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A Fine Night for Dying pc-6 Page 4
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The van swerved into a narrow sandy track to the left and moved down through the pine trees toward the sea. A few moments later, the engine coughed a couple of times, faltered, then stopped completely. The van rolled to a halt, the door opened and Jacaud came round to the rear.
“Trouble?” Chavasse inquired.
“I’ve run out of fuel,” Jacaud said. “But it doesn’t matter. I always carry an emergency supply. At the back of the bench there.”
Chavasse found on old British Army jerrycan that looked as if it had been in use since Dunkirk. It was full, which made it awkward to handle in the confined space, and he had to use both hands, which was obviously exactly what Jacaud had counted on. As Chavasse heaved the jerrycan up on the tailgate with every sign of difficulty, the big man’s hand appeared from behind his back and the tire iron lever he was holding cracked down.
Only Chavasse wasn’t there any longer. He dodged to one side, holding the jerrycan in both hands with negligent ease, and the tire iron dented the edge of the tailgate. Jacaud was already moving backward out of harm’s way, every instinct that had kept him intact for forty-three years warning him that he had made a very bad mistake, but he was too late. The jerrycan took him full in the chest and he went over. He rolled onto his face and started to get up and Chavasse landed on his back.
The arm that clamped itself around Jacaud’s throat was like a steel band, cutting off his air supply so efficiently that he started to choke at once.
Chavasse wasn’t really sure what happened after that. He was aware of Famia screaming, calling his name, and then the light was switched off very suddenly. There was no pain-no pain at all. A blow to the base of the neck delivered by an expert-the thought was there and yet was not there, and in the same moment vision returned.
He looked up into the face of a ravaged saint, an Anthony burned clear to the bone by the heat of the wilderness. Beneath the drift of flaxen hair, the pale blue eyes were empty. There was no love here, no cruelty either, and he crouched beside Chavasse in a kind of meditation, an exquisite ivory Madonna clasped in both hands.
Chavasse was aware of the Smith amp; Wesson hard against his back, secure in its spring holster. Famia Nadeem stood beside the van, hands together, terror on her face, and Jacaud stood beside her. Chavasse decided to play it cool for another couple of minutes. He came back to Rossiter, stared at him vacantly and ran a hand across his eyes.
The Englishman slapped him in the face. “Can you hear me, Chavasse?” Chavasse struggled up on one elbow, and Rossiter smiled briefly. “I was beginning to think I must have hit you harder than I had intended.”
“Hard enough.” Chavasse sat up, rubbing the nape of his neck with one hand. “You’ve heard from Skiros, I presume?”
“Naturally. He gives me to understand that you have in your possession a considerable sum of money belonging to the organization I work for. Where is it?”
“In a safe place back in Saint Brieuc. I decided it would make what a poker player might term a good ace-in-the-hole. Who am I talking to, by the way? You’re not Jacaud, that’s for sure.”
“Monsieur Jacaud you have already met. My name is Rossiter.”
“And he and Skiros work for you?”
“In a manner of speaking.”
“Then I don’t think much of the way your organization treats the cash customers. When I reached Marseilles, Skiros sent me on my way to the wrong destination with a couple of goons on my tail to rob me. When I went back to the ship to talk things over, he was doing his best to rape the girl. On top of that, he’d taken her for a lot of money. I don’t know how well he’s been doing for you, but I’d say his bank account would make interesting reading.”
Rossiter didn’t seem to be listening. He had turned to Famia Nadeem, a frown on his face. When he went forward, she glanced down and he put a hand under her chin and tilted it up.
“Is he telling the truth?”
Strangely enough, all her fear seemed to have vanished. She looked up at him calmly and nodded. Rossiter turned abruptly and came back to Chavasse. His eyes were bleak and there was an expression of utter desolation on his face.
“What a world,” he said softly. “What a filthy, loathsome world.” He took a deep breath, something clicked, and he was himself again. “Get up!”
