The flight to Antigua took a little over eight hours thanks to a tailwind and they arrived just after two o’clock local time. It was hot, really hot, very noticeable after London. Dillon felt quite cheered and strode ahead of everybody else towards the airport building, wearing black cord slacks and a denim shirt, his black flying jacket over one shoulder. When he reached the entrance a young black woman in a pale blue uniform was standing there with a board bearing his name.
Dillon paused, ‘I’m Dillon.’
She smiled. ‘I’m Judy, Mr Dillon. I’ll see you through immigration and so on and then take you to your plane.’
‘You represent the handling agents?’ he asked as they walked through.
‘That’s right. I need to see your pilot’s licence and there are a couple of forms to fill in for the aviation authority, but we can do that while we’re waiting for the luggage to come through.’
Twenty minutes later she was driving him out to the far side of the runway in a courtesy bus, an engineer called Tony in white overalls sitting beside her. The Cessna was parked beside a number of private planes, slightly incongruous because of its floats, with wheels protruding beneath.
‘Shouldn’t give you any problems,’ Tony said as he stowed Dillon’s two suitcases. ‘Flies as sweet as a nut. Of course a lot of people are nervous about flying in the islands with a single engine, but the beauty about this baby is you can always come down in the water.’
‘Or something like that,’ Dillon said.
Tony laughed, reached into the cabin and pointed. ‘There’s an air log listing all the islands and their airfields and charts. Our chief pilot has marked your course from here to Cruz Bay in St John. Very straight-forward. Around two hundred and fifty miles. Takes about an hour and a half.’ He glanced at his watch. ‘You should be there by four-thirty.’
‘It’s American territory, but customs and immigration are expecting you. They’ll be waiting at the ramp at Cruz Bay. When you’re close enough, call in to St Thomas and they’ll let them know you’re coming. Oh, and there will be a self-drive Jeep waiting for you.’ Judy smiled. ‘I think that’s about it.’
‘Thanks for everything.’ Dillon gave her that special smile of his with total charm and kissed her on the cheek. ‘Judy, you’ve been great.’ He shook Tony’s hand. ‘Many thanks.’
A moment later he was in the pilot’s seat, closing the door. He strapped himself in, adjusted his earphones then fired the engine and called the tower. There was a small plane landing and the tower told him to wait. They gave him the good word and he taxied to the end of the runway. There was a short pause then the go signal and he boosted power, roared down the runway and pulled back the column at exactly the right moment, the Cessna climbing effortlessly out over the azure sea.
It was an hour later that Max Santiago flew in to San Juan where he was escorted through passport control and customs with a minimum of fuss by an airport official to where his chauffeur, Algaro, waited with the black Mercedes limousine.
‘At your orders, señor,’ he said in Spanish.
‘Good to see you, Algaro,’ Santiago said. ‘Everything is arranged as I requested?’
‘Oh, yes, señor. I’ve packed the usual clothes, took them down to the Maria Blanco myself this morning. Captain Serra is expecting you.’
Algaro wasn’t particularly large, five foot seven or eight, but immensely powerful, his hair cropped so short that he almost looked bald. A scar, running from the corner of the left eye to the mouth, combined to give him a sinister and threatening appearance in spite of the smart grey chauffeur’s uniform he wore. He was totally devoted to Santiago who had saved him from a life sentence for the stabbing to death of a young prostitute two years previously by the liberal dispensing of funds not only to lawyers, but corrupt officials.
The luggage arrived at that moment and while the porters stowed it Santiago said, ‘Good, you needn’t take me to the house. I’ll go straight to the boat.’
‘As you say, señor.’ They drove away, turned into the traffic of the main road and Algaro said, ‘Captain Serra said you asked for a couple of divers in the crew. It’s taken care of.’
‘Excellent.’ Santiago picked up the local newspaper which had been left on the seat for him and opened it.
Algaro watched him in the mirror. ‘Is there a problem, señor?’
Santiago laughed. ‘You’re like an animal, Algaro, you always smell trouble.’
‘But that’s what you employ me for, señor.’
‘Quite right.’ Santiago folded the newspaper, selected a cigarette from an elegant gold case and lit it. ‘Yes, my friend, there is a problem, a problem called Dillon.’
‘May I know about him, señor?’
‘Why not? You’ll probably have to, how shall I put it, take care of him for me, Algaro.’ Santiago smiled. ‘So listen carefully and learn all about him because this man is good, Algaro, very good indeed.’
