The man who’d introduced himself as Kane wasn’t moving, or telling him he was under arrest. He said nothing and his expression remained impassive.
‘No, please, please,’ Blacklip begged, his voice high-pitched. ‘Mr Kane, what are you doing? I’ve got money. Don’t kill me. For God’s sake.’
The gunman pointed the revolver purposefully in the direction of Blacklip’s groin, his finger tensing on the trigger.
‘Why are you doing this? There’s been a misunderstanding. Please.’ He felt a wetness travelling down his trouser legs. Ignored it. Desperation rose up in him like bile. He wanted to do something – anything. Scream, run, charge down his tormentor. But nothing moved. He was rooted firmly to the spot.
Pissing himself in fear.
The gunman looked him in the eye. In that moment, Blacklip knew there was no hope.
But he had to try. ‘Whatever they’re paying you,’ he whispered, ‘I’ll double it.’
‘I’m choosy who I work for,’ said the gunman, and pulled the trigger.
Blacklip felt a sudden burning sensation like an electric shock. He gasped and fell back onto the bed, his hands grabbing at the wound.
He managed one last word, uttered with a final hiss of venom as rage overcame fear for just one second.
‘Bastards.’
Then the gunman stepped forward and put two more bullets in Blacklip’s head.
A splash of blood like aerosol hit the wall, and the gunman turned and walked from the room.
Part One
MINDORO ISLAND,
PHILIPPINES
One Year Later
1
I was sitting in Tina’s Sunset Restaurant, watching the outriggers shuffle lazily through the clear waters of Sabang Bay, when Tomboy took a seat opposite me, ordered a San Miguel from Tina’s daughter, and told me that someone else had to die. It was five o’clock in the afternoon, there wasn’t a cloud in the sky, and up until that point I’d been in a good mood.
I told him that I didn’t kill people any more, that it was a part of my past I didn’t want to be reminded of, and he replied that he understood all that, but once again we needed the money. ‘It’s just the way the cookie crumbles,’ he added, with the sort of bullshit ‘I share your suffering’ expression an undertaker might give to one of his customers’ relatives. Tomboy Darke was my business partner and a man with a cliché for every occasion, including murder.
Tina’s was empty, as was usually the case at that time of day. It was right at the end of the collection of bars and guest houses that pass for the small tourist town of Sabang’s main drag, and tucked away enough that few of the tourists ever used it, so I’d known as soon as Tomboy had asked to meet me here that something was up. It was the sort of place you went to when you wanted to talk without anyone else listening. So I talked. ‘Who’s the target?’
He paused while the beer was put down in front of him, then waited until Tina’s daughter was out of earshot. ‘The bloke’s name’s Billy Warren,’ he said quietly. ‘He’s on the Thursday flight out of Heathrow, arriving in Manila Friday morning.’
‘Today’s Wednesday, Tomboy.’
‘I know that,’ he answered, running his fingers through what was left of his hair. ‘But you know what they say. Time waits for no man.’
‘What’s he done, this Warren?’
‘No one’s saying anything at the moment, it’s all very hush-hush. But he’s running away from something – something serious. Just like you. Except this time, someone wants to kill him for it. He ain’t going to be whiter than white, put it like that.’
‘How much are they offering for the job?’
‘Thirty thousand US. A lot of money.’
He was right, it was. Particularly here in the Philippines. The business we ran – a small hotel with dive operation attached – didn’t take much more than that in a year, and thanks to Al Qaeda’s continued efforts to mangle Western tourism in the Far East, things weren’t likely to improve much in the year ahead. By the time we’d paid the staff, the local authorities and covered our running costs, we cleared maybe a third of that in profit. Paradise is nice, but it rarely makes you rich.
I took a sip from my beer. ‘Someone must want him dead very badly.’
He nodded and pulled a soft-top pack of Marlboro Lights from his pocket, lighting one. ‘They do. Not only that, they want him to disappear. No trace.’
‘That’s not going to be very easy in Manila.’
