THE CRY OF THE HALIDON BY ROBERT LUDLUM

of Piersall’s house. It was a comfortable white man’s home, thought

Barak.

It was on top of a hill, the entrance road a long climb from George’s

Valley to the west and the Martha Brae to the east. Mango trees, palms,

hibiscus, and orchids lined the entrance and surrounded the

one-and-a-half-storied white stone structure. The house was long, most

of the wide spacious rooms on the first floor. There was black iron

grillwork everywhere, across the windows and over the door entrances.

The only glass was in the second-floor bedrooms; all the windows had

teak shutters.

The rear of High Hill, as the house was called, was the most striking.

To the east of the old pasture of high grass, where Barak lay, the

gently sloping back lawn had been carved out of the forests and the

fields, seeded with a Caribbean fescue that was as smooth as a golf

course; the rocks, painted a shiny white, gave the appearance of

whitecaps in a green sea.

In the center of the area was a medium-sized pool, installed by

Piersall, with blue and white tiles that reflected the sun as sharply as

the blue-green water in it. Around the pool and spreading out over the

grass were tables and chairs-white wrought iron-Aelicate in appearance,

sturdy in design.

The guard came into view again, and Moore caught his breath, as much in

astonishment as in anger. The guard was playing with a dog, a

vicious-looking Doberman. There had been no dogs before. It was a bad

thing, thought Barak … yet, perhaps, not so bad. The presence of the

dog probably meant that this policeman would stay alone at his post

longer than the normal time span. It was a police custom to leave dogs

with men for two reasons: because the district they patrolled was

dangerous, or because the men would remain for a relatively long time at

their watches.

Dogs served several purposes: they were alarms, they protected, and they

helped pass the hours.

The guard threw a stick; the Doberman raced beyond the pool, nearly

crashing into a wrought-iron table, and snatched it up in his mouth.

Before the dog could bring it back the policeman threw another stick,

bewildering the Doberman, who dropped the first retrieval and went after

the second.

He is a stupid man, thought Barak, watching the laughing guard. He did

not know animals, and a man who did not know animals was a man who could

be trapped.

He would be trapped tonight.

It was a clear night. The Jamaican moon-three-quarters of it-shone

brightly between the high banks of the river. They had poled a stolen

bamboo raft down the rushing waters of the Martha Brae until they had

reached the point of shortest distance to the house in Carrick Foyle.

They maneuvered the raft into a pitch-black recess and pulled it out of

the water, hiding it under cascading umbrellas of full-leaved mangroves

and maiden palms.

They were the raiding party: Barak, Alex, Floyd, and Whitehall. Sam

Tucker and Lawrence had stayed at Bengal Court to protect Alison.

They crept up the slope through the dense, ensnaring foliage. The slope

was steep, the traveling slow and painfully difficult. The distance to

the High Hill property was no more than a mile-perhaps a mile and a

quarter but it took the four of them nearly an hour to reach it.

Charles Whitehall thought the route was foolish. If there was one guard

and one dog, why not drive to the road below the winding, half-mile

entrance and simply walk up to the outer gates?

Barak’s reasoning held more sophistication than Whitehall would have

conceded to the Trelawny police. Moore thought it possible that the

parish authorities had set up electronic tripwires along the entrance

drive. Barak knew that such instruments had been in use in Montego Bay,

Kingston, and Port Antonio hotels for months. They could not take the

chance of setting one off.

Breathing heavily, they stood at the southern border of Piersall’s

sloping lawn and looked up at the house called High Hill. The moon’s

illumination on the white stone made the house stand out like an

alabaster monument, still, peaceful, graceful, and solid. Light spilled

out of the teak shutters in two areas of the house: the downstairs back

room opening onto the lawn and the center bedroom on the second floor.

All else was in darkness.

Except the underwater spotlights in the pool. A slight breeze caused

ripples on the water; the bluish light danced from underneath.

“We must draw him out,” said Barak. “Him and the dog, mon.”