It was a perfect afternoon, limitless blue sky with only the occasional cloud as Dillon drifted across the Caribbean at five thousand feet. It was pure pleasure, the sea constantly changing colour below, green and blue, the occasional boat, the reefs and shoals clearly visible at that height.
He passed the islands of Nevis and St Kitts, calling in to the local airport, moved on flying directly over the tiny Dutch island of Saba. He had a brisk tailwind and made good time, better than he had expected, found St Croix on his port side on the horizon no more than an hour after leaving Antigua.
Soon after that, the main line of the Virgins lifted out of the heat haze to greet him, St Thomas to port, the smaller bulk of St John to starboard, Tortola beyond. He checked the chart and saw Peter Island below Tortola and east of St John, Norman Island south of it, and south of there was Samson Cay.
Dillon called in to St Thomas airport to notify them of his approach. The controller said, ‘Cleared for landing at Cruz Bay. Await customs and immigration officials there.’
Dillon went down low, turning to starboard, found Samson Cay with no difficulty and crossed over at a thousand feet. There was a harbour dotted with yachts, a dock, cottages and a hotel block grouped around the beach amidst palm trees. The airstrip was to the north, no control tower, just an air sock on a pole. There were people lounging on the beach down there. Some stood up and waved. He waggled his wings and flew on, found Cruz Bay fifteen minutes later and drifted in for a perfect landing just outside the harbour.
He entered the harbour and found the ramp with little difficulty. There were several uniformed officials standing there and one or two other people, all black. He taxied forward, let the wheels down and ran up on to the ramp, killed the engine. One of the men in customs uniform held a couple of wedge-shaped blocks by a leather strap and he came and positioned them behind the wheels.
Dillon climbed out. ‘Lafayette, we are here.’
Everyone laughed genially and the immigration people checked his passport, perfectly happy with the Irish one, while the customs men had a look at the luggage. Everything was sweetness and light and they all departed with mutual expressions of goodwill. As they walked away a young woman in uniform, rose pink this time, who had been waiting patiently at one side, came forward.
‘I’ve got your Jeep here as ordered, Mr Dillon. If you could sign for me and show me your licence, you can be on your way.’
‘That’s very kind of you,’ Dillon said and carried the suitcases across and slung them on the back seat.
As he signed she said, ‘I’m sorry we didn’t have an automatic in at the moment. I could change it for you tomorrow. I’ve got one being returned.’
‘No, thanks, I prefer to be in charge myself.’ He smiled. ‘Can I drop you somewhere?’
‘That’s nice of you.’ She got in beside him and he drove away. About three hundred yards further on as he came to the road she said, ‘This is fine.’
There was an extremely attractive-looking development opposite. ‘What’s that?’ he asked.
‘Mongoose Junction, our version of a shopping mall, but much nicer. There’s also a super bar and a couple of great restaurants.’
‘I’ll look it over sometime.’
She got out. ‘Turn left, follow the main road. Caneel Bay’s only a couple of miles out. There’s a car-park for residents. From there it’s a short walk down to reception.’
‘You’ve been very kind,’ Dillon told her and drove away.
The Maria Blanco had cost Santiago two million dollars and was his favourite toy. He preferred being on board to staying at his magnificent house above the city of San Juan, particularly since the death of his wife Maria from cancer ten years earlier. Dear Maria, his Maria Blanco, his pet name for her, the one soft spot in his life. Of course, this was no ordinary boat, had every conceivable luxury, needed a captain and five or six crew members to man her.
Santiago sat at a table on the upper deck enjoying the sun and a cup of excellent coffee, Algaro standing behind him. The captain, Julian Serra, a burly, black-bearded man in uniform, sat opposite. He, like most of Santiago’s employees, had been with him for years, had frequently taken part in activities of a highly questionable nature.
‘So you see, my dear Serra, we have a problem on our hands here. The man Dillon will probably approach this diver, this Bob Carney, when he reaches St John.’
‘Wrecks are notoriously difficult to find, señor,’ Serra told him. ‘I’ve had experts tell me they’ve missed one by a few yards on occasions. It’s not easy. There’s a lot of sea out there.’
‘I agree,’ Santiago said. ‘I still think the girl must have some sort of an answer, but she may take her time returning. In the meantime, we’ll surprise Mr Dillon as much as possible.’ He smiled up at Algaro. ‘Think you can handle that, Algaro?’
