It was the moment of ultimate decision for Giancarlo Battes tini. Move now or be damned and finished, vulnerable to the sniper's aim, naked to the gas and nausea cartridges, open to the bone-splintering bullets of the marksmen. His hands furtive, he reached for the flex at Geoffrey Harrison's ankles, swore at the skill of his own knot, and with difficulty loosened it. By the collar of the shirt he pulled his prisoner close to him and back down into the pit, so that the wire tied to the wrists and the roots would have more play. That was easier to unfasten, the work of a few seconds.
'What are we doing, Giancarlo?'
A grim, set smile. 'We go on another journey, 'Arrison,'
'Where are we going?'
Busy with his work, scraping together the strands of wire, Giancarlo muttered, 'You will know.'
The boy bound together the length of wire that he had used on Harrison's legs to the piece now trailing from his wrists.
'Kneel upright.'
Harrison stretched himself to the extent of the pit, wriggled and turned his ankles to restore the circulation and slowly raised his head above the rim. He lifted his shoulders, tautened his spine, and grimaced at the stiffness carried by his trapped night's sleep.
Giancarlo looped the wire around the front of his chest, then snuggled it behind his own back, drew it beneath his armpits and then again to Harrison's wrists. Pressed hard against his man, the boy entwined the knot that closed them together, linked them as one. With a hand he pulled Harrison's shirt from the waist of his trousers and the metal pistol barrel was formidable against the skin in the small of Harrison's back. The front gun-sight carved a scratch line in the flesh as Giancarlo armed the weapon.
' It is a light trigger, 'Arrison. When we start you should not talk, you should not slip. My finger will barely have to move, you understand?'
Harrison nodded, the questions stifled in his throat, choked on his tongue. No more compulsion to ask questions. Just a new horror, and what use explanation? Just a new abyss, and he was plunging.
'We stand up, and carefully.'
They straightened as one, the vibrations mingled, and Giancarlo pressed his head against Harrison's collar-bone.
But your legs don't work, Geoffrey, been tied too long. You'll slip, you'll bloody s t u m b l e… and then the bloody trigger goes.
How far does the finger move, how far… quarter of an inch, eighth of an inch? Concentrate, you bloody fool. One leg forward, put it down slowly, ease the weight on to it, stop, put the other foot forward, test the balance, stop again, put the next foot f o r w a r d
…
Harrison looked around him, blinked in the air, drank in its freshness, felt the erosion of Giancarlo's stale breath. It was a certain sort of freedom, a certain sort of release. Breathing something other than the odour of the earth. Nothing moved at the front, but there would be an army there, concealed, close and waiting. The voice bellowed behind his ear.
'Is Carboni there?'
Ahead of them was the path that they had walked down the previous morning, long ago, separated by infinite time. The route that Giancarlo had used to get his food and to drift away down when he went to the telephone in the darkness, and it was the way the child had come.
The stream of the sun caught the three men square as thev came forward on the path. They wore their badges of nationality, their flags for recognition. A short, rolling man at the front, balding, sallow. One behind him who held a submachine-gun diagonally across his waist, hair combed, the trace of a clipped moustache at his upper lip, his tie sombre and silk. The last was a stranger, clothes of a different cut, hair of a different trim, rounded shoulders and a pallor denied the Mediterranean. Two Italians and an Englishman. Harrison felt the weakness at his knees, the shake at his thighs and shins that was irresistible. The bastards had come. Long enough about it.
Harrison and Giancarlo were fused as one, responsive to each other's tremors, pliant to each other's movements. Three men facing them.
' I am Carboni.*
The words echoed in the trees, bounced from the moss-coated trunks.
Harrison felt the boy stiffen, readying himself. The last great battle, striving for strength and steel stamina.
'Listen, Carboni. This is your 'Arrison, this is your foreign dirt. I have tied him to me, and against his back, behind his heart, I have the P38. It is a hair-trigger, Carboni, tell your criminals, tell your gunmen that. If they shoot, my finger will move on the trigger… you are listening, Carboni? If you hit me,
'Arrison is dead. I am going to walk down the path, I am going to walk to my car. If you want 'Arrison alive, you do not impede me.'
Harrison was aware that the pressure of the circled barrel grew in his back, the impetus growing for movement.
' I am going to move forward. If you want 'Arrison, stay back.'
'What does he say?'
Carboni did not turn towards Carpenter and his sharp anxiety. He gazed on down the path at Harrison and Giancarlo.
' The boy has the gun at Harrison's back. He says it is hair-triggered. He wants to drive away from here… '
Vellosi, in English, because that was the language of the moment.
'Giuseppe, he doesn't walk out of here.'
T h e n Harrison dies.'
T h e boy cannot leave here.' The spitting whisper of the cobra.
' I am here to save Harrison.' Confusion, catastrophe ravaging at Carboni.
'If Battestini walks out of here, if he leaves the wood, he has ridiculed us. One boy and he has beaten u s… '
' I have to save Harrison.' Carboni wavering, torn and pulled and tossed.
'We have to save I t a l y… Think, Carboni, of the implications if the boy walks clear. One against so many, and he wins because we have no courage.'
Violet Harrison dead and mangled on her back in a plastic sack on the morgue slab, incised for autopsy, viewed by path-ologists. And Geoffrey Harrison to lie beside her with a pencil hole in his back and a cavity large enough to fit a lemon into at his chest. Get off your arse, Archie Carpenter. Get into the big boys' league. It's your man out there, Archie, so get off your bloody arse and get walking.
A short jab of his elbow and Archie Carpenter was past Carboni and Vellosi. Three quick strides and he was clear of them… and who was going to run forward to pull him back?
'Watch the boy, Carboni, watch the boy and be ready.'
Giancarlo watched him come. Saw the purposeful clean steps eat into the dividing distance. Nothing to be read from the face of the man, nothing that spoke of danger and risk, nothing from which to recognize his emotions. The command to halt, the shout, was beyond the boy. Fascinated, spellbound. And the light caught at the man's face as he passed between two trees and there was no shop window of fear. A man with a job to do, and getting it over with, and wearing a crumpled suit.
Giancarlo felt his hand on the pistol butt cavort with the weapon. He could not hold it still and motionless.
Francesco Vellosi spun on his heel, raking the trees and bushes behind him till he saw the carabinieri sergeant with the rifle, kneeling and in cover. His fingers snapped for the man's attention and he tossed the submachine-gun towards him, gestured for the rifle and caught it as it was thrown to him. The rifle slipped to his shoulder. Rock steady, unwavering, and the needle of the front sight rested centrally in the V of the rear attachment by his right eye. The line was on the small part of Giancarlo Battestini's head that was visible to him.
The void cut, the gap halved, Archie Carpenter spoke. Almost surprised to hear his own voice. Brisk and full of business.
'Geoffrey Harrison. I'm Archie Carpenter… does this Battestini speak English?'
No preamble, dominate from the start, the way they taught them far back, the Metropolitan Police drill on approaching an armed man.