14
The following day, Fox was
having a light lunch in the Piano Bar at
the Dorchester, tagliatelle alla panna, noodles in a cream and ham sauce, just the way he liked it.
The waiter poured him a glass of Krug,
and Falcone came down the
stairs.
'I've been to the Colosseum, Signore. Mori has laid off
most of the staff. He's kept on Rossi and Cameci.'
'I know. That damn Ferguson.
Any word from Ford?' 'No,
Signore.'
'Today's the day, Aldo. Make or break time.'
More than you know, Falcone thought.
Manchester Charlie Ford had expected Amber for
lunch, and when he failed to turn up he
tried Amber's mobile. When it rang at
Holland Park, Helen Black nodded, Miller stood behind and Amber
answered.
'Hey, where are you?' Charlie demanded.
'Sorry, Charlie,' Amber
mumbled. 'I've got a terrible toothache.
I've only just managed to find a dentist who could give me an appointment.'
'You poor sod. Okay, I'll see you this evening.'
'I don't know, Charlie. This thing could knock me out of
commission.'
There
was a brief silence. 'Well, I suppose we can manage
if we have to. Me, Tony and Harold. But be here
if you can, okay, Amber?'
'I'll do my best, Charlie.'
'Well, you do that, darling. Stay well.'
Amber switched off the phone and looked at Helen Black. 'Was that
okay?'
'You should be on stage, Amber.'
For some strange reason, he
perked up. 'You really think so?'
Absolutely. Much better than prison. Maybe you shouldn't
go back to Barbados. Maybe you should get an
education grant and try the London
Theatre School.'
There was a final meeting at Fox's suite at the
Dorchester: the Jagos, Ford, Briggs and
French. Falcone and Russo stood by, and Fox nodded to Russo, who
got a bottle of champagne from the
basket and thumbed off the cork. He filled glasses
all around.
Fox raised his and toasted
the others. 'To the big one. They'll all
have to sit up and take notice.' He turned to Ford. 'Everything okay?'
'Amber isn't up to snuff.
He's got some sort of tooth infection.
He rang me up from the dentist.'
'We don't need the black,'
Tony Jago said. 'We can manage. Enough
of us as it is.'
'You know best.' Fox nodded.
Tony said, 'So you're sure you're not joining us?'
'Don't be silly. That tunnel would be rather crowded.'
'But you don't mind joining us to share out the loot.'
Falcone, leaning against the wall, straightened, but Harold
took charge. 'You shut your mouth,' he said to
his brother, 'or I'll give you a
slapping.' He turned to Fox. 'Look, I'm sorry. He's young.'
'Well, we all were once,' Jack told him and smiled. 'Come
on, another glass of bubbly, and then, as I
believe the Irish say, "God bless the
good work."'
It was six o'clock that evening when Hannah
answered her doorbell and found Dillon on the step.
'Ferguson expects us at his place to wait out what's happening.
I've got the Daimler.'
'I'll get my coat.'
She was out in a few minutes, he opened the rear
door for her, and she climbed in behind
the driver. Dillon leaned in through the open window and tapped the
driver on the shoulder.
'Take the Superintendent to Brigadier Ferguson.' He smiled at
Hannah. 'I'll see you later. I've got things to do.'
Hannah opened her mouth in
surprise, but the Daimler moved away
before she could reply.
Outside the Jagos' house in Wapping, a large
white truck bearing the sign ELITE
CONSTRUCTION drew up.
Ford was at the wheel wearing overalls, Briggs beside him, French
in the back. The door to the house opened, and Harold and Tony Jago
emerged, came down the steps and also got in the back.
'The moment of truth, boys,'
Harold said. 'Let's get to it.'
At the same time, the night security guard at
the White Diamond Company, having
finished his sandwiches and coffee, sat
back to read the Evening
Standard. He kept blinking his eyes,
yawned a couple of times, put the newspaper down, and checked the
multiple television security screens. Everything
looked normal. Suddenly, he leaned over the
desk, put his head on his arms, and was
asleep.
