Evil for Evil (25 page)

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Authors: James R. Benn

Tags: #Historical, #Mystery

BOOK: Evil for Evil
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CHAPTER • TWENTY SEVEN

MY BOOT HEELS fell softly on the marble floor as we crossed the foyer of Stormont Castle. Sláine’s dress shoes clacked loudly ahead of me, echoing off the stone walls as we approached another set of sentries. This was the seat of Ulster rule, the fortress of loyalty to the British crown. On the outskirts of Belfast, it felt like a castle, set in a large park, green lawns all around it giving a clear view from any direction. The intelligence services had their headquarters here and their secret cells too, places into which suspected IRA men and their sympathizers disappeared. The very name had sounded evil to me as I was growing up, hearing it cursed as if it were a living thing, a beast. And now I walked through it, British soldiers opening doors for me, as I followed a strange and beautiful Irish woman deeper and deeper into its cold stone interior.

We took a circular iron staircase to a narrow corridor. Steel beams were visible above our heads. Metal doors ran along one side. Sláine knocked at the first. A small peephole appeared at a Judas window and a set of eyes looked us over. Locks tumbled open and we were admitted by a Royal Marine sergeant with a Sten gun hanging from a strap over his shoulder.

“Ah, there you are,” said Major Charles Cosgrove. “So glad to see you in one piece, my dear.” Cosgrove sat behind a huge, ornately carved wooden desk that seemed out of place in a basement office. The whole room was a surprise, with thick carpets, several easy chairs, and a fireplace. But no windows. A row of telephones sat on a shelf behind Cosgrove, three black, one green, and one red. Above them was a map of Northern Ireland and the border counties of the Republic. “Sit, please. Good to see you too, Boyle. Getting on all right, are you?”

“Fine, except for all the dead bodies.”

“Yes, terrible. What a waste. Sergeant Lynch was a good man.”

“I wouldn’t know about him. I mean Sam Burnham and Pete Brennan.”

“Ah, yes,” Cosgrove said, flipping through an open file on his desk, licking his finger as he turned each sheet. “Lieutenant Burnham was killed in an IRA ambush, am I correct? And this enlisted man, Brennan, wasn’t he mixed up in the black market? Has the look of a falling-out among thieves, doesn’t it?”

“Who suggested that?” I said.

“It suggests itself. Now, if these killings have anything to do with the task you were sent here to complete, please do tell all. If not, leave the matter to the authorities.”

I was about to argue with Cosgrove that Jenkins was involved and the authorities weren’t allowed to touch him but managed to stop myself. My main reason for being here was to find out more about Jenkins and why he was off-limits. Cracking wise with Cosgrove might be fun but it wouldn’t get me what I wanted.

“Yes, sir,” I said, with the right combination of resentment and obedience.

“Good. Now give me a summary of what you’ve learned. Then I shall brief you both on the hunt for these Germans.”

I went through my reasons for believing the weapons were still in the Clough-Ballykinler area. I told Cosgrove an informant had given me the dope on Eddie Mahoney being sent by the IRA chief of staff to keep an eye on Red Jack, who was suspected of stealing IRA funds. With the unknown Yank still out there, I wanted to play that one close to the vest, so I kept mum about the letter and notes I’d found in Mahoney’s room.

“What is your opinion of all this, Subaltern O’Brien?” Cosgrove asked as he lit up his pipe. The smoke floated above him, then disappeared as a vent soundlessly sucked it out of the room.

“There is no hard evidence other than the empty truck in Warrenpoint but it is a very good theory. It explains everything, and there is no other rational explanation for why Mahoney was killed.”

“The IRA could simply have mistakenly believed he was an informant,” Cosgrove said.

“True,” she said. “And it’s happened before. But would they let an informant in on such an important operation? He might’ve slipped away. It doesn’t add up.”

“Very well. But where does that get us? It leaves us with a very large area to search for the arms cache. Boyle, what else have you found out?”

“I was sidetracked at first by the black market activity and the fact that one of Jenkins’s trucks was used in the robbery. I thought there might be a link but all I found there was a crooked U.S. Army major. The military police have him. Pete Brennan was involved in a lesser way. He asked for a transfer to Italy and was about to ship out when he was killed. His body was found in the car Red Jack Taggart had used for his getaway vehicle after shooting up the RUC station and killing Sam Burnham.”

