Read The Matarese Countdown Online

Authors: Robert Ludlum

The Matarese Countdown (53 page)

Coleman realized that his own hostile attitude toward Sir Geoffrey had been unreasonable; even now his actions lacked logic. MI-5, along with the other cooperating services, all were far more equipped to search for Lady Alicia’s killer than a retired old soldier and an angry teenager. Still, the former sergeant major had to make clear his loyalties. The son of Brigadier Daniel Brewster—officer, scholar, sportsman, and entrepreneur—took precedence over all things, including the government. If Roger wished to make contact with his father’s aged comrade in arms, contact would be made.

But what purpose would be served? What help could
he
provide? Unless Roger Brewster knew something, or remembered something, that others had overlooked. Coleman would learn the answers to his questions soon—if the lad showed up.

He did, at six minutes past three in the afternoon.

“Thanks, Coley, thanks so much for seeing me,” said Roger Brewster, having spotted Coleman in a back booth of the pub, and sitting down quickly across from him.

“I wouldn’t have it any other way. I’m pleased you understood my message.”

“It was confusing at first, but not when I thought about it.”

“I was counting on that, you think clearly. I’m convinced our telephones are tapped, and Sir Geoffrey has already come to see me, threaten me actually, about what to do if you reached me.”

“Oh,
Christ
, I don’t want to get you into trouble!”

“Not to worry, I lost his bloody tail back in Piccadilly. However, young man, I must ask you. Why, Roger,
why?
Sir
Geoffrey and his troops were
protecting
you, I’ll grant him that. Why did you do this to him? Is it Henshaw?”

“Yes, Coley.”

“Can’t you understand that MI-Five and its highly professional associates are doing everything they can to find him, if, indeed, he’s alive?”

“Yes, I know that, but I also understand that there are moles in the services. Sir Geoffrey said as much to Mr. Pryce and Colonel Montrose, I heard him! I didn’t want to take the chance that the information I had could be intercepted.”

“What information, lad?”

“I think I know where Henshaw may be hiding, or at least the person who can tell us where he is.”


What?

“Outside of the whores and the call girls, Gerry had a special girlfriend in High Holborn. Mother knew it but never said anything outside the family, and precious little to us. One night, however, around eleven o’clock, I passed their bedroom door; Henshaw was drunk and they were fighting—nothing new. Then he announced that he was going out for some ‘comfort and relaxation.’ That pissed me off, so I followed him in the Bentley and saw where he went.”

“For God’s sake, why didn’t you say anything about this
before?

“I’m not sure. Mum hated any sort of scandal, you know that, and I guess I just put it out of my mind. Then a few days ago, I remembered Mother’s words to Angie and me as she was going upstairs to confront Gerry, the night he killed her. ‘Call Coley, don’t let him drive the Jaguar. He’ll probably go over to see his girlfriend in High Holborn,’ or words to that effect.”

“Then we must go to Sir Geoffrey with your information—”


No
,” broke in Roger. “I’m going there first! If he’s there, I want him to myself.”

“For
what?
To kill him? You’d throw your life away by killing a worthless scoundrel like Gerald Henshaw?”

“Wouldn’t you, Coley, if you were me? He murdered my mother.”

“I’m
not
you, lad!”

“That doesn’t answer my question.”

“In a way it does, my boy,” replied Oliver Coleman quietly. “To answer your question directly, yes,
I
would kill Gerald Henshaw with my bare hands, as I freely admitted to Sir Geoffrey. It would be a slow death of excruciating pain, but it would be done by me,
not
you. I am an old soldier without much time left on this earth. You, on the other hand, have your whole life in front of you. You’re the son of the finest man I ever knew, and I couldn’t permit you to throw that life away.”

“Suppose, dear friend,” said Roger, looking sheepishly up and locking his eyes with the once and always sergeant major, “I simply beat the living crap out of the bastard, and
then
turned him over to Sir Geof?”

“In that case,” replied Coleman, “as they say in those insufferable American television programs, let’s roll, young man.”

The Bentley slowed down in the street in High Holborn, stopping at a parking place nearest the apartment house Roger pointed out. “I remember he pressed the top button on the left,” said Brewster as they got out of the car.

