The White House Connection. Jack Higgins
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Jake Cazalet was smiling. He looked up at Thornton, who was smiling too.
‘You obviously feel strongly about this, Blake.’
‘I sure as hell do, Mr President.’
‘Then try and come back in one piece. It would seriously inconvenience me to lose you.’
‘Oh, I’d hate to do that, Mr President.’
In London in his office at the Ministry of Defence, Ferguson put down the red secure phone and touched the intercom button.
‘Come in.’
A moment later, Dillon and Hannah Bernstein entered.
‘I’ve spoken to Blake Johnson. He’ll be at the Europa Hotel the day after tomorrow, booked in as Tommy McGuire. You two will join him.’
‘What kind of backup will we have, sir?’ Hannah asked.
‘You’re the backup, Chief Inspector. I don’t want the RUC in this or Army Intelligence from Lisburn. Even the cleaning women are nationalists there. Leaks all over the place. You, Dillon and Blake Johnson must handle it. You only need one pair of handcuffs for Barry.’
It was Dillon who said, ‘Consider it done, Brigadier.’
‘Can you guarantee that?’
‘As the coffin lid closing.’
As frequently happened in Belfast, a cold north wind drove rain across the city, stirring the waters of Belfast Lough, rattling the windows of Dillon’s room at the Europa, the most bombed hotel in the world. He looked out over the railway station, remembering the extent to which this city had figured in his life. His father’s death all those years ago, the bombings, the violence. Now the powers that be were trying to end all that.
He reached for the phone and called Hannah Bernstein in her room. ‘It’s me. Are you decent?’
‘No. Just out of the shower.’
‘I’ll be straight round.’
‘Don’t be stupid, Dillon. What do you want?’
‘I phoned the airport. There’s an hour’s delay on the London plane. I think I’ll go down to the bar. Do you fancy some lunch?’
‘Sandwiches would do.’
‘I’ll see you there.’
It was shortly after noon, the Library Bar quiet. He ordered tea, Barry’s tea, Ireland’s favourite, and sat in the corner reading the Belfast Telegraph. Hannah joined him twenty minutes later, looking trim in a brown trouser suit, her red hair tied back.
He nodded his approval. ‘Very nice. You look as if you’re here to report on the fashion show.’
‘Tea?’ she said. ‘Sean Dillon drinking tea, and the bar open. That I should live to see the day.’
He grinned and waved to the barman. ‘Ham sandwiches for me, this being Ireland. What about you?’
‘Mixed salad will be fine, and tea.’
He gave the barman the order and folded the newspaper. ‘Here we are again then, sallying forth to help solve the Irish problem.’
‘And you don’t think we can?’
‘Seven hundred years, Hannah. Any kind of a solution has been a long time coming.’
‘You seem a little down.’
He lit a cigarette. ‘Oh, that’s just the Belfast feeling. The minute I’m back, the smell of the place, the feel of it, takes over. It will always be the war zone to me. The bad old days. I should go and see my father’s grave, but I never do.’
‘Is there a reason, do you think?’
‘God knows. My life was set, the Royal Academy, the National Theatre, you’ve heard all that, and I was only nineteen.’
‘Yes, I know, the future Laurence Olivier.’
‘And then my old man came home and got knocked off by Brit paratroops.’
‘Accidentally.’
‘Sure, I know all that, but when you’re nineteen you see things differently.’
‘So you joined the IRA and fought for the glorious cause.’
‘A long time ago. A lot of dead men ago.’
The food arrived. A young waitress served them and left. Hannah said, ‘And looking back, it’s regrets time, is it?’
‘Ah, who knows? By this time, I could have been a leading man with the Royal Shakespeare Company. I could have been in fifteen movies.’ He wolfed down a ham sandwich and reached for another. ‘I could have been famous. Didn’t Marlon Brando say something like that?’
‘At least you’re infamous. You’ll have to content yourself with that.’
‘And there’s no woman in my life. You’ve spurned me relentlessly.
‘Poor man.’
‘No kith or kin. Oh, more cousins in County Down than you could shake a stick at, and they’d run a mile if I appeared on the horizon.’
‘They would, wouldn’t they, but enough of this angst. I’d like to know more about Barry.’
‘I knew his uncle, Frank Barry, better. He taught me a lot in the early days, until we had a falling out. Jack was always a bad one. Vietnam was his proving ground and the murder of Vietcong prisoners the reason the army kicked him out. All these years of the Troubles, he’s gone from bad to worse. Another point, as you’ve read in his file, he’s often been a gun for hire for various organizations around the world.’
‘I thought that was you, Dillon.’
He smiled. ‘Touché. The hard woman you are.’
Blake Johnson entered the Library Bar at that moment. He wore black Raybans, a dark blue shirt and slacks, a grey tweed jacket. The black hair, touched by grey, was tousled. He gave no sign of recognition and moved to the bar.
‘Poor