by Jack Higgins
“I knew his mother, Mary, so well, a lovely Irish lady.” She was rambling now. “Widowed for years, a nurse. It was a great blow to him when she died. Eighty-one, she was. From Cork.”
Dillon said gently, “I know it well. Wasn’t Michael Collins himself a Cork man?
“Who?” she said.
“I’m sorry, and me thinking you were Mrs. Caitlin Daly?” She looked bewildered. “The mourning wreath on the door.”
“Oh, I’m not Caitlin, and I saw her leave it earlier. Her mother was a wonderful friend to me. Died last year from lung cancer. Only seventy-five. She was still living with Caitlin at the presbytery by the church. But Caitlin isn’t married, never was. She’s been housekeeper to Father Murphy for years. Used to teach at the Catholic school. Now she just looks after the presbytery and Father Murphy and two curates.” She was very fey now. “Oh, dear, I’ve got it wrong again. He’s Monsignor Murphy, now. A wonderful man.”
Dillon gave her his best smile. “You’ve been very kind. God bless you.”
They went back to the Cooper, and Billy said, as he settled behind the wheel, “Dillon, you’d talk the Devil into showing you the way out of hell. The information you got out of that old duck beggars belief.”
“A gift, Billy,” Dillon told him modestly. “You’ve got to be Irish to understand.”
“Get stuffed,” Billy told him.
“Sticks and stones,” Dillon said. “But everything that befuddled old lady told me was useful information.”
“I heard. Pool was wonderful, so was his mother, this Caitlin bird is beyond rubies, and, as for the good Monsignor Murphy, from the sound of it they got him from central casting.” He turned left on Dillon’s instructions. “Mind you, he must be good to get that kind of rank in a local church where he’s their priest-in-charge.”
“Turn right now,” Dillon told him. “And what would you be knowing about it?”
“I’ve never talked much about my childhood, Dillon. My old man was a very violent man, killed in gang warfare when I was three. My mum was married to Harry’s brother, and she was an exceptional lady who died of breast cancer when I was nineteen. I really went off the rails after that.”
“Which is understandable.”
“It was Harry who pulled me round, and you, you bastard, when you entered our lives. You introduced me to philosophy, remember, gave me a sense of myself.”
“So where is this leading?” Dillon asked.
The Cooper turned another corner and pulled up outside their destination. “Church of the Holy Name,” it said on the painted signboard beside the open gate, along with the times of Confession and Mass. The building had a Victorian-Gothic look to it, which made sense because it was only in the Victorian era that Roman Catholics by law were allowed to build churches again. Dillon saw a tower, a porch, a vast wooden door bound in iron in a failed attempt to achieve a medieval look.
They stayed in the car for a few moments. Billy said, “The thing is, my mother was a strict Roman Catholic. Not our Harry. He doesn’t believe in anything he can’t put his hand on, but she really put me onstage. When I was a kid, I was an acolyte. I tell you, Dillon, it meant everything to her when it was my turn to serve at Mass.”
“I know,” Dillon said. “Scarlet cassock, white cotta.”
“Don’t tell me you did that?”
“I’m afraid so, and, Billy, I’ve really got news for you. I did it in this very church we’re about to enter. I was twelve when my father brought me from Northern Ireland to live with him in Kilburn. That means it was thirty-seven years ago when I first entered this church, and the priest in charge is the same man, James Murphy. As I recall, he was born in 1929, which would make him eighty.”
“But why didn’t you mention that to Ferguson and the others? What’s going on? I knew something was, Dillon. Talk to me.”
Dillon sat there for a moment longer, then took out his wallet and from one of the pockets produced a prayer card. It was old, creased, slightly curling at the golden edges. Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death, we who are ourselves alone.
“Jesus, Dillon.” Billy took it from him. “Where the hell did this come from?”