‘It ain’t going to be in Manila. As soon as he arrives, he’s getting a cab down to Batangas, and a boat across to Puerta Galera.’ Puerta Galera was the nearest main town to us and Mindoro Island’s main port. ‘He’s got a room booked at the Hotel California on East Brucal Street. It’s already been paid for. He’s been told that you’re going to meet him there to give him instructions and a briefcase full of money. What you need to do is get him out of the room and take him for a drive. One that he don’t come back from.’
‘If I accept the job.’
‘Yeah,’ he said with some reluctance, ‘if you accept the job. But you know how things are at the moment. We need this cash. Badly. I wouldn’t ask you if we didn’t, you know that.’
‘We’ve been in this place how long? A year? And you want me to take someone out five kilometres down the road. Don’t you think that’s just a little bit risky?’
‘No one’ll ever find the body. We’re getting fifteen grand up front. All we need to do is provide photos proving it’s been done and we’ll get the balance of the cash. And that’ll be the end of it.’
That’ll be the end of it. I’d heard that one before. ‘Last question. Who’s the client?’
‘Pope. Same as last time.’
‘No doubt doing it on behalf of someone else?’
Tomboy nodded vaguely. ‘No doubt.’
The mysterious Mr Pope. An old criminal contact of Tomboy’s from London, he’d first got in touch a year ago with a business proposition, having tracked down Tomboy all the way to Sabang, which must have taken some doing. The business proposition had been the execution of Richard Blacklip, a British paedophile on the run from the law in the UK who was heading to Manila on a false passport. Someone Pope knew – apparently one of his victims, who was now an adult – wanted Blacklip dead, and Pope had asked Tomboy if he could organize someone reliable to carry out the task.
It might have seemed like a strange request for most people, but Tomboy Darke had been a career criminal all his life (albeit more of a ducker and diver than a man of violence) and had spent many years moving in the sort of circles where such things occasionally happened, and where people weren’t so hesitant in asking the question.
And, of course, Tomboy had known just the man.
I sighed loudly, not wanting to get involved in a repeat performance.
He took a huge gulp from the neck of the beer, dragged on the cigarette and looked me right in the eye. ‘I know you don’t want to do it. I don’t much want to do it, to be honest with you. But this is big money, and I’m telling you, this bloke’s no angel. He’s fleeing London for the back-end of nowhere, meeting someone to get a caseload of cash off them so he can start a new life a long way from prying eyes. Does that sound like someone with a clear conscience to you?’
He had a point there, but if there’s one thing I’ve learned in life, it’s never to take anything you’re told at face value. I’d made that mistake before, and it had almost cost me my life. In the three years since I’d left England, I’d tried to put all that behind me, to start afresh. Just like this guy Warren was trying to do. But you can never escape the past for ever, as he was about to find out.
I continued looking at Tomboy and he continued looking at me. I was thinking that there might be a way round this. A way of getting the money, doctoring a few photos, and not having to kill anyone. I suspected that he was just thinking about the money. Even so, I told him what he wanted to hear.
‘All right,’ I said. ‘I’ll do i
t.’
2
Tomboy drank the rest of his beer and ordered another one from Tina’s daughter. He then spent the next few minutes flirting with her while she leaned against the table opposite, a cloth in one hand and a smile on her face that was wide enough to be friendly but had little in the way of depth.
He said he bet that all the boys were chasing after her, and told her what a pretty young thing she was. She was a pretty young thing too but I doubted if she was a day over sixteen – while Tomboy was, if my memory served me correctly, the grand old age of forty-two, which made the whole thing look a little tasteless. He winked at me now and again, between jokes and compliments, just to demonstrate that it was nothing more than light-hearted banter, but I could see the hint of desperation in his act. He might have thought he was messing about, but, like a lot of men whose looks are fading as their waistlines expand, he needed to believe he still had that elusive ‘something’ the girls always go for. Unfortunately, he didn’t. As well as being about three stone heavier than he had been back in the old days in London, the booze had reddened his nose and cheeks and scattered them with clusters of broken veins, while his precious blond locks – the pride and joy of his youth – had been reduced to a few desperate strands on top and a scraggy ponytail at the back.
