He read the message aloud to Carroll and Caitlin: “There's no salutation or date… It reads as follows: ‘You are to send your representative with the proof of transfer of funds. Your representative is to be at Fox Cross Station, six miles northwest outside Belfast. That's the railroad. Be there at oh five forty-five. The precious securities will be safely waiting nearby… The messenger is to be Caitlin Dillon. No one else is acceptable to us. There will be no further contact.’”
20
At five-thirty, the morning air was misty in suburban Belfast.
It was the kind of day in which objects had no hard definition. The railway platform at Fox Cross was silent. All the trees were stripped and bare and looked arthritic in the wintry absence of clear light. Up beyond the mist the sky was dark gray and the cloud cover low.
Caitlin shivered slightly and folded her arms around her chest. She could definitely hear the drumming of her own heart. She wasn't going to let herself be frightened. She vowed not to act the way a woman would be expected to act under the difficult circumstances. She wouldn't give in to the rising sense of hysteria she was feeling.
She sucked in a raw, cold breath. She shifted impatiently from one boot to the other.
No one was visible yet, not anywhere up and down the weathered railway platform.
Was it all going to be over after this?
Would they learn the identity of Green Band?…
What possible part did the North Irish play? And what could have happened between the Russians and Green Band back in London?
A black leather briefcase hung down from her wrist. Inside were codes to release the enormous sums now on deposit at a Swiss bank, and which were to be paid outright this morning. The ransom of the century was to take place here at historic Fox Cross Station.
Caitlin imagined she looked like a successful business woman with the fine black leather briefcase. Some regular commuter heading into downtown Belfast. Another day at the bloody office. She thought she was playing the part fairly well.
She glanced at her watch and saw it was a few seconds before five forty-five. The time they'd indicated for the exchange had come. She cautioned herself that they were not necessarily punctual.
What did their lack of punctuality mean now? What did it mean in terms of any emergency police action planned at Fox Cross?
Caitlin tensed. Every muscle, every fiber in her body, tightened involuntarily.
A faded blue panel truck had appeared and was approaching the deserted station from a thick row of pine trees.
The slow-moving truck steadily loomed larger and larger. Caitlin saw that there were three passengers, all of them men.
Then the truck passed by her. A gust of frozen wind swept back her hair, and Caitlin let out what must have been the deepest sigh of her life.
Carroll and the British detectives were less than a mile away, according to the plan. It was a comforting thought, but there was nothing they could do if trouble suddenly bloomed-if someone panicked, if someone made a simple, foolish mistake. Was Green Band nothing more than an outrageous robbery?
A car, a nondescript sedan, approached moments after the panel truck. Caitlin tried to observe everything about it as it rolled forward over the parking lot gravel. Very possibly it was just dropping off a passenger for the first scheduled train at 6:04.
It was a late-model Ford, grayish green, with a slightly smashed-in front grille. There was a tiny chip in the windshield. Four passengers inside-two in front, two in back, Irish working men? Thick, heavyset types, anyway. Maybe farmworkers?
But the second car passed by her, too.
Caitlin was tremendously relieved and disappointed at the same time. She was trying desperately to keep her wits about her.
Then the car suddenly stopped and the tires screeched as it reversed. The two burly men in back jumped out; both were wearing black cloth masks, and each carried a machine pistol.
They ran to Caitlin, work shoes splatting hard against concrete.
“You're Caitlin Dillon, missus?” one of the masked men asked. He thrust forward his menacing gun muzzle.
“I am.” Caitlin's legs had begun to buckle.
“You were born in Old Lyme, Connecticut?”
“I was born in Lima, Ohio.”
“Birth date-January 23, 1950?”
“Thanks a lot-1951.”
The masked IRA terrorist laughed at Caitlin's automatic response. He apparently appreciated a modicum of coolness and humor. “All right, then, dearie, we're going to put one of these hangman masks on you. No eyeholes for lookin' out. Nothing to be afraid of, though.”
“I'm not afraid of you.”