“It was Father James Murphy, as he was then, who first received the news of my father’s death in that firefight in Belfast, an incident that turned me into what I am, shaped my whole life. ‘A casualty of war,’ he told me, gave me the card, and begged me to pray.” He smiled bleakly, took the card, and replaced it in the wallet. “So here we are. Let’s go in, shall we? I see from the board someone’s hearing confessions in there, although it may not be the great man himself.”
He got out, and Billy joined him, his face pale. “I don’t know what to say.”
They entered and walked through the cemetery, which was also Victorian-Gothic and rather pleasant, marble effigies, winged angels, engraved headstones, and cypress trees to one side. “I used to like this when I was a boy, liked it more than I liked it inside the church in a way. It’s what we all come to, when you think of it,” Dillon said.
“For Christ’s sake, cut it out,” Billy said. “You’re beginning to worry me.”
He turned the ring on the great door, and Dillon followed him through. There was faint music playing, something subdued and soothing. The whole place was in a kind of half darkness, but was unexpectedly warm, no doubt because of central heating. The usual church smell, so familiar from childhood, filled his nostrils. Dillon dipped his fingers in the holy water font as he went past and crossed himself, and Billy, after hesitating, did the same.
The sanctuary lamp glowed through the gloom, and to the left there was a Mary Chapel, the Virgin and Child floating in a sea of candlelight. The place had obviously had money spent on it in the past. Victorian stained glass abounded, carvings that looked like medieval copies, and a Christ on the Cross which was extremely striking. The altar and choir stalls, too, were ornate and, it had to be admitted, beautifully carved.
A woman was down there wearing a green smock, arranging flowers by the altar. Fifty or so, Dillon told himself, a strong face with a good mouth, handsome in a Jane Austen kind of way, the hair fair and well kept with no gray showing, although that was probably due more to the attentions of a good hairdresser than nature. She wore a white blouse and gray skirt under the smock, and half-heeled shoes. She held pruning scissors in one gloved hand, and she turned and glanced at them coolly for a moment, then returned to her flowers.
Dillon moved towards the confessional boxes on the far side. There were three of them, but the light was on in only one. Two middle-aged women were waiting, and Billy, sitting two pews behind them beside Dillon, leaned forward to decipher the name card in the slot on the priest’s confessional door.
“You’re all right, it says ‘Monsignor James Murphy.’ ”
A man in a raincoat emerged from the box and walked away along the aisle, and one of the women went in. They sat there in silence, and she was out in not much more than five minutes. She sat down, and her friend went in. She was longer, more like fifteen minutes, then finally emerged, murmured to her friend, and they departed.
“Here I go,” Dillon whispered to Billy, got up, opened the door of the confessional box, entered, and sat down.
“Please bless me, Father,” he said to the man on the other side of the grille, conscious of the strong, aquiline face in profile, the hair still long and silvery rather than gray.
Murphy said, “May our Lord Jesus bless you and help you to tell your sins.”
“Oh, that would be impossible, for they are so many.”
The head turned slightly towards him. “When did you last make a confession, my son?”
“So long ago, I can’t remember.”
“Are your sins so bad that you shrink from revealing them?”
“Not at all. I know the secrets of the confessional are inviolate, but acknowledging the deaths of so many at my hands in no way releases me from the burden of them.”<
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Murphy seemed to straighten. “Ah, I think I see your problem. You are a soldier, or have been a soldier, as with so many men these days.”
“That’s true enough.”
“Then you may certainly be absolved, but you must help by seeking comfort in prayer.”
“Oh, I’ve tried that, Father, saying, ‘Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death, we who are ourselves alone.’ ”
There was a moment of silence, then Murphy turned full face, trying to peer through the grille. “Who are you?”
“God bless you, Father, but isn’t that breaking the rules? Still, I’ll let it go for once and put you out of your misery. Sean Dillon, as ever was. Thirty years since you last saw me. I was nineteen, and you were the man the police asked to break the news that my father was dead, killed accidently while on a trip to Belfast. You told me he was a casualty of war.”
“Sean,” Murphy’s voice quavered. “I can’t believe it. What can I say?”
