knowing ultimately they'll have to deal with each
other. Neither one loses sight of that. Each stores his apples as he
goes along.'
'What?' Alison leaned back on the pillow, watching McAuliff as he
stared blankly at the wall. 'I don't follow that.'
'I'm not sure I can explain it. A wolf pack surrounds its victims,
who huddle in the centre. The dogs set up an erratic rhythm of attack,
taking turns lunging in and out around the circle until the quarry's
confused to the point of exhaustion. Then the wolves close in.' Alex
stopped; he was uncertain.
'I gather Charles and this Barak are the victims,' said Alison,
trying to help him.
'Jamaica's the victim, and they're Jamaica. The wolves - the enemies
- are Dunstone and all it represents: Warfield and his crowd of… global
manipulators - the Chatelleraults of this world; British Intelligence,
with its elitists, like Tallon and his crowd of colonial
opportunists; the Crafts of this island… internal bleeders, you could
call them. Finally, maybe even this Halidon, because you can't control
what you can't find; and even if you find it, it may not be
controllable… There are a lot of wolves.'
'There's a lot of confusion,' added Alison.
McAuliff turned and looked at her. 'For us. Not for them.
That's what's remarkable. The victims have worked out a strategy: Take
each wolf as it lunges. Destroy it.'
'What's that got to do with… apples?'
'I jumped out of the circle and went into a straight line.'
'Aren't we abstract,' stated the girl.
'It's valid. As any army - and don't kid yourself, Charles Whitehall
and Barak Moore have their armies - as any army moves forward, it
maintains its lines of supply. In this case, support. Remember. When
all the wolves have been killed, they face each other. Whitehall and
Moore both are piling up apples… support.' McAuliff stopped again and
got up from bed. He walked to the window to the right of the terrace
doors, pulled the curtain, and looked out at the beach. 'Does any of
this make sense to you?' he asked softly.
'It's very political, I think, and I'm not much at that sort of
thing. But you're describing a rather familiar pattern, I'd say—'
'You bet your life I am,' interrupted Alex, speaking
slowly and turning from the windows. 'Historical precedents unlimited…
and I'm no goddamn historian. Hell, where do you want to
start? Caesar's Gaul? Rome's Ferrara? China in the thirties? The
Koreas, the Vietnams, the Cambodias? Half a dozen African states? The
words are there, over and over again. Exploitation from outside, inside
revolt - insurgence and counterinsurgence. Chaos, bloodbath, expulsion.
Ultimately reconstruction in so-called compromise. That's the pattern.
That's what Barak and Charley-mon expect to play out. And each knows
that while he's joining the other to kill a wolf, he's got to entrench
himself further in the turf at the same time. Because when the
compromise comes… as it must… he wants it more his way than
less.'
'What you're saying - getting away from circles and straight lines -
is that you don't approve of Barak's "army" being weakened. Is that it?'
'Not now. Not at this moment.'
'Then you are interfering. You're an outsider taking an
inside position. It's not your… turf, my darling.'
'But I brought Charley here. I gave him his respectability, his
cover. Charley's a son of a bitch.'
'Is Barak Moore a saint?'
'Not for a second. He's a son of a bitch, too. And it's important
that he is.' McAuliff returned to the window. The morning sun was
striking the panes of glass, causing tiny modules of condensation. It
was going to be a hot day.
'What are you going to do?' Alison sat forward, prepared to get up
as she looked over at Alex.
'Do?' he asked quietly, his eyes concentrating on something outside
the window. 'What I was sent here to do; what I'm being paid one
million dollars to do. Complete the survey or find this Halidon.
Whichever comes first. Then get us out of here… on our terms.'
'That sounds reasonable,' said Alison, rising from the bed. 'What is
that sickening odour?'
'Oh? I forgot to tell you. They were going to spray down your room,
get rid of the medicine smells.' McAuliff stepped closer to the window
and shaded his eyes from the rays of the morning sun.
'The ether or disinfectant or whatever it was was far more
palatable. My bathing suit's in there. May I get it?'
'What?' Alex was not listening, his attention on the object of his
gaze outside.
'My bathing suit, darling. It's in my room.'
McAuliff turned from the window, oblivious to her words. 'Wait here.
I'll be right back.' He walked rapidly to the terrace door, opened it,
and ran out.
Alison looked after him, bewildered. She crossed to the window to
see what Alex had seen. It took several seconds to understand; she was
helped by watching McAuliff run across the sand towards the water.
In the distance, down at the beach, was the lone figure of a large
black man staring out at the ocean. It was Lawrence.
Alex approached the tall Jamaican, wondering if he should call out.
Instinctively, he did not. Instead, he cleared his throat when he was
within ten yards; cleared it loud enough to be heard over the sound of
the lapping small waves.
Lawrence turned around. Tears were in his eyes, but he did not blink
or change the muscles of his face. He was a child-man accepting the
agonies of a very personal torment.
'What happened?' asked McAuliff softly, walking up to the shirtless
boy-giant.
'I should have listened to you, mon. Not to him. He was wrong, mon.'
'Tell me what happened,' repeated Alex.
'Barak is dead. I did what he ordered me to do and he is dead. I
listened to him and he is dead, mon.'
'He knew the risk; he had to take it. I think he was probably right.'
'No… He was wrong because he is dead. That makes him wrong, mon.'
'Floyd's gone… Barak. Who is there now?'
Lawrence's eyes bore into McAuliffs; they were red from silent
weeping, and beyond the pride and summoned strength, there was the
anguish of a child. And the pleading of a boy. 'You and me, mon. There
is no one else… You will help me, mon?'
Alex returned the rebel's stare; he did not speak.
Welcome to the seat of revolution, McAuliff thought to himself.
TWENTY ONE
The Trelawny police made Floyd's identification at 7.02 in the
morning. The delay was caused by the lack of any print facilities in
Falmouth and the further lack of cooperation on the part of several
dozen residents who were systematically routed from their beds during
the night to observe the corpse. The captain was convinced that any
number of them recognized the bullet-pierced body, but it was not until
two minutes past seven when one old man - a gardener from Carrick Foyle
- had reacted sufficiently to the face of the bloody mess on the table
for the captain to decide to apply sterner methods. He held a lighted
cigarette millimetres in front of the old man's left eye, which he
stretched open with his free hand. He told the trembling black that he
would burn the gelatine of his eyeball unless he told the. truth.
The ancient gardener screamed and told the truth. The man who was
the corpse on the table had worked for Walter Piersall. His name was
Floyd Cotter.
The captain then telephoned several parish precincts for further
information on one Cotter, Floyd. There was nothing; they had never
heard of him. But the captain had persisted; Kingston's interest in Dr
Walter Piersall, before and after his death, was all-inclusive. Even to
the point of around-the-clock patrols at the house on the hill in
Carrick Foyle. The captain did not know why; it was not his province to
question, much less analyse, Kingston's commands. That they were was
enough. Whatever the motives that resulted in the harassment of the
white scholar before his death, and the continued concern about his
residence after, was Kingston's bailiwick, not his. He simply followed
orders. He followed them well, even enthusiastically. That was why he
was the prefect captain of the parish police in Falmouth.
And that was why he kept making telephone calls about one Floyd
Cotter, deceased, whose corpse lay on the table and whose blood would
not stop oozing out of the punctures on his face and in his chest and
stomach and legs; blood that dried on the pages of The Gleamer,
hastily scattered about the floor.
At five minutes to eight, as the captain was about to lift the
receiver off its base and call the precinct in Sherwood Content, the
telephone rang. It was his counterpart in Puerto Seco, near Discovery
Bay, whom he had contacted twenty minutes ago. The man said that after
their conversation, he had talked with his deputies on the early shift.
One of the men reported that there was a Floyd with a survey team,
headed by an American named McAuliff, that had begun work about ten
days ago on the shoreline. The survey had hired a carrier crew out of
Ocho Rios. The Government Employment Office had been involved.
The captain then woke up the director of the GEO in Ochee. The man
was thoroughly awake by the time he got on the line, because he had no
telephone and consequently had had to leave his house and walk to a
Johnny Canoe store, where he - and most of the neighbourhood - took
calls. The employment chief recalled that among the crewmen hired by
the American named McAuliff, there had been a Floyd, but he
did not remember the last name. This Floyd had simply shown up with
other applicants who had heard of the available work from the Ochee
grapevine. He had not been listed in the employment files; neither had
one or two others eventually hired.
The captain listened to the director, thanked him, and said nothing
to contradict or enlighten him. But after hanging up the phone, he put
in a call to Gordon House in Kingston. To the inspector who headed the
search teams that had meticulously gone over Piersall's house in
Carrick Foyle.
The inspector's conclusion was the same as the captain's: The
deceased Floyd Cotter - former employee of Walter Piersall - had
returned with friends to loot the house and been interrupted.
Was anything missing?
Digging in the cellar? In an old cistern out of use for years?
The inspector would fly back to Falmouth by noon. In the meantime,
the captain might discreetly interrogate Mr McAuliff. If nothing else,
ascertain his whereabouts.
At twenty minutes past nine, the captain and his first deputy drove
through the gates of Bengal Court.
Alexander was convincingly agitated. He was appalled - and naturally
sorry - that Floyd Cotter had lost his life, but goddamn it, the
episode answered several questions. Some very expensive equipment was
missing from the supply truck, equipment that could bring high prices
in a thieves' market. This Floyd Cotter obviously had been the
perpetrator; he was a thief, had been the thief.
Did the captain want a list of the missing items? There was a
geodometer, a water scope, half a dozen jewelled compasses, three
Polaroid filter screens, five brand-new medicine kits in Royal Society
cases, a Rolleiflex camera, and a number of other things of lesser
value - but not inexpensive. The captain's deputy wrote as rapidly as
he could on a notepad as Alex rattled off the 'missing' items. Twice he
asked for spellings; once the point of his pencil broke. It was a
harried few minutes.
After the interview was over, the captain and his deputy shook hands
with the American geologist and thanked him for his cooperation.
McAuliff watched them get into the police car and waved a friendly
good-bye as the vehicle sped out of the parking lot through the gates.
A quarter of a mile down the road, the captain braked the patrol car
to a stop. He spoke quietly to his deputy.
'Go back through the woods to the beach, mon. Find out who he is
with, who comes to see him.'
The deputy removed his visor cap and the creased khaki shirt of his
uniform with the yellow insignias of his rank, and reached into the
back for a green T-shirt. He slipped it over his head and got out of
the car. He stood on the tarred pavement, unbuckled his belt, and slid
his holster off the leather strip. He handed it through the window to
the captain.
The captain reached down below the dashboard and pulled out a
rumpled black baseball cap that was discoloured with age and human
sweat. He gave it to the deputy and laughed.
'We all look alike, mon. Aren't you the fella who all the time sell coconuts?'
'Alia time John Crow, mon. Mongoose him not.'
The deputy grinned and started towards the woods beyond the bank of
the pavement, where there was a rusty, torn wire fence. It was the
demarcation of the Bengal Court property.
The patrol car roared off down the road. The prefect captain of the
Falmouth police was in a hurry. He had to drive to Halfmoon Bay and
meet a seaplane that was flying in from Kingston.
Charles Whitehall stood in the tall grass on a ridge overlooking the
road from Priory-on-the-Sea. Under his arm was the black archive case,
clamped shut and held together with three-inch strips of adhesive. It
was shortly after twelve noon, and McAuliff would be driving up the
road soon.
Alone.
Charles had insisted on it. That is, he had insisted before he had
heard McAuliffs words - spoken curtly, defensively - that Barak Moore
was dead.
Barak dead.
Bramwell Moore, schoolboy chum from so many years ago in
Savanna-la-Mar, dead from Jamaican bullets. Jamaican bullets.
Jamaican police bullets. That was better. In adding the
establishmentarian, there was a touch of compassionate logic - a
contradiction in terms, thought Whitehall; logic was neither good nor
evil, merely logic. Still words defined logic and words could be
interpreted - thus the mendacity of all official statistics:
self-serving logic.
His mind was wandering, and he was annoyed with himself. Barak had
known, as he knew, that they were not playing chicken-in-de-kitchen any
longer. There was no bandana-headed mother wielding a straw broom,
chasing child and fowl out into the yard, laughing and scolding
simultaneously. This was a different sort of insurgence. Bandana-headed
mothers were replaced by visor-capped men of the state; straw brooms
became high-powered rifles. The chickens were ideas… far more deadly to
the uniformed servants of the state than the loose feathers were to the
bandana-headed servants of the family.
Barak dead.
It seemed incredible. Yet not without its positive effect. Barak had
not understood the problems of their island; therefore, he had not
understood the proper solutions. Barak's solutions were decades away.
First there had to be strength. The many led by a very strong,
militant few.
Perhaps one.
In the downhill distance there was a billow of dust; a station wagon
was travelling much too fast over the old dirt road.
McAuliff was anxious too.
Charles started back across the field to the entrance drive of the
house. He had requested that his Drax Hall host be absent between the
hours of twelve and three. No explanations were given, and no questions
were asked.
A messiah had returned. That was enough.
'Here it is,' said McAuliff, standing in front of Whitehall in the
cool toolshed, holding the smaller archive case in his left hand. 'But
before you start fiddling around, I want a couple of things clear.'
Charles Whitehall stared at the American. 'Conditions are
superfluous. We both know what must be done.'
'What's not superfluous,' countered Alex, 'is that you understand
there'll be no… unilateral decisions. This isn't your private war, Charley-mon.'
'Are you trying to sound like Barak?'
'Let's say I'm looking after his interests. And mine.'
'Yours I can comprehend. Why his? They're not compatible, you know.'
'They're not even connected.'
'So why concern yourself?' Whitehall shifted his eyes to the archive
case. He realized that his breathing had become audible; his anxiety
was showing, and again he was annoyed with himself. 'Let me have that,
please.'
'You asked me a question. I'm going to answer it first,' replied
McAuliff. 'I don't trust you, Charley. You'll use anyone. Anything.
Your kind always does. You make pacts and agreements with anything that
moves. And you do it very well. You're so flexible you meet yourself
around corners. But all the time it's sturm-und-drang, and
I'm not much for that.'
'Oh, I see. You subscribe to Barak's canefield paratroopers. The
chaos of the Fidelisti, where the corporals spit and chew cigars and
rape the generals' daughters so society is balanced. Three-year plans
and five-year plans and crude uneducated bullies managing the affairs
of state. Into disaster, I might add. Don't be a fool, McAuliff. You're
better than that.'
'Cut it out, Charley. You're not on a podium addressing your chiefs
of staff,' said Alex wearily. 'I don't believe in that
oversimplification any more than I believe in your two-plus-two
solutions. Pull in your hardware. I'm still the head of this survey. I
can fire you in a minute. Very publicly. Now, that might not get you
off the island, but your situation won't be the same.'
'What guarantee do I have that you won't force me out?'
'Not much of one. You'll just have to take my word that I want those
bastards off my back as badly as you do. For entirely different
reasons.'
'Somehow I think you're lying.'
'I wouldn't gamble on that.'
Whitehall searched McAuliff's eyes. 'I won't. I said this
conversation was superfluous, and it is. Your conditions are accepted
because of what must be done… Now, may I have that case, please?'
Sam Tucker sat on the terrace, alternately reading the newspaper and
glancing over the sea wall to the beach, where Alison and James
Ferguson were in deck chairs near the water. Every now and then, when
the dazzling Caribbean sun had heated their skin temperatures
sufficiently, Alison and the young botanist waded into the water. They
did not splash or jump or dive; they simply fell onto the calm surface,
as though exhausted. It seemed to be an exercise of weariness for both
of them.
There was no joy sur la plage, thought Sam, who
nevertheless picked up a pair of binoculars whenever Alison began
paddling about and scanned the immediate vicinity around which she
swam. He focused on any swimmer who came near her; there were not many,
and all were recognizable as guests of Bengal Court.
None was a threat, and that's what Sam Tucker was looking for.
Ferguson had returned from Montego Bay a little before noon, just
after Alex had driven off to Drax Hall. He had wandered onto the
connecting terraces, startling Sam and the temporarily disoriented
Lawrence, who had been sitting on the sea wall talking quietly about
the dead Barak Moore. They had been stunned because Ferguson had been
expansive about his day-off plans in Mo'Bay.
Ferguson arrived looking haggard, a nervous wreck. The assumption
was that he had overindulged and was hung to his fuzzy-cheeked gills;
the jokes were along this line, and he accepted them with a singular
lack of humour. But Sam Tucker did not subscribe to the explanation.
James Ferguson was not ravaged by the whiskey input of the night
before;
he was a frightened young man who had not slept. His fear, thought Sam,
was not anything he cared to discuss; indeed, he would not even talk
about his night in Montego, brushing it off as as dull, unrewarding
interlude. He appeared only to want company, as if there was immediate
security in the familiar. He seemed to cling to the presence of Alison
Booth, offering to fetch and carry… A schoolboy's crush or a fagot's
devotion? Neither fit, for he was neither.
He was afraid.
Very inconsistent behaviour, concluded Sam Tucker.
Tucker suddenly heard the quiet, rapid footsteps behind him and
turned. Lawrence, fully clothed now, came across the terrace from the
west lawn. The black revolutionary walked over to Sam and knelt - not
in fealty, but in a conscious attempt to conceal his large frame behind
the sea wall. He spoke urgently.
'I don't like what I see and hear, mon.'
'What's the matter?'
'John Crow hide wid' block chicken!'
'We're being watched?' Tucker put down the newspaper and sat forward.
'Yes, mon. Three, four hours now.'
'Who?'
'A digger been walking on the sand since morning. Him keep circling
the west-cove beach too long for tourist leave-behinds. I watch him
good. His trouser pants rolled up, look too new, mon. I go behind in
the woods and find his shoes. Then I know the trouser pants, mon. Him
policeman.'
Sam's gnarled features creased in thought. 'Alex spoke with the
Falmouth police around 9.30. In the lobby… He said there were two: a
chief and an Indian.'
'What, mon?'
'Nothing… That's what you saw. What did you hear?'
'Not all I saw.' Lawrence looked over the sea wall, east towards the
centre beach. Satisfied, he returned his attention to Sam. 'I follow
the digger to the kitchen alley, where he waits for a man to come
outside to speak with him. It is the clerk from the lobby desk. Him
shake his head many times. The policeman angry, mon.'
'But what did you hear, boy?'
'A porter-fella was plenty near, cleaning snapper in his buckets.
When the digger-policeman left I ask him hard, mon. He tell me this
digger kep' asking where the American fella went, who had telephoned
him.'
'And the clerk didn't know.'
'That's right, mon. The policeman was angry.'
'Where is he now?'
'Him wait down at the east shore.' Lawrence pointed over the sea
wall, across the dunes to a point on the other side of the central
beach. 'See? In front of the sunfish boats, mon.'
Tucker picked up the binoculars and focused on the figure near the
shallow-bottomed sailboats by the water. The man and boats were about
four hundred yards away. The man was in a torn green T-shirt and
rumpled baseball cap; the trousers were a contradiction. They
were rolled up to the knees, like most scavengers of the beach wore
them, but Lawrence was right, they were creased, too clean. The man was
chatting with a cocoruru peddler, a thin, very black Jamaican
who rolled a wheelbarrow filled with coconuts up and down the beach,
selling them to the bathers, cracking them open with a
murderous-looking machete. From time to time the man glanced over
towards the west-wing terraces, directly into the binoculars, thought
Sam. Tucker knew the man did not realize he was being observed; if he
did, the reaction would appear on his face. The only reaction was one
of irritation, nothing else.
'We'd better supply him with the proper information, son,' said Sam,
putting down the binoculars.
'What, mon?'
'Give him something to soothe that anger… So he won't think about it
too much.'
Lawrence grinned. 'We make up a story, eh, mon?'
'Eh, mon,' replied
Sam smiling. 'A casual, very believable kind of story.'
'McAuliff went shopping at Ochee, maybe? Ochee is six, seven miles
from Drax Hall, mon. Same road.'
'Why didn't Mrs Booth… Alison go with
him?'
'Him buy the lady a present. Why not, mon?' Sam looked at
Lawrence, then down at the beach, where Alison was standing up,
prepared to go back into the water.
'It's possible, boy. We should make
it a little festive, though.' Tucker got out of the chair and walked to
the sea wall. 'I think Alison should have a birthday.'
The telephone rang in McAuliffs room. The doors were closed against
the heat, and the harsh bell echoed from beyond the slatted panels.
Tucker and Lawrence looked at each other, each knowing the other's
thoughts. Although McAuliff had not elaborated on his late-morning
departure from
Bengal Court, neither had he concealed it. Actually, he had asked the
desk for a road map, explaining only that he was going for a drive.
Therefore, the front desk knew that he was not in his room.
Tucker crossed rapidly to the double doors, opened them, and went
inside to the telephone.
'Mr McAuliff?' The soft, precise Jamaican voice answered Sam's
question with the obvious explanation. It was that of the switchboard
operator.
'No, Mr McAuliff is out. May I give him a message?'
'Please, sir, I have a call from Kingston. From a Mr Latham. Will
you hold the line, please?'
'Certainly. Tell Mr Latham you've got Sam Tucker on the phone. He
may want to speak with me.'
Sam held the telephone under his wrinkled chin as he struck a match
to a thin cigar. He had barely drawn the first smoke when he heard the
double click of the connecting line. The voice was now Latham's.
Latham, the proper bureaucrat from the Ministry who was also committed
to the cause of Barak Moore. As Latham spoke, Tucker made the decision
not to tell him of Barak's death.
'Mr Tucker?'
'Yes, Mr Latham. Alex drove into Ocho Rios.'
'Very well. You can handle this, I'm sure. We were able to comply
with McAuliff's request. He's got his interior runners several days
early. They're in Duanvale and will be driving on Route 11 into
Queenhythe later this afternoon.'
'Queenhythe's near here, isn't it?'
'Three or four miles from your motel, that's all. They'll telephone
when they get in.'
'What are their names?'
'They're brothers. Marcus and Justice Hedrik. They're Maroons, of
course. Two of the best runners in Jamaica; they know the Cock Pit
extremely well, and they're trustworthy.'
'That's good to hear. Alexander will be delighted.'
Latham paused but obviously was not finished. 'Mr Tucker… ?'
'Yes, Mr Latham?'
'McAuliff's altered the survey's schedule, it would appear. I'm not
sure we understand…'
'Nothing to understand, Mr Latham. Alex decided to work from a
geographical midpoint. Less room for error that way; like bisecting a
triangle from semicircular coordinates. I agree with him.' Tucker
inhaled on his thin cigar while Latham's silence conveyed his
bewilderment. 'Also,' continued Sam, 'it gives everyone a lot more to
do.'
'I see… The reasons, then, are quite compatible with… let us say,
professional curiosity?'
'Very professional, Mr Latham.' Tucker realized that Latham would
not speak freely on the telephone. Or felt he could not. 'Beyond
criticism, if you're worried about the Ministry's concerns. Actually,
Alexander could be saving you considerable sums of money. You'll get a
lot more data much quicker.'
Latham paused again, as though to telegraph the importance of the
following statement. 'Naturally, we're always interested in conserving
funds… And I assume you all agree with the decision to go in
so quickly. Into the Cock Pit, that is.'
Sam knew that Latham's statement could be translated into the
question: Does Barak Moore agree!
'We all agree, Mr Latham. We're all professionals.'
'Yes… Well, that's splendid. One last item, Mr Tucker.'
'Yes, Mr Latham?
'We want Mr McAuliff to use all the resources provided him. He's not
to stint in an effort to save money; the survey's too important for
that.'
Tucker again translated Latham's code easily: Alex was to
maintain contact with British Intelligence liaisons. If he avoided
them, suspicions would be aroused.
'I'll tell him that, Mr Latham, but I'm sure he's aware of it. These
past two weeks have been very routine, very dull - simple coastline
geodometrics. Not much call for equipment. Or resources.'
'As long as he knows our feelings,' said Latham rapidly, now anxious
to terminate the conversation. 'Goodbye, Mr Tucker.'
'Goodbye, Mr Latham.' Sam held his finger down on the telephone
button for several moments, then released it and waited for the
switchboard. When the operator came on the line, Tucker asked for the
front desk.
'Bengal Court, good afternoon.'
'This is Mr Tucker, west wing 6, Royal Society survey.'
'Yes, Mr Tucker?'
'Mr McAuliff asked me to make arrangements for tonight. He didn't
have time this morning; besides, it was awkward. Mrs Booth was with
him.' Sam paused, letting his words register.
The clerk automatically responded. 'Yes, Mr Tucker. What can we do
for you?'
'It's Mrs Booth's birthday. Do you think the kitchen could whip up a
little cake? Nothing elaborate, you understand.'
'Of course! We'd be delighted, sir.' The clerk was
effusive. 'Our pleasure, Mr Tucker.'
'Fine. That's very kind of you. Just put it on Mr McAuliff's bill—'
'There'll be no charge,' interrupted the clerk, fluidly subservient.
'Very kind indeed. We'll be dining around 8.30, I guess. Our usual
table.'
'We'll take care of everything…'
'That is, it'll be 8.30,' continued Sam, 'if Mr McAuliff finds his
way back in time…' Tucker paused again, listening for the
clerk's appropriate response.
'Oh? Is there a problem, Mr Tucker?'
'Well, the damn fool drove south of Ocho Rios, around Fern Gully, I
think, to locate some stalactite sculpture. He told me there were
natives who did that sort of thing down there.'
'That's true, Mr Tucker. There are a number of stalactite craftsmen
in the Gully. However, there are government restrictions—'
'Oh Lord, son!' interrupted Sam defensively. 'He's just going to
find Mrs Booth a little present, that's all.'
The clerk laughed, softly and obsequiously. 'Please don't mistake
me, Mr Tucker. Government interference is often most unwarranted. I
only meant that I hope Mr McAuliff is successful. When he asked for the
petrol map, he should have mentioned where he was going. I might have
helped him.'
'Well…' drawled Sam conspiratorially, 'he was probably embarrassed,
if you know what I mean. I wouldn't mention it; he'd be mad as hell at
me.'
'Of course.'
'And thanks for the cake tonight. That's really very nice of you,
son.'
'Not at all, sir.'
The good-byes were rapid, more so on the clerk's part. Sam replaced
the telephone and walked back out onto the terrace. Lawrence turned
from peering over the wall and sat on the flagstone deck, his back
against the sea wall, his body hidden from the beach.
'Mrs Booth and Jimbo-mon are out of water,' said the black
revolutionary. 'They are in chairs again.'
'Latham called. The runners will be here this afternoon… And I
talked with the front desk. Let's see if our information gets
transmitted properly.' Tucker lowered himself on the chair slowly and
reached for the binoculars on the table. He picked up the newspaper and
held it next to the binoculars as he focused on the swimming-pool patio
fronting the central beach .of Bengal Court.
Within ten seconds he saw the figure of a man dressed in a coat and
tie come out of the rear entrance of the motel. It was the front-desk
clerk. He walked around the edge of the pool, past a group of wooden,
padded sun chairs, nodding to guests, chatting with several. He reached
the stone steps leading to the sand and stood there several moments,
surveying the beach. Then he started down the steps and across the
white, soft sand. He walked diagonally to the right, to the row of
sunfish sail-boats.
Sam watched as the clerk approached the digger-policeman in the
sloppy baseball cap and the cocorum peddler. The cocoruru
man saw him coming, picked up the
handles of his wheelbarrow, and rolled it on the hard sand near the
water to get away. The digger-policeman stayed where he was and
acknowledged the clerk.
The magnified features in the glass conveyed all that was necessary
to Sam Tucker. The policeman's features contorted with irritation. The
man was apparently lamenting his waste of time and effort, commodities
not easily expended on such a hot day.
The clerk turned and started back across the sand towards the patio.
The digger-policeman began walking west, near the water's edge. His
gait was swifter now; gone was the stooped posture indigenous to a
scavenger of the beach.
He wasn't much of an undercover man, thought Sam Tucker as he
watched the man's progress towards the woods of Bengal Court's west
property. On his way to his shoes and the egress to the shore road, he
never once looked down at the sand for tourist leave-behinds.
McAuliff stood looking over Charles Whitehall's left shoulder as the
black scholar ridged the flame of the acetylene torch across the seamed
edge of the archive case. The hot point of flame bordered no more than
an eighth of an inch behind the seam, at the end of the case.
The top edge of the archive case cracked. Charles extinguished the
flame quickly and thrust the end of the case under the faucet in the
sink. The thin stream of water sizzled into vapour as it touched the
hot steel. Whitehall removed his tinted goggles, picked up a miniature
hammer, and tapped the steaming end.
It fell off, cracking and sizzling, into the metal sink. Within the
case could be seen the oilcloth of a packet. His hands trembling
slightly, Charles Whitehall pulled it out. He got off the stool,
carrying the rolled-up oilcloth to a deserted area of the bench, and
untied the nylon laces. He unwound the packet until it was flat,
unzipped the inner lining, and withdrew two sheets of single-spaced
typing. As he reached for the bench lamp, he looked at McAuliff.
Alex was fascinated by what he saw. Whitehall's eyes shone with a
strange intensity. It was a fever. A messianic fever.
A kind of victory rooted in the absolute.
A fanatic's victory, thought McAuliff.
Without speaking, Whitehall began to read. As he finished the first
page, he slid it across the bench to Alex.
The word 'Halidon' was in reality three words - or sounds - from the
African Ashanti, so corrupted by later phonetics as to be hardly
traceable. (Here Piersall included hieroglyphs that were meaningless to
Alex.) The root word, again a hieroglyph, was in the sound leedaw,
translated to convey the picture of a hollowed-out piece of wood that
could be held in the hand. The leedaw was a primitive
instrument of sound, a means of communication over distances in the
jungles and hills. The pitch of its wail was controlled by the breath
of the blower and the placement of his hand over slits carved through
the surface - the basic principle of the woodwind.
The historical parallel had been obvious to Walter Piersall. Whereas
the Maroon tribes, living in settlements, used an abeng - a
type of bugle made from the horns of cattle - to signal their warriors
or spread the alarm of an approaching white enemy, the followers of
Acquaba were nomadic and could not rely on animal products with any
certainty. They returned to the African custom of utilizing the most
prolific material of their surroundings: wood.
Once having established the root symbol as the primitive horn, it
remained for Piersall to specify the modification of the accompanying
sounds. He went back to the Ashanti-Coromanteen studies to extract
compatible noun roots. He found the final syllable, or sound, first. It
was in the hieroglyph depicting a deep river current, or undertow, that
perilled man or animal in the water. Its sonic equivalent was a
bass-toned wail or cry. The phonetic spelling was nwa.
The pieces of the primitive puzzle were nearly joined.
The initial sound was the symbol hayee, the Coromanteen
word meaning the council of their tribal gods. Hayee - leedaw - nwa.
The low cry of a jungle horn signifying peril, a supplication to the
council of the gods.
Acquaba's code. The hidden key that would admit an outsider into the
primitive tribal sect.
Primitive and not primitive at all. Halidon. Hollydawn. A wailing instrument whose cry was
carried by the wind to the gods.
This, then, was Dr Walter Piersalls last gift to his island
sanctuary. The means to reach, enlist, and release a powerful force for
the good of Jamaica. To convince 'it' to accept its responsibility.
There remained only to determine which of the isolated communities
in the Cock Pit mountains was the Halidon. Which would respond to the
code of Acquaba?
Finally, the basic scepticism of the scholar inserted itself into
Piersall's document. He did not question the existence of the Halidon;
what he did speculate on was its rumoured wealth and commitment. Were
these more myth than current fact? Had the myth grown out of proportion
to the conceivably diminished resources?
The answer was in the Cock Pit.
McAuliff finished the second page and looked over at Charles
Whitehall. The black fascist had walked from the workbench to the small
window overlooking the Drax Hall fields. Without turning, he spoke
quietly, as though he knew Alex was staring at him, expecting him to
speak.
'Now we know what must be done. But we must proceed cautiously, sure
of every step. A wrong move on our part and the cry of the Halidon will
vanish with the wind.'
TWENTY TWO
The caravel prop plane descended on its western approach to the
small Boscobel airfield in Oracabessa. The motors revved in short
bursts to counteract the harsh wind and rain of the sudden downpour,
forcing the aircraft to enter the strip cleanly. It taxied to the far
end, turned awkwardly, and rolled back towards the small, one level
concrete passenger terminal.
Two Jamaican porters ran through the low gates to the aircraft, both
holding umbrellas. Together they pushed the metal step unit to the side
of the plane, under the door; the man on the left then knocked rapidly
on the fuselage.
The door was slapped open by a large white man who immediately
stepped out, waving aside the offer of the two umbrellas. He jumped
from the top level to the ground and looked around in the rain.
His right hand was in his jacket pocket.
He turned up to the aircraft door and nodded. A second large white
man disembarked and ran across the muddy space towards the concrete
terminal. His right hand, too, was in his pocket. He entered the
building, glanced around, and proceeded out the exit to the parking
area.
Sixty seconds later the gate by the luggage depot was swung open by
the second man and a Mercedes 660 limousine drove through towards the
Caravel, its wheels spinning frequently in the drenched earth.
