Flyaway / Windfall (28 page)

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Authors: Desmond Bagley

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BOOK: Flyaway / Windfall
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THIRTY-TWO

I had telephoned Heathrow from Orly and so there was a car waiting with a driver, since I could not drive a car with a broken arm. He drove us the short distance to the Post House Hotel and I told him to stick around while I booked in. There were reservations for Paul and me in adjoining rooms, so we went up and I got him settled.

Paul, of course, was dead broke—he hadn’t a penny—and that suited me fine because I wanted him immobilized. I didn’t give him any money, but said, ‘Paul, stay here until I get back. If you want anything, order it—it’s on the house. But don’t leave the hotel.’

‘Where are you going?’

‘I have things to do,’ I said uninformatively.

I went down to the lobby, cashed a sheaf of travellers’ cheques, picked up the driver, and gave him an address in Marlow. As we left the hotel-studded environs of Heathrow I reflected that the Post House was the ideal sort of anonymous caravanserai to hide Paul; I didn’t want his presence in England known yet, nor mine, either.

The car pulled up outside Jack Ellis’s house and I walked up and rang the doorbell. Judy Ellis opened it, looked at me uncertainly, and said, ‘Yes?’ interrogatively.

I had met Jack’s wife only three or four times. Stafford Security Consultants Ltd was not the kind of firm that drew
wives into the business orbit; we had other ways of ensuring company loyalty, such as good pay. I said, ‘Is Jack in? I’m Max Stafford.’

‘Oh, I didn’t recognize you. Yes, he’s just got back. Come in.’ She held the door wide and let me into the hall while making all the usual excuses wives make when the boss drops in on an unexpected visit. The place didn’t look all that untidy to me. ‘Jack,’ she called. ‘Mr Stafford’s here.’

As I stood in the doorway of the living-room Ellis rose from an armchair, laying aside a newspaper. He looked at me questioningly. ‘Max?’

I was suddenly aware of the beard—now neatly trimmed by a barber Hesther had brought in, the light-coloured suit of a decidedly foreign cut, and the black silk sling which cradled my left arm. I suppose that to Jack it was a disguise. ‘Hello, Jack.’

‘Well, for God’s sake! Come in.’ He seemed glad to see me.

I was aware of Judy hovering in the background. ‘Er…this isn’t a social call, Jack. I want to talk to you.’

‘I hope to God it isn’t,’ he said. ‘And I want to talk to you. Where have you been? Come into my study.’

He hustled me away and I smiled pleasantly at Judy in passing. In the study he offered me a chair. ‘What’s wrong with the arm?’

‘Just broken.’ I smiled. ‘It only hurts when I laugh.’

‘God, I’m glad to see you. You just disappeared, and I didn’t know where to look. All hell’s been breaking loose.’

‘I’ve not been away long—just over a month,’ I said mildly. ‘You haven’t lost your grip in so short a time?’

‘If you want to put it that way, I suppose I have.’ His voice was grim. ‘But I never had much grip to begin with, did I?’

It was evident that something was griping him so I said, ‘Give me a drink, sit down and tell me all about it.’

He took a deep breath, then said, ‘Sorry.’ He left the room and returned with a tray on which were bottles and glasses. ‘Scotch okay?’ I nodded, and as he poured the drinks he said, ‘As soon as you left the whole character of the company changed.’

‘In what way?’

‘Well, as a minor example, we’re now letting dogs out without handlers.’ He handed me a glass.

‘Starting with Electronomics,’ I suggested.

He looked at me in surprise. ‘How did you know that?’

‘Never mind. Go on.’

He sat down and looked broodingly into the glass which he held cradled in his hands. ‘The big thing is that we’re now up to our necks in industrial espionage. You’ve been away six weeks and I’m already running three penetration exercises.’

‘Are you, by God? On whose authority?’

‘Charlie Malleson twisted my arm.’

I stared at him. ‘Jack, you’re not there to take instructions from Charlie. He’s just the bloody accountant—a number juggler. You’re supposed to be standing in for me—running the operational side—and that doesn’t mean penetration operations. We’re in security; that’s what the name of the firm means. Now, how did Charlie twist your arm?’