But that didn’t stop him. He asked Tina’s daughter what she liked most in a man. ‘Apart from the obvious,’ he added, chortling.
She giggled. ‘I don’t know,’ she said. ‘Don’t ask me that.’
‘You should make it multiple choice, Tomboy,’ I told him. ‘You know, A: beer gut; B: loud London accent. That sort of thing. It’d give you more of a chance.’
‘Sense of humour,’ she said, looking pleased with herself. ‘That’s what I like.’
Tomboy turned my way with the makings of a glare. I think he wanted to say something – a similarly barbed comment aimed in my direction – but remembered that he’d just asked me to kill someone, so decided to let it go.
‘You have a good sense of humour, Tomboy,’ said Tina’s daughter. She didn’t say the same to me, but then I didn’t know her as well.
Tomboy smiled. ‘Thanks, love.’ But he’d lost interest in the banter now. Like an unwelcome heckler, I’d messed up his routine.
He quaffed the rest of his second bottle of beer and announced he had to go. He had things to do, he said. Phoning London, for one. Letting the man called Pope know the job was on.
I finished my own drink in silence, still watching the outriggers in the bay, but with nothing like the pleasure that I’d taken in the view earlier. I liked Tomboy, and hadn’t meant to piss him off. He was a big man with a big personality, and he’d been good to me since I’d arrived at his Philippine hotel three years ago, on the run and without a friend left in the world. So I figured that I owed him. But killing someone on our very own doorstep? That felt like one payment too far.
Which was one reason why I still wasn’t sure whether I was actually going to go through with it or not. The other reason was that I’m no cold-blooded murderer. I’ve done jobs before. Blacklip was one, and there were others before him in England. Jobs where I’ve had to end the lives of people who deserved it. Drug dealers; child molesters; the worst kind of criminals. They weren’t many in number, and they never interfered with the work I did as a detective in London’s Metropolitan Police, so I never thought that I was doing much wrong. However, all that changed three years ago, when I made a mistake and shot some men I was told were bad guys, but who were actually anything but. That’s what I mean about not taking things at face value. People lie. They also double-cross, even the ones you’re meant to trust. Anyway, the result of that particular mistake was that I ended up on the run, with the police, Interpol and God knows who else after my blood. None of them were successful, and after a long and indirect journey, I made it here to the Philippines, going into business with a man who used to be one of my best informants back in the old days, when I was still on the side of the forces of law and order and people had known me as Detective Sergeant Dennis Milne.
Originally, Tomboy had owned a hotel and beach bar on Siquijor, a tiny island way down in the south of the Philippine archipelago, and I worked for him there. When I’d arrived it had been doing quite well, but then the Islamic rebels of Abu Sayyaf began to extend their kidnapping and bombing operations closer and closer to where we were, and the visitor numbers had slowed to a trickle. Tomboy and his Filipina wife Angela had sold up at a significant loss just over a year earlier and we’d headed north to start again in the Puerta Galera region of Mindoro, a large island a few hours’ boat and taxi ride from Manila. It was a lot busier here, and a lot safer too. Unless your name was Billy Warren, of course.
I paid my bill and left Tina’s daughter a fifty-peso tip, then headed out onto the narrow concrete walkway that was Sabang’s equivalent of a promenade, stepping over a couple of three-year-old kids playing on the ground with a mangy-looking puppy. I made my way along the beach, past a group of local men who were stood watching a cock-fight on the sand in front of the boats, then cut into the narrow, dirty backstreets of the town. The journey took me past the ramshackle stalls selling raw meat and fish, where the women gathered to barter in staccato tones; through gaggles of raucous schoolkids, heading home in their immaculate uniforms; past cheap tourist shops and girlie bars; across planks of wood that acted as bridges over the streams of effluent-laced water trailing beneath; under washing lines; through people’s backyards; past noisy games of pool played under tin roofs. And all the way I nodded to people I knew, greeted a few of them by name, breathed in the hot, stinking air, and thought how much I loved this place. The vibrancy, the heat. The freedom.
