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Authors: Dick;Felix Francis Francis

Crossfire (37 page)

BOOK: Crossfire
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I grabbed my shirt and went over to the door. I was about to unlock it when I suddenly stepped back. Could it be Jackson Warren outside? Or Alex Reece? Or Peter Garraway?
“Who is it?” I shouted.
“Derek Philips,” came the reply. My stepfather.
Ian appeared from his bedroom, bleary-eyed and wearing blue-striped boxer shorts.
“What the hell’s going on?” he said, squinting against the brightness.
“It’s my stepfather,” I said to him.
“Well, open the door, then.”
But I wasn’t sure enough. “Are you alone?” I shouted.
“What bloody difference does that make?” Ian said, striding towards me. “Open the bloody door. Here.” He pushed past and unlocked it himself.
Derek almost fell into the room as the door opened, and he was alone.
“Thank God,” he said. Then he saw me. “What the bloody hell are
you
doing here?”
I ignored his question. “Derek, what’s wrong?” I asked.
“It’s your mother,” he said, clearly distressed.
Oh no, I thought. She must have decided to kill herself after all.
“What about her?” I asked, dreading the answer.
“She’s been kidnapped.”
“What?” I said in disbelief.
“She’s been kidnapped,” he repeated.
It sounded so unlikely.
“Who by?” I asked.
“Two men,” he said. “They came looking for you.”
Derek and Ian both looked at me accusingly.
“Who were they?” Ian asked him.
“I don’t know,” Derek said. “They were wearing those ski masks, like balaclavas, but I don’t think either of them was very young.”
“Why not?”
“Something about the way they moved,” Derek said.
I, meanwhile, believed I knew exactly who they were, and Derek was right, neither of them was young. Two desperate men in their sixties, trying to recover the money they thought they had successfully stolen, but which I had then stolen back. But where was Alex Reece?
“Are you sure there were just two of them?” I asked. “Not three?”
“I only saw two,” Derek said. “Why? Do you know who they are?” He and Ian looked accusingly at me once more.
“What exactly did they say?” I asked, trying to ignore their stares.
“I don’t really remember. It all happened so fast,” he said. “They had somehow got into the house and were in our bedroom. One of them poked me with the barrels of a shotgun to wake me up.” He was almost in tears, and I could understand how frightened he and my mother must have been. “They said they wanted you, but we told them we didn’t know where you were. We said we thought you were in London.”
So not telling my mother where I was had saved me a visit from the ski-masked duo. But at what cost to her?
“But why did they take her with them?” I asked, but I already knew the answer. They knew that I’d come to them if they had my mother. “Did they tell you where they were taking her?”
“No,” Derek said. “But they did tell me that you would know where she would be.”
“Have you called the police?” Ian asked.
“No police,” Derek said urgently. “They told me that I mustn’t call the police. Call the police and Josephine dies, that’s what they said. They told me to think about it for a while and then to call you.” He nodded at me. “But I didn’t know where you were, and I don’t even have your phone number.” He was crying now. “All I could think of was asking Ian.”
I would know where she would be. That’s what the kidnappers had told Derek.
I would know where she would be.
And I did.
 
 
I
approached Greystone Stables, not from the road and up the driveway as my enemy might have expected but from the opposite direction over the undulating farmland, and through the woods on the hill above.
In war, tactical surprise is essential, as it had been during the recapture of the Falkland Islands. The Argentine forces, far superior in number, had believed that it was impossible for the British to approach Stanley, the island capital, across the swampy, uncharted interior, and had dug in their defenses for an attack from the sea. How wrong they were. The Royal Marines and Parachute Regiment’s “yomp” across the island, carrying eighty-pound Bergens over more than fifty-six miles in three days, has since become the stuff of folklore in the army. It had been one of the major factors in that victory.
In my case, I was just glad not to have an eighty-pound Bergen on my back.
