Bleeding Hearts (38 page)

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Authors: Ian Rankin

BOOK: Bleeding Hearts
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‘There was a fax machine in Oban,’ I recalled, ‘it had at least two Washington State numbers on its memory.’

‘Olympic Peninsula and Queen Anne,’ Clancy stated with authority.

‘Have you ever spoken to Provost?’ Bel asked him.

‘I’ve tried, but he’s ringed with steel.’

‘But who runs the show really, him or his lieutenants?’

‘Now that’s a good question.’

Clancy broke off so we could order. Bel took his advice when her turn came, and we ordered another round of drinks to go with the meal. Some tortilla chips and dips had been placed on the table, so we munched as we spoke.

‘The men who killed my father,’ said Bel, ‘if they were the same men who stopped us on the road out of Oban, then they were Americans.’

‘They didn’t look like cult members though,’ I told Clancy. ‘They seemed more like government types.’

‘Which brings me to my research,’ Clancy said, beginning to enjoy himself. ‘You know that the Disciples suddenly took off late in 1985? I mean, they started buying land and real estate. Which means Provost had money to spend. Where did it come from? Nobody knows. Did a bunch of rich relatives suddenly and conveniently die? No. Did he win some state lottery? No. A lucky week at Vegas? Uh-uh. It’s been driving people nuts, wondering where that money suddenly came from.’

‘You’ve found out?’ Bel asked.

‘Not exactly, not yet. But I think I was getting close.’ So maybe Eleanor Ricks had been getting close too. ‘I do know this.’ Clancy made a melodramatic point, glancing around the restaurant then leaning forward across the table. I wondered if he could always differentiate between gossip and fact. ‘Provost went to Washington DC. Please, don’t ask how I know this. I have sources to protect and my ... uh, techniques weren’t always strictly legit. He was in DC for a meeting with some lawyers and other fat cats. But while he was there he had a couple of visitors, two men called Elyot and Kline. They visited him on more than one occasion. This was in January 1986, a few months after Provost started spending.

‘Now, I think I’ve tracked down who Elyot and Kline were and are. There’s an agent called Richard Elyot works for the CIA. And at the NSC there used to be a cat called Kline.’

‘Used to be?’

‘He resigned officially in 1986. Since then he’s been on the fringes, only his name’s not on the books any longer. Nobody knows why he resigned, whether he was forced out or what. I’m going to describe Kline to you.’

He did. I nodded halfway through and continued nodding. ‘Sounds familiar,’ I conceded.

‘The guy in the rear car, right?’ Clancy surmised.

‘Right,’ I confirmed. ‘What about Elyot?’

‘Elyot’s posted in some overseas embassy just now, not a very prestigious one. He’s been getting shitty assignments for about the past five years. I even hear that he was in the US consulate in Scotland for a couple of months.’

‘Interesting.’

‘It’s
all
interesting,’ said Bel, finishing her second margarita. ‘But where does it get us?’

‘The Disciples,’ Clancy said, ‘are somehow connected to the CIA and the NSC. How come? What could they possibly have in common?’

‘And whatever it is,’ I added, ‘does it add up to Provost being in their pay?’

‘Absolutely,’ said Clancy, sitting back.

‘I wouldn’t mind a word with Jeremiah Provost.’

Clancy laughed. ‘Get in line, fella.’

‘Michael has ways,’ Bel said quietly, staring at me.

‘Oh, yeah?’ Clancy was interested.

‘But his techniques,’ she went on, ‘aren’t ever strictly legit.’

Clancy looked more interested. ‘Bel,’ I said, ‘it’s been a long day.’

‘A long day’s journey,’ she agreed.

‘Maybe we should get the bill?’

She didn’t say no. I asked Clancy how he wanted to play it. He shrugged, so I made a couple of suggestions. We agreed he’d meet us at our hotel in the morning. I settled the bill with cash. On the back of the check there was a little form asking for comments. We’d seen them before in diners. Bel had filled one of them in. She’d put, ‘Service overfriendly, food big but tasteless, have a nice day.’ This time she got a pen from Clancy and wrote: ‘I love tequila.’

At the bottom she drew a little heart, broken into halves.

22

We met Clancy next morning in the hotel lobby. His first words were, ‘I made a few calls to England. Nobody I spoke to has heard of you.’

‘Michael does magazine work,’ Bel said. ‘Let’s go get some coffee.’ We ordered three
caffè lattes
at a nearby coffee shop and sat at a table inside, even though the proprietor assured us we’d be better off sitting at one of the sidewalk tables. We had a view across the street to the Seattle Art Museum. Clancy just called it ‘Sam’.

‘There’s a porno theatre one block down,’ he said. ‘It used to advertise Sam exhibitions on its awning. Only in Seattle, friends.’

He told us that Seattle’s main industries were Boeing, fish processing and Microsoft, and that things at Boeing were extremely shaky just now. ‘We used to be world leaders in grunge music. You know what that is? Torn jeans, drug habits and sneers.’

‘Didn’t Keith Richards patent that?’

Clancy laughed and looked at his watch. I knew he didn’t altogether trust us yet, and I didn’t like it that he’d been asking about us in London. Word there could get to anyone. ‘Come on,’ he said, ‘time to rock ‛n’ roll.’

We took the Trans-Am to a mechanic Clancy knew near the U-Dub. ‘He’s a Christian mechanic,’ Clancy said. ‘Every job he does comes with a blessing and a guarantee from above.’

The man was young, stocky and bearded. He reminded me of the Amish. He said the car would take a day or so, and meantime we could have a VW Rabbit. It was a small brown car, perfect for the trip we were about to make. There was a plastic litterbag hanging from the dashboard. It had Uncle Sam’s hat on one side, and the Pledge of Allegiance on the other. I took my bag from the Trans-Am and locked it in the boot of the Rabbit. Nobody asked what was in it, and I wouldn’t have answered if they had.

Bel sat in the back of the car, and I let Clancy drive. We drove south on Aurora into Queen Anne Hill. This was a prime residential area, mostly bungalow-style housing. A precious few lots sat on the very edge of the hill, looking down on to the city. This was where Jeremiah Provost had his house.

It was big, even by the standards of the area, and it was on an incline so steep it made you giddy.

‘I wouldn’t fancy walking back from the shops,’ Bel said.

Clancy looked at her.
‘Walk?
Nobody walks, Bel. Nobody ever walks.’

We parked across the road from Provost’s house. Even with the handbrake on and the car left in gear, I wasn’t sure I trusted the Rabbit not to start careering downhill. We all wore sunglasses, and as further disguise Clancy was wearing a red baseball cap. There was a sheen of nervous sweat on his face. We knew we were taking a big risk coming here. But the time had come to take risks. We were parked outside a house with its own turret. We couldn’t see much of Provost’s house though. Steps led up through a bristling garden to a white concrete wall, showing no windows or doors.

‘There’s only one entrance,’ said Clancy, ‘round the side of the house. There are French windows leading on to the pool and patio, so I suppose that makes it two entrances really.’

‘And two exits,’ I added. ‘Where are the security cameras?’

He looked at me, perhaps wondering how I knew. ‘Just as you round the corner.’

‘Is there an infra-red trip?’

‘I don’t know, could be.’

‘It’s just that on the surface, there looks like there’s no security at all. So I take it what security there is is high-tech.’

‘Sure, plus the muscle-man on the door.’

‘Just the one?’

‘Hey, Provost’s a religious nut, not a Middle East guerrilla.’

‘What about at night? He’s got approach lights?’

‘Yeah, if a hedgehog so much as inspects the lawn, the place lights up like the Fourth of July.’ Clancy was still looking at me. ‘You’re asking all the right questions, only I’m not sure they’re questions a reporter would think to ask.’

‘I’m not your everyday reporter,’ I said. ‘He spends most of his time in there?’

‘Yeah. There’s a house out on Hood Canal belongs to Nathan. That’s hot real estate too. Sometimes Provost goes there for the weekend. He doesn’t do much, digs clams, picks oysters at low tide. Mr Microsoft has a compound a few houses down.’

