Take a straw and throw it up into the air,
you shall see by that which way the wind is.
JOHN SELDEN
To follow somebody, without them knowing that you're doing it, is not the doddle they make it seem in films. I've had some experience of professional following, and a lot more experience of professional going back to the office and saying 'we lost him'. Unless your quarry is deaf, tunnel-sighted and lame, you need at least a dozen people and fifteen thousand quids-worth of short-wave radio to make a decent go of it.
The problem with McCluskey was that he was, in the jargon phrase, 'a player' - somebody who knows that they are a possible target, and has some idea of what to do about it. I couldn't risk getting too close, and the only way to avoid that was by running; hanging back on the straights, sprinting flat-out as he rounded corners, pulling up in time to avoid him if he doubled back. None of this would have been countenanced by a professional outfit, of course, because it ignored the possibility that he had someone else watching his back, who might begin to wonder at this sprinting, shuffling, window-shopping lunatic.
The first stretch was easy enough. McCluskey waddled his way from Fleet Street along towards the Strand, but when he reached the Savoy, he skipped across the road and headed north into Covent Garden. There he dawdled amongst the myriad pointless shops, and stood for five minutes watching a juggler outside the Actors Church. Refreshed, he set off at a brisk pace towards St Martin's Lane, crossed over on his way to Leicester Square, and then sold me a dummy by suddenly turning south into Trafalgar Square.
By the time we reached the bottom of the Haymarket, the sweat was pouring off me and I was praying for him to hail a taxi. He didn't do it until he got to Lower Regent Street, and I caught another one an agonising twenty seconds later.
Well, obviously it was another one. Even the amateur follower knows that you don't get into the same taxi as the person you're following.
I threw myself into the seat and shouted at the driver to 'follow that cab', and then realised what a strange thing that is to say in real life. The cabbie didn't seem to find it so.
'Tell me,' he said, 'is he sleeping with your wife, or are you sleeping with his?'
I laughed as though this was the grandest thing I'd heard in years, which is what you have to do with cabbies if you want them to take you to the right place by the right route.
McCluskey got out at the Ritz, but he must have told his driver to stay and keep the meter running. I left him for three minutes before doing the same with my cab, but, as I opened the door, McCluskey came scooting back out and we were off again.
We crawled along Piccadilly for a while, and then turned right into some narrow empty streets that I didn't know at all. This was the sort of territory where skilled craftspeople hand-build underpants for American Express card-holders.
I leaned forward to tell the driver not to get too close, but he'd done this sort of thing before, or seen it done on television, and he hung back a good distance.
McCluskey's cab came to rest in Cork Street. I saw him pay his driver, and I told my man to trickle past and drop me two hundred yards further down the street.
The meter said six pounds, so I passed a ten pound note through the window and watched a fifteen-second production of 'I'm Not Sure I've Got Change For That', starring licensed cab driver 99102, before getting out and heading back down the street.
In those fifteen seconds, McCluskey had vanished. I'd just followed him for twenty minutes and five miles, and lost him in the last two hundred yards. Which, I suppose, served me right for being mean with the tip.
Cork Street is nothing but art galleries, mostly with large front windows, and one of the things I've noticed about windows is that they're just as good for seeing out of as they are for seeing in through. I couldn't go pressing my nose against every art gallery until I found him, so I decided to take a chance. I judged the spot where McCluskey had dismounted, and turned for the nearest door.
It was locked.
I was standing there looking at my watch, trying to work out what an art gallery's opening hours might be if twelve wasn't one of them, when a blonde girl wearing a neat black shift appeared out of the gloom and slipped the latch. She opened the door with a welcoming smile, and suddenly I seemed to have no choice but to step inside, my hopes of finding McCluskey ebbing away with every second.
Keeping one eye on the front window, I sank back into the relative darkness of the shop. Apart from the blonde, there didn't seem to be anyone else in the place, which wasn't all that surprising when I looked at the paintings.
'Do you know Terence Glass?' she asked, handing me a card and price list. She was a frightfully pukka young thing.
'Yes, I do,' I said. 'I've got three of his, as a matter of fact.'
Well, I mean. Sometimes you've just got to have a go, haven't you?
'Three of his what?' she said.
Doesn't always work, of course.
'Paintings.'
'Good heavens,' she said. 'I didn't know he painted. Sarah,' she called out, 'did you know that Terence painted?'
From the back half of the gallery, a cool American voice came back. 'Terry has never painted in his life. Hardly write his own name.'
I looked up just as Sarah Woolf came through the archway, immaculate in a dog-tooth skirt and jacket, and pushing that gentle bow wave of Fleur de Fleurs. But she wasn't looking at me. She was looking towards the front of the gallery.
