The beam of light came nearer, dancing, flickering through the impossible foliage.
«Here, mon!» whispered Alex gutturally, hoping against reasonable hope that the rain and the whisper would not raise an alarm in the Dunstone ear.
«Put on your light, please, mon.»
«Trying to, mon.» No more, thought McAuliff. Nothing.
The dancing beam reflected off a thousand shining, tiny mirrors in the darkness, splintering the light into hypnotically flickering shafts.
Closer.
Alex rolled silently off the path into the mass of wet earth and soft growth, the rifle under him cutting into his thighs.
The beam of light was nearly above him, its shaft almost clear of interference. In the spill he could see the upper body of the man. Across his chest were two wide straps: one was connected to an encased radio, the other to the stock of a rifle, its thick barrel silhouetted over his shoulder. The flashlight was in the left hand; in the right was a large, ominous-looking pistol.
The M.I.6 defector was a cautious agent. His instincts had been aroused.
McAuliff knew he had to get the pistol; he could not allow the man to fire. He did not know how near the others were, how close the other patterns.
Now!
He lashed his right hand up, directly onto the barrel of the pistol, jamming his thumb into the curvature of the trigger housing, smashing his shoulder into the man’s head, crashing his left knee up under the man’s leg into his testicles.
With the impact, the man buckled and expunged a tortured gasp; his hand went momentarily limp, and Alex ripped the pistol from it, propelling the weapon into the darkness.
From his crouched agony the Jamaican looked up, his left hand still holding the flashlight, its beam directed nowhere at the earth, his face contorted … about to take the necessary breath to scream.
McAuliff found himself thrusting his fingers into the man’s mouth, tearing downward with all his strength. The man lurched forward, bringing the hard metal of the flashlight crashing into Alex’s head, breaking the skin. Still McAuliff ripped at his mouth, feeling the teeth puncturing his flesh, sensing the screams.
They fell, twisting in midair, into the overgrowth. The Jamaican kept smashing the flashlight into McAuliff’s temple; Alex kept tearing grotesquely, viciously, at the mouth that could sound the alarm he could not allow.
They rolled over into a patch of sheer jungle mud. McAuliff felt a rock, he tore his left hand loose, ripped the rock up from the ground, and brought it crashing into the black mouth, over his own fingers. The man’s teeth shattered; he choked on his own saliva. Alex whipped out his bleeding hand and instantly grabbed the matted hair, twisting the entire head into the soft slime of the mud. There were the muffled sounds of expulsion beneath the surface. A series of miniature filmy domes burst silently out of the soggy earth in the spill of the fallen flashlight.
And then there was nothing.
The man was dead.
And no alarms had been sent.
Alexander reached over, picked up the light, and looked at the fingers of his right hand. The skin was slashed, there were teeth marks, but the cuts were not deep; he could move his hand freely, and that was all he cared about.
His left temple was bleeding, and the pain terrible, but not immobilizing. Both would stop … sufficiently.
He looked over at the dead Jamaican and he felt like being sick. There was no time. He crawled back to the path and started once again the painstaking task of following it. And he tried to focus his eyes into the jungle. Twice, in the not-too-distant denseness, he saw sharp beams of flashlights.
The Dunstone team was continuing its sweep. It was zeroing in.
There was not an instant to waste in thought.
Eight minutes later he reached the clearing. He felt the accelerated pounding in his chest; there was less than a mile to go. The easiest leg of the terrible journey. He looked at his watch. It was exactly four minutes after twelve midnight.
Twelve was also the house of noon.
Four was the ritual Arawak unit.
The Odyssey of death.
No time for thought.
He found the path at the opposite side of the small clearing and began to run, gathering speed as he raced toward the banks of the Martha Brae. There was no air left in his lungs now, not breath as he knew it; only the steady explosion of exhaustion from his throat, blood and perspiration falling from his head, rivering down his neck onto his shoulders and chest.
There was the river. He had reached the river!
It was only then that he realized the pounding rain had stopped; the jungle storm was over. He swung the flashlight to his left; there were the rocks of the path bordering the final few hundred yards into the campsite.
He had heard no rifle fire. There had been no shots. There were five experienced killers in the darkness behind him, and the terrible night was not over … but he had a chance.
That’s all he had asked for, all that was between him and his command to a firing squad ending his life.
Willingly, if he failed. Willingly to end it without Alison.
He ran the last fifty yards as fast as his exhausted muscles could tolerate. He held the flashlight directly in front of him; the first object caught by its beam was the lean-to at the mouth of the campsite area. He raced into the clearing.
There were no fires, no signs of life. Only the dripping of a thousand reminders of the jungle storm, the tents silent monuments of recent living.
He stopped breathing. Cold terror gripped him. The silence was an overpowering portent of horror.
«Alison. Alison!» he screamed and raced blindly toward the tent. «Sam! Sam!»
When the words came out of the darkness, he knew what it was to be taken from death and be given life again.
«Alexander … You damn near got killed, boy,» said Sam Tucker from the black recesses of the jungle’s edge.
34
Sam Tucker and the runner called Marcus walked out of the bush. McAuliff stared at the Halidonite, bewildered. The runner saw his expression and spoke.
«There is no time for lengthy explanations. I have exercised an option, that is all.» The runner pointed to the lapel of his jacket. Alex needed no clarification. Sewn into the cloth were the tablets he had seen in the wash of yellow moonlight on the back road above Lucea Harbour.
I would not think twice about it, Daniel had said.
«Where is Alison?»
«With Lawrence and Whitehall. They’re farther down the river,» answered Sam.
«What about the Jensens?»
Tucker paused. «I don’t know, Alexander.»
«What?»
«They disappeared. That’s all I can tell you. Yesterday Peter was lost; his carrier returned to camp, he couldn’t find him. Ruth bore up well, poor girl … a lot of guts in her. We sent out a search. Nothing. And then this morning, I can’t tell you why—I don’t know—I went to the Jensen tent. Ruth was gone. She hasn’t been seen since.»
McAuliff wondered. Had Peter Jensen seen something? Sensed something? And fled with his wife? Escaped past the tribe of Acquaba?
Questions for another time.
«The carriers?» asked Alex warily, afraid to hear the answer.
«Check with our friend here,» replied Tucker, nodding to the Halidonite.
«They have been sent north, escorted north on the river,» said the man with the usurped name of Marcus. «Jamaicans will not die tonight unless they know why they are dying. Not in this fight.»
«And you? Why you? Is this your fight?»
«I know the men who come for you. I have the option to fight.»