They walked up the steps, entered the glass-enclosed foyer, and stood in front of the panel of buttons. Roger pressed the top button on the left. There was no response. He pressed it again and again, still nothing.

“Here,” said Coleman, studying the names opposite the numbers. “We’ll try something else,” he added, pressing the button marked Management.


Yes?
” said the gruff voice over the intercom.

“Sir Geoffrey Waters, sir, Crown Military Intelligence. We’re in a dreadful hurry, but if you care to check the MI-Five Index, you’ll find that I
am
who I say.” Coleman’s authority was absolute. “We must talk immediately.”

“Good heavens, of course!” cried the obviously frightened manager of the building. “Come right in,” the man
continued as the entrance buzzer sounded, “I’ll meet you in the hall. I’m on this floor.”

The former sergeant major flashed an old Royal Fusiliers ID card in front of the startled manager and spoke—again with enormous authority. “Flat Eight-A, there’s no response. Is the lessee, Symond, not in?”

“Hasn’t been for days, your … sir.”

“We have to check the premises, it’s most urgent.”

“Yes, certainly—sure!” The shabbily dressed manager led them to an elevator at the end of the hall. “Here’s a master key,” he said. “You can let yourselves in.”

“The Crown thanks you.” Coley accepted the key with a cold nod.

The Symond flat was a well-appointed, attractive apartment with upscale decor and expensive furniture. Roger and Oliver Coleman began their search. There were three rooms, two baths, and a kitchen. A bedroom, the living room, and what appeared to be a library/study, the shelves minimally filled with books, but papers scattered across the desk. Coleman started with the papers, a hodgepodge of bills, magazines, memos reminding the writer of various engagements—initials taking the place of names—and numerous personal letters, many sent from the Continent. The postmarks read like the itinerary of wealthy fun-seekers and shopping aficionados: Paris, Nice, Côte d’Azur, Rome, Baden-Baden, Lake Como, the watering and purchasing centers of Europe.

The letters themselves were chatty, innocuous, the wish-you-were-here variety—in a word, boring. Coleman would, of course, turn everything over to Sir Geoffrey; it was his duty to do so, but the woman named Symond would remain an enigma unless she could be found.


Coley!
” shouted Roger Brewster from another room. “Come
look
at this!”

“Where are you, lad?”

“The kitchen!”

Coleman ran out of the study, glanced around the living room, then dashed into the white-tiled kitchen. “What is it, Roger?”

“Here,” replied young Brewster, standing by a wall phone with a notepad beside it, a ballpoint pen hanging from a small brass chain on the right. “There, see that? There are puncture marks on the pad and they were made by someone angry, I mean really pissed-off. So much so he—or I guess she—stabbed the pad.”

“What? All I can see are parts of two letters and three numbers. The rest are only indentations.”

“That’s because this kind of pen doesn’t write well on the side, you know, on the horizontal. We have one in our dorm at school—most of the time we substitute pencils, but they don’t last—”

“What are you driving at, lad?”

“Well, if we’re in a hurry, say a girl’s giving us a number, we just keep writing
heavy
, then figure it out later.”

“We’ve all done that,” said Coleman, ripping off the page, “and you’ve got a point. The Symond woman must have been in a dreadful hurry. Otherwise, she would have put the caller on hold and gotten a decent writing instrument.” The retired old soldier carried the page to a counter, took a mechanical pencil from his inside jacket pocket, and began lightly drawing the lead back and forth over the indentations. “What do you make of it, Roger?”


NU Three Five Zero.
” Young Brewster read the emerging white lettering. “
Amst. K-Gr. Conf. Tues. Surrey A.P
.… I can figure out the first and the last parts. The ‘NU Three Five Zero’ are the tail numbers of a private plane. I know that because Mother often had to hire one for Wildlife trips. And the ‘Surrey A.P.’ is obviously an airport in Surrey.”

“Perhaps I can fill in the obvious parts of the rest. The ‘Amst.’ is Amsterdam, ‘Conf.’ and ‘Tues.’ undoubtedly a conference on Tuesday. The ‘K-Gr.’ is apparently a location in Amsterdam, and since we can assume the ‘Gr.’ is ‘Gracht,’ which in Dutch is ‘canal,’ it’s probably the address of some place on a canal with the letter ‘K’ in it. There are probably dozens of canals with a prominent ‘K,’ and hundreds and hundreds of such offices or residences.”

