Lammas night

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Lammas night Page 30

by Katherine Kurtz


  After a few more questions, Graham turned the interrogation over to Michael, whose German was better than his own, and drew William aside. The prince was tight-jawed with outrage.

  "I take it you followed most of that," Graham murmured, keeping his eyes on Michael and the prisoner. "I wasn't sure how rusty your German might have become."

  "Not rusty enough, it seems," William replied. "I still can't beheve some of the things I just heard. How did he get involved in something like that? More to the point right now, who vetted him before he came on my staff? I didn't even know he spoke German."

  "I have some ideas I'll follow through on that," Graham said. "Considering who else he named, it shouldn't be too difficult to track down. Fascinating little expose on the Thule Group, though. Charming folk, aren't they?"

  William shivered and glanced at the floor. "It was sickening. How could anyone do that to another human being? I can't even imagine doing it to an animal! Could he possibly be making it up?"

  Graham shook his head, remembering the Dieter photographs. "Definitely not. Between the drug and our utilization of his own conditioning, he isn't capable of lying. At very least, he believes that's what happened, even if a lot of it were faked to look that way for the initiation, so they could blackmail him later on. That isn't likely, however. The Thulists are noted for their sadistic rituals. Ask Grubaugh about it someday if you want the really gory details."

  "Jesus Christ!"

  "I assure you, he has absolutely nothing to do with this. The question now is, what do you want to do with our friend?"

  William snorted. "Have we really got a choice? Oh, I could cover his absence for a few days if you thought you could get anything more out of him, but it all comes 'round to the same decision in the end. He has to go—and the sooner it's done, the less chance of arousing outside suspicion."

  "I'm forced to agree. Let's see if Michael and the brigadier concur."

  Wells was still muttering in a broken mixture of German and English as they came back, but his words no longer made any sense. His head wove back and forth aimlessly between the brigadier's hands, his eyes focused with dread on something only he could see. Michael looked troubled as he glanced up at Graham.

  "All I'm getting now is Nazi dogma and party slogans, sir— and something about eyes staring at him. Could someone be trying to link in with him?"

  "If they are, they can't be getting anything coherent," Graham murmured. "Did you get anything else out of him?"

  Michael drew a deep breath and seemed to pull himself together. "He did spill one other interesting bit. It seems he placed a trunk call to Scotland sometime in the past week— after you and Prince William set up tonight's guest list, since that's what he rang to report. Until this evening, he was convinced that the prince was the mastermind behind whatever is being planned—though he suspected all along that you were involved. Gray. Apparently, something about the Plymouth trip didn't set quite right, and he knew you'd made the arrangements. In any case, both your names were mentioned when he talked to Scotland. Sorry, sir," he concluded, glancing apologetically at William.

  William's jaw tightened, but he only looked to Graham. Graham allowed himself a weary, resigned sigh.

  "I don't suppose you got any names for 'them'?" he asked.

  "No names, but I do have a number," Michael replied, looking a little more confident as he handed across a slip of paper. "He either doesn't know or won't say who it actually was. His contact used a code name which changed according to the date. Wells ordinarily receives his instructions by letter drop or post, but there wasn't time in this case. I got the location of the drop, and there's a code book in his room back at Buck House. Shall I try to trace the number when we get back?"

  With a distracted nod, Graham memorized the number and gave back the paper. He was willing to bet a year's salary that it would connect with one of the high-bom names Wells had already mentioned. That was not sufficient to save the unfortunate Wells, however.

  "Good work, Michael. Please do. William, we'll need that code book as soon as possible. I'll ask you to collect it, if you will."

  "Of course."

  Graham folded his arms across his chest and sighed, then glanced down once more at the nearly oblivious Wells. He did not much like this part of his work.

  "Is there anything else I should know, Captain Jordan?" he said formally, finally looking up at Michael. "Any reason to continue this questioning?"

  Michael stiffened, immediately aware What Graham was asking.