Chavasse did as he was told, producing the Smith amp; Wesson at the same time. Jacaud gave a kind of angry cry, but Rossiter waved him to silence. He stood, feet slightly apart, tossing the ivory Madonna high into the air and catching it again in his right hand.
“Now what?”
“Now nothing,” Chavasse said. “I just want to get to London in one piece and fade into the background.”
“Understandable enough.” Rossiter actually smiled. “Ten years in an Australian jail can hardly have been an exciting prospect. I believe they still run their penal system on rather old-fashioned lines.”
Chavasse managed to look suitably astonished. “Is there anything you don’t know, sport?”
“Not where clients are concerned.”
Chavasse sighed and put the Smith amp; Wesson away. “I’ve had my bellyful of trouble during the past few months, Rossiter. I don’t want any more. Just get me to England, that’s all I ask. I’ll pay whatever is necessary. That business in Marseilles was all Skiros, believe me.”
Rossiter slipped the Madonna into his right pocket. “The money? Where is it?”
Chavasse told him. He also took off his right shoe and produced the key, which Rossiter immediately tossed to Jacaud. “We’ll wait for you here. You can take the Renault.”
Jacaud moved away through the trees without a word and Chavasse lit a cigarette. So far so good. He looked down through the pine trees toward the sea and smiled.
“Nice country. I was looking forward to this bit of the trip. My father came from Brittany, you know.”
“I was wondering about your French,” Rossiter said. “It’s quite excellent.”
“My mother was English, of course, but we’ve never used anything else but French in the house since I can remember. My old man wouldn’t have it any other way.”
Rossiter nodded, produced a slim leather case from his breast pocket, and selected a thin black cheroot, which he lit carefully. “Tell me something about the girl.”
She was sitting in the passenger seat, watching them. Chavasse threw her a smile. “I only know what she’s told me.”
He went through her story quickly, and when he had finished, Rossiter nodded briefly. “She’s very young to have gone through so much.”
He said it as if he meant it, with real sympathy in his voice, and moved toward her. Chavasse sat down on a fallen log and watched them. Rossiter was speaking; the girl answered. Suddenly she was smiling, and a few moments later, laughed out loud. And Rossiter laughed with her, that was the strangest thing of all, so that for a short time he seemed to be an entirely different person. Curiouser and curiouser…
Chavasse gave up for the moment, got to his feet and walked to the edge of the clearing, breathing in the scent of damp pines, the good salt air from the sea, the smell that always brought the Brittany of his boyhood back to him, wherever he was. It would have been nice to have surprised his grandfather at Vaux. The old man would have loved that-an unexpected visit from his clever half-English grandson who lectured at a university whose name he could never remember. A little bit too much of the scholar with his doctorate in modern languages, but still a Chavasse for all that.
Chavasse stared down through the trees toward the sea, remembering boyhood a thousand years ago and all its wonderful dreams. And now he had returned to Brittany and he could not go to Vaux….
A horn sounded through the trees. Jacaud had arrived, and he sighed and came back to the present as Rossiter called to him.
CHAPTER 5
Brittany
St. Denise was twenty or thirty granite cottages amongst pine trees fringing a horseshoe cove that was a natural harbor. There was a wooden jetty of sort
s, with an old thirty-foot launch moored to it that looked as if it had seen better days. The tide was turning, and four clinker-built fishing cobles moved out to sea, line astern. A similar boat lay stranded on the beach above the high-water mark and two men worked on her hull.
Chavasse took it all in as the van moved out of the trees along the narrow road that merged into the main street of the village. The only sign of life was a stray dog sitting mournfully in the rain outside a cottage door.
The van left the village behind, and almost stalled as Jacaud dropped two gears to negotiate a steep hill. The Running Man was at the top, a two-storied granite house sheltering behind high walls. Jacaud turned through an archway and halted in the cobbled courtyard inside. Chavasse got out and looked around with interest. The whole place had a strangely forlorn look about it and badly needed a coat of paint. A shutter banged to and fro in the wind, and when he glanced up, a curtain moved slightly at a window, as if it had been pulled to one side while someone glanced out.