I stopped a few feet short of the limit of the trees and knelt down on my left knee. I looked again at my watch with its luminous face. More than two hours had passed since Derek had arrived so distressed at the door of Ian’s flat. It was now three forty-two a.m. The windless night was beautifully clear, with a wonderful canopy of twinkling stars. The moon’s phase was just past first quarter, and it was sinking rapidly towards the western horizon to my left. In forty minutes or so, the moon would be down completely, and the blackness of the night would deepen for a couple of hours before the arrival of the sun, and the dawning of another day.
I liked the darkness. It was my friend.
In the last of the moonlight I studied the layout of the deserted house and stables spread out below me. I could see no lights, and no movement, but I was sure this was where the two men had meant when they’d told Derek I would know where my mother would be.
But would she actually be here, or had it been a ruse to bring me to this place on a wild-goose chase, to fall willingly into their waiting hands while my mother was actually incarcerated somewhere else?
It had taken all my limited powers of persuasion to convince Ian not to call the police immediately. Derek too had begged him not to.
“But we must call the police,” Ian had said with certainty.
“We will,” I’d replied. “But give me a chance to free my mother first.”
Did I really think that Jackson Warren and Peter Garraway would harm her, or even kill her? I thought it unlikely, but I couldn’t know for sure. Desperate people do desperate things, and I remembered only too well how they had left me to die horribly from starvation and dehydration.
I had left Derek and Ian in the latter’s flat, Derek cuddling a bottle of brandy he had returned briefly to Kauri House to collect, and Ian with a list of detailed instructions, including one to telephone the police immediately if he hadn’t heard from me by six-thirty in the morning.
They had both watched with rising interest and astonishment as I had made my mission preparations. First I’d changed into my dark clothes, together with the all-black Converse basketball boots, the right one requiring me to remove my false leg to force the canvas shoe over the plastic foot. Next, I had gathered the equipment into my little rucksack: black garden ties, scissors, duct tape, the red-colored first-aid kit, the length of chain with the padlock still attached, a torch and a box of matches, all of them wrapped up in a large navy blue towel to prevent any noise when I moved. This time I did borrow one of Ian’s kitchen knives, a large, sharp carving knife, and I’d placed it on top of everything else in the rucksack, ready for easy access. I had then borrowed a pair of racing binoculars from my mother’s office, and finally, I’d removed my sword from its protective cardboard tube and scabbard.
“Surely you’re not going to use
that,
” Derek had said, with his large brandy-filling eyes staring at the three-foot-long blade.
“Not unless I have to,” I had replied casually, as I’d rubbed black boot polish onto the blade to reduce its shine. But I would use it, I thought, and without hesitation, if the need arose.
Killing the enemy had been my raison d’être for the past fifteen years, and I’d been good at it.
Values and Standards of the British Army
demanded it. Paragraph ten states that “All soldiers must be prepared to use lethal force to fight: to take the lives of others, and knowingly to risk their own.”
But was I still a soldier? Was this a war? And was I knowingly risking my own life or that of my mother?
I wasn’t sure about the answers to any of those questions, but I knew one thing for certain. I felt alive again, whole and intact, and eager for the fray.
I scanned the buildings below me once more, using my mother’s binoculars, searching for a light or a movement, any sign that would give away the enemy’s position, but there was still nothing.
Was I wrong? Was this not the place they had meant?
I had skirted around the walls of Lambourn Hall on my way to this point, but it had been dark, locked and seemingly deserted.
They had to be here.
The moonlight was disappearing fast, and I would soon need to be on the move down across the open ground between my current location and the rear of the stables. I took one last look through the binoculars, and there it was, a movement, maybe only a stretching of a cramped leg or a warming rub of a freezing foot but a telltale movement nevertheless. Someone was waiting for me in the line of trees just to the right of the house as I looked. From that position he would have commanded a fine view of the driveway and the road below.
But if he was looking down there, he was looking the wrong way.
I was behind him.
But where was his accomplice?
 
 
T
he moon finally dipped out of sight, and the light rushed away with it. But I didn’t move immediately, not for a minute or two, not until I was sure my eyes had fully adjusted to the change. In truth, the night had not become totally black, as there was still a slight glow from the stars, but it was no longer possible for me to see Greystone Stables from this position. Likewise, it would now be impossible for anyone down there to see
me.
I checked once more that my cell phone was switched off, stood up and started forwards across the grass.
19
I
approached the stables in such a way as to take me past the muck heap near the back end of the passageway in which I had hidden the previous week.
I was ultracareful not to trip over any unseen debris as I eased myself silently through the fence that separated the stable buildings from the paddock behind. How I longed to have a set of night-vision goggles, the magic piece of kit that enabled soldiers to see in the dark, albeit with a green hue. My only consolation was that it was most unlikely that my enemy had them either—we would be as blind as one another.
I stood up close against the stable wall at the back of the short passageway, closed my eyes tight and listened. Nothing. No breath, no scraping of a foot, no cough. I went on listening for well over a minute, keeping my own breathing shallow and silent. Still nothing.
Confident that there was no one hiding in the passageway, I stepped forwards. Here, under the roof, it was truly pitch-black. I tried to recall an image in my head of the inside of the passageway from my time here last week. I remembered that I had used an empty blue plastic drum as a seat. That would be here somewhere in the darkness. I could also recall that there were some wooden staves leaning up against one of the walls.
I moved along the passage very slowly, feeling ahead into the darkness with my hands and my real foot. The canvas basketball boots were thin—in truth, rather too thin for such a cold night—but they allowed me to sense the underfoot conditions so much better than I could have in regulation-issue thick-soled army boots.
My foot touched the plastic drum, and I eased around it to the door. I pressed my face to it, looking through the gaps between the widely spaced wooden slats.
Compared to the total blackness of the passageway, the stable yard beyond seemed quite bright, but there was still not enough light to see into the shadows of the overhanging roof. I couldn’t see if any of the stable doors were open but, equally, that would mean that no one would be able to see me as I eased open the slatted door from the passageway and stepped out into the yard.
I slowly closed the spring-loaded door and then stood very still, listening again for anyone’s breathing, but there was no sound, not even the slight rustling of a breeze.
Provided he hadn’t changed his position, the man I had seen from the woods on the hillside, the man who had made a movement, would have been out of sight from where I was, even in bright sunshine, but I knew there had to be at least one other person around here somewhere. And if Alex Reece had joined Warren and Garraway, there would be three of them to deal with. The quote from Sun Tzu in
The Art of War
about relative army sizes floated into my head once more.
If you are in equal number to your enemy, then fight if you are able to surprise; if you are fewer, then keep away.
I was one and they were two, maybe even three. Should I not just keep away?
Another of Sun Tzu’s pearls of wisdom drifted into my consciousness.
All warfare is based on deception . . . When we are near, we must make the enemy believe we are far away; when far away, we must make him believe we are near . . . Hold out baits to entice the enemy. Feign disorder, and crush him.
I folded back the sleeve of my black roll-necked sweater and looked at the watch beneath. It was four forty-seven.
In eighteen minutes, at five minutes past five precisely, a car would drive through the gates at the bottom of the Greystone Stables driveway and stop. The driver would sound the car horn once, and the car would remain there with the headlights blazing and the engine running for exactly five minutes. Then it would reverse out again onto the road and drive away. At least, it would do all of those things if Ian Norland obeyed to the letter the instructions I had left him.
He hadn’t been very keen on the plan, and that was putting it mildly, but I’d promised him that he was in no danger, provided he kept the car doors locked. It was yet another one of those dodgy promises of mine. But I didn’t actually believe that Jackson Warren and Peter Garraway would kill me there and then. Not before I’d returned the million dollars.
BOOK: Crossfire
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