  "No, sir. Not in my opinion."

  "Thank you. I know that was not an easy answer to give. Wesley, do you agree?"

  "Regretfully, yes. If we let him come out of this, he'll spill his guts to his chiefs on the Second Road as soon as he's able." He sighed and dropped his hands to the condemned man's shoulders. "Poor lad, maybe he'll get things right in the next go-through," he murmured sofdy.

  "Right. That's it, then," Graham said after a minute pause. With brisk efficiency and before anyone had time to think too much about it, he shouldered Denton aside and emptied the rest of the syringe into Wells's vein. Wells subsided almost instantly into unconsciousness.

  "Denny, I'll need a lethal dose to finish this," Graham said quietly, beginning to remove the strips of tape that held the syringe in place. "Michael, I take it you found the Rolls?"

  Only as Denton withdrew to prepare what was ordered did Michael rouse himself with a start, exchanging a slightly queasy look with the tight-lipped William.

  "He hadn't hidden it very well, sir," Michael said, beginning to regain his composure. "He'd left it in a lay-by, less than a mile from here. I brought it around to the back entrance via the rear gate. None of the guests saw it."

  "Fine. Where's your mother?"

  "Seeing Dame Enuna off. Everyone else has gone. She sent the servants off to bed, and the house is secure. Flynn stayed. He's patrolling the grounds with your other two men."

  "Very good. Wesley, would you get his coat, please?"

  As the brigadier complied, Graham left the last strip of tape in place and began untying Wells's slack arms.

  "Now, Michael, here's what I want you to do when we're finished here," he continued. "There's a bad stretch of road with a diversion a few miles toward London, Do you know the place?"

  "Yes, sir."

  "Good. With the blackout, it would be very easy for someone in a hurry to miss a turn and go into the ditch. Make sure the car bums. Denny will go with you."

  "Yes, sir."

  As Graham pulled loose the last loops of cord and the remaining strip of tape, Denton returned with a full syringe; a stethoscope hung around his neck. Blood welled briefly from the needle still in Wells's arm as Graham switched syringes, and he wiped it off in a wad of cotton. Before his thumb could shift to the plunger, William laid a restraining hand on his arm.

  "I'll take over from here. Gray," the prince whispered. "It's my job, not yours. He worked for me."

  A little stiffly, Graham exchanged places with the prince and stood aside. William's face was unreadable as he bent over the syringe and its sure but merciful death. When it was done, William handed the empty syringe to Denton and pressed a cotton wad over the tiny puncture wound while his other hand sought the pulse point in the flaccid wrist. He closed his eyes when Denton moved in to slip the bell of the stethoscope inside Wells's shirt.

  After a few minutes, Denton withdrew, and the brigadier bent to brush his lips lightly against Wells's hair, gently letting the head loll forward on the still chest.

  "Go in peace, son," Ellis whispered.

  William's eyes opened at the words. As he straightened and let himself be eased aside, Graham's arm around his shoulders, his hands fell awkwardly to his sides. He watched numbly as Denton and Michael hoisted Wells's limp form between them and carried him out of the room. The brigadier followed with the dead man's coat, closing the door softly behind him.

  William breathed out slowly, then pulled out a cigarette and
sat in the wing-back chair the brigadier had lately occupied. His hands were shaking as he tried to light up, and Graham finally took the lighter away from him and gave him flame.

  "You didn't have to do that, you know," Graham said, pulling his chair closer and dropping the warm lighter into William's hand before straddling the chair again. "I told you that before. I was prepared to do it."

  Smoke wreathed around William as he shook his head and slouched in his chair. "No, it was my responsibility. I'd just forgotten how much I hated this part of the business. I thought I'd left the killing behind when they made me quit the service."

  "I'm not sure we ever leave it behind," Graham replied, leaning his chin on his folded arms atop the chair back. "Hating it, I mean. I'm not sure we ever should. It's a weighty thing to take a life—and no one should enjoy being an executioner, even when the cause is just. You didn't do it out of vengeance."