I turned, followed her gaze, and saw McCluskey standing in the open doorway.
'But this gentleman claims he's got three . . . ' said the blonde, laughing.
McCluskey was moving quickly towards Sarah, his right hand sliding across his chest towards the inside of his coat. I pushed the blonde away with my right arm, heard her gasp something polite, and at the same moment McCluskey turned his head towards me.
As he swung his body round, I aimed a round-house kick to his stomach, and to block it, he had to pull his right hand down from his coat. The kick connected, and for a moment, McCluskey's feet left the floor. His head came forward as he gasped for breath, and I moved behind him and slipped my left arm around his neck. The blonde was screaming 'oh my God' in a very posh accent, and scrabbling for the phone on the table, but Sarah stayed where she was, arms rigid at her sides. I shouted at her to run, but she either didn't hear me, or didn't want to hear me. As I tightened my grip round McCluskey's neck, he fought to get his fingers between the crook of my elbow and his throat. No chance of that.
I put my right elbow on McCluskey's shoulder, and my right hand at the back of his head. My left hand slipped into the crook of my right elbow, and there I was, the model in diagram (c) in the chapter headed 'Neck-Breaking: The Basics'.
As McCluskey kicked and struggled, I eased my left forearm back and my right hand forward - and he stopped kicking very quickly. He stopped kicking because he suddenly knew what I knew, and wanted him to know - that with a few extra pounds of pressure, I could end his life.
I'm not absolutely sure, but I think that was when the gun went off.
I don't remember the actual feeling of being hit. Just the flatness of the sound in the gallery, and the smell of burnt whatever it is they use nowadays.
At first I thought it was McCluskey she'd shot, and I started to swear at her because I had everything under control, and anyway, I'd told her to get out of here. And then I thought Christ, I must be sweating a lot, because I could feel it running down my side, trickling wetly into my waistband. I looked up, and realised that Sarah was going to fire again. Or maybe she already had. McCluskey had wriggled free and I seemed to be falling back against one of the paintings.
'You stupid bitch,' I think I said, 'I'm... on your side. This is him ... the one . . . he's the one ... to kill your father. Fuck.'
The fuck was because everything was starting to go strange now. Light, sound, action.
Sarah was standing right over me, and I suppose, maybe, if circumstances had been different, I'd have been enjoying her legs. But they weren't different. They were the same. And all I could look at now was the gun.
'That would be very strange, Mr Lang,' she said. 'He could do that at home.' I suddenly couldn't make anything of this. Lots of things were wrong, very wrong, the numbness down my left side being not the least of them. Sarah knelt down next to me and put the muzzle of the gun under my chin.
'This,' she jerked a thumb towards McCluskey, 'is my father.'
As I can't remember any more, I assume I must have blacked out.
'How are you feeling?'
It's a question you're bound to get asked when you're lying on your back in a hospital bed, but I wish she hadn't asked it all the same. My brain was scrambled to the point where you usually have to summon the waiter and ask for a refund, and it would have made more sense for me to be asking her how I felt. But she was a nurse, and therefore unlikely to be trying to kill me, so I decided to like her for the time being.
With a mighty effort, I ungummed my lips and croaked back at her, 'Fine.'
'That's good,' she said. 'Doctor will be along to see you shortly.' She patted the back of my hand and disappeared.
I closed my eyes for a few moments, and when I opened them it was dark outside. A white coat was standing over me, and despite the fact that its wearer looked young enough to be my bank manager, I could only assume he was a doctor. He gave me my wrist back, although I wasn't aware that he'd been holding it, and jotted something down on a clipboard.
'How are you feeling?'
'Fine.'
He kept on writing.
'Well you shouldn't be. You've been shot. Lost quite a bit of blood, but that's not a problem. You were lucky. Passed through your armpit.' He made it sound as if the whole thing was my own silly fault. Which, in a way, it was.
'Where am I?' I said.
'Hospital.'
He went away.
Later, a very fat woman came in with a trolley and put a plate of something brown and foul-smelling on a table beside me. I couldn't imagine what I'd ever done to her, but whatever it was, it must have been bad.
She obviously realised that she'd over-reacted, because half an hour later she came and took the plate away again. Before she left, she told me where I was. The Middlesex Hospital, William Hoyle Ward.
My first proper visitor was Solomon. He came in, looking steady and eternal, sat down on the bed and chucked a paper bag of grapes on to the table.
'How are you feeling?'
A definite pattern was emerging here.
'I feel,' I said, 'almost exactly as if I've been shot, I'm now lying in a hospital trying to recover, and a Jewish policeman is sitting on my foot.' He shifted his weight slightly along the bed.
'They tell me you were lucky, master.'
I popped a grape.
'Lucky as in ... ?'
'As in it being only a couple of inches away from your heart.'
'Or a couple of inches away from missing me altogether. Depends on your point of view.'
He nodded, considering this.
'What's yours?' he said, after a while.
'What's my what?'
'Point of view.'
We looked at each other.
'That England should play a flat back four against Holland,' I said.
Solomon lifted himself off the bed and started to unpeel his raincoat, and I could hardly blame him. The temperature must have been in the nineties, and there seemed to be far, far too much air in the room. It was bunched and crowded, and in your face and eyes, and it made you think the room was a rush-hour tube train, and a lot of extra air had managed to sneak in just as the doors were closing.
I'd asked a nurse if she could turn the temperature down a little, but she'd told me that the heating was controlled by a computer in Reading. If I was the sort of person who writes letters to The Daily Telegraph, I'd have written a letter to The Daily Telegraph.
Solomon hung his coat on the back of the door.
'Well now, sir,' he said, 'believe it or not the ladies and gentlemen who pay my wages have asked me to extract from you an explanation as to how you came to be lying on the floor of a prestigious West End art gallery, with a bullet hole in your chest.'
'Armpit.'
'Arm, if you prefer, pit. Now will you tell me, master, or am I going to have to hold a pillow over your face until you co-operate?'
'Well,' I said, thinking that we may as well get down to business, 'I presume you know that McCluskey is Woolf.' I hadn't presumed any such thing, of course. I just wanted to sound efficient. It was obvious from Solomon's expression that he hadn't known, so I pressed on. 'I follow McCluskey to the gallery, thinking he might be there to do something unpleasant to Sarah. I bop him, get shot by Sarah, who then tells me that the boppee was, in fact, her father, Alexander Woolf.'
Solomon nodded calmly, the way he always did when he heard weird stuff.
'Whereas you,' he said eventually, 'had him down as a man who had offered you money to kill Alexander Woolf?'
'Right.'
'And you assumed, master, as I'm sure many would in your position, that when a man asks you to kill someone, the someone is not going to turn out to be the man himself.'
'It's not the way we do it on planet Earth, certainly.'
'Hmm.' Solomon had drifted over to the window where he seemed captivated by the Post Office Tower.
'That's it, is it?' I said. '"Hmm"? The Ministry of Defence report on this is going to consist of "Hmm", bound in leather with a gold seal and signed by the Cabinet?'
Solomon didn't answer, but just kept staring at the Post Office Tower.
'Well then,' I said, 'tell me this. What's happened to Woolfs major and minor? How did I get here? Who rang the ambulance? Did they stay with me until it came?'
'Have you ever eaten at that restaurant, the one that goes round and round at the top ... ?'
'David, for Christ's sake ...'
'The person who actually rang for the ambulance was a Mr Terence Glass, owner of the gallery in which you were shot, and putter-in of a claim to have your blood removed from his floor at the Ministry's expense.'
'How touching.'
'Although the ones who saved your life were Green and Baker.'
'Green and Baker?'
'Been following you about a lot. Baker held a handkerchief over the wound.'
This was a shock. I'd assumed, after my beer session with Solomon, that the two followers had been called off. I'd been sloppy. Thank God.
'Hurrah for Baker,' I said.
Solomon appeared to be about to tell me something else when he was interrupted by the door opening. O'Neal was very quickly among us. He came straight over to the side of my bed, and I could tell from his expression that he thought my getting shot was a thoroughly splendid development.
'How are you feeling?' he said, almost managing not to smile.
'Very well, thank you Mr O'Neal.'
There was a pause, and his face fell slightly.
'Lucky to be alive is what I heard,' he said. 'Except that from now on, you might think that you're unlucky to be alive.' O'Neal was very pleased with that. I had a vision of him rehearsing it in the lift. 'Well this is it, Mr Lang. I don't see how we can keep this one away from the police. In the presence of witnesses, you made a clear attempt on Woolf's life
O'Neal stopped, and he and I both looked round the room, at floor level, because the sound we'd heard was definitely that of a dog being sick. Then we heard it again, and both realised that it was Solomon, clearing his throat.
'With respect, Mr O'Neal,' said Solomon, now that he had our attention, 'Lang was under the impression that the man he was assaulting was, in fact, McCluskey.'
O'Neal closed his eyes.
'McCluskey? Woolf was identified by ...'
'Yes, absolutely,' said Solomon, gently. 'But Lang maintains that Woolf and McCluskey are one and the same man.'
A long silence.
'I beg your pardon?' said O'Neal.
The superior smile had disappeared from his face, and I suddenly felt like bounding out of bed.
O'Neal gave a fat little snort. 'McCluskey and Woolf are one and the same man?' he said, his voice cracking into a falsetto. 'Are you entirely sane?'