The two Jamaicans remained by the step unit, their umbrellas waiting.
The Mercedes pulled alongside the plane, and the tiny, ancient
figure of Julian Warfield was helped down the steps, his head and body
shielded by the blacks. The second white man held the door of the
Mercedes; his large companion was in front of the automobile, scanning
the distance and the few passengers who had come out of the terminal.
When Warfield was enclosed in the back seat, the Jamaican driver
stepped out and the second white man got behind the wheel. He honked
the horn once; his companion turned and raced around to the left front
door and climbed in.
The Mercedes's deep-throated engine roared as the limousine backed
up beyond the tail assembly of the Caravel, then belched forward and
sped through the gate.
With Julian Warfield in the back seat were Peter Jensen and his
wife, Ruth.
'We'll drive to Peale Court, it's not far from here,' said the
small, gaunt financier, his eyes alive and controlled. 'How long do you
have? With reasonable caution.'
'We rented a car for a trip to Dunns Falls,' replied Peter. 'We left
it in the lot and met the Mercedes outside. Several hours, at least.'
'Did you make it clear you were going to the Falls?'
'Yes. I invited McAuliff.'
Warfield smiled. 'Nicely done, Peter.'
The car raced over the Oracabessa road for several miles and turned
into a gravel drive flanked by two white stone posts. On both were
identical brass plaques reading 'PEALE COURT.' They were polished to a
high gloss, a rich mixture of gold and black.
At the end of the drive was a long parking area in front of a
longer, one-storey white stucco house with expensive wood in the doors,
and many windows. It was perched on top of a steep incline above the
beach.
Warfield and the Jensens were admitted by a passive, elderly black
woman in a white uniform, and Julian led the way to a veranda
overlooking the waters of Golden Head Bay.
The three of them settled in chairs, and Warfield politely asked the
Jamaican servant to bring refreshments. Perhaps a light rum punch.
The rain was letting up; streaks of yellow and orange could be seen
beyond the grey sheets in the sky.
'I've always been fond of Peale Court,' said Warfield. 'It's so
peaceful.'
The view is breathtaking,' added Ruth. 'Do you own it, Julian?'
'No, my dear. But I don't believe it would be difficult to acquire.
Look around, if you like. Perhaps you and Peter might be interested.'
Ruth smiled and, as if on cue, rose from her chair. 'I think I
shall.'
She walked back through the veranda doors into the larger living
room with the light brown marble floor. Peter watched her, then looked
over at Julian. 'Are things that serious?'
'I don't want her upset,' replied Warfield.
'Which, of course, gives me my answer.'
'Possibly. Not necessarily. We've come upon disturbing news. MI5.'
Peter reacted as though he'd been jolted unnecessarily. 'I thought
we had that area covered. Completely. It was passive.'
'On the island, perhaps. Sufficient for our purposes. Not in London.
Obviously.' Warfield paused and took a deep breath, pursing his narrow,
wrinkled lips. 'Naturally, we'll take steps immediately to intercede,
but it may have gone too far. Ultimately, we can control the Service…
if we must, right out of the Foreign Office. What bothers me now is the
current activity.'
Peter Jensen looked out over the veranda railing. The afternoon sun
was breaking through the clouds. The rain had stopped.
'Then we have two adversaries. This Halidon - whatever in blazes it
is. And British Intelligence.'
'Precisely. What is of paramount importance, however, is to keep the
two separate. Do you see?'
Jensen returned his gaze to the old man. 'Of course. Assuming they
haven't already joined forces.'
'They have not.'
'You're sure of that, Julian?'
'Yes. Don't forget, we first learned of this Halidon through MI5
personnel - specialist level. Dunstone's payrolls are diverse. If
contact had been made, we'd know it.'
Again Jensen looked out at the waters of the bay, his expression
pensive and questioning. 'Why? Why? The man was offered a
million dollars… There is nothing, nothing in his dossier
that would give an inkling of this. McAuliff is suspect of all
governmental interferences… quite rabid on the subject, actually. It
was one of the reasons I proposed him.'
'Yes,' said Warfield noncommittally. 'McAuliff was your idea, Peter…
Don't mistake me, I am not holding you responsible, I concurred with
your choice… Describe what happened last night. This morning.'
Jensen did so, ending with the description of the fishing boat
veering off into open water and the removal of the medical equipment
from the motel room. 'If it was an MI5 operation, it was crude, Julian.
Intelligence has too many facilities available to be reduced to motels
and fishing boats. If we only knew what happened.'
'We do. At least, I think we do,' replied Warfield. 'Late last night
the house of a dead white man, an anthropologist named Piersall, was
broken into; ten, twelve miles from the coast. There was a skirmish.
Two men were killed that we know of; others could have been wounded.
They officially called it a robbery, which, of course, it wasn't
really. Not in the sense of larceny.'
'I know the name "Piersall"—'
'You should. He was the university radical who filed that insane
Letter of Intent with the Department of Territories.'
'Of course! He was going to purchase half the Cock Pit! That was
months ago. He was a lunatic.' Jensen lighted his pipe; he gripped the
bowl as he did so, he did not merely hold it. 'So there is a third
intruder,' he said, his words drifting off quietly, nervously.
'Or one of the first two, Peter.'
'How? What do you mean?'
'You just ruled out MI5. It could be the Halidon.'
Jensen stared at Warfield. 'If so, it would mean McAuliff is working
with both camps. And if Intelligence has not made contact, it's because
McAuliff has not permitted it.'
'A very complicated young man.' The old financier placed his glass
down carefully on a tiled table next to his chair. He turned slightly
to look through the veranda doors; the voice of Ruth Jensen could be
heard chatting with the Jamaican maid inside the house. Warfield looked
back at Peter. He pointed his thin, bony finger to a black leather case
on a white wicker table across the open porch. 'That is for you, Peter.
Please get it.'
Jensen rose from his chair, walked to the table, and stood by the
case. It was smaller than the attache variety. And thicker. Its two
hasps were secured by combination locks. 'What are the numbers?'
'The left lock is three zeros. The right, three fives. You may alter
the combinations as you wish.' Peter bent down and began manipulating
the tiny vertical dials. Warfield continued. 'Tomorrow you will start
into the interior. Learn everything you can. Find out who comes to see
him, for certainly he will have visitors. And the minute you establish
the fact that he is in actual contact, and whom with, send out Ruth on
some medical pretext with the information… Then, Peter, you must kill
him. McAuliff is a keystone. His death will panic both camps, and we
shall know all we need to know.'
Jensen lifted the top of the black leather case. Inside, recessed in
the green felt, was a brand-new Luger pistol. Its steel glistened,
except for a dull space below the trigger housing where the serial
number had been removed. Below the weapon was a five-inch cylinder, one
end grooved.
A silencer.
'You've never asked this of me, Julian. Never… You mustn't.' Jensen
turned and stared at Warfield.
'I am not asking, Peter. I am demanding. Dunstone, Limited, has
given you everything. And now it needs you in a way it has not needed
you before. You must, you see.'
PART FOUR
The Cock Pit
TWENTY THREE
They began at midpoint of the western perimeter, two and a half
miles south of Weston Favel, on the edge of the Cock Pit range. They
made base camp on the bank of a narrow offshoot of the Martha Brae. All
but the runners, Marcus and Justice Hedrik, were stunned by the
seemingly impenetrable walls of jungle that surrounded them.
Strange, contradictory forests that were filled with the wet
verdancy of tropic growth and the cold massiveness of sky-reaching
black and green associated with northern climates. Dense macca-fat
palms stood next to silk-cotton, or ceiba, trees that soared out of
sight, their tops obscured by the midgrowth. Mountain cabbage and bull
thatch, orchid and moss, fungi and eucalyptus battled for their
individual rights to coexist in the Oz-like jungle primaeval.
The ground was covered with ensnaring spreads of fern and
pteridophyte, soft, wet and treacherous. Pools of swamplike mud were
hidden in the thick, crowded sprays of underbrush. Sudden hills rose
out of nowhere, remembrances of Oligocene upheavals, never to be
settled back into the cradle of the earth.
The sounds of the screeching bat and parrot and tanager intruded on
the forest's undertones; jungle rats and the mongoose could be heard
intermittently in their unseen games of death. Every now and then there
was the scream of a wild pig, pursuing or in panic.
And far in the distance, in the clearing of the river bank, were the
mountains, preceded by sudden stretches of untamed grassland. Strangely
grey with streaks of deep green and blue and yellow - rain and hot
sunlight in an unceasing interchange.
All this fifteen minutes by air from the gaudy strips of Montego.
Unbelievable.
McAuliff had made contact with the north-coast contacts of British
Intelligence. There were five, and he had reached each one.
They had given him another reason to consign R. C. Holcroft to the
despised realm of the manipulator. For the Intelligence people were of
small comfort. They stated perfunctorily their relief at his reporting,
accepted his explanations of routine geographic chores that kept him
occupied, and assured him - with more sound than conviction - that they
were at his beck and call.
One man, the MI5 contact from Port Maria, drove down the coast to
Bengal Court to meet with Alex. He was a portly black merchant who
limited his identification to the single name of 'Garvey.' He insisted
on a late-night rendezvous in the tiny bar of the motel, where he was
known as a liquor distributor.
It did not take McAuliff long to realize that Garvey, ostensibly
there to assure him of total cooperation and safety, was actually
interrogating him for a report that would be sent back to London.
Garvey had the stench and sight of a practiced informer about him. The
stench was actual: The man suffered from body odour, which could not be
concealed by liberal applications of bay rum. The sight was in his eyes
- ferretlike, and a touch bloodshot. Garvey was a man who sought out
opportunities and enjoyed the fruits thereof.
His questions were precise, McAuliffs answers apparently not
satisfactory. And all questions led to the one question, the only one
that mattered: Any progress concerning the Halidon?
Anything?
Unknown observers, strangers in the distance… a signal, a sign - no
matter how remote or subtle? Anything!
'Absolutely nothing' was a hard reply for Garvey to accept.
What about the blacks in the green Chevrolet who had followed him in
Kingston? Tallon had traced them to the anthropologist Walter Piersall.
Piersall had been a white agitator… common knowledge. Piersall had
telephoned McAuliff… the Courtleigh switchboard cooperated with MI5.
What did Piersall want?
Alex claimed he did not - could not - know, as Piersall had never
reached him. An agitator, white or black, was an unpredictable bearer
of unpredictable news. Predictably, this agitator had had an accident.
It might be presumed - from what little McAuliff had been told by
Tallon
and others - that Piersall had been closing in on Dunstone, Limited;
without a name, of course. If so, he McAuliff, was a logical person to
reach. But this was conjecture; there was no way to confirm it as fact.
What had happened to the late-arriving Samuel Tucker? Where had he
been?
Drinking and whoring in Montego Bay. Alex was sorry he had caused so
much trouble about Sam; he should have known better. Sam Tucker was an
incorrigible wanderer, albeit the best soil analyst in the business.
The perspiring Garvey was bewildered, frustrated by his confusion.
There was too much activity for McAuliff to remain so insulated.
Alex reminded the liaison in short, coarse words that there was far
too much survey activity - logistical, employment, above all government
paperwork - for him not to be insulated. What the hell did Garvey think
he had been doing?
The interview lasted until 1.30 in the morning. Before leaving, the
MI5 contact reached into his filthy briefcase and withdrew a metallic
object the size of a pen-and-pencil case, with its approximate
thickness. It was a miniaturized radio-signal transmitter, set to a
specific frequency. There were three thick, tiny glass lights across
the top of the small panel. The first, explained Garvey, was a white
light that indicated sufficient power for sending when turned on - not
unlike the illuminated filigree of a strobe light. The second, a red
light, informed the operator that his signal was being transmitted. The
third, a green light, confirmed the reception of the signal by a
corresponding device within a radius of twenty-five miles. There would
be two simple codes, one for normal conditions, one for emergency. Code
One was to be transmitted twice daily, once every twelve hours. Code
Two, when aid was needed.
The receiving set, said Garvey, was capable of defining the signal
within a diameter of one thousand yards by means of an attached
radarscope with terrain coordinates. Nothing was left to chance.
Unbelievable.
The incredible assumption, therefore, was that the Intelligence men
would never be more than twenty-five miles away, and Holcroft's
'guaranteed' safety factor was the even more ridiculous assumption that
the jungle distance could be traversed and the exact location
pinpointed within a time period that precluded danger.
R. C. Holcroft was a winner, thought McAuliff.
'Is this everything?' McAuliff asked the sweating Garvey. 'This
goddamn metal box is our protection?'
'There are additional precautions,' Garvey replied enigmatically. 'I
told you, nothing is left to chance—'
'What the hell does that mean?'
'It means you are protected. I am not authorized to speak further.
As a matter of fact, mon, I do not know anything further. I
am, like you, merely an employee. I do what I am told to do, say what I
am told to say… And now I have said enough. I have an uncomfortable
drive back to Port Maria.'
The man named Garvey rose from the table, picked up his tattered
briefcase, and waddled towards the door of the dimly lit room. Before
leaving, however, he could not help himself. He stopped at the bar,
where one of the motel's managers was standing, and solicited an order
of liquor.
McAuliff shook his thoughts loose as he heard the voices of Ruth and
Peter Jensen behind him. He was sitting on a dried mud flat above the
river bank; the Jensens were talking as they walked across the clearing
from their bivouac tent. It amazed Alex - they amazed him.
They walked so casually, so normally, over the chopped Cock Pit ground
cover; one might think they had entered Regent's Park for a stroll.
'Majestic place in its way, rather,' said Peter, removing the
ever-present pipe from between his teeth.
'It is the odd combination of colour and substance, don't you think,
Alex?' Ruth had her arm linked through her husband's. A noonday walk
down the Strand. 'One is so very sensuous, the other so massive and
intricate.'
'You make the terms sound contradictory, darling. They're not, you
know.' Peter chuckled as his wife feigned minor exasperation.
'He has an incorrigibly pornographic mind, Alex. Pay no attention.
Still, he's right. It is majestic. And positively dense.
Where's Alison?'
'With Ferguson and Sam. They're testing the water.'
'Jimbo-mon's going to use up all of his film, I dare say,' muttered
Peter as he helped his wife to sit down next to McAuliff. 'That new
camera he brought back from Montego has consumed him.'
'Frightfully expensive, I should think.' Ruth smoothed the
un-smoothable cloth of her bivouac slacks, like a woman not used to
being without a skirt. Or a woman who was nervous. 'For a boy who's
always saying he's bone-stony, quite an extravagance.'
'He didn't buy it; he borrowed it,' said Alex. 'From a friend he
knew last year in Port Antonio.'
'That's right, I forgot.' Peter relit his pipe as he spoke. 'You
were all here last year, weren't you?'
'Not all, Peter. Just Sam and me; we worked for Kaiser. And
Ferguson. He was with the Craft Foundation. No one else.'
'Well, Charles is Jamaican,' intruded Ruth nervously. 'Surely he
flies back and forth. Heaven knows, he must be rich enough.'
'That's a rather brass speculation, luv.'
'Oh, come off it, Peter. Alex knows what I mean.'
McAuliff laughed. 'I don't think he worries about money. He's yet to
submit his bills for the survey outfits. I have an idea they're the
most expensive in Harrod's Safari Shop.'
'Perhaps he's embarrassed,' said Peter, smiling. 'He looks as though
he had jumped right off the cinema screen. The black hunter; very
impressive image, if somewhat contrived.'
'Now you're the one who's talking brass, luv. Charles is
impressive.' Ruth turned to Alex. 'My overage Lochinvar is green with
envy.'
'That camera's damn well new… not the sort of thing one lends, I
shouldn't think.' Peter looked at McAuliff as he spoke the non sequitur.
'Depends on the friend, I guess,' replied Alex, aware that Peter was
implying something beyond his words. 'Ferguson can be a likable guy.'
' Very,' added Ruth. 'And so helpless, somehow. Except
when he's over his equipment. Then he's positively a whiz.'
'Which is all I really care about.' McAuliff addressed this judgment
to Peter. 'But then, you're all whizzes, cameras and fancy clothes and
aromatic pipes notwithstanding.' Alex laughed.
'Got me there, chap.' Peter removed his pipe and shook his head.
'Dreadful habit.'
'Not at all,' said McAuliff. 'I like the smell, I really do. I'd
smoke one myself but my tongue burns. Then stings.'
'There are preventive measures, but it's a dull subject… What's
fascinating is this jungle laboratory we're in. Have you decided on
crew assignments?'
'Vaguely,' answered Alex. 'Doesn't make an awful lot of difference.
Who do you want?'
'One of those brothers for me,' said Ruth. 'They seem to know exactly
where they are. I'd be lost in half a mo'!… Of course, that's selfish;
my work is least important…'
'We still don't want to lose you, do we, Peter?' McAuliff leaned
forward.
'Not as long as she behaves.'
'Take your pick,' said Alex. 'Marcus or Justice?'
'What marvellously dotty names!' cried Ruth. 'I choose Justice.' She
looked at her husband. 'Always justice.'
'Yes, of course, my dear.'
'All right,' agreed McAuliff. 'Then Marcus'll be with me. One of
them has to. And Alison asked for Lawrence, if you don't mind, Peter.'
'Not at all, chap. Sorry his friend… what was his name? Floyd? Yes,
Floyd. Sorry he jumped ship, as it were. Did you ever find out what
happened to him?'
'No,' replied Alex. 'He just disappeared. Unreliable guy. Something
of a thief, too, according to Lawrence.'
'Pity… He seemed rather intelligent.'
'That's condescending, darling. Worse than brassy.' Ruth
Jensen picked up a tiny stone and chucked it into the narrow river
offshoot.
'Then just pick out a stout fellow who'll promise to lead me back to
camp for meals and sleep.'
'Fine. I'll do that. We'll work four-hour field sessions, staying in
touch by radio. I don't want anyone going beyond a sonic mile from camp
for the first few days.'
'Beyond.' Ruth looked at McAuliff, her voice having risen
an octave. 'Dear Alex, if I stumble more than twenty feet into
that maze of overgrowth, commit me!'
'Rubbish,' countered her husband, 'when you start cracking rocks,
you lose time and distance… Speaking of which, Alex, old boy,
I presume there'll be a fairly steady flow of visitors. To observe our
progress; that sort of thing.'
'Why?' McAuliff was now aware that both husband and wife were
sending out abstract, perhaps unconscious signals. Peter less than
Ruth. He was subtler, surer of himself than she was. But not completely
sure. 'We'll bring out field reports every ten days or so. Rotate days
off that way. That'll be good enough.'
'Well, we're not exactly at the end of nowhere; although I grant
you, it looks like it. I should think the moneymen would want to check
up on what they're paying for.'
Peter Jensen had just made a mistake, and McAuliff was suddenly
alarmed. 'What moneymen?'
Ruth Jensen had picked up another stone, about to throw it into the
brackish river. Arm poised, she froze for a second before hurling it.
The moment was not lost on any of them. Peter tried to minimize it.
'Oh… some Royal Society titans or perhaps a few of these buggers
from the Ministry. I know the RS boys, and God knows the Jamaicans have
been less than cordial. I just thought… Oh, well, perhaps I'm
off-centre.'
'Perhaps,' said Alex quietly, 'you're ahead of me. On-site
inspectors aren't unusual. I was thinking about the convenience. Or
lack of it. It took us nearly a day to get here. Of course, we had the
truck and the equipment… Still, it seems like a lot of trouble.'
'Not really.' Peter Jensen tapped his pipe on his boots. 'I've been
checking the maps, looking about from the river clearing. The
grasslands are nearer than we think. Less than a couple of miles, I'd
say. Light planes could easily land.'
'That's a good point. I hadn't thought of it.' McAuliff leaned
forward once again to engage Peter, but Peter did not look at him now.
'I mean if we needed… equipment or supplies, we could get them much
quicker than I'd anticipated. Thanks, Peter.'
'Oh, don't thank him.' Ruth spoke with a nervous giggle.
'Don't cater to him.' She looked briefly at her husband;
McAuliff wished he could have seen her eyes. 'Peter just wants to
convince himself he's a hop-skip from a pub.'
'Rubbish. Just idle conversation, old girl…'
'I think he's bored with us, Ruth,' said Alex laughing softly,
almost intimately. 'I think he wants to see new faces.'
'As long as it's not new bodies, my dear, the tolerance is
possible,' retorted Ruth Jensen with throated caricature.
The three of them laughed out loud.
McAuliff knew the humour was forced. Mistakes had been made, and the
Jensens were afraid.
Peter was looking for new faces… or a new face. A face he
believed Alex expected.
Who was it?
Was it possible… remotely possible that the Jensens were not what
they seemed?
There was the sound of whistling from a path in the north bush.
Charles Whitehall emerged into the clearing, his safari uniform pressed
and clean, in counterpoint to the rumpled clothes of Marcus Hedrik, the
older brother of the two Cock Pit runners. Marcus remained a respectful
distance behind Whitehall, his passive black face inscrutable.
McAuliff rose from the ground and spoke to the Jensens. 'It's
Charley. There's a hill community several miles west of the river; he
was going to try to hire a couple of hands.'
Ruth and Peter took their cue, because they very much wanted to.
'Well, we've still got some equipment sorting to do,' said the husband,
rising quickly.
'Indeed we do! Help me up, luv.'
The Jensens waved to Charles Whitehall and rapidly started for their
tent.
McAuliff met Whitehall at the midpoint of the clearing. The black
scholar dismissed Marcus Hedrik, instructing him to issue preparation
orders to the rest of the crew about the evening patrols. Alex was
fascinated to watch and listen to Charley-mon speaking to the runner.
He fell easily into the hill country patois - damn near indecipherable
to McAuliff - and used his hands and eyes in gestures and looks that
were absolutely compatible with the obtuse speech.
'You do that very well,' said Alex as the runner trudged out of
hearing.
'I should. It's what you hired me for. I am the best there is.'
'That's one of the things I like about you, Charley. You take
compliments so gracefully.'
'You did not hire me for my graces. They are a bonus you don't
deserve.' Whitehall allowed himself a slight smile. 'You enjoy calling
me "Charley," McAuliff?' added the elegant black.
'Do you object?'
'Not really. Because I understand. It is a defence mechanism; you
Americans are rife with them. "Charley" is an idiomatic leveller,
peculiarly indigenous to the sixties and seventies. The Vietcong were
"Charley," so too the Cambodians and the Laotians; even your man on the
American street. It makes you feel superior. Strange that the name
should be Charley, is it not?'
'It happens to be your name.'
'Yes, of course, but I think that is almost beside the point.' The
black looked away briefly, then back at Alex. 'The name "Charles" is
Germanic in origin, actually. Its root meaning is "full grown" or
possibly - here scholars differ - "great size." Is it not interesting
that you Americans take just such a name and reverse its connotation?'
McAuliff exhaled audibly and spoke wearily. 'I accept the lesson for
the day and all its subtle anti-colonialism. I gather you'd prefer I
call you "Charles," or "Whitehall," or perhaps "Great Black Leader."'
'Not for a moment. "Charley" is perfectly fine. Even amusing. And,
after all, it is better than "Rufus."'
'Then what the hell is this all about?'
Whitehall smiled - again, only slightly - and lowered his voice.
'Until ten seconds ago, Marcus Hedrik's brother had been standing
behind the lean-to on our left. He was trying to listen to us. He is
gone now.'
Alex whipped his head around. Beyond the large tarpaulin lean-to,
erected to cover some camp furniture against a forest shower, Justice
Hedrik could be seen walking slowly towards two other crewmen across
the clearing. Justice was younger than his brother Marcus, perhaps in
his late twenties, and stockily muscular.
'Are you sure? I mean, that he was listening to us?'
'He was carving a piece of ceiba wood. There is too much to do to
waste time carving artifacts. He was listening. Until I looked over at
him.'
'I'll remember that.'
'Yes. Do. But do not give it undue emphasis. Runners are splendid
fellows when they are taking in tourist groups; the tips are generous.
I suspect neither brother is too pleased to be with us. Our trip is
professional - worse, academically professional. There is not much in
it for them. So there will be some hostility.'
McAuliff started to speak, then hesitated. He was bewildered. 'I… I
may have missed something. What's that got to do with his listening?'
Whitehall blinked slowly, as if patiently explaining to an inept
pupil - which, obviously, he felt was the case. 'In the primitive
intelligence, hostility is usually preceded by an overt, blunt
curiosity.'
'Thank you, Dr Strangelove.' Alex did not hide his irritation.
'Let's
get off this. What happened over in the hill community?'
'I sent a messenger to Maroon Tower. I asked for a very private
meeting with the Colonel of the Maroons. He will listen; he will
accept.'
'I wasn't aware a meeting was that tough to get. If I remember what
Barak said, and I do, we just offer money.'
'We do not want a tourist audience, McAuliff. No tribal artifacts or
Afro-Carib beads bought for an extra two-dollah-Jamaican. Our business
is more serious than tourist trade. I want to prepare the Colonel
psychologically; make him think.'
Alex paused; Whitehall was probably right. If what Barak Moore had
said had validity. If the Colonel of the Maroons was the sole contact
with the Halidon, the decision to make that contact would not be
lightly arrived at; a degree of psychological preparation would be
preferable to none at all. But not so much as to make him run, avoid
the decision.
'How do you think you accomplished that?' asked McAuliff.
'I hired the leader of the community to act as courier. I gave him
one hundred dollars, which is like offering either of us roughly a
quarter of a million. The message requests a meeting in four days, four
hours after the sun descends over the mountains—'
'The Arawak symbols?' interrupted Alex.
'Precisely. Completed by specifying that the meeting should take
place to the right of the Coromanteen crescent, which I would presume
to be the Colonel's residence. The colonel was to send back the exact
location with our courier… Remember, the Colonel of the Maroon Tribes
is an ancestral position; he is a descendant and, like all princes of
the realm, schooled in its traditions. We shall know soon enough if he
perceives us to be quite out of the ordinary.'
'How?'
'If the location he chooses is in some unit of four. Obviously.'
'Obviously… So for the next few days we wait.'
'Not just wait, McAuliff. We will be watched, observed very closely.
We must take extreme care that we do not appear as a threat. We must go
about our business quite professionally.'
'I'm glad to hear that. We're being paid to make a geological
survey.'
TWENTY FOUR
With the first penetration into the Cock Pit, the work of the survey
consumed each member of the team. Whatever their private fears or
foreign objectives, they were professionals, and the incredible
laboratory that was the Cock Pit demanded their professional attentions.
Portable tables, elaborately cased microscopes, geoscopes, platinum
drills, sediment prisms, and depository vials were transported by
scientist and carrier alike into the barely penetrable jungles and into
the grasslands. The four-hour field sessions were more honoured in the
breach; none cared to interrupt his experiments or analyses for such
inconveniences as meals and routine communications. The disciplines of
basic precautions were swiftly consigned to aggravating nuisances. It
took less than a full working day for the novelty of the ever-humming,
ever irritating walkie-talkies to wear off. McAuliff found it necessary
to remind Peter Jensen and James Ferguson angrily that it was mandatory
to leave the radio receiving switches on, regardless of the
intermittent chatter between stations.
The first evenings lent credence to the wisdom of Charles
Whitehall's purchases at Harrod's Safari Shop: The team sat around the
fires in canvas chairs, as though recuperating from the day's hunt. But
instead of talk of cat, horn, spore, and bird, other words flew around,
spoken with no less enthusiasm. Zinc, manganese and bauxite;
ochres, gypsum, and phosphate… Cretaceous, Eocene, shale, and igneous;
wynne grass, tamarind, bloodwood; guano, grosmichel, and woman's
tongue… arid and acid and peripatus; water runoffs,
gas pockets, and layers of vesicular lava - honeycombs of
limestone.
The overriding generalization was shared by everyone: The Cock Pit
was an extraordinarily fruitful land mass with abundant reserves of
rich soil, available water, and unbelievable deposits of gases and ores.
All this was accepted as fact before the morning of the third day.
McAuliff listened as Peter Jensen summed it up with frightening clarity.
'It's inconceivable that no one's gone in and developed. I dare say
Brasilia couldn't hold a candle! Three-quarters of the life force is
right here, waiting to be used!'
The reference to the city carved out of the Brazilian jungles made
Alex swallow and stare at the enthusiastic, middle-aged, pipe-smoking
mineral expert. We're going to build a city… Julian Warfield's words.
Unbelievable.
And viable.
It did not take great imagination to understand Dunstone, Limited,
now. The project was sound, taking only gigantic sums of capital to set
it in motion; sums available to Dunstone. And once set in motion, the
entire island could be tied to the incredible development… Armies of
workers, communities, one source.
Ultimately, the government.
Kingston could not, would not turn it off. Once in motion
- one source - the benefits would be overwhelming and
undeniable. The enormity of the cash flow alone could subvert the
parliament.
Slices of the gigantic pie.
Economically and psychologically, Kingston would become dependent on
Dunstone, Limited.
So complicated, yet so basically, ingeniously simple. Once they have Kingston, they have the laws of the land in their
vaults. To shape as they will. Dunstone will own a nation … R. C.
Holcroft's words.
It was nearly midnight; the couriers were banking the fires under
the scrutiny of the two runners. Marcus and Justice Hedrik. The black
revolutionary, Lawrence, was playing his role as one of the crew,
subservient and pleasant, but forever scanning the forests beyond,
never allowing himself to be too far away from Alison Booth.
The Jensens and Ferguson had gone to their tents. McAuliff, Sam
Tucker, and Alison sat around a small bivouac table, the light of the
dying fires flickering across their faces as they talked quietly.
'Jensen's right, Alexander,' said Tucker, lighting a thin cigar.
'Those behind this know exactly what they're doing. I'm no ore expert,
but one strike, one hint of the mother lode, and you couldn't stop the
speculation money.'
'It's a company named Dunstone.'
'What is?'
'Those behind… the company's called Dunstone; the man's name is
Warfield. Julian Warfield. Alison knows.'
Sam held the cigar between his fingers and looked at McAuliff. 'They
hired you.' Tucker's statement was spoken slowly, a touch gruffly.
'He did,' replied Alex. 'Warfield did.'
'Then this Royal Society grant… the Ministry, and the Institute, are
covers.'
'Yes.'
'And you knew it from the beginning.'
'So does British Intelligence. I wasn't just acting as an informer,
Sam. They trained me… as best they could over a couple of weeks.'
'Was there any particular reason why you kept it a secret,
Alexander?' Tucker's voice - especially as capped with McAuliff's name
- was not comforting. 'I think you should have told me. Especially
after that meeting in the hills. We've been together a long time, boy…
No, I don't think you acted properly.'
'He was generously proper, Sam,' said Alison, with a combination of
precision and warmth. 'For your benefit. I speak from experience. The
less you're aware of, the better your prospects. Take my word for it.'
'Why should I?' asked Tucker.
'Because I've been there. And because I was there, I'm here now.'
'She's tied in against Chatellerault. That's what I couldn't tell
you. She worked for Interpol. A data bank picked out her name; it was
made to look so completely logical. She wanted to get out of England—'
'Had to get out, my darling… Do you see, Sam? The computer
was Interpol's; all the intelligence services are first
cousins, and don't let anyone tell you otherwise. MI5 ran a
cross-reference, and here I am. Valuable bait, another complication…
Don't be anxious to learn too much. Alex was right.'
The ensuing silence was artificial. Tucker inhaled on his thin
cigar, the unasked questions more pronounced by their absence. Alison
whisked strands of hair, let down for the evening, off her forehead.
McAuliff poured himself a small quantity of Scotch. Finally Sam Tucker
spoke.
'It's fortunate I trust you, Alexander.'
'I know that. I counted on it.'
'But why?' continued Sam quietly. 'Why in hell did you do
it? You're not that hungry. Why did you work for them?'
'For whom? Or which? Dunstone or British Intelligence?'
Tucker paused, staring at Alex before he replied. 'Jesus, I
don't know. Both, I guess, boy.'
'I accepted the first before the second showed up. It was a good
contract, the best I'd ever been offered. Before I realized it, I was
locked in. I was convinced I couldn't get out… by both sides. At one
point, it was as simple as staying alive… Then there were guarantees
and promises… and more guarantees and more promises.' McAuliff stared
across the clearing; it was strange. Lawrence was crouched over the
embers of a fire, looking at them. 'Before you know it, you're in some
kind of crazy cell block, hurtling through space, bouncing off the
walls… that's not a very sane picture.'
'Move and counter-move, Sam,' interrupted Alison. 'They're experts.'
'Who? Which?' Tucker leaned forward in his chair, holding Alison
with his old eyes.
'Both,' answered the girl firmly. I saw what Chatellerault did to
my husband. I know what Interpol did to me.'
The silence returned once more, less strained than before. And once
again, Sam Tucker broke it softly.
'You've got to define your enemies, Alexander. I get the feeling you
haven't done that… present company excepted as allies, I sincerely
hope.'
'I've defined them as best I can. I'm not sure those definitions
will hold. It's complicated; at least for me.'
'Then simplify, boy. When you're finished, who wants you hanged the
quickest?'
McAuliff looked at Alison. 'Again, both. Dunstone literally; MI5
figuratively. One dead, the other dependent - subject to recall. A name
in a data bank. That's very real.'
'I agree,' said Tucker, relighting
his thin cigar. 'Now let's reverse the process. Who can you
hang the quickest? The surest?'
Alex laughed quietly, joined by Alison. The girl spoke. 'My Lord,
you do think alike.'
'Answer my question, son.'
'I can protect myself… ourselves… with what I know, what I've pieced
together. Both, I guess.'
'That doesn't answer the question. Who the quickest?'
'Dunstone, I imagine. At the moment, it's more vulnerable. Warfield
made a mistake; he thinks I'm really hungry. He thinks he
bought me because he made me a part of them. They fall, I fall… I'd
have to say Dunstone.'
'All right,' replied Sam, assuming the mantle of a soft-spoken
attorney. 'Enemy number one defined as Dunstone. You can extricate
yourself by simple blackmail: third-person knowledge, documents tucked
away in lawyers' offices. Agreed?'
'Yes.'
'That leaves enemy number two: Her Majesty's Intelligence boys.
Let's define them. What's their hook into you?'
'Protection. It's supposed to be protection.'
'Not noticeably successful, would you say, son?'
'Not noticeably successful,' said Alex in agreement. 'But we're not
finished yet.'
'We'll get to that; don't rush… what's your hook into them?'
McAuliff paused in thought. 'Their methods… and their contacts, I
think. Exposing their covert operations.'
'Really the same as with Dunstone, isn't it?' Tucker was zeroing in
on his target.
'Again, yes.'
'Let's go back a second. What does Dunstone offer?'
'Money. A great
deal of money. They need this survey.'
'Are you prepared to lose it?'
'Hell, yes! But I may not have to—'
'That's immaterial. I assume that's
part of the "guarantees and promises".'
'That's right.'
'But it's not a factor. You haven't stolen from the thieves. In any
way can they get you indicted as one of them?'
'Christ, no! They may
think so, but they're wrong.'
'Then there are your answers. Your
definitions. Eliminate the hooks and the offers. Theirs. The money and
the protection. Lose one - the money; make the other unnecessary - the
protection. You're dealing from strength, with your own hooks. You
make whatever offers you wish.' 'You jumped, Sam,' said McAuliff
slowly. 'Or you forgot. We're not finished; we may need the protection.
If we take it, we can't deny it. We'd be a joke. The Watergate
syndrome. Worms crawling over each other.'
Sam Tucker put down his thin cigar in the ashtray on the table and
reached for the bottle of Scotch. He was about to speak, but was
interrupted by the sight of Charles Whitehall walking out of a jungle
path into the clearing. Whitehall looked around, then crossed rapidly
to Lawrence, who was still over the coals of the banked fire, the
orange glow colouring his skin a bronzed black. The two men spoke.
Lawrence stood up, nodded once, and started towards the jungle path.
Whitehall watched him briefly, then turned and looked over at McAuliff,
Sam, and Alison. With urgency, he began walking across the clearing to
them.
'There's your protection, Alexander,' said Sam quietly as Whitehall
approached. 'The two of them. They may despise each other, but they've
got a common hate that works out fine for you. For all of us, goddamn
it… Bless their beautiful black hides.'
'The courier has returned.' Charles Whitehall adjusted the light of
the Coleman lantern in his tent. McAuliff stood inside the canvas flap
of the doorway - Whitehall had insisted that Alex come with him; he did
not wish to speak in front of Alison and Sam Tucker.
'You could have told the others.'
'That will be a… multilateral decision. Personally, I would not
subscribe to it.'
'Why not?'
'We must be extremely careful. The less that is known by the more,
the better.'
McAuliff pulled out a pack of cigarettes and walked to the single
nylon-strapped chair in the centre of the tent. He sat down, knowing
that Charley-mon would not; the black was too agitated, trying almost
comically to remain calm. 'That's funny. Alison used the same words a
little while ago. For different reasons… What's the message from Maroon
Town?'
'Affirmative! The Colonel will meet with us What's more important - so
much more important - is that his reply was in units of four!'
Whitehall approached the chair, his eyes filled with that messianic
anxiety Alex had seen in Drax Hall. 'He made a counter-proposal for our
meeting. Unless he hears otherwise, he will assume it is acceptable… He
asks for eight days. And rather than four hours after sundown, he
requests the same four hours after two in the morning. Two
in the morning! Diagramatically to the right
of the setting sun. Don't you see? He understands, McAuliff.
He understands! Piersall's first step is confirmed!'
'I thought it would be,' replied Alex lamely, not quite sure how to
handle Whitehall's agitation.
'It doesn't matter to you, does it?' The Jamaican stared at McAuliff
incredulously. 'A scholar had made an extraordinary discovery. He'd
followed elusive threads in the archives going back over two hundred
years. His work proved out; it could have enormous academic impact. The
story of Jamaica might well have to be rewritten… Can't you see?'
'I can see you're excited, and I can understand that. You should be…
But right now, I'm concerned with a less erudite problem. I don't like
the delay.'
Whitehall silently exploded in exasperation. He looked up at the
canvas ceiling, inhaled deeply, and quickly regained his composure. The
judgment he conveyed was obvious: The blunt mind in front of him was
incapable of being reached. He spoke with condescending resignation.
'It's good. It indicates progress.'
'Why?'
'I did not tell you, but I included a message with our request for a
meeting. It was admittedly a risk but I felt - unilaterally - that it
was worth taking. It could expedite our objective with greater speed. I
told the courier to say the request came from… new believers of
Acquaba.'
McAuliff tensed; he was suddenly angry with Whitehall, but had the
presence to minimize his anger. The horrible memory of the fate of the
first Dunstone survey came to mind. 'For such a brilliant guy, I think
that was pretty stupid, Charley-mon.'
'Not stupid. A calculated risk. If the Halidon decides to make
contact on the strength of Piersall's code, it will arrive at that
decision only after it learns more about us. It will send out for
information; it will see that I am part of the unit. The elders of the
Halidon will know of my credentials, my scholarship, my contributions
to the Jamaican story. These will be in our favour.'
Alex leaped out of the chair and spoke quietly, viciously. 'You
egomaniacal son of a bitch! Has it occurred to you that your… other
credentials may not be favourable? You could be the one piece
of rotten meat!' 'Impossible'
'You arrogant prick! I won't have the lives of this team jeopardized
by your inflated opinion of yourself! I want protection, and I'm going
to get it!'
There was a rustling outside the tent. Both men whipped around
towards the canvas flap of the entrance. The canvas parted, and the
black revolutionary, Lawrence, walked in slowly, his hands in front of
him, bound by rope. Behind Lawrence was another man. It was the runner
Marcus Hedrik. In his
hand was a gun. It was jabbed into the flesh of his prisoner.
Hedrik spoke quietly. 'Do not go for your weapons. Don't make noise.
Just stay exactly where you are.'
'Who are you?' asked McAuliff, amazed that Hedrik's voice had lost
the hesitant, dull tones he had heard for the better part of the week.
'For the moment, that is not important.'
'Garvey!' whispered Alex. 'Garvey said it! He said there
were others… he didn't know who. You're with British Intelligence!'
'No,' replied Marcus Hedrik softly, even politely. Two of your
couriers were English agents. They're dead. And the obese Garvey had an
accident on the road to Port Maria. He is dead also.'
'Then—'
'It is not you who will ask the questions, Mr McAuliff. It is I. You
will tell me… you new believers… what you know of Acquaba.'
TWENTY FIVE
They talked for several hours, and McAuliff knew that for the time
being he had saved their lives. At one point Sam Tucker interrupted,
only to receive and acknowledge the plea in Alexander's eyes: Sam had
to leave them alone. Tucker left, making it clear that he would be with
Alison. He expected Alex to speak with them before retiring. Sam did
not notice the ropes on Lawrence's hands in the shadowed corner and
McAuliff was grateful that he did not.
'Marcus Hedrik' was not the runner's name. Marcus and Justice Hedrik
had been replaced; where they were was of no consequence insisted this
unnamed member of the Halidon. What was of paramount consequence was
the whereabouts of the Piersall document. Always leave something to trade off… in the last extremity.
The words of R. C. Holcroft. The documents. McAuliffs ploy.
The Halidonite probed with infinite care every aspect of Piersall's
conclusions as related by Charles Whitehall. The black scholar traced
the history of the Acquaba sect, but he would not reveal the nagarro:
the meaning of the Halidon. The 'runner' neither agreed nor disagreed;
he was simply an interrogator. He was also a perceptive and cautious
man. Once satisfied that Charles Whitehall would tell him no more, he
ordered him to remain inside his tent with Lawrence. They were not to
leave; they would be shot if they tried. His fellow 'runner' would stay
on guard.
The Halidonite recognized the intransigence of McAuliffs position.
Alex would tell him nothing. Faced with that, he ordered Alex under
gunpoint to walk out of the campsite.
As they proceeded up a path towards the grasslands, McAuliff began
to understand the thoroughness of the Halidon - that small part of it
to which he was exposed. Twice along the alley of dense foliage, the
man with the weapon commanded him to stop. There followed a brief
series of guttural parrot calls, responded to in kind. Alex heard the
softly spoken words of the man with the gun.
'The bivouac is surrounded, Mr McAuliff. I'm quite sure Whitehall
and
Tucker, as well as your couriers, know that now. The birds we imitate
do not sing at night.'
'Where are we going?'
'To meet with someone. My superior, in fact. Continue, please.'
They climbed for another twenty minutes; a long jungle hill suddenly
became an open grassland, a field that seemed extracted from some other
terrain, imposed on a foreign land surrounded by wet forests and steep
mountains.
The moonlight was unimpeded by clouds; the field was washed with
dull yellow. And in the centre of the wild grass stood two men. As they
approached, McAuliff saw that one of the men was perhaps ten feet
behind the first, his back to them. The first man faced them.
The Halidonite facing them was dressed in what appeared to be ragged
clothes, but with a loose field jacket and boots. The combined effect
was a strange, unkempt paramilitary appearance. Around his waist was a
pistol belt and holster. The man ten feet away and staring off in the
opposite direction was in a caftan held together in the middle by a
single thick rope.
Priest like. Immobile.
'Sit on the ground, Dr McAuliff,' instructed the strangely ragged
paramilitary man, in clipped tones used to command.
Alex did so. The use of the title 'Doctor' told him the
unfamiliarity was more his than theirs.
The subordinate who had marched him up from the camp approached the
priest figure. The two men fell into quiet conversation, walking slowly
into the grass while talking. The two figures receded over a hundred
yards into the dull yellow field.
They stopped.
'Turn around, Dr McAuliff.' The order was abrupt; the black man
above him had his hand on his holster. Alex pivoted in his sitting
position and faced the descending forest from which he and the runner
had emerged.
The waiting was long and tense. Yet McAuliff understood that his
strongest weapon - perhaps his only viable strength - was calm
determination.
He was determined; he was not calm.
He was frightened in the same way he had experienced fear before. In
the Korean hills; alone, no matter the number of troops; waiting to
witness his own single annihilation.
Pockets of fear.
'It is an extraordinary story, is it not, Dr McAuliff?' That voice. My God! He knew that voice.
He pressed his arms against the ground and started to whip his head
and body around.
His temple crashed into the hard steel of a pistol; the agonizing
pain shot through his face and chest. There was a series of bright
flashes in front of his eyes as the pain reached a sensory crescendo.
It subsided to a numbing ache, and he could feel a trickle of blood
on his neck.
'You will remain the way you are while we talk,' said the familiar
voice. Where had he heard it before?
'I know you.'
'You don't know me, Dr McAuliff.'
'I've heard your voice… somewhere.'
'Then you have remarkable recall. So much has happened… I shall not
waste words. Where are Piersall's documents? I am sure it is
unnecessary to tell you that your life and the lives of those you
brought to Jamaica depend on our having them.'
'How do you know they'd do you any good? What if I told you I had
copies made?'
'I would say you were lying. We know the placement of every Xerox
machine, every photostat copier, every store, hotel, and
individual that does such work along the coast. Including Bueno, the
Bays, and Ocho Rios. You have had no copies made.'
'You're not very bright, Mr Halidon… It is Mr Halidon, isn't it?'
There was no response, so Alex continued. 'We photographed them.'
'Then the films are not developed. And the only member of your team
possessing a camera is the boy. Ferguson. He is hardly a confidant… But
this is immaterial, Dr McAuliff. When we say documents, we assume any
and all reproductions thereof. Should any surface… ever…
there will be, to put it bluntly, a massacre of innocents. Your survey
team, their families, children… all those held dear by everyone. A
cruel and unnecessary prospect.'… to the last extremity. R.
C. Holcroft.
'It would be the Halidon's last action, wouldn't it?'
McAuliff spoke slowly but sharply, stunned by his own calm. 'A kind of
final… beau geste before extinction. If you want it that way,
I don't give a damn.'
'Stop it, McAuliff.' The voice suddenly screamed, a
piercing shriek over the blades of wild grass, its echo muted by the
surrounding jungles.
Those words… They were the words he had heard before! Stop it. Stop it… stop it…
Where? For God's sake, where had he heard them? His mind raced;
images were blurred with blinding coloured lights, but he could not
focus.
A man. A black man - tall and lithe and muscular… A man following
orders. A man commanding but not with his own commands. The voice that
had just roared was the same voice from the past… following orders.
In panic… as before. Something…
'You said we would talk. Threats are one-sided conversations; you
take turns, you don't talk. I'm not on anybody's side. I want your…
superiors to know that.' Alex held his breath during the silence that
followed.
The quiet reply came with measured authority… and a small but
recognizable trace of fear. 'There are no superiors as far as
you are concerned. My temper is short. These have been difficult days…
You should realize that you are very close to losing your life.'
The man with the pistol had moved slightly; Alex could see him now
out of the corner of his eye. And what he saw convinced him he was on
the track of an immediate truth. The man's head had snapped up at the
priest figure; the man with the weapon dangling in his hand was
questioning the priest figure's words.
'If you kill me… or any member of the team, the Halidon will be
exposed in a matter of hours.'
Again silence. Again the measured authority; again the now
unmistakable undertone of fear. 'And how is this remarkable exposure
going to take place, Dr McAuliff?'
Alex drew a deep breath silently. His right hand was clasping his
left wrist; he pressed his fingers into his own flesh as he replied.
'In my equipment there is a radio signalling device. It is standard
and operates on a frequency that rides above interference. It's
functional within a radius of twenty-five miles… Every twelve hours I
send out one of two codes; a light on the miniature panel confirms
reception and pinpoints location-identification. The first
code says everything's normal, no problems. The second says something
else. It instructs the man on the receiving end to implement two
specific orders: fly the documents out and send help in. The absence of
transmission is the equivalent of the second code, only more so. It
alerts all the factions in Kingston, including British Intelligence.
They'll be forced in; they'll start with our last location and fan out.
The Cock Pit will be swarming with planes and troops… I'd better
transmit the code, Mr Halidon. And even when I do, you won't know which
one I'm sending, will you?' McAuliff stopped for precisely three
seconds. And then he said quietly, 'Checkmate, Mr Bones.'
A macaw's screech could be heard in the distance. From somewhere in
the wet forests a pride of wild pigs was disturbed. The warm breeze
bent the reeds of the tall grass ever so slightly; crickets were
everywhere. All these were absorbed by Alex's senses. And he
understood, too, the audible, trembling intake of breath from the
darkness behind him. He could feel the mounting, uncontrollable pitch
of anger.
'No, mon!' The man with the pistol cried out, lunging
forward.
Simultaneously, McAuliff felt the rush of air and heard the rustle
of cloth that precedes the instant of impact from behind. Too late to
turn; defence only in crouching, hugging the earth.
One man tried to stop the priest figure as he lunged forward; the
weight of two furious bodies descended on Alex's shoulders and back.
Arms were thrashing, fingers spastically clutched; hard steel and soft
cloth and warm flesh enveloped him. He reached above and grasped the
first objects his hands touched, yanked with all his strength, and
rolled forward.
The priest figure somersaulted over his back; Alex crashed his
shoulders downward, rising on one knee for greater weight, and threw
himself on the coarse cloth of the caftan. As he pinned the priest, he
felt himself instantly pulled backward, with such force that the small
of his back ached in pain.
The two Halidonites locked his arms, stretching his chest to the
breaking point; the man with the pistol held the barrel to his temple,
digging it into his skin. 'That will be enough, mon.'
Below him on the ground, the yellow moonlight illuminating a face
creased with fury, was the priest figure.
McAuliff instantly understood the bewildering, unfocused images of
blinding, coloured lights his mind had associated with the panicked
words stop it, stop it.
He had last seen this 'priest' of the Halidon in London's Soho.
During the psychedelic madness that was The Owl of Saint George. The
man lying on the ground in a caftan had been dressed in a dark suit
then, gyrating on the crowded dance floor. He had screamed at McAuliff
to Stop… stop it!. He had delivered a crushing fist
into Alex's
midsection; he had disappeared into the crowds, only to show up an hour
later in a government car on the street by a public telephone.
This 'priest' of the Halidon was an agent of British Intelligence.
'You said your name was Tallon.' McAuliff strained his speech
through the pain, the words interrupted by his lack of breath. 'In the
car that night you said your name was Tallon. And… when I called you on
it, you said you were… testing me.'
The priest figure rolled over and slowly began to rise. He nodded to
the two Halidonites to relax their grips and addressed them. 'I would
not have killed him. You know that.'
'You were angry, mon,' said the man who had taken Alex out of the
camp.
'Forgive us,' added the man who had cried out and lunged at the
priest figure. 'It was necessary.'
The 'priest' smoothed his cassock and tugged at the thick rope
around his waist. He looked down at McAuliff. 'Your recollection is
sharp, Doctor. I sincerely hope your ability to think clearly is
equally acute.'
'Does that mean we talk?'
'We talk.'
'My arms hurt like hell. Will you tell your sergeants to let go of
me?'
The 'priest' nodded once again, and flicked his wrist in accord.
Alex's arms were released; he shook them.
'My sergeants, as you call them, are more temperate men than I. You
should be grateful to them.'
The man with the pistol belt demurred, his voice respectful. 'Not
so, mon. When did you last sleep?'
'That does not matter. I should have more control… My friend refers
to a hectic several weeks, McAuliff. Not only did I have to get myself
out of England, avoiding Her Majesty's Service, but also a colleague
who had disappeared in a Bentley around a Soho corner… A West Indian in
London has a thousand hiding places.'
Alex remembered vividly. 'That Bentley tried to run me down. The
driver wanted to kill me. Only someone else was killed… because of a
neon light.'
The priest figure stared at McAuliff. He, too, seemed to recall the
evening vividly. 'It was a tragedy born of the instant. We thought a
trap had been set, the spring caught at the last moment.'
'Three lives were lost that night. Two with cyanide—'
'We are committed,' interrupted the Halidonite, who looked at his
two companions and spoke gently. 'Leave us alone, please.'
In warning, both men removed the weapons from their belts as they
pulled Alex to his feet. As ordered, they retreated into the field.
McAuliff watched them. A ragged-clothed twosome with the unlikely
jackets and pistol belts. 'They not only do as you say, they protect
you from yourself.'
The priest figure also looked at his retreating subordinates. 'When
we are in our formative years, we are all given batteries of tests.
Each is assigned areas of instruction and future responsibility from
the results. I often think grave errors are made.' The man tugged at
his caftan and turned to McAuliff. 'We must deal now with each other,
must we not?… As I am sure you have surmized, I was an impermanent
member of MI5.'
'An "infiltrator" is the word that comes to mind.'
'A very successful one, Doctor. Holcroft himself twice recommended
me for citations. I was one of the best West Indian specialists… I was
reluctant to leave. You - and those manoeuvring you - created the
necessity.'
'How?'
'Your survey suddenly contained too many dangerous components. We
could live with several, but when we found out that your closest
associate on the geological team - Mr Tucker - was apparently a friend
of Walter Piersall, we knew we had to keep you under a microscope…
Obviously, we were too late.'
'What were the other components?'
The priest figure hesitated. He touched his forehead, where a grass
burn had developed from his fall to the ground. 'Do you have a
cigarette? This very comfortable sheet has one disadvantage: There are
no pockets.'
'Why do you wear it?'
'It is a symbol of authority, nothing more.'
McAuliff reached into his pocket, withdrew a pack of cigarettes, and
shook one up for the Halidonite. As he lighted it for him, he saw that
the black hollows in the very black skin beneath the eyes were
stretched in exhaustion. 'What were the dangerous components?'
'Oh, come, Doctor, you know them as well as I do.'
'Maybe I don't; enlighten me. Or is that dangerous, too?'
'Not now. Not at this point. The reality is the danger.
Piersall's documents are the reality. The… components are
inconsequential.'
'Then tell me.'
The priest figure inhaled on his cigarette and blew the smoke into
the soft breeze of the dull yellow light. 'The woman you know about.
There are many who fear her on the Continent. Among those, one of the
Dunstone hierarchy… the Marquis de Chatellerault. Where she is, so is
an arm of the Intelligence service. The boy, Ferguson, is deep with the
Craft interests; actually, they fear him. Or did. And rightly so. He
never understood the calamitous economic potential of his fibre work.'
'I think he did,' interrupted Alex. 'And does. He expects to make
money out of Craft.'
The Halidonite laughed quietly. 'They will never let him. But he is
a component. Where does Craft stand? Is he part of Dunstone? Nothing
happens in Jamaica that the soiled hand of Craft has not touched…
Samuel Tucker I have told you about: his association with the suddenly
vital Walter Piersall. Whose summons did he answer? Is he on the island
because of his old friend McAuliff? Or his new friend Piersall? Or is
it coincidence?'
'It is coincidence,' said Alex. 'You'd have to know Sam to
understand that.'
'But we do not, you see. We only understand that among the first
telephone calls he made was to a man who was disturbing us profoundly.
Who was walking around Kingston with the secrets of two hundred years
in his brain… and somewhere on paper.' The priest figure looked at
McAuliff - stared at him, really. His eyes in the moonlight conveyed a
supplication for Alex to understand. He looked away and continued.
'Then there is Charles Whitehall. A very… very dangerous and
unpredictable component. You must know his background; Holcroft
certainly did. Whitehall feels his time on the island has come. His is
the hot mysticism of the fanatic. The black Caesar come to ride up
Victoria Park on nigger-Pompei's horse. He has followers throughout
Jamaica. If there is anyone who might expose Dunstone - wittingly or
otherwise - it could well be Whitehall and his fascists.'
'Holcroft didn't know that,' protested McAuliff. 'He made it clear
that you… the Halidon… were the only ones who could stop Dunstone.'
'Holcroft is a professional. He creates internal chaos, knowing that
his breakthrough can come at any instant during the panic. Would it
surprise you to know that Holcroft is in Kingston now?'
Alex thought for a moment. 'No… I'm surprised he hasn't let me know
it.'
'There is a sound reason. He doesn't want you to fall back on him.
He wants the forces to remain on collision courses. He flew in when
word was received that Chatellerault was in Savanna-la-Mar… You knew that,
didn't you?'
'He knows it because I told Westmore Tallon.'
'And then
there are the Jensens. That charming, devoted couple. So normal, so
lovable, really… who send back word to Julian Warfield of every move
you make, of every person you make contact with; who bribe Jamaicans to
spy on you… The Jensens made a huge mistake once, years ago. Dunstone,
Limited, stepped in and recruited them. In exchange for obliterating
that mistake.' McAuliff looked up at the clear night sky. A single
elongated cloud was drifting from a distant mountain towards the yellow
moon. He wondered if the condensation would disappear before it reached
the shining satellite, or blur it from beneath… envelope it from the
ground.
As he was so enveloped.
'So those are the components,' said Alex aimlessly. 'The Halidon
knows a lot more than anyone else, it seems. And I'm not sure what that
means.'
'It means, Doctor, that we are the silent caretakers of our land.'
'I don't recall any election. Who gave you the job?'
'To quote an American writer: "It comes with the territory." It is
our heritage. We do not swim in the political rivers, however. We leave
those to the legitimate competitors. We do try our best to
keep the pollution to a minimum.' The priest figure finished his
cigarette and crushed the burning end under his sandalled foot.
'You're killers,' said McAuliff simply. 'I know that. I think that's
the worst kind of human pollution.'
'Are you referring to Dunstone's previous survey?'
'I am.'
'You don't know the circumstances. And I'm not the one to define
them. I am here only to persuade you to give me Piersall's documents.'
'I won't do that.'
'Why?' The Halidonite's voice rose in anger, as before. His
black eyes above the black hollows pierced into McAuliffs.
'Mon?' came the shouted query from the field. The priest figure
waved his arm in dismissal.
'This is not your business, McAuliff. Understand that and get out.
Give me the documents and take your survey off the island before it is
too late.'
'If it was that simple, I would. I don't want your fight,
goddamn it. It has no appeal for me… on the other hand, I don't relish
being chased all over the globe by Julian Warfield's guns. Can't you
understand that?'
The priest figure stood immobile. His eyes softened; his lips parted
in concentration as he stared at Alexander He spoke slowly; he was
barely audible. 'I warned them that it might come to this. Give me the nagarro,
doctor. What is the meaning of the Halidon?'
McAuliff told him.
TWENTY SIX
They returned to the river campsite, McAuliff and the runner who had
assumed the name and function of 'Marcus Hendrik.' There was no
pretence now. As they neared the bivouac area, black men in rags could
be seen in the bush, the early dawn light shafting through the dense
foliage, intermittently reflecting off the barrels of their weapons.
The survey camp was surrounded, the inhabitants prisoners of the
Halidon.
A hundred yards from the clearing, the runner - now preceding Alex
on the narrow jungle path, pistol secure in his field jacket belt -
stopped and summoned a Halidon patrol. He did so by snapping his
fingers repeatedly until a large black man emerged from between the
trees.
The two men spoke briefly, quietly, and when they were finished the
patrol returned to his post in the tropic forest. The runner turned to
McAuliff.
'Everything is peaceful. There was a skirmish with Charles
Whitehall, but it was anticipated. He severely wounded the guard, but
others were nearby. He is bound and back in his tent.'
'What about Mrs Booth?'
'The woman? She is with Samuel Tucker. She was asleep half an hour
ago… That Tucker, he will not sleep. He sits in the chair in front of
his tent, a rifle in his hands. The others are quiet. They will be
rising soon.'
'Tell me,' said Alex while the runner still faced him, 'what
happened to all that Arawak language? The Maroon Colonel, the units of
four, the eight days?'
'You forgot, Doctor. I led the Whitehall-mon to his courier. The
Colonel of the Maroons never got the message. The reply you received
came from us.' The runner smiled. Then he turned, gesturing for Alex to
follow him into the clearing.
Under the eyes of the runner, McAuliff waited for the white light of
the miniature panel to reach full illumination. When it did, he pressed
the signal-transmitter button, holding his left hand over his fingers
as he did so. He knew the concealment was unnecessary; he would not
radio for aid. He would not jam the frequency with cries of emergency.
It had been made clear that at the first sight of hostile forces, each
member of the survey team would be shot through the head, Alison Booth
and Sam Tucker the first to be executed.
The remainder of the understanding was equally clear. Sam Tucker
would continue to send the signals every twelve hours. Alexander would
return with the runner into the grassland. From there, with the
'priest' he would be taken to the hidden community of the Halidon.
Until he returned, the team was a collective hostage.
Alison, Sam, Charles Whitehall and Lawrence would be told the truth.
The others would not. The Jensens, James Ferguson and the crew would be
given another explanation, a bureaucratic one readily acceptable to
professional surveyors: During the night a radio message from Kingston
had been relayed by Falmouth; the Ministry of the Interior required
McAuliffs presence in Ocho Rios; there were difficulties with the
Institute. It was the sort of complication to which survey directors
were subjected. Field work was constantly interrupted by administrative
foul-ups.
When the priest figure suggested the time of absence be no less than
three full days, Alex demanded to know the reason for so long a
period. 'I can't answer that, McAuliff.'
'Then why should I agree to
it?'
'It is only time. Then, too, are we not at checkmate… Mr Bones? We
fear exposure perhaps more than you fear for your lives.'
'I won't
concede that.'
'You do not know us. Give yourself the margin to learn. You will not
be disappointed.'
'You were told to say three days, then?'
'I was.'
'Which presumes that whoever told you to say it expected you to
bring me to them.'
'It was a distinct probability.'
Alexander agreed to
three full days.
The black revolutionary, Lawrence, was rubbing a penicillin salve
over Charles Whitehall's bare back. The rope burns were deep; whoever
had lashed Charley-mon had done so in fever-pitch anger. The ropes on
both men had been removed after McAuliffs talk with them.
Alexander had made it clear he would brook no further interference.
Their causes were expendable.
'Your arrogance is beyond understanding, McAuliff!' said Charles
Whitehall, suppressing a grimace as Lawrence touched a sensitive burn.
'I accept the rebuke. You're very qualified in that department.'
'You are not equipped to deal with these people. I have
spent my life, my entire life, stripping away the layers of
Jamaican - Caribbean - history!'
'Not your entire life, Charley-mon,' replied Alex, calmly but
incisively. 'I told you last night. There's the little matter of your
extra-scholastic activity. "The black Caesar riding up Victoria Park on
nigger-Pompei's horse…"'
'What?'
'They're not my words, Charley.' Lawrence suddenly pressed his fist
into a raw lash mark on Whitehall's shoulder. The scholar arched his
neck back in pain. The revolutionary's other hand was close to his
throat. Neither man moved; Lawrence spoke.
'You don't ride no nigger horse, mon. You den walk like everybody
else.'
Charles Whitehall stared over his shoulder at the blur of the
brutal, massive hand poised for assault. 'You play the fool, you know.
Do you think any political entity with a power structure based in
wealth will tolerate you! Not for a minute, you egalitarian
jackal. You will be crushed.'
'You do not seek to crush us, mon?'
'I
seek only what is best for Jamaica. Everyone's energies will be used to
that end.'
'You're a regular Pollyanna,' broke in Alex, walking towards the two
men.
Lawrence looked up at McAuliff, his expression equal parts of
suspicion and dependence. He removed his hand and reached for the tube
of penicillin salve. 'Put on your shirt, mon. Your skin is covered,' he
said, twisting the small cap onto the medicine tube.
'I'm leaving in a few minutes,' said McAuliff, standing in front of
Whitehall. 'Sam will be in charge; you're to do as he says. Insofar as
possible, the work is to continue normally. The Halidon will stay out
of sight… at least as far as the Jensens and Ferguson are concerned.'
'How can that be?' asked Lawrence.
'It won't be difficult,' answered Alex. 'Peter is drilling for
gaspocket sediment a mile and a half southwest. Ruth is due east in a
quarry; the runner we know as "Justice" will be with her. Ferguson is
across the river working some fern groves. All are separated, each will
be watched.'
'And me?' Whitehall buttoned his expensive cotton safari shirt as
though dressing for a concert at Covent Garden. 'What do you propose
for me?'
'You're confined to the clearing, Charley-mon. For your own sake,
don't try to leave it. I can't be responsible if you do.'
'You think you have any say about anything now, McAuliff?'
'Yes, I do. They're as much afraid of me as I am of them. Just don't
try to upset the balance, either one of you. I buried a man on an
Alaskan job a number of years ago. Sam will tell you. I know the
standard prayers.'
Alison stood on the river bank, looking down at the water. The heat
of the early sun was awakening the late sleepers of the forest. The
sounds were those of combative foraging; flyer against flyer, crawler
fighting crawler. The green vines dangling from the tall macca-fat
palms glistened with the moisture rising from below; fern and moss and
matted cabbage growth bordered the slowly flowing currents of the
Martha Brae offshoot. The water was morning-clear, bluish-green.
'I went to your tent,' said McAuliff, walking up to her. 'Sam said
you were out here.'
She turned and smiled. 'I wasn't really disobeying, my darling. I'm
not running anywhere.'
'Nowhere to go… You'll be all right… The runner's waiting for me.'
Alison took two steps and stood in front of him. She spoke quietly,
barely above a whisper. 'I want to tell you something, Alexander T.
McAuliff. And I refuse to be dramatic or tearful or anything remotely
theatrical… because those are crutches… And both of us can walk without
them. Six weeks ago I was running. Quite desperately, trying my
goddamnedest to convince myself that by running I was escaping - which
I knew underneath was absurd. In Kingston I told you how absurd it was.
They can find you. Anywhere. The computers, the data banks, the horrid,
complicated tracers they have in their cellars and in their hidden
rooms are too real now. Too thorough. And there is no life underground,
in remote places, always wondering . I don't expect you to understand
this, and, in a way, it's why what you're doing is right… "Do unto
others before they do unto you." That's what you said. I
believe that's a terrible way to think. And I also believe it's the
only way we're going to have a life of our own.'
McAuliff touched her face with his fingers. Her eyes were bluer than
he had ever seen them. 'That sounds dangerously like a proposal.'
'My wants are simple, my expressions uncomplicated, and, as you said
once, I'm a damned fine professional.'
'"McAuliff and Booth. Surveyors. Offices: London and New York."
That'd look good on the letterhead.'
'You wouldn't consider "Booth and McAuliff"? I mean, alphabetically—'
'No, I wouldn't,' he interrupted gently as he put his arms around
her.
