TWO
DILLON PAUSED OUTSIDE
Le Chat Noir on the end of the small pier
for the second time that night. It was almost deserted, a young man
and woman at a corner table holding hands, a bottle of wine between
them. The accordion was playing softly and the musician talked to
the man behind the bar at the same time. They were the Jobert
brothers, gangsters of the second rank in the Paris underworld.
Their activities had been severely curtailed since Pierre, the one
behind the bar, had lost his left leg in a car crash after an armed
robbery three years previously.
As the door opened and Dillon entered, the other
brother, Gaston, stopped playing. “Ah, Monsieur Rocard. Back
already.”
“Gaston.” Dillon shook hands and turned to the
barman. “Pierre.”
“See, I still remember that little tune of yours,
the Irish one.” Gaston played a few notes on the accordion.
“Good,” Dillon said. “A true artist.”
Behind them the young couple got up and left.
Pierre produced half a bottle of champagne from the bar fridge.
“Champagne as usual, I presume, my friend? Nothing special, but we
are poor men here.”
“You’ll have me crying all over the bar,” Dillon
said.
“And what may we do for you?” Pierre
enquired.
“Oh, I just want to put a little business your
way.” Dillon nodded at the door. “It might be an idea if you
closed.”
Gaston put his accordion on the bar, went and
bolted the door and pulled down the blind. He returned and sat on
his stool. “Well, my friend?”
“This could be a big payday for you boys.” Dillon
opened the briefcase, took out one of the road maps and disclosed
the stacks of hundred dollar bills. “Twenty thousand American. Ten
now and ten on successful completion.”
“My God!” Gaston said in awe, but Pierre looked
grim.
“And what would be expected for all this
money?”
Dillon had always found it paid to stick as close
to the truth as possible, and he spread the road map out across the
bar.
“I’ve been hired by the Union Corse,” he said,
naming the most feared criminal organization in France, “to take
care of a little problem. A matter of what you might term business
rivalry.”
“Ah, I see,” Pierre said. “And you are to eliminate
the problem?”
“Exactly. The men concerned will be passing along
this road here toward Valenton shortly after two o’clock tomorrow.
I intend to take them out here at the railway crossing.”
“And how will this be accomplished?” Gaston
asked.
“A very simple ambush. You two are still in the
transport business, aren’t you? Stolen cars, trucks?”
“You should know. You’ve bought from us on enough
occasions,” Pierre told him.
“A couple of vans, that’s not too much to expect,
is it?”
“And then what?”
“We’ll take a drive down to this place tonight.” He
glanced at his watch. “Eleven o’clock from here. It’ll only take an
hour.”
Pierre shook his head. “Look, this could be heavy.
I’m getting too old for gunplay.”
“Wonderful,” Dillon said. “How many did you kill
when you were with the OAS?”
“I was younger then.”
“Well, it comes to us all, I suppose. No gunplay.
You two will be in and out so quickly you won’t know what’s
happening. A piece of cake.” He took several stacks of hundred
dollar bills from the briefcase and put them on the bar counter.
“Ten thousand. Do we deal?”
And greed, as usual, won the day as Pierre ran his
hands over the money. “Yes, my friend, I think we do.”
“Good. I’ll be back at eleven, then.” Dillon closed
his briefcase, Gaston went and unlocked the door for him and the
Irishman left.
Gaston closed the door and turned. “What do you
think?”
Pierre poured two cognacs. “I think our friend
Rocard is a very big liar.”
“But also a very dangerous man,” Gaston said. “So
what do we do?”
“Wait and see.” Pierre raised his glass. “Salut.”
Dillon walked all the way to the warehouse in rue
de Helier, twisting from one street to another, melting into the
darkness occasionally to check that he wasn’t being followed. He
had learned a long time ago that the problem with all revolutionary
political groups was that they were riddled with factions and
informers, a great truth where the IRA was concerned. Because of
that, as he had indicated to Aroun, he preferred to use
professional criminals whenever possible when help was needed.
Honest crooks who do things for cash, that was the phrase he’d
used. Unfortunately it didn’t always hold true and there had been
something in big Pierre’s manner.
