Read Jack Higgins - Chavasse 02 Online
Authors: Year of the Tiger
Tags: #Cold War, #Fiction, #Tibet (China), #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Suspense Fiction, #Space Race, #Espionage
“There's always hope, Katya,” he said. “That's what makes life worthwhile.”
She laid her head on his chest and he held her close. After a while, she drifted into sleep and he sat there staring into the flames and waiting for the dawn.
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Just before morning the wind died and Osman Sherif went outside. When he came back, he was smiling. “The snow has stopped. We should be able to cross over without any difficulty.”
As he started to lead the horses out through the door everyone stirred and, in a few moments, his wife had blown the fire into life and was heating water for tea.
Chavasse went out to help saddle the horses and told him that he wanted to leave one of the animals behind for Colonel Li.
“It would be wasting a good horse,” the Kazakh said.
Chavasse frowned. “Don't you think he can make it to Rudok on his own?”
The Kazakh shook his head. “I mean something different. I have looked into his eyes, my friend. He is a dead man walking.”
Chavasse went back inside the hut and sat down beside Hoffner, who was drinking tea. The old man looked grey and haggard, but he seemed in remarkably good spirits.
“You look pretty grim, Paul,” he said cheerfully.
“You don't look so marvellous yourself,” Chavasse told him, and held out his hand for the bowl of tea Osman Sherif's wife passed to him.
Katya sat beside the children on the other side of the fire, staring vacantly into the flames. She looked ill and her skin was stretched tightly over the prominent cheekbones.
“Not long now,” Chavasse told her softly.
She came out of her reverie with a start. For a moment, she stared at him as if he were a stranger, a puzzled frown on her face, and then she smiled. A strange, sad smile that touched something deep inside him.
He emptied his bowl, filled it again and went and squatted beside Colonel Li, who sat with his back against a wall, a sheepskin across his legs.
Li held his bandaged hand against his chest and seemed quite calm in spite of his pallor. He smiled tightly as he accepted the tea. “I suppose I should congratulate you.”
“One thing still puzzles me,” Chavasse said. “Why didn't Tsen have troops to back him up when he was waiting for me to turn up at Hoffner's house?”
Colonel Li smiled faintly. “Six men were detailed to report to him at midnight, but I'm afraid the speed with which you escaped wrecked our plans. Did any of my men survive? There were three with me when I set out.”
“We didn't see any. I was lost in the blizzard myself when I ran into you.” Osman Sherif came in and squatted beside the fire, and Chavasse nodded towards him. “You owe your life to our friend there.”
Colonel Li emptied the bowl and placed it carefully on the ground beside him. “But not for long, I imagine.”
Chavasse shook his head. “You've got it all wrong. We're leaving you a horse and some food. You should be able to reach Rudok easily.”
Colonel Li's lips twitched slightly and suddenly there was sweat on his forehead. “You mean you're not going to shoot me?”
Chavasse shook his head. “There's no need, Colonel. As our American friends would say, you're all washed up.”
He started to get to his feet and a quiet voice said, “Not quite, Paul.”
He turned very slowly. Katya was standing on the other side of the fire facing all of them. In her hands, she held the machine pistol.
Hoffner was the first to speak. “Katya, for God's sake! What does this mean?”
Her extreme pallor only made her more beautiful. The skin of her face was almost translucent and the dark sad eyes held a haunted expression Chavasse was to remember for the rest of his days.
He moved forward slightly, hands thrust deep into the pockets of his sheepskin coat, and smiled softly. “Tell him, angel. Tell him everything.”
Suddenly there was something that was almost horror in her eyes. “You knew,” she whispered. “You knew all the time. But if that's true, why did you bring me with you?”
“My people would have found you a prize package. They don't use the same methods as your side to extract information, but they're even more successful. I've been waiting for you to show your hand ever since you recovered consciousness,” Chavasse said. “It was your boyfriend here who let you down, if you're interested. When he exposed my little masquerade at Hoffner's house that afternoon, he said that he and Kurbsky had run into each other at a village called Rangong a few days earlier. Unfortunately, Kurbsky had already told me they'd never met.”
“We all make mistakes,” she said.
“Not in this gameânot if you want to stay alive, anyway,” he told her. “And the pair of you made two. When we were out riding, I told you I'd helped the Dalai Lama out of Tibet. I knew
for a fact that Peking couldn't have known I was involved and yet Colonel Li did. You were the only person who could have been his source of information. You certainly mix with the right people.”
“It wasn't difficultâhe is my brother,” she said proudly. “We know what we are doing and where we are going.”
“For God's sake, don't give me any more of that claptrap,” Chavasse said. “I've had my bellyful during the past few weeks. Would it be too much to ask why you were planted on the doctor?”