'Do people always say silly, things when they're afraid?' she asked,
her face buried in his chest.
'I think so,' he replied.
Peter Jensen reached down into the full pack and felt his way among
the soft articles of clothing. The canvas was stuffed. Jensen winced as
he slid the object of his search up the sides of the cloth.
It was the Luger. It was wrapped in plastic, the silencer
detached, tied to the barrel and in plastic also.
His wife stood by the entrance flap of their tent, the slit folded
back just sufficiently for her to look outside. Peter unwrapped both
sections of the weapon and put the silencer in the pocket of his field
jacket. He pressed the release, slid out the magazine, and reached into
his other pocket for a box of cartridges. Methodically he inserted the
shells until the spring of the magazine was taut, the top bullet ready
for chamber insertion. He slid the magazine back into the handle slot
and cracked it into position.
Ruth heard the metallic click and turned around. 'Do you have to do
this?'
'Yes. Julian was very clear. McAuliff was my selection, his
concurrence a result of that choice. McAuliff's made contact. With
whom? With what? I must find out.' Peter pulled open his jacket and
shoved the Luger down between a triangle of leather straps sewn into
the lining. He buttoned the field jacket and stood up straight. 'Any
bulges, old girl? Does it show?'
'No.'
'Good. Hardly the fit of Whitehall's uniform, but I dare say a bit
more comfortable.'
'You will be careful? It's so dreadful out there.'
'All that camping you dragged me on had a purpose. I see that now,
my dear.' Peter smiled and returned to his pack, pushing down the
contents, pulling the straps into buckling position. He inserted the
prongs, tugged once more, and slapped the bulging outsides. He lifted
the canvas sack by the shoulder harness and let it fall to the dirt.
'There! I'm set for a fortnight if need be.'
'How will I know?'
'When I don't come back with my carrier. If I pull it off right, he
might even be too petrified to return himself.' Peter saw
the tremble on his wife's lips, the terrible fear in her eyes. He
motioned for her to come to him, which she did. Rushing into his arms.
'Oh, God, Peter—
'Please, Ruth. Shhh. You mustn't,' he said, stroking her
hair. 'Julian has been everything to us. We both know that. And Julian
thinks we'd be very happy at Peale Court. Dunstone will need many
people in Jamaica, he said. Why not us?'
When the unknown carrier came into camp, James Ferguson could see
that the runner, Marcus Hedrik, was as angry as he was curious. They
were all curious. McAuliff had left early that morning for the coast;
it seemed strange that the carrier had not met him on the river. The
carrier insisted he had seen no one but wandering hill people, some
fishing, some hunting - no white man.
The carrier had been sent by the Government Employment Office, a
branch in Falmouth that knew the survey was looking for additional
hands. The carrier was familiar with the river offshoot, having grown
up in Weston Favel, and was anxious for work. Naturally, he had the
proper papers, signed by some obscure functionary at GEO, Falmouth.
At 2.30 in the afternoon, James Ferguson, having rested after lunch,
sat on the edge of his cot, prepared to gather up his equipment and
head back into the field. There was a rustling outside his tent. He
looked up, and the new carrier suddenly slapped open the flap and
walked in. He was carrying a plastic tray.
'I say—'
'I pick up dishes, mon,' said the carrier rapidly. 'Alia time be
very neat.'
'I have no dishes here. There's a glass or two need washing…'
The carrier lowered his voice. 'I got message for Fergumon. I give
it to you. You read it quick.' The black reached into his pocket and
withdrew a sealed envelope. He handed it to Ferguson.
James ripped the back and pulled out a single page of stationery. It
was the stationery of The Craft Foundation, and Ferguson's eyes were
immediately pulled to the signature. It was known throughout Jamaica -
the scrawl of Arthur Craft, Senior, the semiretired but all-powerful
head of the Craft enterprises.
My dear James Ferguson:
Apologies from a distance are always most
awkward and often the most
sincere. Such is the present case.
My son has behaved badly, for which he,
too, offers his regrets. He
sends them from the South of France where he will be residing for an
indeterminate - but long - period of time.
To the point: your contributions in our
laboratories on the baracoa
experiments are immense. They led the way to what we believe can be a
major breakthrough that can have a widespread industrial impact. We
believe this breakthrough can be accelerated by your immediate return
to us. Your future is assured, young man, in the way all genius should
be rewarded. You will be a very wealthy man.
However, time is of the essence.
Therefore I recommend that you
leave the survey forthwith - the messenger will explain the somewhat
odd fashion of departure but you may be assured that I have appraised
Kingston of my wishes and they are in full agreement. (The baracoa is
for all Jamaica.) We are also in mutual agreement that it is
unnecessary to involve the survey director, Dr McAuliff, as his
immediate interests are rightfully in conflict with ours. A substitute
botanist will join the survey within a matter of days.
I look forward to renewing our
acquaintance.
Very truly yours, Arthur Craft,
Senior
James Ferguson held his breath in astonishment as he reread the
letter.
He had done it.
He had really done it. Everything.
He looked up at the carrier, who smiled and spoke softly.
'We leave late this afternoon, mon. Before dark. Come back early
from your work. I will meet you on the river bank and we will go.'
TWENTY SEVEN
The priest figure identified himself by the single name of
'Malcolm.' They travelled south on hidden routes that alternated
between steep rocky climbs, winding grottoes, and dense jungle. The
Halidonite in the ragged clothes and the field jacket led the way,
effortlessly finding concealed paths in the forests and covered
openings that led through long dark tunnels of ancient stone - the dank
smell of deep grotto waters ever present, the bright reflection of
stalactites, suspended in alabaster isolation, caught in the beams of
flashlights.
It seemed to McAuliff that at times they were descending into the
cellars of the earth, only to emerge from the darkness of a grotto onto
higher ground. A geological phenomenon, tunnelled caves that inexorably
progressed upward, evidence of oceanic-terrestrial upheavals that
bespoke an epoch of incredible geophysical combustion. The cores of
mountains rising out of the faults and trenches, doing infinite battle
to reach the heat of the sun.
Twice they passed hill communities by circling above them on ridges
at the edge of the forest. Malcolm both times identified the sects,
telling of their particular beliefs and the religious justification for
their withdrawal from the outside world. He explained that there were
approximately twenty-three Cock Pit communities dedicated to isolation.
The figure had to be approximate, for there was ever-present the
rebellion of youth who found in their intermit tent journeys to the
marketplace temptations outweighing the threats of Obeah. Strangely
enough, as one community, or two or three, disintegrated, there were
always others that sprang up to take their places… and often their
small villages.
'The "opiate of the people" is often an escape from simple hardship
and the agonizing pointlessness of the coastal towns.'
'Then eliminate the pointlessness.' Alex remembered the sights of
Old Kingston, the corrugated-tin shacks across from the abandoned,
filthy barges peopled by outcasts; the emaciated dogs, the bone-thin
cats, the eyes of numbed futility on the young-old women. The men with
no teeth praying for the price of a pint of wine, defecating in the
shadows of dark alleys.
And three blocks above, the shining, immaculate banks with their
shining, tinted windows.
Shining, immaculate, and obscene in their choice of location.
'Yes, you are right,' replied Malcolm the Halidonite. 'It is the
pointlessness that erodes the people most rapidly. It is so easy to say
"give meaning." And so difficult to know how. So many complications.'
They continued their journey for eight hours, resting after
difficult sections of jungle and steep clifflike inclines and endless
caves. McAuliff judged that they had gone no farther than seventeen,
perhaps eighteen miles into the Cock Pit country, each mile more
treacherous and enervating than the last.
Shortly after five in the afternoon, while high in the Flagstaff
Range, they came to the end of a mountain pass. Suddenly in front of
them was a plateau of grassland about a half-mile long and no more than
five hundred yards wide. The plateau fronted the banks of a mountain
cliff, at three-quarters altitude. Malcolm led them to the right, to
the western edge. The slope of the plateau descended into thick jungle,
as dense and forbidding as any McAuliff had ever seen.
'That is called the Maze of Acquaba,' said Malcolm, seeing the look
of astonishment on Alex's face. 'We have borrowed a custom from ancient
Sparta. Each male child, on his eleventh birthday, is taken into the
core and must remain for a period of four days and nights.'
'Units of four…' McAuliff spoke as much to himself as to Malcolm as
he stared down at the unbelievably cruel density of jungle beneath.
'The odyssey of death.'
'We're neither that Spartan nor Arawak,' said Malcolm, laughing
softly. 'The children do not realize it, but there are others with
them… Come.' The two Halidonites turned and started towards the
opposite ledge of the plateau. Alex took a last look at the Maze of
Acquaba and joined them.
At the eastern edge, the contradictory effect was immediate.
Below was a valley no more than a half a mile in length, perhaps a
mile wide, in the centre of which was a quiet lake. The valley itself
was enclosed by hills that were the first inclines of the mountains
beyond. On the north side were mountain streams converging into a high
waterfall that cascaded down into a relatively wide, defined avenue of
water.
On the far side of the lake were fields - pastures, for there were
cattle grazing lazily. Cows, goats, a few burros, and several horses.
This area had been cleared and seeded generations ago, thought
McAuliff.
On the near side of the lake, below them, were thatched huts,
protected by tall ceiba trees. At first glance, there seemed to be
seventy or eighty such dwellings. They were barely visible because of
the trees and arcing vines and dense tropical foliage that filled
whatever spaces might have been empty with the bright colours of the
Caribbean. A community roofed by nature, thought Alex.
Then he pictured the sight from the air. Not as he was seeing it, on
a vertical-diagonal, but from above, from a plane. The village - and it
was a village - would look like any number of isolated hill communities
with thatched roofs and nearby grazing fields. But the difference was
in the surrounding mountains. The plateau was an indentation formed at
high altitude. This section of the Flagstaff Range was filled with
harsh updraughts and uncontrollable wind variants; jets would remain at
a six-thousand-foot minimum, light aircraft would avoid direct
overhead. The first would have no place to land, the second would
undoubtedly crash if it attempted to do so.
The community was protected by natural phenomena above it and by a
torturous passage on the ground that could never be defined on a
map.
'Not very prepossessing, is it?' Malcolm stood next to McAuliff. A
stream of children were running down a bordered path towards the lake,
their shouts carried on the wind. Natives could be seen walking around
the huts; larger groups strolled by the avenue of water that flowed
from the waterfall.
'It's all… very neat.' It was the only word McAuliff could think of
at the moment.
'Yes,' replied the Halidonite. 'It's orderly. Come, let's go down.
There is a man waiting for you.'
The runner-guide led them down the rocky slope. Five minutes later
the three of them were on the western level of the thatched community.
From above Alex had not fully realized the height of the trees that
were on all sides of the primitive dwellings. Thick vines sloped and
twisted, immense ferns sprayed out of the ground and from within dark
recesses of the underbrush.
Had the view from the plateau above been fifty feet higher, thought
McAuliff, none of what he had seen would have been visible.
Roofed by nature.
The guide started across a path that seemed to intersect a cluster
of huts within the junglelike area.
The inhabitants were dressed, like most Jamaican hill people, in a
variety of soft, loose clothing, but there was something different that
McAuliff could not at first discern. There was a profusion of rolled-up
Khaki trousers and dark-coloured skirts and white cotton shirts and
printed blouses - all normal, all seen throughout the island. Seen
really in all outback areas - Africa, Australia, New Zealand - where
the natives had taken what they could - stolen what they could - of the
white invaders' protective comforts. Nothing unusual… But something was
very different, and Alex was damned if he could pinpoint that
difference.
And then he did so. At the same instant that he realized there was
something else he had been observing.
Books.
A few - three or four or five, perhaps - of the dozens of natives
within this jungle community were carrying books. Carrying books
under their arms and in their hands.
And the clothing was clean. It was as simple as that.
There were stains of wetness, of sweat, obviously, and the dirt of
field work and the mud of the lake… but there was a cleanliness, a
neatness, that was not usual in the hill or outback
communities. Africa, Australia, New Guinea, or Jacksonville, Florida.
It was a normal sight to see clothing worn by natives in varying
stages of disrepair - torn, ripped, even shredded. But the garments
worn by these hill people were whole, untorn, unripped.
Not castoffs, not ill-fitting stolen property.
The Tribe of Acquaba was deep within a jungle primeval but it was
not - like so many of the isolated hill people - a wornout race of
poverty-stricken primitives scratching a bare subsistence from the land.
Along the paths and around the dwellings Alex could see strong black
bodies and clear black eyes, the elements of balanced diets and sharp
intelligences.
'We shall go directly to Daniel's,' said Malcolm to the guide. 'You
are relieved now. And thank you.'
The guide turned right down a dirt path that seemed to be tunnelled
under a dense web of thick jungle vines. He was removing his pistol
belt, unbuttoning his field jacket. The commando was home, reflected
McAuliff. He could take off his costume - so purposely ragged.
Malcolm gestured, interrupting Alex's thoughts. The path on which
they had been walking under an umbrella of macca-fats and ceibas veered
left into a clearing of matted spider grass. This open area extended
beyond the conduit of rushing water that shot out from the base of the
high waterfall streaming down the mountain. On the other side of the
wide, banked gulley the ground sloped towards a barricade of rock;
beyond were the grazing fields that swung right, bordering the eastern
shore of the lake.
In the huge pasture, men could be seen walking with staffs towards
the clusters of livestock. It was late afternoon, the heat of the sun
was lessening. It is time to shelter the cattle for the night, thought
McAuliff.
He had been absently following Malcolm, more concerned with
observing everything he could of the strange, isolated village, when he
realized where the Halidonite was leading them.
Towards the base of the mountain and the waterfall.
They reached the edge of the lake-feeding channel and turned left.
Alex saw the conduit of water was deeper than it appeared from a
distance. The banks were about eight feet in height; the definition he
had seen from the plateau was a result of carefully placed rocks,
imbedded in the earth of the embankments. This natural phenomenon had
been controlled by man, like the seeded fields generations ago.
There were three crossings of wooden planks with waist-high
railings, each buttressed into the sides of the embankments, where
there were stone steps… placed decades ago. The miniature bridges were
spaced about fifty yards apart.
Then McAuliff saw it; barely saw it, as it was concealed behind a
profusion of tall trees, immense giant-fern, and hundreds of flowering
vines at the base of the mountain.
It was a wooded structure. A large cabinlike dwelling whose base
straddled the channel, the water rushing out from under the huge
pilings that supported the hidden edifice. On each side of the pilings
were steps - again in stone, again placed generations ago - that led up
to a wide catwalk fronting the building. In the centre of the planked
catwalk was a door. It was closed.
From any distance - certainly from the air - the building was
completely concealed.
Its length was perhaps thirty feet; its width impossible to
determine, as it seemed to disappear into the jungle and the crashing
waterfall.
As they approached the stone steps, McAuliff saw something else,
which so startled him that he had to stop and stare.
On the west side of the building, emerging from within and scaling
upward into the tangling mass of foliage, were thick black cables.
Malcolm turned and smiled at Alex's astonishment. 'Our contact with
the outside, McAuliff. Radio signals that are piped into telephone
trunk lines throughout the island. Not unlike the radio-phones in taxis
and private automobiles. Generally much clearer than the usual
telephone service. All untraceable, of course. Now let us see Daniel.'
'Who is Daniel?'
'He is our Minister of Council. His is an elective office. Except
that his term is not guided by the calendar.'
'Who elects him?'
The Halidonite's smile faded somewhat. 'The council.'
'Who elects it?'
'The tribe.'
'Sounds like regular politics.'
'Not exactly,' said Malcolm enigmatically. 'Come. Daniel's waiting.'
The Halidonite opened the door, and McAuliff walked into a large
high-ceilinged room with windows all around the upper wall. The sounds
of the waterfall could be heard; these were mingled with the myriad
noises of the jungle outside.
There were wooden chairs - chairs fashioned by hand, not machinery.
In the centre of the back wall, in front of a second, very large, thick
door was a table, at which sat a black girl in her late twenties. On
her 'desk' were papers, and at her left was an office typewriter on a
regulation typewriter table. The incongruity of such equipment in such
a place caused Alex to stare.
And then he swallowed as he saw a telephone - a regular, pushbutton
telephone - on a stand to the girl's right. 'This is Jeanine, Dr
McAuliff. She works for Daniel.' The girl stood, her smile brief and
tenuous. She acknowledged Alex with a hesitant nod; her eyes were
concerned as she spoke to Malcolm. 'Was the trip all right?'
'Since I
brought back our guest, I cannot say it was wildly successful.'
'Yes,'
replied Jeanine, her expression of concern now turned to fear. 'Daniel
wants to see you right away. This way… Dr
McAuliff.'
The girl crossed to the door and rapped twice. Without waiting for a
reply, she twisted the knob and opened it. Malcolm came alongside Alex
and gestured him inside. McAuliff walked hesitantly through the door
frame and into the office of the Halidon's Minister of Council.
The room was large, with a single, enormous leaded glass window
taking up most of the rear wall. The view was both strange and awesome.
Twenty feet beyond the glass was the midsection of a waterfall; it took
up the entire area; there was nothing but endless tons of crashing
water, its sound muted but discernible. In front of the window was a
long, thick hatch table, its dark wood glistening. Behind it stood the
man named Daniel, Minister of Council.
He was a black Jamaican with sharp Afro-European features, slightly
more than medium height and quite slender. His shoulders were broad,
however; his body tapered like that of a long-distance runner. He was
in his early forties, perhaps. It was difficult to tell; his face had
lean youth, but his eyes were not young.
He smiled - briefly, cordially, but not enthusiastically - at
McAuliff and came around the table, his hand extended.
As he did so, Alex saw that Daniel wore white casual slacks and a
dark blue shirt open at the neck. Around his throat was a white silk
kerchief, held together by a gold ring. It was a kind of uniform,
thought Alex. As Malcolm's robes were a uniform.
'Welcome, Doctor. I will not ask you about your trip, I have made it
too many times myself. It is a bitch.'
Daniel shook McAuliff's hand. 'It is a bitch,' said Alex warily.
The minister abruptly turned to Malcolm. 'What's the report? I can't
think of any reason to give it privately. Or is there?'
'No… Piersall's documents are valid. They're sealed, and McAuliff
has them ready to fly out from a location within a twenty-five-mile
radius of the Martha Brae base camp. Even he doesn't know where… We
have three days, Daniel.'
The minister stared at the priest figure. Then he walked slowly back
to his chair behind the hatch table without speaking. He stood
immobile, his hands on the surface of the wood, and looked up at Alex.
'So by the brilliant persistence of an expatriate island fanatic we
face… castration. Exposure renders us impotent, you know, Dr McAuliff.
We will be plundered. Stripped of our possessions. And the
responsibility is yours… You. A geologist in the employ of
Dunstone, Limited. And a most unlikely recruit in the service of
British Intelligence.' Daniel looked over at Malcolm. 'Leave us alone,
please. And be ready to start out for Montego.'
'When?' asked Malcolm.
'That will depend on our visitor. He will be accompanying you.'
'I will?
'Yes, Dr McAuliff. If you are alive.'
TWENTY EIGHT
'There is but a single threat one human being can make against
another that must be listened to. That threat is obviously the taking
of life.' Daniel had walked to the enormous window framing the
cascading, unending columns of water. 'In the absence of overriding
ideological issues, usually associated with religion or national
causes, I think you will agree.'
'And because I'm not motivated religiously or nationally, you expect
the threat to succeed.' McAuliff remained standing in front of the
long, glistening hatch table. He had not been offered a chair.
'Yes,' replied the Halidon's Minister of Council, turning from the
window. 'I am sure it has been said to you before that Jamaica's
concerns are not your concerns.'
'It's… "not my war" is the way it was phrased.'
'Who said that to you? Charles Whitehall or Barak Moore?'
'Barak Moore is dead,' said Alex.
The minister was obviously surprised. His reaction, however, was a
brief moment of thoughtful silence. Then he spoke quietly. 'I am sorry.
His was a necessary check to Whitehall's thrust. His faction has no one
else, really. Someone will have to be brought up to take his place…'
Daniel walked to the table, reached down for a pencil, and wrote a note
on a small pad. He tore off the page and put it to the side.
McAuliff saw without difficulty the words the minister had written.
They were: 'Replace Barak Moore.' In this day of astonishments, the
implication of the message was not inconsiderable.
'Just like that?' asked Alex, nodding his head in the direction of
the page of notepaper.
'It will not be simple, if that is what you mean,' replied Daniel.
'Sit down, Dr McAuliff. I think it is time you understood. Before we go
further.
Alexander Tarquin McAuliff, geologist, with a company on 38th Street
in New York City, United States of America, sat down in a native-made
chair in an office room high in the inaccessible mountains of the
Flagstaff Range, deep within the core of the impenetrable Cock Pit
country on the island of Jamaica, and listened to a man called Daniel,
Minister of Council for a covert sect with the name of Halidon.
He could not think any longer. He could only listen.
Daniel covered the initial groundwork rapidly. He asked Alex if he
had read Walter Piersall's papers. McAuliff nodded.
The minister then proceeded to confirm the accuracy of Piersall's
studies by tracing the Tribe of Acquaba from its beginnings in the
Maroon Wars in the early eighteenth century.
'Acquaba was something of a mystic, but essentially a simple man. A
Christ figure without the charity or extremes of mercy associated with
the Jesus beliefs. After all, his forebears were born to the violence
of the Coromanteen jungles. But his ethics were sound…'
'What is the source of your wealth?' asked Alex, his faculties
returning. 'If there is wealth. And a source.'
'Gold,' replied Daniel simply.
'Where?'
'In the ground. On our lands.'
'There is no gold in Jamaica.'
'You are a geologist. You know better than that. There are traces of
crystalline deposits in scores of minerals throughout the island—'
'Infinitesimal,' broke in McAuliff. 'Minute, and so impacted with
worthless ores as to make any attempt at separation prohibitive. More
expensive than the product.'
'But… gold, nevertheless.'
'Worthless.'
Daniel smiled. 'How do you think the crystalline traces became
impacted? I might even ask you - theoretically, if you like - how the
island of Jamaica came to be.'
'As any isolated land mass in the oceans. Geologic upheavals—' Alex
stopped. The theory was beyond imagination, made awesome because of its
simplicity. A section of a vein of gold, millions upon millions of
years ago, exploding out of the layers of earth beneath the sea,
impacting deposits throughout the mass that was disgorged out of the
waters. 'My God… there's a vein…'
'There is no point in pursuing this,' said Daniel. 'For centuries
the colonial law of Jamaica spelled out an absolute: All precious
metals discovered on the island were the possession of the Crown. It
was the primary reason no one searched.'
'Fowler? said McAuliff softly. 'Jeremy Fowler…'
'I beg your pardon?'
'The Crown Recorder in Kingston. Almost a hundred years ago…'
Daniel paused. 'Yes. In 1883, to be exact… so that was Piersall's
fragment.' The minister of the Halidon wrote on another page of
notepaper. 'It will be removed.'
'This Fowler,' asked Alex softly. 'Did he know?'
Daniel looked up from the paper, tearing it off the pad as he did
so. 'No. He believed he was carrying out the wishes of a dissident
faction of Maroons conspiring with a group of north-coast landowners.
The object was to destroy the records of a tribal treaty so thousands
of acres could be cleared for plantations. It was what he was told and
what he was paid for.'
'The family in England still believes it.'
'Why not? It was' - the minister smiled - 'Colonial Service.
Shall we return to more currently applicable questions? You see, Dr
McAuliff, we want you to understand. Thoroughly'
'Go ahead.'
According to Daniel, the Halidon had no ambitions for political
power. It never had such ambitions; it remained outside the body
politic, accepting the historical view that order emerges out of the
chaos of different, even conflicting ideologies, ideas were greater
monuments than cathedrals, and a people must have free access to them.
That was the lesson of Acquaba. Freedom of mobility, freedom of
thought… freedom to do battle, if need be. The religion of the Halidon
was essentially humanist, its jungle gods symbols of continuously
struggling forces battling for the mortals' freedom. Freedom to survive
in the world in the manner agreed upon within the tribe, without
imposing that manner on the other tribes.
'Not a bad premise, is it?' asked Daniel confidently, again rapidly.
'No,' answered McAuliff. 'And not particularly original, either.'
'I disagree,' said the minister. 'The thought may have a hundred
precedents, but the practice is almost unheard of… Tribes, as they
develop self-sufficiency, tend to graduate to the point where they are
anxious to impose themselves on as many other tribes as possible. From
the Pharaohs to Caesar; from the Empire - several empires, Holy Roman,
British, et cetera - to Adolf Hitler; from Stalin to your own
conglomeratized government of self-righteous proselytizers. Beware the
pious believers, McAuliff. They were all pious in their fashions. Too
many are still.'
'But you're not.' Alex looked over at the enormous leaded glass
window and the rushing, plummeting water beyond. 'You just decide who
is… and act accordingly. Free to "do battle," as you call it.'
'You think that is a contradiction of purpose?'
'You're goddamned right I do. When "doing battle" includes killing
people… because they don't conform to your idea of what's
acceptable.'
'Who have we killed?'
Alex shifted his gaze from the waterfall to Daniel. 'I can start
with last night. Two carriers on the survey who were probably picking
up a few dollars from British Intelligence; for what? Keeping their
eyes open? Reporting what we had for dinner? Who came to see us? Your
runner, the one I called "Marcus," said they were agents; he killed
them. And a fat pig named Garvey, who was a pretty low-level,
uninformed
liaison and I grant you, smelled bad. But I think a fatal accident on
the road to Port Maria was a bit drastic.' McAuliff paused for a moment
and leaned forward in the chair. 'You massacred an entire survey team -
every member - and for all you know, they were hired by Dunstone the
same way I was: just looking for work. Now, maybe you can justify all
those killings, but neither you nor anyone else can justify the death
of Walter Piersall… Yes. Mr High and Mighty Minister, I think you're
pretty violently pious yourself.'
Daniel had sat down in the chair behind the hatch table during
Alex's angry narrative. He now pushed his foot against the floor,
sending the chair gently to his right, towards the huge window. 'Over a
hundred years ago, this office was the entire building. One of my early
predecessors had it placed here. He insisted that the minister's room
-"chamber", it was called then - overlook this section of our
waterfall. He claimed the constant movement and the muffled sound
forced a man to concentrate, blocked out small considerations… That
long-forgotten rebel proved right. I never cease to wonder at the
different bursts of shapes and patterns. And while wondering, the mind
really concentrates.'
'Is that by way of telling me those who were killed were… small
considerations?'
Daniel pushed the chair back in place and faced McAuliff. 'No,
Doctor. I was trying to think of a way to convince you. I shall tell
you the truth, but I am not sure you will believe it. Our runners, our
guides - our infiltrators, if you will - are trained to use effect
whenever possible. Fear, McAuliff, is an extraordinary weapon. A
nonviolent weapon; not that we are necessarily nonviolent… Your
carriers are not dead. They were taken prisoner, blindfolded, led to
the outskirts of Weston Favel, and released. They were not hurt, but
they were frightened severely. They will not work for MI5 again. Garvey
is dead, but we did not kill him. Your Mr Garvey sold
anything
he could get his hands on, including women, especially young girls. He
was shot on the road to Port Maria by a distraught father, the motive
obvious. We simply took the credit… You say we massacred the Dunstone
survey. Reverse that, Doctor. Three of the four white men tried to
massacre our scouting party. They killed six of our young men after
asking them into the camp for a conference.'
'One of those… white men was a British agent.'
'So Malcolm tells us.'
'I don't believe a trained Intelligence man would kill
indiscriminately.'
'Malcolm agrees with you. But the facts are there. An Intelligence
agent is a man first. In the sudden pitch of battle, a man takes sides.
This man, whichever one he was, chose his side… He did not have to
choose the way he did.'
'The fourth man? He was different, then?'
'Yes.' Daniel's eyes were suddenly reflective. 'He was a good man. A
Hollander. When he realized what the others were doing, he objected
violently. He ran out to warn the rest of our party. His own men shot
him.'
For several moments, neither spoke. Finally McAuliff asked, 'What
about Walter Piersall? Can you find a story for that?'
'No.' said Daniel. 'We do not know what happened. Or who killed him.
We have ideas, but nothing more. Walter Piersall was the last man on
earth we wanted dead. Especially under the circumstances. And if you do
not understand that, then you're stupid.'
McAuliff got out of the chair and walked aimlessly to the huge
window. He could feel Daniel's eyes on him. He forced himself to watch
the crashing streams of water in front of him. 'Why did you bring me
here? Why have you told me so much? About you… and everything else.'
'We had no choice. Unless you lied or unless Malcolm was deceived,
neither of which I believe… And we understand your position as well as
your background. When Malcolm flew out of England, he brought with him
MI5's complete dossier on you. We are willing to make you an offer.'
Alex turned and looked down at the minister. 'I'm sure it's one I
can't refuse.'
'Not readily. Your life. And, not incidentally, the lives of your
fellow surveyors.'
'Piersall's documents?'
'Somewhat more extensive, but those, too, of course,' answered
Daniel.
'Go on.' McAuliff remained by the window. The muted sound of the
waterfall was his connection to the outside somehow. It was comforting.
'We know what the British want: the list of names that comprise the
Dunstone hierarchy. The international financiers that fully expect to
turn this island into an economic sanctuary, another Switzerland. Not
long ago, a matter of weeks, they gathered here on the island from all
over the world. In Port Antonio. A few used their real names, most did
not. The timing is propitious. The Swiss banking institutions are
breaking down their traditional codes of account-secrecy one after
another. They are under extraordinary pressures, of course… We have the
Dunstone list. We will make an exchange.'
'It for our lives? And the documents…'
Daniel laughed, neither cruelly nor kindly. It was a genuine
expression of humour. 'Doctor, I am afraid it is you who are obsessed
with small considerations. It is true we place great value on
Piersall's documents, but the British do not. We must think as our
adversaries think. The British want the Dunstone list above all things.
And above all things, we want British Intelligence, and everything it
represents, out of Jamaica. That is the exchange we offer.'
McAuliff stood motionless by the window. 'I don't understand you.'
The minister leaned forward. 'We demand an end to English influence…
as we demand an end to the influence of all other nations - tribes,
if you wish, Doctor - over this island. In short words, Jamaica is to
be left to the Jamaicans.'
'Dunstone wouldn't leave it to you,' said Alex, groping.
'I'd say its influence was a hell of a lot more dangerous than
anyone else's.'
'Dunstone is our fight; we have our own plans.
Dunstone was organized by financial geniuses. But once confined in our
territory, our alternatives are multiple. Among other devices,
expropriation… But these alternatives take time, and we both know the
British do not have the time. England cannot afford the loss of
Dunstone, Limited.'
McAuliff's mind raced back to the room in the Savoy Hotel… and R. C.
Holcroft's quiet admission that economics were a factor. A rather
significant one.
Holcroft the manipulator.
Alex walked back to the armchair and sat down. He realized Daniel
was allowing him the time to think, to absorb the possibilities of the
new information. There were so many questions; most, he knew, could not
be answered, but several touched him. He had to try.
'A few days ago,' he began awkwardly, 'when Barak Moore died, I
found myself concerned that Charles Whitehall had no one to oppose him.
So did you. I saw what you wrote down—'
'What is your question?' asked Daniel civilly.
'I was right, wasn't I? They're the two extremes. They have
followers. They're not just hollow fanatics.'
'Whitehall and Moore?'
'Yes.'
'Hardly. They're the charismatic leaders. Moore was,
Whitehall is. In all new emerging nations there are generally
three factions: right, left, and the comfortable middle - the
entrenched holdovers who have learned the daily functions. The middle
is eminently corruptible; it continues the same dull, bureaucratic
chores with sudden new authority. It is the first to be replaced. The
healthiest way is by an infusion of the maturest elements from both
extremes. Peaceful balance.'
'And that's what you're waiting for? Like a referee? An umpire?'
'Yes. That's very good, Doctor. There's merit in the struggle, you
know; neither side is devoid of positive factors…
Unfortunately, Dunstone makes our task more difficult. We must observe
the combatants carefully.'
The minister's eyes had strayed again; and, again, there was that
brief, nearly imperceptible reflection. 'Why?'
Daniel seemed at first reluctant to answer. And then he sighed
audibly. 'Very well… Barak Moore's reaction to Dunstone would be
violent. A bloodbath… chaos. Whitehall's would be equally dangerous. He
would seek temporary collusion, the power base being completely
financial. He could be used as many of the German industrialists
honestly believed they were using Hitler. Only the association feeds on
absolute power… absolutely.'
McAuliff leaned back in the chair. He was beginning to understand.
'So if Dunstone's out, you're back to the… what was it… the healthy
struggle?'
'Yes,' said Daniel quietly.
'Then you and the British want the same thing. How can you make
conditions?'
'Because our solutions are different. We have the time and the
confidence of final control. The English… and the French and the
Americans and the Germans… do not have either. The economic disasters
they would suffer could well be to our advantage. And that is all I
will say on the subject… We have the Dunstone list. You will make the
offer.'
'I go with Malcolm to Montego—'
'You will be escorted and guarded,' interrupted Daniel harshly. 'The
members of your geological survey are hostages. Each will be summarily
executed should there be the slightest deviation from our instructions.'
