The Judas Gate (19 page)

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Authors: Jack Higgins

Tags: #Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Thrillers, #Suspense

BOOK: The Judas Gate
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The three men turned to look at Jean and she opened the glove compartment and took out a short-barrelled Smith & Wesson .38 revolver, one of a number of weapons Colonel Henry had kept around the house. She slipped it in her trenchcoat pocket and got out of the Shogun.

‘Sorry if I’m intruding,’ she said. ‘Remember me, Paddy,
from Kilmartin? Jean Talbot, Colonel Henry’s daughter?’ He looked slightly dazed and she took his hand. ‘I was so sorry to hear about what happened to Mickeen.’

‘That’s kind of you.’ He seemed to come to life. ‘This is Sean Dillon, Mickeen’s nephew, over from London on hearing the bad news.’

She turned and didn’t offer her hand, simply stood there with hands in her pockets, looking him over. ‘Sean Dillon.’ She frowned slightly, ‘A familiar name. I’m sure I’ve heard it before.’

‘And my friend, Daniel Holley.’

She smiled at Holley. ‘So how is Mickeen?’

‘What can I say?’ Dillon shrugged slightly. ‘He’s had a massive operation which has left him with a titanium plate in the head, and he’s comatose. He’s been flown to London by air ambulance.’

‘So what happens here?’

‘The garage, you mean? That’s quite simple. I’m offering Paddy a full partnership to keep things going while we see how Mickeen makes out.’

Suddenly, O’Rourke was smiling. ‘By God, that’s a fine offer, Sean, and I’ll take it.’ He spat on the palm of his hand, held it out and Dillon shook it.

Jean said, ‘May I suggest we adjourn to the Green Man and seal the bargain with a drink?’

Paddy’s face fell. ‘Well, now, there could be complications about that.’

‘What complications? Don’t be silly, Paddy.’ She took Dillon’s arm. ‘Shall we go?’

‘It’s entirely our pleasure, Mrs Talbot.’ They walked away, Holley and Paddy following.

Farrel called Curry at once. ‘They’re on their way to the pub, Mr Curry.’

‘Then move your arses and get down here fast. Use the back lane.’

Curry was coldly angry. He reached under the bar and produced a sawn-off shotgun, which he loaded and then replaced under the bar. There was no solution there. The woman was a wild card in this game. She was untouchable.

The door opened and she led the way in, just in front of Dillon, Holley and O’Rourke behind.

‘Mr Curry, how nice to see you, it’s been a while. You may know Mr Dillon here.’

‘He certainly does, we’re of an age,’ Dillon said. ‘We were at the village school together. How goes it, Martin?’ His smile was mocking.

Curry was struggling to keep control, but before he could make any kind of reply, the back door crashed open and Dempsey and Farrel entered.

‘What’s happening?’ Farrel demanded.

‘We’re all having a drink to celebrate Paddy being made partner at the garage,’ Jean said. ‘Why don’t you join us?’

‘I’m damned if I’ll drink with these shites or you, you Protestant whore,’ he said, producing a pistol.

Dillon kicked him under the right kneecap and, as he doubled over, raised his knee into the descending face and sent him back to trip over a chair and bounce off the wall, blood oozing from a broken nose as he slid to the floor,
dropping his pistol. Curry reached under the bar, producing the sawn-off shotgun. Holley picked up the glass jug of water on the bar, threw it in his face and yanked the shotgun from him by the barrel. He tossed it into the corner, kicking Dempsey in the face as he leaned down to pick up Farrel’s pistol.

Jean Talbot took the Smith & Wesson from her pocket and fired a shot into the ceiling. ‘Now can everybody calm down?’

The door opened and Jack Kelly stepped in. He surveyed the scene, Dempsey and Farrel crouched on the floor by the wall, Curry drying his face with a bar towel. O’Rourke looked terrified.

Kelly said to Dillon, ‘Have you given Paddy the job?’

‘I don’t know who you are, but, yes, he’s now a partner.’

‘Excellent. I’m Jack Kelly, estate manager at Talbot Place.’

‘Ah, I mind that name from days when you were doing something else,’ Dillon said. ‘Do you know my friend Daniel Holley?’

‘We have mutual friends in Crossmaglen. If you’re finished here, Jean, I’ll see you home.’

‘That’s kind of you.’ She turned to Dillon and Holley, ‘Shall we go?’

‘Certainly,’ Dillon turned to Curry. ‘It’s been a sincere sensation, Martin.’ He ducked as Curry threw a glass at him.

Outside, Jean was getting into Kelly’s Morris. ‘He’s just running me up to my car. Nice meeting you, gentlemen. It’s good to be able to put a face to the name.’

They walked back up the street. ‘I feel bad about leaving Paddy in there,’ Dillon said.

‘He’ll be all right,’ Holley grinned. ‘They’ve got to get their petrol from somewhere.’

‘Yes, he’ll survive, but what a bloody place. Thank God my father got me out of it at twelve. Let’s get going.’

As Holley drove, Dillon called Roper. ‘What’s the situation with Ferguson?’

‘He’s not stirring yet, so I’m leaving well enough alone. Have you been having fun?’

Dillon told him what had happened, because Roper had a talent approaching genius for making sense out of everything.

‘What do you think?’

‘Jean Talbot? Quite a lady. I liked the bit with the gun. She probably went along to the garage because she wanted to meet you – but I suspect she was also stirring things up. The Catholic and Protestant thing is what she was raised on all her life. She knew you’d have trouble at the Green Man.’

‘That’s true. Maybe she just likes to live dangerously. Anyway, what’s the deal on Mickeen at Rosedene?’

‘He’s arrived and Charles Bellamy has everything in hand. He and Jordan fell into each other’s arms and are enjoying lunch together at Rosedene as we speak.’

‘So everybody’s happy?’

‘Until Ferguson surfaces. God help us all then. I’ve booked your flight plan for three hours from now at Belfast City. Over and out.’

Dillon leaned back. ‘Three hours to lift off. Say farewell to beautiful Ulster.’

‘If you’re worried about Ferguson, I really meant it when I said I’d pay for the air ambulance,’ Holley told him.

‘After an initial roaring when he hears of it, Ferguson will calm down. The department will pay. It’s a matter of honour.’

‘Actually, I don’t see why they should. Mickeen isn’t in the employ of the Secret Intelligence Service. He just had an accident. It’s you who’ve used your position to cause things to happen, helped by my promise to pay. Strictly speaking, I doubt whether Mickeen has any right to be in Rosedene.’

‘Damn you and your logic, but I suppose you’re right. Okay, I’ll just have to pay for it myself.’

‘Can you afford it?’

‘To be honest, I made a great deal of money back in Nineteen ninety-one, payment for a spectacular, and we won’t say what it was. The money’s sat in a numbered account in Switzerland ever since. Over eighteen years, I believe it’s trebled.’

‘You old bastard,’ Holley said. ‘Is there no end to you?’

‘So that’s Mickeen taken care of. I’m going to have a nap.’ Dillon inclined his seat back and closed his eyes.

Jack Kelly, sitting opposite Justin in the study, told him about the scene at the Green Man.

Justin was angry. ‘What was my mother up to, creating such mayhem in Collyban?’

‘She told me she simply wanted to express her sympathy to Paddy O’Rourke. She’s known Flynn for years, always buys petrol from his garage.’

‘So she was there just by chance when Dillon and Holley turned up. Really?’

‘It seems so. And it was she who insisted they go to the Green Man to celebrate the deal. Unfortunately, Curry’s man objected to Dillon, and matters got out of hand.’

‘Unfortunate,’ Justin shrugged. ‘Well, if all that’s true, I suppose there’s really nothing to worry about. After all, she hasn’t the slightest idea who Dillon and Holley are.’

‘I can’t see how she could,’ Kelly said.

‘Good. Then let’s have a drink on it.’

   9   

Other things had been happening the previous evening, too, while Dillon and Holley were racing to make their flight to Belfast.

After the death threat from ‘number one man’, Kalid Hasim had felt extremely nervous. His friend, Sajid, was still in St Luke’s Hospital with the broken arm. Omar, who had swum into the darkness of the Thames, had vanished. Alone, he felt very vulnerable.

But he was no coward, and he soon got restless. Tired of staying in the furnished room he rented, he ventured out at seven-thirty in the evening and went to his usual gym for a training session, a baseball bat in the long sports bag he carried, just in case.

It wasn’t particularly busy and there was no one to spar with, so he just worked out for an hour, then showered, dressed and left, unsure of where he was going to go. There was a lamp shining down from a bracket about ten feet above the end of the narrow street, the beam causing a reflection of his image in the shop window, so that he was aware of the other image merging into his own, a gun in its right hand.

‘I told you you were a dead man,’ the voice said from behind him. ‘Now keep walking and turn into the alley on the right. The canal’s at the end. Very convenient, that, I’m sure you’ll agree.’

‘Just give me a break.’ Hasim half sobbed for effect as he said it, then stumbled, dropped the bag, the baseball bat in his right hand, and swung wildly against the man’s left thigh.

