X

FLOODGATE by ALISTAIR MACLEAN

‘Why not?

‘Because I’d advise him against it. He knows I wouldn’t do that without

reason. Where can I contact you?’

‘I’ll contact you. At the Trianon.’

‘I won’t make any comments about how touching your trust in me is.

Tomorrow morning.’

‘Tonight. Ten o’clock.’

‘You are in a hurry. No point, I suppose, in asking you the compelling

nature of this deadline you so obviously have to meet. Besides, I told

you, I have a nine-thirty appointment.’

‘Ten o’clock.’ Agnelli rose. ‘You will of course try to see your friend

immediately. I’ll put a car at your disposal.’

‘Please, Mr Agnelli. Don’t be so naive.’

168

Seven

‘That’s an Esfahan rug you’re standing on,’ Colonel de Graaf said. ‘Very

rare, very expensive.’

‘I’ve got to drip on to something,’ van Effen said reasonably. He was

standing before the fire in the Colonel’s luxuriously furnished library,

steam gently rising from his saturated clothing. ‘Not for me a door-to-door

chauffeur-driven limousine. I have to cope with taxis that go home to roost

when the first drop of rain falls and with people who seemed anxious to

know where I was going. It didn’t seem clever to let them know that I was

going to the house ofthe Chief of Police.’

‘Your friend Agnelli doesn’t trust you?’

‘Difficult to say. Oh, sure, it was Agnelli who had me followed – couldn’t

have been anyone else. But I’m not sure that he’s suspicious of me – I

think that, on principle, he just doesn’t trust anyone. Difficult character

to read. You’d probably like him. Seems friendly and likeable enough – you

really have to make an effort to associate him with anything like blackmail

and torture – and even then you find it difficult to convince yourself.

Which means nothing. I assume you had a comfortable evening, sir – that you

didn’t have to cope with the elements or the thought that you might be shot

in the back at any moment.’

De Graaf made a dismissive gesture which could have meant either that such

considerations were irrelevant trifles or that they could not possibly

apply to him in the first place. ‘An interesting meeting, but only to a

limited extent. I’m afraid Bernhard wasn’t in a particularly receptive or

cooperative frame of mind.’ Bernhard was Bernhard Dessens, the Minister of

justice.

‘A dithering old woman, scared to accept responsibility,

i6q

unwilling to commit himself and looking to pass the buck elsewhere?’

‘Exactly. I couldn’t have put – I’ve told you before, Peter, that’s no way

to talk about cabinet ministers. There were two of them. Names Riordan and

Samuelson. One – person calling himself Riordan – could have been in

disguise. The other had made no attempt at any such thing which can only

mean that he’s pretty confident about something or other. Riordan had long

black hair – shoulder-length, in fact, I thought that ludicrous style had

gone out of fashion ten years ago – was deeply tanned, wore a Dutch bargee

cap and sun-glasses.’

‘Anything so obvious has to be a disguise.’Van Effen thought for a moment.

‘He wasn’t by any chance very tall and preternaturally thin?’

De Graaf nodded. ‘I thought that would occur to you at once. The fellow who

commandeered that canal boat from – who was it?’

‘At Schiphol? Dekker.’

‘Dekker. This must be the man Dekker described. And damned if I don’t agree

with your bizarre suggestion that this fellow – Riordan or whatever – is an

albino. Dark glasses. Heavy tan to hide an alabaster complexion. Black hair

to hide white. Other fellow – Samuelson – had white hair, thick and very

wavy, white moustache and white goatee beard. No albino, though – blue

eyes. All that white hair would normally bespeak advanced years but his

face was almost completely unlined. But, then, he was very plump, which may

account for the youthful skin. Looked like a cross between an idealized

concept of a US Senator and some bloated plutocrat, oil billionaire or

something like that.’

‘Maybe he’s got a better make-up rnsin than Riordan.’

‘It’s possible. Both men spoke in English, from which I assumed that

Samuelson couldn’t speak Dutch. Both made a point of stating that they were

Irish-Americans and I have no doubt they were. I don’t have to be Hector or

one of his professorial friends to know that – the north-east or New York

accent was very strong. Riordan did nearly all the talking-

170

‘He asked – no, he demanded – that we contact the British government.