The Renault entered the courtyard and pulled up just behind the van. Famia got out and stood there, looking uncertain. Rossiter came round from the other side, picked up her suitcase and took her elbow. She looked tired, ready to drop at any moment. He leaned over her solicitously, murmured something and took her inside.
Chavasse turned to Jacaud. “What about me?”
“If I had my way, you could sleep in the pigsty.”
“Careful,” Chavasse said. “You’ll be making sounds like a man next. Now let’s try again.”
Jacaud went inside without a word and Chavasse picked up his suitcase and followed him. He paused to glance up at the painted sign above the door. It was obviously very old and showed a man running, apparently some kind of fugitive, a pack of hounds at his heels. A pleasant sight indeed, the terror in the poor wretch’s eyes frozen into place for all eternity.
Inside was a large square room with a low-beamed ceiling and a tiled floor. There was a scattering of chairs and tables, a large open hearth in which a fire burned and a marble-topped bar.
Jacaud had gone behind it and was pouring himself a large cognac. He rammed the cork into the bottle and Chavasse dropped his case. “I’ll join you.”
“Like hell you will. Let’s see the color of your money.”
“Rossiter’s got it all, you know that.”
“Then you can go thirsty.” He replaced the bottle on the shelf and raised his voice. “Hey, Mercier, where are you?”
A door at the back of the bar opened and a small, worried-looking man of forty or so came in. He wore a fisherman’s patched trousers and was wiping his hands on a grimy towel.
“Yes, monsieur, what is it?”
“Another passenger for the Leopard. Take him upstairs. He can share with Jones.”
Jacaud glared at Chavasse like some wild animal, turned and, kicking open the door, vanished into the kitchen.
“Quite a show,” Chavasse said. “Is he always like this or is today something special?”
Mercier picked up the suitcase. “This way, monsieur.”
They mounted some stairs to the first floor and moved along a narrow whitewashed corridor past several doors. Mercier knocked on the one at the far end. There was no reply and he opened it.
The room was small and bare, with whitewashed walls, two narrow truckle beds standing side by side. There was a crucifix on one wall, a cheap color reproduction of St. Francis on the other. It was clean-but only just.
Mercier put down the case. “Monsieur Jones will probably be back shortly. He is, by the way, Jamaican. A meal will be served at twelve-thirty. If there is anything else you wish to know, you must see Monsieur Rossiter.”
“And who does Monsieur Rossiter have to see?”
Mercier frowned, looking genuinely bewildered. “I don’t understand, monsieur.”
“Let it go,” Chavasse told him.
Mercier shrugged and went out. Chavasse put his suitcase on one of the beds, moved to the window and looked out. So this was the Running Man? Not a very prepossessing sight.
Behind him, someone said, “Welcome to Liberty Hall, man.”
A gull cried high in the sky and skimmed the sand dunes. Down by the water’s edge, he threw stones into the sea. He turned and moved back toward Chavasse, tall, handsome, the strong angular face and startling blue eyes evidence of that mixture of blood so common in the West Indies. Jack Jones? Well, that was as reasonable a name as any. He had the shoulders of a prizefighter and looked good for ten rounds any day of the week, or Chavasse was no judge.
He flung himself down on the sand, produced a packet of Gauloise and lit one. “So you’re from Australia?”
“That’s it-Sydney.”
“They tell me that’s quite a town.”
“The best. You should try it some time.”
The Jamaican stared at him blankly. “You must be joking. They wouldn’t even let me off the boat. They like their immigrants to be the pale variety, or hadn’t you noticed?”
It was a plain statement of fact, without any kind of rancor in it, and Chavasse shrugged. “I don’t make the laws, sport. Too busy breaking them.”
The Jamaican was immediately interested. “Now that explains a lot. I was wondering why a free, white, upstanding Protestant like you was having to use the back door into the old country like the rest of us.”
“Catholic,” Chavasse said. “Free, white, upstanding Catholic-just for the record.”
Jones grinned, produced his packet of Gauloises for the second time and offered him one. “And just how badly does the law back home want you?”
