by Jon Land
He sprinted for the taxi, lunged into the backseat out of breath.
“You all right, mate?” the cabbie asked him.
“Just drive.”
The cabbie started the meter. “Where to?”
“Just drive!”
The cabbie did just that.
Locke tried to control his thoughts in order to steady his panic. His breath still eluded him. He was hyperventilating. It had all been too much and now the reality was beginning to hit him, the cloak of shock starting to dissipate.
The gun was still in his pocket, still hot. He had killed a man! No training could have prevented the sick feeling lodged in the pit of his stomach. But the Colombian had tried to kill him; he had to remember that. His own life had been at stake.
Madness!
Charney would get him out of this. Thank God his friend had sent him the gun. Otherwise …
“Take me to the Dorchester,” Locke instructed the cabbie.
“We just passed it, mate.”
Locke flipped him a five-pound note. “Go back.”
The man grabbed the bill. “Cheers, mate.”
Something about the cabbie’s voice disturbed him, a distant ring of familiarity, but what?
Cheers, mate.
The accent was not quite British, it was laced with something more like …
Locke went cold. The man’s accent was Spanish!
Chris leaned forward and searched for a cabdriver identification form, found none. This wasn’t New York or Washington, after all. He had no way of knowing if such cards were required in London, where even the damn steering wheel was on the wrong side. Maybe he was letting his imagination run wild. The shock had been too much for him. A Spanish-speaking man had tried to kill him and now he was hearing Spanish accents everywhere. He tried to settle back but couldn’t.
The cabbie inched up the Hyde Park side of Park Lane away from the hotel. His eyes flirted with the rearview mirror. Locke sensed them watching him. He looked up and the eyes moved back to the road.
Stop it! Locke commanded himself, but something just wasn’t right. His defenses had snapped on. He felt for the .45 in his pocket.
The cab came to a halt at a red light. Locke glanced behind him and made out the Dorchester’s sign clearly four blocks back. Jump out, that was it, jump out while the cab was still stopped.
Chris tried the door. It was locked!
He searched for the knob. It had been cut off. He was trapped!
Locke felt the engine idling. He looked up. The cabbie held the steering wheel with only his right hand, his left was by his side.
The light turned green. Locke saw the cabbie’s shoulder shift suddenly and sensed what was happening. He threw himself forward over the seat, crashing his forearm into the back of the cabbie’s head. The man’s face snapped into the steering wheel. The car lurched crazily through the intersection and started to spin.
Locke saw the pistol in the cabbie’s hand, struggled to reach his wrist. He felt a set of rigid fingers smash the bridge of his nose. Pain exploded through his head. His eyes watered and blurred. He lost sight of the gun, forgot his own, grasped desperately about.
The pistol was coming toward him. Locke projected his entire frame into the front seat, trying to pin down the gun-wielding hand.
“Killer!” the cabbie screamed. “¡Carcinero! ¡Asesino!”
The same words Alvaradejo had used.
The car continued to spin, hopelessly out of control now. It slammed into a bus, bounced off, and crashed into a light pole. Locke was tossed forward into the windshield, his back striking first. The cabbie’s head snapped hard against the dashboard, recoiled crushed and bloodied. The door had blasted open on impact. Locke pushed himself toward it. The horn was blaring. Chris rolled out of the car onto the sidewalk where people were starting to approach.
Then he was being helped to his feet, his legs unsteady, his knees wobbly. It seemed his feet weren’t receiving signals from his brain. There was a throbbing pain in the back of his head and neck but, miraculously, no agonized sharpness indicating something had been broken or torn.
“There he is! There he is!”
The words were shouted in Spanish, and he could hear footsteps approaching from where he had just come. How many of them were there? First Alvaradejo, then the cabbie, now …
With a motion as desperate as it was sudden, Locke broke free of the men supporting him and rushed down the street. Behind him he heard orders being shouted in Spanish and men taking off after him. Pain racked his head and shoulders. His feet thumped against the sidewalk, sending jolts of agony through his entire spine. He was dizzy but knew he couldn’t stop. He didn’t dare look back, nor was there reason to, for he knew what would be there: men following, undoubtedly with guns. Alvaradejo had had a gun, the cabbie too. Chris could only hope the crowded street and abundance of witnesses would stop them from firing. He crashed through pedestrians, certain all eyes were upon him.
He sprinted down the sidewalk back toward the Dorchester. There would still be several streets to cross, and he would be an easy target all the way. He knew he had to keep moving in spite of the raging pain that made him want to give up. He thought of reaching for the pistol and making a stand here.
The .45 was gone! It must have fallen out during his struggle with the cabbie.
Locke heard more shouts in Spanish and swung back to see men—three, he thought—following in his path. He sped past the Dorchester, wind giving out and legs cramping.
Then he saw the red double-decker bus squealing to a halt at the corner of Park Lane and Curzon Street. He rushed toward it, nimbly dodging through fast-moving traffic. He prayed the small line of passengers would linger long enough for him to make it.
For an instant, it seemed they wouldn’t. Then a woman dropped her handbag and bent to retrieve it as the driver waited to close the doors. Locke reached the bus just as the woman lifted her handbag from the steps. He leaped in, the doors hissed closed, and the driver pulled the double-decker away.