“I think you said it all thirty years ago when you urged me to pray, particularly the special one on a prayer card you gave me, the prayer I’ve just quoted to you.”
“Yes, I recollect now.” The voice was unsteady. “A wonderful prayer to the Virgin Mary.”
“I remember you saying it would be a comfort for all victims of a great cause. Which made sense, as the prayer is directed at we who are ourselves alone, and ‘ourselves alone’ in Irish is Sinn Fein. So it had a definite political twist to it, urging a nineteen-year-old boy whose father had ended up dead on a pavement in the Falls Road to get angry, clear off to Belfast, and join the Provos to fight for the Glorious Cause. Now, aren’t you proud of me?”
The door to Dillon’s half of the confessional box was yanked open, and the woman in the green smock was there, blazingly angry. “Come out of there,” she shouted, and grabbed at him. Behind her, Billy moved in to pull her off.
“You got good and loud, Sean. Only her and me in the place, and we heard most of what you said.”
She pulled away from Billy and glared at Dillon. “Get out of here before I call the police.”
Billy produced his warrant card. “Don’t waste your breath. MI5, and he’s got one, too.”
The other door opened, and Murphy came out, an imposing figure at six feet, with the silver hair, dressed in a full black cassock, an alb, violet stole draped over his shoulder.
“Leave it, Caitlin, this is Sean Dillon. As a boy of nineteen, I had to tell him his father was murdered by British soldiers in Ulster. He left for Belfast for his father’s funeral and never returned. There were rumors that he had cast in his lot with the Provisional IRA. If so, I can’t see that it in any way concerns me. As to the prayer card that I gave him as a comfort, it may be found on the Internet, if you look carefully, Sean, and has been available to all since Easter 1916. We have a Hope of Mary Hospice and Refuge where the card is readily available.” He put a hand on Dillon’s left shoulder. “You are deeply troubled, Sean, that is so obvious. Your dear father worked and did so much for the church in his spare time. The lectern in beechwood by the high altar was his work. If I can help you in any way, I am here.”
“Not right now,” Dillon said. “But before I go, the score for dead cardholders right now is four: Henry Pool, John Docherty, Frank Barry in New York, Jack Flynn on Long Island.”
“What on earth are you talking about?” Murphy looked shocked.
“Don’t listen to him, he’s lost his wits entirely.” Caitlin moved close to Dillon and slapped his face. “Get out.”
“My, but you’re the hard woman. Come on, Billy, let’s go.” Billy opened the great door, and Dillon turned, and Murphy and Caitlin were standing close, he with his head inclined while she whispered to him.
Dillon called, “If you know anybody named Cochran, tell him we found his wallet, and the prayer card, too. God bless all here.”
And Caitlin Daly snapped completely. “Get out, you bastard.” Her voice echoed around the church, and Dillon followed Billy to the Cooper, and they drove away.
“Do you think there’s anything doing?” Billy asked.
“Oh, yes,” Dillon said. “However bizarre it sounds, I think there’s something going on there.”
“If that’s so, don’t you think you’ve given a lot away?”
“I intended to. Back to Holland Park, Billy,” and he leaned back in his seat and closed his eyes, thinking about it.
At the sacristy, Caitlin Daly leaned against the door and fumbled in her shoulder bag, pushed aside a Belgian Leon .25 semi-automatic pistol, produced an encrypted mobile phone, and punched in a number. It was answered at once, a man’s voice, the slightest tinge of a Yorkshire accent.
“Caitlin?”
“Just listen,” she said. “We’ve got trouble.” She quickly told him what had taken place. “What are we going to do?”
“How did Murphy take it?”
“How do you expect? He’s too good for this bloody world. All he feels is pity for Dillon.”
“Well, he would, wouldn’t he? Leave it with me, I’ll handle it somehow.” The church was very quiet now when she returned, and Murphy knelt before the altar, his head bowed in prayer, and she sat in a front pew and waited. When he stood up and walked to her, she said, “You’ve been praying for Dillon, haven’t you?”
