THE CRY OF THE HALIDON BY ROBERT LUDLUM

the adjoining territory of Port Antonio.

Durell was the young English manager of Trident Villas, a graduate of

London’s College of Hotel Management, with a series of letters after his

name indicating more knowledge and experience than his youthful

appearance would seem to support. But Durell was good; he knew it, the

Trident’s owners knew it. He never stopped looking for the

unexpected-that, along with routine smoothness, was the essence of

superior management.

He had found the unexpected now. And it troubled him.

It was a mathematical impossibility. Or, if not impossible, certainly

improbable in the extreme.

It simply did not make sense.

“Mr. Durell?”

He turned. His Jamaican secretary, her brown skin and features

bespeaking the age-old coalition of Africa and Empire, had walked out on

the deck with a message.

“Yes?”

“Lufthansa flight sixteen from Munich will be late getting into

Montego.”

“That’s the Keppler reservation, isn’t it?”

“Yes. They’ll miss the in-island connection.”

“They should have come into Kingston.”

“They didn’t,” said the girl, her voice carrying the same disapproval as

Durell’s statement, but not so sternly. “They obviously don’t wish to

spend the night in Montego; they had Lufthansa radio ahead. You’re to

get them a charter-”

“On three hours’ notice? Let the Germans do it! It’s their equipment

that’s late.”

“They tried. None available in Mo’Bay.”

“Of course, there isn’t…. I’ll ask Hanley. He’ll be back from

Kingston with the Warfields by five o’clock.”

“He may not wish to……

“He,will. We’re in a spot. I trust it’s not indicative of the week.”

“Why do you say that? What bothers you?”

Durell turned back to the railing overlooking the fields and cliffs of

coral. He lighted a cigarette, cupping the flame against the bursts of

warm breeze. “Several things. I’m not sure I can put my finger on them

all. One I do know.” He looked at the girl, but his eyes were

remembering. “A little over twelve months ago, the reservations for

this particular week began coming in. Eleven months ago they were

complete. All the villas were booked … for this particular week.”

“Trident’s popular. What is so unusual?”

“You don’t understand. Since eleven months ago, every one of those

reservations has stood firm. Not a single cancellation, or even a minor

change of date. Not even a day.”

“Less bother for you. I’d think you’d be pleased.”

“Don’t you see? It’s a mathematical imp-well, inconsistency, to say the

least. Twenty villas. Assuming couples, that is forty families,

really-mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, cousins … For eleven months

nothing has happened to change anyone’s plans. None of the principals

died-and at our rates we don’t cater exclusively to the young. No

misfortunes of consequence, no simple business interferences, or measles

or mumps or weddings or funerals or lingering illness. Yet we’re not

the Queen’s coronation; we’re just a week-in-Jamaica.”

The girl laughed. “You’re playing with numbers, Mr. Durell. You’re put

out because your well-organized waiting list hasn’t been used.”

“And by the way, they’re all arriving,” continued the young manager, his

words coming faster. “This Keppler, he’s the only one with a problem,

and how does he solve it?

Having an aircraft radio ahead from somewhere over the Atlantic. Now,

you’ll grant that’s a bit much. The others?

No one asks for a car to meet them, no in-island confirmations required,

no concerns about luggage or distances. Or anything. They’ll just be

here.”

“Not the Warfields. Captain Hanley flew his plane to Kingston for the

Warfields.”

“But we didn’t know that. Hanley assumed that we did, but we didn’t.

The arrangements were made privately from London. He thought we’d given

them his name; we hadn’t. I hadn’t.”

“No one else would The girl stopped. “But everyone’s … from all

over.”

“Yes. Almost evenly divided. The States, England, France, Germany, and

… Haiti.”

“What’s your point?” asked the girl, seeing the concern on Durell’s

face.

“I have a strange feeling that all our guests for the week are

acquainted. But they don’t want us to know it.”

LONDON, ENGLAND

The tall, light-haired American in the unbuttoned Burberry trench coat

walked out the Strand entrance of the Savoy Hotel. He stopped for an

instant and looked up at the English sky between the buildings in the

court. It was a perfectly normal thing to do-to observe the sky, to

check the elements after emerging from shelter-but this man did not give

the normally cursory glance and form a judgment based primarily on the

chill factor.

He looked.

