I rejoined the road, keeping in first gear, only shifting up into second when the engine was screaming. There was another outburst from Goatee in the trunk and I turned on the radio to drown the noise. It was monotonous, rapid dance music, but at least it was louder than he was.
Even if I got Goatee successfully to the DOP, I didn"t know what I was going to do next. There was no way I could go to a hospital. No identification, no money, no nothing-I"d be picked up in minutes. What had happened down in the industrial complex would be a ma.s.sive deal, even for such a rough banlieue banlieue. The police heli was up: they"d be looking for runners. TV and radio would carry saturation coverage any minute.
I had no chance of getting out of this. The police would find my docs in the pit soon enough, and then I"d really be in the s.h.i.t. I couldn"t run to the American consulate. They"d f.u.c.k me off at the door. The only chance I"d have would be to jump over the wall, giving myself up to someone inside the compound. Even then they"d probably chuck me out. I could try making a run for Italy, but I"d still be in the same boat.
I worked my way up onto the high ground, leaning on the wheel to take some of the weight off my chest. The coughing persisted, and the knifelike pain came back each time my body tensed as I tried to stop it.
The only chance I had was to get on board that warship. It didn"t matter how I did it, even if it meant posing as one of the hawallada hawallada. Only the warship guaranteed medical attention, and offered the possibility of escape.
I drove with the sun to my left for what felt like hours. I still didn"t know where I was because I"d been concentrating too much on other things. I eventually took a right turn, which led into a narrow lane with steep, rocky sides, dotted with clumps of gra.s.s and the odd stubby tree. I was heading east now; the sun half-blinded me in the rearview mirror. The dance music banged out, and the trunk tray gave a jump now and again, not quite in time with the beat. I didn"t have a clue how far inland I was, but I knew I was paralleling the sea and was some way above Nice.
I was feeling more and more exhausted. I"d gone on maybe another hour. Any road south would do me now. I found one and, with the sun to my right and getting lower, began my descent toward the coast.
The rapid breathing returned, and I had to pull in at the roadside and get the paper bag onto my face. The radio boomed, and Goatee gave the back tray another couple of kicks as I puckered my lips and kissed air.
55.
I spit out some more blood and covered my mouth and nose once more with the McDonald"s bag, but it was getting wet from me dripping into it every five minutes, and wouldn"t be good for much longer. spit out some more blood and covered my mouth and nose once more with the McDonald"s bag, but it was getting wet from me dripping into it every five minutes, and wouldn"t be good for much longer.
After about fifteen minutes, the hyperventilation had eased and I threw the bag back onto the pa.s.senger seat. The road ahead swam in and out of focus. All I knew was that as long as I kept heading south, toward the sea, I could sort myself out and get to the DOP.
As darkness began to fall, I found myself on an avenue of large houses set well back from the road, at the end of which was a sign that told me Villefranche was to the left, and Nice to the right.
The volume of traffic increased, and I had to concentrate even harder as the headlights came on and the wipers failed to shift the smear of insects on my windshield. In just a few more miles I was approaching the picnic area. I stopped by the bottle banks, and levered myself slowly out of the car, letting my arms take my weight. The parking lot was empty, but I left the music on to cover any noise Goatee might make. Opening the rear pa.s.senger door, I bent down to retrieve a full can of c.o.ke Light from a six-pack in the footwell, and shoved it under the right-hand corner of the nearest bottle bank. My chest felt like a knife thrower had used it for target practice as I pushed myself back up.
Back behind the wheel, I felt under the dash for the brake and backup lights cutoff, pressing down on the brake so the rear of the wagon was now a blaze of red. It was in the same position as on the other two cars so that everyone knew where to find it, just like the keys. My fingers found the switch, and the gentle glow from the taillights returned in the rearview mirror.
I circled the parking lot and headed downhill, eyes peeled for the DOP driveway. If I missed it, I"d have to go into Hubba-Hubba"s old holding-up point, then make my way back uphill, and I didn"t want to do that if I could avoid it. Every movement was agony.
I kept the vehicle lights on high beam and let the car just coast on its brakes, leaning on the wheel to relieve the pain. I turned off the radio to help me concentrate. There was no sound from the trunk.
