‘Right, let’s get out of here.’ Curry closed the truck door and opened the gates. ‘Belov’s people will clear up.’
She handed him the Beretta and he slipped it in the holdall. ‘Everything okay?’
‘If you mean did I kill Sharp and Silsev, yes. What with Ashimov, London’s not going to be a favoured KGB posting.’
‘I expect not.’ They were approaching a telephone kiosk. He said, ‘Give me a minute.’
A few seconds later the newsdesk at The Times received the call claiming responsibility for the deaths of Major Ivan Silsev and Frank Sharp by January 30 as a direct response to their involvement in the drug trade.
Curry paused on the corner of Camden High Street and hailed a cab. ‘You all right?’ he asked.
‘Never better.’
‘Good. Rupert’s got tickets for Sunset Boulevard. We’re eating at Daphne’s afterwards. Does that suit?’
‘Fantastic. Just get me home. As a great writer once said, a bath and a change of clothes and I can go on forever.’
A cab slid in to the kerb and he opened the door for her.
When Grace entered the piano bar at the Dorchester it was just before seven. Giuliano the manager met her with pleasure, kissed her hand and took her down to the far corner beside the piano where Lang, Curry and Belov waited. She looked quite spectacular in a black beaded shift, black stockings and shoes.
Belov waved off a waiter and started to pour from a bottle of Cristal champagne. ‘You look wonderful.’
At that moment Giuliano came up. ‘The late edition of the Standard. I thought you might like to see it. A double shooting in Highgate by some terrorist group. Isn’t it terrible? Not safe to be out these days.’
He walked away. Rupert Lang laughed; even Tom Curry was having difficulty keeping a straight face. Belov raised his glass, looked at Grace and she smiled slightly.
‘What can I say after that except to you, my friends.’ He toasted them.
BEIRUT 1994 (#ulink_8dd55c44-a369-5dcc-a523-df2d638fd7af)
6 (#ulink_feed433c-c4c0-50e2-95e9-b5d6f36d7550)
The Lebanon was a kind of Arab Belfast, a setting for destruction unparalleled in modern world history. The country had once been the Switzerland of the Middle East, with Beirut its capital as popular with the wealthy of the world as the south of France, and yet since 1975 when serious fighting had broken out between members of the Christian Phalangist Party and the Muslim Militia, only death and destruction had followed.
In his room on the fourth floor of the Al Bustan Hotel Sean Dillon poured out a small Bushmills from the bottle he had brought with him. He’d need to conserve it. He was just adding a little mineral water when there was a knock on the door. He put down his glass and went to open it. Hannah Bernstein stood there, wearing a linen suit the colour of pale straw and tinted glasses.
‘Ah, Miss Cooper,’ he said.
‘Mr Gaunt.’
‘Come in.’
He went back to the window and picked up his drink and she joined him.
‘It looks quite a place,’ she said.
‘Used to be the most sophisticated place in the Middle East. Nearly three million people, Christians, Muslim and Druse.’
‘And what went wrong?’
‘Emerging Arab fundamentalism. It was originally French, which gave it a very sophisticated base, then in seventy-five the Christians and Muslims got stuck into each other, then Palestinian refugees moved in and made things worse. After that, the Israelis, then the Syrians, then the Israelis again, but there’s always that Arab fundamentalism eating away at the heart of things in the Middle East. Don’t know the answer.’ He raised his glass. ‘Here endeth the lesson.’
‘Very unhealthy,’ she said. ‘Poor old Dillon. You’re a doer, not a philosopher. Let’s remember that and get on with it.’
‘I’ll do my best.’
‘Now, if you’ll put your jacket on and come next door to my room Walid Khasan is on his way up.’
‘Why didn’t you say?’
He picked up a lightweight navy-blue blazer and followed her next door. Her room was exactly like his and he checked the French windows to the terrace. There was a knock at the door. When Hannah opened it, a man in his mid-forties stood there. He wore a crumpled white suit, had long black hair, a wrinkled face and olive skin.
‘Good afternoon. I am Walid Khasan.’ He spoke with a strong foreign accent.
‘Amy Cooper,’ Hannah told him, ‘and this is Harry Gaunt. Do come in.’
‘Please, this is not necessary,’ he said as he entered and placed a briefcase on the table. ‘I am very well aware of who you are, Miss Bernstein, and you, Mr Dillon.’
She closed the door and Dillon said in fluent Arabic, ‘So Ferguson filled you in totally?’
‘Yes, but then he usually does,’ Walid Khasan replied in the same language.
‘Good.’ Dillon switched back to English. ‘I’m afraid the Chief Inspector has no Arabic.’
‘Hebrew only, I’m afraid,’ Hannah said.
Walid Khasan replied at once in excellent Hebrew. ‘Oh, I can speak that also, but it is not to be recommended in Beirut. The Israelis are not popular here.’
‘What a pity,’ she said in Hebrew. ‘I’ll remember that, of course. We have enough problems.’
Walid Khasan opened the briefcase, took out two Walther PPK pistols with silencers and several clips of ammunition. ‘I trust these will hold you. I can supply heavier artillery, Mr Dillon, if necessary, but I’ll require notice.’
‘You’ll get it when necessary.’ Dillon checked the Walther and put it in his waistband at the rear and an extra clip in his blazer pocket. Hannah put hers in her shoulder bag.
‘So,’ Dillon said, ‘what about our friends from Belfast?’
Walid Khasan opened the French windows and sat down in a wicker chair. ‘Francis Callaghan is staying here on the floor below and uses his own name. He’s supposed to represent an Irish electronics firm from Cork. I’ve checked and the firm is genuine. They specialize in hotel contracts, security and that sort of thing.’
Hannah leaned on the rail and Dillon sat opposite him. ‘And Quinn?’
‘I’ve seen him only once and he certainly isn’t staying here.’
‘What happened?’ Hannah asked.
‘I’ve had Callaghan followed by people working for me. He seems to have spent his time as any tourist would. Visiting historic remains, shopping.’ He smiled. ‘It may surprise you, but there is still a certain normality here.’
‘And he’s done nothing out of the ordinary?’ she asked.