Locke rode the bus for almost an hour. The exact time eluded him because his watch had been broken when he smashed into the windshield. The time allowed him to calm down and collect himself, letting his muscles loosen and the pain subside. So far as he could tell, all his injuries were minor, limited to a few cuts and bruises, the worst of which lay over the bridge of his nose where the cabbie’s fingers had landed.
Finally Chris saw a red call box up ahead and rose tentatively, reaching for the hand signal. His muscles responded sluggishly but without pain. He climbed out the middle set of doors and stumbled when his beaten legs reached cement. He staggered to the box and settled himself. Luckily he found the proper change in his pocket.
The number! What was the damn number?
Locke searched his scholar’s mind and found it.
“What is your message?” The drab male voice was more welcome than any he’d ever heard.
“Charney,” Locke muttered. “I need to reach Brian Charney.”
“What is your name and number?”
“Christopher Locke.” He read the man the call box’s number.
“Wait by the phone.”
The line clicked off. Chris replaced the receiver immediately.
It rang seconds later. Trembling, he jammed the plastic to his ear.
“Brian!”
“Chris, I’ve been trying to reach you. Where the hell have you been and what’s this about—”
Locke found his voice. “I killed Alvaradejo.”
“You what?”
“Brian, he tried to kill me! I let him set up the meeting just like you said and he tried to shoot me. If it wasn’t for the gun you left for me, I’d—”
“Wait a minute, what gun?”
“A man from Customs issued me one at the airport. On your orders, he said.”
“I never sent you a gun.”
“Then how—”
“That was the gift you mentioned in your message,” Ch
arney realized. “Oh, God, and you shot Alvaradejo with it… .”
“Because he tried to shoot me!”
“Take it easy, old buddy, I believe you. I’m just trying to put this thing together. Someone set you up.”
“I need help, Brian. You’ve gotta get me out of here. There was another man with a gun too, a cabdriver, and others chasing me, all screaming in Spanish.”
“Do you remember anything they said?”
“It was all pretty much the same. They kept repeating the words ‘butcher,’ ‘killer,’ and ‘animal’—singular and plural. And Alvaradejo said something like the souls of San Sebastian would be avenged.”
Silence filled the other end of the line.
“You there, Brian?”
“Yes, Chris. You’re sure he said San Sebastian?”
“Of course I’m sure. Does it mean anything to you?”
“It might.”
Locke looked around, feeling uncomfortable at staying in one place for so long. His shoes kicked nervously against the sidewalk.
“What do we do from here, Brian? They’ll still be looking for me. I might be able to make it back to the hotel if—”
“No!” Charney instructed. “It’s the first place they’d expect you to go. They’ll have a man waiting. Stay clear of it, do you hear me? I’ll meet you someplace else.”
“Where? When?”
“It’ll be a while. I’ve got to make some calls, sort things out. Say five P.M.”
“That’s five hours from now!”
“Four and a half. Believe me, it’s necessary. I’ve dealt with these situations before.” Charney paused. “Do you know St. James’s Park?”
“I’ve been there.”
“The bridge that cuts across the Chinese-style lakes?”
“I know it.”
“Be in the center of it at five P.M. That’ll give me the time I need.”
“To do what?”
“Call in the cavalry.”
The tall man saw his target swing away from the call box and stand there frozen against it, either relieved or exhausted. They had missed him in the park, missed him again in the streets. Those failures were about to be corrected.
The tall man quickened his pace. His hand felt for the butt of the revolver hidden under his jacket.
He had killed before, often and mostly well. This kill would be simple, and especially satisfying since others had failed.
The target moved from the call box.
The tall man started to pull the gun out. He would brush up against him, fire one neat shot that would be muffled against the target’s body, then escape. As simple as that. The tall man drew closer.
A woman with long blond hair smacked into him from behind, spilling the contents of her shopping bag. Annoyed, the tall man had begun to shove her aside when he felt her fingers grasp his elbow, pinning his gun hand to his side.
Then he saw her knife. It whipped up and across so fast that the tall man thought, incredibly, she had missed. Until he felt the warm blood spilling from the tear in his throat where her knife had found its mark. He crumpled to the sidewalk, dead an instant after he struck it.
The woman with long blond hair left him there amid her spilled shopping and walked away.
Chapter 8
LOCKE HUNG UP the phone still nervous, but not as frightened. Charney had gotten him into this mess and Charney would get him out. For now, though, he had time to kill.
He moved away from the call box and joined the sparse flow of pedestrian traffic, forcing himself to walk along. He was on Vauxhall Bridge near the Thames River. He wanted to get back to the commercial district where crowds abounded and he would stick out less. Walking was out of the question and he’d had his fill of taxis for the day. That left only one safe alternative by Locke’s count. He saw an entrance to the London Underground up ahead and moved toward it, taking the steps slowly.
It took him awhile to figure out the way the lines ran, but he was in no rush and the crowds comforted him. He grabbed the northern line and climbed to street level at the Soho Square station. The mist had given way to a raw drizzle and Chris found himself shivering. Killing four hours in the outdoors was unthinkable. The minutes were already taking forever to pass.
