THE CRY OF THE HALIDON BY ROBERT LUDLUM

She could not conceal the silent alarm she felt. She looked away from

him, at the light coming through the balcony doors. It was brighter

now, that strange admixture of pastel yellow and hot orange that is

peculiar to the Jamaican dawn.

“You know it concerns you. . .”

“Of course I know it. I knew it last night.” She returned her eyes to

him. “I didn’t want to admit it to myself… but I knew it. It was

all too tidy.”

“Chatellerault,” he said softly. “He’s here.”

“Oh, God,” she whispered.

“He can’t touch you. Believe me.”

“He followed me. Oh my God…”

McAuliff got up and crossed to the bed. He sat on the edge and gently

stroked her hair. “If I thought he could harm you, I would never have

told you. I’d simply have him … removed.” Oh, Christ, thought Alex.

How easily the new words came. Would he soon be using killed, or

eliminated?

“Right from the very start, it was all programmed. I was programmed.”

She stared at the balcony, allowing his hand to caress the side of her

face, as if oblivious to it. “I should have realized; they don’t let

you go that easily.”

“Who?”

“All of them, my darling,” she answered, taking his hand, holding it to

her lips. “Whatever names you want to give them, it’s not important.

The letters, the numbers, the official-sounding nonsense … I was

warned, I can’t say I wasn’t.”

“How?” He pulled her hand down, forcing her to look at him. “How were

you warned? Who warned you?”

“In Paris one night. Barely three months ago. I’d finished the last of

my interviews at the . . . underground carnival, we called it.”

“Interpol?”

“Yes. I met a chap and his wife. In a waiting room, actually. It’s

not supposed to happen; isolation is terribly important, but someone got

their rooms mixed up. They were English. We agreed to have a late

supper together. He was a Porsche automobile dealer from Macclesfield.

He and his wife were at the end of their tethers. He’d been recruited

because his dealership-the cars, you see-were being used to transport

stolen stock certificates from European exchanges. Every time he

thought he was finished, they found reasons for him to continue-more

often than not, without telling him. It was almost three years; he was

about out of his mind. They were going to leave England. Go to Buenos

Aires.” @

“He could always say no. They couldn’t force him.”

“Don’t be naive, darling. Every name you learn is another hook, each

new method of operation you report is an additional notch in your

expertise.” Alison laughed sadly.

“You’ve traveled to the land of the informer. You’ve got a stigma all

your own.”

tell you again: Chatellerault can’t touch you.”

She paused before acknowledging his words, his anxiety.

“This may sound strange to you, Alex. I mean, I’m not a brave person-no

brimfuls of courage for me-but I have no great fear of him. The

appalling thing, the fear, i,s them.

They wouldn’t let me go. No matter the promises, the agreements, the

guarantees. They couldn’t resist. A file somewhere, or a computer, was

activated and came up with his name; automatically mine appeared in a

data bank. That was it: factor X plus factor Y, subtotal-your life is

not your own. It never stops. You live with the fear all over again.”

Alex took her by the shoulders. “There’s no law, Alison.

We can pack; we can leave.”

“My darling, my darling … You can’t. Don’t you see?

Not that way. It’s what’s behind you: the agreements, the countless

files filled with words, your words … you can’t deny them. You cross

borders, you need papers; you work, you need references. You drive a

car or take a plane or put money in a bank … They have all the

weapons. You can’t hide. Not from them.”

McAuliff let go of her and stood up. He picked up the smooth, shiny

cylinder of gas from the bedside table and looked at the printing and

the inked date of issue. He walked aimlessly to the balcony doors and

instinctively breathed deeply; there was the faint, very faint, aroma of

vanilla with the slightest trace of a spice.

Bay rum and vanilla.

Jamaica.

“You’re wrong, Alison. We don’t have to hide. For a lot of reasons, we

have to finish what we’ve started; you’re right about that. But you’re

wrong about the conclusion. It does stop. It will stop.” He turned

back to her. “Take my word for it.”

