THE CRY OF THE HALIDON BY ROBERT LUDLUM

cigarette.

From the nonexistent wind? From betraying his position?

From enemy snipers?

No. He was not a soldier, had never been one really. He had performed

because it was the only way to survive. He had no motive, other than

survival; no war was his or ever would be his. Certainly not Hammond’s.

“Here we are, Mr. McAuliff,” said the black man who called himself

Tallon. “Rather deserted place, isn’t it?”

The car had entered a road by a field-a field, but not grass covered. It

was a leveled expanse of ground, perhaps five acres, that looked as

though it was being primed for construction. Beyond the field was a

riverbank; Alex presumed it was the Thames, it had to be. In the

distance were large square structures that looked like warehouses.

Warehouses along a riverbank. He had no idea where they were.

The driver made a sharp left turn, and the automobile bounced as it

rolled over a primitive car path on the rough ground. Through the

windshield, McAuliff saw in the glare of the headlamps two vehicles

about a hundred yards away, both sedans. The one on the right had its

inside lights on.

Within seconds, the driver had pulled up parallel with the second car.

McAuliff got out and followed “Tallon” to the lighted automobile. What

he saw’ bewildered him, angered him, perhaps, and unquestionably

reaffirmed his decision to remove himself from Hammond’s war.

The British agent was sitting stiffly in the rear seat, his shirt and

overcoat draped over his shoulders, an open expanse of flesh at his

midsection revealing wide, white bandages. His eyes were squinting

slightly, betraying the fact that the pain was not negligible. Alex

knew the reason; he had seen the sight before–centuries ago–usually

after a bayonet encounter.

Hammond had been stabbed.

“I had you brought here for two reasons, McAuliff. And I warrant you,

it was a gamble,” said the agent as Alex stood by the open door. “Leave

us alone, please,” he added to the black man.

“Shouldn’t you be in a hospital?”

“No, it’s not a severe penetration.”

“You got cut, Hammond,” interrupted McAuliff. “That’s severe enough.”

l, You’re melodramatic; it’s unimportant. You’ll notice, I trust, that

I am very much alive.”

:’You’re lucky.”

“Luck, sir, had nothing whatsoever to do with it! That’s part of what I

want you to understand.”

“All right, You’re Captain Marvel, indestructible nemesis of the evil

people.”

“I am a fifty-year-old veteran of Her Majesty’s Service who was never

very good at football … soccer, to you.”

Hammond winced and leaned forward. “And it’s quite possible I would not

be in these extremely tight bandages had you followed my instructions

and not made a scene on the dance floor.”

“What?”

“But you provoke me into straying. First things first. The instant it

-was apparent that I was in danger, that danger was removed. At no

time, at no moment, was my life in jeopardy.”

“Because you say so? With a ten-inch bandage straddling your stomach?

Don’t try to sell water in the Sahara.”

“This wound was delivered in panic caused by you! I was in the process

of making the most vital contact on our schedule, the contact we sought

you out to make.”

“Halidon?”

“It’s what we believed. Unfortunately, there’s no way to verify. Come

with me.” Hammond gripped the side strap, and with his right hand

supporting himself on the front seat as he climbed painfully out of the

car. Alex made a minor gesture of assistance, knowing that it would be

refused. The agent led McAuliff to the forward automobile, awkwardly

removing a flashlight from his draped overcoat as they approached. There

were several men in shadows; they stepped away, obviously under orders.

Inside the car were two lifeless figures: one sprawled over the wheel,

the other slumped across the rear seat. Hammond shot the beam of light

successively on both corpses.

Each was male, black, in his mid-thirties, perhaps, and dressed in

conservative, though not expensive, business suits. McAuliff was

confused: there were no signs of violence, no shattered glass, no blood.

The interior of the car was neat, clean, even peaceful. The two dead

men might have been a pair of young executives taking a brief rest off

the highway in the middle of a long business trip. Alex’s bewilderment

ended with Hammond’s next word.

“Cyanide.”

“Why?”

