The Judas Gate (28 page)

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Authors: Jack Higgins

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

BOOK: The Judas Gate
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‘And then took him to his plane?’

‘Yes, his friend was waiting.’

‘What kind of plane was it?’ Miller asked.

‘I have no idea.’

‘He was English, I believe, not an Arab.’

It was her father who said, ‘That’s enough. Go, Daniel, and don’t come back.’

‘Just one more thing. He was in reasonable health when you left him. You gave him the penicillin in the kit, and soon?’ said Dillon.

‘Oh yes, I did everything he told me – not that it will do him the slightest good. He’s obviously going to die and I think he knows it.’

She went inside, leaving a stunned silence, and Hamza said, ‘That’s it, on your way.’ He patted the machine gun. ‘Unless you want to argue with this.’

‘Whatever you say, old friend,’ Holley told him. ‘I think you can take it that we won’t be back.’

‘You weren’t even here, as far as we’re concerned,’ Hamza said. ‘I imagine that’s the way the authorities in Algiers will look at it. After all, an Al Qaeda operation is the last thing they’d want to have anything to do with.’

The heavy rain kept what little life there was in Dafur indoors. They dumped the inflatable in the creek, walked down to the runway where the Falcon stood, silent and waiting. Holley took the controls and, within five minutes, they were taking off. Dillon found himself a drink and Miller called Roper on his Codex.

‘That was quick. Did you finally come face to face with Shamrock?’

‘In a way, I suppose. The whole thing was a sting.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Ali Hakim turned out to be Al Qaeda’s man in Algiers.’

‘God in heaven,’ Roper said.

‘You can imagine what a shock it was for Holley. The story about Shamrock having dealings with Hamza was just bait for us to go and get knocked off. They’d hoped Ferguson would be there, too.’

‘So no Shamrock?’

‘No, he turned up. Apparently, he wanted to enjoy dealing with us personally.’

‘Just start at the beginning, so I can make some sense of it,’ Roper said.

Which Miller did, and when he was finished, said, ‘So there it is. Shamrock winging his way back to wherever he came from, with the pilot who flew him in and waited for him.’

‘Badly wounded and dying, according to this Fatima girl.’

‘She’s a strange one, but that’s what she said.’ Miller was repeating himself now. ‘Dillon shot him in the side and the bullet went straight through.’

‘And he’s making a flight to we don’t know where, which could take hours. He’s committing suicide.’

‘Well, that’s the story and it’s obviously not finished yet.’

‘It’s incredible. You’ve certainly had an extraordinary outing this time. God knows what Ferguson will make of it.’

‘He’ll be over the moon about one thing. We now know who the Preacher is. Imagine, a Professor of International Law at the London School of Economics, and he’s moonlighting for Al Qaeda in London.’

‘If you wrote it up, nobody would believe it,’ Roper said.

‘I would: my father knew Kim Philby at Cambridge,’ Miller told him. ‘Anything been happening while we’ve been away?’

‘There hasn’t been time, Harry. You’ve hardly been away. Take it easy. I’ll see you soon.’

L
ONDO
N
N
ORTHERN
I
RELAND

   13   

By the time the Citation X was winging its way across Spain to the Bay of Biscay, Chuck Alan was beginning to worry. When Justin Talbot had returned to the plane at Fasa, he had seemed very hyper and full of nervous energy. He’d insisted on taking the controls on take-off and only handed over during the second hour when Chuck had suggested the autopilot.

‘Excellent idea,’ Justin said. ‘I don’t think I had a wink of sleep while I was away. I’ll get my head down.’

Two hours later, when Alan checked him, he was still asleep, his forehead damp, so Alan returned to the cockpit, consider ably concerned.

At the same time, the Preacher, having heard nothing from
Hakim and no response when he tried to call him, contacted Hamza.

‘What’s happened to Hakim? I don’t seem to be able to contact him.’

‘Well, you wouldn’t,’ Hamza said. ‘He’s dead. In fact, his people are all dead. Dillon and his friends don’t take prisoners.’

‘Merciful Allah! And Shamrock?’

‘Where did you find that guy, the Arabian Nights? He was really something in his Tuareg robes. God knows what he was here for. He only managed to shoot one person, and that was Hakim by mistake. Dillon shot him in return.’

‘Are you saying he’s dead?’

‘No, badly wounded, but fit enough to have flown back out of this cesspool. My daughter did her best for him with his medical kit.’

‘So he’s going to be all right?’

