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Flyaway / Windfall

Page 47

by Desmond Bagley


  Hardin pondered for a moment. ‘I don’t know who is on the CIA station here right now. I think I’ll go along to the Embassy and see if there’s anyone there I know.’

  ‘Will they talk to you?’

  He shrugged. ‘It depends. The CIA is no different than any other outfit; some are bastards, others are right guys.’ He grimaced. ‘But sometimes it’s difficult to tell them apart. Gunnarsson turned out to be a bastard.’

  ‘All right,’ Stafford said. ‘But don’t go to the Embassy until we’re sure that Gunnarsson isn’t there. I’ll see Chip about that.’ He smiled. ‘He can be helpful in that way as much as he likes. I’ll have him check Gunnarsson and let you know.’

  Stafford went back to his room to find the telephone ringing. It was Chip. ‘Where have you been?’ he asked. ‘You walked into the hotel and then disappeared off the face of the earth.’

  Stafford looked at his watch. Exchanging information with Hardin had taken most of the afternoon, ‘I had things to do,’ he said uninformatively.

  If silence could be said to have surprise in it then that silence had. At last Chip said, ‘Some items have come up. I’d like to see you.’

  ‘Come up.’

  When Chip came in he said, ‘What have you got?’

  ‘Brice,’ said Chip. ‘You wanted to know about Brice in Zimbabwe. But it was Rhodesia then. Harry and Mary Brice farmed near Umtali on the Sabi River. They had a son, Charles Brice. When UDI came and Rhodesia became independent Charles Brice had a quarrel with his parents and left the country. Later, when the guerillas became active, the farm was destroyed and Harry and Mary Brice were killed.’

  Stafford said, ‘That checks out with Brice’s story.’

  ‘Exactly,’ said Chip.

  ‘Where did you get it?’

  ‘I told you. The brothers in Zimbabwe are co-operative. You asked to have Brice checked there. He was checked.’

  ‘And he comes out whiter than white.’ Stafford did not spend much time thinking about that expression because he was thinking of this, yet another spectacular example of Chip’s efficiency. He said, ‘Chip, you must have quite an organization behind you. A while ago you needled me because you said I was withholding information. Now, just who the hell are you?’

  ‘Some questions are better not asked,’ Chip said.

  ‘All the same, I’m asking.’

  ‘And some questions are better not answered.’

  ‘That’s not good enough.’

  ‘It’s all you’re going to get,’ Chip said bluntly. ‘Max, don’t stir things up—don’t muddy the water. It could cause trouble. Trouble for you, for everybody. Just let it slide and accept the help. We have helped, you know.’

  ‘I know you’ve helped,’ said Stafford. ‘But I don’t know why. I want to know why.’

  ‘And I’m not going to tell you. Just study Kenyan history since the British left and draw your own conclusions.’ He paused. ‘I believe you brought up a certain subject with Nair and he told you to keep your mouth shut. It’s advice I strongly advise you to follow. Now let’s get on with it. Dirk Hendriks flew in from London this morning. He’s staying at the New Stanley. Do you still want him watched?’

  ‘Yes. How did you know he came in this morning?’

  ‘As I once said, I have friends at the airport. We check the passenger list of every London flight—every European flight, come to that. That’s how we know that your Mr Hardin came in this morning.’

  Stafford sat up straight. ‘Are you having us watched, too?’

  Chip laughed. ‘Simmer down. My friend at the airport relayed the information as a matter of course. Is that where you’ve been all afternoon; talking with Hardin? I ought to have guessed. Did he find out what you wanted to know?’

  Two could play at withholding information. Stafford said, ‘It was a cold trail, Chip. Hendrykxx was an old man. You can’t unravel an eighty-year life all that quickly. Ben is an experienced investigator, I know, but he’s not that bloody good.’

  ‘A pity,’ said Chip.

  ‘Where is Corliss now?’

  ‘Not far. If you want him we can produce him inside an hour.’

  ‘But you’re not going to tell me where he is.’

  ‘Correct. You’re learning, Max.’ He looked at his watch. ‘Gunnarsson will be here before sunset—back in the New Stanley. You know, it’s going to be hard to pin him down.’

  ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘Neither he nor Corliss has committed a crime against Kenyan law. Hendrykxx’s will was drawn up by a Jersey lawyer and presumably will come under Jersey law. If Gunnarsson puts Corliss in as a substitute for Hendrix that is no crime here; no Kenyan has been defrauded. We can’t hold either of them on those grounds. So how are you going to go about it?’

  ‘I don’t know,’ Stafford said glumly. ‘All I know is that you’re talking like a lawyer.’

  ‘How do you know I’m not a lawyer?’ said Chip.

  ‘I don’t. You’re a bloody chameleon. If the Kenyan authorities can’t hold Gunnarsson then there’s nothing to stop him leaving. I don’t think he will leave, not until he knows what’s happened to Corliss, but he might. It would be nice if something were to stop him.’

  ‘He could always lose his passport,’ offered Chip. ‘It wouldn’t stop him, but it would delay him until he got papers from the American Embassy.’

  ‘And how would he lose his passport?’ Stafford asked.

  Chip spread his hands. ‘People do all the time. Strange, isn’t it? It causes considerable work for the consular staffs.’ He stood up. ‘I must go; I have work to do, arrangements to make. Take it easy, Max; don’t work up a sweat.’ He turned to go, then dropped some newspapers on the table. ‘I thought you might like to read the news.’

  He went and Stafford lay on the bed and lit a cigarette. If Chip was a member of the Kenya People’s Union he certainly would not come right out and say so, and he had not. On the other hand, if he was not a member why would he imply that he was? Or had that been the implication? Had Stafford read too much into Chip’s equivocations?

  But there was more. Whether he was or was not a member of a banned political party why was he being so bloody helpful to Max Stafford to the point of kidnapping Corliss and stealing Gunnarsson’s passport, both of which were criminal acts? Stafford was damned sure it was not at the behest of some Indian back in London who liked Curtis.

  He picked up the newspapers and scanned the front pages. The kidnapping of the tour group and the disappearance of Hendrix had made headlines in both the Standard and the Nation. Perhaps, if it had not been for Hendrix, the story would have been played down; Stafford suspected that government pressure would suppress anything that made for a bad public image. But Hendrix made it different—no one had vanished before.

  An editorial in the Standard called for an immediate and extremely strong note of protest to the Tanzanian government and demanded that Hendrix be returned, dead or alive. Someone from the Nation had tried to interview the American Ambassador but he had not been available for comment. The inevitable unnamed spokesman said the American authorities regarded the matter in the most serious light and that steps were being taken. He did not say in which direction.

  In neither newspaper was there a report of the interview Chip and Stafford had given to Eddy Ukiru, the reporter from the Standard, and his companion from the Nation. No mention of Stafford, of Chip, of Nair, of Curtis. No photographs. It was as though their part in this nine day wonder had never happened. Of course, they were pretty small beer compared to Hendrix but it seemed sloppy journalism to Stafford. He tossed the newspapers aside with the thought that perhaps Ukiru and his mate had not met their deadline.

  It was only when he was on the verge of sleep that night that he realized he had never told Chip at any time that Hendrykxx’s will had been drawn up in Jersey. So how did Chip know?

  EIGHTEEN

  Dirk Hendriks drove down the winding road of the escarpment towards the Rift Vall
ey and Naivasha and towards what he always held in his mind but never mentioned aloud—die Kenya Stasie. Not that it was fully operational yet but it would be once this business was over. Still, Frans Potgeiter had done a good job considering the slim funding that had been available. He was a good man.

  He passed the church at the bottom of the hill which had been built by Italian prisoners during the war and turned towards Naivasha. His eyes flitted over the signpost that indicated the road to Narok and he smiled. Potgeiter had succeeded in the Masai Mara, too, after others had failed miserably. There had been too much bungling, too much interference. As the English proverb said: ‘too many cooks spoil the broth’. But everything was coming right at last.

  He turned off the main road short of Naivasha and took the road which ran back along the lake edge past the Lake Naivasha Hotel and on to Ol Njorowa. It was precisely midday when he pulled up outside the gatehouse and blew a blast on his horn. The gate keeper came running. ‘Yes, sah?’

  ‘Mr Hendriks to see Mr Brice. I’m expected.’

  ‘Sah.’ The gate keeper went back and the gates opened. As Hendriks drove through, the gate keeper shouted warningly ‘Pole pole!’ Hendriks did not know what that meant until he hit the first sleeping policeman at a speed which jarred his teeth. He slowed the car and reflected that he had better learn Swahili. It would be useful in the future.