“Why? What’s the point?” asked McAuliff, the sweat from the climb

rolling down into his eyes. “He’s one, we’re four.”

“Moore is right,” answered Charles Whitehall. “If there are electronic

devices outside, then certainly he has the equivalent within.”

“He would have a police radio, at any rate, mon,” interjected Floyd. “I

know those doors; by the time we broke one down, he would have

time–easy to reach others.”

“It’s a half hour from Falmouth; the police are in Falmouth,” pressed

Alex. “We’d be in and out by then.”

“Not so, mon,” argued Barak. “It will take us a while to select and pry

loose the cistern stones. We’ll dig up the oilcloth packet first.

Come!”

Barak Moore led them around the edge of wooded property, to the opposite

side, into the old grazing field. He shielded the glass of his

flashlight with his fingers and raced to a cluster of breadfruit trees

at the northern end of the rock-strewn pasture. He crouched at the

trunk of the farthest tree; the others did the same. Barak spoke

whispered.

“Talk quietly. These hill winds carry voices. The packet is buried in

the earth forty-four paces to the right of the fourth large rock on a

northwest diagonal from this tree.”

“He was a man who knew Jamaica,” said Whitehall softly.

“How do you’ mean?” McAuliff saw the grim smile on the scholar’s face in

the moonlight.

“The Arawak symbols for a warrior’s death march were in units of four,

always to the right of the setting sun.”

“That’s not very comforting,” said Alex.

“Like your American Indians,” replied Whitehall, “the Arawaks were not

comforted by the white man.”

“Neither were the Africans, Charley-mon.” Barak locked eyes with

Whitehall in the moonlight. “Sometimes I think you forget that.” He

addressed McAuliff and Floyd. “Follow me. In a line.”

They ran in crouched positions through the tall grass behind the. black

revolutionary, each man slapping a large prominent rock as he came upon

it. One, two, three, four.

At the fourth rock, roughly a hundred and fifty yards from the base of

the breadfruit tree, they knelt around the stone.

Barak cupped his flashlight and shone it on the top. There was a

chiseled marking, barely visible. Whitehall bent over it.

“Your Dr. Piersall had a progressive imagination; progressive in the

historical sense. He’s jumped from Arawak to Coromantee. See?”

Whitehall traced his index finger over the marking under the beam of the

flashlight and continued softly. “This twisted crescent is an Ashanti

moon the Coromantees used to leave a trail for members of the tribe

perhaps two or three days behind in a hunt. The chips on the convex

side of the crescent determine the direction: one-to the left; two-to

the right. Their replacement on the rim shows the angle. Here: two

chips, dead center; therefore, directly to the right of the stone facing

the base of the crescent.” Whitehall gestured with his right hand

northeast.

“As Piersall instructed.” Barak nodded his head: he did not bother to

conceal his pique at Charley-mon’s explanation. Yet there was respect

in that pique, thought McAuliff, as he watched Moore begin pacing off

the forty-four steps.

Piersall had disguised the spot chosen for burial. There was a thicket

of mollusk ferns spreading out in a free-form spray within the paced-off

area of the grass. They had been rerooted expertly; it was illogical to

assume any sort of diggin had taken place there in years.

Floyd took a knapsack shovel from his belt, unfolded the stem, and began

removing the earth. Charles Whitehall bent down on his knees and joined

the revolutionary, clawing at the dirt with his bare hands.

The rectangular box was deep in the ground. Had not the instructions

been so precise, the digging might have stopped before reaching it. The

depth was over three feet. Whitehall suspected it was exactly four feet

when deposited. The Arawak unit of four.

The instant Floyd’s small shovel struck the metal casing, Whitehall

lashed his right hand down, snatched the box out of the earth, and

fingered the edges, trying to pry it apart. It was not possible, and

Whitehall realized it within seconds.

He had used this type of receptacle perhaps a thousand times: It was a

hermetically sealed archive case whose soft, rubberized edges created a

vacuum within. It had two locks, one at each end, with separate keys;

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 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85

Leave a Reply 0

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