More exactly, he demanded we act as intermediaries between the FFF ‘ and

Whitehall on the basis that Whitehall would be much more likely to

negotiate with another government than with an unknown group such as they

were. When Bernhard asked what on earth they could possibly want to

discuss with Whitehall they said they wanted to have a dialogue about

Northern Ireland, but refused to elaborate further until the Dutch

Goverrument agreed to cooperate.’ De Graaf sighed. ‘Whereupon, alas, our

Minister of justice, seething and fulminating, while at the same time

knowing damn well that they had him over a barrel, climbed on to his high

horse and said it was inconceivable, unthinkable, that a sovereign nation

should negotiate on behalf of a band of terrorists. He carried on for

about five minutes in this vein, but I’ll spare you all the parliamentary

rhetoric. He ended up by saying that he, personally, would die first.

‘Riordan said that he very much doubted that Dessens would go to such

extraordinary lengths and further said that he was convinced that

fourteen million Dutchmen would take a diametrically opposite point of

view. Then he became rather unpleasantly personal and threatening. He

said it didn’t make the slightest damn difference to anything if he,

Dessens, committed suicide on the spot, for the Oostlijk-Flevoland dyke

in the vicinity of Lelystad would go at midnight if the government didn’t

agree to talk terms by ten o’clock tonight. He then produced a paper with

a List of places which, he said, were in immediate danger of going at any

moment. He didn’t say whether or not mines had already been placed in

those areas -the usual uncertainty technique.

‘Among the places he listed – there were so many that I forget half of

them – were Leeuwarden, the Noordoost polder in the vicinity of Urk, the

Amstclmeer, the Wieringermeer, Putten, the polder south of Petten,

Schouwen, Duiveland and Walcheren – did we remember what happened to

Walcheren during the war? Both the Eastern and Western Scheldt estuaries

were on their list, he said – did we remember what happened there in

February 1953 – while Noord and Sud Holland offered a

T7T

positive embarrassment of riches. That’s only a representative sample.

Riordan then started to make very sinister remarks about the weather, had

we noticed how high the level of the North Sea had risen, how the

strengthening wind had gone to the north and that the spring tides were

at hand – while the levels of the Rhine, Waal, Maas and Scheldt were near

an all-time low – so reminiscent of February 1953, didn’t Dessens think?

‘He then demanded that they talked to a minister or ministers with the

power and courage to make decisions and not a snivelling time-server bent

only on preserving his own miserable political career, which was, I

thought, a bit hard on Bernhard.

‘Riordan then said that, to display their displeasure at this wholly

unnecessary hiatus in negotiations, they would detonate one of several

devices they had placed in public buildings in the capital. Here the two

of them had a whispered conference and then Riordan announced that they

had chosen the royal palace and defied anyone to find the explosives

before they went off. No lives, he said, were at risk in this explosion,

which would occur within five minutes of their departure. He added,

almost as an afterthought, that any attempt to restrain them, hinder

their departure or have them followed would inevitably mean that the

Oostlijk-Flevoland dyke would go not at midnight but at nine o’clock this

evening. On this happy note, they left. The palace explosion, as you may

know, duly occurred.’

‘So I believe.’ It seemed the wrong moment to tell de Graaf that it was

he, van Effen, who had, pressed the button. He shivered and moved to a

less damp patch on the Esfahan. ‘I think I’m getting pneumonia.’

‘There’s brandy.’ De Graaf waved a hand at once indicative of

preoccupation and irritation that one should be unaware of the universal

specifics against pneumococci. ‘Schnapps, scotch -‘He broke off ‘as a

knock came on the library door and a uniformed policeman admitted George

and Vasco who were, if anything, even more saturated than van Effen had

been. ‘Two more advanced cases, I suppose.’

George said: ‘I beg your pardon, Colonel?’

172

‘Pneumonia. Help yourselves. I must say I wasn’t expecting you gentlemen.’

‘The Lieutenant said

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71

Categories: MacLean, Alistair
curiosity: