By Stealth tac-9

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By Stealth tac-9 Page 48

by Colin Forbes


  Inside the Mercedes Fanshawe kept looking in his rearview mirror, checking how close his pursuer was. His concentration on this fear made him forget the speed at which he was travelling. He arrived at the anchorage and only then stared ahead in horror.

  Newman was reducing speed, swinging his Volvo to a stop by the boatyard when the Mercedes reached the ramp leading down to the river. All the rivers are swollen. Newman recalled Lee Holmes' words as he saw how high the water had reached and the speed of the current flowing down from Beaulieu upstream.

  Fanshawe jammed on the brakes. Too late. He was on the downward-sloping ramp which was covered with shot ice. The Mercedes aquaplaned – rocketed forward at high speed into the river. It was half-submerged when Newman jumped out after grabbing a torch. He held that in his left hand and his Smith amp; Wesson in the other hand as he stood on the edge of the bank, switched on the powerful beam.

  The car seemed to suspend itself as Newman directed his torch beam on to the vehicle. Fanshawe had climbed on to his seat, thrusting his wide shoulders up through the open roof, holding the sub-machine-gun. His mass of white hair was dishevelled, his voice hoarse as he called out.

  `Throw me a rope, Newman, or I'll gun you down.' `You won't – then you'd have no hope of surviving. So drop that weapon.'

  Fanshawe's nerveless hands let go of the machine-gun and it fell back inside the car. Waving his empty hands, Fanshawe began pleading.

  `For God's sake throw me a rope. There are lifebelts on the shore.'

  `I might consider rescuing you – provided you answer truthfully one question.'

  `Hurry up, man! I'm going down…'

  `The truth, remember. I'll know if you're lying. Did you pass on Dr Wand's orders at any time to kill the victims?'

  `I had to,' Fanshawe gabbled. 'I was his deputy. I had no choice

  …'

  `I see,' Newman replied in a hard voice. 'You were obeying orders. I seem to have heard that excuse before. I have now considered rescuing you – and decided not to.'

  `I can't swim!' Fanshawe screeched. 'In the name of humanity…'

  The Mercedes had propelled itself quite a distance. The rear was in the water, the front resting on dark muddy ooze, swamp-like. The car was tilted, its rear lower than its front. Then the front sank deeper and more rapidly into the slime. The Mercedes was now submerged almost to the rim of the roof.

  Newman stood quite still, his torch beam still shining on Fanshawe who was screaming a mixture of obscenities and pleas. The anchorage was deserted on that eerie December night. Near by a power boat was tied up – Fanshawe's intended means of escape. Vertical trails of motionless ice mist hung over the anchorage.

  Newman made no response to the desperate cries for help. This sadist had been instrumental in murdering innocent men and women. The entire vehicle sank lower, watery mud creeping over the roof, sliding down inside the opening. The last sight Newman had of Fanshawe was hands waving as the mud deluged inside the vehicle. The hands, the crown of white hair vanished a moment after Fanshawe let out a fearful gurgle of pure terror. Bubbles appeared where the car had gone down and swiftly disappeared, caught up in the flow of the river heading for the Solent. The silence was total.

  Epilogue

  `First, how did you realize Helen – and not Lee – was the murderess?' asked Paula.

  Monica, Newman, Marler, Butler, Nield, and Cardon were all assembled in Tweed's office at Park Crescent several days later. They listened, drinking the coffee supplied by Monica as she turned up the central heating. It was an arctic December day outside.

  `Temperament. That was the first clue,' Tweed explained as he relaxed in his swivel chair. 'To kill at least six people – three of them women – by injecting them with cyanide took someone pretty cold-blooded. I know both women had briefly been actresses, but the more I got to know Lee the more she seemed genuinely a fun person, as she called herself.'

  `Whereas Helen was cool as ice,' Paula commented. `Exactly. Then there was the puzzle of the everyday instrument which was a disguised hypodermic – designed back in Hong Kong, I imagine. It could have been Lee's jewelled cigarette holder, but she was too obvious with it.

  `Obvious?' Paula queried.

  `Yes – always waving it about, drawing attention to her precious possession. Again it was a process of elimination. Whereas Helen Claybourne only used her fat fountain-pen now and again.'

  `And what about Vulcan?' Newman asked. 'I thought it was Burgoyne.'