‘Number one man’ cursed and stumbled, the silenced pistol discharging. Hasim dropped the baseball bat at the sound, and ran out into the road blindly, dodging through traffic. He stopped in the safety of the far side, pedestrians around, and stepped into a doorway from where he could observe the alley. When a figure emerged, he gave himself away by carrying Hasim’s sports bag in one hand.

He must have assumed Hasim was running for his life. Hasim had not been able to get a good look at his assailant on the street, but now he stepped back into the darkness of the doorway and watched him. The lights on a silver Mercedes down the street came on – must be a remote control. Hasim found a pen in a pocket of his tracksuit and wrote the licence plate number across the palm of his hand.

The man drove away, and Hasim stood, thinking. There was no point going home. That would be the equivalent of committing suicide. He had twenty-five or thirty pounds in his pocket. A limited future indeed, whichever way you looked at it. ‘Number one man’ was obviously serious about killing him, and it only gave him one choice. He waved down a cab, got in, and told the driver to take him to the Dark Man on Cable Wharf. It was time to talk to the Salters.

Harry and Billy Salter were in the corner booth, Dora serving them with two plates of sandwiches. ‘Ham and pickles,’ she said, ‘and salad for the vegetarian teetotaller.’

‘So kind, Dora.’ Billy reached for one. Harry said, ‘Well, look what the cat’s brought in.’

Hasim stood uncertainly just inside the door, and Joe Baxter went and grabbed his arm. ‘Shall I give him the heave-ho, boss?’

‘Just listen to me, Mr Salter,’ Hasim pleaded.

‘Why should I?’

‘The guy I told you about who’s just a voice on the phone?’

‘The one you’d never met?’ Billy said.

‘He just tried to shoot me.’

There was complete silence, then Harry said, ‘Now why would he do that?’

‘After you gave me the money and told me to find my friend, I took him to the hospital. He’s still there. The man I’m talking about called me. He said I’d shot my mouth off
to you. He added that you now knew it was connected to Al Qaeda and it was my fault and I was a dead man.’

‘And he’s had a go?’ Billy demanded.

Hasim described exactly what had happened when he’d left the gym in Camden.

‘What a bastard,’ Salter said. ‘We can’t have this. Let’s have a look at your palm.’ He examined it, turned to Billy, and read off the licence plate number Hasim had written there. ‘Roper should take at least five minutes to trace this bleeder on his computer, wouldn’t you say?’

‘Absolutely.’ Billy was already on his mobile, calling Holland Park. He got up, walking away as he talked to Roper.

Harry said, ‘You look half starved. Have a sandwich. There’s salad there. I know you Muslims don’t go for ham.’

‘Actually, I’m rather partial to it, so if you don’t mind.’ Hasim helped himself. ‘There are Muslims and Muslims.’

‘You’d better stay here for a bit while we sort this out,’ Dora said as she brought him a drink. She ruffled his hair. ‘Can’t have a nice young lad like you running round in fear for his life.’

‘God help us, she’ll be adopting you next,’ Harry said. ‘But she’s got a point. Go on, have another sandwich, build yourself up.’

The licence plate number was the key that unlocked everything.

‘His name’s Selim Lancy,’ Billy said when he returned to the booth. ‘An interesting geezer. His father was an English
seaman, his mother’s Muslim. She’s got cancer and she’s a patient at St Luke’s at the moment.’

‘Just up the bleeding road,’ Harry said. ‘Bit of a coincidence.’

‘Not really. They live in an old house on Tangier Wharf. That’s no distance at all.’

‘What’s he do?’ Harry asked. ‘Has he got any form?’

‘Not the kind you mean,’ Billy said. ‘A corporal in 3 Para. Couple of tours in Afghanistan, badly wounded, discharged. Roper’s even got the amount of compensation he received from the Ministry of Defence. Seventeen grand.’

‘Well, I think we should do better than that for our gallant lads,’ Harry said. ‘That isn’t going to keep him for the rest of his life, is it?’

‘He’s bought a second-hand Mercedes and is a licensed private chauffeur.’ Billy shrugged. ‘It’s a living, I suppose.’

‘More than a living, I’d have thought,’ Harry said. ‘What’s more glamorous than a war hero in a good suit driving a silver Mercedes? Those posh birds that go shopping to Harrods or Bond Street will lap him up. I bet he’s making a fortune.’

‘Which still leaves us with the Al Qaeda connection,’ Billy said, and turned to Hasim, who’d been listening intently. ‘What’s that all about?’

‘I honestly don’t know,’ Hasim said. ‘He only mentioned the name Al Qaeda once, like I told you, when he sentenced me to death.’ And then he frowned. ‘I think he takes his religion seriously.’

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