The other man, the silent partner, looped a black hood over her head and pulled it tightly over her face. He was careful not to bump or touch any other parts of her body. How very Irish Catholic, Caitlin couldn't help thinking. They'd put a bullet into her without blinking, she knew that. But no impure thoughts, no accidental touching of a female breast.
“We're going to lead you back to the car now. Nice and easy… Easy does it… All right, step up, step inside. Now down in back. On the car floor here. There we go, all comfy.”
Caitlin was feeling numb; her body didn't seem to belong to her. She found herself saying, “Thank you. I'm fine right here.”
“Your mum's name is Margaret?” Cleverly timed.
“My mother's name is Anna. Her maiden name is Reardon.”
“No tracking device anywhere on your person.”
“No.”
Caitlin had answered a little too quickly, she thought. Her skin became clammy, cold. She couldn't breathe.
There was no apparent reaction, nothing she could perceive as wrong, from the Irishmen. They seemed to believe her, not even to question what she'd said about the tracking device.
“I have to check you all the same. Pat you down. All right, here goes.”
Clumsy male hands (mechanic? some kind of working man?) groped all over her body. Caitlin tensed her stockinged legs as a man's hand wedged up between. The intruding hand felt very harsh and rude. The worst part so far. Probably not the worst she was going to experience today, though.
“If you have a transmitter, we have orders to kill you… If you don't, tell us right now. Don't lie about this, dearie. I'm quite serious. Do you have any tracking device? We'll check you thoroughly as soon as we're out of here. Please tell me the truth.”
“I have no tracking device on me.” Inside me. Could they really find that?
There was no more talking after that. The horrible body search ended abruptly.
The car's engine coughed and came alive.
Someone wiped her face with a dripping wet cloth.
Jesus. The fumes were everywhere. The fumes wouldn't let her breathe.
“No, I-”
Chloroform!
“Oh, bugger it. Look at this hopeless mess,” Patrick Frazier exclaimed.
Torrents of water jackhammered the black Bentley that Carroll and Inspector Patrick Frazier were riding in. Rain blasted the steamy windshields, hitting with the solid force of a fire hose.
It had begun to spit rain at five minutes to six. Then suddenly it was coming down heavily, piercing the mist, making it nearly impossible to see the road ahead.
“They're on the Falls Road now. That's in the rough-and-tumble part of Belfast,” Frazier said. “The Provisional Irish Republican Army owns it… It's your basic urban ghetto, where they regularly ambush our soldiers. Hit-and-run snipers in there, mostly. Urban guerrilla warfare at its best.”
Carroll and Frazier were hunched forward on the front seat of the Bentley. The transmitter-beeper tracking Caitlin was coming over frighteningly loud and clear. It sounded a little like a sequence of radar blips, all originating somewhere deep in Caitlin's stomach.
Carroll couldn't help thinking of a heart-monitoring device in an intensive care unit, something that registered one's hold on life. Poor Caitlin. But he couldn't have done anything to stop her from going-he coul
dn't have offered himself as a substitute messenger; the instructions had been specific and final.
The monitoring blip blip blip was becoming louder now, more stubbornly insistent.
The car with Caitlin was apparently slowing down. Maybe it had temporarily stopped at a streetlight? In heavy traffic? What now?
“Range closing fast, sir,” reported the driver.
“Hang it. They're at the home base,” Patrick Frazier pronounced. His driver immediately stepped on the gas, and the car leaned forward with a thrusting surge of power.
“Either that, or they're switching transportation,” Carroll said.
Carroll's mind cocooned tightly around the thought of Caitlin in serious danger. He was angry and afraid for her. “Let's get in closer. Come on! Come on, let's move it now!” he snapped at the driver.
Less than two miles away, the hood was removed from Caitlin's head; she reeled away as acrid smelling salts were briskly passed under her nose. Her watering eyes rolled backward.
Focus. There were dull-edged silhouettes rather than faces clustered around her. Three of them.
Behind the looming shapes stood excessively bright lamps. Behind the lamps were still more shadowy, unidentifiable figures. Green Band?