In the tunnel, Ford and French, each wielding a
sledgehammer, attacked the wall at the
right point. The old Victorian brickwork crumbled and fell
backwards in large sections into the basement.
'Perfect,' Ford said. 'In we go, gents.'
They all scrambled through.
'Now what?' Harold Jago asked.
'The tide started to come in
downriver fifteen minutes ago. We're good for forty minutes. After
that, the tunnel entrance will be
covered.'
'Then let's bleeding get on with it,' Harold said.
Connie Briggs took an object from one of the carrying bags that
resembled a television remote control. 'The Howler,' he said, and
pressed a button.
'Is that it?' Tony Jago asked.
'Well, if it isn't, all hell
will break loose when we go upstairs. If
it works, the security system is fucked and all the doors will be open. Let's go and see.'
Dillon, the Salters, Joe Baxter and Sam Hall
got out of a Transit. Baxter and Hall
were carrying large canvas holdalls. Blake got out after
them.
Harry Salter
said, 'Look, old son, can't you stay in the Transit? You're not up to it.'
'No, it's important to me.
Fox had my wife killed, Harry. I want to
be there when he finally gets his. What happens now, if we succeed, will finish him.'
Strange, it was Billy who
said, 'He's entitled. Let him be.'
'Well, you've changed, you young sod.'
'Damn right, Harry,' Dillon
said. 'He's killed two men, and on the
side of right. No going back on that.'
Salter said, 'Okay, let's get going.'
He led the way down the steps
and started along the shingle to the
tunnel entrance. When they got there, he turned to Billy.
'You checked with Handy. How long have we got?' 'Thirty minutes,
and don't forget, when that tide floods
in, it's what Handy means by St Richard's Force.' 'Right, let's get
to it.'
As the Jagos and the others reached the
entrance hall, they paused, observing
the security guard sprawled across the desk, the security screens blank.
'There you go. Downstairs to
the vault,' Connie Briggs said.
Manchester Charlie Ford laughed. 'I told you he was
a genius,' and he led the way down a
broad marble stairway to the vaults
below.
The others, in the tunnel, had reached the
grille door. Harry Salter said, 'Right, let's get on with
it.'
Billy said, 'We
could clobber them on the way out, Harry. I mean, twelve million.'
'Like I said, it's too much, Billy. They'd bring out the big
battalions. Now, we go with my suggestion. I've
never liked the Jagos, with their drugs,
whores and pornography. Filth.'
He turned to Joe Baxter. 'So
get your gear out and let's hope the
British prison system taught you a trade.'
Joe Baxter took out an
oxy-acetylene welding torch from his holdall. From the other bag,
Sam Hall produced an oxygen
cylinder.
Baxter flared the torch and started to work.
The great vault doors opened, and the Jagos and
their friends were into an Aladdin's
cave. They opened their canvas holdalls,
pulled out bags and poured in a stream of diamonds.
'Jesus,' Harold said. 'I've never known the like.'
There was an atmosphere of
hysteria, everyone laughing, and
finally, they were finished.
'Okay, let's be on our way,'
Harold ordered and led the way back
upstairs.
They moved down to the basement to the exit hole they'd smashed,
moved through one by one.
Tony said, 'Christ there's water in the tunnel.'
'Well, there would be,' Harold said. 'The tide's coming in. We've
got time. Let's get moving.'
It was already a foot deep when they reached the gate, Manchester
Charlie Ford in the lead. He tried to open it. 'What the hell is
going on? It won't budge.'
Val French pushed him out of the way and checked it.
'Christ! Someone's welded it
together.'
'That would be me and my friends.' Dillon sloshed forward in a foot
of water, Blake at his side. 'Sean Dillon, and this is
Blake Johnson. I'm sure you've got a mobile.
Call Jack Fox and give him the bad
news.'
The Jagos grabbed the bars of the grille and shook them. 'Fuck
you!'
Dillon smiled. 'No, I'm afraid it's you who are fucked,
gentlemen. Now, if you'll excuse me, the
water's getting a bit high.'
