The Wolf at the Door. Jack Higgins
it was an hour before midnight at the Garrick Club, where a dinner for twenty ministers from various Commonwealth countries was drawing to a close. General Charles Ferguson, for his sins, had been asked to deliver a speech on the economic consequences of terrorism in the modern age, and he couldn’t wait to leave.
The affair had been expected to finish at ten, but it was now eleven, thanks to a certain amount of squabbling during the question and answer sessions and naturally, and to his great annoyance, Ferguson had been involved. He’d had to call his driver on three separate occasions until at last, the whole sorry business came to an end. He made his escape as fast as possible, found a string of limousines waiting, and his not among them. His beloved Daimler had suffered damage and was being refurbished and the Cabinet Office had provided an Amara and a driver named Pool, who now came forward anxiously.
‘And what’s this?’ Ferguson demanded ominously.
‘We kept getting moved on by security. I’m two streets away, in Venable Row.’ He had a cockney accent, but with a slight whine to it that Ferguson didn’t like.
‘For God’s sake, man, just lead the way. I want to get home to bed.’
Pool scuttled away. Ferguson sighed. Poor sod. It wasn’t his fault when you thought of it, but what a bloody evening. As Pool reached the end of the street a limousine came round the corner and ran through a large puddle, splashing the driver severely. It kept on going and he shouted after it.
‘Holy Mother of God, you’ve soaked me, you bastards.’ His voice was quite different, more Irish than anything else, and he turned to Ferguson and called hurriedly, ‘Sorry, sir,’ and disappeared round the corner.
‘What in the hell is going on?’ Ferguson asked softly and turned into Venable Row. There was some construction going on there, a cleared area and a round fence with an opening for an entrance, along with a couple of diggers and a pickup truck. It was dark in there, just a little light in the glare of a street lamp. The silver Amara was parked some yards inside, and Pool was standing beside it.
‘Here we are, sir.’
Ferguson moved closer, and as he approached, Pool turned and started to run away and the Amara blew up, the explosion echoing between the buildings on either side and setting off their fire alarms.
Ferguson was hurled backwards by the blast, lay there for a moment, then stood up, aware that he was in one piece, but that the Amara was burning furiously. The explosion had come from the boot, and Pool had been closer to the rear of the car. Ferguson lurched towards him, dropped to his knees and turned him over. There was a great deal of blood, and his face was gashed.
Pool’s eyes opened. Ferguson said, ‘Steady old son, you’ll be fine. Help coming.’
Pool’s voice was very weak. ‘I messed up. All my fault.’
‘Nonsense,’ Ferguson said. ‘The only person to blame is the bastard who put that bomb in my car.’
Not that Pool heard him, for he’d already stopped breathing, and Ferguson knelt there, a feeling of total desolation passing through him, aware of the sirens of the police and the emergency services approaching, holding a hand already turning cold.
‘Not your fault, old son,’ he said softly. ‘Not your fault at all.’ As he got to his feet, the first police car roared into the street.
In New York, Harry Miller and Sean Dillon were enjoying a drink in the wood-panelled Oak Bar of the Plaza Hotel, where they were sharing a suite.
‘I like this place,’ Dillon said. ‘The Edwardian splendour of it. They say it was Mark Twain’s home away from home. I had a drink in this very bar on my first trip to New York.’ The small Irishman was wearing trousers of black velvet corduroy and a black Armani shirt that seemed to complement the hair, so fair it was almost white. He looked calm and relaxed, with the half-smile of a man who couldn’t take the world seriously.
‘The IRA must have been generous with their expenses. I presume you were after some wretched informer on the run from Belfast?’
‘As a matter of fact, I was,’ Dillon said, still smiling. ‘Another one?’
‘Why not, but then you’d better get changed. You are, after all, representing the British Government at the UN. I think I’ll stretch my legs while you do.’
Miller was dressed formally in a navy-blue suit, a blue trenchcoat on the seat beside him. He was a little under six feet, with saturnine grey eyes, dark brown hair and a scar bisecting his left cheek.
‘God bless your honour for reminding me, the simple Irish boy I am. What do you think Putin’s up to?’
‘God knows,’ Miller said. ‘If he thought his presence at the UN was going to force the President and the Prime Minister to attend as well, he’s been sadly misinformed.’
The waiter provided two more Bushmills whiskeys and departed. Dillon said gloomily, ‘Sometimes I wonder what the UN is for any more. Not enough muscle, I suppose.’
‘Well, it has eighteen acres of land alongside the East River, and its own police force, fire department and post office,’ Miller said. ‘I suppose they’ll have to be content with that.’ He swallowed his whiskey, stood up, and pulled on his trench-coat. ‘I’m going across the street for a stroll in Central Park. The Embassy car will be here in an hour.’
‘Better take care. That place can be tricky.’
‘That was then, this is now, Sean. These days, New York is safer than London.’
‘If you say so, Major.’ Dillon toasted him. ‘See you later.’
Miller accepted the offer of an umbrella from the doorman, crossed to Central Park and entered. There were few people around in the fading light of late afternoon just before the early evening darkness.
He realized suddenly that he was alone, except for voices somewhere in the distance, a dog barking hollowly and then the footsteps of someone running up behind him. He glanced over his shoulder. A man in a dark green tracksuit wearing gloves and a knitted cap came up fast and swerved to one side. He said hello and kept on going, turning through the trees at the end of the path. A moment later, he reappeared, paused to look at Miller, then walked forward.
Miller dropped his umbrella as if by accident, and under cover of picking it up, reached down and found the Colt .25 in the ankle-holster. He straightened up, raised the umbrella again and turned to go.
The man called, ‘Hey, you, we’ve got business to discuss.’
He ran forward, then slowed, his right hand sliding into a pocket of his tracksuit.
‘And what would that be?’ Miller asked.
‘Wallet, cards, mobile phone. In any order you please.’ He was up close now, his right hand still in his pocket.
Miller took two quick steps so that the two of them were good and close, then held the silenced Colt almost touching the man’s left knee and fired. The man cried out, lurching back as Miller pushed him towards a park bench at the side of the path.
‘Oh, Jesus,’ the man cried, and Miller reached in the tracksuit pocket and found a silenced pistol, which he tossed into the bushes.
‘Wallet, cards, mobile phone, wasn’t that what you said?’
The man had grasped his knee with both hands, blood pumping through. ‘What have you done to me? They didn’t say it would be like this.’
‘I’ve crippled you, you bastard,’ Miller said. ‘Hollow-point cartridges. Now speak up or I’ll give it to you in the other knee as well. Who’s they?’
‘I don’t know. I’m a freelance. People contact me, I provide a service.’
‘You mean you’re a professional hitman?’
‘That’s it. I got a call. I don’t know who it was. There was a package, I don’t know