‘Not according to her. She thinks he’s a goner and she’s usually right about things like that. Where did you get my mobile number from?’

‘Hakim.’

‘Well, don’t call again. I’m not afraid of Al Qaeda, and neither is anyone else that I know around here. After this cock-up, your new motto should be: Stay out of the Khufra.’

He cut off and Shah sat there thinking about it, and then called Talbot, who came awake with a start, the phone ringing in his breast pocket.

‘Hamza’s told me everything. What a debacle, and not helped by you indulging in your usual theatricals. So you’ve managed to get yourself shot?’

‘Yes, and I don’t exactly feel at my best. When I hit Belfast, I should book in at the Seaton – when it comes to gunshot wounds, Belfast hospitals are the best in the world; the Troubles gave them forty years’ practice – but I don’t know. They’ll report me. What’s the point in that?’

And Shah, angry and immensely irritated, said, ‘You bloody fool, you’re dying. Hamza’s daughter said so.’

‘Did she? Well, there you are then. She was a nice girl. You know your trouble, Preacher? You don’t listen. I told you Dillon and his friends were hell on wheels, but you wouldn’t have it. Your stupidity has ruined everything.’

‘My stupidity?’ Shah said. ‘Damn you to hell, Talbot. I’ll destroy you.’

‘If I’m dying, it won’t make any difference, so why don’t you go fuck yourself?’ Justin told him and cut off.

In his study at Bell Street, sitting behind the desk, Hassan Shah quite suddenly felt utterly helpless for the first time in years. Everything was slipping away from him. The consequences of the fiasco in the Khufra would undoubtedly affect his position in Al Qaeda when word reached Osama bin Laden. Once, he’d had the power to ruin Justin Talbot by just reaching for a telephone and making an anonymous call to any major newspaper, but that was no threat to a dying man. He frowned suddenly as a thought struck him: As long as he did die, of course.

Roper informed Ferguson of everything while the Falcon was still on its way, and Ferguson was astounded. ‘This is
one of the most sensational coups in the history of my department.’

‘Do you envisage repercussions, General?’

‘No. Algeria is not well-disposed towards Al Qaeda, and Hakim was notorious for his deeply secret covert operations where no questions were ever asked. I think this will simply be regarded as one that went badly wrong and in one of the worst places in the country. The whisper of an Al Qaeda connection will kill it stone dead. It never happened, Major.’

‘Tell that to Shamrock, flying off into the blue with Dillon’s bullet in him.’

‘And dying, if that young woman is right,’ Ferguson added thoughtfully.

‘Which leaves us with Professor Hassan Shah,’ Roper told him. ‘What’s to be done there? Do we arrest him?’

‘Not at the moment. We know how badly things have gone wrong – and so will he by now. Al Qaeda’s tentacles spread far. Call in Billy right now. Tell him he’s to stick to Shah like glue.’

‘Should I put out a red code travel restriction so he can’t leave the country?’

‘No. I’ll rely on Billy, and also Shah’s confidence in his social and governmental position.’ Ferguson shook his head. ‘You know what really gets to me? He’s the kind of eminent lawyer you would have expected to get a life peerage.’

‘I see your point, General. I suppose he’ll have to make do with a thirty-year sentence for high treason instead.’

‘Exactly,’ Ferguson said. ‘But give Billy his orders now.’

* * *

The Citation X landed at Belfast City just after noon, Chuck Alan sitting alone in the cockpit. He parked as instructed, went in the cabin and opened the door. He found Justin dozing. He shook his shoulder lightly and Justin’s eyes opened. He seemed puzzled for a moment, as if unaware of where he was, and the sweat on his forehead was more obvious.

He smiled suddenly, ‘Hi, old buddy, are we there?’

‘Belfast City,’ Alan said. ‘You don’t look too good.’

Justin sat up, reached for a napkin and wiped his face. ‘I’m good, Chuck, just fine.’ He reached in the rucksack, found the medical kit and the morphine pack. He extracted a phial and jabbed it in his left arm.

‘What in the hell are you doing?’ Chuck Alan demanded. ‘What’s going on, boss?’

‘Morphine’s going in, Chuck, it kills the pain, which is good if you’ve been shot, which I was back in that stinking marsh.’ Justin was obviously light-headed now.

‘Look, I don’t know what I’ve been involved with or what happened back there this morning. I don’t think I’ve heard machine gun fire like it since Iraq, but I think you should probably be in the hospital.’