There was a small Judas gate set in the larger
double doors of the warehouse. He unlocked it and stepped inside.
There were two cars, a Renault saloon and a Ford Escort, and a
police BMW motorcycle covered with a sheet. He checked that it was
all right, then moved up the wooden stairs to the flat in the loft
above. It was not his only home. He also had a barge on the river,
but it was useful on occasions.
On the table in the small living room there was a
canvas holdall with a note on top that simply said, As ordered. He smiled and unzipped it. Inside was a
Kalashnikov PK machine gun, the latest model. Its tripod was
folded, the barrel off for easy handling, and there was a large box
of belt cartridges, a similar box beside it. He opened a drawer in
the sideboard, took out a folded sheet and put it in the holdall.
He zipped it up again, checked the Walther in his waistband and
went down the stairs, the holdall in one hand.
He locked the Judas and went along the street,
excitement taking control as it always did. It was the best feeling
in the world when the game was in play. He turned into the main
street and a few minutes later, hailed a cab and told the driver to
take him to Le Chat Noir.
They drove out of Paris in Renault vans, exactly
the same except for the fact that one was black and the other
white. Gaston led the way, Dillon beside him in the passenger seat,
and Pierre followed. It was very cold; snow mixed with the rain,
although it wasn’t sticking. They talked very little, Dillon lying
back in the seat eyes closed so that the Frenchman thought he was
asleep.
Not far from Choisy, the van skidded and Gaston
said, “Christ almighty,” and wrestled with the wheel.
Dillon said, “Easy, the wrong time to go in a
ditch. Where are we?”
“Just past the turning to Choisy. Not long now.”
Dillon sat up. The snow was covering the hedgerows but not the
road. Gaston said, “It’s a pig of a night. Just look at it.”
“Think of all those lovely dollar bills,” Dillon
told him. “That should get you through.”
It stopped snowing, the sky cleared showing a
half-moon, and below them at the bottom of the hill was the red
light of the railway crossing. There was an old, disused building
of some sort at one side, its windows boarded up, a stretch of
cobbles in front of it lightly powdered with snow.
“Pull in here,” Dillon said.
Gaston did as he was told and braked to a halt,
switching off the motor. Pierre came up in the white Renault, got
down from behind the wheel awkwardly because of the false leg and
joined them.
Dillon stood looking at the crossing a few yards
away and nodded. “Perfect. Give me the keys.”
Gaston did as he was told. The Irishman unlocked
the rear door, disclosing the holdall. He unzipped it as they
watched, took out the Kalashnikov, put the barrel in place
expertly, then positioned it so that it pointed to the rear. He
filled the ammunition box, threading the cartridge belt in
place.
“That looks a real bastard,” Pierre said.
“Seven-point-two-millimeter cartridges mixed with
tracer and armor piercing,” Dillon said. “It’s a killer all right.
Kalashnikov. I’ve seen one of these take a Land-Rover full of
British paratroopers to pieces.”
“Really,” Pierre said, and as Gaston was about to
speak, he put a warning hand on his arm. “What’s in the other
box?”
“More ammunition.”
Dillon took out the sheet from the holdall, covered
the machine gun, then locked the door. He got behind the driving
wheel, started the engine and moved the van a few yards, positioned
it so that the tail pointed on an angle toward the crossing. He got
out and locked the door and clouds scudded across the moon and the
rain started again, more snow in it now.
“So, you leave this here?” Pierre said. “What if
someone checks it?”
“What if they do?” Dillon knelt down at the offside
rear tire, took a knife from his pocket, sprang the blade and poked
at the rim of the wheel. There was a hiss of air and the tire went
down rapidly.
Gaston nodded. “Clever. Anyone gets curious,
they’ll just think a breakdown.”
“But what about us?” Pierre demanded. “What do you
expect?”
“Simple. Gaston turns up with the white Renault
just after two this afternoon. You block the road at the crossing,
not the railway track, just the road, get out, lock the door and
leave it. Then get the hell out of there.” He turned to Pierre.
“You follow in a car, pick him up and straight back to
Paris.”
“But what about you?” the big man demanded.
“I’ll be already here, waiting in the van. I’ll
make my own way. Back to Paris now. You can drop me at Le Chat Noir and that’s an end of it. You won’t see
me again.”