Ellis shrugged. ‘He just told me to do it.’

‘Didn’t you squawk?’

‘Of course I bloody well squawked.’ His ire was rising. ‘But what the hell could I do? I’m not a shareholder, and he brought Brinton in to back him up, and when the bosses say “Do!”, you do. Max, this last week I’ve been on the verge of quitting, but I held on in the hope that you’d come back.’ He stuck his finger out at me. ‘Any moment from now I’m going to get instructions to penetrate one of our own clients. That would be a laugh, wouldn’t it? Playing both ends against the middle. But it’s not what I joined the firm for.’

‘Not very ethical,’ I agreed. ‘Take it easy, Jack; we’ll sort this out. You say Charlie brought in Lord Brinton?’

‘The old bastard is in and out all the time now.’ Jack caught himself. ‘Sorry. I forgot he’s a friend of yours.’

‘Not particularly. You say he comes to the office frequently?’

‘Two or three times a week. He has himself driven two whole blocks in his Rolls-Royce.’

‘Does he have access to files?’

Jack shrugged. ‘Not through me. I don’t know about Charlie.’

‘Oh, we can’t have that.’ I thought about it for a moment, then said, ‘I talked about you to Charlie before I left. It was agreed that if you could handle my job then you’d be made managing director. That would entitle you to a parcel of shares because that’s the way we work. I was going to start operations in Europe—go for the multinationals. Didn’t Charlie say anything about this?’

‘Not a word.’

‘I see.’ I sipped my scotch. ‘This is a surprising development but it’s not what I came to see you about. Remember what we were doing just before I left?’

He nodded. ‘Looking for a half-wit called Billson.’

‘Well, I found him, and that led to other things. I want you to re-open the account of Michelmore, Veasey and Templeton, but do it quietly. Don’t open a formal file, and keep all details locked away from prying eyes.’

‘Same as before?’

‘Exactly the same as before. No one sees it—especially not Charlie or Brinton. Now, this is what I want you to do.’ As I reeled off my requirements Jack’s eyes got bigger. I ended up by saying, ‘Oh yes; and that analytical chemist must be a forensic type, able to go on to the stand in court as an expert witness.’

He looked up from the notebook in which he was scribbling. ‘Quite a packet.’

‘Yes. Now, don’t worry about what’s happening to the firm. Leave that in my hands and I’ll sort it out. Carry on as usual. One more thing, Jack; I’m not in England. You haven’t seen me tonight. I’ll arrive at the office unexpectedly one day. Okay?’

He grinned. ‘Catching them in the act?’

‘Something like that.’

I went away leaving Jack a great deal less troubled in the mind than when I’d arrived. I gave the driver Alix Aarvik’s address in Kensington and sat back wondering how that pair of cheapjack bastards thought they could get away with it. It was very puzzling because I was the majority shareholder.

Alix Aarvik was in and pleased to see me. As she ushered me in to the living-room she said, ‘Oh, you’ve hurt yourself.’

‘Not irrevocably. Have you been keeping well?’

‘I’m all right. Would you like coffee?’

‘Thank you.’

She was busily domestic for a few minutes, then she said, ‘I like your beard—it suits you.’ She suddenly blushed because she’d said something personal to a comparative stranger.

‘Thank you. I might keep it on that recommendation.’ I paused. ‘Miss Aarvik, I’ve found your brother.’ I raised my hand. ‘He’s quite well and undamaged and he’s back in England.’

She sat down with a bump. ‘Oh, thank God!’

‘Rather thank a man called Byrne; he got Paul out of most of the holes he got himself into. Paul will tell you about it.’

‘Where was he?’

I thought of Koudia and Atakor and the Tassili. ‘In North Africa. He found his father, Miss Aarvik.’ Her hand flew to her mouth. ‘I suppose the story will be breaking in the
newspapers quite soon. A complete vindication, making nonsense of all the malicious speculation.’

‘Oh, I’m so glad!’ she said. ‘But where is Paul now?’

