THE CRY OF THE HALIDON BY ROBERT LUDLUM

cradle of the earth.

The sounds of the screeching bat and parrot and tanager intruded on the

forest’s undertones; jungle rats and the mongoose could be heard

intermittently in their unseen games of death. Every now and then there

was the scream of a wild pig, pursuing or in panic.

And far in the distance, in the clearing of the riverbank, were the

mountains, preceded by sudden stretches of untamed grassland. Strangely

gray with streaks of deep green and blue and yellow-rain and hot

sunlight in an unceasing interchange.

All this fifteen minutes by air from the gaudy strips of Montego.

Unbelievable.

McAuliff had made contact with the north-coast contacts of British

Intelligence. There were five, and he had reached each one. They had

given him another reason to consign Hammond to the despised realm of the

manipulator. For the Intelligence people were of small comfort. They

stated perfunctorily their relief at his reporting, accepted his

explanations of routine geographic chores that kept him occupied, and

assured him-with more sound than conviction-that they were at his beck

and call.

One man, the MI-6 contact from Port Maria, drove down the coast to

Bengal Court to meet with Alex. He was a portly black merchant who

limited his identification to the single name of Garvey. He insisted on

a late-night rendezvous in the tiny bar of the motel, where he was known

as a liquor distributor.

It did not take McAuliff long to realize that Garvey, ostensibly there

to assure him of total cooperation and safety, was actually

interrogating him for a report that would be sent back to London. Garvey

had the stench and look of a practiced informer about him. The stench

was actual: the man suffered from body odor, which could not be

concealed by liberal applications of bay rum. The look was in his

eyes-ferretlike, and a touch bloodshot. Garvey was a man who sought out

opportunities and enjoyed the fruits thereof.

His questions were precise, McAuliff s answers apparently not

satisfactory. And all questions led to the one question, the only one

that mattered: Any progress concerning the Halidon?

Anything?

Unknown observers, strangers in the distance … a signal, a sign-no

matter how remote or subtle?

Anything?

“Absolutely nothing” was a hard reply for Garvey to accept.

What about the men in the green Chevrolet who had followed him in

Kingston? Tallon had traced them to the anthropologist Walter Piersall.

Piersall had been a white agitator… common knowledge. Piersall’had

telephoned McAuliff… the Courtleigh switchboard cooperated with MI-6.

What did Piersall want?

Alex claimed he did not–could not-know, as Piersall had never reached

him. An agitator, white or black, was an unpredictable bearer of

unpredictable news. Predictably, this agitator had had an accident. It

might be presumed from what little McAuliff had been told by Tallon and

others-that Piersall had been closing in on Dunstone, Limited; without a

name, of course. If so, he, McAuliff, was a logical person to reach.

But this was conjecture; there was no way to confirm it as fact.

What had happened to the late-arriving Samuel Tucker?

Where had he been?

Drinking and whoring in Montego Bay. Alex was sorry he had caused so

much trouble about Sam; he should have known better. Sam Tucker was an

incorrigible wanderer, albeit the best soil analyst in the business.

The perspiring Garvey was bewildered, frustrated by his confusion. There

was too much activity for McAuliff to remain so insulated.

Alex reminded the liaison in short, coarse words that there was far too

much survey activity-logistical, employment, above all government

paperwork-for him not to be insulated. What the hell did Garvey think

he had been doing?

The interview lasted until 1:30 in the morning. Before leaving, the

MI-6 contact reached into his filthy briefcase and withdrew a metallic

object the size of a pen-and-pencil case, with its approximate

thickness. It was a miniaturized radio-signal transmitter, set to a

specific frequency. There were three thick, tiny glass lights across

the top of the small panel. The first, explained Garvey, was a white

light that indicated sufficient power for sending when turned on-not

unlike the illuminated filigree of a strobe light. The second, a red

light, informed the operator that his signal was being transmitted. The

third, a green light, confirmed the reception of the signal by a

corresponding device within a radius of twenty-five miles. There would

be two simple codes, one for normal conditions, one for emergency. Code

One was to be transmitted twice daily, once every twelve hours. Code

Two, when aid was needed.