Dillon and Blake turned and
waded away, the water already two feet
deep and rising. They exited on to the beach, which was already flooded. Harry Salter and
the other were at the steps,
waiting.
Dillon took out his Codex Four mobile phone and called Scotland
Yard, using the Special Branch number.
The officer who replied said,
'Special Branch. How can I help
you?'
'The Jago
brothers and a hand-picked team are trapped in the White Diamond Company building at St Richard's
Dock. They can't get out the way they
got in underground, because the tide's
rising. If you get to the front entrance fast, you'll
catch them with twelve million in
diamonds.'
'Who is this?'
'Don't be silly, get moving.'
In the tunnel, the Jagos and the others shook
desperately at the grille together, but Joe Baxter had done too
good a job, and then the water rose and
started to bore in very fast.
'Christ,' Harold said. 'It's
that St Richard's Force thing. Let's get
out of here.'
They turned and scrambled along the tunnel, the water foaming
around them, got through the hole, and scrambled upstairs to the
foyer and the security office.
'Listen,' Harold said, 'if that Howler works, then the front door's
open.'
'That's right,' Connie told him.
'Okay, let's get the hell out of here.'
He led the way to the door,
and there was a squeal of brakes as half
a dozen police cars arrived outside.
Harold stood there, bitter and angry, and said to Connie,
'Close the door with your sodding Howler,'
which Connie did. 'Let them
wait.'
The police bunched together outside the glass doors, and Tony Jago,
gave them two fingers. Harold called through on the mobile to Fox
at his suite at the Dorchester.
Fox said, 'Harold, how did it go?'
'Wonderful. I'm standing here
at the White Diamond Company holding a
bag worth twelve million and there must
be at least twenty cops outside trying to get in at
US.
'What happened, for God's sake?'
Harold told him.
'Dillon?' Fox said. 'Are you sure?'
'And the American, Johnson. I think they've been on your
case more than you know, Jack. The trouble is
it's put them on my case.'
'I'll get you the best barrister in London.'
'Thanks very much. That's a
great comfort, Fox. Sod you and your
barrister!'
He
switched off the mobile. Tony said, 'What the hell do
we do, Harold?'
'Travel hopefully, Tony.' Harold turned to Connie Briggs.
'Go on, use that gadget and open the door.'
Connie did, and the police rushed in and
surged all over them.
Fox said, 'That bastard Dillon. He and Johnson,
they've ruined the operation!'
'Signore?' Falcone said.
'God, I see it all now. It wasn't them just with the
Colosseum, but Al Shariz and Kilbeg, too. And
now this!' 'But how, Signore? How would
they know?'
'The
Johnson woman, everything flows from that. Somehow she found out and told them. God knows how.'
'So what do we do now, Signore?'
Fox turned to him with a hard light in his eyes. 'We exact
revenge,' Fox said. 'That's what I want,
revenge.' 'And how do we do
that?'
'I'll tell
you later. Right now, I want you and Russo to get down to the Colosseum and pick up Rossi and
Cameci. Go on, do it now.' He was angry.
'And make it fast.'
'Signore.'
Falcone
left, picked up Russo from his room, and filled him in as they went down in the elevator to get the
car.
Russo said, 'He's too angry, and being too angry
isn't good.'
'You don't have to tell me,' Falcone said.
In the car on the way to the Colosseum, he phoned Don Marco in New
York and brought him up to date.
'Ah God, Aldo, can't he see?
They're looking for him to come after them. He
should just cut his losses, get out of
there.'
'He won't do
that, Don Marco. He's an angry man.' 'And insane to go after them. But then, Jack was always
headstrong.'
Falcone hesitated, then said the unthinkable. 'Do you wish me to
take care of him, Don Marco?'
'No, Aldo. No matter what
he's done, he's my nephew, flesh of my
flesh. I'm coming over there. I'll leave New York within the hour.
You stay in dose touch.'
'Of course.'
'Aldo. I need your total loyalty in this.'
'You have it as always, Don Marco.'