I wondered whether or not to take her into my confidence. She was much more level-headed than Paul, but in the end I decided against it. The truth, if and when it came out, would be so explosive that the fewer in the know the better, and there must be no possible way of Paul getting to know it.

I said carefully, ‘Newspapermen in a hurry can be highly inaccurate. We’ll be holding a press conference in a few days’ time and Paul and I are honing our statements—making sure they’re just right I’d rather he wasn’t disturbed until then.’

She nodded understandingly. ‘Yes,’ she said. ‘I know Paul. That would be better.’

‘You may find that Paul has changed,’ I said. ‘He’s different’

‘How?’

I shrugged. ‘I think you’ll find that he’s a better man than he was.’

She thought about that for a moment but couldn’t make anything of it. ‘Were you with Paul when you found…the body?’

‘Yes, and so was Byrne. We helped Paul bury it.’ I neglected to say that we’d helped him twice.

‘Who is Byrne?’

I smiled. ‘A difficult man to describe. You could call him a white Targui, except that a lot of Tuareg are as white as we are. He says he used to be an American. A very fine man. Your brother owes him a lot.’

‘And you, too.’

I changed the subject. ‘Are you still with Andrew McGovern as his secretary?’

‘Yes.’

‘I’d like you to do me a favour. I’d like to meet him.’

‘That can be arranged,’ she said.

‘But not very easily the way I want to do it. I want to meet him
not
at his office, and without him knowing who I am. This is a matter of some discretion, an assignment on behalf of a client.’

‘That
will
be difficult,’ she said, and fell into thought. ‘His lunches are usually business affairs. Can’t you see him at his home?’

‘I’d rather not. I prefer not to take business into people’s homes.’ Considering that I’d just busted in on Jack Ellis and here I was in Alix Aarvik’s flat that was a non-starter, but she didn’t notice.

‘He has no lunch appointment for the day after tomorrow,’ she said. ‘On those occasions he hardly eats at all and, if it’s fine, he nearly always takes a walk in the gardens of Lincoln’s Inn. If it’s not raining he’ll probably be there. Would you know him if you saw him?’

‘Oh yes.’

She spread her hands. ‘Then, there you are.’

I made leave-taking motions, and she said, ‘When will I be seeing Paul?’

‘Oh, not long. A week, perhaps; not more than ten days.’ I thought that if I didn’t get what I wanted within ten days I probably wouldn’t get it at all.

I didn’t leave all the work to Ellis. For instance, I spent an interesting morning in the Public Records Office, and on my way to see McGovern I called in at Hatchard’s and browsed through the current edition of
Whitaker’s Almanac
. Although it told me what I wanted to know I bought it anyway as part of the dossier.

Eight days later I had all I needed. I primed Ellis to let me know the next time Lord Brinton visited the office, then sat waiting by the telephone.

THIRTY-THREE

I pressed the button in the lift and ascended to the floor which held the offices of Stafford Security Consultants Ltd. The girl travelling up with me was one of our junior typists; probably somebody had sent her out to buy a packet of cigarettes or a bar of chocolate or something illicit like that. She looked at me and turned away, then looked at me again as though I were someone she ought to recognize. It was the beard that did it.

I stepped into the familiar hallway, walked into Reception and straight on through towards my own office. Barbara the receptionist said, hastily, ‘Here, you can’t…’

I turned and grinned at her. ‘Don’t you recognize your own boss?’

I carried on, hearing, ‘Oh, Mr Stafford!’ I went into my office and found Joyce hammering a typewriter. ‘Hi, Joyce; is Mr Ellis in?’

‘You’ve hurt your arm.’

‘And gone all hairy. I know. Is he in?’

‘Yes.’

I walked in on Ellis. ‘Morning, Jack. Got the rest of the bits and pieces?’

‘Yes.’ He unlocked the drawer of his desk. ‘The chemist’s report and the marriage certificate. It was 1937, not ‘36.’

I nodded. ‘There’d be a mourning period, of course.’

‘What’s this all about, Max?’

I unlocked my briefcase, using one hand, and he dropped the papers into it. ‘Better you don’t know. Is Brinton here?’

‘His Nibs is with Charlie.’

‘Right—stand by for fireworks.’