“That is odd. Any idea why the vehicle was used?”

“No. That’s one reason I wanted to get a look at the files you have here on Jenkins and Taggart. Maybe there’s something we’re missing. Jenkins had a motive for killing Brennan but not much of one. Only a few hundred bucks. It would have been easier to let him get on the boat to Italy.”

“Indeed. Italy is proving to be a tough old boot and might have been the end of Sergeant Brennan in any case.”

“And I think that Sam was the target at the RUC station, not me. Taggart shot him first then sprayed the windows with fire to keep everyone down. But why shoot a U.S. Army officer? There’s no percentage.”

“Be glad you can’t understand the motivations of killers like Taggart, Boyle. He obviously enjoys killing for its own sake. Anything else?”

“There’s something fishy going on at a Protestant bank in Armagh. Brennan was kidnapped near there, and a local constable named Simms was in on it. It’s where Jenkins does his banking, and Sam Burnham was seen nearby before he was killed.”

“My God, Boyle. What a mishmash of conjectures. Who cares where Andrew Jenkins keeps his money? Perhaps this Simms fellow is in the black market business himself and had a score to settle. As I said, leave local corruption to the police. District Inspector Carrick is on the case, is he not?”

“Yes. He’s looking into the bank. He knows the manager.”

“Then leave it to him.”

“Yes, sir.” Leave it to the man who isn’t allowed to look at Jenkins’s file. Perfect. “Say, Major, you wouldn’t happen to be a member of the Royal Black Knights of the British Commonwealth, would you?”

“And if I were?” Cosgrove growled.

“Nothing, just curious. I’d never heard of them before, and they seem to be everywhere in this case.”

“It so happens I am proud to be a member. I was invited to join several years ago, when I was originally posted here. I was inducted at Brownlow House.”

“The headquarters of the society. I’ve been there. Not a member myself, though.”

“I should say—” Cosgrove stopped himself. “Never mind. Does this have anything to do with what we are discussing?”

“No, sir.” I decided it was time to clam up.

“Any luck tracking the Germans, Major?” Sláine asked, helpfully filling in the silence.

“None. We did find two rubber rafts hidden among the weeds at the edge of Lough Neagh. They had been sunk in shallow water. A few footprints in the mud, nothing else. Up the coast, by Bangor, we’ve had reports of three strangers with knapsacks boarding a train to Belfast. Their trousers and shoes were wet, but it had been raining. No one thought much of it at the time but a conductor remembered when the police asked about suspicious strangers. They could be from the U-boat or they could be bird-watchers out for a holiday. No trace of them since.”

“Any idea of what the target might be? If all these events are related, it adds up to a major operation. Pulling off the arms theft, coordinating with Germans, it had to be carefully planned in advance,” I said. “What are they after?”

“It almost doesn’t matter what the target is,” Cosgrove said. “That’s the devil of it. There are so many places to strike, they can have their pick. There are U.S. Army convoys on most main roads every day. Units in the field on maneuvers. RAF bases. The Belfast shipyards. Seaplane bases on the west coast. Give me one hundred well-armed men and I could raise havoc long before a sufficient force was dispatched to stop me. Then I’d fall back into the hills and dare them to give chase.”

“And all the while, the world cheers on the brave lads striking a blow for freedom. The American Irish ponder their loyalties, and the Republicans in the south begin to act on theirs. Soon we have a crisis in the alliance between the United States and Great Britain,” Sláine said.

“That may be the best-case scenario. Imagine if de Valera is pressured into aiding the IRA in the north, even clandestinely? Great Britain could not stand for it. There would be war again across all of Ireland. It would be terrible for the Irish, and possibly delay the Allies’ invasion of the continent, giving the Nazis another year to prepare their defenses. Unthinkable.”

A telephone rang. One of the black ones. I wondered who called on the red phone.

“Yes” was all Cosgrove said. He listened for a minute and then hung up. “We’ve intercepted a dispatch—don’t bother asking how— that gives the code name for the German agents landing in Northern Ireland. Operation Sea Eagle II. The Nazis are absolute dolts when it comes to code names; there was an Operation Sea Eagle two years ago, landing agents by seaplane in the Republic. Obviously Sea Eagle II is more of the same but here in the north.”

“Any indication of the target?” Sláine asked.