“What do you think it all means?” asked Roger.

“I think it means we should march right over and deliver this information to Sir Geoffrey Waters.”

“Come
on
, Coley. He’ll lock me up again in France!”

“That, young man, would not make me unhappy. Now, we’ll tear this flat apart, looking for any evidence of Henshaw’s whereabouts, but if none can be found, you’ve accomplished your mission, won’t you agree?”

“Suppose she comes back?”

“We’ll make an agreement with Waters and MI-Five. In writing, if you like. He’ll have this place covered as if there’s a skin around the street. Should Symond or Henshaw return, you’ll be instantly notified and flown back to London.”

“Let’s start
looking
!” exclaimed Roger Brewster.

Sir Geoffrey Waters did his very best to control his nearly uncontrollable temper. Called by Coleman to come to the Brewster house in Belgravia, his face flushed with anger at the sight of Roger Brewster.

“I trust you realize, Roger, that you’ve caused this organization,
and
others, a great deal of aggravation, to say the least, as well as placing the lives of Angela and James Montrose in extreme jeopardy.”

“The boy has also brought you what I believe to be extraordinary information,” said Oliver Coleman firmly, in defense of young Brewster. “None of us knew about the Symond woman until he remembered her.
He
did it, I didn’t, and he should be given credit for doing so. By your own admission, he couldn’t trust your—”


Myra
Symond?” interrupted Waters. “My God, it’s
incredible!

“Yes, I believe that was the first name on the letters sent to her,” said Coleman. “Why is it incredible?”

“She was
one
of us, damn it! A member of our associate branch,
MI-Six!
She was one of the most successful operatives in foreign penetrations.”

“Yet she was obviously a traitor, a mole,” continued
Coleman. “So our young friend has brought you information you knew nothing about.”

“How could we?” protested Waters. “She retired a year ago, claiming burnout, which is not unusual.”

“She wasn’t too burned out to work for somebody else, was she?” said Roger. “Gerald Henshaw killed my mother because she stood up against this Matarese, her computer messages to and from Madrid damn well proved it. Suddenly, this Symond woman is tight with Gerry and Mum’s murdered.
Jesus
, sir, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see the connection!”

“Yes, yes, it’s quite apparent,” Waters spoke quietly and nodded his head in understatement, “and your knowledge of that, should it ever be suspected, would mark you for a Matarese bullet or a knife. And as someone recently said, ‘They’re everywhere, we just can’t see them.’ ”

“I understand, sir, I’ll go back to France, no argument from me.”

“No France, either, Roger,” said Waters. “We closed that place down within minutes after you were found missing. I wasn’t joking, young man, you seriously risked the lives of the others by the chaos you created. People talk and other people listen; word spreads swiftly when a secret government operation is uncovered in a foreign country.”

“I’m truly sorry, sir.”

“Well, don’t be
too
hard on yourself. The sergeant major is right, you have brought us extraordinarily helpful information. More than you realize, perhaps.… I’ll tell you this much. We believe we’ve identified a Matarese agent here in London. Combined with what you’ve discovered, we may be a step closer.”

“To what, sir?”

“The soul of the serpent, I dearly hope. It’s still beyond our reach, but a step is a step.”

“Where will I be going?” asked the Brewster son.

“South is all you have to know.”

“How will I get there?”

“We use only one pilot and one plane. Come to think of
it, it’s been a rather exhausting day for the poor chap. Oh, well, he’s young and strong.”

“Luther’s a gas, sir.”

“Yes, he’s refueled a number of times today. Petrol, I mean.”

chapter 27

L
ieutenant Senior Grade Luther Considine, U.S. Navy, once again swept left for yet another final approach, this in to an alternate diplomatic airstrip at Heathrow Airport. “You’ve got to be
kidding
,” he roared into the mouthpiece of his radio headgear. “I’ve been ferrying this relic since four o’clock this morning, and it’s now almost five o’clock in the afternoon! Give me a break, like lunch maybe?”

“Sorry, Leftenant, those are the orders.”

“It’s not
leftenant
, it’s
lootenant
, and I’m hungry.”

“Apologies again, old sport. I’m simply relaying the orders, I don’t make them. The flight plan will be delivered to you by an officer of MI-Five.”

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