THE CRY OF THE HALIDON BY ROBERT LUDLUM

cases, a Rolleiflex camera, and a number of other things of lesser

value-but not inexpensive. The captain’s deputy wrote as rapidly as he

could on a notepad as Alex rattled off the “missing” items. Twice he

asked for spellings; once the point of his pencil broke. It was a

harried few minutes.

After the interview was over, the captain and his deputy shook hands

with the American geologist and thanked him for his cooperation.

McAuliff watched them get into the police car and waved a friendly

good-bye as the vehicle sped out of the parking lot through the gates.

A quarter of a mile down the road, the captain braked the patrol car to

a stop. He spoke quietly to his deputy.

“Go back through the woods to the beach, mon. Find out who he is with,

who comes to see him.”

The deputy removed his visor cap and the creased khaki shirt of his

uniform with the yellow insignias of his rank, and reached into the back

for a green T-shirt. He slipped it over his head and got out of the

car. He stood on the tarred pavement, unbuckled his belt, and slid his

holster off the leather strip. He handed it through the window to the

captain.

The captain reached down below the dashboard and pulled out a rumpled

black baseball cap that was discolored with age and human sweat. He

gave it to his deputy and laughed.

“We all look alike, mon. Aren’t you the fella who alla time sell

cocoruru?”

“Alla time John Crow, mon. Mongoose him not.”

The deputy grinned and started toward the woods beyond the bank of the

pavement, where there was a rusty, torn wire fence. It was the

demarcation of the Bengal Court property.

The patrol car roared off down the road. The prefect captain of the

Falmouth police was in a hurry. He had to drive to Halfinoon Bay and

meet a seaplane that was flying in from Kingston.

Charles Whitehall stood in the tall grass on a ridge overlooking the

road from Priory-on-the-Sea. Under his arm was the black archive case,

clamped shut and held together with three-inch strips of adhesive. It

was shortly after twelve noon, and McAuliff would be driving up the road

soon.

Alone, Charles had insisted on it. That is, he had insisted before he

had heard McAuliff s words-spoken curtly, defensively-that Barak Moore

was dead.

Bramwell Moore, schoolboy churn from so many years ago in

Savanna-la-Mar, dead from Jamaican bullets.

Jamaican bullets.

Jamaican police bullets. That was better. In adding the

establishmentarian, there was a touch of compassionate logic-a

contradiction in terms, thought Whitehall; logic was neither good nor

evil, merely logic. Still, words defined logic and words could be

interpreted thus the mendacity of all official statistics: self-serving

logic.

His mind was wandering and he was annoyed with himself. Barak had

known, as he knew, that they were not playing chicken-in-de-kitchen any

longer. There was no bandanna-headed mother wielding a straw broom,

chasing child and fowl out into the yard, laughing and scolding

simultaneously. This was a different sort of insurgence.

Bandanna-headed mothers were replaced by visor-capped men of the state;

straw brooms became highpowered rifles. The chickens were ideas . . .

far more deadly to the uniformed servants of the state than the loose

feathers were to the bandanna-headed servants of the family.

Barak dead.

It seemed incredible. Yet not without its positive effect.

Barak had not understood the problems of their island; therefore, he had

not understood the proper solutions.

Barak’s solutions were decades away.

First there had to be strength. The many led by a very strong, militant

few.

Perhaps one.

In the downhill distance there was a billow of dust; a station wagon was

traveling much too fast over the old dirt road.

McAuliff was anxious too.

Charles stared back across the field to the entrance drive of the house.

He had requested that his Drax Hall host be absent between the hours of

twelve and three. No explanations were given, and no questions asked.

A messiah had returned. That was enough.

“Here it is,” said McAuliff, standing in front of Whitehall in the cool

toolshed, holding the smaller archive case in his left hand. “But

before you start fiddling around, I want a couple of things clear.”

Charles Whitehall stared at the American. “Conditions are superfluous.

We both know what must be done.”

“What’s not superfluous,” countered Alex, “is that you understand

there’ll be no … unilateral decisions. This isn’t your private war,

Charley-mon.”