Besides the Gulfstream, the family operated a
Golden Eagle twin-engine aircraft out of
Bardsey Aero Club outside London. It was
useful for local flights, the kind where you had to
put down on short runways, so it was
particularly good for Hellsmouth. Fox
called the pilot now, an ageing, ex-RAF pilot named Swan, and got him at home.
'Mr Fox, what can I do for you?'
'I need a flight in a couple
of hours to Hellsmouth. Can you manage
that?'
'If you say
so, Mr Fox. It might be a rough landing. It's pretty dark.'
'I don't care if you put us down on its belly, just so
you get us there.'
As you say, sir.'
When Dillon arrived at Stable Mews, Fox, Russo,
Falcone, Rossi and Cameci were waiting in a large black
van.
Dillon got out
with Blake and gave him the key to the house. 'There you go. I'll be back later. I'll go and see
what Ferguson wants.'
He got back into the taxi and it moved away. Blake walked
slowly towards the door, and the van drove up
and braked. Rossi and Cameci were out and had him in seconds.
Blake tried to struggle but had little
strength. Fox leaned across Russo, who
was at the wheel.
'It's my turn now, Johnson. Get him in the back. You
know what to do, Falcone.'
They dragged Blake in and
Falcone produced a hypodermic. 'Now this
will really make you feel good,' he said and jabbed it into the
right arm.
Blake
continued to struggle, but then everything slipped
away and he was still.
Bardsey operated a twenty-four-hour service
that handled the ever-increasing volume
of private planes and executive jets
that Heathrow didn't welcome any more. For internal
flights, there was no particular security. Swan
was waiting for them.
Fox said, 'We'll take off right away. I don't want to hang
around. I'm a little worried about my friend
here. He's had too much to
drink.'
'Will there be a return, Mr Fox?' Swan asked.
'Not tonight. You wait at the
airstrip for further instructions.'
Swan, only too well aware of the kind of people he
was dealing with, said, 'As you say, sir,' went
and logged flight details.
Rossi and Cameci took Blake up the steps, Russo followed, and Fox
turned to Falcone. 'Phone the caretaker, old Carter.
Tell him I want the fireplaces lit, but I don't
want him in the house. He can go
home.'
As you say, Signore.'
Fox boarded the Eagle, and Falcone got on his mobile and made the
call. When he finished, Falcone followed and Swan
pulled up the steps and dosed the Airstair
door. As he went up to the cockpit, Fox
reached out to Falcone.
'Give me the phone.'
He took out a card, a digest of information Maud Jackson
had given him, found Ferguson's number in
Cavendish Square and dialled
it.
'Charles Ferguson.'
'Jack Fox. Is Dillon there?'
'Why, Mr Fox. And how are you this evening?' 'Shove it, Ferguson.
Give me Dillon.'
Ferguson handed the phone to Dillon, and he and Hannah stood
up.
'Why, Jack, so sorry to hear your bad news.'
'Yeah, well, it's nothing
compared to the news I have for you,
Dillon. I've just grabbed Blake Johnson, and I'm taking
him to hell, but not, alas, back. I saw you
clear off in the cab, Dillon, and I got
him before he opened the door. If you use your brains, you might come up with where I'm
taking him, and that would please me no
end.'
He switched
off before Dillon could reply, and Dillon turned to Hannah and Ferguson. 'He's got Blake. He said
he's taking him to hell but not back.'
He frowned. 'Hellsmouth, his place in
Cornwall, it's got to be. Let me use the phone.'
Hannah said, 'Dillon, no,
it's a trap. He made it easy for you to
guess, and now he'll kill you, too.'
'That may be, Hannah. But I
can't leave Blake there alone.'
He
dialled the Holland Park safe house and got Helen Black.
'Bad news. The bastards have kidnapped Blake
Johnson. Put the Major on.'
Roper said, 'Here I am, Sean. What's the deal?' Dillon told
him.
Roper said,
'Give me a couple of minutes at my computer.'
'Good man.'
Roper was back very quickly. 'Yes, besides the Gulfstream,
the Solazzo family have a Golden Eagle. You
know that plane?'
'I've flown one many times,'
Dillon said. 'It's excellent for short
runways.'
