‘Come on,’ said Amy, dragging him to his feet.
He looked down at his stomach. He was bleeding, there was a bite mark and some blood – but he was OK -
‘Now!’ Angus shouted. He jerked his head, indicating their escape. There seemed to be soldiers up there. Or policemen, way up the passage. Bright lights. Torches. Uniforms.
‘But -’ David protested. ‘But -’
Amy squeezed his hand. Her gaze was ardent, and fierce.
‘I did a deal with the police. They wanted Miguel, David. I gave them Miguel, and the archives – for us, you and me. Now try and run – the police have been fighting Miguel’s men, in the bar -’
Angus yelled:
‘We have to go!’
It was another rockfall. Blocks of stone and muddy boulders were slipping and groaning; the whole passage complex had been destabilized. They clambered through the hole and into the passage and then they ran: for their lives, a wall of mud was chasing them – everyone was running, sprinting, fleeing, as a tidal wave of slurry came after them like a wild animal, a devouring cave monster – a mouth of grey and black rocks – chasing them, trying to eat them alive, a wolf of rock.
And then they reached the little door and the booming sounds of the rockfall began to subside, and they wrenched open the Juden Tur, and emerged blinking and gasping and dirty into the bright light of the Bohemian pivnice.
Where several German policemen were standing and waiting. And Czech policemen too. And Sarria was there. And the other policeman from Biarritz. Some other guys in plain clothes and sunglasses. Secret police? What? There were doctors tending men on stretchers. Signs of a gunfight.
One German officer came over to Simon, brandishing a mobile phone:
‘Herr Quinn?’
‘Yes – but -’
‘A detective…in Scotland Yard. Here.’ The German officer handed over the phone. The journalist took it and stumbled outside, into damp grey October air. David watched for a second: then he saw, through the doorway, Simon buckling into tears, and crumpling, and stumbling. A hand over his eyes, hiding his shameful sobs.
No doubt Tim was dead. They had been too late for Tim.
David and Amy and Angus walked out into the rain. Large shiny police cars were lined up and down the road; several ambulances were waiting, red lights flashing, others were racing up the hill. A platoon of soldiers in fatigues stood at the end.
It was mayhem: cops were running into the beer-hall. Carrying more explosives, or so it seemed.
He looked at Amy, her face streaked and smeared with dirt and blood. But alive. Intact. Was she pregnant?
She shook her head. And spoke.
‘Listen. Let me talk. I knew he would catch us. By the time we reached Amsterdam I realized…Miguel would never give up. One day somewhere he would find us. We had to entice him. Entice him into a trap where we could kill him. Where the cops could get him. I couldn’t trust you to know, because…I knew you loved me too much…And…because…’ She blinked, and wiped her eyes with the back of a grimy hand. Then she said: ‘You would never let me risk it, David – especially if you knew I was pregnant. And the pregnancy was my one trump card, if we needed to buy time in the cellar. And we did – I guessed right – we needed to buy time.’ Her gaze was calm, yet rich with emotion. ‘So, yes, I called Miguel. Betrayed us, told him where we were going. He believed me. He still loved me. He wanted to believe.’
‘But -’
‘But then I called the police as well, Sarria. He spoke to the German government and to the French government. He told them that they would get everything they wanted – Miguel, an end to all this, and the hiding place of the Fischer archives. So the data could be destroyed. And the Cagots all dead…’
‘You did a deal with the police?’
‘As well as Miguel. Yes, I had to, David. But it was so difficult. Miguel had to get here first, any sign of the police and he’d never have come. But the police have been following us for days. We’re lucky. Very lucky. They’ve agreed to let us go, and we must commit to stay silent. Forever. That’s the deal, that’s the deal that kept us alive. All of us.’
She took his hand, and, just as she had done with Miguel, she placed his palm on her stomach.
‘So that really was true? You really are…’
‘Yes.’
He couldn’t bear to ask the terrible and obvious question. Instead he turned away and stared down the dismal street where the police lights twinkled sadly in the rain like blue stars written on an old grey map.
51
Stepping from the shower Simon dried himself and threw on a shirt. He could still hear the mild laughter outside, the happy noises of a summer holiday.
Briskly he walked to the top of the stairs. Not for the first time this week, he stared out of the window at the blue and sunlit Pyrenees, across the valley, their summits confected with snow. Then he jogged down the sunny steps, into the villa’s airy kitchen. He wanted to join his friends, in the sun, before the afternoon ended.
But his attention was snagged en route.
A package lay on the kitchen table. The address was Simon Quinn, c/o David Martinez.
The stamps were South African. And he recognized the scrawly handwriting.
Nerves jangled, he opened the package. Two items fell out. A clasp of hair. And a little toy dog. And there was a note.
Call me on this number.
Calming himself, Simon walked to the door that led to the riverside lawns. He dialled the number. The answering voice was quite unmistakable.
‘Hello, Angus.’
‘So you’re holidaying with Mr and Mrs Martinez?’
‘For a fortnight or so.’
‘Excellent news. Soaking the rich!’
‘And what about you?’ Simon was desperate to ask the question; but he desperately didn’t want to know the answer. He leaned against a sun-warmed wall. ‘Why the sudden phone stuff? Thought you were still a bit paranoid?’
‘Well I’ve calmed down now. I reckon they really must have agreed to Amy’s deal. Our lives for Miguel. The Fischer data destroyed. If they were really planning anything it would have happened by now, three frigging years later. So, yes, I have opted to chillax. Move on. Get some putting practice. You know.’
‘Well, good, glad to hear it. So…’ Simon watched a heron gliding across the sky, down the long Gascon valley. ‘So where are you?’
‘Little town near the Cedarbergs. And I got enough diamonds to keep myself in biltong.’
‘OK.’
Again Simon wanted to ask the questions yet he couldn’t quite stomach it. So he asked something else:
‘You know…’
‘What?’
‘You never told us. Did you ever find Alphonse?’
The thoughtful silence carried halfway across the world. Then Angus replied: ‘Took me six months. I searched the desert. But, yes, I found…what was left of him. He’s buried out there now, in the desert. Poor old Alfie.’
Simon wondered, ‘Did it help?’
‘You mean closure? Yeah maybe. Reckon I’ll always feel guilty. But then I always did. It’s probably genetic. Talking of which…’ Angus’s voice was quieter. ‘I wanted to tell you this personally, rather than in some silly email. I’d like to have told David but…maybe it’s easier through you.’ He paused. ‘I did both the tests, Simon. Successfully.’
‘Well done.’
‘Dankie. In fact, without shipping the entire horn section into the recording studio, I like to think I’m the only geneticist in the world who could have done some of that – got enough genetic material from the toy dog, for instance, but, yes, I managed it. I got your brother’s DNA. And compared it to the DNA in your son’s hair.’
‘Where?’
‘Borrowed a lab at Witwatersrand.’
The moment was coming. Simon felt the tension like a steel grip around his throat. Angus gave the answer.
‘Timothy Quinn, your late brother, carried the classic genetic markers for schizotypal mental disorders, DNA sequence alterations in NRG1 and DISC1.’ A sober pause. ‘I can say with 99.995 percent certainty that your son Conor Quinn does not have the same sequential alterations.’