THE CRY OF THE HALIDON BY ROBERT LUDLUM

was killed.”

Alison Booth gasped. Her eyes riveted on Alex; her hand reached out for

his arm. He covered it gently. “Oh my God,” she whispered.

The doctor looked at Alison but did not comment on her reaction. He

turned back to McAuliff. “Barak told me.

There may be a problem; we do not know yet. The survey is being

watched. Floyd was part of it, and the police will find out. You will

be questioned, of course. Naturally, you know absolutely nothing; wear

long sleeves for a while-a few days, until the wound can be covered with

a large plaster.

To replace Floyd now with one of our men could be a selfinduced trap.”

Reluctantly, Alex nodded. “I see,” he said softly. “But I need another

man. Lawrence can’t do triple duty.”

“May I make a suggestion?” asked the doctor with a thin smile and a

knowing look in his eyes.

“What’s that?”

“Use British Intelligence. You really should not ignore them.”

“Get some sleep, Sam. Lawrence, you do the same,” said Alex to the two

men on the terrace. The doctor had left; his assistant remained with

Barak Moore. Alison had gone into McAuliff s room and shut the door.

“Nothing will happen tonight, except possibly the police … to ask me

questions about a crewman I haven’t seen since early afternoon.”

“You know what to say, mon?” Lawrence asked the question with authority,

as if he would provide the answer.

“The doctor explained; Barak told him.”

“You must be angry, mon! Floyd alla time a no-good thief from Ochee.

Now you know: supplies stolen. You drum-drum angry, mon!”

“It doesn’t seem fair, does it?” said Alex sadly.

“Do as he says, lad,” countered Sam Tucker. “He knows what he’s talking

about…. I’ll nap out here. Hate the goddamn bed, anyway.”

“It isn’t necessary, Sam.”

“Has it occurred to you, boy, that the police may just come here without

announcing themselves? I’d hate like hell for them to get the rooms

mixed up.”

“Oh, Lord McAuliff spoke with weariness. It was the exhaustion of

inadequacy, the pressure of continually being made aware of it. “I

didn’t think of that.”

“Neither did the goddamn doctor,” replied Sam.

Lawrence and I have, which is why we’ll stand turns.”

“Then I’ll join you.”

“You do enough tonight, mon,” said Lawrence firmly.

“You have been hurt. Maybe policemen do not come so quick. Floyd carry

no papers. Early morning Sam Tuck and me take Barak away.”

“The doctor said he was to stay where he is.”

“The doctor is a kling-kling, mon! Two, three hours Barak will sleep.

If he is not dead, we take him to Braco Beach. The ocean is still

before sunrise; a flat-bottom is very gentle, mon. We take him away.”

“He makes sense again, Alex.” Tucker gave his approval without regret.

“Our medical friend notwithstanding, it’s a question of alternatives.

And we both know most wounded men can travel gentle if you give ’em a

couple of hours.”

“What’ll we do if the police come tonight? And search?”

Lawrence answered, again with authority. “I tell Tuck, mon. The person

in that room has Indie Fever. The bad smell helps us. Falmouth police

plenty scared of Indie Fever.”

“So is everybody else,” added Sam, chuckling.

“You’re inventive,” said McAuliff. And he meant it.

“Indie Fever” was the polite term for a particularly nasty offshoot of

elephantiasis, infrequent but nevertheless very much a reality, usually

found in the hill country. It could swell a man’s testicles many times

their size and render him impotent as well as a figure of grotesque

ridicule.

“You go get sleep now, McAuliff, mon … please.”

“Yes. Yes, I will. See you in a few hours.” Alex looked at Lawrence

for a moment before turning to go inside. It was amazing. Floyd was

dead, Barak barely alive, and the grinning, previously carefree

youngster who had seemed so naive and playful in comparison to his

obvious superiors was no longer the innocent. He had, in a matter of

hours, become the leader of his faction, lord of his pack. A hard

authority had been swiftly developed, although he still felt the need to

qualify that authority.

Get sleep now … please.

In a day or two the “please” would be omitted. The command would be

all.

So forever the office made the man.

Sam Tucker smiled at McAuliff in the bright Jamaican moonlight. He

seemed to be reading Alex’s thoughts. Or was Sam remembering McAuliff’s

first independent survey? Tucker had been there. It had been in the

Aleutians, in springtime, and a man had died because Alex had not been

firm enough in his disciplining the team regarding the probing of ice

fissures. Alexander Tarquin McAuliff had matured quickly that

springtime in the Aleutians.

“See you later, Sam.”

Inside the room, Alison lay in bed, the table lamp on. By her side was

the archive case he had carried out of Carrick Foyle. She was outwardly

calm, but there was no mistaking the intensity beneath the surface.

McAuliff removed his shirt, threw it on a chair, and crossed to the dial

on the wall that regulated the overhead fan. He turned it up; the four

blades suspended from the ceiling accelerated, the whir matching the

sound of distant surf outside. He walked to the bureau, where the

bucket of ice had melted halfway. Cubes were bunched together in the

water, enough for drinks.

“Would you like a Scotch?” he asked without looking at her.

“No thank you,” she replied in her soft British accent.

Soft, but laced-as all British speech was laced-with that core of

understated, superior rationality.

“I would.”

“I should think so.”

He.poured the whiskey into a hotel glass, threw in two ice cubes, and

turned around. “To answer you before you ask, I had no idea tonight

would turn out the way it did.”

“Would you have gone had you known?”

“Of course not…. But it’s over. We have what we need now.”

“This?” Alison touched the archive case.

“Yes.

“From what you’ve told me … on the word of a dying primitive. Told

to him by a dead fanatic.”

“I think those descriptions are a little harsh.” McAuliff went to the

chair by the bed and sat down facing her. “But I won’t defend either

one yet. I’ll wait. I’ll find out what’s in here, do what they say I

should do, and see what happens.”

“You sound positively confident, and I can’t imagine why. You’ve been

shot at. A bullet came within five inches of killing you. Now you sit

here calmly and tell me you’ll simply bide your time and see what

happens? Alex, for God’s sake, what are you doing?”

McAuliff smiled and swallowed a good deal of whiskey.

“What I never thought was possible,” he said slowly, abruptly serious.

“I mean that…. And I’ve just seen a boy grow up into a man. In one

hour. The act cost a terrible price, but it happened … and I’m not

sure I can understand it, but I saw it. That transformation had

something to do with belief. We haven’t got it. We act out of fear or

greed or both … all of us. He doesn’t. He does what he does,

becomes what he becomes, because he believes…. And, strangely enough,

so does Charley Whitehall.”

“What in heaven’s name are you talking about?”

McAuliff lowered his glass and looked at her. “I have an idea we’re

about to turn this war over to,the people who should be fighting it.”

Charles Whitehall exhaled slowly, extinguished the acetylene flame, and

removed his goggles. He put the torch down on the long narrow table and

took off the asbestos gloves. He noted with satisfaction that his every

movement was controlled; he was like a confident surgeon, no motion

wasted, his mind ahead of his every muscle.

He rose from the stool and stretched. He turned to see that the door of

the small room was still bolted. A foolish thing to do, he thought; he

had bolted the door. He was alone.

He had driven over back roads nearly forty miles away from Carrick Foyle

to the border of St. Anne’s. He had left the police car in a field and

walked the last mile into the town.

Ten years ago St. Anne’s was a meeting place for those of the Movement

between Falmouth and Ocho Rios. The “nigger rich,” they had called

themselves, with good-sized fields in Drax Hall, Chalky Hill, and Davis

Town. Men of property and certain wealth, which they had forced from

the earth and were not about to turn over to the Commonwealth sycophants

in Kingston. Whitehall remembered names, as he remembered most things-a

necessary discipline-and within fifteen minutes after he reached St.

Anne’s, he was picked up by a man in a new Pontiac, who cried at seeing

him.

When his needs were made known, he was driven to the house of another

man in Drax Hall, whose hobby was machinery. The introductions were

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