The receiving set, said Garvey, was capable of defining the signal

within a diameter of one thousand yards by means of an attached

radarscope with terrain coordinates. Nothing was left to chance.

Unbelievable.

The incredible assumption, therefore, was that the Intelligence men

would never be more than twenty-five miles away, and Hammond’s

“guaranteed” safety factor was the even more ridiculous assumption that

the jungle distance could be traversed and the exact location pinpointed

within a time period that precluded danger.

R. C. Hammond was a winner, thought McAuliff

“Is this everything?” McAuliff asked the sweating Garvey. “This goddamn

metal box is our protection?”

“There are additional precautions,” Garvey replied enigmatically. “I

told you, nothing is left to chance-”

“What the hell does that mean?”

“It means you are protected. I am not authorized to speak further. As

a matter of fact, mon, I do not know anything further. I am, like you,

merely an employee. I do what I am told to do, say what I am told to

say…. And now I have said enough. I have an uncomfortable drive back

to Port Maria.”

The man named Garvey rose from the table, picked up his tattered

briefcase, and waddled toward the door of the dimly lit room. Before

leaving, however, he could not help him self He stopped at the bar,

where one of the motel’s managers was standing, and solicited an order

of liquor.

McAuliff shook his thoughts loose as he heard the voices of Ruth and

Peter Jensen behind him. He was sitting on a dried mudflat above the

riverbank; the Jensens were talking as they walked across the clearing

from their bivouac tent. It amazed Alex-they amazed him. They walked

so casually, so normally, over the chopped Cock Pit ground cover; one

might think they had entered Regent’s Park for a stroll.

“Majestic place in its way, rather,” said Peter, removing the

ever-present pipe from between his teeth.

“It is the odd combination of color and substance, don’t you think,

Alex?” Ruth had her arm linked through her husband’s. A noonday walk

down the Strand. “One is so very sensuous, the other so massive and

intricate.”

“You make the terms sound contradictory, darling.

They’re not, you know.” Peter chuckled as his wife feigned minor

exasperation.

“He has an incorrigibly pornographic mind, Alex. Pay no attention.

Still, he’s right. It is majestic. And positively dense. Where’s

Alison?”

“With Ferguson and Sam. They’re testing the water.”

“Jimbo-mon’s going to use up all of his film, I dare say,” muttered

Peter as he helped his wife to sit down next to McAuliff “That new

camera he brought back from Montego has consumed him.”

“Frightfully expensive, I should think.” Ruth smoothed the unsmoothable

cloth of her bivouac slacks, like a woman not used to being without a

skirt. Or a woman who was nervous. “For a boy who’s always saying he’s

bone-stony, quite an extravagance.”

“He didn’t buy it; he borrowed it,” said Alex. “From a friend he knew

last year in Port Antonio.”

“That’s right, I forgot.” Peter relit his pipe as he spoke.

“You were all here last year, weren’t you?”

“Not all, Peter. Just Sam and me; we worked for Kaiser.

And Ferguson. He was with the Craft Foundation. No one else.”

” Well, Charles is Jamaican,” intruded Ruth nervously.

Surely he flies back and forth. Heaven knows, he must be rich enough.”

:’That’s a rather brass speculation, luv.”

“Oh, come off it, Peter. Alex knows what I mean.”

McAuliff laughed. “I don’t think he worries about money.

He’s yet to submit his bills for the survey outfits. I have an idea

they’re the most expensive in Harrod’s Safari Shop.”

“Perhaps@ he’s embarrassed” said Peter, smiling. “He looks as though he

had jumped right off the cinema screen. The black hunter; very

impressive image, if somewhat contrived.”

“Now you’re the one who’s talking brass, luv. Charles is impressive.”

Ruth turned to Alex. “My overage Lochinvar is green with envy.”

“That camera’s damn well new … not the sort of thing one lends, I

shouldn’t think.” Peter looked at McAuliff as he spoke the non sequitur.

” Depends on the friend, I guess,” replied Alex, aware that Peter was

implying something beyond his words. “Ferguson can be a likable guy.”

“Very, ” added Ruth. “And so helpless, somehow. Except when he’s over

his equipment. Then he’s positively a whiz.”

“Which is all I really care about.” McAuliff addressed this judgment to

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