Any geologist who made his living developing geophysical surveys for

governments, companies, and foundations knew that the weather was

income; it connoted progress or delay.

Habit.

His clear gray eyes were deeply set beneath wide eyebrows, darker than

the light brown hair that fell with irritating regularity over his

forehead. His face was the color of a man’s exposed to the weather, the

tone permanently stained by the sun, but not burned. The lines beside

and below his eyes seemed stamped more from his work than from age,

again a face in constant conflict with the elements. The cheekbones

were high, the mouth full, the jaw casually slack, for there was a

softness also about the man … in abstract contrast to the hard,

professional look.

This softness, too, was in his eyes. Not weak, but inquisitive; the

eyes of a man who probed-perhaps because he had not probed sufficiently

in the past.

Things … things … had happened to this man.

The instant of observation over, he greeted the uniformed doorman with a

smile and a brief shake of his head, indicating a negative.

“No taxi, Mr. McAuliff?”

“Thanks, no, Jack. I’ll walk.”

“A bit nippy, sir.”

“It’s refreshing–only going a few blocks.”

The doorman tipped his cap and turned his attention to an incoming

Jaguar sedan. Alexander McAuliff continued down the Savoy Court, past

the theater and the American Express office to the Strand. He crossed

the pavement, and entered the flow of human traffic heading north toward

Waterloo Bridge. He buttoned his raincoat, pulling the lapels up to

ward off London’s February chill.

It was nearly one o’clock; he was to be at the Waterloo intersection by

one. He would make it with only minutes to spare.

He had agreed to meet the Dunstone company man this way, but he hoped

his tone of voice had conveyed his annoyance. He had been perfectly

willing to take a taxi, or rent a car, or hire a chauffeur, if any or

all were necessary, but if Dunstone was sending an automobile for him,

why not send it to the Savoy? It wasn’t that he minded the walk; he

just hated to meet people in automobiles in the middle of congested

streets. It was a goddamn nuisance.

The Dunstone man had had a short, succinct explanation that was, for the

Dunstone man, the only reason necessary for all things: “Mr. Julian

Warfield prefers it this way.”

He spotted the automobile immediately. It had to be Dunstone’s-and/or

Warfield’s. A St. James Rolls-Royce, its glistening black, hand-tooled

body breaking space majestically, anachronistically, among the

petrol-conscious Austins, MGs, and European imports. He waited on the

curb, ten feet from the crosswalk onto the bridge. He would not gesture

or acknowledge the slowly approaching Rolls. He waited until the car

stopped directly in front of him, a chauffeur driving, the rear window

open.

“Mr. McAuliM.” said the eager, young-old face in the frame.

“Mr. Warfield?” asked McAuliff, knowing that this fiftyish,

precise-looking executive was not.

“Good heavens, no. The name’s Preston. Do hop in; I think we’re

holding up the line.”

“Yes, you are.” Alex got into the backseat as Preston moved over. The

Englishman extended his hand.

“It’s a pleasure. I’m the one you’ve been talking to on the telephone.”

“Yes … Mr. Preston.”

“I’m really very sorry for the inconvenience, meeting like this. Old

Julian has his quirks, I’ll grant you that.”

McAuliff decided he might have misjudged the Dunstone man. “It was a

little confusing, that’s all. If the object was precautionary-for what

reason I can’t imagine-he picked a hell of a car to send.”

Preston laughed. “True. But then, I’ve learned over the years that

Warfield, like God, moves in mysterious ways that basically are quite

logical. He’s really all right. You’re having lunch with him, you

know.”

“Fine. Where?”

“Belgravia.”

“Aren’t we going the wrong way?”

“Julian and God-basically logical, chap.”

The St. James Rolls crossed Waterloo, proceeded south to the Cut,

turned left until Blackfiiars Road, then left again, over Blackfriars

Bridge and north into Holbom. It was a confusing route.

Ten minutes later the car pulled up to the entrance canopy of a white

stone building with a brass plate to the right of the glass double doors

that read SHAFTESBURY ARMS. The doorman pulled at the handle and spoke

jovially.

“Good afternoon, Mr. Preston.”

“Good afternoon, Ralph.”

McAuliff followed Preston into the building, to a bank of three

elevators in the well-appointed hallway. “Is this Warfield’s place?” he

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