Automatic fire spackled the cliff face and Purkiss ducked as a shower of gravel fell on him. He looked up, half-expecting to see Motruk drawing a bead, but he wasn’t there.
Purkiss inched around the boulder and looked. Motruk had, after all, chosen self-preservation and changed course, running to the shore. He was aboard one of the boats with two other men, and as Purkiss watched the vessel arced off across the roiling water, peeling away from the direction of the ship and heading out to sea.
It was over relatively quickly. Three of the Siclians were shot dead by police marksmen. The rest surrendered soon afterwards, and those who’d made it to the ship would be rounded up once the ship was intercepted. One policeman had been injured by a lucky shot, but would live.
Purkiss made his way up the cliff path, running the gauntlet of police officers who glared at him even though Cass had provided his description and told them to hold fire. At the top he saw Cass and Silverman in discussion with the officer in charge.
Cass came over. ‘Are you hurt?’
‘No.’
‘Sorry.’
It said all that needed to be said, with admirable concision, Purkiss thought.
‘Shame he got away,’ she said. ‘But we’ll get him somewhere along the line.’
‘He hasn’t got away.’ Purkiss took out his phone. ‘He told me you’d given him a phone in the beginning, but that the Sicilians confiscated it so they could listen to any secret calls you might make to him.’ He looked at her expectantly. ‘So what’s the number?’
Cass gazed at him, then understood and glanced away. ‘I know what you’re thinking, but —’
‘We have to do it this way.’
Unusually for her, she didn’t meet his eyes as she recited the number. Purkiss keyed it in.
On the fourth ring it was answered in silence. Without pause Purkiss said in Italian, ‘Motruk? It’s Purkiss. Cass is here too. Listen, we can still salvage this. Stay with them and when you can, get message to us where you are. If it’s Sicily, we’ll liaise with the local police to make a swoop but leave you unhurt. You have my word.’
He waited, heard an intake of breath at the other end. He said, ‘Motruk?’ Then he muttered, off to one side, ‘Damn it. Someone else has his phone,’ and killed the call.
Like a hanging judge, signing the final piece of paper.
Purkiss began to walk away up the grassy slope towards where his car was parked.
Cass called: ‘Where are you going?’
‘Home,’ said Purkiss.
FROM THE AUTHOR
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