“And the rest of the money?” Pierre demanded as he
got behind the Renault’s wheel and Gaston and Dillon joined
him.
“You’ll get it, don’t worry,” Dillon said. “I
always keep my word, just as I expect others to keep theirs. A
matter of honor, my friend. Now let’s get moving.”
He closed his eyes again, leaned back. Pierre
glanced at his brother, switched on the engine and drove
away.
It was just on half past one when they reached
Le Chat Noir. There was a lock-up garage
opposite the pub. Gaston opened the doors and Pierre drove
in.
“I’ll be off then,” Dillon said.
“You’re not coming in?” the big man asked. “Then
Gaston can run you home.”
Dillon smiled. “No one’s ever taken me home in my
life.”
He walked away, turning into a side street, and
Pierre said to his brother, “After him and don’t lose him.”
“But why?” Gaston demanded.
“Because I want to know where he’s staying, that’s
why. It stinks, this thing, Gaston, like bad fish stinks, so get
moving.”
Dillon moved rapidly from street to street,
following his usual pattern, but Gaston, a thief since childhood
and an expert in such matters, managed to stay on his trail, never
too close. Dillon had intended returning to the warehouse in rue de
Helier, but pausing on the corner of an alley to light a cigarette,
he glanced back and could have sworn he saw a movement. He was
right, for it was Gaston ducking into a doorway out of sight.
For Dillon, even the suspicion was enough. He’d had
a feeling about Pierre all night, a bad feeling. He turned left,
worked his way back to the river and walked along the pavement and
past a row of trucks, their windshields covered with snow. He came
to a small hotel, the cheapest sort of place, the kind used by
prostitutes or truckers stopping overnight and went in.
The desk clerk was very old and wore an overcoat
and scarf against the cold. His eyes were wet. He put down his book
and rubbed them. “Monsieur?”
“I brought a load in from Dijon a couple of hours
ago. Intended to drive back tonight, but the damn truck’s giving
trouble. I need a bed.”
“Thirty francs, monsieur.”
“You’re kidding,” Dillon said. “I’ll be out of here
at the crack of dawn.”
The old man shrugged. “All right, you can have
number eighteen on the second landing for twenty, but the bed
hasn’t been changed.”
“When does that happen, once a month?” Dillon took
the key, gave him his twenty francs and went upstairs.
The room was as disgusting as he expected even in
the diffused light from the landing. He closed the door, moved
carefully through the darkness and looked out cautiously. There was
a movement under a tree on the river side of the road. Gaston
Jobert stepped out and hurried away along the pavement.
“Oh, dear,” Dillon whispered, then lit a cigarette
and went and lay on the bed and thought about it, staring up at the
ceiling.
Pierre, sitting at the bar of Le Chat Noir waiting for his brother’s return, was
leafing through Paris Soir for want of
something better to do when he noticed the item on Margaret
Thatcher’s meeting with Mitterrand. His stomach churned and he read
the item again with horror. It was at that moment the door opened
and Gaston hurried in.
“What a night. I’m frozen to the bone. Give me a
cognac.”
“Here.” Pierre poured some into a glass. “And you
can read this interesting tidbit in Paris
Soir while you’re drinking.”
Gaston did as he was told and suddenly choked on
the cognac. “My God, she’s staying at Choisy.”
“And leaves from that old air-force field at
Valenton. Leaves Choisy at two o’clock. How long to get to that
railway crossing? Ten minutes?”
“Oh, God, no,” Gaston said. “We’re done for. This
is out of our league, Pierre. If this takes place, we’ll have every
cop in France on the streets.”
“But it isn’t going to. I knew that bastard was bad
news. Always something funny about him. You managed to follow
him?”
“Yes, he doubled around the streets for a while,
then ended up at that fleapit old François runs just along the
river. I saw him through the window booking in.” He shivered. “But
what are we going to do?” He was almost sobbing. “This is the end,
Pierre. They’ll lock us up and throw away the key.”
“No they won’t,” Pierre told him. “Not if we stop
him, they won’t. They’ll be too grateful. Who knows, there might
even be a reward in it. Now what’s Inspector Savary’s home
number?”
“He’ll be in bed.”
“Of course he will, you idiot, nicely tucked up
with his old lady where all good detectives should be. We’ll just
have to wake him up.”
Inspector Jules Savary came awake cursing as the
phone rang at his bedside. He was on his own, for his wife was
spending a week in Lyons at her mother’s. He’d had a long night.
Two armed robberies and a sexual assault on a woman. He’d only just
managed to get to sleep.
He picked up the phone. “Savary here.”
“It’s me, Inspector, Pierre Jobert.”
Savary glanced at the bedside clock. “For Christ’s
sake, Jobert, it’s two-thirty in the morning.”
“I know, Inspector, but I’ve got something special
for you.”
“You always have, so it can wait till the
morning.”
“I don’t think so, Inspector. I’m offering to make
you the most famous cop in France. The pinch of a lifetime.”
“Pull the other one,” Savary said.
“Margaret Thatcher. She’s staying at Choisy
tonight, leaves for Valenton at two? I can tell you all about the
man who’s going to see she never gets there.”
Jules Savary had never come awake so fast. “Where
are you, Le Chat Noir?”
“Yes,” Jobert told him.
“Half an hour.” Savary slammed down the phone,
leapt out of bed and started to dress.
It was at exactly the same moment that Dillon
decided to move on. The fact that Gaston had followed him didn’t
necessarily mean anything more than the fact that the brothers were
anxious to know more about him. On the other hand . . .
He left, locking the door, found the back stairs
and descended cautiously. There was a door at the bottom that
opened easily enough and gave access to a yard at the rear. An
alley brought him to the main road. He crossed, walked along a line
of parked trucks, chose one about fifty yards from the hotel, but
giving him a good view. He got his knife out, worked away at the
top of the passenger window. After a while it gave so that he could
get his fingers in and exert pressure. A minute later he was
inside. Better not to smoke, so he sat back, collar up, hands in
pockets, and waited. It was half past three when the four unmarked
cars eased up to the hotel. Eight men got out, none in uniform,
which was interesting.
“Action Service, or I miss my guess,” Dillon said
softly.
Gaston Jobert got out of the rear car and stood
talking to them for a moment, then they all moved into the hotel.
Dillon wasn’t angry, just pleased that he’d got it right. He left
the truck, crossed the road to the shelter of the nearest alley and
started to walk to the warehouse in rue de Helier.
The French secret service, notorious for years as
the SDECE, has had its name changed to Direction Générale de la
Sécurité Extérieure, DGSE, under the Mitterrand government in an
attempt to improve the image of a shady and ruthless organization
with a reputation for stopping at nothing. Having said that,
measured by results, few intelligence organizations in the world
are so efficient.
The service, as in the old days, was still divided
into five sections and many departments, the most famous, or
infamous, depending on your point of view, being Section 5, more
commonly known as Action Service, the department responsible for
the smashing of the OAS.
Colonel Max Hernu had been involved in all that,
had hunted the OAS down as ruthlessly as anyone, in spite of having
served as a paratrooper in both Indochina and Algeria. He was
sixty-one years of age, an elegant, white-haired man who now sat at
his desk in the office on the first floor of DGSE’s headquarters on
the Boulevard Mortier. It was just before five o’clock and Hernu,
wearing horn-rimmed reading glasses, studied the report in front of
him. He had been staying the night at his country cottage forty
miles out of Paris and had only just arrived. Inspector Savary
watched respectfully.
Hernu removed his glasses. “I loathe this time of
the morning. Takes me back to Dien Bien Phu and the waiting for the
end. Pour me another coffee, will you?”
Savary took his cup, went to the electric pot on
the stand and poured the coffee, strong and black. “What do you
think, sir?”
“These Jobert brothers, you believe they’re telling
us everything?”
“Absolutely, sir, I’ve known them for years. Big
Pierre was OAS, which he thinks gives him class, but they’re
second-rate hoods really. They do well in stolen cars.”
“So this would be out of their league?”
“Very definitely. They’ve admitted to me that
they’ve sold this man Rocard cars in the past.”