At last I saw it. I moved into the oncoming lane, killed the lights, put the Focus into first and managed to make the sharp right turn onto the track. My chest burst into flames again, and I coughed blood onto the dash.
The rusty chain was padlocked to a wooden post at either end. I put my foot down. I hit it dead center and the Focus lunged forward, but then stopped, throwing me against the steering wheel. The engine stalled.
My chest was agony. I coughed up another mouthful of blood and mucus and reached for the soggy McDonald"s bag. When my breathing had slowed, I lowered the window, listening for vehicles. There was nothing; I moved the gearshift into reverse, checked there was no white light behind me, backed into the road, and tried again, this time with more revs.
The post ripped out and I braced myself and braked, not wanting the Focus to go all the way down the hill just yet. I turned off the engine, put the hand brake on, and pressed the trunk-release catch before stumbling outside. Shoving the wet McDonald"s bag down my sweatshirt and using the car to support myself, I waded through a river of broken boxes, empty cans, and burst garbage bags.
The light came on as I lifted the tailgate. Goatee was still out of it, just a limp bundle. I got hold of his feet and swung them out, bent down, and half-lifted, half-dragged him out onto the ground. It was just as well there was no resistance from him: I wouldn"t have been able to fight back.
I made my way back to the driver"s seat, released the hand brake, and gave the Focus as much of a push as my grating ribs would allow. It rolled slowly forward, gathered a bit of momentum, and continued down the slope until it hit a barrier of old washing machines. It hadn"t gone far, but was out of view of the road, and that was what mattered.
I turned and limped back to Goatee, got my hands under his armpits, and dragged him onto the canvas tarpaulin to the right of the driveway.
A car came downhill from the picnic area, bathing the roadside and bushes in light. I waited for the sound of its engine to die, then pulled him over onto his side to make sure he didn"t choke on his tongue. He curled up like a baby. I sat over him; I tried lying down, but it was just too painful.
Coughing out more blood, I checked traser. It was just past seven o"clock: it could be hours before we got a pickup. Goatee"s condition was a worry. I wasn"t sure he was going to make it. Come to think of it, I wasn"t too sure about myself.
I lifted the corner of the tarpaulin and covered him, trying to maintain his core temperature. I tried to get some of it over me as well, but it hurt too much to pull it any farther. I started to hyperventilate again with the effort and the McDonald"s bag finally fell apart as I tried to breathe into it again. There was nothing I could do but use my cupped hands. I rested my elbows on my knees for a moment, but that was too painful.
More vehicle lights bathed the skyline intermittently for the next hour or so, then I heard a diesel engine coming down the hill. I listened and hoped it would stop at the driveway, but no such luck. It pa.s.sed and the lights disappeared. I checked traser again. Only ten minutes had pa.s.sed since the last time I"d looked.
Goatee retched, and I heard a splash on the tarpaulin. He wheezed and fought for breath, then coughed again, and I felt warm liquid on the hand that I was using to support myself.
Two or three more vehicles pa.s.sed in each direction as I just sat there, cross-legged, trying to keep my trunk upright, wishing my life away because I desperately needed Thackery to turn up and get us out of here. Goatee moaned gently below me; now and again his body twitched and his legs pedaled on the tarpaulin, but at least his breathing was more regular than mine.
Suddenly, soft bleeping noises filled the air. I wondered if I were hallucinating. It took me several seconds to realize they were coming from Goatee"s cell phone. He started to straighten out his legs, mumbling to himself in Arabic. I lay down next to him, feeling in the dark, finding his hand as it tried to find his pocket. I pulled it away weakly.
"f.u.c.k you," he grunted. There were only a few inches between our faces now and I could smell his rancid breath. Mine was probably no better.
I dug into his pants pocket with my left hand and pulled out the cell phone. It had stopped ringing, and Goatee was whining in Arabic, I thought more in anger at not being able to take the call than from the pain.
"What are you saying?"
I could hear slurping as he opened and closed his mouth a couple of times before muttering, "My wife."
I opened up the phone and a dull blue display glowed in the dark. "Tough s.h.i.t." With the blood-and tar-covered thumb of my right hand I tapped in the digits 001, then the rest of the Ma.s.sachusetts number.