“Fanatics, obviously. It was preferable to revealing information …

unwillingly, of course. They misread us. It began when you made such

an obvious attempt to follow me out of The Owl of Saint George. That

was their first panic; when they inflicted … this.” Hammond waved his

hand just once at his midsection.

McAuliff did not bother to conceal his anger. “I’ve about had it with

your goddamn caustic deductions!”

“I told you it was a gamble bringing you here–2′

“Stop telling me things!”

“Please bear in mind that without us you had a life expectancy of four

months-at the outside.”

“Your version.” But the agent’s version had more substance than McAuliff

cared to think about at the moment. Alex turned away from the

unpleasant sight. For no particular reason, he ripped the torn lining

from the base of his jacket and leaned against the hood of the car.

“Since you hold me responsible for so much tonight, what happened?”

The Britisher told him. Several days ago, MI-5’s surveillance had

picked up a second “force” involved with Dunstone’s movements. Three,

possibly four, unidentifiable subjects who kept reappearing. The

subjects were black.

Photographs were taken, fingerprints obtained by way of restaurants,

discarded objects–cigarette packs, newspapers, and the like-and al I

the data fed into the computers at New Scotland Yard and Emigration.

There were no records; the subjects were “negative” insofar as Dunstone

was concerned. Obvious … then proven without doubt earlier in the

evening, when one of the subjects killed a Dunstone man who spotted him.

“We knew then,” said Hammond, “that we had centered in; the target was

accurate. It remained to make positive contact, sympathetic contact. I

even toyed with the idea of bringing these men and you together in short

order, perhaps this morning. So much resolved so damned quickly…”

A cautious preliminary contact was made with the subjects: “so harmless

and promising, we damn near offered what was left of the Empire. They

were concerned, of course, with a trap.”

A rendezvous was arranged at The Owl of Saint George, a racially

integrated club that offered a comfortable enviromnent. It was

scheduled for 2:30 in the morning, after Hammond’s meeting with

McAuliff.

When Alex made his panicked-and threatening-call to Hammond’s number,

insisting that they meet regardless of time, the agent left his options

open. And then made his decision. Why not The Owl of Saint George?

Bring the American into Soho, to the club, and if it proved the wrong

decision, McAuliff could be stopped once inside. If the decision was

the right one, the circumstances would be optimal-all his parties

present.

“What about Warfield’s men?” asked Alex. “You said he doubled his teams

on me.”

“I lied. I wanted you to remain where you were. Warfield had a single

man on you. We diverted him. The Dunstone people had their own

anxieties: One of their men had been killed. You couldn’t be held

responsible for that.”

The night progressed as Hammond had anticipated: without incident. The

agent made arrangements for the table”we know just about everyone you’ve

met in London, chap’@–and awaited the compatible merging of elements.

And then, in rapid succession, each component fell apart.

First was Alex’s statement that the survey team was leaving in two

days-MI-5 and its counterpart overseas, M-1-6, were not ready for them

in Kingston. Then the information that Warfield had spoken the name of

“Halidon”; it was to be expected, of course. Dunstone would be working

furiously to find the killers of the first survey team. But, again,

MI-5 had not expected Dunstone to have made such progress. The next

breakdown was the spaced-out agent who crashed into the table and used

the word “Edinburgh7-used it twice.

“Each twenty-four-hour period we circulate an unusual word that has but

one connotation: ‘abort, extreme prejudice.” If it’s repeated, that

simply compounds the meaning: Our cover is blown. Or misread. Weapons

should be ready.”

At that moment, Hammond saw clearly the massive error that had been

made. His agents had diverted Warfield’s men away from Alex, but not

one of the black men. McAuliff had been observed in Warfield’s company

at midnight for a considerable length of time. Within minutes after he

had walked into The Owl, his black surveillance had followed, panicked

that his colleagues had been led into a trap.

The confrontation had begun within the gyrating, psychedelic madness

that was The Owl of Saint George.

Hammond tried to stop the final collapse.

He broke the rules. It was not yet 2:30, but since Alexander McAuliff

had been seen with him, he dared not wait. He tried to establish a

bridge, to explain, to calm the raging outburst.

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