Read The Angel Tapes Online

Authors: David M. Kiely

The Angel Tapes (8 page)

“I wish you wouldn't say things like that, sir. It's not right, so it's not.”

“Ah, don't mind me, Sweetman. I'm always the same at a time like this. When I've nothing to go on. Fuck it anyway.”

He started back slowly the way they'd come. Sweetman fell into step beside him.

“Why don't the Americans call off the visit? It's suicide.”

“They can't, Sweetman. The president can't pull out now; he's painted himself into a corner—him and his big mouth. The media would tear him to bits.”

“Better than having a bomb
blow
you to bits.”

Blade wanted to smile but couldn't. “It's all the Brits' fault. They're the ones to blame. Still, Duffy says he'd have given in as well. Maybe he's right. Anything's better than having the deaths of two-hundred-odd people on your conscience.”

Sweetman stopped.

“Now you've put your finger on it, Blade. Why don't we just pay the shagger his money and let him jet off to the Bahamas or wherever it is he wants to go? I know what
I
could do with twenty-five million dollars, but the government wouldn't miss it. Sure it's chicken feed compared with what we got last year from the European funds.”

Blade shook his head.

“I've said it before and I'll say it again, Sweetman: You've a bloody good head on you. But sometimes you're a bit naive, d'you know that?” He put a hand on her shoulder. She looked up in surprise and he withdrew it hurriedly.

“Th-think of it this way,” he said. “Our bomber's like a kidnapper—without the kid. Now you know as well as I do what kidnappers are like. They're mad bastards; they don't give a toss. Once they have the ransom money they kill their hostage anyway—ninety-nine percent of them at any rate. And that's what this fucker Angel'll do. The man's a looper; I know it. You'd
have
to be loopy to dream up something like this.”

“So you reckon he'll set off the bombs anyway?”

“I do. It's the spectacle, Sweetman! Seeing your handiwork on television, having half the country talking about you in the pub. Having everyone scared out of their wits over you. He probably wanked himself silly watching the news.”

“I wish you wouldn't be so crude, sir.”

“Sorry. But you see my point? There's no way we can give in to him like the Brits did in Heathrow. He'd do the job anyway.
And
we'd leave ourselves wide open to some other mad bastard with a bomb and a funny voice.”

“You're right, Blade.”

“I know I'm right. And I wish to Christ I wasn't.”

Eight

Three women had left messages on Blade's machine. One was his mother. The message was garbled, and that didn't surprise him in the least—he'd have been very surprised had Katharine's words been fully coherent. He made a mental note to call her.

The second message had been left by someone at the bank. Politely but firmly, Macken was invited to review the terms of his overdraft. He knew what
that
meant. He muttered a curse and decided to ignore the invitation for the time being.

The third caller was a stranger. Yet her voice, husky as that of a Gauloise smoker, awakened memories in Blade. He remembered a club on Leeson Street. He'd visited it on Thursday night in the company of Sweetman and a half-dozen other officers, the leftovers of Paddy O'Driscoll's farewell party. Much wine had been drunk, dances danced. There'd been a blonde woman in her late twenties who'd been dancing alone, shoeless. She'd brushed off every advance made to her—apart from Macken's.

Christ almighty tonight, how could he have forgotten! She'd been stunningly beautiful. The last time he'd dated a girl like that was the week a man walked for the first time on the moon. Blade had empathized with that walker. And she—Elaine, that was her name, the answering machine reminded him; Elaine de Rossa—she'd responded eagerly to his advances. Unbelievable. Now she was giving him her phone number, with a request that he call her.

The number seemed familiar. Then Macken recollected the seven digits he'd scrubbed off his palm the previous morning. Stupid, stupid. You didn't always get second chances with women like Elaine.

Blade picked up the receiver. He hesitated. He didn't have time for this. He really didn't; not now. But more memories of Elaine de Rossa were starting to come, and Blade was a red-blooded man.

He rang the number.

*   *   *

“I'm not here,” Ambassador Seaborg said. “I'm not in this room; I'm not hearing this conversation. Is that understood?”