A man in ground-crew overalls peered in. ‘We’ve brought your Mercedes from the VIP car park Major Talbot. They presumed you needed it.’

‘Well, that’s damned nice of them.’ Justin picked up his rucksack with his right hand and said to Alan, ‘You should be at Frensham.’

Justin went down the steps carefully, like a drunk, and
walked to the Mercedes, where the ground-crew man held the driver’s door open for him. He put the rucksack on the passenger seat, slid behind the wheel, switched on the engine and lowered the window.

‘Bon voyage, old buddy, happy landings.’ He drove away, was waved through security without a search, smiling and calling hello to various officials who knew him well. A few minutes later and he was part of the busy city traffic of Belfast.

Chuck had to hang on for another hour for his departure slot, and waited in the private lounge, drinking black coffee and going over it all in his mind. He finally did the right thing and called the house number he’d been given for Talbot Place. A man’s voice answered.

‘It’s Chuck Alan, Mr Talbot’s pilot. I was hoping to speak to his mother.’

‘I’m afraid she’s out. I’m the estate manager, Jack Kelly. I thought you were in Algeria?’

‘We’ve just got back.’

‘Is there something wrong? I know Justin was up to no good.’

Chuck hesitated. ‘Look, this is my boss we’re talking about.’

‘Just tell me the worst,’ Kelly ordered.

Which Alan did, and when he was finished, said, ‘I know it sounds difficult to believe—’

Kelly cut him off. ‘Not where Justin’s concerned. I’m going to change your orders. You do have your Talbot credit card?’

‘I sure do.’

‘Cancel your departure, put the Citation in for a flight check, refuelling and so on, and then go down to the Europa, book in and await further instructions. I don’t know how this business is going to turn out, but you could be needed. Understand?’

‘Perfectly, Mr Kelly, I’ll get moving on that at once.’

Jean Talbot had been up the mountain again with Nell, hoping that the strong wind blowing in from the Irish Sea would clear her head of the dark thoughts that had filled it since Justin’s departure. She was surprised to see Kelly’s old Morris driving towards her on the lower track. It stopped. Kelly got out and came towards her.

She knew it must be trouble of a sort, and hurried to meet him. ‘What is it? Justin?’

‘Get in the car out of the wind and I’ll tell you.’

She took the passenger seat, Nell scampered in the back, and Kelly got behind the wheel as it started to rain.

‘Jack, what’s going on?’ And then the thought hit her and she turned pale, ‘Oh, dear God, he’s dead?’

‘No, but I understand he’s been shot.’

‘Then where is he?’

‘It would appear he’s driving down from Belfast.’ Kelly started the Morris and coasted down to the road below.

She took a deep breath to pull herself together. ‘What’s been going on, Jack? I’ve heard half of everything for too long. Who is my son, really, what kind of man?’

‘I don’t think he’s ever known that,’ Kelly told her. ‘The little Protestant bastard who was really a Catholic bastard, a boy who had to survive a bigger bastard, Colonel Henry Talbot. But forget all that. The serious trouble he’s in started after he left the army and went to Pakistan and Peshawar.’

‘Why was that?’

‘He and our happy band of brothers from Kilmartin were selling illegal arms over the border to the Taliban in Afghanistan. Selling arms became also agreeing to train people in their use. Al Qaeda, discovering what he was doing, blackmailed him into working for them.’

She said, in horror, ‘You’re asking me to believe he would go along with that?’

‘He didn’t have a choice, Jean, and certainly not at first. The trouble is he found he liked it. Action and passion are everything to him. You know your own son.’

She nodded, calmer now. ‘Just how bad is what he’s done?’

‘He’s led a Taliban group, some of them including British Muslims, in battle against American and British forces.’ ‘And killed people?’ ‘A great many, I’m afraid.’

‘This can’t be happening.’ She shook her head. ‘Why hasn’t he been arrested?’

‘The authorities don’t know who he is. I do, because the other year he confided in me. He’s controlled by a man in London called the Preacher, and Justin has a codename, Shamrock. Dillon and Daniel Holley, whom you met, are
working for General Charles Ferguson of British Intelligence, trying to find out who Shamrock is.’

‘So where does Algeria come in?’

‘False information was fed by Al Qaeda sources to Ferguson that Shamrock was known to be in a pretty unsavoury part of Algeria. Justin devised the plot, which was to draw Ferguson’s people to hunt for him, unaware that they were the hunted themselves.’

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