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Stepping across the trough, he tried the back door into the taverna. It opened silently on well-oiled hinges, as he’d hoped it would. During his interview with Theotokis, McGarvey had watched the comings and goings of the Mafia boss’s people. More than half of them had used the back door. It was a regular route for them, apparently, when they wanted to come or go unnoticed by an observer on the docks.

He found himself in a tiny kitchen area, a pantry to his left and a stone urinal trough in a tiny room to the right. A dim light came from behind the copper bar through a swinging door.

McGarvey watched for a moment. Constantine Theotokis was seated alone at a back table.

He was reading a newspaper, a bottle of red wine and a single glass in front of him.

Obviously he was waiting for someone. Probably Karamanlis and Papagos to return and tell him what had happened.

A thick-necked man with an enormous belly leaned against the bar, apparently reading over Theotokis’s shoulder. A double-barrel sawed-off shotgun, its pistol grip stock well used and shining dully in the light, lay on the bar at the man’s back. These two were waiting for trouble.

McGarvey took out his Walther, switched the safety catch to the off position, cocked the hammer and stepped through the swinging doors.

The big man spun around and started to grab for the shotgun, but McGarvey was across to him in two steps, the Walther pointed directly at the man’s face.

“Stand down,” McGarvey said softly.

Theotokis was looking over his shoulder at them, his body absolutely still.

“If need be I’ll kill you both. Believe me, I don’t care one way or the other.”

“Do as he says, Georgios,” Theotokis instructed his bodyguard. “I believe Mr. McGarvey is a man who will listen to reason.”

Chapter 54

McGarvey rode in the back seat of the battered Land Rover, bracing himself as best he could as they bounced slowly over the extremely rough dirt track. Theotokis sat in the front passenger seat while his bodyguard drove. As the crow flew it was barely three and a half miles from Thira to the monastery, but the track led over the spine of the island, rising to an elevation of more than 1,600 feet.

It had been simple to convince them to betray Spranger by bringing McGarvey out here.

It was either that or be killed. Theotokis had had the intelligence to read that much from McGarvey’s eyes.

Georgios the bodyguard, however, had watched McGarvey very closely for any sign of weakness, for an opening, no matter how small, that he could take advantage of. He wasn’t a Santorinian. McGarvey would have been willing to bet that the man had learned his trade on the streets and back alleys of Athens or some other big city.

Over the central massif, the stoney path plunged into a valley, and then started immediately up again to the crest of a much lower hill. They were nearing the top.

“How much farther?” McGarvey asked.

Georgios glanced at his reflection in the rearview mirror, but then turned back to his driving, which was difficult along the narrow track and made more dangerous by the wind and rain.

“The church is just on the other side of this hill,” Theotokis said.

“We will drop you off at the summit, and from there it is only a small walk of perhaps less than a half kilometer.”

“Turn off the headlights, and stop here,” McGarvey said.

Again Georgios looked at him in the rearview mirror. “What?” he grumbled.

McGarvey jammed the barrel of his pistol into the side of the big man’s head. “Do it now,” he ordered.

Georgios complied immediately, and as they lurched to a halt, their lights out, they could suddenly hear the wind shrieking around the volcanic rock outcroppings just above them, and the driven rain hammering against the car.

“Do you mean to kill us?” Theotokis asked.

“If I see you again, I will,” McGarvey said. “Now you and your friend are returning to Thira.”

“As you wish…“

“On foot,” McGarvey said. “You’re both getting out on the passenger side.”

Georgios started to turn, but McGarvey jabbed harder with the pistol barrel. “Keep your hands in plain sight, and your eyes forward.”

“Do as you’re told,” Theotokis sighed. “The little walk will certainly be uncomfortable, but considering the alternatives…“

McGarvey opened his door on the passenger side and directed Theotokis to do the same.

“Carefully now.”

“We will do exactly as you tell us, Mr. McGarvey, you may believe that.” Theotokis got out of the car, and his bodyguard slid across the seat behind him and climbed out.

McGarvey got out and stepped a few feet off the track. “Take off your shoes and socks.”

He had to shout to be heard over the wind.

“That’s inhuman,” Theotokis protested.

“It’s late,” McGarvey shouted. “I’m tired. I’m out of patience. And I’m going to kill again for what has been done to my wife and daughter.”

“I see your point,” the Greek said and he and Georgios removed their shoes and socks.

“Now, go,” McGarvey said.

Georgios stared at him for a long time, as if he were trying to memorize McGarvey’s face, his eyes narrowed, his lips compressed. “Ernst and his people will kill you,”

he said. “And in the morning I shall piss on your body.”

The rain seemed to intensify as the two Greek mafioso picked their way down the rock-strewn path. McGarvey watched until they disappeared into the darkness. In another age he might have killed them for their part in Spranger’s operation. But they were only little people; petty hoods who had no conception of the larger issues, or any desire to know. And McGarvey was finding that he was finally losing his stomach for the business.

He turned and looked up the hill in the direction the Land Rover was pointed. He had lost his stomach for the kill except for Spranger and men of his ilk. He’d been told repeatedly that wherever he turned up trouble would almost certainly develop.

Well, Spranger had lured him here. And this night there would be trouble. The man had stepped over the line. Way over the line.

McGarvey holstered his gun, and got behind the Land Rover’s wheel. The engine ticked over softly, and for a second longer he hesitated, watching in the rearview mirror for any sign that Georgios or his boss had doubled back. A fleeting thought passed through his head: He wondered how he had gotten to this point in his life from where he had started on his parents’ ranch in Kansas.

There were no simple answers, he told himself. Or at least none that he wanted to face just now. But they would come. They would come.

The crest of the hill was about two hundred yards farther up the final slope. He drove to a spot just below it, and picked his way to the top on foot. They knew he was coming and they would be watching for him. He didn’t want to be spotted just yet. But there was little or nothing to be seen except for what appeared to be an indistinct mass below.

He checked his watch. It was a few minutes after four, dawn still about two hours off. Even then, if the weather continued overcast and rainy, he’d have an additional half hour or more of covering darkness.

Back at the Land Rover, he popped the hood and, working by feel alone, found the ignition coil and removed the wire between it and the distributor cap. He pocketed it and the keys. Now no one would be able to take the vehicle, but on the way out he could get it started in less than a half minute if need be. There was no telling what shape Kathleen and Elizabeth might be in. It was possible, even likely, that they would not be able to travel very far on foot.