8
Dillon and Blake listened
as Ferguson related Hannah Bernstein's
adventures. When he was finished, Blake said, 'This is surely
unacceptable, one major intelligence department hugging secrets to itself that could be of possible
crucial importance to others.'
'Yes, well, Carter's always been good at doing
his own thing, and to hell with anyone
else.'
'Seems to me it's time to remind Carter,'
Ferguson said, 'that the particular
circumstances of my position as head of
the Prime Minister's personal security service give me
extraordinary powers. Including over him.'
'That I'd love to see,' Dillon told
him.
Ferguson smiled, picked up his phone, and
dialled a number.
'Ah, that you, Carter? Look, something's come
up and I need to see you. I want your
input on something before I speak to the
Prime Minister ... Yes? Good. I'll see you at the
Grenadier in St James's in thirty
minutes.'
'Nothing like being decisive,' Blake
said.
'Well, as you Yanks say, you ain't seen nothing
yet. Order the car, Dillon, I'll find a
warrant or two, and we'll be on our
way.'
The Grenadier was a pleasant traditional London
pub, with old-fashioned dark oak booths.
Carter was already there in a corner,
sipping a glass of sherry. A small, pale-faced man with white hair,
he reacted angrily at the sight of Dillon.
'Really, Ferguson, I've told you before. I
object to this murderous swine's presence.'
'Well, take it up with the Prime Minister. He
employs him.'
'God save your honour,' Dillon said cheerfully.
'It's a blessing, the grand man like
yourself allows me in the same
room.'
'Oh, go to hell.'
Ferguson said, 'You'll remember Blake
Johnson.'
'Yes, the American.' Carter offered a reluctant
hand and turned to Ferguson. 'So what is this?'
'An IRA renegade named Brendan Murphy's up to
no good, and I need to know what it
is.'
'Nonsense, that's old hat, Ferguson. Murphy
isn't a problem any longer, not since
the peace process overwhelmed the land.'
'It's the great liar you are,' Dillon told him,
and turned to Blake. 'This is the Deputy
Director of the Security Services, a
faceless man who never worked in the field
himself.'
'Damn you, you Irish swine.' Carter was
furious.
'Now, that's a racist remark,' Dillon said. 'I
could take you to the
tribunal.'
'Exactly,' Ferguson agreed. 'And as my sainted
mother was Irish, then as a half-Irishman I take it very
personally.'
'I'd say you've just insulted his mother's
memory,' Blake put in.
'Could we get on with it?' Dillon asked. 'You
lifted a man named Sean Regan at Heathrow three weeks ago, when his
plane to Dublin was diverted because of fog. Why?'
'Don't be stupid, Dillon. He shot a military
policeman in Londonderry a couple of years ago and fled. The
policeman nearly died.'
'So you're going to stand Regan up on trial at
the Old Bailey?' Ferguson
asked.
'We might.'
'But you won't, because of the peace process.
We're letting them out of prison now, not banging them
up.'
Carter was strangely confused. 'Come on,
Ferguson, we're in the hands of our
political masters.'
'Not as far as I'm concerned. We're in the
hands of the law. The truth is, you're
holding Regan to squeeze anything you
can out of him in case it may be of future use.'
'So what?'
'Not any more. Where are you holding him?'
'Wandsworth.' Carter answered as a reflex.
'Not any longer.' Ferguson produced a paper
from his inside pocket. 'That's a
warrant from me as head of the PM's security squad, authorizing me to, as quaint legal
language has it, take possession of one
Sean Regan.'
Carter was outraged. 'Now, look here,
Ferguson.'
'No, you look here. The difference is that
I did serve
in the field. I was an eighteen-year-old
second lieutenant in the Hook in Korea in fifty-two, and I've seen
more villains here than you've had
breakfasts. So don't argue. Just countersign the order. Here's my pen.'
He offered it and Carter took it, hand shaking,
and signed the document. 'My turn will
come, Ferguson.'
'I don't think so.' Ferguson blew on the ink.
'Now go away.'
