The Bannerman Effect (The Bannerman Series) (47 page)

Also at Grassi's side stood Kurt Weiss, his driver. His left cheek bandaged but the wound not serious. Caused not by a bullet but by chips from a concrete planter. Tucker had fired wildly and with one hand; Bannerman's man McHugh spoiled his aim. Had Tucker been more competent and had it not been for Lesko, more might have died. Himself among them.
Many other cars leaving. Or preparing to leave. His own nephews were there, having solicited rides as far as Malaga, having been denied the second helicopter. There was a greater need for it.
It was lifting off now. It rose, over a maelstrom of sand, and banked immediately to the northwest. Fuel permitting, thought Urs Brugg, it should reach Lisbon within ninety minutes.
The departing cars again caught his attention. A few had turned east. But most were crossing the Cadiz road and climbing a hill that, as far as he could tell, led nowhere. Now he saw where they were going. Several had already stopped at a house halfway to the base of the mountain. He could see two men standing on the terrace, gesticulating to new arrivals. Their body language seemed to convey great enthusiasm. Urs Brugg could not think what the cause might be. The house was unremarkable. Except, perhaps, that its occupants used their terrace railing as a laundry line. Unusual for Marbella. Probably Italians.

The pilot looked over his shoulder, questioningly, concern on his face. Urs Brugg managed a smile. He raised his thumb, then turned it, gesturing in the direction of Malaga where his Gulfstream jet was refueled and waiting. His wound could wait. The bullet, steel jacketed, meant for Grassi, had entered under his armpit and exited high on his chest. It passed through four inches of his flesh, no more, deflected by a rib. It would be treated in Zurich. Meanwhile, he had Tovah. Then, too, there was Lesko, seated behind him with Elena. There was every reason to get Lesko out of Spain quickly. The helicopter banked and climbed.

From his place behind Urs Brugg, Lesko watched the scene below, without interest, his expression sad and distant.
Elena sat with him. She tried to soothe him.
“You did well, Lesko,” she told him. “Susan will understand.”
Lesko did not answer. In his mind he heard his daughter's scream. And he saw the look in her eyes. Disbelief. Then fury. Perhaps even hatred. He could not blame her.

David?”
Katz would know. He knew Susan. Practically her uncle. He almost wished that Katz could go with her. Talk to her. Maybe he had. There was no answer.
The way they had looked at him, the rest of them, Bannerman's friends, he was lucky to be alive. Several of them, maybe six or eight, ran over to Tucker, ready to pump insurance shots into him. But his head was already all over the courtyard. Then they swung their guns on him. Elena yelled at them, stepped in front of him, or tried to. He held her aside, his own gun lowered.
But they didn't shoot.
He almost wished they had.
In the second Bell Ranger, Billy McHugh's head snapped up.
The hot sun strobing across his face, the whine of the rotors, had revived him. He glanced around him. The Mediterranean, he saw, was on his left. This helicopter was heading west.
”Wha—where we going?” he gasped, trying to rise.
Leo Belkin reached to restrain him, ease him backward.
“To Lisbon,” he told him. “To the Soviet Embassy. We have a surgeon there. A good one.”
The KGB colonel reached to adjust the field dressing that packed Billy's neck and shoulder. Beneath it, the wound had been crudely stitched. The collarbone pressed into place. No anesthetic. But the Israeli had worked quickly. And this man had not complained.
“Where's Paul?” Billy asked, pressing forward against Belkin's touch.
“Behind you. Resting. You must both sit quietly.”
“Paul?” Billy ignored him. He raised his good hand to the space between the headrests.
“Right here, Billy.” Bannerman took the hand in his. His left. Bannerman's right hand and arm were also useless.
“How bad? You, I mean.”
“Not bad at all,” he lied. “Just a crease. You relax. We'll be there before you know it.”
“At the Russian Embassy? What for?”
“No police, no questions, a good doctor. Besides, there's something Colonel Belkin wants to show me there.”
Billy met the Russian's eyes. Trying, through his pain, to read them. He saw nothing that gave him alarm. Nor did the Russian look away. But he saw Billy's suspicion. He shook his head. “You are quite safe,” he said. “It is not at all what you must be thinking.” Belkin gestured toward the empty seat next to Billy. Billy's automatic was there. “You may keep it if you wish.”
Billy wished. And he wondered. What could be better than delivering Mama's Boy and Billy McHugh, wounded, mostly helpless, inside the walls of a Russian Embassy compound? But Paul showed no concern. Billy's mind turned to the last thing he remembered. The shooting, the chaos, at the Puente Romano.
“Paul?” he asked over his shoulder. “We lose any?”
“No.”
“You're sure? Any sign of—”
“Three towels,” Bannerman answered tersely. “Stay quiet, Billy. Try to sleep.”
“Carla and—”
“They're fine, Billy. Show's over.”
Billy nodded, satisfied. “Grassi.” He closed one eye, remembering, a smile tugging at his mouth. “He got shot in the ass, didn't he.”
“He'll live.”
“Too bad.”
“Billy—not now.”
“It's his fault. Him and his games. If that dumb shit football player didn't pop him first, I would've before we left.”
“Billy—”
“Or you would've.”
A sharp intake of breath. “Billy—Susan's back here with me.”

