Louisa breathed out at last, and stepped away from the car.
“Explosion” was an exaggeration, but stilclass="underline" there’d been petrol involved, and plenty of timber.
While the barn burned, River lay in the snow against a hummock, feeling his back grow colder, his front warmer, and knowing that the two bad actors, Lars and whoever, were heading along the footpath to the coast. One bullet wasn’t going to be enough, not out in the open. And somewhere in the flames in front of him, or in the black angry smoke roiling into the sky, J.K. Coe was taking leave of the planet.
If they’d packed up and left the scene, it meant their job was done. Which meant Louisa and the boy, Min Harper’s kid, were presumably ticked boxes by now; their lives scored off the register.
He didn’t want to think about Louisa being dead.
For once, just once, he’d like an op that didn’t turn into some catastrophic clusterfuck.
He used Coe’s phone, because his own was out of charge, and called Shirley.
“Where the hell are you?”
“Who the hell wants to know?”
“It’s me. River.”
“Why’ve you got Coe’s phone?”
River said nothing.
Shirley said, “Shit.”
“Where are you?” he said again.
“Heading back to the main road,” she said, her voice quieter than normal. “There’s a fire up on the hill.”
“That’ll be me.”
The flames were still biting chunks out of the morning when he reached the road to find Shirley approaching on foot. Which didn’t bode well for Roddy Ho’s car, but, never high on River’s list of priorities, Ho’s vehicular welfare was even less a concern than usual right now.
Shirley was holding something wrapped in kitchen foil.
“What happened to Coe?”
River gestured with his head back up the hillside, to the burning barn.
She looked that way, and he couldn’t read the expression on her face. Sometimes, Shirley Dander was an ABC. The rest, she was lost in translation.
She said, “Did you find Harkness?”
“Uh-huh.”
“And?”
River shrugged.
“What about Louisa?”
“Don’t know yet.”
Shirley said, “Well. She might be okay.” Then she handed him the foil package. “Here. I got you this.”
“What is it?”
“Sausage sandwich.”
It was warm to the touch.
He said, “You only brought one? What was Coe going to eat?”
She didn’t reply, and he thought, yeah, right. She’d brought it for Coe.
After a while he rang Lamb, and gave him the story.
Martin Kreutzmer liked to read The Guardian, because it kept him in touch with that strain of self-lacerating smugness which hoped to inherit the earth, but would have no clue what to do with it. Peter Kahlmann, on the other hand—his primary cover—was a Daily Mail man through and through, locked in a constant tussle between resentment and prurience, and calling it victory either way. So it was the Mail that Martin—Peter—was reading in Fischer’s, looking for a story that wasn’t there. This was the most interesting kind. When a story was on the front pages you looked for the holes in the headlines, hoping for a glimpse of the truth they covered up. When the story dropped from view altogether, you wondered what diplomatic origami had been at work, folding the paper so it vanished between the creases.
So: a few days ago there’d been some drug-related killings in Pembrokeshire, which was in Wales—bodies in a burned-out barn, a dead woman in a wood. But the speed with which the story had evaporated made Martin suspect Spook Street activity; either an undercover frolic gone enthusiastically wrong, or something deeper. Wales wasn’t uncivilised, if you took a charitable view, but the dangerous edge of things was always closer than it looked. Martin had worked undercover, and like anyone who’d done time wearing the opposition’s coat he still woke sweating some nights, undone by the fear that he’d betrayed himself in some tiny way. You could be in your own home, your own bed, but there were bandit eyes on you always, and they never blinked, never looked away. After a while, you forgot that other people didn’t know this.
He shook his head to clear these thoughts, and was back in Fischer’s, on the foothills of Marylebone High Street, the Mail a rolled-up truncheon next to him; his lunch freshly delivered to the table.
“Some things few people get to witness, and most of them wish they hadn’t. Like jazz dancing. Or the pope’s sex face.”
A large man in a dirty overcoat had appeared out of nowhere.
“Or Martin Kreutzmer eating a salad.”
He dropped heavily into the seat opposite Martin, and fixed him with a malevolent glare.
Martin navigated a forkful of greenery into his mouth, and didn’t speak until he was ready. “Jackson Lamb,” he said at last. “It’s been a long time. Though not quite long enough.”
The waiter arrived. “Can I—”
“No.”
“We’re fine,” said Martin. “Thank you.” The waiter left, and he said, “There’s something different about you. Wait—I know. You got fat and old.”
“And you had a stroke.”
Martin nodded pleasantly, like a man doing ‘relaxed’ in charades. Only three people knew he’d had a stroke, or that was what he’d thought two seconds ago. It had been a minor thing, a slight tug on the curtain, but enough for a glimpse, if not of what lay beyond, at least of the fact that there was a beyond, and it wasn’t going anywhere. Maybe that’s why he’d been taking such relish in running Hannah Weiss. But it was also the reason he’d slowed down taking some of life’s corners.
“Which’ll be why you joined the salad-tossers.”
“It’s not a strict diet,” said Martin, who’d been known to order the schnitzel. “But I’m watching my cholesterol.”
“I can’t imagine what that’s like,” Lamb said. “Losing control of your bodily functions.”
He farted, presumably to demonstrate total dominance over his own.
An elderly couple two tables away stared in horror.
Martin Kreutzmer laid knife and fork aside. “Is this what passes for covert activities these days? No wonder they put you out to grass.”
“Is that what they did to me? I’ve been wondering.”
He reached across and plucked a crouton from Martin’s plate, examined it in what might have been curiosity, then put it back.
“Because it still feels like the Wild West some days. Especially when a bandit’s been branding my cattle.”
Martin used his fork to manoeuvre the crouton Lamb had been fondling, and the greenery it nestled among, to the side of his plate.
He hadn’t laid eyes on Lamb since Berlin, early ’90s, where Lamb had enjoyed all sorts of reputations, each of them circling one fixed point: you didn’t fuck with his joes. Years had gone by, a lot of water pissed into from different bridges, but Lamb had the look of a man whose fixed points stayed where he’d put them. And Martin, yes, had branded one of Lamb’s cattle. The fact that he’d done it to keep his own joe safe would melt no ice. Nor did he have to be aware of Lamb’s reputation to see the violence currently churning below his surface. “Current mood,” as the kids said: “fuck off and die.”
He said, “I always thought you’d end up running the Park. If they didn’t stick your head on a pike, that is.”
“They’re still sharpening the blade. And you’re changing the subject.”
“I haven’t crossed your borders, old man. Wherever those borders happen to be.” He speared a ribbon of cucumber with his fork. “I’m out of the game. Maybe you hadn’t heard.”