Carter suddenly looked helpless, got up, and
stumbled out. Blake said, 'Why is it I don't feel sorry for
him?'
'Because he isn't worth it,' Ferguson said.
'So, gentlemen, Wandsworth Prison next stop.'
Ferguson, Dillon and Blake waited in the
interview room at Wandsworth until the
door was opened, and the kind of prison
officer who looked as if he'd been a sergeant in
a Guards regiment pushed Regan
in.
Dillon said, 'Good man yourself, Sean.' He
turned to the others. Always gave us a
problem, the two of us being Sean.'
Regan said, 'Jesus, is that you,
Dillon?'
'As ever was. Come to take you away from your
cell and the stench of the lavatory buckets. This is Brigadier
Charles Ferguson, your new boss. The other fella is a Yank, and
FBI, so watch it.'
'What in the hell is going
on?'
Ferguson turned to the prison officer. 'Give us
a moment.' 'Certainly, sir.'
The man went out, and Dillon said, 'Brendan
Murphy. We know you've been part of his
outfit.'
Regan was thrown, but tried to brazen it out.
'I haven't seen Brendan in
years.'
'So Carter didn't manage to wheedle anything
out of you?'
'I've said I don't know what you're talking
about.' 'Don't waste my time,' Ferguson
told him. 'You shot a military policeman in Derry two years ago and
fled to the States. Since then, you've
worked for Murphy in Europe.'
'It's a lie.'
Dillon said, 'Don't be stupid. You shot a
peeler. All right, he didn't die, but at
the Old Bailey you'll pull ten years for
attempted murder. Imagine Wandsworth or maybe Parkhurst, year after
year. You'd be afraid to take a shower.'
'No.' Regan was shaken. 'Mr Carter said if I
cooperated I wouldn't do
time.'
'Yes, well, unfortunately, I'm in charge now,'
Ferguson told him. 'Now make your mind
up. A comfortable safe house where
you'll fill us in on Brendan Murphy's doings, or a very unpleasant future.'
Regan, in despair, said, 'Brendan would cut me
to pieces. He's a sadist.'
'Which is why we'll have to take good care of
you.'
He nodded to Dillon, who knocked on the door,
which opened and the prison officer
appeared. Ferguson took his warrant out.
'Take this prisoner to his cell, allow him to
collect his belongings, then present this document to the Governor,
authorizing his release into my custody.'
'Certainly, Brigadier.'
Regan was pushed out, and Ferguson turned to
Dillon and Blake. 'So, we take him to Holland Park, where you,
Dillon, will squeeze out the last drop of juice.'
'My pleasure, Brigadier,' Dillon
said.
They delivered Regan to Holland Park and drove
in through the electronic gates. The
security guards wore neat navy blue blazers and flannel
slacks.
'Nursing home? What is this?' Regan
asked.
'It's a fortress,' Ferguson told him. 'And the
gentlemen in blazers are all military
police. There's no way out of here, as
you'll find for yourself.' He turned to Dillon. 'Let Helen settle
him in and feed him. You and Blake stay. I'll be back.'
His Daimler drove away. They took Regan up the
steps between them, his wrists still
manacled. The door opened and a very
large man appeared.
'Mr Dillon, sir.'
'Another one for you, Sergeant Miller, one Sean
Regan. He shot a Royal Military Policeman in Derry two years
ago.'
'That would be Fred Dalton.' Miller's face was
like stone. 'He survived, but had to
take a medical discharge. Oh, I'll take
good care of you, Mr Regan.'
He reached for Regan's left shoulder with a
hand the size of a meat plate, and Helen Black came down the hall
stairs. 'Is this the prisoner, Sergeant
Miller?'
Miller got his feet together. 'Yes,
ma'am.'
'Good. Room ten, unpack him, then we'll have
sandwiches and tea in the parlour.'
'As you say, ma'am.'
Regan turned. 'What is this? Who's
she?'
'Sergeant Major Black, and don't be a male
chauvinist, Regan,' Dillon said. 'She
shot two Provos in Derry and holds the Military
Cross.'
'Fuck you, Dillon.'
'That's bad language in front of a lady. We
can't have that, can we, sergeant?' he asked
Miller.
'We certainly can't, sir.' Miller squeezed
Regan's left arm very hard. 'Up we go, there's a good
gentleman.'
Blake said, 'Now what?'
'Oh, they have a canteen, a kitchen. We won't
starve.' Dillon smiled. 'We'll sort
Regan out later.'
Upstairs, Regan was astounded. He had a decent
bedroom, a bathroom, a view of the
garden, even if it was through barred
windows. He even had a fresh shirt, blazer and slacks, like the
guards'. Miller took him downstairs to a small sitting room, a gas
fire flickering in the hearth. There was soup, ham sandwiches and a
glass of dry white wine. Miller stood by the wall,
enigmatic. Regan, slightly euphoric at
the difference from Wandsworth, said,
'Could I have another glass of wine?'
'Of course, sir.'
Miller poured the glass of Chablis, and behind
the mirror Ferguson, Dillon, Hannah – who had just arrived – and
Helen Black watched.
Ferguson said, 'You all know the story by now.
This is a bad business, so we make sure
he talks. I'd like you to go in,
Sergeant Major, and you, Dillon. Facts, that's what
I need.'
'Certainly, sir.' Helen Black nodded to Sean.
'Good guy, bad guy, suit you,
Sean?'
'Nothing better. Takes me back to my days at
the National Theatre.'
'Yes, you have told us that one before.
Let's do it.' She led the way out. 'But
follow my lead.'
'Shall I leave, ma'am?' Miller asked, as they
stepped into the room.
'No, I might need you, Sergeant.' Her voice was
different and very hard. 'This is a
Provisional IRA gunman. He crippled Fred Dalton. Do you think Fred
was his first?'
'I doubt it, ma'am,' Miller said
coldly.
'Right, but I'd like you to manacle him,
Sergeant. Once a killer, always a killer.'
'Certainly, ma'am.'
'Now, look here,' Regan
protested.
'Just hold out your wrists and be a good
boy.'
Regan was sweating and very, very worried. He'd
had three weeks in Wandsworth, with the
lavatory bucket,- the twice-a-week showers, the unwelcome
attentions of certain wild-eyed prisoners, and others: basic
English criminals who didn't like the IRA. The contrast of his
treatment at the safe house spoke for
itself. In a way, he'd thought he was going to be all right, but now he had this woman who looked
like his elder sister, acting like the
Gestapo.
She unbuttoned her jacket, revealing the
holstered Colt. 'Now then, let's get
started.'
Roper had joined the group on the other side of
the mirror. 'She's really very good.'
'Outstanding,' Blake agreed.
'And still won't take a commission,' Ferguson
said. 'You can't buy her, sir,' Hannah put in.
'I know,' Ferguson sighed. 'Very
depressing.'
And then, Helen Black started to
work.
The change was astonishing. This pleasant,
decent Englishwoman seemed to take on a new
persona.
'I've been fighting people like you for years.
The bomb and the bullet, women and kids – you couldn't care less.
I shot dead two of your bastards in
Derry. They were parking a van with
fifty pounds of Semtex on board outside a nurses'
hostel. Well, we couldn't have that, could we?
I took a bullet in the left thigh, got
the bastard who did it, then sat up and got his friend in the back as he ran
away.'
Regan was terrified. 'For Christ's sake, what
kind of woman are you?'
She grabbed his jaw and shook his head
painfully from side to side. 'The Apache
Indians used to give their prisoners to their women to go to work on. I'm that kind of
woman.'
'Excellent,' Ferguson said. 'She should be at
the National Theatre herself.'
'You crippled a comrade of mine. Fred Dalton.'
She took out her Colt and touched him
between the eyes. 'These are hollow-points, you scum. I pull this trigger and your
brains are on the
wall.'
'For God's sake, no,' Regan
cried.
Dillon caught her wrist and turned the gun.
'No. Sergeant Major, this isn't the way.'
She turned, as if in fury. 'I'll be back.' She
walked out. Regan was shaking. Dillon said to Miller, 'Uncuff him,
Sergeant, he isn't going anywhere.'