Lesko?”
He heard Katz's voice over the slap of the rotors. He was no longer in the mood.

David

Leave me alone. ”

Just listen for once, okay?


No. Go away.


Lesko, I saw. You did good.

Bullshit.


Bannerman’s still alive. So’s his gorilla. Nobody got hurt
that bad except the redneck who was dead one way or another
anyway. You did good.


You saw how Susan looked at me?


What about it?


What about it? She sees her father blow a man's face off
and she sees me shoot her boyfriend. What do you think, she grew up seeing me do this around the house?


I would’ve done it. Shot Bannerman, I mean.”

You would have yelled first. I didn't. Maybe I

I don't
know

maybe I wanted him dead. Out of Susan's life.


Will you stop?


Stop what? Maybe it's true?


Lesko

—Katz shifted in the seat next to him—
“Anything involving your daughter, you wouldn't know the truth if
it bit you on your pecker. I have to draw you a picture?


Just leave me alone.


You're at this hotel right? No regular guests. Most of the
staff sent home except the ones in Grassi's pocket. Otherwise,
nothing but pros. Old pros. The kind who stayed alive because
they don't wait to yell warnings. ”
Katz
had a hand on his arm. Lesko tried to pull away.

Listen to me.’
9
The hand gripped him.
“Bannerman
knows this. He knows none of his friends

only his enemies

would run up behind him without letting him know they're
coming. So he hears a noise, his instinct says turn and shoot.
The guy's on autopilot. By the time he sees it's Susan, maybe
it's too late. ”
Lesko squeezed his eyes shut. It had been so close.

You did good. You also impressed a lot of people. Two
great shots. ”

David, ”
Lesko said patiently,
”I aimed at Bannerman's head. Any lower and I hit Susan myself. It was luck I got his
arm.


So? One great, one lucky.


I aimed for Tucker's head, too. I got his jaw. And a piece
of Billy.


You want some advice? Shut up about luck. Let people
think what they want.

He did not answer.

Lesko?

He felt the hand on his arm. Squeezing it.
Wait a second.
Since when does Katz touch him?
“Lesko?”
He blinked. Elena's voice. Her hand.
“Yeah?” He straightened. “Sorry—what?”
“Do you understand what I've said?” she asked, gently.
“Ah—what part?”
“That Uncle Urs is right. You did well. You were very brave. And that, concerning Mr. Bannerman, you had no choice.”
“That was you? Just now?” He waved a hand as if to erase the question. “Never mind,” he said, embarrassed.
She eyed him curiously, but withheld comment. “What is important is that you believe it.”
“I'm more interested in what Susan believes,” he said, gathering himself. “Maybe you could call her. Talk to her.”
”I think Mr. Bannerman will do that.”
“Square me with Susan? Fat chance.”
She squeezed his hand, reassuringly. “May I rest against your shoulder?” she asked.
“You want a pillow? I could get you a pillow.”

A deep sigh. She lifted his arm and, to the extent she was able, raised it over her head. She nestled against him. “No, Lesko,” she said. ”I do not want a pillow.”

He allowed his arm to embrace her, but he kept its weight from settling. He was barely touching her.
“Am I made of spun glass, Lesko?”
“Sorry.” He eased it down, finding the warmth of her arm. She closed her eyes.

David?”
No answer.

Were you here?”
Still nothing. Just as well. All in his head. Has to stop anyway. While Elena still thinks he's sane.

A pillow?”
Oh, Christ.

Lady wants your body, so you'd give her a fucking pil
low?”

David—”

You're hopeless, Lesko. You know that?”

I know.”
. . . I know.
Susan had barely spoken to him. Nor he to her.
She had asked about his arm, how badly it was hurting him. He made little of it, saying hardly at all, but she knew better.
The right arm was broken, although not shattered. The bullet had entered at a shallow angle, just below his elbow, and drilled, toward his wrist, through several inches of muscle.
Like Urs Brugg's, it had passed through. Like Billy's, it had been roughly stitched. She had watched as two men held him still and the Israeli straightened the bone. She flushed the wound with vodka, then sewed it shut using what looked like an upholstery needle and dental floss. Susan would not turn away. She refused to let him see her do that. Only when the arm was splinted and wrapped did she leave, to get ice from the bar in a plastic bag. She went with him to the helicopter, boarded with him. He did not resist. Nor did he welcome her. She sat with him, strapped him in, and carefully placed the ice on his arm.

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