Maestro: 4 (The Herbie Kruger Novels)

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Maestro: 4 (The Herbie Kruger Novels) Page 74

by John Gardner


  The desk sergeant at the Salisbury nick showed an obviously unusual subservience when Herbie mentioned Peter Gurney and flashed his little plastic ID card. They were led around to the big open garage at the back of the building, where Gurney appeared to be giving an impromptu lecture to an assorted bevy of cops—uniformed and plain-clothed—who hung on his every word, knowing they listened to a legend.

  “With cars,” he was saying, “you must have a good knowledge of the wiring. If any of you are thinking about going into this line of work, start now: memorize the wiring of every car on the road and keep updated. I’m talking all vehicles, not just the most common wheels you see around your particular patch. The point is that, with car bombs, you must be able to sort out infiltrated wire from the stuff that’s already there. I know it’s difficult with more and more computerization coming in, but it is essential, as in this case. The first thing we found were the four strands of burned wire you see lying on the table here. That wire has no place in a Rover of this type—or any Rover, come to that.”

  What was left of Gus’s car seemed to have been further dismantled, and a plain long folding table had been set up next to the burned and twisted thing that had been a Rover. Sections of it had been sliced away and now lay on the table together with smaller items: tiny pieces of metal and the strands of wire to which Gurney was pointing.

  He looked up, saw Herb, smiled and told his audience that his guv’nor had arrived, so they would have to call it a day.

  “The wire?” Herbie asked him. “That for real, or your usual line of bullshit?”

  “Unhappily, it’s for real.” Gurney traced a finger along the strands of charred wire, some of it almost crumbling to dust. “There’s no black magic, Mr. Kruger. We were lucky. First thing we found. Someone had taken a lot of pains with this. It isn’t your quick device with magnets plonked on the underside and blown at your leisure. It took time and trouble. I told you that there was a cluster of dynamite sticks inside, under the driver’s seat.” He gestured to what had been the driver’s seat, which now looked like a piece of modern metal sculpture—the kind that art galleries paid thousands to own and exhibit. “Another close to the gas tank, and a third right under the trunk.”

  “Any takers?” Herb asked quietly.

  “If I had to make a substantial bet, I’d say Middle East. It has Arab handwriting all over it. Also, they rarely work bombs over here, so they’d probably go in for some petty pilfering. Some quarries and specialist firms aren’t too careful with their dynamite.”

  “You prove it?”

  “Have to get analysis on the dynamite first. Find out if it’s from one source or several, but we know how the deed was done.”

  “Show me.”

  “There was a magnet.” The expert picked up a small bent circle of metal, with varied attachments. “Mercury switch,” he said. “Mercury switch attached to a magnet and so to the underside of the chassis. You’re conversant with mercury switches, sir?”

  “Sure, but tell me just the same.”

  “Glass vial containing mercury. Usually tilted so that the mercury lies at one end. When it slides down the vial, it provides the necessary to make contact with wires and batteries, so that a small amount of electricity takes a swipe at the detonator or, in this case, detonators. Then bang!”

  He turned the charred remnant in his fingers. A pair of AA batteries were visible, and some fragments of wire. “This one,” Gurney continued, “was fairly highbrow. Mercury switch with a little flap to stop it running down to complete the circuit and boom. It had a solenoid here”—pointing—“and the solenoid was probably operated by something as simple as a remote from one of those toy aircraft or cars. Press the button and Puff the Magic Dragon sends a bloody great firework straight up your arse—if you’ll excuse the expression, sir—and two others which ignited the gas.”

  “Sure. You can prove all this in a court? In front of the beak?”

  “Not at the moment, but we will be able to once we’ve got all this stuff into the lab, back in the Smoke.” For the uninitiated, the Smoke was London. Herb was initiated.

  “So where they put the dynamite?”

