'Cease fire!'
The shout came from Lynn.
The silence was deafening.
I stared at the twisted metal. The BMW was lying on its left side. The driver was virtually decapitated. The passenger was crushed against the rock.
I moved forward a few paces to feel about for his AK amongst the mangled flesh and steel. What I saw stopped me in my tracks.
104
In Russian prisons, your life story is tattooed on your body, and this boy's was pretty much an open book.
The initiation tattoo of a new gang member is usually on the chest. I opened the dead man's shirt. The first thing I saw was a rose. He was Russian mafia. The ace of clubs nearby represented a warrior's sword. I didn't need to rip off his Levis to know there'd be a small star on each kneecap to show he would never kneel before anyone.
The tattoos were blue and blurred. The ink must have been improvised from a mixture of soot and piss, and applied without proper instruments. It was often injected into the skin with a sharpened guitar string attached to an electric shaver.
I scanned the rest of the wreckage. Both of our assailants were dead.
I made my way back up the side of the
Lynn was standing motionless over Mansour's body, .38 in hand.
'What the fuck did you do that for? I thought he was your friend. Old enemies, mutual respect . . .'
Lynn looked up at me. His voice was steel. 'He knew.'
'He knew what?'
'The identity of the source. The man who betrayed PIRA all those years ago . . .'
'Who was it?'
'Nick . . .'
I thought he was about to fuck me off with need-to-know. Instead, he shook his head incredulously. 'You listened to Mansour's little speech. He was spot on. There's only one man who made the transition from acknowledged member of the IRA Army Council to democratically elected politician . . .'
'Isham? Richard Isham turned informer?'
'Richard Isham is a hero. He should have got a Nobel prize. Without him, there would be no Good Friday Agreement, no peace in Northern Ireland . . .'
'And all along, you knew this was why the Firm was after you – after us. But you said fuck all!'
'There is no higher state secret I know of . . .'
I kicked Mansour. 'Is that why you killed him?'
'One of the reasons, yes. Hadn't we better get going?'
He was right. This could wait.
We climbed back into the Audi and I gunned it another half K towards Tripoli until the
Lynn's time bomb had been ticking away quietly for years – retirement must do that to some people. You work for decades, you make it your life, and then –
When Caroline killed herself, he became an outcast. He must have been riddled with guilt. Even his kids had binned him. This dirty little secret was all he had left.
PART NINE
105
The dying rays of the sun picked out the target as we approached. I parked the Audi in dead ground, some distance away from it.