'As you say, sir.' Miller got out a key and
unlocked the manacles. Dillon opened his
old silver cigarette case, took out two
cigarettes, lit them, and gave Regan one.
'There you go, just like in Now Voyager.'
Regan was shaking. 'What in the hell are you
talking about?'
'Never mind, Sean, I've a weakness for old
movies. Now listen. Me, I got smart. I could have faced a Serb
firing squad, but Ferguson is an
extraordinarily powerful man. He saved my life, and in return I dropped working for the
glorious cause and work for him instead.
Which means I'm alive.' Regan was
trembling, and Dillon turned to Miller. 'A large brandy,
Sergeant.'
'Certainly, sir.'
Miller opened a cupboard and returned with a
glass, which Regan emptied at one throw.
He looked up at Dillon. 'What do you
want?'
'What's best for you. Look, Ferguson's in
charge now, and you did shoot that
fella, Dalton. Peace process or not, he'll make you stand up in court if he wants
to.'
On the other side of the mirror, Ferguson said,
'In you go, Sergeant
Major.'
Helen Black went back into the sitting room, a
document in one hand. 'All right, I've had enough. It's back to
Wandsworth for you, you bastard.'
Regan simply fell apart. 'For God's sake, tell
me what you want, just tell me.'
'Excellent,' Roper said. 'Pure Gestapo. They
used physical abuse much less than
people realized. Didn't need to. They just messed with their heads.'
Ferguson said to Hannah, 'We won't overwhelm
him.' He turned to Roper. 'You and Blake stay here. You come in
with me and do your Scotland Yard bit,
Superintendent.'
Ferguson walked in with Hannah and said to
Miller, 'Give him another brandy, Sergeant.'
'Sir.' Miller did as he was told, and Regan
took the glass with shaking hands and
drained it.
'Do I have a deal?'
'That depends on what you have for
me.'
Regan looked at Dillon, who said, 'The
Brigadier's a hard man, Sean, but a moralist. If he says it, he
means it.'
Hannah said, 'Mr Regan, I'm Detective
Superintendent Bernstein of Special Branch. I'd be interested to
know if you can assist us in our inquiries regarding the activities
of one Brendan Murphy.'
Regan said, 'What do you want to
know?'
'I understand there's an underground concrete
bunker somewhere in County Louth.'
'Semtex, machine guns, mortars,' Dillon said.
'Enough to start a civil war. Where is
it, Sean?'
Regan said, 'Close to Kilbeg.'
'Jesus, son, there are Kilbegs all over
Ireland.'
'Well, this one is in Louth, like the
Superintendent says, just south of the
border in the Republic and south of Dundalk Bay. Near Dunany Point.
Very remote.'
'I know that area,' Dillon
said.
'You wouldn't last long, Dillon. They're a
funny lot. Strangers stand out like a
sore thumb.'
Ferguson said, 'Let's be
specific.'
'When I fled to the States, I was helped by a
wealthy Irish American group who were a
bit radical. Didn't approve of peace. I
brokered a big financial deal for Brendan. The idea
was to prepare for the future, the next
war.'
'Which explains the bunker,' Ferguson
said.
'But where did the arms come from?' Dillon
asked. Behind the mirror, Roper was making notes.
'Oh, that was a Mafia connection. Brendan had
worked with them in Europe. A fella
called Jack Fox.'
'Fronting for the Solazzo family?' Hannah
said.
'Well, I always figured he was fronting for
himself. He supplied the arms.'
'Anything else?' Hannah asked. 'Lebanon, for
example?' 'Christ, is there nothing you don't
know?'
'Get on with it,' Dillon said.
'Murphy was trained in Libya years ago, has
strong Arab contacts, can even get by
with the language, enough to order a
meal, anyway.'
'So?' Ferguson asked.
'Well, Fox controls the Solazzos' drug
operations in Russia, so he has big
contacts. Murphy has the Arab link.' 'Which Arab link?'
Regan hesitated. 'Saddam.
Iraq.'