I walked in on Charlie cold, without announcement, ignoring the flapping of his secretary. He was sitting behind his desk and Brinton was in an armchair by his side. The armchair was new, but Brinton was noted for attending to his own creature comforts. If Charlie had seen fit to get an armchair then it meant Brinton was a frequent visitor.

Charlie looked up at me blankly, and then the penny dropped. ‘Max!’

‘Hello, Charlie.’ I nodded at Brinton. ‘Morning, my lord.’

‘Well, I’m damned!’ said Brinton. ‘Where did you spring from? I see you’ve hurt your arm. How did you do that?’

‘Skiing can be dangerous.’ A perfectly truthful statement, if not responsive to the question. I drew up a chair, sat down, and put the briefcase on the floor.

‘Where were you? Gstaad?’ Brinton was his old genial self but Charlie Malleson seemed tongue-tied and wore a hunted look.

I said, ‘I’ve been hearing some bloody funny stories about the company so I came back.’

Charlie’s eyes slid to Brinton who didn’t seem to notice. He still retained his smile as he said, ‘From Ellis, I suppose. Well, it’s true enough. We’ve made some changes to improve the profitability.’

‘Without my knowledge,’ I said coldly. ‘Or my consent.’

‘What’s the matter, Max?’ said Brinton. ‘Don’t you like money?’

‘As much as the next man—but I’m particular how I earn it.’ I turned to Charlie. ‘You didn’t take that clause from the Electronomics contract. So this was being cooked
up as long ago as that. What the hell’s got into you?’ He didn’t answer, so I said, ‘All right; from now on we go back to square one.’

Brinton’s voice was almost regretful as he said, ‘‘Fraid not, Max. You don’t have all that much of a say any more.’

I looked at him. He still wore the big smile but it didn’t reach his eyes which were cold as ice. ‘What the devil are you talking about? I own fifty-one per cent of the shares—a controlling interest.’

He shook his head. ‘You did. You don’t now. You made a mistake, the elementary mistake of a man in love. You trusted someone.’

I knew it then. ‘Gloria!’

‘Yes, Gloria. You went off in a hurry and forgot about the seven per cent interest in the firm you’d given her. I bought her shares.’ He wagged his head. ‘You should pay more attention to proverbial sayings; there’s a lot of truth in them. Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. See what I mean?’

I said, ‘Seven plus twenty-five makes thirty-two. That’s still not control.’

His grin had turned reptilian. ‘It is if Charlie votes with me—and he will. It seems he’s been a trifle worried lately—his financial affairs have become somewhat disordered and it’s definitely in his interest to increase the profitability of the company. It fell to me to point out that simple fact.’

‘I don’t suppose you had anything to do with his financial disorder,’ I said acidly. Brinton’s grin widened as I turned to Charlie and asked quietly, ‘Will you vote with him?’

He swallowed. ‘I must!’

‘Well, by God! What a bloody pair you are. I was prepared for his lordship to pull a fast one, but I didn’t think it of you, Charlie.’ He reddened. ‘You came to see me at my
club just before I left. I thought then that you wanted something but I couldn’t figure what it was. Now I know. You wanted to find out if I was still going on holiday even though I’d left Gloria.’ I jerked my thumb at Brinton. ‘He sent you to find out. No wonder both of you were urging me to go. You were giving me the fast shuffle so that Brinton could grab Gloria’s shares.’

Brinton chuckled. ‘It was her idea, really. She came and offered them to me. Max, you’re a simpleton. You don’t think I’d let all the valuable information in your files go to waste. A man could make millions with what you’ve got here.’

‘You let me build up the reputation of the company, and now you’re going to rape it. Is that it?’

‘Something along those lines,’ he said carelessly. ‘But legally—always legally.’

I said, ‘Brinton, I have something for your ears only—something I don’t think you’d like Charlie to know about.’

‘There’s nothing you can say to me that anyone can’t hear. If you have something in your gullet, spit it out.’

‘All right,’ I said. ‘Kissack won’t be coming back.’

‘What the devil are you talking about?’ he demanded. ‘Kissack? Who the hell is he?’