He had his back turned to them, as though to add emphasis to his words. He didn't see the look that Lawrence Redfern tossed to the others.

Seventeen of them were gathered in the ambassador's office: burly men dressed eerily alike in dark, double-breasted suits. The fashion was outmoded but purposeful: The loose jackets concealed the bulges made by heavy-caliber handguns, when such weapons needed to be borne. For the moment, these and other tools of Redfern's trade were stored in the armory in the bowels of the embassy, behind a door marked
ARCHIVES
. The double electronic keycard that would open that door was in the custody of Seaborg's driver, Thomas Jones, who sat in a corner of the room, idly filing his nails. Seaborg wasn't privy to Jones's real name; that information was guarded by the men and women of a government facility in Langley, Virginia.

Two others present were on the embassy payroll: one an interpreter, the other a minor office functionary. Seaborg mused that they actually performed their “official” duties damn well. He didn't want to know about their other business.

The strangers had arrived at the embassy in pairs, at three-and four-hourly intervals. Their number had been complete twenty minutes ago, and Redfern had called the meeting at once.

“The room's clean, sir,” he told the ambassador. “You can speak freely.”

Seaborg turned.

“No, no,
you
do it. I'm too old for this kind of thing. They're your men, Major. You do it.”

“Very well.”

Redfern half sat, half leaned against the mahogany desk. Thomas Jones slipped his nail file back into his top pocket.

“You've all been briefed on Macken,” Redfern reminded the assembly, “so you already know about his service record. It's impressive; I'd be the last person to say it wasn't. A good soldier, a good cop. Or
was
—once.”

Seaborg glanced around sharply.

“The man's a walking ruin,” Redfern continued. “He's past it, over the hill. My God, we had to fumigate this office yesterday when he left! If he doesn't die of lung cancer, then the booze will get him. He smelled like a distillery—at four in the goddamn afternoon.”

Redfern picked up a folder.

“The man can't even go near his wife, for crying out loud. There's an exclusion order in operation; if he comes within a mile of her home they can arrest him.”

“Did he beat up on her or what?”

Redfern opened the file and flipped through it, confirming what he already knew. He shook his head.

“No, Mr. Roe. He didn't go as far as that. ‘Mental cruelty' is what it says here—whatever
that
means.”

“Why don't they replace him? Get somebody else to head up the investigation?”


You
tell
me,
Mr. Roe. His superior insists he's the best they've got. All I can say is: If that's so, then God help this country.”

“And God help the president,” Roe said with feeling. “Can't we put pressure on their foreign-office people?”

“No!”

It was Seaborg. “Out of the question. This isn't Panama; we can't go upsetting these people. The White House would have my head on a platter.”

“The colonel's right,” Redfern said. “The last thing we want is to make enemies of the police. They're touchy enough already; they don't like foreigners on their patch. It's imperative we keep them on our side. We might need them before this thing is over.”

“Sounds to me like you want us to do the job alone, Mr. Redfern.”

“That's what I
do
mean, Mr. Coburn.”

Good grief, Seaborg thought, weren't they polite mother-fuckers; weren't they just.
Mr.
Roe,
Mr.
Coburn,
Mr.
Jones.… Like a board meeting of merchant bankers—as opposed to merchants of death, a more fitting description for some of them—Coburn in particular. Seaborg knew the man's reputation. Why Larry Redfern had asked for that dangerous son of a bitch was something the ambassador couldn't fathom. Seaborg pulled a tiny silver case from his pocket and swallowed one of the pills it contained. The whole business wasn't doing much for his heart.

“Consider yourselves,” Redfern went on, “the only game in town.” He spread his hands. “Maybe the Irish cops
will
get this scumball before we do. Could be they've got resources we don't know about. But frankly, gentlemen, I doubt it.”

“Having said that,” he went on, “it's also obvious that Macken and his people can lay their hands on a lot more local information than we can. The police commissioner has given us authorization to operate from Harcourt Square, and that's just what we're going to do. We're to have complete access to their files. Use them. If you find something interesting, then
I
want to know what that something is before Macken does. Is that clear?”

