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Sean Dillon 3-Book Collection 1: Eye of the Storm, Thunder Point, On Dangerous Ground

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2019
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‘There’s still your friend Flood, in London.’

‘I know and he’ll pull out all the stops, but that takes time and we don’t have much to spare.’

Devlin nodded. ‘Right, son, you leave it with me and I’ll see what I can do.’ He glanced at his watch. ‘One o’clock. We’ll have a sandwich and perhaps a Bushmills together and I suggest you go to your Lear jet and hare back to London. I’ll be in touch, believe me, the minute I have something.’

Dillon parked round the corner from Jack Harvey’s funeral business in Whitechapel and walked, the briefcase in one hand. Everything was beautifully discreet down to the bell push that summoned the day porter to open the door.

‘Mr Harvey,’ Dillon lied cheerfully. ‘He’s expecting me.’

‘Down the hall past the chapels of rest and up the stairs. His office is on the first floor. What was the name, sir?’

‘Hilton.’ Dillon looked around at the coffins on display, the flowers. ‘Not much happening.’

‘Trade you mean.’ The porter shrugged. ‘That all comes in the back way.’

‘I see.’

Dillon moved down the hall, pausing to glance into one of the chapels of rest, taking in the banked flowers, the candles. He stepped in and looked down at the body of a middle-aged man neatly dressed in a dark suit, hands folded, the face touched with make-up.

‘Poor sod,’ Dillon said and went out.

At the reception desk, the porter picked up a phone. ‘Miss Myra? A visitor. A Mr Hilton, says he has an appointment.’

Dillon opened the door to Harvey’s outer office and moved in. There were no office furnishings, just a couple of potted plants and several easy chairs. The door to the inner office opened and Myra entered. She wore skin-tight black trews, black boots and a scarlet three-quarter-length kaftan. She looked very striking.

‘Mr Hilton?’

‘That’s right.’

‘I’m Myra Harvey. You said you had an appointment with my uncle.’

‘Did I?’

She looked him over in a casual way and behind him the door opened and Billy Watson came in. The whole thing was obviously pre-arranged. He leaned against the door, suitably menacing in a black suit, arms folded.

‘Now what’s your game?’ she said.

‘That’s for Mr Harvey.’

‘Throw him out, Billy,’ she said and turned to the door.

Billy put one rough hand on Dillon’s shoulder. Dillon’s foot went all the way down the right leg stamping on the instep, he pivoted and struck sideways with clenched fist, the knuckles on the back of the hand connecting with Billy’s temple. Billy cried out in pain and fell back into one of the chairs.

‘He’s not very good, is he?’ Dillon said.

He opened his briefcase and took out ten one-hundred-dollar bills with a rubber band round them and threw them at Myra. She missed the catch and had to bend to pick them up. ‘Would you look at that,’ she said. ‘And brand new.’

‘Yes, new money always smells so good,’ Dillon said. ‘Now tell Jack an old friend would like to see him with more of the same.’

She stood there looking at him for a moment, eyes narrowed, then she turned and opened the door to Harvey’s office. Billy tried to get up and Dillon said, ‘I wouldn’t advise it.’

Billy subsided as the door opened and Myra appeared. ‘All right, he’ll see you.’

The room was surprisingly businesslike with walls panelled in oak, a green carpet in Georgian silk and a gas fire that almost looked real, burning in a steel basket on the hearth. Harvey sat behind a massive oak desk smoking a cigar.

He had the thousand dollars in front of him and looked Dillon over calmly. ‘My time’s limited so don’t muck me about, son.’ He picked up the bank notes. ‘More of the same?’

‘That’s right.’

‘I don’t know you. You told Myra you were an old friend, but I’ve never seen you before.’

‘A long time ago, Jack, ten years to be precise. I looked different then. I was over from Belfast on a job. We did business together, you and me. You did well out of it as I recall. All those lovely dollars raised by IRA sympathisers in America.’

Harvey said, ‘Coogan. Michael Coogan.’

Dillon took off his glasses. ‘As ever was, Jack.’

Harvey nodded slowly and said to his niece, ‘Myra, an old friend, Mr Coogan from Belfast.’

‘I see,’ she said. ‘One of those.’

Dillon lit a cigarette, sat down, the briefcase on the floor beside him and Harvey said, ‘You went through London like bloody Attila the Hun last time. I should have charged you more for all that stuff.’

‘You gave me a price, I paid it,’ Dillon said. ‘What could be fairer?’

‘And what is it this time?’

‘I need a little Semtex, Jack. I could manage with forty pounds, but that’s the bottom line. Fifty would be better.’

‘You don’t want much, do you? That stuff’s like gold. Very strict government controls.’

‘Bollocks,’ Dillon said. ‘It passes from Czechoslovakia to Italy, Greece, onwards to Libya. It’s everywhere, Jack, you know it and I know it so don’t waste my time. Twenty thousand dollars.’ He opened the briefcase on his knee and tossed the rest of the ten thousand packet by packet across the desk. ‘Ten now and ten on delivery.’

The Walther with the Carswell silencer screwed on the end of the barrel lay ready in the briefcase. He waited, the lid up and then Harvey smiled. ‘All right, but it’ll cost you thirty.’

Dillon closed the briefcase. ‘No can do, Jack. Twenty-five I can manage, but no more.’

Harvey nodded. ‘All right. When do you want it?’

‘Twenty-four hours.’

‘I think I can manage that. Where can we reach you?’

‘You’ve got it wrong way round, Jack, I contact you.’

Dillon stood up and Harvey said affably, ‘Anything else we can do for you?’

‘Actually there is,’ Dillon said. ‘Sign of goodwill, you might say. I could do with a spare handgun.’
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