'Suppose British Intelligence doesn't believe you? What the hell am
I supposed to do then?'
Daniel stood up. 'They will believe you, McAuliff. For your trip to
Montego Bay is merely part of news that will soon be worldwide. There
will be profound shock in several national capitals. And you will tell
British Intelligence that this is our proof. It is only the tip of the
Dunstone
iceberg… Oh, they will believe you, McAuliff. Precisely at noon,
London time. Tomorrow.'
'That's all you'll tell me?'
'No. One thing more. When the acts take place, the panicked giant -
Dunstone - will send out its killers. Among others you will be a
target.'
McAuliff found himself standing up in anger. 'Thank you for the
warning,' he said.
'You are welcome,' replied Daniel. 'Now, if you will come with me.'
Outside the office, Malcolm, the priest figure, was talking quietly
with Jeanine. At the sight of Daniel, both fell silent. Jeanine blocked
Daniel's path and spoke.
'There is news from the Martha Brae.'
Alex looked at the minister and then back at the girl. 'Martha Brae'
had to mean the survey's campsite. He started to speak, but was cut off
by Daniel.
'Whatever it is, tell us both.'
'It concerns two men. The young man, Ferguson, and the ore
specialist, Peter Jensen…'
Alex breathed again.
'What happened?' asked Daniel. 'The young man first.'
'A runner came into camp bringing him a letter from Arthur Craft,
senior. In it Craft made promises, instructing Ferguson to leave the
survey, come up to Port Antonio, to the foundation. Our scouts followed
and intercepted them several miles down the river. They are being held
there, south of Weston Favel.'
'Craft found out about his son,' said Alex. 'He's trying to buy off
Ferguson.'
'The purchase might well be to Jamaica's advantage. And Ferguson is
not a hostage high on your scale of values.'
'I brought him to the island. He is valuable to me,' answered Alex
coldly.
'We shall see.' Daniel turned to the girl. 'Tell the scouts to stay
where they are. Hold Ferguson and the runner; instructions will follow.
What about the Jensen man?'
'He is all right. The scouts are tracking him.'
'He left camp?'
'He's pretending to be lost, our men think. Early this morning, soon
after Dr McAuliff left, he had his carrier stretch what is called an…
azimuth line. He had the man walk quite a distance while he reeled out
the nylon string. The signals were by tugs, apparently—'
'And Jensen cut the line and tied his end to a sapling,' interrupted
Alex in a rapid monotone. 'With a loop around a nearby limb.'
'How do you know this?' Daniel seemed fascinated.
'It's a very old, unfunny trick in the field. A distasteful joke.
It's played on green recruits.'
Daniel turned again to the girl. 'So his carrier could not find him.
Where is Jensen now?'
'He tried to pick up Malcolm's trail,' replied the secretary. 'The
scouts say he came very close. He gave up and circled back to the west
hill. From there he can watch the entire campsite. All means of
entrance.'
'He will wait the full three days, starving and trapped by cats, if
he thinks it will help him. He does not dare go back to Warfield
without something.' Daniel looked at Alex. 'Did you know you were his
choice to direct the survey?'
'I was his. . .' McAuliff did not finish the statement.
There was no point, he thought.
'Tell our people to stay with him,' ordered the minister. 'Get
close, but don't take him… unless he uses a radio that could reach the
coast. If he does, kill him.'
'What the hell are you saying?' demanded McAuliff angrily. 'Goddamn
it, you have no right!'
'We have every right, Doctor. You adventurers come to this island!
Soil it with your filth' Don't speak to me of rights,
McAuliff!' And then, as suddenly as he had raised his voice, he lowered
it. He spoke to the girl. 'Convene the Council.'
TWENTY NINE
Daniel led McAuliff down the steps into the matted grass on the left
bank of the miniature channel of rushing water. Neither man spoke. Alex
looked at his watch; it was nearly eight o'clock. The rays of the
twilight sun shot up from behind the western mountains in spectral
shafts of orange; the intercepting hills were silhouetted in brownish
black, emphasizing their incredible height, their fortress-immensity.
The lake was a huge sheet of very dark glass, polished beyond the
ability of man, reflecting the massive shadows of the mountains and the
streaks of the orange sun.
They walked down the slope of the clearing to the stone fence
bordering the grazing field. At the far left was a gate; Daniel
approached it, unlatched the large single bolt, and swung it open. He
gestured McAuliff to go through.
'I apologize for my outburst,' said the minister as they walked into
the field. 'It was misdirected. You were a victim, not an aggressor. We
realize that.'
'And what are you? Are you a victim? Or an aggressor?'
'I am the Minister of Council. And we are neither. I
explained that.'
'You explained a lot of things, but I still don't know anything
about you,' said McAuliff, his eyes on a lone animal approaching them
in the darkening field. It was a young horse, and it whinnied and
pranced hesitantly as it drew near.
'This colt is forever breaking out,' laughed Daniel as he patted the
neck of the nervous animal. 'He will be difficult to train, this one… Hyee!
Hyee!' cried the Halidonite as he slapped the colt's flank,
sending it kicking and prancing and snorting towards the centre of the
field.
'Maybe that's what I mean,' said Alex. 'How do you train… people?
Keep them from breaking out?'
Daniel stopped and looked at McAuliff. They were alone in the large
pasture, awash with the vivid colours of the dying Jamaican sun. The
light silhouetted the minister and caused McAuliff to shield his face.
He could not see Daniel's eyes, but he could feel them.
'We are an uncomplicated people in many ways,' said the Halidonite.
'What technology we require is brought in, along with our medical
supplies, basic farm machinery, and the like. Always by our own
members, using untraceable mountain routes. Other than these, we are
self-sufficient on our lands. Our training - as you call it - is a
result of understanding the immense riches we possess. Our isolation is
hardly absolute. As you will see.'
From childhood, Daniel explained, the Halidonite was told he was
privileged and must justify his birthright by his life's actions. The
ethic of contribution was imbued in him early in his education; the
need to use his potential to the fullest. The outside world was shown
in all its detail - its simplicities, its complications, its peace and
its violence; its good and its evil. Nothing was concealed;
exaggeration was not left to young imaginations. Realistic temptation
was balanced - perhaps a bit strongly, admitted Daniel - with realistic
punishment.
As near to his or her twelfth birthday as possible, the Halidonite
was tested extensively by teachers, the Elders of the Council, and
finally by the minister himself. On the basis of these examinations,
individuals were selected for training for the outside world. There
followed three years of preparation, concentrating on specific skills
or professions.
When he or she reached sixteen, the Halidonite was taken from the
community and brought to a family residence on the outside, where the
father and mother were members of the tribe. Except for infrequent
returns to the community and reunions with his own parents, the outside
family would be the Halidonite's guardians for a number of years to
come.
'Don't you have defections?' asked Alex.
'Rarely,' replied Daniel. 'The screening process is most thorough.'
'What happens if it isn't thorough enough? If there are—'
'That is an answer I will not give you,' interrupted the minister.
'Except to say the Maze of Acquaba is a threat no prison can compete
with. It keeps offenders - within and without - to a minimum.
Defections are extremely rare.'
From the tone of Daniel's voice, Alex had no desire to pursue the
subject. 'They're brought back?'
Daniel nodded.
The population of the Halidon was voluntarily controlled. Daniel
claimed that for every couple that wanted more children, there
invariably was a couple that wanted fewer or none. And, to McAuliffs
astonishment, the minister added: 'Marriages take place between
ourselves and those of the outside. It is, of course, unavoidable and,
by necessity, desirable. But it is a complicated procedure taking place
over many months and with stringent regulations.'
'A reverse screening process?'
'The harshest imaginable. Controlled by the guardians.'
'What happens if the marriage doesn't…'
'That answer, too, is not in bounds, Doctor.'
'I have an idea the penalties are stiff,' said Alex softly.
'You may have all the ideas you like,' said Daniel, starting up
again across the field. 'But what is of the greatest importance is that
you understand that we have scores… hundreds of guardians - halfway
houses - throughout the countries of the world. In every profession, in
all governments, in dozens of universities and institutions everywhere…
You will never know who is a member of the Halidon. And that is our
threat, our ultimate protection.'
'You're saying that if I reveal what I know, you'll have me killed?'
'You and every member of your family. Wife, children, parents… in
the absence of the formal structure, lovers, closest associates, every
person who was or is an influence on your life. Your identity, even
your memory, will be erased.'
'You can't know every person I talk to, every telephone call I make.
Where I am every minute. No one can!
I could mount an army; I could find you!'
'But you will not,' said Daniel quietly, in counterpoint to
McAuliffs outburst. 'For the same reason others have not… Come. We are
here.'
They were standing now on the edge of the field. Beyond was the
tentacled foliage of the Cock Pit forest, in shadowed blackness.
Suddenly, startlingly, the air was filled with a penetrating sound
of terrible resonance. It was a wailing, inhuman lament. The tone was
low, breathless, enveloping everything and echoing everywhere. It was
the sound of a giant woodwind, rising slowly, receding into a simple,
obscure theme and swelling again to the plaintive cry of the higher
melody.
It grew louder and louder, the echoes now picking up the bass tones
and hurling them through the jungles, crashing them off the sides of
the surrounding mountains until the earth seemed to vibrate.
And then it stopped, and McAuliff stood transfixed as he saw in the
distance the outlines of figures walking slowly, purposefully, in
measured cadence, across the fields in the chiaroscuro shadows of the
early darkness. A few carried torches, the flames low.
At first there were only four or five, coming from the direction of
the gate. Then there were some from the south bank of the black,
shining lake; others from the north, emerging out of the darkness.
Flat-bottomed boats could be seen crossing the surface of the water,
each with a single torch.
Within minutes there were ten, then twenty, thirty… until McAuliff
stopped counting. From everywhere. Dozens of slowly moving bodies
swaying gently as they walked across the darkened fields.
They were converging towards the spot where Alex stood with Daniel.
The inhuman wailing began again. Louder - if possible - than before,
and McAuliff found himself bringing his hands up to his ears; the
vibrations in his head and throughout his body were causing pain -
actual pain.
Daniel touched him on the shoulder; Alex whipped around as if he had
been struck violently. For an instant he thought he had been, so severe
were the agonizing sensations brought on by the deafening sound of the
horrible lament.
'Come,' said Daniel gently. 'The hollydawn can injure you.'
McAuliff heard him accurately; he knew that. Daniel had pronounced
the word: not 'halidon' but 'hollydawn.' As though the echoing,
deafening sound had caused him to revert to a more primitive tongue.
Daniel walked rapidly ahead of Alex into what McAuliff thought was a
wall of underbrush. Then the Halidonite suddenly began to descend into
what appeared to be a trench dug out of the jungle. Alex ran to catch
up, and nearly plummeted down a long, steep corridor of steps carved
out of rock.
The strange staircase widened, flaring out more on both sides the
deeper it went, until McAuliff could see that they had descended into a
primitive amphitheater, the walls rising thirty or forty feet to the
surface of the earth.
What was the staircase became an aisle, the curving rock on both
sides forming rows of descending seats.
And suddenly the deafening, agonizing sound from above was no more.
It had stopped. Everything was silent.
The amphitheater, carved out of some kind of quarry, blocked out all
other sound.
McAuliff stood where he was and looked down at the single source of
light: a low flame that illuminated the wall of rock at the centre rear
of the amphitheater. In that wall was embedded a slab of dull yellow
metal. And on that slab of metal was a withered corpse. In front of the
corpse was a latticework of thin reeds made of the same yellow
substance.
McAuliff needed to go no closer to realize what the substance was:
gold.
And the withered, ancient body - once huge - was that of the mystic
descendant of the Coromanteen chieftains.
Acquaba.
The preserved remains of the progenitor… spanning the centuries. The
true cross of the Tribe of Acquaba. For the believers to see. And sense.
'Down here,' Daniel's words were whispered, but Alex heard them
clearly. 'You will sit with me. Please, hurry.'
McAuliff walked down the remaining staircase to the floor of the
quarry shell and over to the Halidonite on the right side of the
primitive stage. Jutting out from the wall were two stone blocks;
Daniel pointed to one: the seat nearest the corpse of Acquaba, less
than eight feet away.
McAuliff lowered himself on to the hard stone, his eyes drawn to the
open catafalque of solid and webbed gold. The leathered corpse was
dressed in robes of reddish black; the feet and hands were bare… and
huge, as the head was huge. Allowing for the contraction of two
centuries, the man must have been enormous - nearer seven feet than six.
The single torch below the coffin of gold shot flickering shadows
against the wall; the thin reeds crisscrossing the front of the
carved-out casket picked up the light in dozens of tiny reflections.
The longer one stared, thought Alex, the easier it would be to convince
oneself this was the shell of a god lying in state. A god who had
walked the earth and worked the earth - two hundred years could not
erase the signs on the enormous hands and feet. But this god, this man
did not toil as other men…
He heard the sounds of muted steps and looked up into the small
amphitheater. Through the entrance, hidden in darkness, and down the
staircase they came, a procession of men and women separating and
spreading throughout the lateral stone aisles, taking their seats.
In silence.
Those with torches stood equidistant from each other on graduating
levels against opposite walls.
All eyes were on the withered body beyond the latticework of gold.
Their concentration was absolute; it was as if they drew sustenance
from it.
In silence.
Suddenly, without warning, the sound of the hollydawn shattered
the stillness with the impact of an explosion. The
thunderous, wailing lament seemed to burst from the bowels of
rock-covered earth, crashing upward against the stone, thrusting out of
the huge pit that was the grave of Acquaba.
McAuliff felt the breath leaving his lungs, the blood rushing to his
head. He buried his face between his knees, his hands clamped over his
ears, his whole body shaking.
The cry reached a crescendo, a terrible screaming rush of air that
swelled to a pitch of frenzy. No human ears could stand it!
thought Alex as he trembled… as he had never before trembled in his
life.
And then it was over and the silence returned.
McAuliff slowly sat up, lowering his hands, gripping the stone
beneath him in an effort to control the violent spasms he felt shooting
through his flesh. His eyes were blurred from the blood which had raced
to his temples; they cleared slowly, in stages, and he looked out at
the row of Halidonites, at these chosen members of the Tribe of Acquaba.
They were - each one, all - still staring, eyes fixed on the
ancient, withered body behind the golden reeds.
Alex knew they had remained exactly as they were throughout the
shattering madness that had nearly driven him out of his mind.
He turned to Daniel; involuntarily he gasped. The Minister of
Council, too, was transfixed, his black eyes wide, his jaw set, his
face immobile. But he was different from all the others; there were
tears streaming down Daniel's cheeks.
'You're mad… all of you,' said Alex quietly. 'You're insane…'
Daniel did not respond. Daniel could not hear him. He was in a
hypnotic state.
They all were. Everyone in that carved-out shell beneath the earth.
Nearly a hundred men and women inextricably held by some force beyond
his comprehension.
Autosuggestion. Self-somnipathy. Group hypnosis. Whatever the
catalyst, each individual in that primitive amphitheatre was
mesmerized beyond reach. On another plane… time and space unfamiliar.
Alexander felt himself an intruder; he was observing a ritual too
private for his eyes.
Yet he had not asked to be here. He had been forced in - ripped out
of place - and made to bear witness.
Still, the witnessing filled him with sorrow. And he could not
understand. So he looked over at the body that was once the giant,
Acquaba.
He stared at the shrivelled flesh of the once-black face. At the
closed eyes, so peaceful in death. At the huge hands folded so strongly
across the reddish black robe.
Then back at the face… the eyes… the eyes… Oh, my God! Oh, Christ!
The shadows were playing tricks… terrible, horrible tricks. The body of Acquaba moved. The eyes opened; the fingers of the immense hands spread, the
wrists turned, the arms raised… inches above the ancient cloth. In supplication.
And then there was nothing.
Only a shrivelled corpse behind a latticework of gold.
McAuliff pressed himself back against the wall of stone, trying
desperately to find his sanity. He closed his eyes and breathed deeply,
gripping the rock beneath him.
He did not know how long it was - a minute, an hour, a decade of
terror - until he heard Daniel's words.
'You saw it.' A statement made gently. 'Do not be afraid. We shall
never speak of it again. There is no harm. Only good.'
Alexander could not talk. The perspiration rolled down his
face. And the carved-out council ground was cool.
Daniel stood up and walked to the centre of the platform of rock.
Instead of addressing the Tribe of Acquaba, he turned to McAuliff. His
words were whispered, but, as before, they were clear and precise,
echoing off the walls.
'The lessons of Acquaba touch all men, as the lessons of all
prophets touch all men. But few listen. Still, the work must go on. For
those who can do it. It is really as simple as that. Acquaba was
granted the gift of great riches… beyond the imaginations of those who
will never listen; who will only steal and corrupt… So we go out into
the world without the world's knowledge. And we do what we can… It must
ever be so, for if the world knew, the world would impose itself and
the Halidon, the Tribe of Acquaba, and the lessons of Acquaba would be
destroyed… We are not fools, Dr McAuliff. We know with whom we speak,
with whom we share our secrets. And our love… But do not mistake us. We
can kill; we will kill to protect the vaults of Acquaba. In that we are
dangerous. In that we are absolute. We will destroy ourselves and
the vaults if the world outside interferes with us.
'I, as Minister of Council, ask you to rise, Dr McAuliff. And turn
yourself away from the Tribe of Acquaba, from this Council of the
Halidon, and face the wall. What you will hear, staring only at stone,
are voices, revealing locations and figures. As I mentioned, we are not
fools. We understand the specifics of the marketplace. But you will not
see faces, you will never know the identities of those who speak. Only
know that they go forth bearing the wealth of Acquaba.
'We dispense vast sums throughout the world, concentrating as best
we can on the areas of widespread human suffering. Pockets of famine,
displacement… futility. Untold thousands are helped, daily by the
Halidon. Daily. In practical ways.
'Please rise and face the wall, Dr McAuliff.'
Alexander got up from the block of stone and turned. For a brief
instant his eyes fell on the corpse of Acquaba. He looked away and
stared at the towering sheet of rock.
Daniel continued. 'Our contributions are made without thought of
political gain or influence. They are made because we have the
concealed wealth and the commitment to make them. The lessons of
Acquaba.
'But the world is not ready to accept our ways, Acquaba's ways. The
global mendacity would destroy us, cause us to destroy ourselves,
perhaps. And that we cannot permit.
'So understand this, Dr McAuliff. Beyond the certainty of your own
death, should you reveal what you know of the Tribe of Acquaba, there
is another certainty of far greater significance than your life: the
work of the Halidon will cease. That is our ultimate threat…'
One by one, the voices recited their terse statements:
'Afro axis. Ghana. Fourteen thousand bushels of grain. Conduit:
Smythe Brothers, Capetown. Barclay's Bank…'
'Sierra Leone. Three tons medical supplies. Conduit: Baldazi
Pharmaceuticals, Algiers. Bank of Constantine…'
'Indo-China axis. Vietnam, Mekong , Quan Tho provinces Radiology and
laboratory personnel and supplies. Conduit: Swiss Red Cross. Bank of
America…'
'Southwest Hemisphere axis. Brazil. Rio de Janiero. Typhoid serum.
Conduit: Surgical Salizar. Banco Terceiro, Rio…'
'Northwest Hemisphere axis. West Virginia. Appalachia. Twenty-four
tons food supplies. Conduit: Atlantic Warehousing. Chase Manhattan, New
York…'
'India axis. Dacca. Refugee camps. Inoculation serums, medicals.
Conduit: International Displacement Organization. World Bank, Burma…'
The voices of men and women droned on, the phrases clipped, yet
somehow gentle. It took nearly an hour, and McAuliff began to recognize
that many spoke twice, but always with different information. Nothing
was repeated.
Finally there was silence.
A long period of silence. And then Alexander felt a hand on his
shoulder. He turned, and Daniel's eyes bore in on him.
'Do you understand?'
'Yes, I understand,' McAuliff said.
They walked across the field towards the lake. The sounds of the
forest mingled with the hum of the mountains and the crashing of the
waterfall nearly a mile to the north.
They stood on the embankment, and Alex bent down, picked up a small
stone, and threw it into the black, shining lake that reflected the
light of the moon. He looked at Daniel.
'In a way, you're as dangerous as the rest of them. One man… with so
much… operating beyond reach. No checks, no balances. It would be so
simple for good to become evil, evil good. Malcolm said your… term
isn't guided by a calendar.'
'It is not. I am elected for life. Only I can terminate my office.'
'And pick your successor?'
'I have influence. The council, of course, has the final
disposition.'
'Then I think you're more dangerous.'
'I do not deny it.'
THIRTY
The trip to Montego was far easier than the circuitous march from
the Martha Brae. To begin with, most of the journey was by vehicle.
Malcolm, his robes replaced by Savile Row clothing, led Alexander
around the lake to the southeast, where they were met by a runner who
took them to the base of a mountain cliff, hidden by jungle. A steel
lift, whose thick chains were concealed by mountain rocks, carried them
up the enormous precipice to a second runner, who placed them in a
small tram, which was transported by cable on a path below the skyline
of the forest.
At the end of the cable ride, a third runner took them through a
series of deep caves, identified by Malcolm as the Quick Step Grotto.
He told Alex that the Quick Step was named for seventeenth-century
buccaneers who raced from Bluefield's Bay overland to bury treasure at
the bottom of the deep pools within the caves. The other derivation -
the one many believed more appropriate - was that if a traveller did
not watch his feet, he could easily slip and plummet into a crevice.
Injury was certain, death not impossible.
McAuliff stayed close to the runner, his flashlight beamed at the
rocky darkness in front of him.
Out of the caves, they proceeded through a short stretch of jungle
to the first definable road they had seen. The runner activated a
portable radio; ten minutes later a 'desert jeep' came out of the
pitch-black hollows from the west and the runner bid them good-bye.
The crude-looking vehicle travelled over a criss-cross pattern of
back-country roads, the driver keeping his engine as quiet as possible,
coasting on descending hills, shutting off his headlights whenever they
approached a populated area. The drive lasted a half-hour. They passed
through the Maroon village of Accompong and swung south several miles
to a flat stretch of grassland.
In the darkness, on the field's edge, a small aeroplane was rolled
out from under a camouflage of fern and acacia. It was a two-seater
Comanche; they climbed in, and Malcolm took the controls.
'This is the only difficult leg of the trip,' he said as they taxied
for takeoff. 'We must fly close to the ground to avoid interior radar.
Unfortunately, so do the ganga aircraft, the drug smugglers. But we
will worry less about the authorities than we will about collision.'
Without incident, but not without signalling several ganga planes,
they landed on the grounds of an outlying farm, southwest of Unity
Hall. From there it was a fifteen-minute ride into Montego Bay.
'It would arouse suspicions for us to stay in the exclusively black
section of the town. You, for your skin, me, for my speech and my
clothes. And tomorrow we must have mobility in the white areas.'
They drove to the Cornwall Beach Hotel and registered ten minutes
apart. Reservations had been made for adjoining but not connecting
rooms.
It was two o'clock in the morning, and McAuliff fell into bed
exhausted. He had not slept in nearly forty-eight hours. And yet, for a
very long time, sleep did not come.
He thought about so many things. The brilliant, lonely, awkward
James Ferguson and his sudden departure to the Craft Foundation.
Defection, really. Without explanation. Alex hoped Craft was
Jimbo-mon's solution. For he would never be trusted again.
And of the sweetly charming Jensens… up to their so-respectable
chins in the manipulations of Dunstone, Limited.
Of the 'charismatic leader' Charles Whitehall, waiting to ride
'nigger-Pompei's horse' through Victoria Park. Whitehall was no match
for the Halidon. The Tribe of Acquaba would not tolerate him.
Nor did the lessons of Acquaba include the violence of Lawrence, the
boy-man giant… successor to Barak Moore.
Lawrence's 'revolution' would not come to pass. Not the way he
conceived it.
Alex wondered about Sam Tucker. Tuck, the gnarled rocklike force of
stability. Would Sam find what he was looking for in Jamaica? For
surely he was looking.
But most of all McAuliff thought about Alison. Of her lovely half
laugh and her clear blue eyes and the calm acceptance that was her
understanding. How very much he loved her.
He wondered, as his consciousness drifted into the grey, blank void
that was sleep, if they would have a life together.
After the madness.
If he was alive.
If they were alive.
He had left a wake-up call for 6.45. Quarter to twelve, London time.
Noon. For the Halidon.
The coffee arrived in seven minutes. Eight minutes to twelve.
The telephone rang three minutes later. Five minutes to noon, London
time. It was Malcolm, and he was not in his hotel room. He was at the
Associated Press Bureau, Montego Bay office on St James Street. He
wanted to make sure that Alex was up and had his radio on. Perhaps his
television as well.
McAuliff had both instruments on.
Malcolm the Halidonite would call him later.
At three minutes to seven - twelve, London time - there was a rapid
knocking on the hotel door. Alexander was startled. Malcolm had said
nothing about visits; no one knew he was in Montego Bay. He approached
the door.
'Yes?'
The words from the other side of the wood were spoken hesitantly, in
a deep, familiar voice.
'Is that you… McAuliff?'
And instantly Alexander understood. The symmetry, the timing was
extraordinary; only extraordinary minds could conceive and execute such
a symbolic coup.
He opened the door.
R. C. Holcroft, British Intelligence, stood in the corridor, his
slender frame rigid, his face an expression of suppressed shock.
'Good God. It is you… I didn't believe them. Your signals from the
river… There is nothing irregular, nothing at all!'
'That,' said Alex, 'is about as disastrous a judgment as I've ever
heard.'
'They dragged me out of my room in Kingston… before daylight. Drove
me up into the hills—'
'And flew you to Montego,' completed McAuliff, looking at his watch.
'Come in, Holcroft. We've got a minute and fifteen seconds to go.'
'For what?'
'We'll both find out.'
The lilting, high-pitched Caribbean voice on the radio proclaimed
over the music the hour of seven in the 'sunlight paradise of Montego
Bay.' The picture on the television set was a sudden fade-in shot of a
long expanse of white beach… a photograph. The announcer, in overly
Anglicized tones, was extolling the virtues of 'our island life' and
welcoming 'all visitors from the cold climates,' pointing out
immediately that there was a blizzard in New York.
Twelve o'clock London time.
Nothing unusual.
Nothing.
Holcroft stood by the window, looking out at the blue-green waters
of the bay. He was silent; his anger was the fury of a man who had lost
control because he did not know the moves his opponents were making.
And, more important, why they were making them.
The manipulator manipulated.
McAuliff sat on the bed, his eyes on the television set, now a
travelogue fraught with lies about the 'beautiful city of Kingston.'
Simultaneously, the radio on the bedside table blared its combination
of cacophonic music and frantic commercials for everything from
Coppertone to Hertz.
Intermittently, there was the syrupy female
Voice-of-the-Ministry-of-Health, telling the women of the island that
'you do not have to get pregnant,' followed by the repetition of the
weather… the forecasts never 'partly cloudy,' always 'partly sunny.'
Nothing unusual.
Nothing.
It was eleven minutes past twelve London time.
Still nothing.
And then it happened.
'We interrupt this broadcast....'
And, like an insignificant wave born of the ocean depths - unnoticed
at first, but gradually swelling, suddenly bursting out of the waters
and cresting in controlled fury - the pattern of terror was clear.
The first announcement was merely the prelude - a single flute
outlining the significant notes of a theme shortly to be developed.
Explosion and death in Port Antonio.
The east wing of the estate of Arthur Craft had been blown up by
explosives, the resulting conflagration gutting most of the house.
Among the dead was feared to be the patriarch of the Foundation.
There were rumours of rifle fire preceding the series of explosions.
Port Antonio was in panic.
Rifle fire. Explosives.
Rare, yes. But not unheard of on this island of scattered violence.
Of contained anger.
The next 'interruption' followed in less than ten minutes. It was -
appropriately, thought McAuliff - a news report out of London. This
intrusion warranted a line of moving print across the television
screen: 'Killings in London Full Report on News Hour.' The radio
allowed a long musical commercial to run its abrasive course before the
voice returned, now authoritatively bewildered.
The details were still sketchy, but not the conclusions. Four
high-ranking figures in government and industry had been slain. A
director of Lloyds, an accounts official of Inland Revenue, and two
members of the House of Commons, both
chairing trade committees of consequence. The methods: two now
familiar, two new - dramatically oriented.
A high-powered rifle fired from a window into a canopied entrance in
Belgravia Square. A dynamited automobile, blown up in the Westminster
parking area. Then the new: poison - temporarily identified as
strychnine - administered in a Beefeater martini, causing death in ten
minutes; a horrible, contorted, violent death… the blade of a knife
thrust into moving flesh on a crowded corner of The Strand.
Killings accomplished; no killers apprehended. R. C. Holcroft stood
by the hotel window listening to the excited tones of the Jamaican
announcer. When Holcroft spoke, his shock was clear.
'My God… Every one of those men at one time or another was
under the glass—'
'The what?'
'Suspected of high crimes. Malfeasance, extortion, fraud… Nothing
was ever proved out.'
'Something's been proved out now.'
Paris was
next. Reuters sent out the first dispatches picked up by all the wire
services within minutes. Again the number was… four. Four Frenchmen -
actually, three French men and one woman. But still four.
Again, they were prominent figures in industry and government. And
the MOs were identical: rifle, explosives, strychnine, knife.
The French woman was a proprietor of a Paris fashion house. A
ruthless, hated, sadistic lesbian long considered an associate of the
Corsicans. She was shot from a distance as she emerged from a doorway
on the St Germain des Pres. Of the three men, one was a member of the
president's all-important Elysee Financial; his Citroen exploded when
he turned his ignition on in the Rue de Bac. The two other Frenchmen
were powerful executives in shipping companies - Marseilles-based,
under Paraguyan flag - owned by the Marquis de Chatellarault. The first
spastically lurched and died over a cafe table in the Montmarte
- strychnine in his late-morning espresso. The second had his chest
torn
open by a butcher's knife on the crowded sidewalk outside the Georges
Cinque Hotel.
Minutes after Paris came Berlin. The Berlin of the Bonn government.
There were only rumours out of the East - sirens were heard beyond the
bridges, the Wall; police radios were intercepted - but nothing was
clear.
On the Kurfurstendam Strasse, the Unter Schriftfuhrer of
the Bundestag's AuBenpolitik was shot from the roof of a
nearby building as he was on his way to a luncheon appointment. A Direktor
of Mercedes Benz stopped for a traffic light on the Autobahn, where two
grenades were thrown into the front seat of his car, demolishing
automobile and driver in seconds. A known narcotics dealer was given
poison in his glass of heavy lager at the Grand Hotel, and an appointee
of the Einkunfte Finanzamt was stabbed expertly - death
instantaneous - through the heart in the crowded lobby of the
government building.
Rome followed. A financial strategist for the Vatican, a despised
cardinal devoted to the church militants' continuous extortion of the
uninformed poor, was dropped by an assassin firing a rifle from behind
a Bernini in St Peter's Square. A funzionario of Milan's
Mondadori drove into a cul-de-sac on the Via Condotte, where his
automobile exploded. A lethal dose of strychnine was administered with
cappuccino to a direttore of customs at Rome's Fiumicino
Airport. A knife was plunged into the ribs of a powerful broker of the Borsa
Valori as he walked down the Spanish Steps into the Via Due
Macelli.
London, Paris, Berlin, Rome.
And always the figure was four… and the methods identical: rifle,
explosives, strychnine, knife. Four diverse, ingenious modi operandi.
Each strikingly news-conscious, oriented for shock. All killings the
work of expert professionals; no killers caught at the scenes of
violence.
The radio and the television stations no longer made attempts to
continue regular programming. As the names came, so too did
progressively illuminating biographies.
And another pattern emerged, lending credence to Holcroft's summary
of the four slain Englishmen: The victims were not ordinary men of
stature in industry and government. There was a common stain running
through the many that aroused suspicions about the rest. They were
individuals not alien to official scrutinies. As the first hints began
to surface, curious newsmen dug swiftly and furiously, dredging up
scores of rumours, and more than rumour - facts: indictments (generally
reduced to the inconsequential), accusations from injured competitors,
superiors, and subordinates (removed, recanted… unsubstantiated),
litigations (settled out of court or dropped for lack of evidence).
It was an elegant cross section of the suspected. Tarnished, soiled,
an aura of corruption.
All this before the hands on McAuliff's watch read nine o'clock. Two
hours past twelve, London time. Two o'clock in the afternoon in Mayfair.
Commuter-time in Washington and New York.
There was no disguising the apprehension felt as the sun made its
way from the east over the Atlantic. Speculation was rampant, growing
in hysteria; a conspiracy of international proportions was suggested, a
cabal of self-righteous fanatics violently implementing its vengeances
throughout the civilized world.
Would it touch the shores of the United States?
But, of course, it had.
Two hours ago.
The awkward giant was just beginning to stir, to recognize the
signs of the spreading plague.
The first news reached Jamaica out of Miami. Radio Montego picked up
the overlapping broadcasts, sifting, sorting… finally relaying by tape
the words of the various newscasters as they rushed to verbalize the
events spewing out of the wire service teletypes.
