look at the engine? Don't open the hood. Don't touch anything.'

'Don't worry,' I said, getting down on my back and pushing with my heels. Carrick and the others crowded around, their curiosity overcoming their qualms. It was dark under the truck but not so dark that I couldn't see bricks of plastic explosive tucked in the wheel wells and in various places around the frame and engine. Detonators were wired to each, and seemed to lead to the ignition switch. I could see above the radiator to the hood latch, and there were no wires or explosives there. I pulled myself out.

'The hood is clear,' I said. 'But look at this.' I opened the hood and propped it up. Even more of the plastic explosive was visible. It looked like enough to sink a battleship.

'That's why the killer faked a suicide,' Carrick said. 'So we would all be called to the scene, stand around trying to figure things out, and then blow ourselves to smithereens.'

'The rope was short so that we'd have to start up the truck to lower the body. If Uncle Dan had been just a few minutes late-'

'This would have been one big hole in the ground,' he finished for me.

'We owe you our thanks, to be sure,' Carrick said. 'If you're a policeman, as your nephew says, then you will understand we need to speak with you further about this matter and your presence here. It is not official, I take it.'

'The jurisdiction of the Boston PD does not extend over the Atlantic, to be sure,' Uncle Dan said. 'As for right now, I'd be happy to answer your questions but I have an appointment. Saving all your lives has made me late, and this much explosive makes me nervous, so I'll be leaving.'

'I agree with you about the explosive, Mr. Boyle. But not about your leaving. Constable,' Carrick said, pointing at Uncle Dan, 'search him.'

They found a. 38 Special, brass knuckles, and a switchblade, but no passport or identification. But it was obvious he wasn't here to tour the old country. Cosgrove and Carrick argued over whether this was a police matter or one for MI-5. Carrick responded by informing Uncle Dan that he was under arrest for reckless driving and vagrancy, and put him in the back of one of the police cars with a constable on either side. Uncle Dan nodded and smiled in appreciation of the maneuver as he settled in for the ride between two cops who owed him their lives. I figured these Ulster cops were a better bet than MI-5 at Stormont Castle. Our driver followed us on Uncle Dan's motorcycle, and we all drove north, back to Belfast and RUC headquarters, me at the wheel with Cosgrove and Slaine in back.

'They should give him a medal, not take him in,' I said, probably for the tenth time.

'You had no idea he was here?' Slaine asked.

'None. I'd seen a guy on a motorcycle shadowing me, and a few people I talked to mentioned another American asking the same sort of questions I was. That must have been Uncle Dan. Remember, I asked you if you had another American working on this?'

'Yes, I do. It rather looks like you had the other American, not I.'

'I had no idea it was him. How could I?' I thought about the Boston Braves matchbook in my pocket. That would have come from Uncle Dan. He was a Braves fan and could easily have grabbed a few packs of smokes and matches for the trip, without even thinking about it. Then he and Eddie Mahoney meet for a pint, the cigarettes and matches are out on the table, and Eddie ends up with Warren Spahn in his pocket. But what had Uncle Dan been up to with Eddie Mahoney, and why was he following me around in secret?

I could think of one reason. Given Uncle Dan's membership in the North American IRA and his connections with Clan na Gael, I could make a pretty good guess, especially since he'd been in touch with Eddie Mahoney. The Dublin IRA wouldn't be the only ones out for blood when they learned about Red Jack stealing from them. Joe McGarrity, the head of Clan na Gael, and good friend of the Boyles, would be upset too. Upset enough to send someone to eliminate the thief, and set an example. Upset enough to send a hit man. A man loyal enough to do what had to be done and keep quiet about it. A man like Daniel Boyle.

WE PULLED INTO the rear of the brick RUC station on Musgrave Road as DI Carrick took Uncle Dan by the arm and led him up the steps. It wasn't a tight grip and he didn't use handcuffs. Professional courtesy, I guess.