'That's nice,' Dillon said. 'What's
intended?'
'There's a freighter down from the Black Sea
next week. Called the
Fortuna. If it's on
time, it's due at a place called Al
Shariz, south of Beirut, next Tuesday.'
Dillon took over. 'Russian
crew?'
'No, Arab. All Army of God.'
'And the cargo?' Regan hesitated. 'Come on,
what's the bloody
cargo?'
'Hammerheads.'
There was a pause, and Hannah turned to
Ferguson. 'Hammerheads, sir?'
The door opened and Blake entered. 'Sorry,
Brigadier, but I know all about those.
They're short-range missiles mounted on
a tripod that only take two minutes to erect. Their range is three
hundred miles. Nuclear-tipped. They wouldn't take out Israel or
Jordan completely, but Tel Aviv wouldn't look too good.'
Ferguson turned to Regan. 'Have you told me the
truth, told me
everything?'
Regan hesitated again. 'When the boat gets in,
the Fortuna, Brendan will be on board. Fox meets them, gets paid in
gold. Five million.'
'Dollars or pounds?' Dillon
asked.
'How the fuck would I know? Paid on the boat is
what I heard, because they want to arrange another consignment
a
month later.'
'And all this is true?' Ferguson
asked.
'Yes, damn you.'
Ferguson turned to Helen Black and Miller.
'Send him
back to his room.'
They took Regan out between them, and Roper
came in
after they left.
'I've had a thought,' he said. 'I've got
details of Fox's Gulfstream. It's parked
at Heathrow, as I recall. Let me
check its movements.'
They followed him to his ground floor suite,
where all his equipment had been set up. Roper started on the
computer,
fingers deft on the keys.
He grunted. 'Fox has a slot booked out of
Heathrow for Monday morning, destination Beirut.'
'Wonderful,' Dillon said. 'Regan was telling
the truth.' 'So what now, sir?' Hannah
asked.
Ferguson said, 'We can't send in the SAS, and
we do have other business with Fox.
Something more subtle is
needed.'
Hannah said, 'The Israelis wouldn't like this,
Brigadier.'
'Exactly what I was thinking.' Ferguson turned
to Dillon. 'You went to Beirut the other
year with the Superintendent here.
Stayed at the Al Bustan.'
'How could I forget it? It overlooks some
excellent Roman
ruins.'
'You remember my man there, Walid
Khasan?'
'Very well. Lebanese Christian. He and the
Superintendent
got on rather well. Which is not surprising,
considering that
he was actually Major Gideon Cohen of Mossad.'
'Lieutenant colonel, now.'
'Had a nice sister, Anya, I remember. A
lieutenant.' 'Captain, now.'
'And there was another one — what was his name?
Captain Moshe Levy?'
'Major. Everything goes up in the world,
Dillon. Yes, I think Colonel Cohen might
be interested. I'll give him a call.'
Lieutenant Colonel Gideon Cohen wore uniform
only on occasion. Sitting in his office
now at the top of a secluded building in Tel Aviv, he was wearing a
white shirt and linen Slacks, all very unmilitary for a Mossad
colonel. Forty-nine years of age, he had
olive skin, and hair that was still black and down to his shoulders.
His sister, Captain Anya Shamir, sat at a
corner desk, working a computer. She'd
been a widow since her husband's death on the Golan
Heights.
In the other corner, Major Moshe Levy sat at a
second computer. He was in uniform
because he'd had a report to make at
Army headquarters, and wore khaki shirt and slacks, paratroopers' wings and decorations. The phone on
Gideon Cohen's desk rang.
A voice said, 'This is Ferguson. Are you coded?
I am.'
'My dear Charles, of course I am.' Cohen waved
to Anya and Moshe. 'Ferguson from
London.'
He pressed the audio button on his telephone.
'Charles, old boy.'
'Don't call me old boy just because you went to
Sandhurst. I'm glad to say I still outrank you.'
'Something special, Charles?'
'Something rotten in the state of
Lebanon.'
'Tell me.'
Which Ferguson did.
When he was finished, Cohen said, 'Hammerheads.