‘With pleasure, señor,’ Algaro said.
‘Good.’ Santiago turned back to Serra. ‘What about the crew?’
‘Guerra, first mate. Solona and Mugica as usual and I’ve brought in two men with good diving experience, Javier Noval and Vicente Pinto.’
‘And they’re reliable?’
‘Absolutely.’
‘And we’re expected at Samson Cay?’
‘Yes, señor, I spoke to Prieto personally. You wish to stay there?’
‘I think so. We could always drop anchor off Paradise Beach at Caneel, of course. I’ll think about it.’ Santiago finished his coffee and stood up. ‘Right, let’s get moving then.’
Dillon took to Caneel from the moment he got there. He parked the Jeep and carrying his own bags followed the obvious path. There was a magnificent restaurant on a bluff up above him, circular with open sides. Below it was the ruins of a sugar mill from the old plantation days. The vegetation was extremely lush, palm trees everywhere. He paused, noticing a gift-shop on the left and set back. More importantly the smaller shop next to it said Paradise Watersports, Carney’s place, he remembered that from the brochure and went and had a look. As he would have expected, there were diving suits of various kinds on display, but the door was locked so he carried on and came to the front desk lobby.
There were three or four people being dealt with at the desk before him so he dropped his bags and went back outside. There was a very large bar area, open at the sides, but under a huge barn-like roof, a vital necessity in a climate where instant heavy rain showers were common.
Beyond was Caneel Bay, he knew that from the brochure, boats of various kinds at anchor, a pleasant palm-fringed beach beside another restaurant, people still taking their ease in the early evening sun, one or two windsurfers still out there. Dillon glanced at his watch. It was almost five-thirty and he started to turn away to go back to the front desk when he saw a boat coming in.
It was a 35-foot Sport Fisherman with a flying bridge, sleek and white, but what intrigued Dillon were the dozen or so air tanks stacked in their holders in the stern and there were four people moving around on deck packing their gear into dive bags. Carney was on the flying bridge, handling the wheel, in jeans and bare feet, stripped to the waist, very tanned, the blond hair bleached by the sun. Dillon recognized him from the photo in the brochure.
The name of the boat was Sea Raider, he saw that as it got closer, moved to the end of the dock as Carney manoeuvred it in. One of the dive students tossed a line, Dillon caught it and expertly tied up at the stern then he moved along to the prow where the boat was bouncing against its fenders, reached over and got the other line.
Dillon lit a cigarette, his Zippo flashing, and Carney killed the engines and came down the ladder. ‘Thanks,’ he called.
Dillon said, ‘My pleasure, Captain Carney,’ and he turned and walked away along the dock.
One of the receptionists from the front desk took him out to his cottage in a small courtesy bus. The grounds were an absolute delight, not only sweeping grassland and palm trees, but every kind of tropical plant imaginable.
‘The entire peninsula is private,’ she said as they followed a narrow road. ‘We have seven beaches and, as you’ll notice, most of the cottages are grouped around them.’
‘I’ve only seen two restaurants so far,’ he commented.
‘Yes, Sugar Mill and Beach Terrace. There’s a third at the end of the peninsula, Turtle Bay, that’s more formal. You know, collar and tie and so on. It’s wonderful for an evening drink. You look out over the Windward Passage to dozens of little islands, Carval Rock, Whistling Cay. Of course a lot further away you’ll see Jost Van Dyke and Tortola, but they’re in the British Virgins.’
‘It sounds idyllic,’ he said.
She braked in a turned circle beside a two-storeyed, flat-roofed building surrounded by trees and bushes of every description. ‘Here we are, cottage 7.’
There were steps up to the upper level. ‘It isn’t all one then?’ Dillon asked.
She opened the door into a little vestibule. ‘People do sometimes take it all, but up here it’s divided into two units. 7D and 7E.’
The doors faced each other, she unlocked 7D and led the way in. There was a superb shower-room, a bar area with a spare ice-box. The bedroom-cum-sitting-room was enormous and very pleasantly furnished with tiled floor and comfortable chairs and a sofa and there were venetian blinds at the windows, two enormous fans turning in the ceiling.
‘Is this all right?’ she asked.
‘I should say so.’ Dillon nodded at the enormous bed. ‘Jesus, but a man would have to be a sprinter to catch his wife in that thing.’