Washington. Early morning. The undersecretary of the budget - a
patently political appointment resulting from openly questioned
campaign contributions - was shot while jogging on a back-country road
near his residence in Arlington; the weapon was a high-powered rifle,
probably with a
telescopic sight, fired from a hill above the road. The body was
discovered by a motorist at 8.20; the time of death estimated to be
within two hours.
Noon. London time.
New York. At approximately seven o'clock in the morning, when one
Angelo Dellacroce - reputed Mafia figure - stepped into his Lincoln
Continental in the attached garage of his Scarsdale home, there was an
explosion that ripped the entire enclosure out of its foundation,
instantly killing Dellacroce and causing considerable damage to the
rest of the house. Dellacroce was rumoured to be…
Noon. London time.
Phoenix, Arizona. At approximately 5.15 in the morning, one Harrison
Renfield, international financier and real-estate magnet with extensive
Caribbean holdings, collapsed in his private quarters at the
Thunderbird Club after a late party with associates. He had ordered a
pre-dawn breakfast; poison was suspected, as a Thunderbird waiter was
found unconscious down the hall from Renfield's suite. An autopsy was
ordered… Five o'clock, Mountain time.
Twelve, noon. London.
Los Angeles, California. At precisely 4.00A.M. the junior Senator
from Nevada - recently implicated (but not indicted) in a Las Vegas tax
fraud - stepped off a launch on to a pier in Marina del Ray. The launch
was filled with guests returning from the yacht of a motion-picture
producer. Somewhere between the launch and the base of the pier, the
junior Senator from Nevada had his stomach ripped open with a blade so
long and a cut so deep that the cartilage of his backbone protruded
through spinal lacerations. He fell among the revellers, carried along
by the boisterous crowd until the eruptions of the warm fluid that
covered so many was recognized for the blood it was. Panic resulted,
the terror alcoholic but profound. Four in the morning. Pacific time.
Twelve noon. London.
McAuliff looked over at the silent, stunned Holcroft.
'The last death reported was four in the morning… twelve o'clock in
London. In each country four died, with four corresponding - identical
- methods of killing… The Arawak units of four - the death odyssey…
that's what they call it.'
'What are you talking about?'
'Deal with the Halidon, Holcroft. You have no choice; this is their
proof… They said it was only the tip.'
The tip?'
'The tip of the Dunstone iceberg.'
'Impossible demands!' roared R. C. Holcroft, the
capillaries in his face swollen, forming splotches of red anger over
his skin. 'We will not be dictated to by goddamn niggers'.'
'Then you won't get the list.'
'We'll force it out of them. This is no time for treaties
with savages'
Alexander thought of Daniel, of Malcolm, of the incredible lakeside
community, of the grave of Acquaba… the vaults of Acquaba. Things he
could not, would not, talk about. He did not have to, he considered.
'You think what's happened is the work of savages? Not the killings, I
won't defend that. But the methods, the victims… Don't kid yourself.'
'I don't give a damn for your opinions…' Holcroft walked
rapidly to the telephone on the bedside table. Alex remained in a chair
by the television set. It was the sixth time Holcroft had tried to
place his call. The Britisher had only one telephone number he could
use in Kingston; embassy telephones were off-limits for clandestine
operations. Each time he had managed to get a line through to Kingston
- not the easiest feat in Montego - the number was busy.
'Damn! Goddamn it!' exploded the agent.
'Call the embassy before you have a coronary,' said McAuliff. 'Deal
with them.'
'Don't be an ass,' replied Holcroft. 'They don't know who I am. We
don't use embassy personnel.'
'Talk to the ambassador.'
'What in God's name for? What am I supposed to say? "Pardon me, Mr
Ambassador, but my name's so-and-so. I happen to be…" The bloody
explanation - if he'd listen to it without cutting me off - would take
the better part of an hour. And then the damn fool would start sending
cables to Downing Street!' Holcroft marched back to the window.
'What are you going to do?'
'They've isolated me, you understand that, don't you?' Holcroft
remained at the window, his back to McAuliff.
'I think so.'
'The purpose is to cut me off, force me to absorb the full impact of
the… past three hours…' The Britisher's voice trailed off in thought.
McAuliff wondered. 'That presupposes they know the Kingston
telephone; that they shorted it out somehow.'
'I don't think so,' said Holcroft, his eyes still focused on the
waters of the bay. 'By now Kingston knows I've been taken. Our men are
no doubt activating every contact on the island, trying to get a
bearing on my whereabouts. The telephone would be in constant use.'
'You're not a prisoner; the door's not locked.' Alex suddenly
wondered if he was correct. He got out of the chair, crossed to the
door and opened it.
Down the corridor were two Jamaicans by the bank of elevators. They
looked at McAuliff, and although he did not know them, he recognized
the piercing, controlled calm of their expressions. He had seen such
eyes, such expressions high in the Flagstaff mountains. They were
members of the Halidon.
Alex closed the door and turned to Holcroft, but before he could say
anything, the Britisher spoke, his back still to Alex.
'Does that answer you?' he asked quietly.
'There are two men in the corridor,' said McAuliff, pointlessly.
'You knew that.'
'I didn't know it, I merely presumed it. There are fundamental
rules.'
'And you still think they're savages?'
'Everything is relative.' Holcroft turned from the window and faced
Alex. 'You're the conduit now. I'm sure they've told you that.'
'If "conduit" means I take back your answer, then yes.'
'Merely the answer? They've asked for no substantive guarantees?'
The Englishman seemed bewildered.
'I think that comes in Phase Two. This is a step contract, I gather.
I don't think they'll take the word of Her Majesty's obedient servant.
He uses the term "nigger" too easily.'
'You're an ass,' said Holcroft.
'You're an autocratic cipher,' replied McAuliff, with equal disdain.
'They've got you, agent-mon. They've also got the Dunstone list. You
play in their sandbox… with their "fundamental rules."'
Holcroft hesitated, repressing his irritation. 'Perhaps not. There's
an avenue we haven't explored. They'll take you back… I should like to
be taken with you.'
'They won't accept that.'
'They may not have a choice—'
'Get one thing straight,' interrupted Alex. 'There's a survey team
in the Cock Pit - white and black - and no one's
going to jeopardize a single life.'
'You forget,' said Holcroft softly - aloofly. 'We know the location
within a thousand yards.'
'You're no match for those guarding it. Don't think you are… One
misstep, one deviation, and there are mass executions.'
'Yes,' said the Britisher. 'I believe just such a massacre took
place previously. The executioners being those whose methods and
selections you admire so.'
'The circumstances were different. You don't know the truth.'
'Oh, come off it, McAuliff! I shall do my best to protect the lives
of your team, but I'm forced to be honest with you. They are no more
the first priority for me than they are for the Halidon! There are more
important considerations.' The Englishman stopped briefly, for
emphasis. 'And I can assure you, our resources are considerably more
than those of a sect of fanatic… coloureds. I'd advise you not to
change your allegiances at this late hour.'
The announcer on the television screen had been droning, reading
from pages of script handed to him by others in the studio. Alex
couldn't be sure - he had not been listening - but he thought he had
heard the name, spoken differently… as if associated with new or
different information. He looked down at the set, holding up his hand
for Holcroft to be quiet.
He had heard the name.
And as the first announcement three hours ago had been the prelude -
a single instrument marking a thematic commencement - McAuliff
recognized this as the coda. The terror had been orchestrated to a
conclusion.
The announcer looked earnestly into the camera, then back to the
papers in his hand.
'To repeat the bulletin. Savanna-la-Mar. Shooting broke out at the
private Negril airfield. A band of unidentified men ambushed a party of
Europeans as they were boarding a small plane for Weston Favel. The
French industrialist Henri Salanne, the Marquis de Chatellerault, was
killed along with three men said to be in his employ… No motive is
known. The marquis was the houseguest of the Wakefield family. The
pilot, a Wakefield employee, reported that his final instructions from
the marquis were to fly south of Weston Favel at low altitude towards
the interior grasslands. The parish police are questioning…'
Alex walked over to the set and switched it off. He turned to
Holcroft; there was very little to say, and he wondered if the
Intelligence man would understand.
'That was a priority you forgot about, wasn't it, Holcroft? Alison
Booth. Your filthy link to Chatellerault… The expendable Mrs Booth, the
bait from Interpol… Well, you're here, agent-mon, and
Chatellerault is dead. You're in a hotel room in Montego Bay. Not in
the Cock Pit. Don't talk to me about resources, you son of a bitch.
You've only got one. And it's me.'
The telephone rang. McAuliff reached it first.
'Yes?'
'Don't interrupt me; there is no time' came the agitated words from
Malcolm. 'Do as I say. I have been spotted. MI5… native. One I knew in
London. We realized they would fan out; we did not think they would
reach Montego so quickly—'
'Stop running,' broke in Alex, looking at Holcroft, 'MI5 will
co-operate. They have no choice—'
'You damn fool. I said listen… There are two men in the
corridor. Go out and tell them I called. Say the word "Ashanti." Have
you got that, mon? "Ashantee."'
Alex had not heard the Anglicized Malcolm use 'mon' before. Malcolm
was in a state of panic. 'I've got it.'
'Tell them I said to get out! Now!' The hotels will be
watched. You will all have to move fast—'
'Goddamn it!' interrupted Alex again. 'Now you listen to me.
Holcroft's right here and—'
'McAuliff.' The sound of Malcolm's voice was low, cutting,
demanding attention. 'British Intelligence, Caribbean Operations, has a
total of fifteen West Indian specialists. That is the budget. Of those
fifteen, seven have been bought by Dunstone, Limited.'
The silence was immediate, the implication clear. 'Where are you?'
'In a pay phone outside McNabs. It is a crowded street; I will do my
best to melt.'
'Be careful in crowded streets. I've been listening to the news.'
'Listen well, my friend. That is what this is all about.'
'You said they spotted you. Are they there now?'
'It is difficult to tell. We are dealing with Dunstone now. Even we
do not know everyone on its payroll… But they will not want to kill me.
Any more than I want to be taken alive… Good luck, McAuliff… We are
doing the right thing.'
With these words, Malcolm hung up the telephone. Alexander instantly
recalled a dark field at night on the outskirts of London, near the
banks of the river Thames. And the sight of two dead West Indians in a
government automobile. Any more than I want to be taken alive…
Cyanide. We are doing the right thing…
Death.
Unbelievable. Yet very, very real.
McAuliff gently replaced the telephone in its cradle. As he did, he
had the fleeting thought that his gesture was funereal.
This was no time to think of funerals.
'Who was that?' asked Holcroft.
'A fanatic nigger who, in my opinion - which I realize doesn't
interest you - is worth a dozen men like you. You see, he doesn't lie.'
'I've had enough of your sanctimonious claptrap, McAuliff!' The
Englishman spat out his words in indignation. 'Your fanatic doesn't pay
one million dollars, either. Nor, I suspect, does he jeopardize his own
interests for your well-being, as we have done constantly.
Furthermore—'
'He just did,' interrupted Alex as he crossed the room. 'And if I'm
a target, so are you.'
McAuliff reached the door, opened it swiftly, and ran out into the
corridor towards the bank of elevators. He stopped.
There was no one there.
THIRTY ONE
It was a race in blinding sunlight, somehow macabre because of the
eye-jolting reflections from the glass and chrome and brightly coloured
metals on the Montego streets. And the profusion of people. Crowded,
jostling, black and white; thin men and fat women - the former with
their goddamned cameras, the latter in foolish-looking rhinestone
sunglasses. Why did he notice these things? Why did they irritate him?
There were fat men, too. Always with angry faces; silently, stoically
reacting to the vacuous-looking, thin women at their sides.
And the hostile black eyes staring out from wave after wave of black
skin. Thin, black faces - somehow always thin - on top of bony, black
bodies - angular, beaten, slow.
These then were the blurred, repeating images imprinted on the
racing pages of his mind.
Everything… everyone was instantly categorized in the frantic,
immediate search for an enemy.
The enemy was surely there.
It had been there… minutes ago.
McAuliff had rushed back into the room. There was no time to explain
to the furious Holcroft; it was only necessary to make the angry
Britisher obey. Alex did so by asking him if he had a gun, then
pulling out his own, furnished him by Malcolm on the night before.
The sight of McAuliffs weapon caused the agent to accept the moment.
He removed a small, inconspicuous Rycee automatic from a belt holster
under his jacket.
Alexander had grabbed the seersucker coat - this too furnished by
Malcolm on the previous night - and thrown it over his arm, concealing
his revolver.
Together the two men had slipped out of the room and run down the
corridor to the staircase beyond the bank of elevators. On the concrete
landing they found the first of the Halidonites.
He was dead. A thin line of blood formed a perfect circle around his
neck below the swollen skin of his face and the extended tongue and
blank, dead, bulging eyes. He had been garrotted swiftly,
professionally.
Holcroft had bent down; Alexander was too repelled by the sight to
get closer. The Englishman had summarized. Professionally.
'They know we're on this floor. They don't know which rooms. The
other poor bastard's probably with them.'
'That's impossible. There wasn't time. Nobody knew where
we were.'
Holcroft had stared at the lifeless black, and when he spoke,
McAuliff recognized the profound shock of the Intelligence man's anger.
'Oh, God, I've been blind? In that instant,
Alexander, too, understood. British Intelligence, Caribbean
Operations, has a total of fifteen West Indian specialists. That's the
budget. Of those fifteen, seven have been bought by Dunstone, Limited
The words of Malcolm the Halidonite. And Holcroft the manipulator had
just figured it out. The two men had raced down the staircase. When
they reached the lobby floor, Holcroft stopped and did a strange thing.
He removed his belt, slipping the holster off and placing it in his
pocket. He then wound the belt in a tight circle, bent down, and placed
it in a corner. He stood up, looked around, and crossed to a
cigarette-butt receptacle and moved it in front of the belt.
'It's a signalling device, isn't it?' McAuliff had said.
'Yes.
Long-range. External scanner reception; works on verticle arcs. No damn
good inside a structure. Too much interference… thank heaven.'
'You
wanted to be taken?'
'No, not actually. It was always a possibility, I knew that… Any
ideas, chap? At the moment, it's your show.'
'One. I don't know how good it is. An airfield; it's a farm, I
guess. West, on the highway, near a place called Unity Hall… Let's go.'
Alex reached for the knob on the door to the lobby.
'Not that way,' said Holcroft. They'll be watching the lobby. The
street too, I expect. Downstairs. Delivery entrance… maintenance, that
sort of thing. There's bound to be one in the cellars.'
'Wait a minute.' McAuliff had grabbed the English man's arm,
physically forcing him to respond. 'Let's you and I get something
clear. Right now… You've been had. Taken. Your own people
sold
you out. So there won't be any stopping for phone calls, for signalling
anyone on the street. We run but we don't stop. For anything. You do
and you're on your own. I disappear. I don't think you can handle that.'
'Who in hell do you think I'm going to get in touch with? The Prime
Minister?'
'I don't know. I just know that I don't trust you. I don't trust
liars. Or manipulators. And you're both, Holcroft.'
'We all do what we can,' replied the agent coldly, his eyes
unwavering. 'You've learned quickly, Alexander. You're an apt pupil.'
'Reluctantly. I don't think much of the school.'
And the race in the blinding sunlight had begun.
They ran up the curving driveway of the basement garage, directly
into a tan Mercedes sedan that was not parked at that particular
entrance by coincidence. Holcroft and Alexander saw the startled look
on the face of the white driver; then the man reached over across the
seat for a miniature transistorized radio.
In the next few seconds Alex, witnessed an act of violence he would
never forget as long as he lived. An act performed with cold precision.
R. C. Holcroft reached into both his pockets and took out the Rycee
automatic in his right hand, a steel cylinder in his left. He slapped
the cylinder onto the barrel of the weapon, snapped in a clip, and
walked directly to the door of the tan Mercedes Benz. He opened it,
held his hand low, and fired two shots into the driver, killing him
instantly.
The shots were spits. The driver fell onto the dashboard; Holcroft
reached down and picked up the radio with his left hand.
The sun was bright; the strolling crowds kept moving. If any knew an
execution had taken place, none showed it.
The British agent closed the door almost casually.
'My God…' It was as far as Alex got.
'It was the last thing he expected,' said Holcroft rapidly. 'Let's
find a taxi.'
The statement was easier made than carried out. Cabs did not cruise
in Montego Bay. The drivers homed like giant pigeons back to appointed
street corners, where they lined up in European fashion, as much to
discuss the progress of the day with their peers as to find additional
fares. It was a maddening practice; during these moments it was a
frightening one for the two fugitives. Neither knew where the cab
locations were, except the obvious - the hotel entrance - and that was
out.
They rounded the corner of the building, emerging on a free-port
strip. The sidewalks were steaming hot; the crowds of gaudy, perspiring
shoppers were pushing, hauling, tugging, pressing faces against the
window fronts, foreheads and fingers smudging the glass, envying the
unenviable… the shiny. Cars were immobilized in the narrow street, the
honking of horns interspersed with oaths and threats as Jamaican tried
to out-chauffeur Jamaican for the extra tip… and his manhood.
Alexander saw him first, under a green and white sign that read
'MIRANDA HILL' with an arrow pointing south. He was a heavyset,
dark-haired white man in a brown gabardine suit, the jacket buttoned,
the cloth stretched across muscular shoulders. The man's eyes were
scanning the streams of human traffic, his head darting about like that
of a huge pink ferret. And clasped in his left hand, buried in the
flesh of his immense left hand, was a transistorized walkie-talkie
identical to the one Holcroft had taken out of the Mercedes.
Alex knew it would be only seconds before the man spotted them. He
grabbed Holcroft's arm and wished to God both of them were shorter than
they were.
'At the corner! Under the sign… Miranda Hill. The brown suit.'
'Yes. I see.' They were by a low-hanging awning of a free-port
liquor store. Holcroft swung into the entrance, begging his pardon
through the swarm of tourists, their Barbados shirts and Virgin Island
palm hats proof of yet another cruise ship. McAuliff followed
involuntarily; the Britisher had locked Alex's arm in a vicelike grip,
propelling the American in a semicircle, forcing him into the crowded
doorway.
The agent positioned the two of them inside the store, at the far
corner of the display window. The line of sight was direct; the man
under the green and white sign could be seen clearly, his eyes still
searching the crowds. 'It's the same radio,' said Alex.
'If we're lucky, he'll use it. I'm sure they've set up relays… I
know him. He's Unio Corso.'
'That's like a Mafia, isn't it?'
'Not unlike. And far more efficient. He's a Corsican gun. Very
high-priced. Warfield would pay it.' Holcroft clipped his phrases in a
quiet monotone; he was considering strategies. 'He may be our way out.'
'You'll have to be clearer than that,' said Alex.
'Yes, of course.' The
Englishman was imperiously polite. And maddening. 'By now they've
circled the area, I should think. Covering all streets. Within minutes
they'll know we've left the hotel. The signal won't fool them for
long.' Holcroft lifted the radio as unobtrusively as possible to the
side of his head and snapped the circular switch. There was a brief
burst of static; the agent reduced the volume. Several nearby tourists
looked curiously; Alexander smiled foolishly at them. Outside on the
corner, underneath the sign, the Corsican suddenly brought his radio to
his ear. Holcroft looked at McAuliff. 'They've just reached your room.'
'How do you know?'
'They report a cigarette still burning in the ashtray. Nasty habit.
Radio on… I should have thought of that.' The Englishman pursed his
lips abruptly; his eyes indicated recognition. 'An outside vehicle is
circling. The… WIS claims the signal is still inside.'
'WIS?'
Holcroft replied painfully. 'West Indian Specialist. One of my men.'
'Past tense,' corrected Alex.
'They can't raise the Mercedes,' said Holcroft quickly. 'That's it.'
He swiftly shut off the radio, jammed it into his pocket, and looked
outside. The Corsican could be seen listening intently to his
instrument. Holcroft spoke again. 'We'll have to be very quick. Listen
and commit… When our Italian finishes his report, he'll put the radio
to his side. At that instant we'll break through at him. Get your hands
on that radio. Hold it no matter what.'
'Just like that?' asked McAuliff apprehensively. 'Suppose he pulls a
gun?'
'I'll be beside you. He won't have time.'
And the Corsican did not.
As Holcroft predicted, the man under the sign spoke into the radio.
The agent and Alex were beneath the low awning on the street, concealed
by the crowds. The second the Corsican's arm began to descend from the
side of his head, Holcroft jabbed McAuliffs ribs. The two men broke
through the flow of people towards the professional killer.
Alexander reached him first; the man started. His right hand went
for his belt, his left automatically raised the radio. McAuliff grabbed
the Corsican's wrist and threw his shoulder into the man's chest,
slamming him against the pole supporting the sign.
Then the Corsican's whole face contorted spastically; a barking,
horrible sound emerged from his twisted mouth. And McAuliff felt a
burst of warm blood exploding below.
He looked down. Holcroft's hand held a long switchblade. The agent
had ripped the Corsican's stomach open from pelvis to rib cage,
severing the belt, cutting the cloth of the brown gabardine suit.
'Get the radio!' commanded the agent. 'Run south on the east side of
the street. I'll meet you at the next corner. Quickly now!'
Alex's shock was so profound that he obeyed without thought. He
grabbed the radio from the dead hand and plunged into the crowds
crossing the intersection. Only when he was halfway across did he
realize what Holcroft was doing: He was holding up the dead Corsican
against the pole. He was giving him time to get away!
Suddenly he heard the first screams behind him. Then a mounting
crescendo of screams and shrieks and bellowing roars of horror. And
within the pandemonium, there was the piercing shrill of a whistle…
then more whistles, then the thunder of bodies running in the
steaming-hot street.
McAuliff raced… was he running south? was he on
the east side?… he could not think. He could only feel panic. And the
blood.
The blood! The goddamn blood was all over him! People had to see
that!
He passed an outdoor restaurant, a sidewalk cafe. The diners were
all rising from their seats, looking north towards the panicked crowds
and the screams and the whistles… and now the sirens There was an empty
table by a row of planter boxes. On the table was the traditional
red-checked tablecloth beneath a sugar bowl and shakers of salt and
pepper.
He reached over the flowers and yanked the cloth, sending the
condiments crashing to the cement deck, one or all smashing to pieces;
he did not, could not, tell. His only thought was to cover the goddamn
blood, now saturated through his shirt and trousers.
The corner was thirty feet away. What the hell was he supposed to
do? Suppose Holcroft had not got away? Was he supposed to stand there
with the goddamn tablecloth over his front looking like an imbecile
while the streets were in chaos?
'Quickly now,' came the words.
McAuliff turned, grateful beyond his imagination. Holcroft was
directly behind him, and Alex could not help but notice his hands. They
were deep red and shining; the explosion of Corsican blood had left its
mark.
The intersecting street was wider; the sign read 'QUEEN'S DRIVE.' It
curved upward towards the west, and Alex thought he recognized the
section. On the diagonal corner an automobile pulled to a stop; the
driver peered out the window, looking north at the racing people and
sounds of riot.
Alex had to raise his voice to be heard. 'Over there!' he said to
Holcroft. 'That car!'
The Englishman nodded in agreement.
They dashed across the street. McAuliff by now had his wallet out of
his pocket, removing bills. He approached the driver - a middle-aged
black Jamaican - and spoke rapidly.
'We need a ride. I'll pay you whatever you want!'
But the Jamaican just stared at Alexander, his eyes betraying his
sudden fear. And then McAuliff saw: the tablecloth was under his arm -
how did it get under his arm? - and the huge stain of dark red blood
was everywhere.
The driver reached for the gearshift. Alex thrust his right hand
through the window and grabbed the man's shoulder, pulling his arm away
from the dashboard. He threw his wallet to Holcroft, unlatched the
door, and yanked the man out of the seat. The Jamaican yelled and
screamed for help. McAuliff took the bills in his hand and dropped them
on the kerb as he pummelled the black across the sidewalk.
A dozen pedestrians looked on, and most ran, preferring
noninvolvement; others watched, fascinated by what they saw. Two white
teenagers ran towards the money and bent down to pick it up.
McAuliff did not know why, but that bothered him. He took the
necessary three steps and lashed his foot out, smashing one of the
young men in the side of the head.
'Get the hell out of here!' he roared as the teenager fell back,
blood matted instantly along his blond hairline.
'McAuliff!' yelled Holcroft, racing around the car towards
the opposite front door. 'Get in and drive, for God's sake!'
As Alex climbed into the seat, he saw what he knew instantly was the
worst sight he could see at that moment. A block away, from out of the
milling crowds on the street, a tan Mercedes Benz had suddenly
accelerated, its powerful, deep-throated engine signifying its
anticipated burst of speed.
McAuliff pulled the gearshift into drive and pressed the pedal to
the floor. The car responded, and Alex was grateful for the surge of
the racing wheels. He steered into the middle of Queen's Drive, on what
had to be Miranda Hill, and immediately passed two cars… dangerously
close, nearly colliding.
'The Mercedes was coming down the street,' he said to Holcroft. 'I
don't know if they spotted us.'
The Britisher whipped around in the seat, simultaneously withdrawing
the Rycee automatic and the transistorized radio from both pockets. He
snapped on the radio; the static was interspersed with agitated voices
issuing commands and answering excitedly phrased questions.
The language, however, was not English.
Holcroft supplied the reason. 'Dunstone has half the Unio Corso in
Jamaica.'
'Can you understand?'
'Sufficiently… They're at the corner of Queen's Drive and Essex. In
the Miranda Hill district. They've ascertained that the secondary
commotion was us.'
'Translated: They've spotted us.'
'Can this car get a full throttle?'
'It's not bad; no match for a Mercedes, though.'
Holcroft kept the radio at full volume, his eyes still on the rear
window. There was a burst of chatter from the tiny speaker, and at the
same instant McAuliff saw a speeding black Pontiac come over the
incline in front of him, on the right, its brakes screeching, the
driver spinning the wheel. 'Jesus!' he yelled.
'It's theirs!' cried Holcroft. 'Their west patrol just reported
seeing us. Turn! The first chance you get.'
Alex sped to the top of the hill. 'What's he doing?' He yelled
again, his concentration on the road in front, on whatever automobiles
might lie over the crest.
'He's turning… side-slipped halfway down. He's righting it now.'
At the top of the incline, McAuliff spun the wheel to the right,
pressed the accelerator to the floor, and raced past three automobiles
on the steep descent, forcing a single approaching car to crowd the
kerb. 'There's some kind of park about a half a mile down.' He couldn't
be sure of the distance; the blinding sun was careening off a thousand
metal objects… or so it seemed. But he couldn't think of that; he could
only squint. His mind was furiously abstracting flashes of recent
memory. Flashes of another park… in Kingston: St George's. And another
driver… a versatile Jamaican named Rodney.
'So?' Holcroft was bracing himself now, his right hand, pistol
firmly gripped, against the dashboard, the radio, at full volume,
against the seat.
'There's not much traffic. Not too many people either…' Alex swerved
the car once again to pass another automobile. He looked in the
rear-view mirror. The black Pontiac was at the top of the hill behind
them; there were now four cars between them.
'The Mercedes is heading west on Gloucester,' said Holcroft,
breaking in on Alex's thoughts. 'They said Gloucester… Another car is
to proceed along… Sewell…' Holcroft translated rapidly as the voices
spoke, overlapping each other.
'Sewell's on the other side of the district,' said McAuliff, as much
to himself as to the agent. 'Gloucester's the shore road.'
'They've alerted two vehicles. One at North and Fort streets, the
other at Union.'
'That's Montego proper. The business area. They're trying to cut off
at all points… For Christ's sake, there is nothing else left!'
'What are you talking about?' Holcroft had to shout; the screaming
tyres, the wind, the roaring engine did not permit less.
Explanations took time, if only seconds - there were no seconds
left. There would be no explanations, only commands… as there had been
commands years ago. Issued in the frozen hills with no more confidence
than McAuliff felt now.
'Get in the back seat,' he ordered, firmly but not tensely. 'Smash
the rear window; get yourself a clear area… When I swing into the park,
he'll follow. As soon as I'm inside. I'm
going to swerve right and stop. Hard. Start firing the
second you see the Pontiac behind us. Do you have extra clips?'
'Yes.'
'Put in a full one. You've used two shells. Forget that goddamn
silencer, it'll throw you off. Try to get clean shots. Through the
front and side windows. Stay away from the gas tank and the tyres.'
The stone gates to the park were less than a hundred yards away,
seconds away. Holcroft stared at Alex - for but an instant - and began
climbing over the seat to the rear of the automobile.
'You think we can switch cars—'
Perhaps it was a question; McAuliff did not care. He interrupted. 'I
don't know. I just know we can't use this one any longer and we have to
get to the other side of Montego.'
'They'll surely spot their own vehicle…'
'They won't be looking for it. Not for the next ten minutes… if you
can aim straight.'
The gates were on the left now. Alex whipped the steering wheel
around; the car skidded violently as Holcroft began smashing the glass
in the rear window. The automobile behind swerved to the right to avoid
a collision, its horn blaring, the driver screaming. McAuliff sped
through the gate, now holding down the bar of his own horn as a warning.
Inside the gates he slammed on the brakes, spun the wheel to the
right, pressed the accelerator, and jumped the kerb of the drive over
onto the grass. He crashed his foot once again onto the brake pedal;
the car jolted to a stop on the soft turf. In the distance strollers in
the park turned; a couple picnicking stood up.
Alex was not concerned. In seconds the firing would start; the
pedestrians would run for cover, out of the danger zone. Away from the
fire base. Danger zone. Fire base. Cover. Terms from centuries ago.
So then it followed that the strollers in the park were not
pedestrians at all.
They were civilians.
It was war.
Whether the civilians knew it or not.
There was the sudden, ear-shattering screech of tyres.
Holcroft fired through the smashed rear window. The Pontiac swerved
off the drive, hurtled over the opposite kerb, careened off a cluster
of tropic shrubbery, and slammed into a mound of loose earth, dug for
one of a thousand unending park projects. The engine continued at high
speed, but the gears had locked, the wheels still, the horn blasting in
counterpoint to the whining roar of the motor.
Screams could be heard in the distance.
From the civilians.
McAuliff and Holcroft jumped out of the car and raced over grass and
concrete onto grass again. Both had their weapons drawn; it was not
necessary. R. C. Holcroft had performed immaculately. He had fired with
devastating control through the open side window of the Pontiac. The
automobile was untouched but the driver was dead, sprawled over the
wheel. Dead weight against the horn.
The two fugitives divided at the car, each to a door of the front
seat, Alexander on the driver's side. Together they pulled the lifeless
body away from the wheel; the blaring horn ceased, the engine continued
to roar. McAuliff reached in and turned the ignition key.
The silence was incredible.
Yet, still, there were the screams from the distance, from the grass.
The civilians.
They yanked at the dead man and threw the body over the plastic seat
onto the floor behind. Holcroft picked up the transistor radio. It was
in 'on' position. He turned it off. Alexander got behind the wheel and
feverishly tugged at the gearshift.
It did not move, and the muscles in McAuliff's stomach tensed; he
felt his hands trembling.
From out of a boyhood past, long, long forgotten, came the recall.
There was an old car in an old garage; the gears were always sticking.
Start the motor for only an instant.
Off - on. Off - on.
Until the gear teeth unlocked.
He did so. How many times, he would never remember. He would only
remember the cold, calm eyes of R. C. Holcroft watching him.
The Pontiac lurched. First into the mound of earth; then, as Alex
jammed the stick into R, backward - wheels spinning furiously
- over the grass.
They were mobile.
McAuliff whipped the steering wheel into a full circle, pointing the
car towards the cement drive. He pressed the accelerator, and the
Pontiac gathered speed on the soft grass in preparation for its jarring
leap over the kerb.
Four seconds later they sped through the stone gates.
And Alexander turned right. East. Back towards Miranda Hill.
He knew Holcroft was stunned; that did not matter. There was still
no time for explanations, and the Englishman seemed to understand. He
said nothing.
Several minutes later, at the first intersecting road, McAuliff
jumped the light and swung left. North. The sign read 'CORNICHE ANNEX.'
Holcroft spoke.
'You're heading towards the shore road?'
'Yes. It's called Gloucester: It goes through Montego and becomes
Route One.'
'So you're behind the Dunstone car… the Mercedes.'
'Yes.'
'And may I presume that since the last word' - here Holcroft held up
the transistorized walkie-talkie - 'any of them received was from that
park, there's a more direct way back to it? A faster way?'
'Yes. Two. Queen's Drive and Corniche Road. They branch off from
Gloucester.'
'Which, of course, would be the routes they would take.'
'They'd better.'
'And naturally, they would search the park.'
'I hope so.'
R. C. Holcroft pressed his back into the seat. It was a gesture of
temporary relaxation. Not without a certain trace of admiration.
'You are a very apt student, Mr McAuliff.'
'To repeat myself, it's a rotten school,' said Alexander.
They waited in the darkness, in the overgrowth at the edge of the
field. The crickets hammered out the passing seconds. They had left the
Pontiac miles away on a deserted back road in Catherine Mount and
walked to the farm on the outskirts of Unity Hall. They had waited
until nightfall before making the last few miles of the trip.
Cautiously, shelter to shelter; when on the road, as far out of sight
as possible. Finally using the tracks of the Jamaica Railway as their
guideline.