  “Under the driver’s seat, as I’ve said. Another lot near the gas tank, and the final handful under the trunk, which had three four-gallon gas containers inside. The explosive didn’t even have to rupture the metal to set the Rover ablaze, though it did with the trunk. When it pops, the stuff generates enough heat to cause spontaneous combustion—if it’s set near some combustible material. The driver would be dead before the flames got near him. In fact, they have what’s left of him down at the hospital. The doc says it’s like doing a jigsaw, and the local law’s out combing the ground for more spare parts. Poor old Mr. Keene’s been rendered down to kit form, as it were.”

  “Mmmmm.” Herb frowned. “And nobody’s going to be able to ID him, because there’s no nice, convenient dental records.”

  “They’ll be able to size him up, and we do have one or two small items.” Peter Gurney turned towards the table again. “Oh, and it was his Rover. Engine serial number fits.”

  “So what else you got?”

  What was left of Augustus Claudius Keene’s personal possessions was assembled in several small plastic bags. “Bits of metal.” Gurney pointed. “Looks like the remains of his watch here. This is probably the metal lining of a spectacle case. A Zippo lighter, almost certainly. Then there’s this little doo-dah.”

  This little doo-dah was a tiny twisted metal disc, the size of a small button. On the underside there was a pin almost an inch long. How that had escaped the fire was a mystery.

  “What you reckon?” Herb asked.

  “Lapel pin probably. Can’t really tell. You taking charge of this stuff?”

  Herbie nodded slowly. “I have to get him ID’d. Bugger of a job. Ask his wife if he had a Zippo—which I am pretty sure he did. Find out what this dah-doo is.”

  “Doo-dah.” Gurney corrected, for he was not cognizant of the English language according to Kruger.

  “Sure.” Herb nodded. “You done a lot in a short time, Pete. What else?”

  “No idea.”

  “I mean what’s your general feelings about this?”

  Peter Gurney could not meet his eye. He had known Gus en passant and realized that Big Herb had been a friend. “It’s a very pro job. Whoever did it knows all the tricks, and I’d say that the victim had to be dead or unconscious before someone did this to him. Mr. Keene, I gather, was astute.”

  “A what?” Herb was running on autopilot and did things like this instinctively.

  “Astute, as in shrewd.”

  “Ja. Yeah. Yeah he was. Shrewd, Gus was.”

  “Wise to the ways of the badlands?”

  “Very. Now is the taming of the shrewd, ja?”

  Gurney frowned. “I’d say the car was not rigged when he drove from Salisbury or wherever he’d been. Or, put it another way, it was not completely ready. He’d have felt uncomfortable with those sticks of bang under the seat. If he was good in the ways of tradecraft, he’d have felt something fishy.”

  “So, he was stopped on the road—which he was, Peter. You think they gave him a bounce on the melon, rigged the car, then set him off to his final destination?”

  “Probably. A lot more work needs to be done.”

  “How long it take, Pete? Rigging the car?”

  “Ten, maybe seven, minutes. They’d have to have the clumps of dyno already rigged, put them in place, push in the detonators, run the wires, screw them into the switch, then plug in the batteries. Really good boys would cut the time down to six or seven minutes, and I’ve no doubt these were really good boys.”

  “Go do your stuff at the lab. I’ll take the geegaws.” Kruger pointed to the neat plastic bags.

  “You have the authority to take these?”

  “Trust me.” Herb gathered the evidence bags into his huge paw, said he would be in touch and lumbered away, Ginger in his wake like a tugbo
at.

  “Warminster next?” the driver asked.

  “Warminster, but stop off at a telephone booth on the way. There’s one near the turn at Knook Camp.”

  “Anything you say, sir.”

  Big Herbie Kruger slumped himself into the passenger seat. He was in despair and heavy with emotion. Carole Keene, who had loved Gus with deep passion, waited at the end of this particular leg of the trip, and Herb was not looking forward to that meeting.