“Of the hot variety?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Of course they are telling the truth. The ten
thousand dollars speak for them there. But this man Rocard, you’re
an experienced copper, Inspector. How many years on the
street?”
“Fifteen, sir.”
“Give me your opinion.”
“His physical description is interesting because
according to the Jobert boys, there isn’t one. He’s small, no more
than one sixty-five. No discernible color to the eyes, fair hair.
Gaston says the first time they met him he thought he was a
nothing, and then he apparently half-killed some guy twice his size
in the bar in about five seconds flat.”
“Go on.” Hernu lit a cigarette.
“Pierre says his French is too perfect.”
“What does he mean by that?”
“He doesn’t know. It’s just that he always felt
that there was something wrong.”
“That he wasn’t French?”
“Exactly. Two facts of interest there. He’s always
whistling a funny little tune. Gaston picked it up because he plays
accordion. He says Rocard told him once that it was Irish.”
“Now that is interesting.”
“A further point. When he was assembling the
machine gun in the back of the Renault at Valenton he told the boys
it was a Kalashnikov. Not just bullets. Tracer, armor piercing, the
lot. He said he’d seen one take out a Land-Rover full of British
paratroopers. Pierre didn’t like to ask him where.”
“So, you smell IRA here, Inspector? And what have
you done about it?”
“Got your people to get the picture books out,
Colonel. The Joberts are looking through them right now.”
“Excellent.” Hernu got up and this time refilled
his coffee cup himself. “What do you make of the hotel business. Do
you think he’s been alerted?”
“Perhaps, but not necessarily,” Savary said. “I
mean, what have we got here, sir? A real pro out to make the hit of
a lifetime. Maybe he was just being extra careful, just to make
sure he wasn’t followed to his real destination. I mean, I wouldn’t
trust the Joberts an inch, so why should he?”
He shrugged and Max Hernu said shrewdly, “There’s
more. Spit it out.”
“I got a bad feeling about this guy, Colonel. I
think he’s special. I think he may have used the hotel thing
because he suspected that Gaston might follow him, but then he’d
want to know why. Was it the Joberts just being curious, or was
there more to it?”
“So you think he could have been up the street
watching our people arrive?”
“Very possibly. On the other hand, maybe he didn’t
know Gaston was tailing him. Maybe the hotel thing was a usual
precaution. An old resistance trick from the war.”
Hernu nodded. “Right, let’s see if they’ve
finished. Have them in.”
Savary went out and returned with the Jobert
brothers. They stood there looking worried, and Hernu said,
“Well?”
“No luck, Colonel, he wasn’t in any of the
books.”
“All right,” Hernu said. “Wait downstairs. You’ll
be taken home. We’ll collect you again later.”
“But what for, Colonel?” Pierre asked.
“So that your brother can go to Valenton in the
Renault and you can follow in the car just like Rocard told you.
Now get out.” They hurriedly left, and Hernu said to Savary,
“We’ll see Mrs. Thatcher is spirited to safety by
another route, but a pity to disappoint our friend Rocard.”
“If he turns up, Colonel.”
“You never know, he just might. You’ve done well,
Inspector. I think I’ll have to requisition you for Section Five.
Would you mind?”
Would he mind? Savary
almost choked with emotion, “An honor, sir . . .”
“Good. Go and get a shower then and some breakfast.
I’ll see you later.”
“And you, Colonel?”
“Me, Inspector?” Hernu laughed and looked at his
watch. “Five-fifteen. I’m going to ring British Intelligence in
London. Disturb the sleep of a very old friend of mine. If anyone
can help us with our mystery man it should be he.”
The Directorate General of the British Security
Service occupies a large white and red brick building not far from
the Hilton Hotel in Park Lane, although many of its departments are
housed in various locations throughout London. The special number
that Max Hernu rang was of a Section known as Group Four, located
on the third floor of the Ministry of Defence. It had been set up
in 1972 to handle matters concerning terrorism and subversion in
the British Isles. It was responsible only to the Prime Minister.
It had been administered by only one man since its inception,
Brigadier Charles Ferguson. He was asleep in his flat in Cavendish
Square when the telephone beside his bed awakened him.
“Ferguson,” he said, immediately wide awake,
knowing it had to be important.
