Henzigger shrugged and stuck his hand back in his pocket. ‘Can we go somewhere and talk? This is a bit public for my tastes.’
Riley was concerned about how he’d found her. She wasn’t in the phone book and she didn’t give out her home address, having learned from colleagues long ago that unhappy subjects of the criminal kind had a knack of finding out where journalists lived, and might choose to make late calls to protest their innocence or anger.
‘Here’s fine,’ she said. ‘Talk about what?’
‘I’ve been looking for you. I know you’re an investigative reporter — I’ve read some of your stuff. You heard what they said about me?’ His right eye flickered slightly as he spoke. It was an almost imperceptible movement, which Riley guessed wouldn’t have been visible if he hadn’t been standing so close.
Riley didn’t want to spoil his day by telling him that he hadn’t been nationwide news, but said anyway, ‘Well, I heard you were almost a guest of Her Majesty. False passport, wasn’t it? Bit unwise, in view of the current state of things.’
Henzigger looked sour. ‘It was a mistake,’ he muttered. ‘It was all a mistake. Did you know I’ve never been charged? They let me sweat it out for over a year, then dropped the case.’ She had to think hard about that, before guessing that he wasn’t talking about being pulled in by Immigration, but his problems before that.
‘Isn’t that a relief?’
‘Oh, sure.’ It came out with a hint of sarcasm, and he wiped a hand across his face. It was a big hand and looked as if it could do a lot of damage. The nails were clean, but the skin was rough and deeply tanned, suggesting Henzigger spent a lot of time outdoors. ‘Look, I know you don’t have any reason to trust me or nothing. But I need to talk. Can we get a coffee somewhere? Somewhere public — you choose.’
Riley nodded. In spite of herself, how could she not be intrigued? Part of it was professional, wanting to know Henzigger’s story. The other part was a growing sense that this man might know something important about Sir Kenneth Myburghe. Otherwise, why had he been there?
‘This way,’ she said, and led him along the street to a café where they could talk safely without being isolated. She let him place the order and sat down at a corner table. When he joined her, she didn’t waste time in small talk. ‘What do you want from me?’
He tasted his coffee, then reached for more sugars, tearing off the paper ends with a jerk and pouring the contents into his cup. He flicked the paper fragments away. ‘I was set up, you know? That stuff about unauthorised contacts and me being too close to the cartel was pure crap.’ He looked sour, as if he was bubbling with suppressed rage. ‘You know how it is. Over the years I could’ve taken back-handers to kill stories, and cut into some deals big enough to pay off the Bolivian national debt. And nobody would’ve known. Not Washington, not Congress, not the Department of Justice — nobody. But I didn’t. You wanna know why? Because it didn’t interest me. I didn’t become a newsman because I liked the retirement plan or I figured the industry had a good ethics programme. I did it because I knew a college buddy killed himself on coke — and that was before it got fashionable. He fell in with a bad crowd on campus who liked to ‘experiment’. Only they didn’t know what they were getting into and they got sold some shit cut with face powder. His first shot and he dies in agony. And he wasn’t the only one. I figured right then that it was going to get worse and maybe I could help make a difference by working my way up and exposing some of the underbelly of the drugs market.’ A little bubble had formed on his lip with this impassioned claim, and it popped when he clamped his mouth shut.
‘So how come you’re still walking around?’
‘Because they couldn’t prove anything. They listened to the rumours, they tracked down everyone I ever met and they talked to every junkie who had a deal to cut. It’s no surprise they got the story they wanted to hear.’
‘But?’
‘In the end they decided to drop it. And you know why? Because it never would have stood up in court. Trouble is, shit sticks. After that I couldn’t get hired to write page numbers.’ His look of disgust deepened at the memory of how he’d been treated and Riley felt a flicker of sympathy. But it didn’t explain why he’d been in the woods at the shoot in Gloucestershire, or why he was now sitting in front of her. Nor how he’d tracked her down.
‘How did you find me?’
He took his time answering, as if he was marshalling his words to make sure they came out right. ‘I need your help. I need someone I can trust. To be honest, I’d never heard of you until I picked up the name of your military cop pal, Palmer.’
‘In relation to what?’
He gave a thin smile. ‘Sir Kenneth Myburghe. Who else?’ When Riley remained blank-faced, he continued, ‘I took a drive in the country and followed the shooting party Myburghe was supposed to be in. I knew straight away he wasn’t there, though, and figured it was a decoy set-up. That’s where I saw you and Palmer.’
‘How did you get our names?’ Weller had told her that Henzigger had Palmer’s name in his wallet at Immigration, suggesting he knew the name before entering the country. But that didn’t explain how he’d got hold of it.
He seemed to read her mind. ‘I still got friends, don’t worry. They found out Palmer was running protection on Myburghe and got his name through the licence plate number. Then they hooked onto you. The rest was easy.’
‘What’s your interest in Myburghe?’
‘It’s because of him that I was set up.’ He sat back suddenly, looking tired, as if he’d been harbouring the words for a long time and it had cost him a great deal to get them out. He shook his head. ‘That sounds lame, right?’
Riley agreed. It did. It also sounded like every crook who’d ever been caught with his nose in the trough, making excuses. Criminals were always innocent and crooked cops were victims of a frame-up. It was an old song.
‘How could he have been involved? He’s a British diplomat.’
He looked away. ‘Oh, he’s involved, believe me. It’s why I came over here. I fouled up coming in on false papers, but it gets to be a habit in my line of work. By the time I realised, I was in line at Immigration and couldn’t get to my real ID. I figured, what the hell, it was nothing that couldn’t be sorted out.’ He shrugged fatalistically. ‘I was wrong. In the end someone at the embassy made a call and they let me go. I guess they knew it wasn’t worth the hassle.’
He made it sound so simple, Riley almost found herself believing him. She had never used a false ID, so had to take it on trust that if you did so all the time, you might reach for the wrong one under stress. But would Immigration really allow someone who’d used false papers to go free on the say-so of the US Embassy?
‘How does this affect me?’
‘You were out near Myburghe’s place in — where is it, Gloucestershire.’ He pronounced it the American way, with staccato syllables. ‘At the shoot. Are you doing a piece on him? You should — it’d make your hair curl.’
She waited for him to elaborate, but he didn’t. He guessed he was referring to Colombia. As a journalist, Henzigger would have made it his business to know all the key players in the area he was covering, putting names to faces, sorting out the friendly from the hostile. It was a subtle balancing-act, having to mix and meet on one hand with people from embassies and trade missions, and then going off to rub shoulders with men and women who wouldn’t know a canapé from a can of beans.
‘What were you doing in the woods?’ she asked.
He smiled crookedly, a thin sliver of charm breaking through the angry veneer. ‘That wasn’t my finest hour, was it? I’m getting too old for all that backwoods stuff. They nearly had me.’ The expression dropped away just as quickly as it had come. ‘I was just doing some groundwork. I got past the guards but I didn’t expect you and your partner to roll up. Is he for real? That was some fancy gunplay. I thought there was strict etiquette to hunting over here.’