She laughed and opened the double doors to the terrace and led the way out. There was a large seating area and a narrow part round the corner that fronted the other windows. There was a grassy slope, trees and a small beach below, three or four large yachts of the ocean-going type at anchor some distance from shore.
‘Paradise Beach,’ she said.
There was another beach way over to the right with a line of cottages behind it. ‘What’s that?’ he asked.
‘Scott Beach, and Turtle Bay is a little further on. You could walk there in fifteen minutes although there is a courtesy bus service with stops dotted round the grounds.’
There was a knock at the door, she went back inside and supervised the bellboy leaving the luggage. Dillon followed her. She turned. ‘I think that’s everything.’
‘There was the question of a telephone,’ Dillon said. ‘You don’t have them in the cottages I understand.’
‘My, but I was forgetting that.’ She opened her carrying bag and took out a cellular telephone plus a spare battery and charger. She put it on the coffee-table with a card. ‘Your number and instructions are there.’ She laughed. ‘Now I hope that really is everything.’
Dillon opened the door for her. ‘You’ve been very kind.’
‘Oh, one more thing, our general manager, Mr Nicholson, asked me to apologize for not being here to greet you. He had business on St Thomas.’
‘That’s all right. I’m sure we’ll catch up with each other later.’
‘I believe he’s Irish too,’ she said and left.
Dillon opened the ice-box under the bar unit, discovering every kind of drink one could imagine including two half-bottles of champagne. He opened one of them, poured a glass then went out and stood on the terrace looking out over the water.
‘Well, old son, this will do to take along,’ he said softly and drank the champagne with conscious pleasure.
In the end, of course, the sparkle on the water was too seductive and he went inside, unpacked, hanging his clothes in the ample wardrobe space, then undressed and found some swimming trunks. A moment later he was hurrying down the grass bank to the little beach which for the moment he had entirely to himself. The water was incredibly warm and very clear. He waded forward and started to swim; there was a sudden swirl over on his right, an enormous turtle surfaced, looked at him curiously then moved sedately away.
Dillon laughed aloud for pure pleasure, then swam lazily out to sea in the direction of the moored yachts, turning after some fifty yards to swim back. Behind him, the Maria Blanco came round the point from Caneel Bay and dropped anchor about three hundred yards away.
Santiago had changed his mind about Samson Cay only after Captain Serra had brought him a message from the radio room. An inquiry by ship-to-shore telephone had confirmed that Dillon had arrived at Caneel Bay.
‘He’s booked into cottage 7,’ Serra said.
‘Interesting,’ Santiago told him. ‘That’s the best accommodation in the resort.’ He thought about it, tapping his fingers on the table, and made his decision. ‘I know it well, it overlooks Paradise Beach. We’ll anchor there, Serra, for tonight at least.’
‘As you say, señor.’
Serra went back to the bridge and Algaro, who had been standing by the stern rail, poured Santiago another cup of coffee.
Santiago said, ‘I want you to go ashore tonight. Take someone with you. There’s the Land Rover Serra leaves permanently in the car-park at Mongoose Junction. He’ll give you the keys.’
‘What do you require me to do, señor?’
‘Call in at Caneel, see what Dillon is up to. If he goes out, follow him.’
‘Do I give him a problem?’ Algaro asked hopefully.
‘A small one, Algaro,’ Santiago smiled. ‘Nothing too strenuous.’
‘My pleasure, señor,’ Algaro said and poured him another cup of coffee.
Dillon didn’t feel like anything too formal, wore only a soft white cotton shirt and cream linen slacks, both by Armani, as he walked through the evening darkness towards Caneel Beach. He carried a small torch in one pocket, provided by the management for help with the dark spots. It was such a glorious night that he didn’t need it. The Terrace Restaurant was already doing a fair amount of business, but then Americans liked to dine early, he knew that. He went to the front desk, cashed a traveller’s cheque for five hundred dollars then tried the bar.
He had never cared for the usual Caribbean liking for rum punches and fruit drinks, settled for an old-fashioned vodka Martini cocktail which the genial black waitress brought for him quite rapidly. A group of musicians were setting up their instruments on the small bandstand and way out across the sea he could see the lights of St Thomas. It really was very pleasant, too easy to forget he had a job to do. He finished his drink, signed for it and went along to the restaurant where he introduced himself to the head waiter and was seated.
The menu was tempting enough. He ordered grilled sea scallops, a Caesar salad followed by Caribbean lobster tail. No Krug but a very acceptable half-bottle of Veuve Clicquot completed the picture.
He was finished by nine o’clock and wandered down to reception. Algaro was sitting in one of the leather armchairs looking at The New York Times. The girl on duty was the one who’d taken Dillon to the cottage.
She smiled. ‘Everything okay, Mr Dillon?’
‘Perfect. Tell me, do you know a bar called Jenny’s Place?’
‘I sure do. It’s on the front, just past Mongoose Junction on your way into town.’
‘They stay open late I presume?’
‘Usually till around two in the morning.’
‘Many thanks.’
He moved away and walked along the dock, lighting a cigarette. Behind him Algaro went out and hurried along the car-park by Sugar Mill, laughter drifting down from the people dining up there. He moved past the taxis waiting for customers to where the Land Rover waited, Felipe Guerra, the Maria Blanco’s mate, sitting behind the wheel.
Algaro got in beside him and Guerra said, ‘Did you find him?’
‘I was within touching distance. He was asking about that bar, Jenny’s Place. You know it? On the front in Cruz Bay.’
‘Sure.’
‘Let’s take a look. From the sound of it he intends to pay the place a visit.’
‘Maybe we can make it interesting for him,’ Guerra said and drove away.
Dillon drove past Mongoose Junction, located Jenny’s Place, then turned and went back to the Junction car-park. He walked along the front of the harbour through the warm night, went up the steps, glanced up at the red neon sign and entered. The café side of things was busy, Mary Jones taking orders while two waitresses, one white, the other black, worked themselves into a frenzy as they attempted to serve everybody. The bar was busy also although Billy Jones seemed to be having no difficulty in managing on his own.
Dillon found a vacant stool at the end of the bar and waited until Billy was free to deal with him. ‘Irish whiskey, whatever you’ve got and water.’
He noticed Bob Carney seated at the other end of the long bar, a beer in front of him, talking to a couple of men who looked like seamen. Carney was smiling and then as he turned to reach for his beer, became aware of Dillon’s scrutiny and frowned.
Billy brought the whiskey and Dillon said, ‘You’re Billy Jones?’
The other man looked wary. ‘And who might you be?’
‘Dillon’s the name – Sean Dillon. I’m staying at Caneel. Jenny told me to look you up and say hello.’
‘Jenny did?’ Billy frowned. ‘When you see Miss Jenny?’
‘In London. I went to Henry Baker’s cremation with her.’
‘You did?’ Billy turned and called to his wife. ‘Woman, get over here.’ She finished taking an order then joined them. ‘This is my wife, Mary. Tell her what you just told me.’
‘I was with Jenny in London.’ Dillon held out his hand. ‘Sean Dillon. I was at Baker’s funeral, not that there was much doing. She said he was an atheist, so all we did was attend the crematorium.’
Mary crossed herself. ‘God rest him now, but he did think that way. And Jenny, what about her? Where is she?’
‘She was upset,’ Dillon said. ‘She told me Baker had a sister.’
Mary frowned and looked at her husband. ‘We never knew that. Are you sure, mister?’
‘Oh, yes, he had a sister living in France. Jenny wouldn’t say where, simply flew off to Paris from London. Wanted to take his ashes to the sister.’
‘And when is she coming back?’
‘All she said was she needed a few days to come to terms with the death and so on. As I happened to be coming out here she asked me to say hello.’
‘Well I thank you for that,’ Mary said. ‘We’ve been so worried!’ A customer called from one of the tables. ‘I’ll have to go. I’ll see you later.’
She hurried away and Billy grinned. ‘I’m needed too, but hang around man, hang around.’
He went to serve three clamouring customers and Dillon savoured his whiskey and looked around the room. Algaro and Guerra were drinking beer in a corner booth. They were not looking at him, apparently engaged in conversation. Dillon’s eyes barely paused, passed on and yet he had recognized him from reception at Caneel, the cropped hair, the brutal face, the scar from eye to mouth.
‘Judas Iscariot come to life,’ Dillon murmured. ‘And what’s your game, son?’ for he had learned the hard way over many years never to believe in coincidence.
The two men Carney had been talking to had moved on and he was sitting alone now, the stool next to him vacant. Dillon finished his drink, moved along the bar through the crowd. ‘Do you mind if I join you?’