“Paris, Brigadier,” an anonymous voice said.
“Priority one. Colonel Hernu.”
“Put him through and scramble.”
Ferguson sat up, a large, untidy man of sixty-five
with rumpled gray hair and a double chin.
“Charles?” Hernu said in English.
“My dear Max. What brings you on the line at such a
disgusting hour? You’re lucky I’m still on the phone. The powers
that be are trying to make me redundant along with Group
Four.”
“What nonsense.”
“I know, but the Director General was never happy
with my freebooter status all these years. What can I do for
you?”
“Mrs. Thatcher is overnighting at Choisy. We’ve
details of a plot to hit her on the way to the airfield at Valenton
tomorrow.”
“Good God!”
“All taken care of. The lady will now take a
different route home. We’re still hoping the man concerned will
show up, though I doubt it. We’ll be waiting though, this
afternoon.”
“Who is it? Anyone we know?”
“From what our informants say, we suspect he’s
Irish, though his French is good enough to pass as a native. The
thing is, the people involved have looked through all our IRA
pictures with no success.”
“Have you a description?”
Hernu gave it to him. “Not much to go on, I’m
afraid.”
“I’ll have a computer check done and get back to
you. Tell me the story.” Which Hernu did. When he was finished,
Ferguson said, “You’ve lost him, old chap. I’ll bet you dinner on
it at the Savoy Grill next time you’re over.”
“I’ve a feeling about this one. I think he’s
special,” Hernu said.
“And yet not on your books, and we always keep you
up to date.”
“I know,” Hernu said. “And you’re the expert on the
IRA, so what do we do?”
“You’re wrong there,” Ferguson said. “The greatest
expert on the IRA is right there in Paris, Martin Brosnan, our
Irish-American friend. After all, he carried a gun for them till
nineteen seventy-five. I heard he was a professor of Political
Philosophy at the Sorbonne.”
“You’re right,” Hernu said. “I’d forgotten about
him.”
“Very respectable these days. Writes books and
lives rather well on all that money his mother left him when she
died in Boston five years ago. If you’ve a mystery on your hands,
he might be the man to solve it.”
“Thanks for the suggestion,” Hernu said. “But first
we’ll see what happens at Valenton. I’ll be in touch.”
Ferguson put down the phone, pressed a button on
the wall and got out of bed. A moment later the door opened and his
manservant, an ex-Gurkha, came in putting a dressing gown over his
pyjamas.
“Emergency, Kim. I’ll ring Captain Tanner and tell
her to get round here, then I’ll have a bath. Breakfast when she
arrives.”
The Gurkha withdrew. Ferguson picked up the phone
and dialed a number. “Mary? Ferguson here. Something big. I want
you at Cavendish Square within the hour. Oh, better wear your
uniform. We’ve got that thing at the Ministry of Defence at eleven.
You always impress them in full war paint.”
He put the phone down and went into the bathroom
feeling wide-awake and extremely cheerful.
It was six-thirty when the taxi picked up Mary
Tanner on the steps of her Lowndes Square flat. The driver was
impressed, but then most people were. She wore the uniform of a
captain in the Women’s Royal Army Corps, the wings of an Army Air
Corps pilot on her left breast. Below them were the ribbon of the
George Medal, a gallantry award of considerable distinction, and
campaign ribbons for Ireland and for service with the United
Nations peacekeeping force in Cyprus.
She was a small girl, black hair cropped short,
twenty-nine years of age and a lot of service under the belt. A
doctor’s daughter who’d taken an English degree at London
University, tried teaching and hated it. After that came the army.
A great deal of her service had been with the Military Police.
Cyprus for a while, but three tours of duty in Ulster. It had been
the affair in Derry that had earned her the George Medal and left
her with the scar on her left cheek, which had brought her to
Ferguson’s attention. She’d been his aide for two years now.
She paid off the taxi, hurried up the stairs to the
flat on the first floor and let herself in with her own key.
Ferguson was sitting on the sofa beside the fireplace in the
elegant drawing room, a napkin under his chin, while Kim served his
poached eggs.
“Just in time,” he said. “What would you
like?”
“Tea, please. Earl Grey, Kim, and toast and
honey.”
“Got to watch our figure.”