  He parked outside the Administration Block and went inside. In the cool hall he approached the reception desk behind which sat a muscular young black who was dressed neatly in white shirt and shorts. Another young Kenyan was sitting at a side desk hammering a typewriter. ‘Mr Hendriks to see Mr Brice,’ Hendriks repeated.

  ‘Yes, sir; he’s expecting you. Come this way.’ Hendriks followed, passing through a wicker gate and along a corridor towards Brice’s office. He nodded approvingly. Potgeiter had it organized well; no one was going to wander about the place unobserved.

  Brice was sitting behind his desk and looked up with a smile as Hendriks came in. The Kenyan left, closing the door behind him, and Hendriks said, ‘Goeie middag, meneer Potgeiter; hoe gaan dit?’

  The smile abruptly left Brice’s face. ‘No Afrikaans,’ he said sharply. ‘And my name is Brice—always Brice. Remember that!’

  Hendriks smiled and dropped into a chair. ‘Think the place is bugged?’

  ‘I know it isn’t.’ Brice tapped on the desk for emphasis. ‘But don’t get into bad habits.’

  ‘I’m a South African,’ said Hendriks. ‘I’m supposed to know Afrikaans.’

  ‘And I’m not,’ snapped Brice. ‘So stick to English—always English.’

  ‘English it will be,’ agreed Hendriks. ‘Even when we’re conspiring.’

  Brice nodded—a gesture which closed the subject. ‘How did you get on in London?’

  ‘All right. That old fool, Farrar, is making the distribution next week.’ Hendriks laughed. ‘He gave me a cheque for a hundred thousand pounds on account as soon as we got back. Your coffers should be filling up soon.’

  ‘And about time,’ said Brice. ‘I’m tired of working on a shoestring.’ He shook his head. ‘The way it was set up in Europe was too complicated. We ought to have had direct control. Farrar asked some sticky questions when he was here.’

  ‘It had to be set up in Jersey,’ said Hendriks. ‘Do you think we wanted to pay the British Treasury death duties on forty million pounds? This operation wasn’t set up to give money to the Brits. As for Farrar, Mandeville kept a tight rein on him. Farrar is a legal snob; he likes working with an eminent British barrister. And Mandeville is a good man. The best.’ Hendriks smiled thinly. ‘He ought to be, considering what we pay him.’

  Brice made a dismissive gesture. ‘I never understood the European end of this and I didn’t want to. I had my own troubles.’

  You had troubles! thought Hendriks bitterly, but said nothing. His mind went back to the moment when Alix happily announced that she was pregnant. That had come as a shock because if the child was born before Hendrykxx died it would automatically become one of his heirs and that could not be allowed. The kid would inherit two million of their precious pounds and it would bring Alix right into the middle of the operation.

  He had thought of having the will changed and had talked it over with Mandeville but Mandeville had said they would not get it past Farrar. Hendrykxx was then senile and not in his right mind, and Farrar was rectitude itself. So Hendrykxx had to go before the baby was born. It had been risky—murder always was—but it had been done. And all that was on top of the trouble caused by Henry Hendrix who had dropped out of sight in America. Still, that problem had been solved—or had it?

  Brice said, ‘Your cousin Henry was one of your problems you wished on me. Why the hell was he allowed to come to Africa?’

  ‘We lost him,’ said Hendriks. ‘And Pretoria was asleep. By the time they woke up back home to the fact that Henry was important because the old man was dead Farrar had employed an American agency and was looking for him himself. The agency man got to Henry about ten minutes before we did.’ He snorted. ‘Ten minutes and three inches.’

  Brice raised his eyebrows. ‘Three inches?’

  ‘Our man took a shot at him. Hit him in the shoulder. Three inches to the right and Henry wouldn’t have been a problem ever again.’

  ‘Well, he’s no problem now,’ said Brice. ‘I’ve seen to that. Have you read the papers lately?’

  Hendriks nodded. ‘It made a couple of paragraphs in the English papers.’ He leaned forward. ‘You’re wrong, Brice. Henry is still a problem. Where’s the bloody body? We need the body. His three million quid is tied up until death is proved. We don’t want to wait seven years to collect. As it is he’s just disappeared.’