When I emerged at the other end of town and stepped back onto the promenade, the sun was setting in a blaze of gold and pink above the headland in front of me.
It was beautiful. It should have made me happy.
But I was too busy thinking about the fugitive coming from across the sea, and wondering whether he was going to be the man who ruined it all for me.
3
Two days after the meeting at Tina’s Sunset Restaurant, I drove the potholed road from Sabang to Puerta Galera, a gun in my pocket and a lot on my mind.
East Brucal Street’s a quiet and surprisingly leafy little road about fifty yards long and dotted with mango trees, just off Puerta Galera’s raucous main drag. The Hotel California, halfway down it, is a small, two-storey establishment with an open-air restaurant on its second floor that fits in nicely with the surroundings. It’s owned by an ex-Vietnam War veteran who’s not the sort of man you’d want to get in an argument with, but who was quite friendly with Tomboy and could be trusted not to take too much notice of who was passing through his establishment. At three hundred pesos a night for a double room with bathroom, it’s a good-value place to stay. Particularly so for Billy Warren, as his one night there had already been paid for in cash by Tomboy.
It was two thirty on a hot, sunny Friday afternoon and the street was quiet. A couple of cars were parked up but there didn’t seem to be anyone around. I pulled up ten yards past the front of the hotel, outside a collection of rusty corrugated-iron sheets that had somehow been fashioned into a shop selling house plants, and dialled the mobile number I’d been given.
Warren answered after five rings. ‘Hello?’ The tone was neutral, a little rough around the edges, and not betraying any nerves.
‘My name’s Mick Kane,’ I told him without preamble. ‘I’ve been told to deliver something to you, and to give you certain instructions. I’m outside, just up the street in a blue Land Rover. Can you come down?’
‘I’ve never seen a blue Land Rover before,’ he informed me helpfully.
‘Well, now’s your chance. You can even have a drive in it if you want. There’s a bar at the Ponderosa golf club. It’s fifteen minutes up the road. It’ll be quiet up there this time of day, so we can talk.’
‘So, you want to take me for a drive, do you?
’ His tone was suspicious, but there was something mocking in it too, as if he was letting me know he knew my motives. ‘Here I am all on my lonesome in a fleapit of a country where, according to the BBC, life is dirt fucking cheap, and I’ve just been invited to get in a car with a man I’ve never met before, but who’s apparently got a load of money for me, and go for a country jaunt?’
‘Listen, I don’t mind how we do it,’ I told him. ‘My job’s to give you the case I’m carrying and provide you with a few instructions to help you on your way. You can just come out and grab it if you want. It makes no difference. I just fancied a drink, that’s all.’
‘Has it got aircon, this place? I’m not going anywhere without aircon. Not in this heat.’
‘Of course it has,’ I lied. ‘And it’s got nice views, too. You’ll like it.’
‘We’ll see,’ he said enigmatically and hung up.
This guy fancied himself, no question; and he wanted me to know he was no fool. I’ve met plenty of men like him before. Men who are sure they know the score on everything; who are streetwise enough that they can smell trouble a mile off. But everyone’s got a weakness. It’s just a matter of knowing where to look.
Five minutes passed, and I was just about to phone the cheeky sod again to see what the hell he was playing at when he emerged from the hotel entrance, dressed in a white, short-sleeved cotton shirt and jeans. He made his way straight to the car without looking around, which meant that he’d been watching it from his hotel room. Fair enough. I’d have done the same in his position.
He was medium height, early forties, with short dark hair and a thick moustache that followed the curves of his mouth and didn’t look right on him at all. He had a muscular build that suggested he worked out regularly, and his face was fairly nondescript in so far as nothing actually stood out, except perhaps that it belonged to a man who knew how to handle himself.
A Good Day To Die Page 2