'Well,
that's what they have at the Hellsmouth estate. There's an old RAF feeder station from the Second
World War. The nearest decent airfield
is RAF, St Just, twenty miles away. It's
an air-sea rescue set-up, helicopters, long runway.'
'Thanks, old son.'
'You're going in hard, I take it.'
'You could say that.'
'I wish I could be with you. I'll stay on the
computer, in case you need me. Just a
minute.' There was a pause, and Roper
spoke again. 'The Golden Eagle took off twenty minutes ago. The slot booked says Cornwall,
Hellsmouth, six passengers.'
'And one of those is Blake. Thanks, Roper.'
Dillon said, 'Hellsmouth, they've gone down in a Golden Eagle from
Bardsey. Six passengers.' He punched another number on the
phone.
'Sean, what are you doing?' Hannah said.
'Well, I'm not phoning the
Cornish police. They're a fine body of
men, but not for a job like this. I'm calling Farley Field.'
'What for?' she demanded.
'Because he's going after them,' Ferguson said. 'I
know my Sean.'
'He said to hell but not back,' Dillon said. 'Well, I'll follow him
to hell.'
A voice on the receiver said, 'Farley Field.'
'Dillon. Get me Squadron Leader Lacey, if he's there.'
'Actually, I just saw him in the mess. Hang
on.' Lacey was there quickly. 'Is that
you, Dillon?'
'We're going into action, and I mean now.'
'What's the score?'
'Hellsmouth, near Lizard Point in Cornwall. It's a small airstrip,
so I need a parachute landing.'
'I know that area. RAF St Just is not too far away.' 'Exactly, so
you drop me, then land at St Just.'
'Jesus, Dillon, you're at it again, saving the world.'
'No, saving Blake Johnson's
life. Speak to the quartermaster.
Brownings, AK47s, parachutes for two. I'd say six
hundred feet.'
'You're mad, Sean, but let me get on with it.'
Dillon put the phone down and
Hannah Bernstein said, 'Gear for two
parachutists. What the hell are you talking about?'
'Well, not the SAS. There isn't time. I've someone
in mind, and I'll go and see him now. If
you want to see me again, it will be at
Farley Field.'
'You're just going to execute all those people, aren't you,
Dillon?' she said angrily.
Dillon turned to Ferguson. 'She's a lovely woman,
Brigadier, but I've had it up to here
with her morality. I'm more interested
in saving a good man's life,' and he turned and walked out.
Hannah turned and said, 'He's mad, sir.'
'No, Superintendent. He's Dillon.'
Harry Salter, Billy, Joe and Sam Hall were in
the end booth at the Dark Man enjoying
large Scotches when Dillon came
in.
'Sean, my old
son,' Harry Salter said. 'Did we do it or did we do it?'
'Fox has kidnapped Blake,' Dillon said. 'Flown off to this estate
he has in Cornwall with four of his heavies.'
There was silence. Salter
said, 'What are you going to do?'
'I
can't leave it, they might chop him. I'm flying down
in an hour from Farley Field. I'll drop over
the estate by parachute. Try and catch
them with their pants down. It's got to
be a drop, the landing field there is too short for a Gulfstream.
The nearest RAF base is twenty miles away.'
Billy said, 'Fox and four
makes five, Dillon, and you're going in
alone?'
'No, Billy, I'm going in with you.'
'You must be bleeding mad,' Harry Salter said.
Dillon ignored him. 'Billy, you've heard of Arnhem in the
Second World War, all those paratroopers going
in? There was one major, an army surgeon, who'd never done a
jump in his life, but they needed a
doctor. He survived just fine and so
will you. Billy, trust me. You jump out, pull the
cord at six hundred feet, you hit the ground in
twenty-five seconds, and that's all there is to it.'
Salter said, 'You're crazy.'
But Billy was smiling all over his face. 'I've said it
before, Dillon, you're just like me. You
don't give a stuff. Just show me the
way.'
'Well, if he
goes, I'm bleeding going,' Salter said. 'Even if I'm only on the sidelines.'
'Right,' Dillon said. 'Then let's do it.'