  "No."

  The talk of killing reminded Graham of other lives taken, and he wondered again why it was only recently that more detailed memories of his own deeds should begin to surface. He shook the mood with a blink and a slight shake of his head—it had been a grim enough night already without bringing that in—and found William staring at him. He must have been away for longer than he thought.

  "Where were you?" William asked, breathing out smoke. "You looked like you were seeing ghosts."

  Graham smiled grimly, though he did not lift his head from his arms. "Perhaps I was. Does it matter?"

  "Yes."

  "Very well. I was thinking about other deaths for which I've been responsible. Does that make you feel any better?"

  "Not really."

  The ash on William's cigarette was getting long, and he rose with a cupped hand under it, looking for an ash tray. The only one was on the desk, next to the black bag and Denton's empty syringes. William stared at them for a moment, the cigarette dripping ash into his hand, then stubbed it out and came back to Graham, dusting off his hands, eyes downcast.

  "So what happens next?" he asked.

  "I have some loose ends to wrap up. You should get some sleep while you can." Graham glanced at his watch. "It's after one now. You may have four or five hours, at most, before someone finds your car and the authorities come inquiring. At least they'll know to ask here first, since it's known you were staying with Wesley for a few days. Until that happens, you ought to get some sleep."

  "Sleep?" William snorted. "You don't really expect me to sleep after all of this, do you? Even if I hadn't just killed a man in cold blood, there was all that other."

  He dropped heavily into the wing-back chair again, then, cocked his head at Graham, eyes narrowing.

  "You started to tell me something just before we found Denny and Wells. I asked if I'd said anything wrong, and you said that I might have unwittingly—what? You never got to finish."

  Graham sighed, wondering now whether he should even mention it and give William one more thing to brood on. There had been no time to think about it while they resolved the Wells crisis, but now the imagery of those kneeling with their hands between William's snapped into clear focus. Even more chilling were the words they had spoken at the end: "God save the King!" If only he could be certain they were not referring to William.

  "Gray, what is it?" William persisted.

  Studying the carpet through the rungs on the back of his chair, Graham grimaced and resigned himself to the uncomfortable task of trying to articulate his worry without also putting ideas in William's head.

  "Very well, it was the oath taking," he said softly. "I'm not sure you're aware how some people may have seen it. I think it might be construed as something more than a simple homage."

  "Why? Was there some esoteric factor of which I wasn't aware?" William sat forward cautiously. "You know, of course, that I exchanged Masonic countersigns with Sir Robert when I took his oath. There was nothing unusual about that."

  "No, of course not. What I was going to point out was that you might unwittingly have cast yourself in the role of another Edward III. It's probably remote—at least I hope so—but the parallel is an odd coincidence, in any case."

  "Edward III? I don't know what you're talking about."

  "Think back to that night in London when we discussed the founding of the Order of the Garter," Graham said. "Do you remember how you told me that a lady lost her garter and Edward picked it up and spoke his immortal words?"

  "Yes, of course, but—"

  "What did I tell you was the significance of that act, in esoteric terms?"

  William leaned his head against the back of the chair, kneading at his eyes with the heels of his hands.

  "Do you really want me to remember that far back?" he muttered. "Let's see. He—ah—had taken on the official protectorship of the old religion."

  "That was the lesser possibility," Graham agreed. "What was the greater?"

  "That he—ah—assumed the position of god incarnate for his people and actual head of the—" William sat bolt upright with a start. "Bloody hell, Gray, I didn't do that, did I?"

  Graham smiled bleakly. "I certainly hope not. I can't say how they all construed it, but I'd be willing to bet you that at least some of them read it that way. You certainly assumed a kind of protectorship. That was inevitable, I suppose."

  "But that's an entirely different—"

  "Yes, it is. But don't you remember the look on Conwy's face? He said, Tn my religion we do not kneel to any man.' But he'll kneel to a god. Will. So would a lot of the others."