She couldn't see who the others were… not yet, anyway.
“Welcome back among the living. You're a brave one to accept our invitation. Probably a little scared right now. That's natural enough.”
“You do have authority to transfer the agreed-upon sum of money? You have the necessary bank codes, Ms. Dillon?”
Caitlin nodded. Her neck was stiff, her throat dry and itchy. When she spoke her voice sounded hollow and lifeless to her, the words clumsily formed.
“Would you mind showing me… some of the stolen securities? I need some reassurance as well. I need to see what we're getting in the exchange.”
“You'll be able to estimate the true value by yourself, aye? And you can tell counterfeit from the genuine article? You've that finely trained an eye?”
“Touch is more important than the eye,” Caitlin said calmly, hiding any anger she felt. “I can tell a great deal by touching the securities. Enough to release the money in Geneva. Please? May I examine them?”
They finally brought her the “sample” stock certificates and bonds. She held in a tiny gasp of amazement. The look of the securities was certainly authentic. She quickly read off the top names: IBM, General Motors, AT &T, Digital, Monsanto.
She played with the outrageous numbers in her mind. It was several thousand times the amount of the great train robbery. And who knew how much of the total stolen amount this was? What was coming still?
“You can touch the documents all you like, darling. They're real enough. We wouldn't bring you all the way here for nothing. Just to chat and admire your fine all-American boobies.”
The black Bentley sedan Carroll rode in barely slowed as it squeezed around a crumbling white brick wall in the inner city. The wall was blackened in places from petrol bombs. The car's radial tires screeched above the bustling city noises.
Suddenly a flatbed was in the same narrow, twisting lane as the Bentley. The truck's engine roared and its horn blared loudly.
A blast of gunfire erupted from the cab of the onrushing truck. Spits of gunfire came from the flat tenement rooftops to the right of the thread-needle roadway.
“Ambush!” Inspector Patrick Frazier grunted. He slumped back against the door as a jagged black hole appeared at the center of his forehead.
Carroll opened the door quickly and followed the driver of the Bentley out. Then he lay pressed tightly against the side of the car. He looked up, staring at Patrick Frazier's wound through the open Bentley doorway. The MI6 inspector was dead, his eyes registering a final glassy surprise.
Carroll angrily swung his gun barrel in the direction of the flatbed. Without any accompanying sound, the weapon opened rapid fire. Gaping bullet holes appeared everywhere on the truck's already mottled surface.
One of the Irish gunsels, astonished because there had been no gun sound, blew back, away from the faded red hood of the truck. Blood spurted from his black-bearded face and throat. And then the body rolled and rolled across the road like a barrel.
Carroll's machine pistol had been developed and perfected by the Israeli army in 1981. It fired automatically; up to two hundred and fifty rounds in six seconds. The bullets were attracted by body heat. “Silent death,” the Israelis and their enemies called it.
A stout redheaded man's forehead was angrily stitched straight across with bullet holes. The man performed a brief two-step, then spun off a steep-shingled rooftop. He plummeted onto the street with a hollow, crunching sound.
Carroll was aware of movement on each side of him.
Crowds, mostly women and children, were streaming out of crumbling, low-slung tenement buildings. They mobbed forward instead of hiding in the safer shadows. They had deep red faces filled with anger.
The two remaining gunmen from the truck immediately dodged back among the women in their plaid bathrobes and tattered men's jackets. They crouched among the dirty-faced children, many of whom were still in their pajamas, dragged out of the innocence of sleep and made to confront still another horror in their sad young lives.
Carroll clicked the machine gun off automatic so it wouldn't fire into the converging crowds.
“British spies!” the Irish people had suddenly begun to jeer, protecting their revolutionary soldiers, some of whom were immediate family members, some less close relatives and friends.
“Damn British spies! Damn you British!”
“Ga home, damn Brits!”
Carroll cautiously ran forward, anyway. He threw himself directly into the fierce, snarling faces, the threatening, murderous shouts. His machine pistol jutted out, the ugly black snout just menacing enough to keep them off him. Who was the real terrorist here? his mind rambled.
