Jack Higgins – The Violent Enemy

He arrived in Kendal just after seven and found the place, like most country market towns at that time in the morning, already stirring. He located the Woolpack Inn in Stricklandgate without any trouble, pulled in the car park and switched off the engine.

It was a strange feeling waiting there in the car, like the old days working with the Maquis in France, and he lemembered that morning in Amiens with the rain bouncing from the cobbles and the contact man who turned out to be an Abwehr agent. But then you never could be certain of anything in this life, from the womb to the grave.

He opened the packet of cigarettes Pope had given him, found it empty and crushed it in his hand. A quiet voice said, ‘A fine morning, Mr. Rogan.’

She was perhaps twenty years old, certainly no more. She wore an old trenchcoat belted around her waist and, in spite of her headscarf, rain beaded the fringe of dark hair which had escaped at the front and drifted across her brow.

She walked round to the other side, opened the door and sat on the bench seat beside him. Her face was

smoothly rounded with a flawless cream complexion, the eyebrows and hair coal black and her red lips had an extra fullness that suggested sensuality. It was the sort of face he had seen often on the west coast of Ireland, particularly around Galway where there had been a plentiful infusion of Spanish blood over the centuries.

‘How could you be sure?’ he said.

She shrugged. ‘I had the number of the car and Colum showed me a photograph. You’ve changed.’

‘Haven’t we all?’ he said. ‘Where do you fit in?’

‘You’ll find out. If you’ll let me get at that wheel, we’ll move out.’

He eased himself across the seat. She slid past him. For a moment he was acutely conscious of her as a woman, a hint of perfume in the cold morning air, the edge of the coat riding above her knees. She pulled it down with a complete lack of self-consciousness and started the engine.

‘I’d like to stop for some cigarettes,’ Rogan said.

She took a packet from her left pocket and tossed them across. ‘No need. I’ve got plenty.’

‘Have we far to go?’

‘About forty miles.’

She was perfectly calm, her hands steady on the wheel as she took the brake with real skill through the narrow streets and the early morning traffic, and he watched her for a while, leaning back in the corner.

A fine, lovely girl this one, but one who had been used by life and not kindly. The story was there in the shadow that lurked behind the grey-green eyes. Hurt, but not broken-the courage showed in the tilt of the chin, the sureness of those competent hands. The pity of it was that she would never let anyone get close to her again and that was the real tragedy.

Her voice cut sharply into his musing. ‘You’ll know me next time?’

‘And would that be a bad thing?’ he grinned lightly. ‘ Liverpool-Irish ?’

‘Is it that obvious?’

‘No accent like it in this world or out of it.’

She smiled in spite of herself. ‘You needn’t think you sound like any English gentleman yourself.’

‘And why would I be wanting to?’

‘You were a major in their army, weren’t you?’

‘You seem to know.’

‘I should do. At one time, I used to get the great Sean Rogan for breakfast, dinner and supper and precious little else.’

They were now on the outskirts of the town and she pulled in beside a low stone wall topped by iron railings. A little farther along there was an open iron gate and a sign which readChurch of the Immaculate Heart with the times of Mass and Confession in faded gold letters beneath.

‘Do you mind?’ she said. ‘I don’t get in very often.’

‘Suit yourself.’

He watched her pass through the gate, a small girl with a ripe peasant figure and hips that were too large by English standards. So, she still kept to the Faith? Now that was interesting, and proved she wasn’t an active member of the I.R.A. which carried automatic excommunication.

Pages: 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

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *