Confessional (19 page)

Read Confessional Online

Authors: Jack Higgins

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Espionage

BOOK: Confessional
5.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

 

'Paul?' he turned his head.

 

 

An arm slid round his neck, a hand clamped over his mouth. In the second that he recognized Cussane's pale face under the brim of the black hat, the needle point of the stiletto the other held in his right hand probed in under his ribs, thrusting up into the heart. There was not even time to struggle. A kind of blinding light, no pain, then only darkness.

 

 

Cussane wiped the blade carefully on Lubov's jacket, eased him back in the seat as if asleep. He found the Stechkin in the dead man's pocket, took it out and slipped it into his own. He had been right, as usual. The final proof. He got up, went down the aisle, a shadow only in his black coat, and left through one of the exit doors.

 

 

He was back at the office in the Secretariat within half an hour, had hardly sat down when Monsignor Halloran came in. Halloran was very cheerful and obviously excited.

 

 

'Have you heard? Just had the confirmation from the Vatican. The Pope's visit is on.'

 

 

'So they've decided. You'll be going across?'

 

 

'Yes indeed. Seat booked in Canterbury Cathedral. An historic occasion, Harry. Something for people to tell their grandchildren about.'

 

 

'For those who have any,' Cussane smiled.

 

 

Halloran laughed. 'Exactly, which hardly applies to us. I must be off. I've got a dozen things to organize.'

 

 

Cussane sat there thinking about it, then reached for his raincoat where he'd thrown it on a chair and took the poniard out in its leather sheath. He put it in one of the desk drawers then took out the Stechkin. What a bungling amateur Lubov had been to use a weapon of Russian manufacture. But it was the proof that he had needed. It meant that to his masters he was not only expendable. He was now a liability.

 

 

'So what now, Harry Cussane?' he asked himself softly. 'Where do you go?'

 

 

Strange that habit, when speaking to himself, of addressing Cussane by his full name. It was as if he were another person which, in a way, he was. The phone rang and when he answered, Devlin spoke to him.

 

 

'There you are.'

 

 

'Where are you?'

 

 

'Dublin airport. I'm picking up a house-guest. A very pretty girl, actually. I think you'll like her. I thought we all might have supper tonight.'

 

 

'That sounds nice,' Cussane said calmly. 'I've agreed to take evening Mass, though, at the village church. I'll be finished at eight. Is that all right?'

 

 

'Fine. We'll look forward to seeing you.'

 

 

Cussane put the phone down. He could run, of course, but where and to what purpose? In any event, the play had at least one more act to go, all his instincts told him that.

 

 

'No place to hide, Harry Cussane,' he said softly.

 

 

When Harry Fox and Tanya came through the gate into the arrival hall, Devlin was waiting, leaning against a pillar, smoking a cigarette, wearing the black felt hat and trenchcoat. He came forward, smiling.

 

 

'Cead mile failte,'he said and took the young woman's hands. 'That's Irish for a hundred thousand welcomes.'

 

 

'Goraibh maith agat.' Fox gave him the ritual thanks.

 

 

'Stop showing off.' Devlin took her bag. 'His mother was a decent Irishwoman, thank the Lord.'

 

 

Her face was shining. 'I'm so excited. All this is so - so unbelievable.'

 

 

Fox said, 'Right, you're in safe hands now. I'm off. There's a return flight in an hour. I'd better book in. We'll be in touch, Liam.'

 

 

He went off through the crowd and Devlin took her elbow and led her to the main entrance. 'A nice man,' she said. 'His hand? What happened?'

 

 

'He picked up a bag with a bomb in it in Belfast one bad night and didn't throw it fast enough. He gets by very well with the electronic marvel they've given him.'

 

 

'You say that so calmly,' she said as they crossed to the carpark.

 

 

'He wouldn't thank you for the wrong kind of sympathy. Comes of his particular kind of upbringing. Eton, the Guards. They teach you to get on with it, not cry in your beer.' He handed her into his old Alfa Romeo sports car. 'Harry's a special breed, just like that ould bastard Ferguson. What's known as a gentleman.'

 

 

'Which you are not?'

