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‘I could help you.’

‘I’ve got people helping me.’

‘At your newspaper?’

‘No names, Mike. I still don’t know that I can trust you.’

‘Could we meet? I want to talk about the Disciples.’

‘I don’t know... Do you have any proof you could give me? I mean proof of anything you’ve said, of who you are?’

I thought about this. The answer was, no. ‘I think you’d find the murdered man’s daughter proof enough, Sam.’

He sighed. ‘Is she there with you?’

‘She’s right here.’

‘Put her on.’

I passed the phone to Bel. ‘He needs convincing we’re genuine.’

‘Mr Clancy?’ said Bel. ‘You’ve got to help us. If you saw what they did to my father. I mean, they didn’t just kill him, that wasn’t enough for them. I want them caught... whatever it takes. With you or without you, we’re going after them.’ She handed me the receiver.

‘All right,’ said Clancy, ‘let’s have dinner.’

‘Where?’

‘There’s a little Mexican place near Green Lake. Do you know where that is?’

‘I can find it.’ He gave me the name and address of the restaurant. We agreed eight o’clock, and the call ended there.

‘Sounds promising,’ I told Bel, giving her a kiss. ‘Is there a street map in that pile of stuff?’

‘Only a downtown one.’

‘Then let’s go do some shopping.’

It’s very hard to get lost in American cities, so long as you stick to the grid system. You’ll nearly always find the right road, though you may then have trouble finding the right building, since there doesn’t always seem to be much sense to the way street numbers run.

That evening, we got on to Aurora and followed it for miles. I don’t think Bel had ever seen a street so long, and when we came off at Green Lake, Aurora still had a long way to run. Green Lake was busy with joggers and walkers, skateboarders and roller-skaters, and people just enjoying the air.

We’d had a good afternoon, walking the streets, sitting in coffee shops, making new friends. As I’d promised Bel, the coffee here was definitely a class above the stuff they doled out in diners. She’d already had three cups of Starbuck’s, and the caffeine was showing. Every café we sat in, when people heard our accents they wanted to talk to us. So we learned a bit more about the city. Ballard was the district where the descendants of the Norsemen lived. The streets east of the Kingdome were to be avoided. The Mariners were having another lousy season, and were now owned by Nintendo. We’d missed the annual Folklife Festival. There was a drought. A couple of local micro-breweries were producing excellent dark beers... Some of this I already knew, but some of it was new to me, and I appreciated all the information I could get. Jeremiah Provost, after all, was on home ground. It was important to know as much about the city as he did. That way, we’d be less likely to fall into any traps.

So far, Seattle had looked distinctly free from traps. I showed Bel Pike Place Market, pointed out the bicycle cops in Pioneer Square, and steered her around the street people and panhandlers milling around the streets near the waterfront. The pawnshops were doing good business in Seattle. They had guns and guitars in their windows, but I didn’t stop to look. I wasn’t carrying a gun with me, but when we headed off for dinner with Sam Clancy, I hid the pistol under the Trans-Am’s front seat.

The car was sounding ropey. It needed another tune, oil change, and maybe a new exhaust. Probably it also needed a complete rest. We’d pushed it hard, and it had served us well, but we needed it healthy for a while longer.

We’d overestimated the weight of traffic and were early at the restaurant, so we parked the car and walked back down to the lake. Bel pulled off her cowboy boots to walk barefoot on the grass. She looked okay, not tired or stressed out. She was keen for something to happen, for some showdown to arrive, but she managed not to look too impatient.

By the time we got back to the restaurant she declared herself ready for a drink. There was still no sign of Clancy, but a table had been reserved in the name of West, so we took it. It was laid out for three diners. The waiter asked if we wanted a margarita while we waited. Bel nodded that we did.

‘Large or small?’

‘Large,’ she stated, before ploughing through the menu. ‘What’s the difference between all these things?’ she asked me. ‘Tacos, burritos, fajitas, tortillas...?’

‘Ask the waiter.’

But instead she took her very large margarita from him and ran her finger around the rim.

‘It’s salt,’ I said.

‘I knew that.’ Having wiped a portion of the rim clean, she sipped, considered, then took another sip.

There was a man at the front of the restaurant. He’d been studying the takeaway menu when we’d come in, and he was still studying it. I got up from the table and walked over to him.

‘Why don’t you join us?’ I said.

He tried to look puzzled, then gave up and smiled. ‘Have you known all the time?’

‘More or less.’

I led him to the table. Sam Clancy was tall and thin with a cadaverous face and sunken eyes. He was in his late twenties or early thirties, with thinning brown hair combed across his forehead. From his voice, I’d imagined he’d be older. He took Bel’s hand before sitting down. The waiter arrived, and Clancy nodded towards her drink.

‘Looks good,’ he said. The waiter nodded and moved off. ‘So, I guess I wouldn’t make a career working undercover, huh? Do you want some introductory conversation, or shall we get down to work?’

‘Let’s consider ourselves introduced,’ said Bel.

‘Right. So, you want to know what I know. Well, here goes. Jeremiah Provost takes a bit of a back seat these days as far as the day-to-day running of the Disciples is concerned. You know a bit about his background?’

‘Rich family,’ I said, ‘bad college professor.’

‘That’s not a bad precis. Also completely mad. He’s been in and out of expensive clinics. No sign that he does heavy drugs or booze, so there has to be some other reason, like pure mental instability.’

‘So if he’s in the back seat,’ asked Bel, ‘who’s behind the wheel?’

‘On the business side, a man called Nathan. I don’t even know if that’s his first or second name, he’s just called Nathan. You know a couple of reporters got hit on by the Disciples? That was Nathan. He didn’t like them, so he whacked them.’

‘He’s a bit handy then?’ I said.

‘He’s a tough mother. Then there’s Alisha, she’s an earth mother type with just a streak of junta. She runs the people, makes them do what needs to be done.’

‘And this is all out on the Olympic Peninsula?’

Clancy nodded. ‘The most beautiful spot on the continent. But Provost isn’t there much. He’s taken on a Howard Hughes existence in a brand new house up on Queen Anne Hill. Terrific view on to downtown, a few thousand square feet and a swimming pool. Rumour has it Kiefer Sutherland wanted to rent the place when he was here filming The Vanishing. Anyway, that’s where Provost spends his time, surrounded by phones and fax machines and computers, so he can keep in touch with his minions overseas.’

‘There was a fax machine in Oban,’ I recalled, ‘it had at least two Washington State numbers on its memory.’

‘Olympic Peninsula and Queen Anne,’ Clancy stated with authority.

‘Have you ever spoken to Provost?’ Bel asked him.

‘I’ve tried, but he’s ringed with steel.’

‘But who runs the show really, him or his lieutenants?’

‘Now that’s a good question.’