'Major Cosgrove?' a constable asked as we stepped out of the vehicle. 'Message for you, sir. Follow me.' We did, turning right as we entered the building. I watched Uncle Dan and Carrick disappear down the opposite corridor. We were taken to a radio room. An operator handed Cosgrove a dispatch, which he read carefully then held over an ashtray and lit with his lighter. He held it until flames licked his fingers, and then dropped it.

'Operation Sea Eagle II,' he said in a whisper. 'A Focke-Wulf Condor will take off from Saint-Servais in Brittany this evening. Two men will be dropped by parachute tonight, somewhere near the border.'

'How do you know-?'

'Never mind that, Boyle. What matters is we do know.'

'Are you going to intercept it?'

'What would you suggest, Subaltern O'Brien?' Cosgrove said, ushering us out into the deserted hallway.

'I'd prefer those two men alive. Let them come.'

'Of course. Only sensible thing to do at this point. Now let's find out what your relative has been up to and then work out this little puzzle.'

A little puzzle. That's all this was to the old men of the British Empire, the riddle of the Irish. I didn't have much sympathy for the Luftwaffe, based on recent experiences, but I did feel sorry for those guys, gearing up for their flight, not knowing that their lives were being weighed in the balance. Was their part of the puzzle to live or die? I hoped no one was thinking about me that way, and then I remembered Slaine and her secret meetings. Was I part of her puzzle? And if so, was I her solution?

We entered what looked like home. A big room, desks pushed together, guys pecking at typewriters, talking on telephones with receivers scrunched between cheek and shoulder as they took notes, the low buzz of talk and back talk and all the familiar noises of a big city stationhouse. Rising above the Ulster Irish accents was one pure American voice.

'… so then I says to him, 'Either way is fine with me!''

Laughter broke out at the punch line from a group of constables crowded around Uncle Dan, who took a sip of tea from a mug one of them handed him. He was grinning ear to ear as he winked at me, charming everyone around him as usual. I watched DI Carrick in his office, through the open door, as he spoke on the telephone, one eye on Uncle Dan.

'Billy, come here and tell our brother officers about your first arrest, that Frenchman who couldn't keep his pants on, wasn't it?' He set down the mug and hitched his trousers up, the way he always did when he carried a pistol, badge, and cuffs. Cop force of habit. He rocked on his heels, his head tilted back as he brushed his thick brown hair off his forehead. He looked good, still strong, broad in the shoulders with blue eyes that drank in everything around him.

The constables looked eagerly at me but I wasn't the storyteller Uncle Dan was. I saw Carrick hang up.

'I think we're keeping DI Carrick waiting,' I said.

The group broke up, a few of the men wishing Uncle Dan luck before moving back to their desks and duties. Carrick motioned us in. His office was long and narrow, a conference table to the right of his desk, along a window that overlooked the room. He sat at the head under a portrait of King George VI, gazing serenely over us in his naval uniform, one hand languidly resting on a chair, gold braid up the elbow. Uncle Dan looked at it, then turned away to face Major Cosgrove and Slaine across the table. He shook his head slowly and muttered something under his breath. I didn't dare ask him what he'd said.

'I have many questions for you,' Carrick said as he opened a small notepad. 'But please begin with how you came to know about the bomb in the truck.'

'I'll not speak further in front of this lot,' Uncle Dan said, gesturing dismissively with his thumb toward Slaine and Cosgrove.

'You certainly will, and answer every question put to you,' Cosgrove said, his cheeks puffed out in indignation. 'I've half a mind to take you in for espionage as it is.'

'The old man has only half a mind, as he says,' Uncle Dan said, turning to face Slaine. 'What's your excuse?'

'Hold on,' I said, watching Cosgrove's face redden. 'I think we're all after the same thing here, so let's not fight each other. OK?' I laid my hand on Uncle Dan's arm and held my breath. Dad always said I got my wiseacre

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