by Jack Higgins
'Fate, I suppose, and how it can't be avoided. You think you've avoided Death in one place and he finds you in another.'
'Sure, I can see that, but I don't see how it affects you.'
'Oh, I do, Hedley.' She leaned back. 'The story illustrates the inevitability of things.'
'Like you taking on the President of the United States? I can't buy that, Lady Helen, I surely can't.'
'Remember the sign another President had on his desk? The buck stops here? Well, he was right.' She peered out at the dark. 'Oh, look where we are. I need tea and a sandwich. Let's stop.'
They were at an old-fashioned truck stand at the side of the road, one they'd stopped at before, the flap up against the rain. It was almost two in the morning, two roadliner trucks parked nearby, the drivers eating in their cabs. Hedley ordered steak sandwiches on white toast and tea, hot and strong. She joined him, watching the woman who ran the place frying the steaks.
'Smells good, Hedley.'
'It always does, Lady Helen.'
She bit into the sandwich, juice running down her cheek and the woman leaned over and offered a paper napkin. 'There you go, love.'
Rain poured off the canopy, she finished the sandwich and drank the strong bitter tea and when she was finished, said, 'Let's go-'
She sat in the passenger seat beside him. 'You think I'm crazy, Hedley.' It was a statement.
'I think you're going too far, Lady Helen.'
She lit another cigarette. 'Most people take the other way in life, let things go, all good manners and politeness. I remember once sitting in the corner of a London restaurant with a man who'd been my accountant. Next to us were four women, all smoking, one of them in a wheelchair. My friend whispered that he couldn't take the smoke, would have to leave. The woman in the wheelchair said loudly that it was a pity some people couldn't learn a little tolerance.'
'What happened?'
'I put him in a taxi, then went back and told the woman in the wheelchair that at least she was alive, whereas my friend with lung cancer had three weeks to live.' She frowned. 'Why am I telling you this? Probably because it was the first time I really stood up, in a public sense, to be counted. I couldn't stand by.'
'Just like you couldn't stand by over the Sons of Erin. Okay, I see that. Only, the President?' He shook his head.
'You don't see anything, Hedley. You're a lovely man, but like most people, you see only what you think you do. You look at me and think I'm the woman I've always been. It's not true. I'm a woman in a hurry, Hedley, because I have no time to lose.'
'Hey, don't say things like that.'
'It's the truth, Hedley, I'm going to die. Not tonight and not tomorrow, but soon, too soon, and I've got things to do, and by God, I'm going to do them. I'm going to Long Island to face the President, and I've got Barry on the end of that coded mobile any time I want him. All I have to do is reel him in.' She took out her pill bottle and shook two into her palm. 'So pass that whiskey flask and put your foot down. We could be home by three.'
But the weather became even worse, the rain torrential, and when they drove down the hill overlooking the village, it was a scene of chaos, the water overflowing a foot deep in the street, and men struggling at the lock gate.
Hedley pulled in at the pub. Old Tom Armsby was putting sandbags at the door and Hetty was helping him. She looked up as the Mercedes stopped and Lady Helen opened the door.
'Looks bad.'
'It is bad, and all down to the Parish Council. The mean bastards wouldn't find the money to fix that lock gate after the last time, when Hedley saved us. Much more of this and every cottage in the village will be flooded.'
Lady Helen turned to Hedley. 'They're ordinary folk, most of them pensioners. It would ruin them.'
'I know.' He got out into the rain, took off his chauffeur's tunic and rolled up his sleeves, standing there in a pool of water. 'What's that phrase where you have a sense that you've been here before?'
' Deja vu. It's French.'
'Yes, it would be.'
He turned and went towards the men struggling at the lock gate and she got out and waded after him. There was a young man in the turbulent waters below. He was obviously half-dead, but he tried to go under again and was thrown back up, retching.
'Get him out of here,' Hedley ordered. The boy was plucked from the water and dragged up the bank. 'Where's a crowbar?'