“I’d like to. I really would. I don’t see how.”

“An old infantry game. Do unto others before they can do unto you. The

Hammonds and the Interpols of this world use us because we’re afraid. We

know what they can do to what we think are our well-ordered lives.

That’s legitimate; they’re bastards. And they’ll admit it. But have

you ever thought about the magnitude of disaster we can cause them?

That’s also legitimate, because we can be bastards, too.

We’ll play this out-with armed guards on all our flanks.

And when we’re finished, we’ll be finished. With them.”

Charles Whitehall sat in the chair, the tiny glass of Pemod on the table

beside him. It was six o’clock in the morning; he had not been to bed.

There was no point in trying to sleep; sleep would not come.

Two days on the island and the sores of a decade ago were disturbed. He

had not expected it; he had expected to control everything. Not be

controlled.

His enemy now was not the enemy-enemies-he had waited ten years to

fight: the rulers in Kingston; worse, perhaps, the radicals like Barak

Moore. It was a new enemy, every bit @s despicable, and infinitely more

powerful, because it had the means to control his beloved Jamaica.

Control by corruption; ultimately own … by possession.

He had lied to Alexander McAuliff. In Savanna-la-Mar, Chatellerault

openly admitted that he was part of the Trelawny Parish conspiracy.

British Intelligence was right.

The marquis’s wealth was intrinsic to the development of the raw acreage

on the north coast and in the Cock Pit, and he intended to see that his

investment was protected.

Charles Whitehall was his first line of protection, and if Charles

Whitehall failed, he would be destroyed. It was as simple as that.

Chatellerault was not the least obscure about it. He had sat opposite

him and smiled his thin Gallic smile and recited the facts-and names of

the covert network Whitehall had developed on the island over the past

decade.

He had capped his narrative with the most damaging information of all:

the timetable and the methods Charles and his political party expected

to follow on their road to power in Kingston.

The establishment of a military dictatorship with one, nonmilitary

leader to whom all were subservient-the Praetorian of Jamaica was the

title, Charles Whitehall the man.

If Kingston knew these things . . . well, Kingston would react.

But Chatellerault made it clear that their individual objectives were

not necessarily in conflict. There were areasphilosophical, political,

financial-in which their interests might easily be merged. But first

came the activity on the north coast. That was immediate; it was the

springboard to everything else.

The marquis did not name his partners-Whitehall got the distinct

impression that Chatellerault was not entirely sure who they all

were-but it was manifestly clear that he did not trust them. On one

level he seemed to question motives, on another it was a matter of

abilities. He spoke briefly about previous interference and/or

bungling, but did not dwell on the facts.

The facts obviously concerned the first survey.

What had happened?

Was the Halidon responsible?

Was the Halidon capable of interference?

Did the Halidon really exist?

The Halidon.

He would have to analyze the anthropologist Piersall’s papers; separate

a foreigner’s exotic fantasies from island reality. There was a time,

many years ago, when the Rastafarians were symbols of African terror,

before they were revealed to be children stoned on grass with mud-caked

hair and a collective desire to avoid work. And there were the

Pocomanians, with their bearded high priests inserting the sexual orgy

into the abstract generosities of the Christian ethic: a socioreligious

excuse for promiscuity. Or the Anansi sects-inheritors of the

long-forgotten Ashanti belief in the cunning of the spider, on which all

progress in life was patterned.

There were so many. So often metaphysically paranoid; so fragmented, so

obscure.

Was the Halidon-Hollydawn-any different?

At this juncture, for Charles Whitehall it didn’t really matter. What

mattered was his own survival and the survival of his plans. His aims

would be accomplished by keeping Chatellerault at bay and infiltrating

the structure of Chatellerault’s financial hierarchy.

And working with his first enemy, Barak Moore.

Working with both enemies.

Jamaica’s enemies.

James Ferguson fumbled for the light switch on the bedside lamp. His

thrusts caused an ashtray and a glass to collide, sending both crashing

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