“Of course. So sad, that business of his father’s death in Belfast all those years ago. His life has so obviously been a hard and bitter one. What else can I do but pray for him?”
She stifled her anger with difficulty. “Sometimes, Monsignor, I think you’re much too forgiving. But take my arm, and we’ll go back to the presbytery for tea.”
He did as he was told, and as they walked away he said, “Poor boy, he seems completely unhinged.”
4
A little earlier, Miller and his sister had been on their way to Dover Street. Since becoming aware that her dearly loved brother was a man of dark secrets, Monica had also learned that anything he told her, however dangerous and extreme, was very probably true. For an academic like her, there was an undeniable thrill to it all, especially her involvement with Sean Dillon. When Miller picked her up at her rooms in Cambridge, she was already packed and waiting for him, and he filled her in on everything, as he knew it, right up to that moment.
Her reaction to the event in Central Park was highly practical. “Well, all I can say is, thank God you were carrying.”
He grinned. “I see you’ve picked up the slang of our dark trade already.”
“I don’t have any option, not with you and Sean round. I’ve checked on George Dunkley, by the way, and he’s doing fine. Thank God.”
They were halfway to London when Roper called him and filled him in about Belsize Park and what was to happen.
“What about Sean?”
Roper said, “He went to see what he could dig up in Kilburn, took Billy with him.”
“Is something wrong?” Monica asked him when he hung up.
“You could say that.” He told her about the intruder at Belsize Park. “So this guy Cochran got away but lost his wallet, and they found another copy of that prayer card. We might as well call in at Holland Park instead of going straight to the house. They’ll be finalizing the Gulfstream’s departure from Farley this evening, and then there’s Sean. God knows what he’s getting up to in Kilburn, but, knowing him, it’s bound to be interesting.” He leaned over and said to Fox, “Change of plan, Arthur, as you’ve just heard.”
“As you say, Major.”
“Poor Svetlana,” Monica said. “That beautiful house and all those lovely antiques and paintings. It’s going to break her heart.”
“I appreciate that, but it’s not going to be forever, and she’s got Katya to support her. And they’ll be safe, that’s the important thing. Whoever we’re up against, they’re pretty nasty.”
“And Alexander?”
“Maybe in America he can get back to writing. Another War and Peace per
haps?”
“Which he’s perfectly capable of producing,” she said primly, and the Mercedes, approaching the Holland Park safe house, pulled up at the security gates and waited for them to open.
They found Roper in the computer room and Ferguson on his phone. He waved to them, then walked out, still talking.
Roper said, “He’s been on and off the phone all afternoon. Half a dozen times with Clancy, but everything is set now. We pick them up at Belsize Park at seven. It’ll take forty minutes to get to Farley Field, and they’re all off by eight.”
“Where are they heading?” Miller asked.
“Andrews Air Force Base, where they’ll refuel, and then move on to another base in Florida, and then proceed by helicopter to the island.”
Monica went and kissed him and ruffled his hair. “You look tired, love.”
“I always do, these days, it’s my new look. Sorry about Dunkley, there seem to be bad people out there. Are you okay?”
“A few bruises here and there. It could have been worse.”
“I suppose so. At least with Kurbsky and the ladies out of it, we’ll have a level playing field, and we can just concentrate on discovering who these people are.”
Maggie Hall appeared from the kitchen, face beaming. “And how are you, Lady Monica? It’s real nice to see you again. Mr. Dillon will be smiling, I know that. Can I get you some tea? I know you’ve been traveling.”
Ferguson loomed up behind her. “We’ll all have tea, my dear, and some of those delicious chocolate biscuits that you seem to have an inexhaustible supply of.”
“You can have anything you want, General.”
She departed, and Ferguson held Monica for a moment and kissed her cheek. “Sorry about having to drag you away from Cambridge like this, but it’s for your own good, I’m afraid. Has it been made plain to you what we’re up against?”
“It’s been made plain to me what’s happened. The behavior of the wretch who drove his truck into me was proof enough of what we’re up against.”