We can't have that.'
'Jerusalem wouldn't look too good after one of
those.' 'Exactly. Charles, I need to consider
this.'
'What you mean is, you need to talk to the
general, your uncle.'
'I'm afraid so.'
'That's no problem. But this is a black one,
Gideon. Keep it close.'
In his penthouse office, General Arnold Cohen,
head of Mossad's Section One, the group
with special responsibility for
activities in Arab areas, listened gravely.
When his nephew was finished, he said,
'Hammerheads. This is very
serious.'
'So what do we do? Call an air strike on this
boat, the Fortuna?'
'In Lebanese waters? Come on, Gideon, we're
supposed to be nice at the moment while
our British and American cousins
castigate Saddam.'
'And he's going to send Hammerhead strikes up
our backside.'
His sister, Anya, standing with Levy by the
window, said, 'Can I make a point, Uncle?'
'Of course you can. You've gotten away with
murder with me ever since you learned to
speak, so why should this time be
different?'
'Why don't we use Dillon, uncle? He's hell on
wheels, that one – remember that job
with him in Beirut the other year? He
was incredible.'
'She's right,' Levy put in. 'What's important
here is disposing of this Fortuna
boat and its cargo with a minimum
of fuss, right?'
'So?'
'So we make it a small-scale operation. With
Dillon to call on, the three of us –
Anya, Moshe, me – can handle it in Al
Shariz. The right equipment, and we can blow the damn
boat to hell.'
'He's right,' Gideon Cohen said. 'No adverse
publicity. No air
strikes.'
'I like it,' the general said. 'Get on with
it.'
Ferguson said, 'Fine, Gideon. I'll send over
Dillon. Also an American colleague,
Blake Johnson, who works directly for
the President. You'll find him most useful. I'll put
Dillon on.'
A moment later, Dillon said in bad Hebrew, 'How
are you, you lying dog?'
'Dillon, we seem to have business
together.'
They switched into English. 'I'm not sure how
we'll do this,' Dillon said. 'If we're to blow this
Fortuna out of
the water, we'll need mines, Semtex,
some scuba equipment.'
'We'll take care of it. We'll keep it low-key.
Myself, Levy, my sister. With you and this American, that's five.
We don't want to draw attention,
although things have changed since you
operated in Beirut, my friend. It's not quite the war zone
it used to be. People are trying to build up
the infrastructure again, tourism and so on.'
'Where would Fox stay.
Beirut?'
'No, there's an old Moorish palace in Al Shariz
which has been refurbished as a hotel.
I'd say he'll be there. It's called the
Golden House.'
'No good for us, then.'
'No problem. We'll come up on a motor yacht,
like tourists. You and your friends can stay on
board.'
'We can't exactly sit in the bar at the Golden
House, though. We don't want Fox to know
it's us. It'd be much better if he
thought it was an Israeli job.'
'Do you recall my sister
Anya?'
'How could I forget? She played a lady of the
night better than a lady of the night.'
'Enough to ensnare this Fox.'
Dillon laughed. 'Enough to ensnare friend
Fox.'
'You and Johnson, Levy and myself, we'll stay
on our boat, the Pamir, well out of the way. Anya
can squeeze what she can out of the guy.
We'll send the Fortuna
down when we're
ready.'
'You Israelis are such morally committed
people,' Dillon said. 'But you'll sink
that boat, crew and all, without a flicker.'
'Not even half a flicker,' Cohen said. 'See you
soon.' Dillon hung up, and Ferguson said, 'So, here we go again.'
Hannah Bernstein said, 'What about me, Sir?'
'Not this one, Superintendent. Dillon and
Blake, plus our friends from Mossad, are
enough. What I'd like you to do is get a
little more basic with friend Regan as regards the
bunker in County Louth.' He turned to Roper.
'I'm sure the Major here will be more than willing to
help.'
'A pleasure, Sir,' Roper said.
'Sorry, Hannah, I'll have to love you and leave
you.' Dillon turned to Blake and smiled, a strange excitement
there. 'Here we go, old buddy, back to the war zone
again.'