 

 

'God save us, my ould mother would turn in her grave to hear you even suggest it,' he said as he drove away. 'So, you decided to give things some more thought after I left Paris? What happened?'

 

 

She told him everything. Belov, the phone conversation with Maslovsky, Shepilov and Turkin, and finally, Alex Martin in Jersey.

 

 

Devlin was frowning thoughtfully as she finished. 'So they were on to you? Actually waiting in Jersey? How in the hell would they know that?'

 

 

'I asked about the train times at hotel reception,' she told him. 'I didn't give my name or room number. I thought that covered it. Perhaps Belov and his people were able to make the right sort of enquiries.'

 

 

'Maybe. Still, you're here now. You'll be staying with me at my cottage in Kilrea. It isn't far. I've got a call to make

 

 

when we get in. With luck, we'll be able to set up the right kind of meeting for you tomorrow. Lots of photos for you to plough through.'

 

 

'I hope something comes of it,' she said.

 

 

'Don't we all? Anyway, a quiet night. I'll make the supper and a good friend of mine is joining us.'

 

 

'Anyone interesting?'

 

 

'The kind of man you'd find rather thin on the ground where you come from. A Catholic priest. Father Harry Cus-sane. I think you'll like him.'

 

 

He phoned McGuiness from his study. 'The girl is here. Staying with me at my place. How soon can you set up the right meeting?'

 

 

'Never mind that,' McGuiness told him. 'Have you heard about Cherny?'

 

 

Devlin was immediately alert. 'No.'

 

 

'Took a very long fall from a very high window at Trinity College this afternoon. The thing is, did he fall or was he pushed?'

 

 

'I suppose one could say his end was fortuitous,' Devlin said.

 

 

'For one person only,' McGuiness told him. 'Jesus, I'd like to get my hands on that sod.'

 

 

'Set up the meeting with the girl then,' Devlin said. 'Maybe she'll recognize him.'

 

 

'I'd go to confession again if I thought that could be guaranteed. Okay, leave it with me. I'll get back to you.'

 

 

Cussane robed for Mass in the sacristy, very calm, very cold. It wasn't like a play any longer. More like an improvisation in which the actors created a story for themselves. He had no idea what was going to happen.

 

 

The four acolytes who waited for him were village boys, clean and neat and angelic in their scarlet cassocks and white

 

 

cottas. He settled the stole around his neck, picked up his prayer book and turned to them.

 

 

'Let's make it special tonight, shall we?'

 

 

He pressed the bellpush at the door. A moment later, the organ started to play. One of the boys opened the door and they moved through into the small church in procession.

 

 

Devlin was working in the kitchen preparing steaks. Tanya opened the French windows and was immediately aware of the organ music drifting across the garden from the other side of the wall. She went in to Devlin. 'What's that?'

 

 

'There's a convent over there and a hospice.- Their chapel is the village church. That'll be Harry Cussane celebrating Mass. He won't be long.'

 

 

She went back into the living room and stood listening at the French windows. It was nice and not only peaceful. The organ playing was really rather good. She crossed the lawn and opened the door in the wall. The chapel, on the end of the convent, looked picturesque and inviting, soft light flooding from the windows. She went up the path and opened the oaken door.

 

 

There were only a handful of villagers, two people in wheelchairs who were obviously patients from the hospice and several nuns. Sister Anne-Marie played the organ. It was not much of an instrument and the damp atmosphere had a bad effect on the reeds, but she was good, had spent a year at the Conservatoire in Paris as a young girl before heeding God's call and turning to the religious life.

 

 

The lights were very dim, mainly candles, and the church was a place of shadows and calm peace, the nuns' voices sweet as they sang the offertory:'Domine Jesu Christ, Rex Floriae.. /At the altar, Harry Cussane prayed for all sinners everywhere whose actions only cut them off from the fact of God's infinite mercy and love. Tanya took a seat to one side on her own, moved by the atmosphere. The truth was that

 

 

she had never attended a church service like this in her life. She couldn't see much of Cussane's face. He was simply the chief figure down there at the altar in the dim light, fascinating to her in his robes as was the whole business.