  After a short, strained silence, William cleared his throat.

  "That's—ridiculous. I'm not their god—and I don't know the first thing about magic so far as practice is concerned."

  "I know that. Let's hope I'm wrong. Anyway, it isn't something we'll resolve by further discussion tonight." He glanced at his watch again. "You really should try to get some sleep. The others will be back soon, and then I'll have to get back to London. Mr. Wells has given us a lot of work tonight."

  "You go ahead when you have to," William murmured. "I really don't feel like sleeping."

  Graham gazed at him compassionately, then stood and moved his chair around so he could sit on it straight on, knees nearly touching William's. He did not really want to pull out the last item in his reserve where William was concerned, but perhaps it was time. The prince definitely should be asleep when the authorities arrived. As William looked up at him quizzically, Graham sat forward a little, fingers lightly intertwined, elbows resting on his knees.

  "If you want, I can help you to sleep," he said softly. "With something from your black bag over there?" William shook his head quickly. "No, thank you."

  "Actually, that isn't what I had in mind at all. You don't remember because I asked you not to, but that night at Oak-wood, after we talked to Alix, you gave me a very special gift. You gave me your trust," he added at William's look of question. "That trust is a very powerful tool. If you want to learn, I can teach you how to use it now, to help you to sleep."

  William stared at him incredulously. Graham could almost hear the thoughts racing by as the prince reviewed that other night and could find no hint of what Graham was talking about. As William shook his head, still obviously unable to remember, Graham knew that the trigger he had set would work. The memory block would not be so complete if that were not so.

  "I don't know what you're talking about," William said. "Where were we?"

  "In your bedroom. I won't go into details because you'll remember them yourself soon enough, but you went into a hypnotic trance for me. You can do it again if you want to and remember everything that happened that night."

  William squeezed his eyes shut for several seconds, then opened them, still staring at Graham blankly. "I don't think you're lying, but I honestly don't remember what you're talking about. I went into a trance?"

  Graham nodded slowly.

  "What—" William swallowed audibly. "What did I say?"

  "Nothing incriminating,"
Graham replied with a reassuring smile. "I think you may have said 'yes' once or twice. Alix had asked me to give you a sedative so she and I could work undisturbed. I put it in your nightcap, but I wouldn't give it to you without telling you first. Even after I persuaded you to drink it, you were fighting it. Then you went into a trance, just to show me that you trusted me, I suppose—even if you weren't sure we trusted you."

  "Why don't I remember, then?"

  '*I felt it was better you not remember just then. I did leave you with a posthypnotic trigger like you saw me use with Michael, however. The very fact that you can't remember is proof positive that it took. Would you care to try it?"

  A tiny smile was playing at the comers of William's mouth, as if he could not quite make up his mind whether Graham was serious, but the trust was there, too.

  "All right," he said simply. "What do I have to do?"

  "Just close your eyes for now," Graham said. "In a moment, ril ask you to open them again, while you're in trance, because I want you to realize that you can. For now, just close them and take a deep breath."

  As William obeyed, Graham leaned forward slightly and laid his hand across the prince's forehead.

  "Let it out now and let go. Remember."

  Immediately, Graham felt the initial rigidity dissolve. He let himself relax a little as he took his hand away, sitting back in his chair. A slow, lazy smile was spreading across William's face.

  "It feels a little strange, doesn't it?" Graham said conversationally. "But I can see that you remember now. Stay in trance, but you can open your eyes if you want to. Tell me how you feel."

  William opened his eyes and blinked several times, slowly. **I thought I'd feel groggy or something."

  "No. You did the first time, but that was because of the drug. Right now, you probably feel—unmimm—perhaps a bit lethargic, like you haven't much inertia of your own. If I were to stop talking and leave you alone, with nothing to think about, you'd probably drift back into a sort of floating state. You might even go to sleep."

 

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