  Brice sighed. He stood up and went to the window. With his back to Hendriks he said, ‘He’s not the only one to have disappeared. Two of my men didn’t come back.’

  ‘What!’ Hendriks also rose to his feet. ‘What did you say?’

  Brice turned. ‘You heard me. I’ve lost two men.’

  ‘You’d better explain,’ Hendriks said tightly.

  ‘It all went exactly the way I planned. You’ve read the newspaper reports. The stories those tourists told were exactly right except for one thing. They were supposed to see the body and they didn’t. It wasn’t there—and neither were my men.’

  ‘Could Henry have jumped them and got away? How were they armed?’

  ‘Standard Tanzanian army gear. Kalashnikovs.’

  Hendriks shook his head. ‘I don’t think Henry would have the stuffing in him to tackle those. In any case if he got away he’d be back by now.’ He thought for a moment. ‘Perhaps the Tanzanians got him. The real ones, I mean.’

  ‘I doubt it,’ said Brice. ‘The Legislature is in an uproar and the Foreign Minister is putting pressure on the Tanzanians. Some of my boys are on the border with a watching brief. The Tanzanians are scouring the area south of the Masai Mara. Why would they do that if they already had Henry—or his corpse?’

  Hendriks said coldly. ‘So that leaves one answer. Your men are cheating on you.’

  ‘Not those boys,’ said Brice decisively. ‘They’re two of my best.’ He paused, then added, ‘Besides, they’ve got their families back home to think of.’

  ‘So what’s the answer?’

  ‘I don’t know.’ Brice rubbed his eyes and said sourly, ‘Who dreamed up this crazy operation, anyway?’

  ‘We did,’ said Hendriks flatly. ‘You and me.’

  Brice said nothing to that but merely shrugged. ‘Well, we’ll get most of the money in soon.’

  ‘That’s true,’ said Hendriks as he sat down again. ‘But it irks me to have three million tied up. I worked damned hard to get this money in here.’ He changed the subject. ‘Why did you announce an inheritance of only seven million? Isn’t that risky?’

  Brice spread his hands. ‘Who is going to check back to Jersey? Hell, man; I’ll bet not one in a hundred Kenyans even knows where Jers
ey is. One in a thousand.’

  ‘But what if somebody does?’ persisted Hendriks.

  ‘No problem,’ said Brice. ‘I’ll say I was misquoted—misunderstood. I’ll say that the seven million is the estimated annual income after the main fund has been invested. We have everything to gain and nothing to lose.’ He checked the time. ‘We’ll have lunch and then I’ll show you around. I didn’t show you the real stuff last time you were here. Farrar stuck closer than a leech.’

  ‘I’ll stay for lunch,’ said Hendriks. ‘But the rest can wait. I have got to get back to Nairobi and raise a stink. My long lost cousin has been lost again and what the hell are they doing about it? I must do the grieving relative bit to make it look right. Let’s go and eat. I’m hungry.’

  NINETEEN

  In Nairobi Gunnarsson was angry. His feet hurt and his back was sore but that was not the reason for his anger. What riled him was that he was being given the runaround in the American Embassy. ‘Damn it!’ he said. ‘I’ve been kidnapped and my friend is still missing. If I can’t see the Ambassador who the hell can I see? And don’t fob me off on any third clerk. I want action.’

  The clerk behind the counter sighed. ‘I’ll see what I can do.’ He moved away and picked up a telephone. ‘Is Mr Pasternak there?’

  ‘Speaking.’

  ‘There’s a guy here called Gunnarsson wanting to see the Ambassador. He has some crazy story about being kidnapped by Tanzanians and says his friend is still missing. I think he’s a nut, but I can’t get rid of him.’

  An incredulous silence bored into his ear, then Pasternak said, ‘Gleeson; don’t you read the papers? Watch TV? Listen to the radio?’

  ‘I’ve been on safari for two weeks,’ said Gleeson. ‘Just got back this morning from my vacation. Why? Something happened?’

  ‘Yeah; something happened,’ said Pasternak ironically. ‘Don’t let that guy get away; I’ll be right down. And catch up on the goddamn news for God’s sake.’ He hung up, opened his desk drawer to check that his recorder had a tape ready to go, then went downstairs to meet Gunnarsson.

 

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