couldn't wait to check if anyone was there. There was an illuminated phone box a hundred yards ahead, just outside a wine bar.

I strode rapidly towards the source of light, reflected off the pools of water in the road and the glistening leaves of the privet hedges which loomed up on either side of the street. The back of my neck tingled, I expected at any moment to feel an arm round my throat or an iron bar on the back of my head.

I jumped as a couple tumbled out of the wine bar right in front of me. I paused to let them pass, laughing and swaying, on their way back to Gloucester Road.

I made it to the phone box. I pushed the door and squeezed myself inside. From what I could see, there was no one in the mews. The problem was that because the phone box was lit from the inside, it was very difficult to see anything outside.

I lifted the receiver to my face, ready to dial 999 at any sign of trouble.

There was none.

This was ridiculous. After a couple of minutes I replaced the receiver and left the phone box. I walked briskly down a narrow pathway, and then along a road next to a church. There was a path through the churchyard which formed a shortcut to my flat. I took it.

I had only walked a few yards when I thought I heard a soft thud behind me and to my left. Even though I was in the middle of a city, the churchyard was eerily quiet. The usual urban sounds were reduced to a muffled far-off rumble by the wall and the church. I waited, eyes and ears straining to pick out any sound or movement. Then I thought I saw a shadow flit behind a gravestone.

I ran.

I sprinted through the churchyard, flying past gravestones and moonshadows, concentrating on the churchyard gate. I reached it unscathed, and although it must have been almost five feet high, I hurdled it without slowing down. I ran on through another mews and on to the main road and didn't stop running until I reached my flat.

I let myself in, poured myself a large whisky, and threw myself on to the sofa, still gasping for breath.

As my pulse and my breathing began to settle down, so did my brain. I was jumpy. Way too jumpy. I had never actually seen Joe clearly. I had thought I had seen and heard someone following me, but could I be sure? Was I going to spend every day from now on looking over my shoulder, running from shadows? I was a little drunk and more than a little scared.

I pulled myself together. Yes, I was up against some unpleasant people. They were unpredictable and probably dangerous. Joe, in particular, didn't seem to like me very much. But there was nothing I could do about that. I wasn't going to let him ruin my life. If I was careful and kept my wits about me, I would be all right. Or so I told myself as I took another gulp of whisky.

CHAPTER 11

It was a relief to get out of the country. I had spent two days looking over my shoulder everywhere I went. Not knowing whether my apprehension was justified hadn't helped at all. As soon as I got on the plane, I felt a huge weight lift from my shoulders. Somehow I doubted that Joe would track me down in New York.

I was glad that Cathy and Cash were not on the plane. They were following more or less the same itinerary I was. They were spending a couple of days at their head office in New York first, then moving on to Phoenix for the conference, and finally joining their clients for a visit to the Tahiti. Cash, especially, I was not looking forward to meeting. It was hard enough to think of him as responsible for the Tremont Capital fraud. What bothered me even more was the question of whether he was involved in Debbie's death. I was still no nearer finding out who had killed her. I wasn't even sure why she had been killed.

It was going to be difficult to talk to Cash on this trip, but I was going to have to do it. I had lots of questions to ask him, and I would have to be subtle. I also needed to find out what I could about Dick Waigel, and look for some trace of Tremont Capital at Bloomfield Weiss's New York office. I was due to spend the whole of my first day there, and Cash had fixed up a lot of people for me to meet, so I was hopeful that I would find something out. I was still not exactly sure how.

Despite this, the task excited me. It was a challenge with a lot at stake; twenty million dollars and De Jong & Co.'s reputation. Hamilton was going to meet me for dinner in New York on his way back from the Netherlands Antilles. I would make sure I had something to tell him.

My arrival in New York was just as intimidating as always. Although it was half past seven local time when I left the airport, it was after midnight according to my own biological clock. Not the right time to deal with the stress of New York's welcome.

As I emerged from the terminal, I beat off a chauffeur who offered to give me a lift in his boss's limousine for a hundred dollars. I grabbed a yellow taxi. The driver, whose name according to the licence pinned to his dashboard was Diran Gregorian, did not seem to speak English. He didn't even acknowledge the words 'Westbury Hotel'. But he started his taxi and drove off towards the city at full speed.

Fortunately his headlong flight was hindered by the Long Island traffic jams. We crossed the Triboro Bridge with New York's skyline welcoming us on the left. I tried to pick out as many of the buildings as I could. Most prominent was the Empire State Building, incomplete without the figure of King Kong clambering up it. In front was the smaller and more elegant Chrysler Building, whose peak rose like a minaret, calling the faithful money-makers to their desks each morning. I picked out the Citicorp Building, the top right-hand corner of its roof cleanly sliced off, and in the distance the green rectangular slab of the UN jutting out into the East River. Other lesser structures clustered round these in the middle of Manhattan Island. Then, to the left stretched a plain of the low, brown tenements of Soho, the East Village, and the Bowery, until the huge twin peaks of the World Trade Center dwarfed the Wall Street office blocks surrounding them downtown. My pulse quickened despite my fatigue. Amongst all those buildings were lights, noise, traffic and people. Millions of people working and playing. They beckoned even the tiredest traveller to join them.

We finally made it to the hotel. I threw down my bag without bothering to unpack it, and flopped into bed. I fell asleep immediately.

I wasn't due at Bloomfield Weiss until ten o'clock, so I could linger over the excellent Westbury breakfast. One of the great pleasures of being away from the office was the opportunity to have a long, leisurely breakfast, instead of cramming down a stale bun at my desk at half past seven in the morning. The Westbury is Manhattan's 'English' hotel. I had been booked in there because it was the hotel Hamilton usually stayed in when he was in New York. It had elegance without opulence. A tapestry in the foyer, Regency furniture and nineteenth-century landscapes could almost persuade you that you were in an English country hotel and not in an eight-storey block of stone in the middle of Manhattan.

Finally sated, I caught a taxi, Haitian driver this time, and bucketed down to Wall Street, a local French- language radio station blaring in my ears.

I was a few minutes early, so I asked the taxi-driver to drop me off at the top of Wall Street so I could walk the last few blocks to Bloomfield Weiss's offices. Walking down Wall Street was like descending into a canyon, with huge walls shooting up on both sides. Although it was a sunny day, the giant buildings threw the street into shadow, and at this time of morning it still felt cool. Halfway down the street I turned left and then right, down narrower streets, the buildings coming ever closer together, the shadows ever deeper. Finally I came to a fifty- storey black tower, which looked more sinister than those surrounding it. The words 'Bloomfield Weiss' were printed in small gold lettering above the entrance.

I had been told to go up to the forty-fifth floor and ask for Lloyd Harbin, the head of high yield bond sales. I waited in the reception area for a couple of minutes before he came round to get me. He was of average height, but had a very compact frame. His shoulders were broad and his neck bulged with muscle. He strode across the room, hand outstretched and voice booming, 'Hi Paul, how are you? Lloyd Harbin.'

I was prepared for the iron handshake. I had learned at school that if you pushed your hand hard into the joint between thumb and forefinger of your adversary, it was impossible for him to grip your hand tightly. I had developed this technique so that it was not obvious, but was still very effective against the American marine types. It momentarily put Lloyd Harbin off his stride.

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