Carney’s eyes were very blue in the tanned face. ‘Should I?’
‘Dillon, Sean Dillon.’ Dillon eased on to the stool. ‘I’m staying at Caneel. Cottage 7. Jenny Grant told me to look you up.’
‘You know Jenny?’
‘I was just with her in London,’ Dillon said. ‘Her friend, Henry Baker, was killed in an accident over there.’
‘I heard about that.’
‘Jenny was over for the inquest and the funeral.’ Dillon nodded to Billy Jones who came over. ‘I’ll have another Irish. Give Captain Carney whatever he wants.’
‘I’ll have a beer,’ Carney said. ‘Did Jenny bury him in London?’
‘No,’ Dillon told him. ‘Cremation. He had a sister in France.’
‘I never knew that.’
‘Jenny told me few people did. It seems he preferred it that way. Said she wanted to take the ashes to her. Last I saw of her she was flying to Paris. Said she’d be back here in a few days.’
Billy brought the whiskey and the beer and Carney said, ‘So you’re here on vacation?’
‘That’s right. I got in this evening.’
‘Would you be the guy who came in the Cessna floatplane?’
‘Flew up from Antigua.’ Dillon nodded.
‘On vacation?’
‘Something like that.’ Dillon lit a cigarette. ‘The thing is I’m interested in doing a little diving and Jenny suggested I spoke to you. Said you were the best.’
‘That’s nice of her.’
‘She said you taught Henry.’
‘That’s true.’ Carney nodded. ‘Henry was a good diver, foolish, but still pretty good.’
‘Why do you say foolish?’
‘It never pays to dive on your own, you should always have a buddy with you. Henry would never listen. He would just up and go whenever he felt like it and that’s no good when you’re diving regularly. Accidents can happen no matter how well you plan things.’ Carney drank some more beer and looked Dillon full in the face. ‘But then I’d say you’re the kind of man who knows that, Mr Dillon.’
He had the slow easy accent of the American southerner as if everything he said was carefully considered.
Dillon said, ‘Well in the end it was an accident that killed him in London. He looked the wrong way and stepped off the pavement in front of a London bus. He was dead in a second.’
Carney said calmly, ‘You know the old Arab saying? Everybody has an appointment in Samarra. You miss Death in one place, he’ll get you in another. At least for Henry it was quick.’
‘That’s a remarkably philosophical attitude,’ Dillon told him.
Carney smiled. ‘I’m a remarkably philosophical fellow, Mr Dillon. I did two tours in Vietnam. Everything has been a bonus since. So you want to do some diving?’
‘That’s right.’
‘You any good?’
‘I manage,’ Dillon told him, ‘but I’m always willing to learn.’
‘Okay. I’ll see you at the dock at Caneel at nine o’clock in the morning.’
‘I’ll need some gear.’
‘No problem, I’ll open the shop for you.’
‘Fine.’ Dillon swallowed his whiskey. ‘I’ll see you then.’ He hesitated. ‘Tell me something. You see the two guys in the booth in the far corner? I particularly mean the ugly one with the scar. Do you happen to know who they are?’
‘Sure,’ Carney said. ‘They work on a big motor yacht from Puerto Rico that calls in here now and then. It’s owned by a man called Santiago. It’s usually based at Samson Cay, that’s over on the British side of things. The younger guy is the mate, Guerra, the other is a real mean son of a bitch called Algaro.’
‘Why do you say that?’
‘He half killed a fisherman outside one of the bars here about nine months ago. He was lucky to get away without doing some prison time. They laid a real hefty fine on him, but his boss paid it, so I heard. He’s the kind of guy to step around.’
‘I’ll certainly remember that.’ Dillon got up. ‘Tomorrow then,’ and he walked out through the crowd.
Billy came down the bar. ‘You want another beer, Bob?’
‘What I need is something to eat, my wife being away and all,’ Carney said. ‘What did you make of him?’
‘Dillon? He said he was in London with Jenny. Happened to be coming down here and she told him to look us up.’
‘Well that sure was a hell of a coincidence.’ Carney reached for his glass and noticed Algaro and Guerra get up and leave. He almost got up and went after them, but what the hell, it wasn’t his problem, whatever it was and in any case, Dillon was perfectly capable of looking after himself, he’d never been more certain of anything in his life.
