this.”
Tomac’s next move was partly a result of his devious nature. He was smiling to himself as he went downstairs and found Greta and Levin in the bar by the window. He eased himself down beside them.
“This man you seek, Fitzgerald, is at a house in Zarza six miles up the coast from here in the marsh. He’s waiting to be picked up in a couple of hours to be taken to Algiers. Something to do with smuggling. Nothing to do with me, but the information is sound.”
“How do we get there?” Greta asked.
“I’ll have Abdul take you in the Land Rover.” He puffed out his cheeks. “Why, I don’t know as it can’t possibly profit me. You’ll be armed?”
“Naturally,” Levin told him.
“A wise precaution in these parts.” He heaved himself up. “I can only wish you luck.” He went and spoke to Abdul and shuffled away.
“What do you think?” Greta asked Levin.
“I don’t see a better offer on the table.” Levin shrugged. “Why would he double-cross us? What would be the purpose? Come on, let’s go and get ready.”
Tomac phoned the Eagle Deep Dive Center and asked for Russo.
“You know the old house at Zarza?” Tomac said.
“Yes.”
“This Fitzgerald man. I have it on good authority that he’ll be there in about two hours waiting for a lift to Algiers.”
“A long drive,” Russo said.
“Well, maybe he wants to go as far away as possible. If the information is useful, use it. Pay me back another time.”
He switched off the phone and started to laugh. It was really very funny. It would have been nice to have seen it.
“So that’s it,” Russo said. “I don’t know what he’s playing at, but it’s up to you.”
It was Billy who spoke. “We’ll go for it. What else is there to do here? Come on, Dillon, let’s get tooled up and go and take the sod on.”
“If he’s there, Billy.”
“I’ll take you myself in the Ford,” Russo said. “Even on these roads and a run into the marsh, it’s forty-five minutes at the most. What have you got to lose?” He turned to Romano and Cameci. “You two mind the store.”
The coast road was at least surfaced, occasional small farms, lots of date palms, almond trees, thin cows, ribs showing, sheep, even the odd camel.
“It’s like something out of the Bible,” Greta said.
Levin smiled. “Darling, they’d probably cut my throat. You, of course, they’d sell in the slave market.”
“Thanks very much.”
Abdul, enigmatic as he drove, turned the Land Rover into the beginnings of the harsh and pungent smell of the marsh. As they started along the dike roads, wild fowl and seabirds stirred under protest.
The sky had darkened, and Greta said, “What’s wrong?”
“Summer storm,” Abdul told her. “A cold front from the sea. Soon we get rain.”
The sun had vanished, the reeds, ten feet high at least, seemed to stretch to eternity. It was as wild and desolate as anything Greta had ever known, mile upon mile of the great reeds stretching into the distance, an eerie whispering as the wind moved amongst them and a strange mist fell. And then it started to rain.
“There are ponchos in the back locker,” Abdul said.
Levin pulled them out. They were obviously ex-military with hoods. He passed one to Greta and pulled the other one on himself. As they progressed, there were birds everywhere, wild duck, geese. The one good thing was the flattening of the clouds of mosquitoes in the deluge.
And then, at the end of one of the dike roads, they turned onto a kind of island. An overgrown garden, all sorts of foliage, date palms, a gloomy, weather-beaten clapboard house with a terrace, a large portico entrance, French windows.
“I’d say this was once a plantation,” Levin said to Greta.
Abdul nodded. “There was a French family here for many years, a century or more. They drained part of the marsh, made it prosperous, then the war came and General de Gaulle took the hard line. The French people left, local farmers took over, and they were no good. Nature returned.” He shrugged. “The door is always open. I leave you here. I’ll park under the trees down the track and wait. We’re too early, I think.”
They got out, hoods up in the pouring rain, and went forward, both of them with a Walther ready. Greta paused at the bottom of the steps leading to the wide terrace. The front door opened and Sean Dillon stepped out, Billy on one side, Russo on the other.
“Hold it right there,” Dillon said, and then she pulled her hood back. “Why, Dillon, it’s you, Baghdad all over again.”
The look on his face was astonishing, absolute total shock, and he dropped his hand that held the Browning with a twenty-round magazine up the butt.
“My God, Greta.”
Taking advantage, Levin pushed her away, flung himself to one side and fired, but at his angle, it was Russo he caught, chipping his left shoulder. He kept on rolling as he hit the ground, went into the reeds and disappeared, and Billy fired after him to no avail. Russo got up, clutching his shoulder.
“It’s okay. Could be worse.”
Dillon held out his hand. “Mine’s bigger than yours,” he told Greta.
She smiled. “Of course,” and gave him her Walther.
In the reeds, Levin watched them move in out of the rain. A lucky shot might have got one of them, but with a handgun at that range not all three, and there was always the chance of hitting Greta. There was only one place to go, really. He eased his way back through the reeds and found Abdul standing by the Land Rover in the rain, holding an umbrella and peering through the trees. Levin slipped up behind him and tapped the back of his skull lightly with his Walther.
“No sign of Fitzgerald at all. I bet you enjoyed watching.”
“It’s not my fault, Effendi. I was following Dr. Tomac’s orders.”
“Who was the man I shot? Do I know the other two?”
“Aldo Russo. He owns Eagle Air and the dive center. He’s a dangerous man. Mafia.”
“What’s his connection with Tomac?”
“Cigarette smuggling to Europe. It’s big business.”
“Now we come to Fitzgerald. He’s here, so where is he?” Abdul hesitated, and Levin rammed the muzzle of the Walther against his ear. “I’ll blow it off.”
Abdul came to heel quickly. “Next to the Tomac Dive Center, an old dhow is moored, the
“Excellent. I like cooperation, so you can drive me back to town and we’ll see what Tomac has to say about this almighty cock-up.”
Dillon, Billy and Russo had arrived only twenty minutes before Abdul and Levin and Greta. There were old stables at the rear and Russo had suggested hiding the Ford in there and waiting in the house. That the absence of Fitzgerald and the arrival of Levin and Greta had been more than a surprise went without saying. Billy was stunned by Greta.
“It’s like Lazarus out of his coffin and walking again, only he was a fella.”
“My goodness, Billy, you actually read the Bible,” Greta said.
“Never mind the repartee. Levin hasn’t hung around long, has he?” Dillon told her.