“Are you trying to sound like Barak?”

“Let’s say I’m looking after his interests. And mine.”

“Yours I can comprehend. Why his? They’re not compatible, you know.”

“They’re not even connected.”

“So why concern yourself?” Whitehall shifted his eyes to the archive

case. He realized that his breathing had become audible; his anxiety

was showing, and again he was annoyed with himself. “Let me have that,

please.”

“You asked me a question. I’m going to answer it first,” replied

McAuliff. “I don’t trust you, Charley. You’ll use anyone. Anything.

Your kind always does. You make pacts and agreements with anything that

moves, and you do it very well. You’re so flexible you meet yourself

around corners. But all the time it’s Sturm und Drang, and I’m not much

for that.”

“Oh, I see. You subscribe to Barak’s canefield paratroopers. The chaos

of the Fidelisti, where the corporals spit and chew cigars and rape the

generals’ daughters so society is balanced. Three-year plans and

five-year plans and crude uneducated bullies managing the affairs of

state. Into disaster, I might add. Don’t be a fool, McAuliff. You’re

better than that.”

“Cut it out, Charley. You’re not on a podium addressing your chiefs of

staff,” said Alex wearily. “I don’t believe in that oversimplification

any more than I believe in your two plus-two solutions. Pull in your

hardware. I’m still the head of this survey. I can fire you in a

minute. Very publicly.

Now, that might not get you off the island, but your situation won’t be

the same.”

“What guarantee do I have that you won’t force me out?”

“Not much of one. You’ll just have to take my word that I want those

bastards off my back as badly as you do. For entirely different

reasons.”

“Somehow I think you’re lying.”

“I wouldn’t gamble on that.”

Whitehall searched McAuliff s eyes. “I won’t. I said this conversation

was superfluous, and it is. Your conditions are accepted because of

what must be done…. Now, may I have that case, please?”

Sam Tucker sat on the terrace, alternately reading the newspaper and

glancing over the sea wall to the beach, where Alison and James Ferguson

were in deck chairs near the water. Every now and then, when the

dazzling Caribbean sun had heated their skin temperatures sufficiently,

Alison and the young botanist waded into the water.

They did not splash or jump or dive; they simply fell onto the calm

surface, as though exhausted. It seemed to be an exercise of weariness

for both of them.

There was no joy surla plage, thought Sam, who nevertheless picked up a

pair of binoculars whenever Alison began paddling about and scanned the

immediate vicinity around which she swam. He focused on any swimmer who

came near her; there were not many, and all were recognizable as guests

of Bengal Court.

None was a threat, and that’s what Sam Tucker was looking for.

Ferguson had returned from Montego Bay a little before noon, just after

Alex had driven off to Drax Hall. He had wandered onto the connecting

terraces, startling Sam and the temporarily disoriented Lawrence, who

had been sitting on the sea wall talking quietly about the dead Barak

Moore.

They had been stunned because Ferguson had been expansive about his

day-off plans in Mo’Bay.

Ferguson arrived looking haggard, a nervous wreck. The assumption was

that he had overindulged and was hung to his fuzzy-cheeked gills; the

jokes were along this line, and he accepted them with a singular lack of

humor. But Sam Tucker did not subscribe to the explanation. James

Ferguson was not ravaged by the whiskey input of the night before; he

was a frightened young man who had not slept.

HIs fear, thought Sam, was not anything he cared to discuss;

indeed, he would not even talk about his night in Montego, brushing it

off as a dull, unrewarding interlude. He appeared only to want company,

as if there was immediate security in the familiar. He seemed to cling

to the presence of Alison Booth, offering to fetch and carry…. A

schoolboy’s crush or a gay’s devotion? Neither fit, for he was neither.

He was afraid.

Very inconsistent behavior, concluded Sam Tucker.

Tucker suddenly heard the quiet, rapid footsteps behind him and turned.

Lawrence, fully clothed now, came across the terrace from the west lawn.

The black revolutionary walked over to Sam and knelt-not in fealty, but

in a conscious attempt to conceal his large frame behind the sea wall.

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