Thunder Point. Jack Higgins

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Thunder Point - Jack Higgins страница 8

Thunder Point - Jack  Higgins

Скачать книгу

him Zekan smiled, showing bad teeth, took Dillon’s silver case and Zippo lighter from a pocket and laid them carefully on the table. He withdrew, closing the door, and the key rattled in the lock.

      Dillon went to the window and tried the bars, but they seemed firm. Too far down anyway. He opened one of the packs of Rothmans and lit one. One thing was certain. Branko was being excessively kind and there had to be a reason for that. He went and lay on the bed, smoking his cigarette, staring up at the ceiling and thinking about it.

      In 1972, aware of the growing problem of terrorism and its effect on so many aspects of life at both political and national level, the British Prime Minister of the day ordered the setting up of a small elite Intelligence unit, known simply by the code name Group Four. It was to handle all matters concerning terrorism and subversion in the British Isles. Known rather bitterly in more conventional Intelligence circles as the Prime Minister’s private army, it owed allegiance to that office alone.

      Brigadier Charles Ferguson had headed Group Four since its inception, had served a number of prime ministers, both Conservative and Labour, and had no political allegiance whatsoever. He had an office on the third floor of the Ministry of Defence overlooking Horseguards Avenue, and was still working at his desk at nine o’clock that night when there was a knock at the door.

      ‘Come in,’ Ferguson said, stood up and walked to the window, a large, rather untidy-looking man with a double chin and grey hair who wore a baggy suit and a Guards tie.

      As he peered out at the rain towards Victoria Embankment and the Thames the door opened behind him. The man who entered was in his late thirties, wore a tweed suit and glasses. He could have been a clerk, or even a schoolmaster, but Detective Inspector Jack Lane was neither of these things. He was a cop. Not an ordinary one, but a cop all the same and, after some negotiating, Ferguson had succeeded in borrowing him from Special Branch at Scotland Yard to act as his personal assistant.

      ‘Got something for me, Jack?’ Ferguson’s voice was ever so slightly plummy.

      ‘Mainly routine, Brigadier. The word is that the Director General of the Security Services is still unhappy at the Prime Minister’s refusal to do away with Group Four’s special status.’

      ‘Good God, don’t they ever give up those people? I’ve agreed to keep them informed on a need-to-know basis and to liaise with Simon Carter, the Deputy Director, and that damned MP, the one with the fancy title. Extra Minister at the Home Office.’

      ‘Sir Francis Pamer, sir.’

      ‘Yes, well that’s all the co-operation they’re going to get out of me. Anything else?’

      Lane smiled. ‘Actually, I’ve saved the best bit till last. Dillon – Sean Dillon?’

      Ferguson turned. ‘What about him?’

      ‘Had a signal from our contacts in Yugoslavia. Dillon crashed in a light plane this morning, supposedly flying in medical supplies only they turned out to be Stinger missiles. They’re holding him in that castle at Kivo. It’s all here.’

      He passed a sheet of paper across and Ferguson put on half-moon spectacles and studied it. He nodded in satisfaction. ‘Twenty years and the bastard never saw the inside of a prison cell.’

      ‘Well he’s in one now, sir. I’ve got his record here, if you want to look at it.’

      ‘And why would I want to do that? No use to anyone now. You know what the Serbs are like, Jack. Might as well stick it in the dead-letter file. Oh, you can go home now.’

      ‘Good night, sir.’

      Lane went out and Ferguson crossed to his drinks cabinet and poured a large Scotch. ‘Here’s to you, Dillon,’ he said softly. ‘And you can chew on that, you bastard.’

      He swallowed the whisky down, returned to his desk and started to work again.

      2

      East of Puerto Rico in the Caribbean are the Virgin Islands, partly British like Tortola and Virgin Gorda. Across the water, just as proudly American, are St Croix, St Thomas and St John since 1917 when the United States purchased them from the Danish government for twenty-five million dollars.

      St John is reputed to have been discovered by Columbus on his second voyage to the New World in 1493 and without a doubt is the most idyllic island in the entire Caribbean, but not that night as a tropical storm, the tail end of Hurricane Able, swept in across the old town of Cruz Bay, stirring the boats at anchor in the harbour, driving rain across the rooftops, the sky exploding into thunder.

      To Bob Carney, fast asleep in the house at Chocolate Hole on the other side of Great Cruz Bay, it was the sound of distant guns. He stirred in his sleep and, suddenly, it was the same old dream, the mortars landing everywhere, shaking the ground, the screams of the wounded and dying. He’d lost his helmet, flung himself to the ground, arms protecting his head, was not even aware of being hit, only afterwards, as the attack faded and he sat up. There was pain then in both arms and legs from shrapnel wounds, blood on his hands. And then, as the smoke cleared, he became aware of another marine sitting against a tree, both legs gone below the knees. He was shaking, had a hand outstretched as if begging for help and Carney cried out in horror and sat bolt upright in bed, awake now.

      The same lousy old dream, Vietnam, and that was a long time ago. He switched on the bedside lamp and checked his watch. It was only two-thirty. He sighed and stood up, stretching for a moment, then padded through the dark house to the kitchen, switched on the light and got a beer from the ice-box.

      He was very tanned, the blond hair faded, both from regular exposure to sea and sun. Around five foot eight, he had an athlete’s body, not surprising in a man who had been a ship’s captain and was now a master diver by profession. Forty-four years of age, but most people would have taken seven or eight years off that.

      He went through the living-room and opened a window to the verandah. Rain dripped from the roof and out to sea lightning crackled. He drank a little more of his beer then put the can down and closed the window. Better to try and get a little more sleep. He was taking a party of recreational scuba divers out from Caneel Bay at nine-thirty which meant that as usual he needed his wits about him, plus all his considerable expertise.

      As he went through the living-room he paused to pick up a framed photo of his wife, Karye and his two young children, the boy Walker and his daughter, little Wallis. They’d departed for Florida only the previous day for a vacation with their grandparents which left him a bachelor for the next month. He smiled wryly, knowing just how much he’d miss them and went back to bed.

      At the same moment in his house on the edge of Cruz Bay at Gallows Point, Henry Baker sat in his study reading in the light of a single desk lamp. He had the door to the verandah open because he liked the rain and the smell of the sea. It excited him, took him back to the days of his youth and his two years’ service in the navy during the Korean War. He’d made full lieutenant, had even been decorated with the Bronze Star, could have made a career of it. In fact they’d wanted him to, but there was the family publishing business to consider, responsibilities and the girl he’d promised to marry.

      It hadn’t been a bad life considering. No children, but he and his wife had been content until cancer took her at fifty. From then on he’d really lost interest in the business, had been happy to accept the right kind of deal for a take-over which had left him very rich and totally rootless at fifty-eight.

      It

Скачать книгу