There had been a road map in the glove compartment of the
automobile, and they studied it. It was maddening. Most of the streets
west of Montego proper were unmarked, lines without names, and always
there were the alleys without lines. They passed through a number of
ghetto settlements, aware that the inhabitants had to be sizing them up
- two white men without conceivable business in the area. There was
profit in an assault on such men.
Holcroft had insisted that they both carry their jackets, their
weapons very much in evidence in their belts.
Subalterns crossing through hostile colonial territory, letting the
nigger natives know they carried the magic firesticks that spat death.
Ludicrous.
But there was no assault.
They crossed the Montego River at Westgate; a half-mile away were
the railroad tracks. They ran into an itinerant tramp enclave - a hobo
camp, Jamaica-style - and Holcroft did the talking.
They were insurance inspectors for the company; they had no
objections to the filthy campsite so long as there was no interference
with the line. But should there be interference the penalties would be
stiff indeed.
Ludicrous.
Yet no one bothered them, although the surrounding black eyes were
filled with hatred.
There was a tiny freight pickup at Unity Hall. A single platform
with two wire-encased light bulbs illuminating the barren site. Inside
the weather-beaten rain shelter was an old man drunk on cheap rum.
Painstakingly they elicited enough information from him for McAuliff to
get his bearings. Vague, to be sure, but enough to determine the
related distances from the highway, which veered inland at Parish
Wharf, to the farm district in the southwest section.
By 9.30 they had reached the field.
Now, Alex looked at his watch. It was 10.30.
He was not sure he had made the right decision. He was only sure
that he could not think of any other. He had recalled the lone
farmhouse on the property, remembered seeing a light on inside. There
was no light now. It was deserted.
There was nothing else to do but wait.
An hour passed, and the only sounds were those of the Jamaican
night: the predators foraging, victims taken, unending struggles -
immaterial to all but the combatants.
It was nearly the end of the second hour when they heard it.
Another sound.
An automobile. Driving slowly, its low-geared, muted engine
signalling its apprehension. An intruder very much aware of its
transgression.
Minutes later, in the dim light of a moon sheeted with clouds, they
watched a long figure run across the field, first to the north end,
where a single torch was ignited, then to the south - perhaps four
hundred yards - where the action was repeated. Then the figure dashed
once more to the opposite end.
Another sound. Another intruder. Also muted - this from the darkness
of the sky.
An aeroplane, its engine idling, was descending rapidly.
It touched the ground, and simultaneously the torch at the north end
was extinguished. Seconds later the aircraft came to a stop by the
flame at the south end. A man jumped out of the small cabin; the fire
was put out instantly.
'Let's go!' said McAuliff to the British agent. Together the two men
started across the field.
They were no more than fifty yards into the grass when it happened.
The impact was so startling, the shock so complete, that Alex
screamed involuntarily and threw himself to the ground, his pistol
raised, prepared to fire.
Holcroft remained standing.
For two immensely powerful searchlights had caught them in the
blinding convergence of the cross-beams.
'Put down your weapon, McAuliff,' came the words from beyond the
blinding glare.
And Daniel, Minister of Council for the Tribe of Acquaba, walked
through the light.
THIRTY TWO
'When you came into the area you tripped the photoelectric alarms.
Nothing mysterious.'
They were in the automobile, Daniel in front with the driver,
Holcroft and Alexander in the back seat. They had driven away from the
field, out of Unity Hall, along the coast into Lucea Harbour. They
parked on a deserted section of a dirt road overlooking the water. The
road was one of those native offshoots on the coastal highway unspoiled
by trespassing tourists. The moon was brighter by the ocean's edge,
reflecting off the rippling surface, washing soft yellow light over
their faces.
As they were driving, McAuliff had a chance to study the car they
were in. From the outside it looked like an ordinary,
not-very-distinguished automobile of indeterminate make and vintage -
like hundreds of island vehicles, made from the parts of other cars.
Yet inside the fundamental difference was obvious: It was a
precision-tooled mobile fortress… and communications centre. The
windows were of thick, bullet-proof glass; rubber slots were evident in
the rear and side sections - slots that were for the high-blasting,
short barrelled shotguns clamped below the back of the front seat.
Under the dashboard was a long panel with dials and switches; a
telephone was locked into a recess between two microphones. The engine,
from the sound of it, was one of the most powerful Alex had ever heard.
The Halidon went first class in the outside world.
Daniel was in the process of dismissing McAuliffs astonishment at
the events of the past two hours. It seemed important to the minister
that he convey the reality of the situation. The crisis was
sufficiently desperate for Daniel to leave the community; to risk his
life to be in command.
It was as though he wanted very much for R. C. Holcroft to realize
he was about to deal with an extremely sensible and hard-nosed
adversary.
'We had to make sure you were alone… the two of you, of course. That
you were not somehow followed. There were tense moments this afternoon.
You handled yourselves expertly, apparently. We could not help you.
Congratulations.'
'What happened to Malcolm?' asked Alex.
Daniel paused, then spoke quietly, sadly. 'We do not know yet. We
are looking… He is safe - or dead. There is no middle ground.' Daniel
looked at Holcroft. 'Malcolm is the man you know as Joseph Myers,
Commander Holcroft.'
McAuliff shifted his gaze to the agent. So Holcroft the manipulator
was a Commander. Commander Holcroft, liar, manipulator… and
risker-of-life to save another's.
Holcroft reacted to Daniel's words by closing his eyes for precisely
two seconds. The information was a professional burden he did not care
for; the manipulator was outflanked again.
'Do I have a single black man working for me? For the Service?'
The minister smiled gently. 'By our count, seven. Three, however,
are quite ineffectual.'
'Thank you for enlightening me. I'm sure you can furnish me with
identities… They all look so much alike, you see.'
Daniel accepted the
cliched insult calmly, his smile disappearing, his eyes cold in the
yellow moonlight. 'Yes. I understand the problem. There appears to be
so little to distinguish us… from such a viewpoint. Fortunately, there
are other standards. You will not be needing the identities.'
Holcroft returned Daniel's look without intimidation. 'McAuliff
conveyed your demands. I say to you what I said to him. They're
impossible, of course—'
'Please, Commander Holcroft,' said Daniel rapidly, interrupting,
'there are so many complications, let us not compound them with lies.
From the beginning your instructions were clear. Would you prefer we
deal with the Americans? Or the French? The Germans, perhaps?'
The silence was abrupt. There was a cruelty to it, a blunt execution
of pain. Alexander watched as the two enemies exchanged stares. He saw
the gradual, painful cognizance in Holcroft's eyes.
'Then you know,' said the Englishman softly.
'We know,' replied Daniel simply.
Holcroft remained silent and looked out the window.
The Minister of Halidon turned to McAuliff. 'The global mendacity,
Doctor. Commander Holcroft is the finest Intelligence officer in the
British service. The unit he directs is a co-ordinated effort between
the aforementioned governments. It is, however, co-ordinated in name
only. For MI5 - as the prime investigatory agency - does not apprise
its fellow signatories of its progress.'
'There are good and sufficient reasons for our actions,' said
Holcroft, still looking out the window.
'Reduced to one, is that not right, Commander?… Security. You cannot
trust your allies.'
'Our counterparts are leak-prone. Experience has confirmed this.'
The agent did not take his eyes off the water.
'So you mislead them,' said Daniel. 'You give false information,
tell them you are concentrating in the Mediterranean, then South
America - Argentina, Nicaragua. Even nearby Haiti… But never Jamaica.'
The minister paused for emphasis. 'No, never Jamaica.'
'Standard procedure,' answered Holcroft, allowing Daniel a brief,
wary look.
'Then it will not surprise you to learn that this mistrust is shared
by your foreign confederates. They have sent out teams, their
best men. They are presently tracing down every scrap of information
MI5 has made available. They are working furiously.'
Holcroft snapped his head back to Daniel. 'That is contrary to our
agreement,' he said in an angry monotone. The minister did not smile.
'I
do not think you are in a position to be sanctimonious, Commander.'
Daniel shifted his eyes again to Alexander. 'You see, McAuliff, since
Dunstone, Limited, was a London-based conglomerate, it was agreed to
give the first-level assignment to British.'
Intelligence. It was understandable; MI5 is the best in the free
world; the Commander its best. On the theory that the fewer clandestine
services operating, the less likely were breaches of security, the
British agreed to function alone and keep everyone current. Instead,
they continuously furnished erroneous data.' Daniel now permitted
himself a minor smile. 'In a sense, they were justified. The Americans,
the French, and the Germans were all breaking the agreement,
none had any intention of keeping it. Each was going after Dunstone,
while claiming to leave the field to the English… Dunstone has
to be dismantled. Taken apart economic brick by economic brick. The
world markets can accept no less. But there are so many bricks… Each
government believes that if only it can get there first - get the
Dunstone list before the others… well, arrangements can be made.'
Holcroft could not remain silent. 'I submit - whoever you are - that
we are the logical… executors.'
'The terms "logic" being interchangeable with "deserving". I will
say this for your cause. God, Queen, and Empire have paid heavily in
recent decades. Somewhat out of proportion to their relative sins… But
that is not our concern, Commander. As I said, your instructions were
clear at the outset: Get the Dunstone list at all costs. The cost is
now clear. We will give you the list. You will get out of Jamaica. That
is the price.'
Again, the silence; once more, the exchange of analysing stares. A
cloud passed over the Montego moon, causing a dark shadow to fall over
the faces. Holcroft spoke.
'How can we be sure of its authenticity?'
'Can you doubt us after the events of the day? Remember, it is in
our mutual interest that Dunstone be eliminated.'
'What guarantees do you expect from us?'
Daniel laughed. A laugh formed in humour. 'We do not need guarantees,
Commander. We will know. Can you not understand that? Our
island is not a continent; we know every liaison, conduit, and contact
with whom you function.' The smile from the laugh formed in humour
disappeared. 'These operations will stop. Make whatever settlements you
must, but then no more… Give - really give - Jamaica to its rightful
owners. Struggles, chaos, and all.'
'And' - the Englishman spoke softly - 'if these decisions are
outside of my control—'
'Make no mistake, Commander Holcroft!' Daniel's voice rose, cutting
off the agent. 'The executions that took place today began at noon.
London time. And each day, the chimes in Parliament's clock tower ring
out another noon. When you hear them, remember. What we were capable of
today, we are capable of tomorrow. And we will add the truth of our
motives. England will be a pariah in the community of nations. You
cannot afford that.'
'Your threat is ludicrous!' countered Holcroft, with equal fever.
'As you said, this island is not a continent. We'd go in and destroy
you.'
Daniel nodded and replied quickly. 'Quite possibly. And you should
know that we are prepared for that eventuality. We have been
for over two hundred years. Remarkable, isn't it?… By all you believe
holy, pay the price, Holcroft; take the list and salvage what you can
from Dunstone. You do deserve that. Not that you'll salvage
much; the vultures will fly in from their various geographies and dive
for the carrion. We offer you time, perhaps only a few days. Make the
best of it!'
A red light on the panel beneath the dashboard lit up, throwing a
glow over the front seat. There were the sharp, staccato repeats of a
high-pitched buzzer. The driver reached for the telephone and pulled it
to his ear, held it there for several seconds, and then handed the
instrument to Daniel.
The Minister of the Halidon listened. Alexander saw his face in the
rear-view mirror. Daniel could not conceal his alarm.
And then his anger.
'Do what you can but risk no lives. Our men are to pull
out. No one is to leave the community. That is final. Irreversible!'
He replaced the telephone in its upright recess firmly and turned in
the seat. He looked first at Alexander and then at Holcroft, keeping
his eyes on the Englishman as he spoke sarcastically. 'British expertise,
Commander. John Bull know-how… The West Indian Specialists,
MI5, Caribbean, have just received their orders from Dunstone. They are
to go into the Cock Pit and intercept the survey. They are to make sure
it does not come out.'
'Oh, my-God!' McAuliff pitched forward on the seat. 'Can they reach
them?'
'Ask the eminent authority,' said Daniel bitingly, his eyes wide on
Holcroft. 'They are his men.'
The agent was rigid, as though he had stopped breathing.
Yet it was obvious his mind was operating swiftly, silently.
'They were in contact with the radio receivers… the signals
transmitted from the campsite. The location can be pinpointed—'
'Within a thousand yards,' cut in Alex, completing
Holcroft's statement. 'Yes.'
'You've got to stop them!'
'I'm not sure there's a way—'
'Find one. For Christ's sake, Holcroft, they're going to be
killed!' McAuliff grabbed Holcroft by the lapels of his jacket, yanking
him forward viciously. 'You move, mister. Or I'll kill you!'
'Take your hands—'
Before the agent could finish the obvious, Alexander whipped his
right hand across Holcroft's face, breaking the skin on the
Englishman's lips. 'There isn't anything more, Commander. I
want those guarantees! Now!'
The agent spoke through rivulets of blood. 'I'll do my best. All
I've ever given you was… our best efforts.'
'You son of a bitch!' McAuliff brought his hand back once again. The
driver and Daniel grabbed his arm. 'McAuliff! You'll accomplish nothing!'
roared the minister.
'You tell him to start accomplishing!' Then Alexander
stopped and turned to Daniel, releasing the Englishman.
'You've got people there.' And then McAuliff remembered the terrible
words Daniel had spoken into the telephone: Risk no lives. Our
men… pull back. No one is to leave the community. 'You've got to
get on that phone. Take back what you said. Protect them!'
The minister spoke quietly. 'You must try to understand. There are
traditions, revelations… a way of life extending over two hundred
years. We cannot jeopardize these things.'
Alexander stared at the black man. 'You'd watch them die…
My God, you can't!'
'I am afraid we could. And would. And we should then be faced with
the taking of your life… It would be taken as swiftly…' Daniel turned
up the collar of his shirt, revealing a tiny bulge in the cloth. Tablets,
sewn into the fabric. '… as I would bite into these, should I ever
find myself in a position where it is necessary. I would not think
twice about it.'
'For God's sake, that's you! They're not you; they're no
part of you. They don't know you. Why should they pay with
their lives?'
Holcroft's voice was startling in its quiet incisiveness.
'Priorities, McAuliff. I told you. For them… for us.'
'The accidents of war, Doctor. Combat's slaughter of innocents,
perhaps.' Daniel spoke simply, denying the implication of his words.
'Things written and unwritten—'
'Bullshit!' screamed McAuliff.
The driver removed a pistol from his belt; his action was obvious.
Alexander looked rapidly back and forth between the Minister of the
Halidon and the British Intelligence officer. 'Listen to me. You said
on that phone for them to do what they can. You. Holcroft. You offered
your… goddamned "best efforts." All right. Give me a chance!'
'How?' asked Daniel. 'There can be no Jamaican police, no Kingston
troops.'
The words came back to Alexander. Words spoken by Sam Tucker in the
glow of the campsite fire. A quiet statement made as Sam watched the
figure of Charles Whitehall and the black giant, Lawrence, talking in
the compound. They're
our protection. They may hate each other… They're our protection.
McAuliff whirled on Holcroft. 'How many defectors have you got here?'
'I brought six specialists from London—'
'All but one has sold out
to Dunstone,' interrupted Daniel.
'That's five. How many others could
they pick up?' McAuliff addressed the Halidonite.
'On such short notice, perhaps three or four; probably mercenaries.
That is only a guess… They would be more concerned with speed than
numbers. One automatic rifle in the hands of a single soldier—'
'When did they get the Dunstone orders?' asked Alex swiftly,
breaking off Daniel's unnecessary observations.
'Within the hour is our estimate. Certainly no more than an hour.'
'Could they get a plane?'
'Yes. Ganga aircraft are always for hire. It would take a little
time; ganga pilots are a suspicious breed, but it could be done.'
Alex turned to Holcroft. The agent was wiping his lips with his
fingers… his goddamn fingers, as if dusting the pastry crumbs of his
mouth during tea at the Savoy! 'Can you raise the people monitoring the
signals from the campsite? With that radio?' McAuliff pointed to the
panel under the dashboard. 'I have the frequency—'
'Does that mean yes?'
'Yes.'
'What is the point,' asked Daniel. 'To see if his goddamn
specialists have reached them. To get the position—'
'You want our plane?' interrupted the Minister of the Halidon,
knowing the answer to his question.
'Yes!'
Daniel signalled the driver
to start the car. 'You don't need the position. There is only one place
to land: the grassland two miles southwest of the campsite. We have the
coordinates.'
The automobile lurched out of the parking area, careened off the
primitive border, and sped into the darkness towards the highway.
Holcroft gave the frequency-band decimals to Daniel; the minister
transmitted them, handing a microphone to the British agent.
There was no pickup.
No answer over the airwaves.
'It will take time to get a plane…' Daniel spoke quietly as the car
roared over the wide roadway.
Alex suddenly put his hand on the minister's shoulder. 'Your runner,
the one who used the name of "Marcus." Tell him to get word to Sam
Tucker.'
'I have instructed our men to pull out,' answered Daniel icily.
'Please remember what I told you.'
'For Christ's sake, send him back. Give them a chance!'
'Don't you mean… give her a chance?'
McAuliff wanted - as he had never wanted anything before - to kill
the man. 'You had to say it, didn't you?'
'Yes,' replied Daniel, turning in his seat to look Alexander in the
eye. 'Because it is related to the condition on which you have use of
the plane… If you fail, if the woman is killed, your life is taken
also. You will be executed. Quite simply, with her death you could
never be trusted.'
Alexander acknowledged the penetrating stare of Daniel the
Halidonite. 'Quite simply,' he said, 'my answer is easy. I'll give the
firing order myself.'
R. C. Holcroft leaned forward. His speech was measured precise as
ever. 'I am going in with you, McAuliff.'
Both Daniel and Alex looked at the Englishman. Holcroft, in a few
words, had quietly moved into a strangely defenceless position. It
astonished both men.
'Thank you.' It was all McAuliff could say, but he meant it
profoundly.
'I'm afraid that is not possible, Commander,' said Daniel. 'You and
I… we have matters between us. If McAuliff goes, he goes alone.'
'You're a barbarian.' Holcroft spoke sharply.
'I am the Halidon. And we do have priorities. Both of us.
THIRTY THREE
McAuliff nosed the small plane above cloud cover. He loosened the
field jacket provided him by the driver of the car. It was warm in the
tiny cabin. The Halidon aircraft was different from the plane he and
Malcolm had flown from the field west of Accompong. It was similar to
the two-seater Comanche in size and appearance, but its weight and
manoeuvrability were heavier and greater.
McAuliff was not a good pilot. Flying was a skill he had half
mastered through necessity, not from any devotion. Ten years ago, when
he had made the decision to go field-commercial, he had felt the
ability to fly would come in handy, and so he had taken the prescribed
lessons that eventually led to a very limited license.
It had proved worthwhile. On dozens of trips over most continents.
In small, limited aircraft.
He hoped to Christ it would prove worthwhile now. If it did not,
nothing mattered anymore.
On the seat beside him was a small blackboard, a slate common to
grammar school, bordered by wood. On it was chalked his primitive
flight plan in white lettering that stood out in the dim light of the
instrument panel.
Desired air speed, compass points, altitude requirements, and
sightings that, with luck and decent moonlight, he could distinguish.
From the strip outside Unity Hall he was to reach a height of one
thousand feet, circling the field until he had done so. Leaving the
strip perimeter, he was to head southeast at 115 degrees, air speed 90.
In a few minutes he would be over Mount Carey - two brush fires would
be burning in a field; he would spot them.
He did.
From Mount Carey, maintaining air speed and dropping to 700 feet, he
was to swing east-northeast at 84 degrees and proceed to Kempshot Hill.
An automobile with a spotlight would be on a road below; the spotlight
would flicker its beam into the sky.
He saw it and followed the next line on the chalkboard.
His course change was minor - 8 degrees to 92 on the compass,
maintaining air speed and altitude. Three minutes and thirty seconds
later, he was over Amity Hall. Again brush fires, again a fresh
instruction; this too, was minimal.
East-northeast at 87 degrees into Weston Favel.
Drop altitude to 500 feet, maintain airspeed, look for two
automobiles facing each other with blinking headlights at the south
section of the town. Correct course to exactly degrees and reduce air
speed to 75.
The instant he reached the Martha Brae River, he was to alter course
35 degrees southeast, to precisely 122 on the compass.
At this point he was on his own. There would be no more signals from
the ground, and, of course, no radio contact whatsoever.
The coordination of air speed, direction, and timing was all he had…
everything he had. Altitude was by pilotage - as low as possible,
cognizant of the gradual ascent of the jungle hills. He might spot
campfires, but he was not to assume any to be necessarily those of the
survey. There were roving hill people, often on all-night hunts. He was
to proceed on course for exactly four minutes and fifteen seconds.
If he had followed everything precisely and if there were no
variants of magnitude such as sudden wind currents or rainfall, he
would be in the vicinity of the grasslands. Again, if the night was
clear and if the light of the moon was sufficient, he would see them.
And - most important - if he spotted other aircraft, he was to dip
his right wing twice. This would indicate to any other plane that he
was a ganga runner. It was the current courtesy-of-recognition between
such gentlemen of the air. The hills rose suddenly, far more rapidly
than McAuliff had expected. He pulled back the half wheel and felt the
updraughts carry him into a one-o'clock soar. He reduced the throttle
and countered the high bank with pressure on the left pedal; the
turbulence continued, the winds grew.
Then he realized the cause of the sudden shifts and cross currents.
He had entered a corridor of harsh jungle showers. Rain splattered
against the glass and pelted the fuselage; wipers were inadequate. In
front of him was a mass of streaked, opaque grey. He slammed down the
left window panel, pulled out the throttle, went into a swift
ten-o'clock bank, and peered down. His altimeter inched towards 650;
the ground below was dense black… nothing but jungle forest, no breaks
in the darkness. He retraced the leg from the Martha Brae in his mind.
Furiously, insecurely. His speed had been maintained, so too his
compass. But there had been slippage; not much but recognizable. He was
not that good a pilot - only twice before had he flown at night; his
lapsed license forbade it - and slippage, or drift, was an instrument
or
pilotage problem corrected by dials, sightings, or radio.
But the slight drift had been there. And it had come from aft
starboard. Jesus, he was better in a sailboat! He levelled the aircraft
and gently banked to the right, back into the path of the rain squall.
The windshield was useless now; he reached across the seat and pulled
down the right window panel. The burst of noise from the
cross-draughted openings crashed abruptly through the small cabin. The
wind roared at high velocity; the rain swept in streaking sheets,
covering the seats and the floor and the instrument panel. The
blackboard was soaked, its surface glistening, the chalk marks
seemingly magnified by the rushing water sloshing within the borders.
And then he saw it… them. The plateau of grassland. Through the
starboard - goddamn it, right window. A stretch of less-black
in the middle of the total blackness. A dull grey relief in the centre
of the dark wood.
He had overshot the fields to the left, no more than a mile, perhaps
two.
But he had reached them. Nothing else mattered at the moment. He
descended rapidly, entering a left bank above the trees - the top of a
figure eight for landing. He made a 280-degree approach and pushed the
half wheel forward for touch down.
He was at the fifty-foot reading when behind him, in the west, was a
flash of heat lightning. He was grateful for it; it was an additional,
brief illumination in the night darkness. He trusted the instruments
and could distinguish the approaching grass in the beam of the
forelamps, but the dull, quick fullness of dim light gave him extra
confidence.
And it gave him the visibility to detect the outlines of another
plane. It was on the ground, stationary, parked on the north border of
the field.
In the area of the slope that led to the campsite two miles away.
Oh, God! He had not made it at all. He was too late!
He touched earth, revved the engine, and taxied towards the immobile
aircraft, removing his pistol from his belt as he manipulated the
controls.
A man waved in the beam of the front lights. No weapon was drawn;
there was no attempt to run or seek concealment. Alex was bewildered.
It did not make sense; the Dunstone men were killers, he knew that. The
man in the beam of light, however, gave no indication of hostility.
Instead, he did a peculiar thing. He stretched out his arms at his
sides, lowering the right and raising the left simultaneously. He
repeated the gesture several times as McAuliffs craft approached.
Alex remembered the instructions at the field in Unity Hall. If you
sight other planes, dip your right wing. Lower your right
wing… arm.
The man in the beam of light was a ganga pilot!
McAuliff pulled to a stop and switched off the ignition, his hand
gripped firmly around the handle of his weapon, his finger poised in
the trigger frame.
The man came up behind the wing and shouted through the rain to Alex
in the open window. He was a white man, his face framed in the canvas
of a poncho hood. His speech was American… Deep South, Delta origins.
'Gawddamn! This is one busy
fuckin' place! Good to see your white
skin, man! I'll fly 'em an' I'll fuck 'em, but I don' lak
'em!' The pilot's voice was high-pitched and
strident, easily carried over the sound of the rain. He was medium
height, and, if his face was any indication, he was slender but flabby;
a thin man unable to cope with the middle years. He was past forty.
'When did you get in?' asked Alex loudly, trying not to show his
anxiety.
'Flew in these six niggers 'bout ten minutes ago. Mebbe a little
more, not much. You with 'em, I sup'oze? You runnin' things?'
'Yes.'
'They don' get so uppity when there's trouble, huh?
Nothin' but trouble in these mountain fields. They sure need whitey,
then, you betcha balls!'
McAuliff put his pistol back in his belt beneath the panel. He had
to move fast now. He had to get past the ganga pilot. 'They said there
was trouble?' Alex asked the question casually as he opened the cabin
door, stepped on the wing into the rain, and jumped to the wet ground.
'Gawddamn! The way they tell it, they got stole blind by a
bunch of fuckin' bucks out here. Resold a bundle after takin' their
cash. Let me tell you, those niggers are loaded with hardware!'
'That's a mistake,' said McAuliff with conviction. 'Jesus… goddamned
idiots!'
'They're lookin' for black blood, man! Those niggers gonna' lay out
a lotta brothers! Eeeaww!'
'They do and New Orleans will go up in smoke!… Christ!' Alexander
knew the Louisiana city was the major port of entry for narcotics
throughout the Southern and Southwestern states. This particular ganga
pilot would know that. 'Did they head down the slope?' McAuliff
purposely gestured a hundred yards to the right, away from the vicinity
of the path he remembered.
'Damned if they was too fuckin' sure man! They got one of them
Geigers like an air-radar hone, but not so good. They took off more
like down there.' The pilot pointed to the left
of the hidden jungle path.
Alex calculated rapidly. The scanner used by the Dunstone men was
definitive only in terms of a thousand-yard radius.
The signals would register, but there were no hot or cold levels that
would be more specific. It was the weakness of miniaturized
long-distance radio arcs, operating on vertical principles.
One thousand yards was three thousand feet - over a half a mile
within the dense, almost impenetrable jungle of the Cock Pit. If the
Dunstone team had a ten-minute advantage, it was not necessarily fatal.
They did not know the path - he didn't know it either, but he
had travelled it. Twice. Their advantage had to be reduced. And if
their angle of entry was indirect - according to the ganga pilot, it
was - and presuming they kept to a relatively straight line,
anticipating a sweep… the advantage conceivably might be removed.
If… if he could find the path and keep to it.
He pulled up the lapels of his field jacket to ward off the rain and
turned towards the cabin door above the wing of the plane. He opened
it, raised himself with one knee to the right of the strut, and reached
into the small luggage compartment behind the seat. He pulled out a
short-barrelled, high-powered automatic rifle - one of the two that had
been strapped below the front seat of the Halidon car. The clip was
inserted, the safety on. In his pockets were four additional clips;
each clip held twenty cartridges.
One hundred shells.
His arsenal.
'I've got to reach them,' he yelled through the downpour at the
ganga pilot. 'I sure as hell don't want to answer to New Orleans!'
'Them New Orleens boys is a tense bunch. I don't fly for 'em if I
got other work. They don' lak nobody!'
Without replying, McAuliff raced towards the edge of the grassland
slope. The path was to the right of a huge cluster of nettled fern - he
remembered that; his face had been scratched because his hand had not
been quick enough when he had entered the area with the Halidon runner.
Goddamn it! Where was it?
He began feeling the soaked foliage, gripping every leaf, every
branch, hoping to find his hand scratched, scraped by nettles. He had
to find it; he had to start his entry at precisely the right point. The
wrong spot would be fatal. Dunstone's advantage would be too great; he
could not overcome it.
'What are you lookin' for?'
'What! Alex whipped around into the harsh glare of light.
His concentration was such that he found himself unlatching the safety
on the rifle. He had been about to fire in shock.
The ganga pilot had walked over. 'Gawddamn. Ain't you got a
flashlight, man? You expect to find your way in that mess without no
flashlight?'
Jesus! He had left the flashlight in the Halidon plane. Daniel had
said something about being careful… with the flashlight. So he had left
it behind! 'I forgot. There's one in the plane.'
'I hope to fuck there is,' said the pilot.
'You take mine. Let me
use yours, okay?'
'You promise to shoot me a couple o' niggers, you got
it, man.' The pilot handed him the light. 'This rain's too fuckin' wet,
I'm going back inside. Good huntin', hear!' McAuliff watched the pilot
run towards his aircraft and then quickly turned back to the jungle's
edge. He was no more than five feet from the cluster of fern; he could
see the matted grass at the entry point of the concealed path. He
plunged in.
He ran as fast as he could, his feet ensnared by the underbrush, his
face and body whipped by the unseen tentacles of overgrowth. The path
twisted - right, left, right, right, right, Jesus! circles -
and then became straight again for a short stretch at the bottom of the
slope.
But it was still true. He was still on it. That was all that
mattered.
Then he veered off. The path wasn't there. It was gone!
There was an ear-shattering screech in the darkness, magnified by
the jungle downpour. In the beam of his flashlight, deep within a
palm-covered hole below him, was a wild pig suckling its blind young.
The hairy, monstrous face snarled and screeched once more and started
to rise, shaking its squealing offspring from its teats. McAuliff ran
to his left, into the wall of jungle. He stumbled on a rock. Two, three
rocks. He fell to the wet earth, the flashlight rolling on the ground.
The ground was flat, unobstructed. He had found the path again!
He got to his feet, grabbed the light, shifted the rifle under his
arm, and raced down the relatively clear jungle corridor.
Clear for no more than a hundred yards, where it was intersected by
a stream, bordered by soft, foot-sucking mud. He remembered the stream.
The runner who had used the name of 'Marcus' had turned left. Was it
left? Or was that from the opposite direction?… No, it was
left. There had been palm trunks and rocks showing through the surface
of the water, crossing the narrow stream. He ran to the left, his
flashlight aimed at the midpoint of the water. There were the logs! The
rocks. A hastily constructed bridge to avoid the ankle-swallowing mud.
And on the right palm trunk were two snakes in lateral slow motion,
curving their way towards him. Even the Jamaican mongoose did not have
the stomach for Jamaica's Cock Pit.
Alexander knew these snakes. He had seen them in Brazil. Anaconda
strain. Blind, swift-striking, vicious. Not fatal, but capable of
causing paralysis - for days. If flesh came within several feet of the
flat heads, the strikes were inevitable.
He turned back to the overgrowth, the beam of light crisscrossing
the immediate area. There was a dangling branch of a ceiba tree about
six feet long. He ran to it, bending it back and forth until it broke
off. He returned to the logs. The snakes had stopped, alarmed. Their
oily, ugly bodies were entwined, the flat heads poised near each other,
the blind, pinlike eyes staring fanatically in the direction of the
scent. At him.
Alex shoved the ceiba limb out on the log with his left hand, the
rifle and flashlight gripped awkwardly in his right.
Both snakes lunged simultaneously, leaping off the surface of the
log, whipping their bodies violently around the branch, their heads
zeroing towards McAuliffs hand, soaring through the soft leaves.
Alex threw - dropped? he would never know - the limb into the water.
The snakes thrashed; the branch reeled in furious circles and sank
beneath the surface.
McAuliff ran across the logs and picked up the path.
He had gone perhaps three-quarters of a mile, certainly no more than
that. The time elapsed was twelve minutes by his watch. As he
remembered it, the path veered sharply to the right through a
particularly dense section of fern and maidenhead to where there was a
small clearing recently used by a band of hill-country hunters. Marcus
- the man who used the name of 'Marcus' - had remarked on it.
From the clearing it was less than a mile to the banks of the Martha
Brae and the campsite. The Dunstone advantage had to be diminishing.
It had to be.
He reached the nearly impossible stretch of overgrowth, his
flashlight close to the earth, inspecting the ground for signs of
passage. If he stepped away from the path now - if he moved into
underbrush that had not seen human movement - it would take him hours
to find it again. Probably not until daylight - or when the rains
stopped.
It was painfully slow, agonizingly concentrated. Bent weeds, small
broken branches, swollen borders of wet ground where once there had
been the weight of recent human feet; these were his signs, his codes.
He could not allow the tolerance of a single error. 'Hey, mon!' came
the muted words. McAuliff threw himself to the ground and held his
breath. Behind him, to his left, he could see the beam of another
flashlight. Instantly he snapped off his own.
'Hey, mon, where are you? Contact, please. You went off your
pattern. Or I did.' Contact, please… Off your pattern. The terms of an agent,
not the language of a carrier. The man was MI5. Past tense. Was.