“None. But another team is expected to be dropped in tonight. We’ve no idea where. The RAF will have their night fighters up but it’s impossible to cover every location. They could use another seaplane or they could make a parachute drop. If they fly low and evade our radar, they stand a good chance of getting in and out.”

“If we could capture them, we might discover the target,” I said.

“We have a surfeit of ifs, young man, and very few facts. If going through the files will help you with the latter, by all means, get to it. I’ve arranged for you to view the files on the three individuals you requested, and I also had one put together noting any unsolved killings during the last month, in case any of those incidents are related.”

“LEAVE YOUR COAT and jacket in this outer room, sir,” said a Royal Marine private, his hand resting on his sidearm as if I might respond violently to the suggestion. He pointed to a coat stand and I hung up my trench coat and my tanker’s jacket.

“Your belt and weapon then empty your pockets onto this table,” he said.

I handed him my web belt and .45, and dumped out a few coins and chewing gum onto the table. I took a pen from my shirt pocket and left it as well, along with my ID and a few pound notes.

“Is that everything, sir? You are not permitted to bring anything in with you or anything out.” He had escorted me from Cosgrove’s office and through another metal doorway. This one led to a small antechamber, where I was relieved of about everything except my shoelaces. “No writing implements of any kind. No paper or any item on which you could take notes. Is that understood, sir?”

“Nothing up my sleeve,” I said, pushing up my shirtsleeves.

“Is that understood, sir?”

“Understood, Private. Just kidding around.”

“The major doesn’t appreciate kidding, sir.”

“Tell me about it. What next?”

“I will take you into the file room. You will find a table with the files you requested. You may sit and read. You may not get up from your seat. When you are done, tell the guard behind the desk. He will summon me, and I will escort you out. You will be searched. Is that understood, sir?” He spoke in a monotone that told me he’d given this speech many times before.

“Sure. Does Subaltern O’Brien conduct the search?”

“Quite the kidder you are, sir. Follow me.”

He unlocked the inner door. Straight ahead of me was a table and one chair. Four file folders sat in a row in front of the chair. To the right was a counter behind steel bars. Beyond the counter were rows of file cabinets, single lightblubs dangling from the ceiling every couple of yards. There were hundreds of file cabinets, and I couldn’t see how far the rows extended around the corner. Seated behind the counter and behind the bars was another Royal Marine. Or was I the one behind the bars? As my escort shut the door, I saw there was no knob on my side. Basically, I was in a cell.

“How long do you have to stay down here?” I hollered to the marine on the other side of the bars.

“Doesn’t matter, sir. Please read your files and inform me when you are done.”

I decided I’d be testy too if I had to spend more than an hour down here. Cold concrete floors, army green paint job, and black iron bars. What a cheery place to work.

I grabbed the first file. Jenkins, Andrew. A strip of blue tape across the top and the word RESTRICTED in bright yellow. Beneath that was a memo stapled to the file folder. It said the file was not to leave the file room, and that access was restricted to MI-5 personnel. I felt honored.

Jenkins’s file contained a section on his personal history. Evidently the Jenkins clan had lived in Armagh for generations, and his grandfather had started the family business. During the War of Independence, Andrew’s father had targeted the Catholic competition, creating opportunity out of chaos. After the partition, the more prosperous Catholic farmers had been burned out, and the only other vegetable wholesaler was dead. Andrew Jenkins inherited a thriving business and the thanks of the Protestant farmers who had divided the spoils. Not very pleasant or too surprising.

Another section dealt with his association with the Red Hand. Each page was headed by dates. The first was 1925–1929. He had joined as a young boy after the partition, and enthusiastically took part in suppressing the Catholic minority. He was a suspect in the murder of a Catholic whose body was found beaten to a pulp in 1928. No arrest, lack of evidence. Another run-in with the law in 1930 over the shooting of an IRA suspect who had turned out to be a businessman from south of the border with no known IRA links. Again, no witnesses, no evidence, no arrest. By 1938, Andrew Jenkins was a well-respected businessman himself, and commander of the Red Hand. He had risen within the ranks through a combination of brutality and the ability to evade the law. The RUC did arrest some of the Red Hand mob when the killings were too public and distasteful even for them. As I read the file, I noticed some of those arrested had been Jenkins’s competition within the Red Hand. Like his father before him, he was good at coming out on top.

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