Someone held one out. Hedley took it and, without hesitation, plunged in. He surfaced, took a deep breath, went down and felt for the iron clasps on the gate that had been temporarily repaired after the previous occasion. He forced the crowbar in, worked at it, then had to surface, gasping for breath.
He went down again, twice, three times, always more difficult, and then the clasp gave, the gates started to open and then the force of the water drove them wide. Hedley surfaced to a ragged cheer, for already the flood waters were subsiding.
Willing hands pulled him from the water. He got to his feet and stood there in the rain, and Hetty Armsby ran over with a blanket and put it round him.
'Oh, you wonderful bastard. Come on into the pub, and the rest of you as well. To hell with the law tonight.'
Everyone moved forward, and Lady Helen joined Hedley. 'Don't let it go to your head. I wouldn't be as blasphemous as to say you walk on water, but they just might change the name of the church to St Hedley.'
The following morning at Compton Place, the weather was still dreadful, an east wind driving in the rain, waves breaking across the long flat sands of Horseshoe Bay.
Helen, wrapped up in storm coat and hood, cantered her mare through pine woods that broke the worst excesses of the storm, paused in the shelter of the wall of an old ruined chapel and lit a cigarette with difficulty in her cupped hands.
She looked out at the churning sea, and remembered a visit to friends in Long Island some years before, not in the fashionable summer, but late winter, just like this. She'd been shown Chad Luther's mansion, a palace of a place, lawns running into the waters of the Sound, no one in residence, so she didn't enjoy a conducted tour. Chad had invited her many times, mainly because he liked money and she had more than he did. She had never accepted, for a simple reason. She didn't like him. Vulgar, vain, conceited.
She pulled herself up and said softly, 'Come on, my dear, who are you to make such judgements? Somebody must love him. Though God alone knows who.'
Which still left Long Island in her mind. She shook the reins and galloped away.
Hedley had driven down to the village to see the state of the game. It was still raining hard and the water in the slot was high, but there were no problems. He called at the village shop, filled out a grocery order and drove back to the house. There was no sign of Lady Helen. He left the groceries in the kitchen, went out into the yard and heard the sound of pistol fire coming from the barn. When he went in, she was standing shooting at the targets with the Colt. 25.
He said, 'So I take it we are still going to Long Island and the Colt will still be in your purse?'
'Day after tomorrow,' she said, and reloaded. 'I'll use one of the company Gulfstreams. We can land at Westhampton Airport in Long Island. Very convenient.'
'I still wish you weren't taking the gun, though.'
'As I told you, I want to be ready for anything. For whatever opportunity arises. You don't need to come if you aren't happy.'
'Oh, but I do need to come.' He picked up a Browning from the selection of weapons on the table and fired very rapidly at the targets, shooting four of them through the head.
'Showing off again, Hedley?'
'No,' he said. 'Just checking I'm on form so I can make sure you're on form. After all, what if you meet the Connection?'
'So you'll come? You're with me?'
'Oh, I'll come all right. Someone's got to watch out for you.' He took the Colt from her, checked it and handed it back. 'Okay, take your stance and remember what I told you.'
New York,
Washington
Chapter Eleven<
br />
Blake sat in Parker's office the following morning, drank coffee and ate a ham sandwich. He was quite alone. Outside, the end of March weather was as lousy as it could be. Powdery flakes of wet snow drifted against the window. The door opened and Parker came in in shirt sleeves.
'They said you were here. Hey, feel free with my coffee break.'
'I just flew in from Washington. The weather was so bad they couldn't serve breakfast.'
'Serves you right for joining the jet set.' Parker sat down, picked up the phone and ordered another sandwich and more coffee. He shook his head. 'You are in deep shit, my friend.'
'I beg your pardon?'
'Come on – Cohan? All the newspapers indicated an unfortunate accident, but you and I know better.'
At that moment, his assistant, an older woman police sergeant, came in without knocking and put more coffee and sandwiches on the desk.
'Have mine. I've already ordered more. I figured Mr White House here would clean you out.'
She went. Blake said, 'What a treasure – and what a healthy appetite. Too much for you, with your weight to consider.'
He took another sandwich and Parker said, 'Screw you, Blake.' He took a sandwich himself. 'So what's the score?'
'Simple. The Sons of Erin, all gone to the great diners club in the sky. Cohan, Ryan, Kelly, Brady, Cassidy. That's five.' Blake opened one of the coffee containers. 'Come on, you bastard, all those years on the street, how many murders have you investigated?'
'A hundred and forty-seven. I kept count.'
'So what's your verdict? You don't accept this sectarian nonsense, do you?'
'Crap.' Parker finished his sandwich. 'The pattern is clear. The motive is revenge.'
'Revenge for something the Sons of Erin were responsible for.'
'I'd say so.'
Blake sat there thinking about it. 'I agree. But it still doesn't get us very far. I've been thinking about Cohan. Why wasn't he attacked in New York, like the others? You don't happen to have any attempted burglaries on his house, do you? That sort of thing?'
'Let's have a look.'
The last sandwich in his left hand, Parker went to his computer, sat down and tapped the keys. 'No, no such reports.' He paused. 'Just a minute. That's interesting.'
'What is?'
'Last week there were a couple of murders in an alley next to Cohan's house. Typical street bad guys. Shot dead. Autopsy showed lots of alcohol and traces of cocaine. Both of them were in police hands many times. Street dealers, one of them ran whores.'
The screen kept changing. Blake, trying to suppress a rising excitement, said, 'What kind of gun was it?'
Parker tapped, then leaned back. 'Dear God, a Colt. 25.' He turned. 'Let me cross-reference.' He attacked the keys in a kind of frenzy and finally stopped. 'There you go, Blake. You thought you had four members of the Sons of Erin shot by the same weapon. I've got you two more.'
Blake was stunned. 'But why these guys?'
Parker sat there thinking about it. 'Look, the obvious link is Cohan's house. That's in an exclusive area. These guys were lowlifes, probably just passing through.'
"You mean in the wrong place at the wrong time?'
'How in the hell would I know? I'm clutching at straws, man. Maybe someone was waiting for Cohan and these two turned up.'
Blake nodded. 'Yeah. Oh, man!'
'So what are you going to do?'
'I'm going to take a look at the scene of the crime.' He stood up. 'Thanks, Harry, I'm sure I'll be back,' and he left.
Lady Helen went for a walk, holding a golfing umbrella against the rain. She stopped in the pine trees, looked out at the turbulent sea, took out the mobile and phoned Barry.
'Ah, there you are,' she said.
'What do you want?'
'Nothing special. I just thought I'd make a connection. It's a terrible day here. Raining like hell.'
Barry felt surprisingly calm, that link again. 'Where are you?'
'Ah, progress, it's the first time you've asked. I'll tantalize you. The east coast of England.'
'Yorkshire – Norfolk?'
'That would be telling.'
He was surprised at how reasonable she sounded. 'Look, what do you want?'
'You, Mr Barry, that's what I want. Dead, of course.'
She rang off. Barry went to the cupboard, got a bottle of Paddy Whiskey, and poured one. It scalded the back of his mouth. When he lit another cigarette, his hand was shaking. She wasn't going to go away, that was obvious, so he phoned the Connection.
'Look, I didn't tell you everything about the Cohan business.'
Thornton said, 'Well, you'd better do it now.' Which Barry did. When he was finished, Thornton said, 'Tell me again what she said about her son.'
Barry thought for a moment. 'She said I butchered her son in Ulster three years ago, and executed his friends, four others, including a woman.'
'Does that strike a chord with you?'
'For God's sake, I've been at war for years. You want to know how many people I've killed?'
'Okay, okay. Just leave it with me. There may be a link here. I'll check it out.'
Blake had his car drop him in front of Cohan's house on Park Avenue, but on the other side of the street. He sat there reading the scene-of-crime reports. It was all pretty straightforward. It had been after midnight, heavy rain clearing the streets.
He tried to imagine the scene, as he looked across at Cohan's place: dark, wet, not much of a struggle because the pathologist's report indicated instant death in both cases, and then he frowned. There was an anomaly here. He turned to the pathology report and examined it quickly. Victim One, blood group O. Victim Two, blood group A. The only trouble was that there were traces of another blood group on Victim Two's shirt, this time B.