It would be afternoon in Marblehead, and she should be home. She had to be-it was her day to look after the bed-and-breakfast.
It rang three or four times, then I heard her voice. "h.e.l.lo?"
"Carrie, it"s me. Please don"t hang up."
"Oh."
"I need help."
"I"ve been telling you that for months." Her tone changed. "So, Nick, where do we go from here?"
"Listen, I really need your help." I tried to stop myself coughing.
"Are you okay, Nick? You sound...have you got somebody with you?"
"Yes, I have." I hesitated, then realized I had no choice. "Look, I"m still working for George." I moved the phone away from my mouth, and this time coughed up some more blood.
"Nick?"
"I"m all right. I need you to call your dad for me. Tell him I"m coming in with today"s collection, and the collection is ready now. Tell him we both need medical attention, and quickly. Can you do that? Can you contact him?"
"Sure, his pager. But-"
"Please, just make the call."
"Of course."
"Please do it now-it"s important."
"Nick?"
"I"ve got to go-just do it now, please." I hit the off b.u.t.ton, but kept the power on in case the phone had an access code.
Goatee coughed and cleared his mouth before speaking. "Your wife?" He lay there waiting for a reply.
"You"re dying. People are going to pick us up soon and try to save you, but that"s only because they want you alive. They want to know what you know. After that, I don"t know what happens, but it"s not going to be good."
There was a pause. He didn"t say anything, but I could hear his head moving up and down on the canvas and the smell of his breath came and went in waves.
"Me, I"m going home. That"s the end of it, apart from the fact that somebody screwed both of us. Those two you lifted in the shop, they were the real collectors." I could hear his head move again. "We were there to follow them, to get to you-and then do exactly what I"m doing with you now. So my job is done, but my two friends are dead. And so are yours, and chances are you"ll never talk with your wife again. Tell me who you saw in Juan-les-Pins Wednesday night, and what they said." I let it sink in a little before continuing. "Look, you"re f.u.c.ked, but I can do something for both of us."
A vehicle pa.s.sed by, up on the road, so I let my words sink in a little more. "You"ve got nothing to lose, you"ve lost it already."
He gave what sounded like a sob, then made an effort to pull himself together. He turned his head toward me, and the rancid smell returned. "He said he knew that the collection was taking place today.... He said the collectors were not the real guys. They were coming to steal the money, but they were coming with the correct code. He also told me that there would be other guys out there following them as protection."
"What did this man look like? Was he white? Black?"
"Arab."
"With long, graying hair?"
"No, no. Greased back." He coughed, and I heard liquid in his throat. "I had to do what I did. Surely you understand that? Just tell me your price and let me go. I"ll pay you money, more than you can imagine. No one will know what happened. You can say I escaped. How much do you want?"
My mind was on other things. I"d heard all that c.r.a.p a million times before, over the years. I thought about the first time I"d been to Greaseball"s flat. He hadn"t been expecting me, and that was why he"d tried to hide the tennis bags. I"d thought he was trying to stop me seeing the syringes when he kicked them under the bed, but that wasn"t it at all: he was going to collect the money in them. There were even a couple of rackets out on the landing. Their plan couldn"t have been simpler: they were even prepared to sacrifice this collection so they could hang on to the other two, Monaco and Cannes.
I opened up the cell phone once more, mentally reciting the pager number. The first four numbers toned out from the phone, then I stopped. What if they were still in the harbor, or anywhere near real people? I couldn"t do that. I had to stop the money movement, but it was my anger dialing, not the job. I could get something organized from the warship. After all, they had enough technology on board to find anything, anywhere.
I kept the phone in my bloodstained hand as Goatee stirred again. "Please tell my wife...please call her."
I thought about lying to him to make him feel better. Then I thought about Hubba-Hubba"s charred hand reaching through the wrought-iron gate. I turned to face him again in the darkness. "f.u.c.k you."
He didn"t reply, just coughed up even more blood than I had and started to breathe very quickly and shallowly. I forced myself up on my a.s.s to relieve some of the chest pain, and felt myself breathing out of rhythm. I cupped my hands over my nose and mouth.
Another vehicle roared up the hill and I checked traser. It was eight-twenty-seven.
I slid my way down again, and lay next to Goatee.
