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‘And you can’t stop him?’

He gave a rueful smile, then said with sudden intensity, ‘We are investigating his activities. We are working with the authorities in Spain; in Colombia we liaise with the Americans and in Africa we work on our own. Now he has crossed your sights in the UK, I hope we will be able to work with you too. One day we will have enough to arrest him. But he was always clever, and he has lost none of his cleverness in his new profession.’

Dessert was cleared, and Liz pondered all this over coffee. It was an intriguing story, and she had no reason to doubt any of it. She sensed in Seurat’s account a feeling of betrayal, which she well understood.

‘So tell me, are you very often in France?’ he asked.

She shook her head. ‘Sadly not. I like your country very much – and I love Paris. But…’ and she waved a hand helplessly.

He laughed, a low chuckle she was coming to like. His looks would make him attractive to any woman, but it was his mix of the urbane and the unaffected that appealed to Liz. ‘And your husband? He likes Paris as well?’

He knows full well I’m single, thought Liz. He had greeted her as Mlle Carlyle when she first arrived and in any case she wasn’t wearing a wedding ring. But she was flattered more than annoyed by the unsubtle query. ‘If I ever have a husband, he will be required to love Paris,’ she declared firmly.

‘Ha! That’s excellent. My wife cannot stand the place.’

‘Oh, really?’ said Liz, disappointed in spite of herself.

‘Yes, perhaps that is why she took herself off to her mother’s house in Alsace. I believe she is living there still,’ he said, flashing his infectious grin. Then he said more seriously, ‘It is funny that you should be here asking about Antoine. I was thinking of him just the other day.’

‘Why was that?’

He shrugged, nodding at Madame Bouffet as she plonked the bill down on the table. ‘How long have you been with your service?’

‘Long enough,’ she said, ducking the question, but it was in fact almost fifteen years now.

‘Then you’ll understand me when I say that sometimes we all have our Antoine days. That’s what I call them. The kind of day when everything seems… would the word be thankless? Yes. You work hard, the money seems very small, your personal life is absolument zero, n’est-ce-pas? Does that make sense?’

‘Of course,’ she said at once. She didn’t have a name for what he was describing, but it was familiar enough. Her remedy was to take an hour off and walk along the Thames as far as the Tate Gallery. Sometimes she joined the tourists and went inside and stood in the Pre-Raphaelite room, contemplating one or other of the paintings – by which time her mood had lifted, and she was keen to get back to Thames House.

‘It never lasts, and please do not misunderstand me – I like my work and there is not another job I would prefer.’ He added jokingly, ‘Not even selling arms. My point is, au fond, that in those moments I can see what came over Antoine, only for him it was a much more fundamental thing.’

‘You can empathise then?’

‘You mean “share” his feelings? Non!’ He was suddenly emphatic. ‘I can sympathise, perhaps, but that’s all. And not for long. For his so-called freedom, Antoine has helped many people to be killed. None of them he knew; none of them he ever saw. But it is killing just the same.’

Again there was that bitterness, which suggested a personal as much as professional resentment. Liz said nothing as Seurat paid the bill, then they walked slowly towards the Metro.

When they reached the station, she held out her hand. ‘That was a wonderful lunch. Thank you very much. And you have been extremely helpful.’

‘Excellent.’ He seemed genuinely pleased. ‘Now perhaps you can help me with two requests. The first is to please keep in touch as you investigate what Milraud is up to in Belfast. It goes without saying that if we can be of any assistance, you must not hesitate to say so.’

‘Of course,’ Liz said simply, wondering what the second request would be.

Seurat looked hesitant and for the first time less than completely self-assured. ‘The other is not perhaps not quite so professional. Would you have dinner with me this evening?’

‘Oh Martin,’ she said, suddenly realising they had slipped into first names during the course of their lunch, ‘I would love to. But I have to get back.’ An image of Jimmy Fergus flickered briefly in her mind.

‘Another time then,’ said Seurat mildly.

For all his good looks, there was something disappointed in this gallant acceptance of her rejection; it made Liz want to reassure him. She touched him lightly on the arm.

‘There will be another time, I’m sure,’ she said. ‘I have a feeling Monsieur Milraud will see to that.’

23

He was suspicious of the letter from the start. Block capitals on the envelope – SEAMUS PIGGOTT – and the office address, then at the bottom: PRIVATE. His secretary had obeyed the instruction, and placed it unopened with the rest of the morning’s post in his in-tray.

He slit the envelope cautiously. Letter bombs were bulkier than this, but it paid to be careful. A man with his background had many enemies, and he knew they were out there, just waiting for him to drop his guard and give them the opportunity to have a go. The Feds and their British stooges would love to be able to stick something on him, and there were others, people here in Northern Ireland, who resented the success of the Fraternity’s activities. It was inevitable that a clever and determined man like him aroused the envy and resentment of weaker specimens.

There was no bomb inside the envelope, just a folded piece of A4 paper. He extracted it slowly and carefully, holding the corner with his fingertips and flicking it open with the point of a pencil. He was startled by the bizarre appearance of the message, and surprised by what it said.

Watch your back. Well, he’d spent thirty years doing that. Yes, he took risks, but only necessary ones; he had never been impetuous, and every step he took was carefully calculated beforehand. He cast his mind back with satisfaction to the boy Aidan, sitting trembling and terrified in his office in County Down. Before Malone had brought the boy in, he had already decided to have two of his fingers broken. That was the appropriate punishment for blabbing and complaining. Not three (that would have been excessive), but not just one either – that wouldn’t have been enough. He was a fine judge of these things, he thought with pleasure.

He looked down again with disdain at the paper and its cutout letters. He didn’t need some anonymous coward to instruct him to take care.

But the real thrust of the message – its warning about Milraud – was more puzzling. He didn’t believe for a moment that Milraud was talking to British Intelligence. He and the Frenchman went back a long way. He knew something of Milraud’s background; he knew what his previous profession had been and why he’d changed it. It was inconceivable that Milraud would betray him to MI5.

Still, never take anything for granted. He’d learned that long ago. Enduring loyalty was a contradiction in terms. Any allegiance was vulnerable; everyone could be seduced by something: money, women, power, fear or an ideology. There were many people in this little island whose lives were governed by ideology – be it Irish Republicanism or so-called Loyalism to the British crown. But of all people, Milraud was the least likely to have become attached to a political cause. He was far too cool-headed a businessman for that.

Piggott himself was happy to pay lip service to the ideology of Irish Republicanism. His credentials as a long-standing IRA supporter had helped to establish him in the Belfast underworld almost overnight. But his only true ideology nowadays, the only thing he really cared about, was revenge. He’d made the money he had once craved, growing up poor in South Boston. Women had never mattered to him at all – it seemed inexplicable why so many men met their downfall chasing a skirt. And as for power, it was enough that people feared him; the people working for him did what he said, and everyone else gave him a wide berth.