He walked past the collection of shops and restaurants, finding himself on Oxford Street with his head pounding, and saw a large marquee not far away that provided his solution. Just before Oxford gave way to New Oxford Street, there was a row of cinemas. Locke knew at once how he would spend the next four hours before his meeting with Charney: two movies would do the job nicely. He purchased tickets to the movies in advance to avoid having to stand in line again. The titles of the films were meaningless; he wouldn’t be paying much attention to them.
Sitting down in the darkened, nearly empty cinema, Chris felt his breathing return to normal. He stretched his legs and massaged them, then tried to do the same with his neck and shoulders. Finally he leaned back and squeezed his eyes shut. Fatigue swept over him. He found himself dozing, snapping back awake occasionally with a jolt forward. Between shows he purchased a pair of Cokes for want of coffee, hoping the caffeine might recharge him. As he revived, he found himself ravenously hungry, so he left to buy three portions of prepackaged popcorn. A short time later, he checked the damage to his face in a men’s room mirror, afraid his injuries might make him too recognizable. Fortunately the swelling was minor and a cup of ice obtained from the refreshment stand took much of it down.
By four thirty he felt reasonably alive again. It was time to head for his meeting with Charney. Soon all this would be over. Chris had known from the start there was some risk involved, but never did he imagine his life might actually be threatened, that he would have to become a killer to survive. The possibility, even probability, of that had been dealt with in the training. They tried to desensitize you. Guilt was the real enemy, they had said, not bullets. Guilt made you slow, hesitant. But Locke hadn’t accepted the desensitizing process. In fact, it was around that time he had quit.
The memories were uncomfortable, so Locke turned his mind toward piecing together all that had happened. He found himself with only questions. If Alvaradejo had helped Lubeck, why had the Colombian tried to kill Locke when all he had done was raise his dead friend’s name? It didn’t make sense. And if Charney hadn’t provided the gun, who had? More madness.
And what of San Sebastian? What in hell was it and where did it fit in? Most of all, who were the men that were trying to kill him?
Locke would leave the questions for Charney. He rode the underground to the St. James’s Park station and arrived at four fifty, according to a clock in the terminal. He took his time departing from the station and found the bridge with little trouble. He strolled around briefly before moving to its center at precisely five o’clock.
Charney was nowhere in sight.
Locke’s heart started pounding again. Panic rose in him. The steady drizzle soaked his jacket and his hair. The mist had developed into a fog and St. James’s Park seemed totally deserted.
Then he heard the footsteps coming from the northern side. He turned swiftly, letting go of the wooden railing.
Brian Charney approached routinely, a man out for an afternoon stroll, no spark of recognition in his eyes. Locke was about to say something, then thought better of it. Contact was up to Charney. He would take no chances.
Charney leaned over to tie his shoe when he reached Locke.
“Start walking,” the man from State instructed. “Keep your pace steady. I’ll stay about six feet behind you.”
“What?”
“Just do as I say. Walk leisurely and don’t look back. You hear me, don’t look back! I’ve been made.”
Locke started walking, hand gliding across the wooden railing to convince anyone watching of the leisureliness of his pace. His fingers trembled.
“I lied to you, Chris,” Charney said softly, almost too soft, pulling to within six feet of him. “I lied to you from
the beginning. You were meant to be a decoy, a sacrifice. We—I—never expected you to make it back.”
Fury flared in Locke’s cheeks. “How could—”
“Turn around, goddammit! Don’t look at me. I’m trying to save your ass … and mine. It’s bad, real bad, a thousand times worse than I ever imagined.”
“What is?”
“The massacre was the key. I should have seen that before.”
“What massacre?”
“San Sebastian.”
“You didn’t tell me anything about—”
“Turn your goddamn head around and keep it that way or I’ll save our friends the trouble and blow it off your shoulders.”
“Where are they?”
“I don’t know. Close, though. I couldn’t lose them.”
“What about the cavalry?”
“There is none. Not for us. At least not here. I don’t know whom to trust, how deep it goes.”
Locke made out the panic in his friend’s voice. He felt his own trembling increase. “Brian—”
“I can’t talk anymore. Go back to your hotel and wait for me there.”
“But you said it wasn’t safe.”
“Nothing’s safe. It’s the best we can do. They’re after you and they’re after me and there’s no one in the middle.”
“Who‘s after us?”
“Not now. Get back to your room. Wait for me inside. Don’t turn the lights on. If the phone rings, don’t answer it. I’ll try to lose them and meet you there. Be ready to leave in a hurry.”
“Just say the word.”
They had reached the end of the bridge.
“I’ll veer to the right here. You stay straight. Find a crowd, lose yourself in it, then get back to the hotel.”
Locke started to twist his shoulders.
“Keep your fucking eyes forward. I’m trying to save your life! Just do as I say and don’t ask questions!”
Charney veered away. Locke didn’t stop to think, just kept moving at the same unaffected pace onto the mall heading straight into Piccadilly. It was all a nightmare and it was getting worse. Charney had spoken in shadowy, desperate phrases that told him nothing. His life was clearly still in danger.