 

 

The Mass continued, most of those in the congregation went forward to the rail to receive the body and blood of Christ. She watched, as he moved from one person to the other, the head bending to murmur the ritual words and she was filled with a strange unease. It was as if she knew this man, some trick of physical movement that seemed familiar.

 

 

When the Mass was over, the final absolution given, he paused on the steps to address the congregation. 'And in your prayers during the coming days, I would ask each one of you to pray for the Holy Father, soon to visit England at a most difficult time.' He moved forward a little, the candlelight falling on his face. 'Pray for him that your prayers, added to his own, grant him the strength to accomplish his mission.'

 

 

His gaze passed over the entire congregation and for a moment it was as if he was looking at her directly, then he moved on. Tanya froze in horror, the shock, the most terrible she had ever known in her life. When he spoke the words of the benediction, it was as if his lips moved with no sound. The face - the face which had haunted her dreams for years. Older, of course, kinder even, and yet unmistakably the face of Mikhail Kelly, the man they had named Cuchulain.

 

 

What happened then was strange, yet perhaps not so strange if one considered the circumstances. The shock was so profound that it seemed to drain all strength from her and she remained in the half-darkness at the back of the church while people moved out and Cussane and the acolytes disappeared into the sacristy. It was very quiet in the church and she sat there, trying to make sense of things. Cuchulain was Father Harry Cussane, Devlin's friend, and it explained so many things. Oh, my God, she thought, what am I going to do? And then the sacristy door opened and Cussane stepped out.

 

 

Things were almost ready in the kitchen. Devlin checked the oven, whistling softly to himself and called, 'Have you laid the table in there?'

 

 

There was no reply. He went into the living room. Not only was the table not laid but there was no sign of Tanya. Then he noticed the French window ajar, took off his apron and moved forward.

 

 

'Tanya?' he called into the garden, and in the same moment saw that the door in the garden wall stood open.

 

 

Cussane wore a black suit and clerical collar. He paused for a moment, aware of her presence although he made no sign. He'd noticed her almost at once during the Mass. The fact that she was a stranger would have made her stand out, but in the circumstances it had been obvious who she must be. Knowing that, there was the ghost of the child there in the face, the child who had struggled as he held her that day in Drumore, all those years ago. Eyes never changed, and the eyes he had always remembered.

 

 

He turned at the altar rail, dropping to one knee to genuflect, and Tanya, in a panic now and terribly afraid, forced herself to her feet and moved along the aisle. The door to one of the confessional boxes stood partially open and she slipped inside. When she pulled it close, there was a slight creaking. She heard him walk down the aisle, the steps slow, distinct on the stone flags. They came closer. Stopped.

 

 

He said softly in Russian, 'I know you are there, Tanya Voroninova. You can come out now.'

 

 

She stood there, shivering, very cold. He was quite calm, his face grave. Still in Russian, he said, 'It's been a long time.'

 

 

She said, 'So, do you kill me like you killed my father? As you have killed so many others?'

 

 

'I hoped that wouldn't be necessary.' He stood there looking at her, his hands in the pockets of his jacket, and then he

 

 

smiled gently and there was a kind of sadness there. 'I've heard you on records. You have a remarkable talent.'

 

 

'So have you.' She felt stronger now. 'For death and destruction. They chose you well. My foster-father knew what he was doing.'

 

 

'Not really,' he said. 'Nothing is ever that simple. I happened to be available. The right tool at the right time.'

 

 

She took a deep breath. 'What happens now?'

 

 

'I thought we were supposed to be having dinner together, you, I and Liam,' he said.

 

 

The porch door banged open and Devlin walked in. Tanya?' he called and then paused. 'Oh, there you are. So you two have met?'

 

 

'Yes, Liam, a long, long time ago,' Harry Cussane told him, and his hand came out of the right pocket of his jacket holding the Stechkin he had taken from Lubov.

Other books

Boko Haram by Mike Smith
Paranormal Erotic Romance Box Set by Lola Swain, Ava Ayers
Rules of Civility by Amor Towles
The Parting Glass by Elisabeth Grace Foley
Blood Sacraments by Todd Gregory, Todd Gregory
A Secret Rage by Charlaine Harris
Hide in Plain Sight by Marta Perry