“Big man with yer gun,” someone taunted.
“Fookin' coward with your gun. Dirty Brit turd! Filthy Brit bastard!”
Carroll almost didn't hear the angry shouts. He had only one thought-follow the continuing radar blips. Find Caitlin.
Caitlin covered her head with both arms. She was trying desperately to squirm and struggle away from the IRA men. The air in the tenement room was heavy, impossible for her to breathe.
“You filthy whore, you! Whore! You filthy swine!” the head man screeched at the top of his voice, inches from Caitlin's face. A contact radio was crackling nearby, blaring the latest street reports into the IRA hideout.
“It's a trap. Infuckingsane. She's carryin' some kind of signal, Dermot! Police cars, damn Brit soldiers, are swarming the street out there. Soldiers're everywhere!”
It was the most horrifying, helpless moment Caitlin could ever have imagined. She knew what they were going to do to her. She knew instinctively she was going to be shot, murdered in seconds. She wondered when that moment of resigned calm would come, that transcendental moment you were supposed to experience when you understood you were going to die.
The IRA group leader continued to scream; his black masked face was terribly close to hers. “You bloody knew! You dirty bitch.”
“No, I didn't know. Please. I don't understand.”
The Irish terrorist suddenly lunged forward, propelling himself out of the blinding white floodlights. He ripped off his mask. She saw a dirty, reddish blond beard, black holes for eyes. She saw the gaping mouth of a Russian SKS assault rifle…
Tears flooded her eyes. She tried to tell the terrorist not to fire, to stop, please stop. Her senses were overwhelmed with horrifying impressions. She wondered if this was the way it was going to be, one burst of crazy clarity and then death, that last solitary moment.
There were shrill police sirens and ambulances and gunfire outside; the air was pierced with the maddening noises. Through her tears she watched the door of the apartment burst open. Somebody she'd never seen before stood poised with a drawn pisto
l-
A deafening volley of automatic gunfire aimed at Caitlin's face. Oh, no! Oh, God, no-
Caitlin tried to twist and turn away. That urgent, paramount thought stuck in her mind: Get away now! Get away! Get away! Get away!
Only she couldn't seem to move.
Caitlin Dillon simply fell.
“Get out of my way! Get out of the way, you bastards!”
Carroll screamed wildly at the three Belfast men standing squarely in his path. The Irish hoods were stubbornly posted between him and the tenement house stairway. They were viciously waving Gaelic football bats in the dimly lit hallway.
“Why don'tcha make us move, mate? Come on now. Make us move. See if you can?”
The tracking beeper was singing desperately, actually vibrating in his jacket pocket. Caitlin had to be upstairs. She was somewhere in this building.
Police sirens and emergency army sirens were shrieking everywhere. Steady sniper gunfire was still raining and ricocheting down on Falls Road. Move! Now! Move!
Carroll leapt between the three surprised Irish youths. They wisely sidestepped the charging, bull-shouldered American. Carroll crashed two and three steps at a time, up a twisty flight of dusty, darkened stairs. Please, God, no!
He was fighting against furious rage and an even worse fear building inside him. He kept the machine gun clipped off automatic fire. There were too many civilians swarming inside the tenement.
Apartment doors kept opening, then slamming shut. There were dangerously hostile looks and abusive screams in every direction as he charged upward.
As Carroll finally reached the top landing, the fourth floor of the dismal building, he saw the dingy yellow door to an apartment thrown open.
His brain was going to explode. Suddenly he knew what he was going to find there. He just knew.
He could already see inside the grubby doorway. Then he could see Caitlin lying there, still in her coat. Her gaily striped muffler was off casually to one side. She lay against a fallen wooden chair.
The IRA henchmen were gone, up to the roof, up over other roofs, gone, escaped somewhere.
“Oh, God, no.” Carroll choked back a horrible sob, a desperate, hopeless prayer. He experienced that awful, hollow bitterness of death all over again. He felt a terrible hurt, an infinite pain.
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