I hadn’t scored with that one. Of course, he might not know of Kissack who was pretty low on the totem pole—a hired hand. I tried again. ‘Lash won’t be coming back, either.’

That got to him! I knew by the fractional change in the planes of his face. But he kept his end up well. ‘And who is Lash?’

‘Lash is the man who hired the men who beat me up,’ I said deliberately. ‘Lash is the man who hired Kissack to k—’

Brinton held up his hand abruptly. ‘I can’t stay here all day. I have things to do at my place. You can come with
me and get rid of this nonsense there.’ He got to his feet creakily.

I cheered internally. I had the old bastard by the short hairs, and he knew it. He went ahead of me and I paused at the door and looked back at Charlie. ‘You louse!’ I said. ‘I’ll deal with you later.’

I went with Brinton to the basement and we solemnly drove two blocks to the basement of another building and ascended to his penthouse where the coal fire still blazed cheerfully. All the time he didn’t say a thing, but once on his own ground, he said, ‘Stafford, you’d better be careful with your statements or I’ll have your balls!’

I grinned, walked past him and sat in an armchair by the fire, and put down my briefcase. He didn’t like that; he didn’t like not being in central, and that meant he’d have to follow me. He sank into an opposing chair. ‘Well, what is it?’

‘I’d like to tell you a story about a bright, ambitious young engineer who married a woman who had just come into money. She hadn’t won the pools or anything like that, but the life of her previous husband had been insured for a hundred thousand pounds. This was in 1937, so that’s a lot more money than it sounds like now—maybe half a million in our terms.’

I stopped but Brinton made no comment. He merely stared at me with cold eyes. ‘But what this woman didn’t know was that this bright young engineer who, incidentally, was Canadian like yourself, had murdered her husband. His name was John Grenville Anderson, but he was commonly known as Jock. He was born in 1898 which, by another coincidence, would make him exactly as old as you.’

Brinton whispered, ‘If you repeat those words in public I’ll take you to court and strip you naked.’

‘It was the name that foxed me,’ I said. ‘We’ve had quite a few Canadian peers but none of them have tried to hide behind a name. Beaverbrook was obviously Canadian;
Thomson of Fleet not only retained his own name but advertised his newspaper connection. But Brinton doesn’t mean a damned thing, either here or in Canada. There’s a little place called Brinton in Norfolk but you’ve never been near it to my knowledge.’

I leaned down and opened the briefcase. ‘Exhibit One—a photocopy of a page from
Whitaker’s Almanac
.’ I read the relevant line. ‘“Created 1947, Brinton (1st.) John Grenville Anderson, born 1898.” A most anonymous title, don’t you think?’

‘Get on with this preposterous nonsense.’

‘Exhibit Two—a copy of your marriage lines to Helen Billson early in 1937. You didn’t stick with her long, did you, Jock? Just long enough to part her from her money. A hundred thousand quid was just what a man like you needed to start a good little engineering company. Then the war came, and Lord, how the money rolled in! You were in aircraft manufacture, of course, on cost plus a percentage until your compatriot, Beaverbrook, put a stop to that. But by the end of the war you’d built up your nest-egg to a couple of millions, plus the grateful thanks of your sovereign who ennobled you for contributing funds to the right political party. And not just a tatty old life peerage like we have now. Not that that made any difference—you had no legitimate children.’

His lips compressed. ‘I’m being very patient.’

‘So you are. You ought to have me thrown out neck and crop. Why don’t you?’

His eyes flickered. ‘You amuse me. I’d like to hear the end of this fairy story.’

‘No one can say I’m not obliging,’ I said. ‘All right; by 1946 you’d just got started. You discovered you had a flair for finance; in the property boom of the ‘fifties you made millions—you’re still making millions because money makes money. And it all came out of the murder of Peter Billson whose widow you married.’

‘And how am I supposed to have murdered Billson?’

‘You were his mechanic in the London to Cape Town Air Race of 1936. In Algiers you delayed him so he’d have to fly to Kano at night. Then you gimmicked his compass so that he flew off course.’

‘You can never prove that. You’re getting into dangerous waters, Stafford.’