  Knook Camp lies about two miles from Wylye and three from Warminster itself. It is an old, decrepit military complex, and to reach the Office’s facility known as Warminster, you take a right at Knook Camp and go on for a couple of miles until you reach the high redbrick wall that is studded with electronic eyes and sensors. There is a lonely British Telecom telephone booth half a mile from the main entrance. From this booth Herbie called the office and spoke to Young Worboys.

  “Touching boos with you, Tony.”

  “Base, Herb.” Then he heard the chuckle at the distant end. “So, what’s the problem?”

  “No problem. I seen Pete Gurney and they figured some of it. It’s all nasty and I’ll have to be doing lots of gumshoeing around. Whoever did Gus was good. Probably Middle East.”

  “Yes, I’ve talked to Pete. It adds another dimension.”

  “Several. Pete says it’s got Arab handwriting. Anyway, I’m pretty unhappy, young Worboys. Just about to go talk with Carole and that’s not going to be a barrel of laughs.”

  “Yes. I’ve spoken to the Old Man. He has some rather good ideas. Want to hear them?”

  “Shoot, old sheep.”

  “You should have someone with you …”

  “I got Ginger.”

  “He’s muscle, Herb, and you just might need muscle. Pete tells me whoever did the thing is a pro; but you know that already.”

  “Sure. Okay, Ginger’s muscle.”

  “Any ideas about who you’d like with you to run interference?”

  “You, old sport, like in the old days when you were my junior.”

  “Be sensible, Herb. The Chief says Bitsy. She’s already down there and she knows enough. I think he wants to keep her, in this time of dwindling resources and people taking golden handshakes. Wants to give her experience.”

  “She looking after Carole?”

  “Not for much longer. I’ve already got a pair of nurses on their way down.”

  Herbie grunted. For nurses read minders and mind readers. “Why?”

  “It has been suggested that Carole should be moved into the luxury apartments …”

  “Leave her home?” Slightly shocked.

  “She’ll be near enough. For her own safety, Herb. You’ll have to tell her.”

  “Great. I show her the bits of metal that, apart from a model kit that’s his bones, is all that’s left of her husband, then I tell her she has to get out of her home.”

  “That’s about it. You will stay there—in the Dower House—with Ginger doing the minding and Bitsy running the errands. You’ll have peace and quiet, plus all Gus’s documents, including what he’s done on his memoir. Go through it like—”

  “Grease through a duck, sure, I know.”

  “It’s handy, Herb.”

  “Sure, it’s also insulting to Carole.”

  “Herb, for all we know, the dark and lovely Carole could be our first suspect. Isn’t that the old rule? Wife is the first one you turn over.”

  Big Herbie, cramped in the phone booth, gave another of his long sighs. “His wife is a former member of the Office as well. But okay, I call you from the Dower House. Is the line clear or have we got a dodgy bit of electronics there?”

  “Safe as the Bank of England.”

  “Oh, Christ.”

  “Do it, Herb.”

  “Okay. You’ll have to pick up the pieces.”

  “Of course, Herb. You know the Office’ll stand by you.” Pause for twenty seconds, ten seconds longer than necessary. “We’ll also stand by you when the anti-terrorist Plod comes calling.”

  “When’ll that be?”

  “Three, maybe four days. They’re clearing a DCI from other work.”

  “Keep him at bay, Tony. Get him to check out those two car bombs FFIRA say they didn’t do, eh?”

  “We’ll try, but we’re right behind you, old friend. Watch your back.”

  Like hell, Kruger thought, easing himself from the booth. “Let’s go,” he said without looking at Ginger. “Warminster. The place they call the Dower House. Where the old main entrance used to be.”

  “Know it well, guv. Residence of the late Mr. Keene, right?”

  “And the lovely widow Keene, yes.” Herbie reflected that he truly did not know how he would do this.

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  Extracts from “Gerontion,” “La Figlia Che Plange,” and “The Waste Land” appeared in Collected Poems 1909–1962 by T. S. Eliot, copyright 1936 Harcourt Brace & Company, copyright © 1964, 1963 by T. S. Eliot, reprinted by permission of the publisher.

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