Solomon looked to me for confirmation.
'That's about the size of it,' I said. 'Woolf is the man who approached me in Amsterdam, and asked me to kill a man called Woolf.'
The colour had now completely dribbled out of O'Neal's face. He looked like a man who's just realised that he's posted a love letter in the wrong envelope.
'But that's not possible,' he stammered. 'I mean, it makes no sense.'
'Which doesn't mean it's not possible,' I said.
But O'Neal wasn't really hearing anything now. He was in an awful state. So I pushed on for Solomon's benefit.
'I know I'm only the parlour maid,' I said, 'and it's not my place to speak, but this is how my theory goes. Woolf knows that there are some parties around the globe who would like him to cease living. He .does the usual sort of thing, buys a dog, hires a bodyguard, doesn't tell anyone where he's going until he's already got there, but,' and I could see O'Neal shake himself into concentrating, 'he knows that that isn't enough. The people who want him dead are very keen, very professional, and sooner or later they'll poison the dog and bribe the bodyguard. So he has a choice.'
O'Neal was staring at me. He suddenly realised that his mouth was open, and shut it with a snap.
'Yes?'
'He can either take the war to them,' I said, 'which for all we know, may not be feasible. Or he can ride the punch.' Solomon was chewing his lip. And he was right to, because this was all sounding terrible. But it was better than anything they could come up with just now. 'He finds someone who he knows isn't going to accept the job, and he gives them the job. He lets it be known that a contract is out on his own life, and hopes that his real enemies will slow up for a while because they think that the job will get done anyway without them having to take any risks or spend any money.'
Solomon was back on Post Office Tower duty, and O'Neal was frowning.
'Do you really believe that?' he said. 'I mean, do you think that's possible?' I could see that he was desperate for a handle, any handle, even if it came off with the first flush.
'Yes, I think it's possible. No, I don't believe it. But I'm recovering from a gunshot wound, and it's the best I can do.'
O'Neal started to pace the floor, running his hands through his hair. The heat in the room was getting to him too, but he didn't have time to get rid of his coat.
'All right,' he said, 'somebody may want Woolf dead. I can't pretend that Her Majesty's government would be heartbroken if he walked under a bus tomorrow. Granted, his enemies may be considerable, and normal precautions useless. So far, so good. Yes, he can't take the war to them,' O'Neal rather liked that phrase, I could tell, 'so he puts out a fake contract on himself. But that doesn't work.' O'Neal stopped pacing and looked at me. T mean, how could he be sure it would be fake? How could he know that you wouldn't go through with it?'
I looked at Solomon, and he knew I was looking at him, but he didn't look back.
'I've been asked before,' I said. 'Offered a lot more money.
I said no. Maybe he knew that.'
O'Neal suddenly remembered how much he disliked me.
'Have you always said no?' I stared back at O'Neal, as coolly as I could. 'I mean, maybe you've changed,' he said.
'Maybe you suddenly need the money. It's a ridiculous risk.'
I shrugged, and my armpit hurt.
'Not really,' I said. 'He had the bodyguard, and at least with me he knew where the threat would come from. Rayner was hanging around me for days before I got into the house.'
'But you went to the house, Lang. You actually ...'
'I went there to warn him. I thought it was a neighbourly thing to do.'
'All right. All right.' O'Neal got stuck into some more pacing. 'Now how does he "let it be known" that this contract is out? I mean, does he write it on lavatory walls, put an advertisement in the Standard, what?'
'Well, you knew about it.' I was starting to get tired now. I wanted sleep and maybe even a plate of something brown and foul-smelling.
'We are not his enemies, Mr Lang,' said O'Neal. 'Not in that sense, at any rate.'
'So how did you find out that I was supposedly after him?'
O'Neal stopped, and I could see him thinking that he'd already said whole volumes too much to me. He looked over at Solomon crossly, blaming him for not being a good enough chaperon. Solomon was a picture of calm.
'I don't see why we shouldn't tell him that, Mr O'Neal,' he said. 'He's had a bullet through his chest through no fault of his own. Might make it heal quicker if he knows why it happened.'
O'Neal took a moment to digest this, and then turned to me.
'Very well,' he said. 'We received the information about your meeting with McCluskey, or Woolf...' He was hating this. 'We received this information from the Americans.'
The door opened and a nurse came in. She might have been the one who patted my hand when I first woke up, but I couldn't swear to it. She looked straight through Solomon and O'Neal, and came over to fiddle with my pillows, plumping them up, pushing them about, making them considerably less comfortable than they had been.
I looked up at O'Neal.
'Do you mean the CIA?'
Solomon smiled, and O'Neal nearly wet himself.
The nurse didn't even flicker.