‘How much do you know about Nathan?’

‘Not much. I got a name and a face.’

‘When did he join the Disciples?’

‘I don’t know. The problem is, only having one of his names, I can’t even begin to do a trace back.’

‘He handles the business, does that mean the money?’

‘Yeah, there’s an accountant too, but Nathan does the day to day balance sheet. Thing is, there’s very little on the profit side. Very little income compared to the outgoings.’

‘Maybe we should talk to Nathan rather than Provost.’

‘He’s no easier to get to, Mike. And he wears this look like he’s just waiting to break someone’s face open. These cults, they’re always suspicious. I mean, someone comes sniffing around them for a story, chances are it isn’t going to be a panegyric.’

I looked out at Provost’s house. ‘Can we see it from another angle?’

‘Yeah, if you walk downhill and take a left. But frankly, you won’t see much more than you can from here. More concrete and the top of a window, that’s about it. It’s a smart design, completely open but totally private. He doesn’t even have a fence, but he could be filming hard-core in his pool and none of the neighbours would know.’

‘Some of these cult leaders like to initiate new recruits,’ said Bel, who’d done her reading.

Clancy shrugged. ‘I don’t know if Provost shafts the women in the cult. I mean, with a name like Disciples of Love, and starting off where it did and how it did, it’s got to be a good bet. But he’s never gone public on humping politics.’

‘That sounds like a quote from one of your own stories.’

He grinned. ‘It is, only the paper spiked it as defamatory.’

‘Okay,’ I said, ‘I’ve seen enough. Let’s go buy what we need.’

 

The shop we wanted was on Aurora, way north of Green Lake. It was called Ed’s Guns and Sporting Goods and was run by a man named Archie with a trace of a Scots accent. I knew pretty much what we needed: camouflage jackets, overtrousers, boots, a couple of tents, a small stove and pot, plates, mugs and cutlery, binoculars, and a couple of rucksacks to put everything in.

The binoculars he showed me were small but powerful. ‘Bird watchers love them,’ he said, like this was a recommendation.

I handed them back. ‘Got anything with a night vision facility?’

‘You’re talking major expense.’

‘So let me talk.’

He went off to find a night-scope. Bel was picking out thick socks to go with her boots. ‘We want to look like tourists, right?’

‘Right.’

‘Then we’d probably have too much gear, all of it brand new.’

‘Right again.’

‘So I want some new sunglasses.’ I nodded and she went to choose some. Meantime I picked out a compass, and studied a few of the available knives. The survival knives looked good. There was one with a hollow handle, inside which were fishing-line, hooks and a needle, a tiny compass, stuff like that. Another was so versatile you could turn it from knife into axe or shovel or even a torch. It was big too. I reckoned it was big enough to scare most people.

‘I’ll take that,’ I said, pointing it out to Archie, who had come back with a plain cardboard box. He was licking his lips, excited at the total sale but nervous about the ease with which we were spending money. Maybe he thought we were going to pull a gun or even one of his own combat knives on him. Instead I pulled out a wad of cash and waved it in his face. He nodded and relaxed a little.

I checked the night-scope. It was perfect. I could use it like a telescope or, with a couple of adjustments, fit it to my sniping rifle.

‘How discreet are you, Archie?’ I asked.

‘That depends.’

‘Well, I want to buy all this, and I want to pay cash. But I’ve a job I’d like to do. Do you have a workshop back there?’ He nodded. ‘Could I borrow it for, say, fifteen minutes?’

He shrugged. ‘You buy that lot, you can bunk in the back for all I care.’

‘That won’t be necessary.’

Bel was asking Archie about maps when I left the shop. She’d slid a survival knife into the top of her right boot to see how it felt. Clancy stared at the knife for a moment, then followed me out. Clancy wasn’t a country boy or a born-again backwoodsman. Seattle still had something of the frontier town about it, but he was strictly
latte
and art museum. He told us the only times he’d been out to the Olympic Peninsula had been to visit the hot springs resort. He’d driven past the Disciples’ compound, but only on day trips, and he’d hardly budged from the car.

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