Now Dunstone, Limited.
The Dunstone team had separated, each man assigned an area… a
pattern. That could only mean they were in radio contact.
Six men in radio contact. Oh, Jesus!
The beam of light came nearer, dancing, flickering through the
impossible foliage.
'Here, mon!' whispered Alex gutturally, hoping against
reasonable hope that the rain and the whisper would not raise an alarm
in the Dunstone ear.
Put on your light, please, mon.'
'Trying to, mon.' No more, thought McAuliff. Nothing. The dancing
beam reflected off a thousand shining, tiny mirrors in the darkness,
splintering the light into hypnotically flickering shafts. Closer.
Alex rolled silently off the path into the mass of wet earth and
soft growth, the rifle under him cutting into his thighs. The beam of
light was nearly above him, its shaft almost clear of interference. In
the spill he could see the upper body of the man. Across his chest were
two wide straps: One was connected to an encased radio, the other to
the stock of a rifle, its thick barrel silhouetted over his shoulder.
The flashlight was in the left hand; in the right was a large,
ominous-looking pistol.
The MI5 defector was a cautious agent. His instincts had been
aroused.
McAuliff knew he had to get the pistol; he could not allow the man
to fire. He did not know how near the others were, how close the other
patterns. Now!'
He lashed his right hand up, directly on to the barrel of the
pistol, jammming his thumb into the curvature of the trigger housing,
smashing his shoulder into the man's head, crashing his left knee up
under the man's legs into his testicles. With the impact, the man
buckled and expunged a tortured
gasp; his hand went momentarily limp, and Alex ripped the pistol from
it, propelling the weapon into the darkness.
From his crouched agony the Jamaican looked up, his left hand still
holding the flashlight, its beam directed nowhere at the earth, his
face contorted… about to take the necessary breath to scream.
McAuliff found himself thrusting his fingers into the man's mouth,
tearing downward with all his strength. The man lurched forward,
bringing the hard metal of the flashlight crashing into Alex's head,
breaking the skin. Still McAuliff ripped at the black's mouth, feeling
the teeth puncturing his flesh, sensing the screams.
They fell, twisting in midair, into the overgrowth. The Jamaican
kept smashing the flashlight into McAuliff's temple; Alex kept tearing
grotesquely, viciously, at the mouth that could sound the alarm he
could not allow.
They rolled over into a patch of sheer jungle mud. McAuliff felt a
rock, he tore his left hand loose, ripped the rock up from the ground,
and brought it crashing into the black mouth, over his own fingers. The
man's teeth shattered; he choked on his own saliva. Alex whipped out
his bleeding hand and instantly grabbed the matted hair, twisting the
entire head into the soft slime of the mud. There were the muffled
sounds of expulsion beneath the surface. A series of miniature filmy
domes burst silently out of the soggy earth in the spill of the fallen
flashlight.
And then there was nothing.
The man was dead.
And no alarms had been sent.
Alexander reached over, picked up the light, and looked at the
fingers of his right hand. The skin was slashed, there were teeth
marks, but the cuts were not deep; he could move his hand freely, and
that was all he cared about.
His left temple was bleeding, and the pain terrible, but not
immobilizing. Both would stop… sufficiently.
He looked over at the dead Jamaican and he felt like being sick.
There was no time. He crawled back to the path and started once again
the painstaking task of following it. And he tried to focus his eyes
into the jungle. Twice, in the not-too-distant denseness, he saw sharp
beams of flashlights. The Dunstone team was continuing its sweep. It
was zeroing in.
There was not an instant to waste in thought.
Eight minutes later he reached the clearing. He felt the accelerated
pounding in his chest; there was less than a mile to go. The easiest
leg of the terrible journey.
He looked at his watch. It was exactly four minutes after twelve
midnight.
Twelve was also the hour of noon. Four was the ritual Arawak unit.
The odyssey of death. No time for thought.
He found the path at the opposite side of the small clearing and
began to run, gathering speed as he raced towards the banks of the
Martha Brae. There was no air left in his lungs now, not breath as he
knew it; only the steady explosions of exhaustion from his throat,
blood and perspiration falling from his head, rivering down his neck
onto his shoulders and chest.
There was the river. He had reached the river! It was only then that
he realized the pounding rain had stopped; the jungle storm was over.
He swung the flashlight to his left; there were the rocks of the path
bordering the final few hundred yards into the campsite.
He had heard no rifle fire. There had been no shots. There were five
experienced killers in the darkness behind him, and the terrible night
was not over… but he had a chance.
That's all he had asked for, all that was between him and his
command to a firing squad ending his life.
Willingly, if he failed. Willingly to end it without Alison.
He ran the last fifty yards as fast as his exhausted muscles could
tolerate. He held the flashlight directly in front of him; the first
object caught by its beam was the lean-to at the mouth of the campsite
area. He raced into the clearing.
There were no fires, no signs of life. Only the dripping of a
thousand reminders of the jungle storm, the tents silent monuments of
recent living.
He stopped breathing. Cold terror gripped him. The silence was an
overpowering portent of horror.
'Alison. Alison' he screamed, and raced blindly towards
the
tent. 'Sam! Sam!'
When the words came out of the darkness, he knew what it was to be
taken from death and be given life again.
'Alexander… You damn near got killed, boy,' said Sam Tucker
from the black recesses of the jungle's edge.
THIRTY FOUR
Sam Tucker and the runner called 'Marcus' walked out of the bush.
McAuliff stared at the Halidonite, bewildered. The runner saw his
expression and spoke.
'There is no time for lengthy explanations. I have exercised an
option, that is all.'
The runner pointed to the lapel of his jacket.
Alex needed no clarification. Sewn into the cloth were the tablets he
had seen in the wash of yellow moonlight on the back road above Lucea
Harbour. I would not think twice about it, Daniel had said.
'Where is Alison?'
'With Lawrence and Whitehall. They're farther down the river,'
answered Sam.
'What about the Jensens?'
Tucker paused. 'I don't know, Alexander.'
'What?'
'They disappeared. That's all I can tell you… Yesterday Peter was
lost; his carrier returned to camp, he couldn't find him. Ruth bore up
well, poor girl… a lot of guts in her. We sent out a search. Nothing…
And then this morning, I can't tell you why - I don't know -I went to
the Jensen tent. Ruth was gone. She hasn't been seen since.' McAuliff
wondered. Had Peter Jensen seen something? Sensed something? And fled
with his wife? Escaped past the Tribe of Acquaba?
Questions for another time.
'The carriers?' asked Alex warily, afraid to hear the answer.
'Check with our friend here,' replied Tucker, nodding to the
Halidonite.
'They have been sent north, escorted north on the river,' said the
man with the usurped name of Marcus. 'Jamaicans will not die tonight
unless they know why they are dying. Not in this fight.'
'And you? Why you? Is this your fight?'
'I know the men who come for you. I have the option to fight.'
'The limited freedoms of Acquaba?' asked Alex softly.
Marcus
shrugged; his eyes betrayed nothing. 'An individual's freedom of
choice, Doctor.'
There was a barely perceptible cry of a bird, or the muted screech
of a bat, from the dense, tropic jungle. Then there followed another.
And another. McAuliff would not have noticed… there were so many
sounds, so continuously. A never-ending nocturnal symphony; pleasant to
hear, not pleasant to think about.
But he was compelled to notice now.
Marcus snapped his head up reacting to the sound. He swiftly reached
over and grabbed Alexander's flashlight and ripped it out of his hand
while shouldering Tucker away.
'Get down!' he cried, as he pushed McAuliff violently,
reeling him backward, away from the spot where he was standing.
Seven rifle shots came out of the darkness, some thumping into
trees, others cracking into the jungle distance, two exploding into the
dirt of the clearing.
Alex rolled on the ground, pulling his rifle into position and aimed
in the direction of the firing. He kept his finger on the trigger; a
shattering fusillade of twenty bullets sprayed the area. It was over in
seconds. The stillness returned.
He felt a hand grabbing his leg. It was Marcus.
'Pull back. Down to the river, mon,' he whispered harshly.
McAuliff scrambled backward in the darkness. More shots were fired
from the bush; the bullets screamed above him to the right.
Suddenly there was a burst of rifle fire from only feet away. Marcus
had leaped up to the left and delivered a cross-section barrage that
drew the opposing fire away. Alex knew Marcus's action was his cover.
He lurched to the right, to the edge of the clearing. He heard Sam
Tucker's voice.
'McAuliff Over here.'
As he raced into the brush, he saw Sam's outline on the ground.
Tucker was crouched on one knee, his rifle raised. 'Where. For
Christ's sake, where's Alison? The others'?'
'Go down to the river, boy, South, about three hundred yards. Tell
the blacks. We'll hold here '
'No, Sam! Come with me . . Show me.'
'I'll be there, son 'Another volley of shots spat out of the jungle.
Marcus answered from the opposite side of the clearing. Tucker
continued speaking as he grabbed the cloth in Alex's field jacket and
propelled him beyond. 'That black son of a bitch is willing to get his
tar ass shot off for us! Maybe he's given me a little time I don't
deserve. He's my countryman, boy. My new landsmann. Jesus! I
knew I liked this fucking island. Now get the hell down there and watch
out for the girl. We'll join you, don't you worry about that. The girl,
Alexander!'
'There are five men out there, Sam. I killed one of them a mile
back. They must have seen my flashlight when I was running. I'm sorry .
.' With these words McAuliff plunged into the soaking-wet forest and
slashed his way to the river bank. He tumbled down the short slope, the
rifle clattering against the metal buttons of his jacket, and fell into
the water.
South Left.
Three hundred yards. Nine hundred feet… a continent.
He stayed close to the river bank, where he could make the best
time. As he slopped through the mud and the growth and over fallen
trunks, he realized his magazine clip was empty Without stopping he
reached into his pocket and pulled out a fresh clip, snapping the old
one out of its slot and slamming the new one in. He cracked back the
insertion bar; the cartridge entered the chamber.
Gunfire broke his non-thoughts. Behind him men were trying to kill
other men.
There was a bend in the narrow river. He had travelled over a
hundred yards; nearer two, he thought my new landsmann .
Christ, Sam Tucker, itinerant wanderer
of the globe, schooler of primitives, lover of all lands - in search of
one to call his own, at this late stage of life. And he had found it in
a violent moment of time in the cruellest wilds of Jamaica's Cock Pit.
In a moment of sacrifice.
Suddenly, in an instant of terror, from out of the darkness above, a
huge black form descended. A giant arm fell vicelike around his neck,
clawing fingers tore at his face, his kidneys were being hammered by a
vicious, powerful fist. He slammed the rifle butt into the body behind
him, sank his teeth into the flesh below his mouth, and lunged forward
into the water. 'Mon! Jesus, mon.'
The voice of Lawrence cried as he pummelled McAuliffs shoulder.
Stunned, each man released the other; each held up his hands, Alex's
awkwardly thrusting out the rifle, Lawrence's holding a long knife.
'My God!' said McAuliff. 'I could have shot you!'
There was another fusillade of gunfire to the north.
'I might have put the blade in… not the handle,' said the black
giant, waist-deep in water. 'We wanted a hostage.'
Both men recognized there was no time for explanations. 'Where are
you? Where's Alison and Whitehall?'
'Downstream, mon. Not far '
'Is she all right?'
'She is frightened . But she is a brave woman. For a white English
lady. You see, mon?'
'I saw, mon,' replied Alexander. 'Let's go.'
Lawrence preceded him, jumping out of the water about thirty yards
beyond the point of the near-fatal encounter. McAuliff saw that the
revolutionary had tied a cloth around his forearm; Alex spat the blood
out of his mouth as he noticed it, and rubbed the area of his kidneys
in abstract justification.
The black pointed up the slope with his left hand and put his right
hand to his mouth at the same time. A whistled treble emerged from his
lips A bird, a bat, an owl . . it made no difference. There was a
corresponding sound from the top of the river bank, beyond in the
jungle.
'Go up, mon. I will wait here,' said Lawrence.
McAuliff would never know whether it was the panic of the moment or
whether his words spoke the truth as he saw it, but he grabbed the
black revolutionary by the shoulder and pushed him forward. 'There
won't be any more orders given. You don't know what's back there. I do!
Get your ass up there!'
An extended barrage of rifle fire came from the river.
Lawrence blinked. He blinked in the new moonlight that flooded the
river bank of this offshoot of the Martha Brae.
'Okay, mon! Don't push!'
They crawled to the top of the slope and started into the overgrowth.
The figure came rushing out of the tangled darkness, a darker,
racing object out of a void of black. It was Alison. Lawrence reached
back to McAuliff and took the flashlight out of Alex's hand. A gesture
of infinite understanding.
She ran into his arms. The world… the universe stopped its insanity
for an instant, and there was stillness. And peace. And comfort. But
only for an instant.
There was no time for thought. Or reflection.
Or words.
Neither spoke.
They held each other, and then looked at each other in the dim spill
of the new moonlight in the isolated space that was their own on the
banks of the Martha Brae.
In a terrible, violent moment of time.
And sacrifice.
Charles Whitehall intruded, as Charley-mon was wont to do. He
approached, his safari outfit still creased, his face an immobile mask,
his eyes penetrating.
'Lawrence and I agreed he would stay down at the river. Why have you
changed that?'
'You blow my mind, Charley…'
'You bore me, McAuliff!' replied Whitehall. 'There was
gunfire up there!'
'I was in the middle of it, you black son of a bitch!' Jesus,
why did he have to say that! 'And you're going to learn
what the problem is. Do you understand that?'
Whitehall smiled. 'Do
tell… whitey.' Alison slapped her hands off McAuliff and
looked at both men. 'Stop it!'
'I'm sorry,' said Alex quickly.
'I'm not,' replied Whitehall. 'This is his moment of
truth. Can't you see that, Miss Alison?'
Lawrence's great hands interfered. They touched both men, and his
voice was that of a thundering child-man. 'Neither, no more, mon!
McAuliff, mon, you say what you know! Now.'
Alexander did. He spoke of the grasslands, the plane - a
plane, not the Halidon's - the redneck ganga pilot who had brought six
men into the Cock Pit to massacre the survey, the race to the campsite,
the violent encounter in the jungle that ended in death in a small
patch of jungle mud. Finally, those minutes ago when the runner called
'Marcus' saved their lives by hearing a cry in the tropic bush.
'Five men, mon,' said Lawrence, interrupted by a new burst of
gunfire, closer now but still in the near-distance to the north. He
turned to Charles Whitehall. 'How many do you want, fascisti!'
'Give me a figure, agricula.'
'Goddamn it!' yelled McAuliff. 'Cut it out. Your games don't count
any more.'
'You do not understand,' said Whitehall. 'It is the only thing that
does count. We are prepared. We are the viable contestants.
Is this not what the fictions create? One on one, the victor sets the
course?'
… The charismatic leaders are not the foot soldiers… They
change or are replaced… The words of Daniel, Minister of the Tribe
of Acquaba.
'You're both insane,' said Alex, more rationally than he thought was
conceivable. 'You make me sick, and goddamn you — '
'Alexander! Alexander The cry came from the river bank
less than twenty yards away. Sam Tucker was yelling.
McAuliff began running to the edge of the jungle.
Lawrence raced ahead, his huge body crashing through the foliage,
his hands, pulverizing into sudden diagonals everything in their path.
The black giant jumped to the water's edge; Alex started down the
short slope and stopped.
Sam Tucker was cradling the body of Marcus the runner in his arms.
The head protruding out of the water was a mass of blood, sections of
the skull were shot off.
Still, Sam Tucker would not let go.
'One of them circled and caught us at the bank. Caught me
at the bank… Marcus jumped out between us and took the fire. He killed
the son of a bitch; he kept walking right up to him. Into the gun.'
Tucker lowered the body into the mud of the river bank.
McAuliff thought. Four men remained, four killers left of the
Dunstone team.
They were five. But Alison Booth could not be counted now.
They were four, too.
Killers.
Four. The Arawak four.
The death odyssey.
Alex felt the girl's hands on his shoulders, her face pressed
against his back in the moonlight.
The grasslands.
Escape was in the grasslands and the two aircraft that could fly
them out of the Cock Pit.
Yet Marcus had implied there was no other discernible route but the
narrow, twisting jungle path - a danger in itself.
The path was picked up east of the river at the far right end of the
campsite clearing. It would be watched; the MI5 defectors were
experienced agents. Egress was a priority; the single avenue
of escape would have automatic rifles trained on it.
Further, the Dunstone killers knew their prey was downstream. They
would probe, perhaps, but they would not leave the hidden path
unguarded.
But they had to separate. They could not gamble on the unknown, on
the possibility that the survey team might slip through, try to
penetrate the net.
It was this assumption that led McAuliff and Sam Tucker to accept
the strategy. A variation on the deadly game proposed by Lawrence and
Charles Whitehall. Alexander would stay with Alison. The others would
go out. Separately. And find the enemy.
Quite simply, kill or be killed.
Lawrence lowered his immense body into the black waters. He hugged
the bank and pulled his way slowly upstream, his pistol just above the
surface, his long knife out of its leather scabbard, in his belt -
easily, quickly retrievable.
The moon was brighter now. The rain clouds were gone; the towering
jungle overgrowth obstructed but did not blot out the moonlight. The
river currents were steady; incessant, tiny whirlpools spun around
scores of fallen branches and protruding rocks, the latter's tips
glistening with buffeted moss and matted green algae.
Lawrence stopped; he dropped farther into the water, holding his
breath, his eyes just above the surface. Diagonally across the narrow
river offshoot a man was doing exactly what he was doing, but without
the awareness Lawrence now possessed.
Waist-deep in water, the man held a lethal-looking rifle in front of
and above him. He took long strides, keeping his balance by grabbing
the overhanging foliage on the river bank, his eyes straight ahead.
In seconds, the man would be directly opposite him.
Lawrence placed his pistol on a bed of fern spray. He reached below
and pulled the long knife from his belt.
He sank beneath the surface and began swimming underwater.
Sam Tucker crawled over the ridge above the river bank and rolled
towards the base of the ceiba trunk. The weight of his body pulled down
a loose vine; it fell like a coiled snake across his chest, startling
him.
He was north of the campsite now, having made a wide half circle
west, on the left side of the river. His reasoning was simple, he hoped
not too simple. The Dunstone patrol would be concentrating downstream;
the path was east of the clearing. They would guard it, expecting any
who searched for it to approach from below, not above the known point
of entry.
Tucker shouldered his way up the ceiba trunk into a sitting
position. He loosened the strap of his rifle, lifted the weapon, and
lowered it over his head diagonally across his back. He pulled the
strap taut. Rifle fire was out of the question, to be used only in the
last extremity, for its use meant - more than likely - one's own
execution. That was not out of the question, thought Sam, but it
surely would take considerable persuasion.
He rolled back to a prone position and continued his reptilelike
journey through the tangled labyrinth of jungle underbrush.
He heard the man before he saw him. The sound was peculiarly human,
a casual sound that told Sam Tucker his enemy was casual, not primed
for alarm. A man who somehow felt his post was removed from immediate
assault, the patrol farthest away from the area of contention.
The man had sniffed twice. A clogged nostril, or nostrils, caused a
temporary blockage and a passage for air was casually demanded.
Casually obtained. It was enough.
Sam focused in the direction of the sound. His eyes of fifty-odd
years were strained, tired from lack of sleep and from peering for
nights on end into the tropic darkness. But they would serve him, he
knew that.
The man was crouched by a giant fern, his rifle between his legs,
stock butted against the ground. Beyond, Tucker could see in the
moonlight the outlines of the lean-to at the far left of the clearing.
Anyone crossing the campsite was in the man's direct line of fire.
The fern ruled out a knife. A blade that did not enter precisely at
the required location could cause a victim to lunge, to shout. The fern
concealed the man's back too well. It was possible, but awkward.
There was a better way. Sam recalled the vine that had dropped from
the trunk of the ceiba tree.
He reached into his pocket and withdrew a coil of ordinary azimuth
line. Thin steel wire encased in nylon, so handy for so many things…
He crept silently towards the giant spray of tiny leaves.
His enemy sniffed again.
Sam rose, half inch by half inch, behind the fern. In front of him
now, unobstructed, was the silhouette of the man's neck and head.
Sam Tucker slowly separated his gnarled, powerful hands. They were
connected by the thin steel wire encased in nylon.
Charles Whitehall was furious. He had wanted to use the river; it
was the swiftest route, far more direct than the torturously slow
untangling that was demanded in the bush. But it was agreed that since
Lawrence had been on guard at the river, he knew it better. So the
river was his.
Whitehall looked at the radium dial of his watch; there were still
twelve minutes to go before the first signal. If there was one.
Simple signals.
Silence meant precisely that. Nothing.
The short, simulated, guttural cry of a wild pig meant success. One
kill.
If two, two kills.
Simple.
If he had been given the river, Charles was convinced, he would have
delivered the first cry. At least one.
Instead, his was the southwest sweep, the least likely of the three
routings to make contact. It was a terrible waste. An old man,
authoritative, inventive, but terribly tired, and a plodding, unskilled
hill boy, not without potential, perhaps, but still a misguided,
awkward giant.
A terrible waste! Infuriating.
Yet not as infuriating as the sharp, hard steel that suddenly made
contact with the base of his skull. And the words that followed,
whispered in a harsh command: 'Open your mouth and I blow your head
off, mon!' He had been taken! His anger had caused his concentration to
wander. Stupid.
But his captor had not fired. His taker did not want the alarm of a
rifle shot any more than he did. The man kept thrusting the barrel
painfully into Charles's head, veering him to the right, away from the
supposed line of Whitehall's march. The man obviously wanted to
interrogate, discover the whereabouts of the others. Stupid.
The release-seizure was a simple manoeuvre requiring only
a hard surface to the rear of the victim for execution. And it was,
indeed, execution.
It was necessary for the victim to rebound following impact, not be
absorbed in space or elastically swallowed by walled softness. The
impact was most important; otherwise, the trigger of the rifle might be
pulled. There was an instant of calculated risk - nothing was perfect -
but the reverse jamming of the weapon into the victim allowed for that
split second of diagonal slash that invariably ripped the weapon out of
the hands of the hunter. Optimally, the slash coincided with the
impact. It was all set forth clearly in the Oriental training manuals.
In front of them, to the left, Whitehall could distinguish the
sudden rise of a hill in the jungle darkness. One of those abrupt
protrusions out of the earth that was so common to the Cock Pit. At the
base of the hill was a large boulder reflecting the wash of moonlight
strained through the trees. It would be sufficient… actually, more than
sufficient; very practical, indeed.
He stumbled, just slightly, as if his foot had been ensnared by an
open root. He felt the prod of the rifle barrel. It was the moment.
He slammed his head back into the steel and whipped to his right,
clasping the barrel with his hands and jamming it forward. As the
victim crashed into the boulder, he swung the weapon violently away,
ripping it out of the man's grasp.
As the man blinked in the moonlight, Charles Whitehall rigidly
extended three fingers on each hand and completed the assault with
enormous speed and control. The hands were trajectories - one towards
the right eye, the other into the soft flesh below the throat.
McAuliff had given Alison his pistol. He had been startled to see
her check the clip with such expertise, releasing it from its chamber,
pressing the spring, and reinserting it with a heel-of-the-palm impact
that would have done justice to Bonnie and Clyde notoriety. She had
smiled at him and mentioned the fact that the weapon had been in the
water.
There were eight minutes to go. Two units of four; the thought was
not comforting.
He wondered if there would be any short cries in the night. Or
whether a measured silence would signify an extension of the nightmare.
Was any of them good enough? Quick enough? Sufficiently alert?
'Alex!' Alison grabbed his arm, whispering softly but with sharp
intensity. She pulled him down and pointed into the forest, to the west.
A beam of light flicked on and off.
Twice.
Someone had been startled, in the overgrowth; some thing
perhaps. There was a slapping flutter and short, repeated screeches
that stopped as rapidly as they had started.
The light went on once again, for no more than a second, and then
there was darkness.
The invader was perhaps thirty yards away. It was difficult to
estimate in the dense surroundings. But it was an opportunity. And if
Alexander Tarquin McAuliff had learned anything during the past weeks
of agonizing insanity, it was to accept opportunities with the minimum
of analysis.
He pulled Alison to him and whispered instructions into her ear. He
released her and felt about the ground for what he knew was there.
Fifteen seconds later he silently clawed his way up the trunk of a
ceiba tree, rifle across his back, his hands noiselessly testing the
low branches, discomforted by the additional weight of the object held
in place inside his field jacket by the belt.
In position, he scratched twice on the bark of the tree.
Beneath him Alison whistled - a very human whistle, the abrupt notes
of a signalling warble. She then snapped on her flashlight for
precisely one second, shut it off, and dashed away from her position.
In less than a minute the figure was below him - crouched, rifle
extended, prepared to kill.
McAuliff dropped from the limb of the ceiba tree, the sharp point of
the heavy rock on a true, swift course towards the top of the invader's
skull.
The minute hand on his watch reached twelve; the second hand was on
one. It was time.
The first cry came from the river. An expert cry, the sound of a
wild pig.
The second came from the southwest, quite far in the distance but
equally expert, echoing through the jungle.
The third came from the north, a bit too guttural, not expert at
all, but sufficient unto the instant. The message was clear.
McAuliff looked at Alison, her bright, stunningly blue eyes bluer
still in the Caribbean moonlight.
He lifted his rifle in the air and shattered the stillness of the
night with a burst of gunfire. Perhaps the ganga pilot in the
grasslands would laugh softly in satisfaction. Perhaps, with luck, one
of the stray bullets might find its way to his head.
It did not matter.
It mattered only that they had made it. They were good enough, after
all.
He held Alison in his arms and screamed joyfully into the darkness
above. It did not sound much like a wild pig, but that did not matter,
either.
THIRTY FIVE
They sat at the table on the huge free-form pool deck overlooking
the beds of coral and the blue waters beyond. The conflict between wave
and rock resulted in cascading arcs of white spray surging upwards and
forwards, blanketing the jagged crevices.
They had flown from the grasslands directly to Port Antonio. They
had done so because Sam Tucker had raised Robert Hanley on the
aeroplane's radio, and Hanley had delivered his instructions in
commands that denied argument. They had landed at the small Sam Jones
Airfield at 2.35 in the morning. A limousine sent from the Trident
Villas awaited them.
So, too, did Robert Hanley. And the moment Sam Tucker alighted from
the plane, Hanley shook his hand and proceeded to crash his fist into
Tucker's face. He followed this action by reaching down and picking Sam
up off the ground, greeting him a bit more cordially but explaining in
measured anger that the past several weeks had caused him unnecessary
anxiety, obviously Sam Tucker's responsibility. The two very young old
reprobates then drank the night through at the bar of Trident Villas.
The young manager, Timothy Durell, surrendered at 5.10 in the morning,
dismissed the bartender, and turned the keys over to Hanley and Sam.
Durell was not aware that in a very real sense, the last strategies of
Dunstone, Limited, had been created at Trident that week when strangers
had converged from all over the world. Strangers, and not strangers at
all… only disturbing memories now.
Charles Whitehall left with Lawrence, the revolutionary. Both black
men said their good-byes at the airfield; each had places to go to,
things to do, men to see. There would be no questions, for there would
be no answers. That was understood.
They would separate quickly.
But they had communicated; perhaps that was all that could be
expected.
Alison and McAuliff had been taken to the farthest villa on the
shoreline. She had bandaged his hand and washed the cuts on his face
and made him soak for nearly an hour in a good British tub of hot
water. They were in Villa Twenty. They had slept in each other's arms
until noon.
It was now a little past one o'clock. They were alone at the table,
a note having been left for Alexander from Sam Tucker. Sam and Robert
Hanley were flying to Montego Bay to see an attorney. They were going
into partnership.
God help the island, thought McAuliff.
At 2.30 Alison touched his arm and nodded towards the alabaster
portico across the lawn. Down the marble steps came two men, one black,
one white, dressed in proper business suits.
R. C. Holcroft and Daniel, Minister of Council for the Tribe of
Acquaba, high in the Flagstaff Range.
'We'll be quick,' said Holcroft, taking the chair indicated by
Alexander. 'Mrs Booth, I am Commander Holcroft.'
'I was sure you were,' said Alison, her voice warm, her smile cold.
'May I present… an associate? Mr Daniel. Jamaican Affairs. I believe
you two have met, McAuliff?'
'Yes.'
Daniel nodded pleasantly and sat down. He looked at Alex and spoke
sincerely. 'There is much to be thankful for. I am very relieved.'
'What about Malcolm?'
The sadness flickered briefly across Daniel's eyes. 'I am sorry.'
'So am I,' said McAuliff. 'He saved our lives.'
'That was his job,' replied the Minister of the Halidon.
'May I assume,' interrupted Holcroft gently, 'that Mrs Booth has
been apprised… up to a point?'
'You certainly may assume that, Commander Holcroft.' Alison gave the
answer herself.
'Very well.' The British agent reached into his pocket, withdrew the
yellow paper of a cablegram, and handed it to Alexander. It was a
deposit confirmation from Barclay's Bank, London. The sum of $660,000
had been deposited to the account of A. T. McAuliff, Chase Manhattan,
New York. Further, a letter of credit had been forwarded to said A. T.
McAuliff that could be drawn against all taxes upon receipt of the
proper filing papers approved by the United States Treasury Department,
Bureau of Internal Revenue.
Alex read the cable twice and wondered at his own indifference. He
gave it to Alison. She started to read it but did not finish; instead,
she lifted McAuliffs cup and saucer and placed it underneath.
She said nothing.
'Our account is settled, McAuliff.'
'Not quite, Holcroft… In simple words, I never want to hear from you
again. We never want to hear from you. Because if we do, the
longest deposition on record will be made public—'
'My dear man,' broke in the Englishman wearily, 'let me
save you the time. Gratitude and marked respect would obligate me
socially any time you're in London. And, I should add, I think you're
basically a quite decent chap. But I can assure you that professionally
we shall remain at the farthest distance. Her Majesty's Service has no
desire to involve itself with international irregularities. I might as
well be damned blunt about it.'
'And Mrs Booth?'
'The same, obviously.' Here Holcroft looked directly, even
painfully, at Alison. 'Added to which it is our belief she has gone
through a great deal. Most splendidly and with our deepest
appreciation. The terrible past is behind you, my dear. Public
commendation is uncalled for, we realize. But the highest citation will
be entered into your file. Which shall be closed. Permanently.'
'I want to believe that,' said Alison.
'You may, Mrs Booth.'
'What about Dunstone?' asked McAuliff. 'What's going to happen?
When?'
'It has already begun,' replied Holcroft. 'The list was cabled in
the early hours of the morning.'
'Several hours ago,' said Daniel quietly. 'Around noon, London time.'
'In all the financial centres, the work is proceeding,' continued
Holcroft. 'All the governments are co-operating… it is to everyone's
benefit.'
McAuliff looked up at Daniel. 'What does that do for global
mendacity?'
Daniel smiled. 'Perhaps a minor lesson has been learned. We shall
know in a few years, will we not?'
'And Piersall? Who killed him?'
Holcroft replied. 'Real-estate interests along the North Coast who
stood to gain by the Dunstone purchase. His work was important, not
those who caused his death. They were tragically insignificant.'
'And so it is over,' said Daniel, pushing back his chair. 'The
Westmore Tallons will go back to selling fish, the disciples of Barak
Moore will take up the struggle against Charles Whitehall, and the
disorderly process of advancement continues. Shall we go, Commander
Holcroft?'
'By all means, Mr Daniel.' Holcroft rose from the chair, as did the
Minister of Council for the Tribe of Acquaba.
'What happened to the Jensens?' Alexander looked at Daniel, for it
was the Halidonite who could answer him.
'We allowed him to escape. To leave the Cock Pit. We knew Julian
Warfield was on the island, but we did not know where. We only knew
that Peter Jensen would lead us to him. He did so. In Oracabessa…
Julian Warfield's life was ended on the balcony of a villa named Peale
Court.'
'What will happen to them? The Jensens?' McAuliff shifted his eyes
to Holcroft.
The commander glanced briefly at Daniel. 'There is an understanding.
A man and a woman answering the description of the Jensens boarded a
Mediterranean flight this morning at Palisados. We think he is retired.
We shall leave him alone. You see, he shot Julian Warfield… because
Warfield had ordered him to kill someone else. And he could not do
that.'
'It is time, Commander,' said Daniel.
'Yes, of course. There's a fine woman in London I've rather
neglected. She liked you very much that night in Soho, McAuliff. She
said you were attentive.'
'Give her my best,'
'I shall.' The Englishman looked up at the clear sky and the hot
sun. 'Retirement in the Mediterranean. Interesting.' R. C. Holcroft
allowed himself a brief smile, and replaced the chair quite properly
under the table.
They walked on the green lawn in front of the cottage that was
called a villa and looked out at the sea. A white sheet of ocean spray
burst up from the coral rock and appeared suspended, the pitch-blue
waters of the Caribbean serving as a backdrop, not a source. The spray
cascaded forward and downward and then receded back over the crevices
that formed the coral overlay. It became ocean again, at one with its
source; another form of beauty.
Alison took McAuliffs hand.
They were free.