“About ten years’ worth. That’s if I’m lucky and the judge isn’t feeling too liverish on the great day.”
Jones whistled softly. “Man, you must be a real tiger when you get going.”
“A weakness for other people’s money, that’s my trouble.” Chavasse looked across the sand dunes to the small harbor and the sea beyond. “This is all right; about the nicest beach I’ve touched since Bondi.”
“That’s what I thought five days ago-now it’s just a drag. I want to get moving.”
“What are you going to do when you get over the Channel?”
Jones shrugged. “I’ve got friends. They’ll fix me up with something.”
“But for how long?”
“As long as I need. Once I hit London, I can’t go wrong. I’ll just merge into the scenery. After all, one black face is the same as another, or hadn’t you noticed?”
Chavasse refused to be drawn. “What about the rest of the clientele?”
“If you turn your head a couple of points to starboard, you’ll see them now.”
The old man who appeared over a sand dune a few yards away wore a blue overcoat two sizes too large, which gave him a strangely shrunken look, and his brown, wrinkled skin was drawn tightly over the bones of his face. He wasn’t too steady on his feet, either. Chavasse got the distinct impression that if it hadn’t been for the woman who supported him with a hand under his left elbow and an arm around his shoulders, he might well have fallen down.
“Old Hamid is seventy-two,” Jones said. “A Pakistani. He’s hoping to join his son in Bradford.”
“And the woman?”
“Mrs. Campbell? Anglo-Indian-a half-and-half. What they used to call chi-chi in the good old days of Empire. A fine Scots name, but she can no more get away from the color of her skin than I can. Her husband died last year and her only relative is a sister who married an English doctor years ago and went to live in Harrogate, of all places. Mrs. Campbell tried to get an entry permit to join her, but they turned her down.”
“Why?”
“She doesn’t qualify as a dependent under the Immigration Act, she’s an Indian national and she’s got tuberculosis. She was born in India, never been to England in her life and yet she talks about it as if going home. Funny, isn’t it?”
“Not particularly.”
Mrs. Campbell was about fifty, with sad dark eyes and skin that
was darker than usually found amongst Eurasians. She seemed cold and wore a shabby fur coat, a heavy woolen scarf wrapped about her neck and head.
They paused, the old man gasping for breath. “A cold day, Mr. Jones, don’t you agree?”
Jones and Chavasse stood up and Jones nodded. “This is Mr. Chavasse, a new arrival. He’ll be going with us.”
The old man showed no surprise. “Ah, yes, Miss Nadeem spoke of you.”
“You’ve met her?” Chavasse said.
“Just before we left for our walk,” Mrs. Campbell put in.
Hamid held out a soft, boneless hand, which Chavasse touched briefly before it slipped from his grasp as easily as life would slip from the frail old body before very much longer.
Mrs. Campbell seemed curiously embarrassed and tugged at the old man’s sleeve. “Come now, Mr. Hamid, we mustn’t dawdle. Lunch soon. So nice, Mr. Chavasse.” Her English was quaint in its preciseness, and the way in which she spoke was an echo of a bygone age. Chavasse watched them stumble away across the sand dunes, strange, shadowy creatures with no substance to them, adrift in an alien world, and was conscious of an indescribable feeling of bitterness. Men made laws to protect themselves, but someone always suffered-always.
He turned and found Jones watching him enigmatically. “You look sorry for them, too sorry for any Sydney duck with the law on his tail.”
There was a curious stillness between them. Chavasse said, in a harsh, unemotional voice, “I don’t know what in the hell you’re talking about.”
“Neither do I, man.” Jones grinned, and the moment passed. “You want to eat, we’d better move.”
They made their way through the sand dunes and started across the beach above the wooden jetty. Chavasse pointed toward the motor launch moored beside it. “Is that the boat?”
Jones nodded. “It kind of fits in with Jacaud, wouldn’t you say?”
“What do you make of him?”
Jones shrugged. “He’d sell his sister or his grandmother for a bottle of rum at the right time. He’s on two a day at the moment and escalating.”