Running Blind by Desmond Bagley

I ticked off the sequence of events. At Geysir I had told Case of my

suspicions of Slade, and Case had agreed to pass them on to Taggart. No

matter what happened Slade would then be thoroughly investigated. But I

had seen Slade talking to Case just before Kennikin took me. Suppose

that Case had aroused Slade’s suspicions in some way? Slade was a clever

man – a handler of men – and maybe Case had shown his hand.

What would Slade do? He would contact Kennikin to find if I had been

captured. He would insist that his cover next to Taggart should remain

unbroken at al costs and that this was more important than the gadget.

He would say, ‘Kil the bastard!’ That was why Kennikin had switched.

/And it would be just as important to kil Jack Case before be talked to

Taggart./ I had played right into Slade’s hands and left Case for

Kennikin to find, and Kennikin had stabbed him with my knife. Kennikin

had traced where the Volkswagen had come from and gone looking for me,

and he had left the body of Case. Terrorist tactics.

It al tied together except for one loose end which worried me. Why,

when I had been jumped at Geysir by Kennikin’s mob, had Jack Case run

out on me? He hadn’t lifted a finger to help; he hadn’t fired a shot in

my defence even though he was armed. I knew Jack Case and that was very

unlike him, and that, together with his apparent chumminess with Slade,

had been the basis of my mistrust of him. It worried me very much.

But it was al past history and I had the future to face and decisions

to make. I said, ‘Did you check on Bjarni?’

Elin nodded listlessly. ‘He’s on the Reykjavik-Hofn run. He’l be in

Reykjavik this afternoon.’

‘I want him over here,’ I said. ‘And you’re to stick in this office

until he comes. You’re not to move out of it even for meals. You can

have those sent up. And most emphatical y you’re not to go out into the

concourse of the airport; there are too many eyes down there looking for

you and me.’

‘But I can’t stay here forever,’ she protested.

‘Only until Bjarni comes. Then you can tel him anything you think fit –

you can even tel him the truth. Then you’re to tel him what he must do.’

She frowned. ‘And that is?’

‘He’s got to get you on a plane and out of here, and he has to do it

discreetly without going through normal channels. I don’t care if he has

to dress you up as a hostess and smuggle you aboard as one of the crew,

but you mustn’t go down into the concourse as an ordinary passenger.’

‘But I don’t think he could do that.’

‘Christ!’ I said. ‘If he can smuggle in crates of Carlsberg from

Greenland he can smuggle you out. Come to think of ‘ it, going to

Greenland might not be such a bad idea; you could stay in Narsassuaq

until al this blows over. Not even Slade, clever though he is, would

think of looking there.’

‘I don’t want to go.’

‘You’re going,’ I said. ‘I want you from underfoot. If you think things

have been rough for the last few days then compared to the next

twenty-four hours they’l seem like an idyllic holiday. I want you out

of it, Elin, and, by God, you’l obey me.’

‘So you think I’m useless,’ she said bitterly.

‘No, I don’t; and you’ve proved it during the last few days. Everything

you’ve done in that time has been against your better judgment, but

you’ve stuck by me. You’ve been shot and you’ve been shot at, but you

stil helped out.’

‘Because I love you,’ she said.

‘I know – and I love you. That’s why I want you out of here. I don’t

want you kil ed.’

‘And what about you?’ she demanded.

‘I’m different,’ I said. ‘I’m a professional. I know what to do and how

to do it; you don’t.’

‘Case was a professional too ? and he’s dead. So was Graham, or whatever

his name real y was. And that man, Volkov, was hurt at Geysir – and he

was a professional. You said yourself that the only people hurt so far

have been the professionals. I don’t want you hurt, Alan.’

‘I also said that no innocent bystanders have been hurt,’ I said.

‘You’re an innocent bystander – and I want to keep it that way.’

I had to do something to impress the gravity of the situation upon her.

I looked around the room to check its emptiness, then quickly took off

my jacket and unslung Case’s shoulder holster complete with gun. I held

it in my hand and said, ‘Do you know how to use this?’

Her eyes dilated. ‘No!’

I pointed out the slide. ‘If you pull this back a bullet is injected

into the breech. You push over this lever, the safety catch, then you

point it and pull the trigger. Every time you pull a bullet comes out,

up to a maximum of eight. Got that?’

‘I think so.’ ‘Repeat it.’

‘I pul back the top of the gun, push over the safety catch and pull the

trigger.’

‘That’s it. It would be better if you squeezed the trigger but this is

no time for finesse.’ I put the pistol back into the holster and pressed

it into her reluctant hands. ‘If anyone tries to make you do anything

you don’t want to do just point the gun and start shooting. You might

not hit anyone but you’l cause some grey hairs.’

The one thing that scares a professional is a gun in the hands of an

amateur. If another professional is shooting at you at least you know

he’s accurate and you have a chance of out-manoeuvring him. An amateur

can kil you by accident.

I said, ‘Go into the loo and put on the holster under your jacket. When

you come back I’l be gone.’

She accepted the finality of the situation along with the pistol. ‘Where

are you going?’

‘The worm is turning,’ I said. ‘I’m tired of running, so I’m going

hunting. Wish me luck.’

She came close to me and kissed me gently and there were unshed tears in

her eyes and the gun in its holster was iron-hard between us. I patted

her bottom and said, ‘Get along with you,’ and watched as she turned and

walked away. When the door closed behind her I also left.

Chapter I

Nordlinger’s Chevrolet was too long, too wide and too soft-sprung and I

wouldn’t have given a thank you for it in the /Obyggdir,/ but it was

just what I needed to get into Reykjavik fast along the International

Highway which is the only good bit of paved road in Iceland. I did the

twenty-five miles to Hafnarfjordur at 80 mph and cursed when I was

slowed down by the heavy traffic building up around Kopavogur. I had an

appointment at midday in the souvenir shop of the Nordri Travel Agency

and I didn’t want to miss it.

The Nordri Travel Agency was in Hafnarstraeti. I parked the car in a

side street near Naust and walked down the hil towards the centre of

town. I had no intention at al of going into Nordri; why would I when

Nordlinger had the gadget tucked away in his safe? I came into

Hafnarstraeti and ducked into a bookshop opposite Nordri. There was a

cafe above the shop with a flight of stairs leading directly to it so

that one could read over a cup of coffee. I bought a newspaper as cover

and went upstairs.

It was stil before the midday rush so I got a seat at the window and

ordered pancakes and coffee. I spread open the paper and then glanced

through the window at the crowded street below and found that, as I had

planned, I had a good view of the travel agency which was on the other

side of the street. The thin gauze curtains didn’t obstruct my view but

made it impossible for anyone to recognize me from the street.

The street was fairly busy. The tourist season had begun and the first

hardy travel ers had already started to ransack the souvenir shops and

carry home their loot. Camera-hung and map in hand they were easy to

spot, yet I inspected every one of them because the man I was looking

for would probably find it convenient to be mistaken for a tourist.

This was a long shot based on the fact that everywhere I had gone in

Iceland the opposition had shown up. I had fol owed instructions on

arrival and gone the long way around to Reykjavik and Lindholm had been

there. I had gone to earth in Asbyrgi and Graham had pitched up out of

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