“He was important to us as a figurehead, because the people trusted him.” She shrugged. “It was necessary for some reliable person to share his confidences. This affair alone has proved the value of my presence in the house.”
“There's one small point that has been bothering me for a long time,” he said. “When I tried to take a shot at your brother, my Walther jammed. I've never known them to do that before.”
“I'd taken the precaution of emptying the clip the previous night,” she said. “When you were asleep.”
“Most efficient of you.” He sighed. “You realize what will happen to us when you take us back? You know how we'll be treated?”
“They will only do what is necessary for the good of the State,” she said. “Nothing more.”
“Katya!” There was pain in Hoffner's voice. “Did I mean nothing more to you than that?”
“Nothing, Doctor,” she said flatly.
“I don't believe you.”
He started round the fire towards her and she raised the machine pistol warningly. “Keep back, Doctor. I will shoot, I promise you.”
“And kill the brain,” Chavasse said mockingly.
“It is all in the briefcase,” she told him calmly. “I have nothing to lose.”
Hoffner kept on moving, a hand stretched out towards her. “Katya, please listen to me.”
“I warn you,” she said.
Chavasse had been watching her index finger curl around the trigger of the machine pistol, his own hand ready on Tsen's automatic. As her knuckle whitened, he fired twice through the pocket of his sheepskin coat.
The force of the bullets lifted her back against the wall, and she dropped the machine pistol and slid down to the ground.
Hoffner gave an agonized cry, his hands going to his face, and Chavasse pushed him out of the way and knelt beside her. She stared up at him, that characteristic slight frown on her face, and then she choked as blood poured from her mouth. As he eased her down to the floor, the head lolled to one side.
Osman Sherif was already hustling his wife and their two children outside as Chavasse got to his feet and faced Hoffner.
“I'm sorry,” he said. “I know how much she meant to you.”
Hoffner shook his head slowly. “There was nothing else you could do. For the first time in my life I'm beginning to realize the strength of the opposition. I think we ought to do something about it.”
He picked up his briefcase and doctor's bag and followed the others as Chavasse turned and looked down at Katya for the last time.
Colonel Li knelt beside her. After a moment, he got to his feet, and when he spoke, his voice seemed to belong to someone else.
“You are a hard man,” he said. “Harder than I ever imagined a man could be.”
“I'm a professional,” Chavasse told him. “That's something you wouldn't understand, but she would. She was one herself.”
He started to turn away and Li caught his arm. “Kill me, Paul!”
Chavasse jerked himself free without speaking and went outside. The sky was grey but already beginning to clear, and the snow was startlingly white.
The others were already mounted and Osman Sherif held a horse ready for him. Chavasse reached for the pommel of the high wooden saddle and pulled himself up. It was an effort, but he made it and they started to move forward.
He was aware that Colonel Li had stumbled out of the doorway to stand beside the tethered
horse they had left him, but he didn't bother to look back.
The effects of Hoffner's injections were beginning to wear off and all of a sudden, he felt really tired. But it didn't matter. Nothing mattered except that in some strange way, life was now beginning all over again.
It must have been an hour later when they reached the crest of the pass. From somewhere a thousand miles away he seemed to hear his name and he turned and looked for the last time at the small figure, black against the snow beside the customs hut. He urged his horse forward and rode after the others, down into Kashmir.
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The fire was low now, the room quiet for several moments as Chavasse finished talking. It was Moro who spoke first.
“So, you crossed into India safely, you and Dr. Hoffner and the Kazakhs?”
“That's right.”
“But what happened then? No further word of Hoffner, not anywhere. I've checked all sources.”
“The whole thing was handled with total secrecy, just as if he didn't exist. It was all meant to fool Chinese intelligence, of course.”
“So he was taken to England?”
Chavasse nodded. “Moncrieff arranged everything. As I say, total secrecy. There was a safe house arranged in the countryside outside Cambridge where he was supposed to meet with
Professor Craig from the Joint Space Research Programme at NATO.”
There was a pause. Moro said, “You said âwas supposed to.'”
“Life playing its usual bad joke. Karl Hoffner died of a heart attack on his first night in the house. He was an old man, remember; that dreadful journey and all that stress proved too much for him. Since in a manner of speaking he didn't officially exist, he had a very private cremation by the Bureau's disposal unit.”
“But you had his papers, all the details of his research. Why was nothing heard of this?”
“Oh, Professor Craig and his people went towork on them. He used the best brains he could find, but they all drew a blank. Hoffner's theory was either seriously flawed or of such genius that no other mind on earth could make sense of it.”
There was another silence and then Moro said, “All for nothing. That dreadful journey. Colonel Li crippled, Katya's death. So many deaths.” He shook his head and said again, “All for nothing.”
“That's the way it goes sometimes. Life can be pretty bloody-minded,” Chavasse told him. He smiled. “A long time ago.”
“Yet you are still here,” Moro said. “The sole survivor, as it were.”
“Not really.” Chavasse reached to the coffee table, took a cigarette from a silver box and lit it. “There's always you.”
This time the silence was profound. Moro's face seemed to change, almost as if he had become another person, and he slipped a hand inside his robe.
“What do you mean?”
“Let's forget your rather intimate knowledge of my background and stick with the fact that you knew about Karl Hoffner and the fact that I got him out of Tibet. Very interesting, that. When I asked you where you got your information you said from sources of your own.”
“So?” Moro said.
“Let's go over it again. I crossed into India with Hoffner, and Osman Sherif and his family went to Turkey, so we can discount them. So who else knew? Professor Craig who died years ago. Sir Ian Moncrieff, also dead. No official record of the operation in the Bureau files. I know that for a fact, because I've been Chief of the Bureau for twenty years.”
“I see you are a logician, Sir Paul.”
“Oh, yes,” Chavasse said. “I like things to make sense. So, where does this all leave us? With me being the only person in the world who knows anything about the Hoffner affair at all.” He helped himself to another cigarette. “In fact, there would seem to be only one person you could have got your knowledge of Hoffner from, and according to my intelligence sources he died of cancer in Peking ten years ago.” Chavasse
blew out smoke and leaned back in the chair, his right hand on the cushion. “Colonel Li.”
Moro took a deep breath, then said, “He was my father. I was the product of a brief encounter with his Tibetan housekeeper at Changu. I was born in 1960. She died shortly after the Hoffner affair. My father took me to Peking, raised me, loved me, educated me. The university background I told you of is true; I really did go to Cambridge.”
“And he told you about Hoffner. So if you knew most of it anyway, why ask me to go over it again?”
“To hear it from your own lips. Also, I have wondered all these years what kind of man you were. You killed my aunt, Katya; my father was left crippled, a claw for one hand, totally shamed. It was like acid burning into him over the years. It never went away.”
“So now you want revenge? You've taken your time.”
“I've dreamt of it for years. In a matter of family honour, the waiting is nothing. I knew my time would come.”
Chavasse nodded. “I should tell you that when they were feeding you in the kitchen I put in a call to the temple at Glen Aristoun. They'd never heard of a Lama Moro. I also spoke to Jackson on the house phone. He's been right outside the door all this time. If you look you'll see it's
slightly ajar.” He raised his voice. “Come in, Earl.”
The door swung open and Jackson stepped in. He closed it behind him. “I heard everything. Better than the midnight movie on TV.”
Moro's hand came out of his robe clutching a pistol. He stood and backed away so that he could cover them both.
“Interesting,” Chavasse said to Earl. “Chinese copy of a Russian Tokarev.”
“Type 670,” Jackson nodded. “Trouble with those is that when you use them in the silenced Mode you can only get one round off, and there are two of us.”
“One is enough,” Moro said. “I really am a monk, Sir Paul, of the Shao Lin temple. Death means nothing to me. This is for Katya and my father.”
“When you intend to kill a man do it, don't talk about it,” Chavasse said.
He found the silenced Walther he had placed in the cushion at his side, his hand swept up and he shot Moro twice in the heart, knocking him back against the wall. Moro dropped the Tokarev and fell to the floor. Jackson knelt down and turned him on his back.
“Dead,” he said. “Two in the pumper. Good thing you check out on the range every week. This little sod was going to kill you.”
“I know.” Chavasse was on the phone. After a moment he said, “The Chief here. Tell Section
Three I've had a red alert at my home. Need immediate disposal team.” He put the phone down. “Twenty minutes, Earl, and let's keep Lucy out of it.”
“As you like, Sir Paul,” Jackson said formally.
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The discreet undertaker's van appeared on time. Two aging gentlemen in formal attire came to the drawing room with a coffin and departed with Moro's body. The blood had soaked into his robe and there was no stain on the carpet.
“A few pounds of grey ash,” Jackson said. “That's all he'll be in the morning. They'll probably strew him on one of the grass verges.”
“You're a hard man, Earl.”
“Comes of soldiering too long.” Jackson shrugged. “Nothing else you could have done. It was you or him. Can I get you anything?”
“No thanks.”
“I'll say goodnight then.”
The door closed and Chavasse sat down to think about recent events, then picked up the phone and rang Downing Street. When it was answered he said, “Code Eagle. Give me the prime minister.”
A moment later John Major came on. “Paul?”
“I just wanted to let you know, Prime Minister, that I'll be at my desk tomorrow and that I'll occupy it for as long as you need me.”
“Marvellous,” Major told him. “We'll speak soon.”
Chavasse put down the phone and poured a Bushmills, then went and drew the curtains and opened the French window. Rain drummed down on the terrace.
After all was said and done, what else was he going to do?
He raised his glass and toasted the night.