All I could do was wait now, try to control my breathing, and hope that we were going to get picked up before both of us were dead.
56.
A nother vehicle swept down the hill, but this time slowed as it neared the entrance to the track. nother vehicle swept down the hill, but this time slowed as it neared the entrance to the track.
Whoever it was came to a complete halt, with his engine turning over. I heard the high-pitched whine of the vehicle backing up; then a mixture of red and white light swept across the bank of garbage bags beside us. There was just a second"s silence before the doors swung open. There was something about their echo that made me think van, not car. It must be them. Then the crunch of footsteps headed my way as red light now fought its way past the collapsed chain barrier.
I didn"t move a muscle. Maybe it was just somebody about to do some late-night garbage dumping. If it was Thackery, he"d know where to find us: I didn"t want to spook him, in case he and his pal were armed. I wanted to get into the back of that van in one piece.
Goatee stirred, and I leaned over and cupped my hand over his mouth. I realized that I still had the phone in my other, and slipped it into the pocket of my jeans.
Two silhouettes appeared in front of the gentle red glow, weapons already drawn down, and picked their way through the garbage. The one on the right saw us first. "s.h.i.t! We"ve got two!"
The other one closed in and gave Goatee a kick. I didn"t know whether he was looking for a reaction, or if it was just for the h.e.l.l of it.
The hawallada hawallada responded with a dull moan and curled up even more. I didn"t want any of that: I didn"t know if my rib cage could take it. I looked up and kept my voice very low. "He"s the one you"re here for. He"s got a gunshot wound to the abdomen." responded with a dull moan and curled up even more. I didn"t want any of that: I didn"t know if my rib cage could take it. I looked up and kept my voice very low. "He"s the one you"re here for. He"s got a gunshot wound to the abdomen."
The shadow leaned toward me.
"I"m the one who delivered him. The man-"
The punch flattened my nose against my face. My eyes watered, and white stars flashed inside my head. I lay there, just trying to get my breath back, as a hand ran over my body, checking for weapons. The phone was found and confiscated.
The other did the same to Goatee, then they both picked him up and carried him by his arms and legs to the van, beyond the bushes. I hoped they were going to come back for me, but just in case, I struggled up onto my hands and knees and started to follow.
My route was paved with rusty cans and broken gla.s.s.
I got to the track as the two shadows reappeared. I held up my hands, taking the pain in my chest. "I"m one of you," I gasped. "I need to get to the ship."
They closed in and I got a very thick New York growl in my left ear. "Shut the f.u.c.k up." Hands gripped me and half-lifted, half-dragged me into the back of the van. The pain was unbearable but I wasn"t complaining. One of the shadows got in with us and the door closed. In the gentle red glow from the rear lights, I could see him ripping apart the Velcro fastenings on a trauma pack. As we started to move, he turned on the interior light and I saw Thackery"s face at last.
He completely ignored me, concentrating on Goatee in the mix of white and red light from the rear units exposed in the back as we bounced our way back to the road.
He was wearing much the same gear as he had in Cap 3000. I tugged at his jeans. "It"s me. Cap 3000, remember? The brush contact, the color was blue. It"s me...."
He ripped open the plastic wrapper of a field dressing with his teeth.
"Do you recognize me?"
He nodded. "You okay?" He sounded like one of Dolly Parton"s backup group.
"Not sure." I dribbled some blood down the front of my sweatshirt, as if to show him what I meant. We headed steeply downhill and encountered the first of the hairpins.
Thackery held the dressing in place over Goatee"s gut, and manhandled him over to look for the exit wound. Not finding one, he started to wrap a bandage aggressively around the hawallada hawallada"s stomach. "What the f.u.c.k"s going on here, my friend? Some b.u.t.tons got pressed and we were told to do the pickup quick as we could."
The driver hit the brakes. Thackery held Goatee in place and I put my hands on the floor of the van to steady myself as we took another sharp right-hander, and I lost some more of the now drying top layer of skin from my palms. "There"s been a f.u.c.k-up. I need your help."
He continued bandaging, checking Goatee"s tongue wasn"t blocking his airway. "Hey, man, I don"t know what this is about, and I don"t want to know. We know nothing, we just do what we do."