“Rather early in the day for sexist cracks, even
for you, Brigadier. Now what have we got?”
He told her while he ate and Kim brought her tea
and toast and she sat opposite, listening.
When he finished she said, “This Brosnan, I’ve
never heard of him.”
“Before your time, my love. He must be about
forty-five now. You’ll find a file on him in my study. He was born
in Boston. One of those filthy rich American families. Very high
society. His mother was a Dubliner. He did all the right things,
went to Princeton, took his degree, then went and spoiled it all by
volunteering for Vietnam and as an enlisted man. I believe that was
nineteen sixty-six. Airborne Rangers. He was discharged a sergeant
and heavily decorated.”
“So what makes him so special?”
“He could have avoided Vietnam by staying at
university, but he didn’t. He also enlisted in the ranks. Quite
something for someone with his social standing.”
“You’re just an old snob. What happened to him
after that?”
“He went to Trinity College, Dublin, to work on a
doctorate. He’s a Protestant, by the way, but his mother was a
devout Catholic. In August sixty-nine, he was visiting an uncle on
his mother’s side, a priest in Belfast. Remember what happened? How
it all started?”
“Orange mobs burning Catholics out?” she
said.
“And the police not doing too much about it. The
mob burned down Brosnan’s uncle’s church and started on the Falls
Road. A handful of old IRA hands with a few rifles and handguns
held them off, and when one of them was shot, Brosnan picked up his
rifle. Instinctive, I suppose. I mean Vietnam and all that.”
“And from then on he was committed?”
“Very much so. You’ve got to remember that in those
early days, there were plenty of men like him in the movement.
Believers in Irish freedom and all that sort of thing.”
“Sorry, sir, I’ve seen too much blood on the
streets of Derry to go for that one.”
“Yes, well I’m not trying to whitewash him. He’s
killed a few in his time, but always up front, I’ll say that for
him. He became quite famous. There was a French War photographer
called Anne-Marie Audin. He saved her life in Vietnam after a
helicopter crash. Quite a romantic story. She turned up in Belfast
and Brosnan took her underground for a week. She got a series out
of it for Life magazine. The gallant Irish
struggle. You know the sort of thing.”
“What happened after that?”
“In nineteen seventy-five he went to France to
negotiate an arms deal. As it turned out, it was a setup and the
police were waiting. Unfortunately he shot one of them dead. They
gave him life. He escaped from prison in seventy-nine, at my
instigation, I might add.”
“But why?”
“Someone else before your time, a terrorist called
Frank Barry. Started off in Ulster with a splinter group called the
Sons of Erin, then joined the European terrorist circuit, an evil
genius if ever there was one. Tried to get Lord Carrington on a
trip to France when he was Foreign Secretary. The French hushed it
up, but the Prime Minister was furious. Gave me direct orders to
hunt Barry down whatever the cost.”
“Oh, I see now. You needed Brosnan to do
that?”
“Set a thief to catch a thief and so forth, and he
got him for us.”
“And afterwards?”
“He went back to Ireland and took that
doctorate.”
“And this Anne-Marie Audin, did they marry?”
“Not to my knowledge, but she did him a bigger
favor than that. Her family is one of the oldest in France and
enormously powerful politically and he had been awarded the Legion
of Honour for saving her in Vietnam. Anyway, her pressure behind
the scenes bore fruit five years ago. President Mitterrand granted
him a pardon. Wiped the slate clean.”
“Which is how he’s at the Sorbonne now? He must be
the only professor they’ve had who shot a policeman dead.”
“Actually one or two after the war had done just
that when serving with the Resistance.”
“Does the leopard ever change its spots?” she
asked.
“O, ye of little faith. As I say, you’ll find his
file in the study if you want to know more.” He passed her a piece
of paper. “That’s the description of the mystery man. Not much to
go on, but run it through the computer anyway.”
She went out.
Kim entered with a copy of the Times. Ferguson read the headlines briefly, then
turned to page two where his attention was immediately caught by
the same item concerning Mrs. Thatcher’s visit to France that had
appeared in Paris Soir.
“Well, Max,” he said softly, “I wish you luck,” and
he poured himself another cup of coffee.