He stood up.

“We'll keep the units intact, we'll operate in twos. Mr. Jones and I will work alone, for the most part. He has his job to do, I have mine. I'll be covering Macken, so I'll be closest to the top.”

“What about the tape, Mr. Redfern?”

“It's in good hands, Mr. Sachs. We've two secure Unix mainframes in Langley working on it, plus the Crays in Canaveral and the Pentagon. I'm hopeful.”

“One more thing, Mr. Redfern,” Coburn said. “Are we carrying?”

Redfern laughed without humor.

“No, Mr. Coburn, we are not; not for the time being. The White House doesn't like it, and the Micks are paranoid about guns. But I promise you this: As soon as we've got something to shoot
at,
you'll be the first to know.”

Nine

Jim Roche kissed Joan Macken on the cheek, dumped his briefcase in the hall and went straight to the drinks cabinet in the front room. It had been a long—but fruitful—Saturday. He poured himself three fingers of brandy, drank half quickly, and eased himself into the club chair. Joan squirted soda water into her own glass and lit a cigarette.

“You know Charlie Nolan?” Roche asked.

She nodded, although it was a rhetorical question. Roche swirled the gold liquid around in his glass, enjoying a childlike fascination with the way a shaft of evening sun caused the brandy to glow as if with an inner light.

“Well, there's something going on there. I can't quite put my finger on it, but it's bloody queer.”

“What do you mean, ‘queer'?”

“Well, I suppose you heard about the burglary at Don Delahunt's house?”

Joan tossed her mane of thick, heavy hair. It was prematurely gray but she'd never considered having anything done about that. Her friends assured her that it suited her, and she agreed with them.

“You mean her ladyship's jewels? Who hasn't heard about it? Sure didn't the papers pester us with nothing else for days on end.”

She drained her glass and helped herself to another soda water. “Can I top you up?”

Roche passed her his brandy glass. “Apparently Duffy's put Nolan onto it and he isn't too pleased about that. I had him on the line today and he did nothing but moan for the best part of twenty minutes. Jesus, sometimes I wonder about that man.”

“Oh, why's that?”

Roche studied his glass.

“Ah, I don't know. He's fifty-five if he's a day—due for retirement in a couple of years—but you'd swear sometimes you were dealing with a bleeding six-year-old.”

“In what way?”

“Well, for a start, there's this thing with him and Macken.”

“Sure that's been going on for years, Jim. Charlie Nolan'll go to his grave still giving out about Duffy.”

“Yeah, well, it was bloody stupid of Duffy to put them both in charge of the one unit; they squabble like a pair of Kilkenny cats most of the time. If he'd done the sensible thing now and given Merrigan's job to Nolan—”

“Or Blade.”

“Hmm, well I won't comment on
that.
Gerry Merrigan always thought that Nolan was the best man for the job. He told me so loads of times. He never trusted Macken; not after the accident.”

Joan put her glass on the table and sat down opposite Roche.

“What really
did
happen, Jim? Do you know? Blade would never talk about it.”

Roche laughed bitterly.

“I'm not surprised. Sure wasn't he the one partly responsible in the first place? If Macken'd had his shagging wits about him that day, instead of going out on the job half-sloshed, then it never would've happened.”

“Are you sure? I mean about the half-sloshed? I know he was bad—Jesus, no one knows better than me—but in all the years I've known him, he never touched a drop when he was on duty. Before: sometimes. After: well,
all
the fecking time!”

“I'm just telling you what
I
was told. Merrigan and Macken were called out on that robbery … Where's this it was?”

“Donnybrook?”

“Yeah, Donnybrook … the Ulster Bank I think it was; the one on the corner of … Ah well, it doesn't matter. It wasn't strictly speaking, their case—they just happened to be in the vicinity when they got the call. So Merrigan told Macken to wait in the car. He reckoned he'd be only five minutes, because the Guards were there before him.” Roche nipped at his drink. “But what Gerry Merrigan didn't know was that the gang were still in there.”

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