Dillon drove out of Cruz Bay, changing down to climb the steep hill up from the town, thinking about Carney. He’d liked him straightaway, a calm, quiet man of enormous inner strength, but then, remembering his background, that made sense.
He breasted the hill, remembering that in St John you kept on the left-hand side of the road just like England, was suddenly aware of the headlights coming up behind him very fast. He expected to be overtaken, wasn’t, and as the vehicle behind moved right in on his tail knew he was in trouble. He recognized it as a Land Rover in his rear-view mirror an instant before it bumped him, put his foot down hard and pulled away, driving so fast that he went straight past the turning to Caneel Bay.
The Land Rover had the edge and suddenly it swerved out to the right-hand side of the road and moved alongside. He caught a brief glimpse of Algaro’s face, illuminated in the light from the dashboard as he gripped the wheel and then the Land Rover swerved in and Dillon spun off the road into the brush, bounced down a shallow slope and came to a halt.
Dillon rolled out of the Jeep and got behind a tree. The Land, Rover had stopped and there was silence for a moment. Suddenly a shotgun roared, pellets scything through the branches overhead.
There was silence and then laughter. A voice called, ‘Welcome to St John, Mr Dillon,’ and the Land Rover drove away.
Dillon waited until the sound had faded into the night, then he got back into the Jeep, engaged four-wheel drive, reversed up the slope on to the road and drove back towards the Caneel turning.
In London it was three-thirty in the morning when the phone went at the side of Charles Ferguson’s bed in his flat at Cavendish Square. He came awake on the instant and reached for it.
‘Ferguson here.’
Dillon stood on the terrace, a drink in one hand, the cellular telephone in the other. ‘It’s me,’ he said, ‘ringing you from the tranquil Virgin Islands, only they’re not so tranquil.’
‘For God’s sake, Dillon, do you know what time it is?’
‘Yes, time for a few questions and hopefully some answers. A couple of goons just tried to run me off the road, old son, and guess who they were? Crewmen off Santiago’s yacht, the Maria Blanco. They also loosed off a shotgun in my direction.’
Ferguson was immediately alert, sat up and tossed the bedclothes aside. ‘Are you certain?’
‘Of course I am.’ Dillon was not particularly angry, but made it sound as if he were. ‘Listen, you devious old sod, I want to know what’s going on? I’ve only been in the damned place a few hours and yet they know me by name. I’d say they were expecting me as they’re here too and how could that be, Brigadier?’
‘I don’t know,’ Ferguson told him. ‘That’s all I can say for the moment. You’re settled in all right?’
‘Brigadier, I have an insane desire to laugh,’ Dillon told him. ‘But yes, I’m settled in, the cottage is fine, the view sublime and I’m diving with Bob Carney in the morning.’
‘Good, get on with it then and watch yourself.’
‘Watch myself?’ Dillon said. ‘Is that the best you can do?’
‘Stop whining, Dillon,’ Ferguson told him. ‘This sort of thing’s exactly why I chose you for the job. You’re still in one piece, right?’
‘Just about.’
‘There you are then. They’re trying to put the frighteners on you, that’s all.’
‘That’s all, he says.’
‘Leave it with me. I’ll be in touch.’
Ferguson put the phone down, switching off the light, and lay there thinking about it. After a while he drifted into sleep again.
Dillon went to the small bar. There were tea and coffee bags there. He boiled the water and opted for a cup of tea, taking it out on the terrace, looking out into the bay where there were lights on some of the boats. More to things than met the eye, he was more convinced than ever and he hadn’t liked the shotgun. It made him feel naked. There was an answer to that of course, a visit to the address Ferguson had given him in St Thomas, the hardware specialist. That could come in the afternoon after he’d dived with Carney.
The moment he and Guerra were back on board Algaro reported to Santiago. When he was finished Santiago said, ‘You did well.’
Algaro said, ‘He won’t do anything about it will he, señor, the police I mean?’
‘Of course not, he doesn’t want the authorities to know why he’s here, that’s the beauty of it. That U-boat is in American waters so legally it should be reported to the coastguard, but that’s the last thing Dillon and this Brigadier Ferguson he works for want.’
Algaro said, ‘I see.’
‘Go to bed now,’ Santiago told him.
Algaro departed and Santiago went to the rail. He could see a light in cottage 7. At that moment it went out. ‘Sleep well, Mr Dillon,’ he said softly, turned and went below.