  `So did I for a while. Two factors made me doubtful. At the MOD an officer called Fieldway rather overdid hinting that he was a suspect character. When the Burgoyne Quartet boarded the same plane as we did for Brussels how did the Brigadier know we'd be taking that flight?'

  `Well, how did he?' Paula asked impatiently.

  `He could only have known because someone at London Airport had been pressured by the MOD to inform them when I booked a flight. That someone had to be Jim Corcoran, the chief security officer. I noticed Corcoran seemed embarrassed when I arrived – even tried to avoid me. I detected the same kind of discomfort in his attitude which Fieldway had shown.'

  `Was that conclusive?' Marler enquired.

  `No. But as I explained when we were in the New Forest recently, Willie was a little too vehement in his anti-British views. Belatedly he attributed them to Burgoyne to put me off the track.'

  `And what part did Burgoyne himself play?' Marler persisted.

  `After Newman drove off in pursuit of Willie I had a chat with Burgoyne on his own at Leopard's Leap. He has been working for Military Intelligence for years – trying to trap Dr Wand. Hence the MOD's co-operation with him. He decided I seemed to be having better luck, so he attached himself to us. Hence the Burgoyne Quartet's repeat appearances wherever we went.'

  `But what about that mysterious light aircraft and then the powerboat which appeared later when we were tackling the Mao in Jutland?' asked Newman.

  `That was Burgoyne. Again, he'd used his muscle to get Nielsen to tell him where I'd gone. Nielsen tried to warn me, but the radio connection broke down. Burgoyne can fly, hired a plane at Esbjerg Airport, flew down over the beach to do a recce. I told him off about that and he had the grace to apologize.'

  `And the powerboat?' Newman asked again.

  `That also had Burgoyne aboard. He is convinced Dr Wand was a General Chang, Chief of Staff to Cardon's General Li Yun at Lop Nor. After tracking Wand for all those years he was determined to kill him. He fired the two shots after I'd fired at Wand. A. 45 you said, Bob, and you were right. The Brigadier takes some satisfaction from having put two bullets into him. Although Dr Wand would have been burnt to a crisp anyway. Talking about burning – Nielsen phoned to say the house where Paula was held had been totally destroyed by fire. The remains of two bodies – one of them presumably Dr Hyde – were found in the ashes of the basement. A real cremation.'

  `You do have a graphic way of expressing yourself,' Paula commented.

  `They were evil men. Wand's entire apparatus – which might not have been activated for years – has been eliminated. The Moonglow organizations have also been closed down all over Europe and in Hong Kong. And Jules Starmberg is singing like the proverbial bird.'

  `At least there was no problem in getting him through security at Hamburg and London airports,' Paula recalled.

  `Kuhlmann was again co-operative – escorting us so we bypassed all normal checks. Jim Corcoran seemed only too glad to perform the same service at London Airport. I think he was relieved to make up for tricking me earlier. Not that he had any choice.'

  `And any news of Mrs Garnett, late of Moor's Landing?' Newman asked.

  `Yes. I advised Stanstead, the Chief Constable, to check all the local graveyards. Sure enough one had been disturbed – a grave, I mean. They dug up a few feet of soil and found the poor old soul lying face-down on top of a coffin. Her skull had been split. Barton, the phoney estate agent, and the other Moor's Landing occupants are being charged as accomplices to
murder. I don't think they wanted a fresh body floating in the Solent.'

  'Moonglow was some sort of cover organization then?' Paula queried.

  `It was exactly that. Accounts going through the books have already found Moonglow was laundering huge sums of money.' Tweed looked grim. 'It was a vile business. Under the pretence of aiding refugees the Chinese army was using vast profits from the drug trade to finance setting up the apparatus ready for their ultimate invasion of the West.'

  `And Stealth,' Newman remarked, 'is now capable of being defeated?'

  `Absolutely.' Tweed was cleaning his glasses. 'That huge floating dock with giant lifting cranes will soon reach Jutland. It will take on board the intact Yenan and bring it back here for examination by experts. On top of that, poor Gaston Delvaux's new radar system has given us the means of easily detecting any such vessels or planes.'

  `And you've withdrawn your resignation. End of story,' Newman said.

  `Of that story, yes. The East will never now invade us by stealth.'

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