‘Exhibit Three—an eight-by-ten colour photograph of
Flyaway
, Billson’s aircraft, taken by myself less than two weeks ago. Note how intact it is. Exhibit Four—an affidavit witnessed by a notary public and signed by myself and the man who took out the compass and tested it.’

Brinton studied the photograph, then read the document. I said, ‘By the way, that’s also a photocopy—all these papers are. Those that are a matter of public record are in the appropriate place, and the others are in the vaults of my bank. My solicitor knows what to do with them should anything happen to me.’

He grunted. ‘Who is Lucas Byrne?’

‘An aeronautical engineer,’ I said, stretching a point. ‘You’ll note he mentions a substance found in the main fuel tank. Here’s a report by a chemist who analysed the stuff. He says he found mostly hydrocarbons of petroleum derivation.’

‘Naturally,’ sneered Brinton.

‘He said mostly,’ I pointed out. ‘He also found other hydrocarbons—disaccharides, D-glucopyranose, D-fructopyranose and others. Translated into English it means that you’d put sugar into the fuel tank, and when Billson switched over from the auxiliary his engine froze solid.’ I sat back. ‘But let’s come to modern times.’

Brinton stretched out his hand and dropped Byrne’s statement on to the fire. I laughed. ‘Plenty more where that came from.’

‘What about modern times?’

‘You became really worried about Paul Billson, didn’t you, when you found he was practically insane about his
father? He was the one man who had the incentive and the obsessiveness to go out to find
Flyaway
in order to clear his father’s name. You weren’t as worried about Alix Aarvik but you really anchored Paul. I had a long chat with Andrew McGovern about that the other day.’

Brinton’s head came up with a jerk. ‘You’ve seen McGovern?’

‘Yes—didn’t he tell you? I suppose I must have thrown a bit of a scare into him. He had no objection to employing Paul because you were paying all of Paul’s inflated salary. He jumped to the natural conclusion: that Paul was one of your byblows, a souvenir of your misspent youth whom you were tactfully looking after. And so you tethered Paul for fifteen years by giving him a salary that he knew he wasn’t worth. It’s ironic that it was you who financed his trip to the Sahara when he blew up. I dare say the payments you made through the Whensley Group can be traced.’

His lips twisted. ‘I doubt it.’

‘McGovern told me something else. He didn’t want Stafford Security pulled out of the Whensley Group—it was your idea. You twisted his arm. I don’t know what hold you have on McGovern, but whatever it is you used it. That was to stop me carrying on the investigation into Paul Billson. You also got McGovern to send Alix Aarvik to Canada but that didn’t work out, did it? Because I got to her first. So you had Lash have me beaten up. I don’t think McGovern likes you any more. I suppose that’s why he didn’t report back to you that he’d seen me—that and the fact that I told him he’d better keep his nose clean.’

Brinton dismissed McGovern with a twitch of a finger. ‘You said Lash isn’t coming back. What happened to him?’

‘Two bullets through his lungs, one through the belly, and another through the head at close range—that’s what
happened to Lash. There are three dead men out there, and another with an amputated foot, and all because of you, Jock. All because you were so scared of what Paul Billson might find that you put out a contract on him.’ I tapped my arm in its sling. ‘Not Gstaad, Jock; the Tassili. You owe me something for this.’

‘I owe you nothing,’ he said contemptuously.

‘Then we come to a man called Torstein Aarvik who married Helen Billson.’ I drew a photocopy of the marriage certificate from my briefcase. ‘This really shook me when I saw it because legally she was Anderson, wasn’t she? Helen had lost sight of you so she took a chance. She married Aarvik as the widow Billson without divorcing you. It was wartime and things were pretty free and easy and, besides, she wasn’t too bright—I have Alix Aarvik’s word for that. But you knew where she was because you’d been keeping tabs on her. I don’t know how you separated her from her money in the first place but you used her bigamous marriage to keep her quiet for the rest of her life. She couldn’t fight you, could she? And maybe she wasn’t bright but perhaps she was decent enough to prevent Alix knowing that she’s a bastard. Now who’s the bastard here, you son of a bitch?’

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