So, there was a third party involvement, some sort of a struggle. Could that have been the killer? Blake frowned. For some reason, he didn't buy that. The way the two guys had been shot had been so instantly effective, so ruthless. Why would there have been a struggle? He frowned again. Unless there had been another person. Four persons, not three.
He decided to try and get the perspective from the pavement, a different viewpoint. 'Go back to police headquarters and wait for me there,' he told his driver. 'I'll get a cab. Just hand me the umbrella.'
The driver did as he was told and drove away, as Blake opened the umbrella. So, it was night and she was waiting for Cohan to return home from some function or other. Where would you wait? This side of the street, not the other, because from here you got a clear view, from here a halfway decent shot was possible.
He turned and looked behind. Plenty of doorways to stand in concealed by the shadows. So what happened? What went wrong? To hell with it, Blake thought, took out a pack of Marlboros and lit one. This wasn't a time to give up smoking. He inhaled deeply and that damn March rain dripped from the umbrella.
The two victims were in the alley, probably sheltering from the rain. They shouldn't have been there, not at such a time and in such an area. So, I'm the killer, Blake thought, and I'm waiting here for Cohan, so what went wrong? He looked across at Cohan's house, and at that moment, a young couple came around the corner further along Park Avenue, huddled under an umbrella. Blake watched them go, move past the alley, walk to the next corner and disappear.
'That's it,' he said softly. 'Just as I thought. Someone walked into something. The wrong place at the wrong time.'
So, the individual with the B blood group had left the scene, God knows in what condition, and to where?
Blake crossed the street and paused at the alley. So, say someone was running, which way would they go? Right or left? What the hell, he would go to the left first, for no better reason than that's the way the young couple had gone.
He lit another cigarette and walked steadily along the sidewalk in the rain, turned the corner and carried on for another block, passing offices, the occasional boutique, all of which would have been closed after midnight.
&nbs
p; 'But not that place,' he said softly, looking across the intersection. 'They never close.'
The sign said St Mary's Hospital. It was private and a large painted board offered a range of services including ambulance, accident, and emergency.
'So here we are,' Blake said. 'It's the early hours of the morning, it's raining and you're bleeding. Now where would you go?'
He moved into a doorway, got his mobile phone out and called Harry Parker. 'Harry, I need you.'
'Have you got something?'
'Let's say my nose is twitching, and if I'm right, I need a police presence.'
'So where are you?' Blake told him. 'Fine, I'll see you soon.'
When Parker and Blake went into the emergency room of St Mary's, they found it surprisingly luxurious; fitted carpets, comfortable chairs, calming music. The duty nurse at reception wore a uniform which could have been designed by Armani, and probably had been.
'Gentlemen?' She was slightly wary. 'Can I help you?'
Harry flashed his gold badge. 'Captain Parker, N YPD. I need some information. It's tied to a murder investigation.'
'Then I'd better get our Chief Administrator, Mr Schofield.'
'You do that, honey,' Harry said.
Schofield wore a blue chalk-striped suit, and looked tanned and fit. They sat in his rather sumptuous office and Blake told him all he needed to know. That there had been a double shooting not too far away, and that there was a possibility of a third person injured to some degree or another.
'Sounds important,' Schofield said.
'Yes, well, my friend here is FBI, that's how important it is,' Harry Parker told him.
'So what do you want from me?'
Blake reached for a memo pad and scribbled a date. 'The early morning of that day. Did you get anyone coming into the ER sometime after midnight, bleeding?'
'There's a question of patient confidentiality here, gentlemen.'
'And there's the question of a presidential warrant here.' Blake produced the document and presented it.
Schofield said, 'Jesus. Okay, let's take a look.'
At the desk, he looked through the admissions book, then nodded. 'There was a patient noted here. Name of Jean Wiley. Booked in at one-fifteen a.m. on the indicated date. Her face was cut. The night intern handled it, Dr Bryant.'