'Why, are you getting bored, Billy?' Dillon asked. 'Let's see Harry and decide.'
'He's down at the boat.'
'The Lynda Jones?'
'Sure. Refurbished. His pride and joy. I'll show you. Let's take a walk.'
They went along the wharf, passing a few boats, one or two old barges sunk into the water. It started to rain as they reached the boat. Harry Salter was sitting at a table under an awning, reading The Times. Dora, the chief barmaid from the Dark Man, was pouring tea. He patted her ample rear.
'I've said it before, Dora, you've got a great arse.'
'Now, isn't that the poet in him?' Dillon said. 'Such a majestic choice of language.'
Salter looked up and took off his reading glasses. 'Christ, Dillon, it's you.' He glanced at Blake. 'And the bleeding Yank again. Here, what's going on?' The blue eyes hardened in the well-lined face. 'Trouble?'
'Well, let's put it this way. You owe me, and this is payback time. You'd have been dead meat when the Hooker mob had you if Blake and I hadn't stuck an oar in.'
'No problem. I always pay my debts. Anyway, I like you, Dillon. You remind me of Billy here. I mean, you don't give a stuff. Mad as a hatter.'
'Seeking death, you mean,' Dillon asked.
'That's it,' Billy said. 'You and me both, Dillon, brothers under the skin. Have we got a problem?'
'Well, if it is, its name is Jago.'
Billy's face turned pale. 'Harold and Tony, those two bastards.'
'You don't like them?'
Salter said, 'Dillon, we're friends, right? I'm doing well on the cigarette run from Europe. There are big profits, with the tax differential. But I've had three cargoes hijacked in two months. I know it's the Jagos, but I can't prove it. So what's your problem?'
A guy called Jack Fox fronts for the Solazzo family.'
'The Colosseum?' Billy said. 'Hey, we know about them. The Jagos have been running with him. In-and-out jobs, security trucks.'
'Always cash,' Salter said. 'What's your interest?'
'Fox had Blake's wife murdered. She was a reporter who got close, too close, so he had her wasted.'
'Jesus,' Salter said. 'The fucking bastard.' He turned to Blake. 'Look, what can I say?'
'That you'll help us, will do.'
'Well, you can bloody well count on that. What's going on?'
'Fox needs cash flow. You won't have heard yet, but we closed the Colosseum and the betting shops down last night.'
'And how in the hell did you do that?'
Dillon said to Blake, 'Go on, tell him,' which Blake did, and Salter and his boys fell about laughing.
'Dear God,' Billy said. 'I mean, that's beautiful.'
'Yes, but the Jagos were there, and we know Fox needs a big tickle. Eyes and ears, Harry, see what you can find out.' 'We certainly will.' Salter rubbed his hands together. 'Life suddenly becomes interesting again, eh, Billy?'
Billy looked wolfish. 'It certainly does.' He turned to Dillon. 'I'm reading this paperback on philosophy. Pinched it from the hairdresser. Better than a novel. This guy Heidegger. Have you heard of him, Dillon?'
'German. A great favourite of Heinrich Himmler, I believe.'
'Never mind that. This Heidegger says that life is action and passion, and that a man fails to take part in the action and passion of his times at the peril of being judged not to have lived.'
'That's really very erudite, Billy.'
'Don't take the piss out of me, Dillon. I didn't get much schooling and I know I'm a tearaway, but I've got a brain. I like books and I know what erudite means, which is that I'm a clever bastard.'
'I never doubted it.' Dillon took out a card and scribbled numbers. 'My house, my mobile, Ferguson at his Cavendish Square flat. Do what you can, Harry.'
'Sure will, my old son.'
Dillon and Blake went to the gangplank and Dillon noticed
some air bottles. 'Hey, Billy, you're still at the scuba diving?' 'Master diver now,' Billy said. 'Are you a master diver?' 'As a matter of fact, I am.'
'Oh, go and stuff yourself, Dillon. We'll be in touch,' and Billy went back to his uncle.
The Gulfstream did not carry RAF roundels, so when it landed at Dublin Airport it was simply directed to an area that handled private planes. Flight Sergeant Madoc got the door open. Like Lacey and Parry, he wore the kind of navy blue uniform used by flight crews throughout the world. He put an umbrella up against the driving rain.
'There's a limousine by the hangar,' Madoc said, and led the way towards a black Mercedes.
But there was another vehicle waiting there, a Garda police car, a uniformed officer at the wheel, a large man in a fawn Burberry trenchcoat and tweed cap sitting beside him.
He got out, smiling. 'Dan Malone, Special Branch, chief superintendent. We've never met.'
'Ah, you outrank me, sir.'
'Heard they've put you up to Super. I bet the boys at Special Branch at Scotland Yard didn't like that.'
'Malone? That's a good Irish name. We have a Detective Sergeant Terry Malone in Special Branch.'
'My nephew. English mother, born in London. Can we have words, away from the pride of the RAF here?'
They moved out of the rain into the hangar, and he took a cigarette from a crumpled pack. 'Do you use these things?'
'No.'
'Good for you. You'll live longer than me. Listen, we're all together these days, what with Europe and the peace process. And I know all about you, Superintendent, just like most of Dublin Special Branch. Your reputation precedes you. Ferguson's and Dillon's, too.'
'What are you trying to say?'
'That we're not looking the other way where the IRA is concerned. On the other hand, if Ferguson's sent you over, something's up. I'll be honest with you. I leaned on your driver, who told me he was to take you to Kilrea, and that means only one thing. You're going to see Liam Devlin, the old sod.'
'Ah, you like him, too?'
'Yes, damn you, I do. So — is there something I should know about?'
'I'm seeking information.'
'Is this a hot one?'
'It could be.' She took a chance then. 'One cop to another?'
'One cop to another.'
'Does Brendan Murphy mean anything to you?'
'That bastard? Dear God, is he in this?' He frowned. 'But he wouldn't be in this jurisdiction. He's always stayed north of the border. What is this?'
'This is just a rumour right now. Could be an arms dump in County Louth. Could be an Arab terrorist connection in Lebanon.'
'So that's why you've come to see Devlin?'
'That's right. If anyone will have heard a whisper, it'll be him.'
'No doubt about that.' Malone frowned. 'You'll keep me informed?'
'Of course. We might even need your good offices.'
'Fine. I'll hear from you, then.' He walked her back to thelimousine and opened the door. 'And watch your back, peace or no peace.'
'What peace?' she asked, got in the limousine, and closed the door.
It was just after noon when she reached Devlin's Victorian cottage next to the convent in Kilrea village. She told the driver to wait, went up the path, and knocked on the door. It opened and he stood there, an ageless figure in black Armani slacks and shirt, his hair silver, his eyes very blue, a man who still held literary seminars as a visiting professor at Trinity College, but also a lifetime member of the IRA who had killed many times.
'Jesus, girl, you look wonderful.' He embraced her. 'You look grand. Come away in.'
'You're not looking too bad yourself.'
He led her to the sitting room.
He turned. 'Would you like a drink or something?' 'No, I'd like to get on with it.'
She sat down and he took the opposite chair. 'Get on with it, then.'
'Do you know a man called Brendan Murphy?'
His face hardened. 'Is that dog in this?'
'A bad one?'
'As bad as they come.' He took a cigarette from the old silver case and lit it. 'You'd better tell me.'
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