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Authors: Jack Higgins

BOOK: On Dangerous Ground
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When they turned into the cobbled street, it was still raining. He got out and closed the door. Asta put the window down and looked out at the cottage.

“All in darkness. No lady friend, Dillon?”

“Alas no, but you can come in for a cup of tea if you like.”

She laughed. “Oh, no, I’ve had enough excitement for one night.”

“Another time perhaps.”

“I don’t think so. In fact, I doubt whether we’ll ever see each other again.”

“Ships that pass in the night?”

“Something like that. Home, Henry,” and as she put up the window the Mercedes pulled away.

Dillon watched it go, and as he turned to open the door he was smiling.

 

SEVEN

 

IT WAS PEACEFUL IN THE SMALL RAILWAY STATION BY the lochside and Dillon peered out of the rear compartment keeping out of sight. Following her had been easy. The Lear had taken him to Glasgow Airport at breakfast time and he had waited until Asta had arrived on the morning shuttle from London, had followed her down to the central railway station. Keeping out of the way from Glasgow to Fort William had been easy, for the train was busy with many tourists here to see Loch Lomond and afterwards the spectacular mountain scenery of the Highlands.

The smaller, local train from Fort William to Arisaig had been more difficult, for there were only a handful of passengers and he’d kept out of sight, only leaping into the rear compartment at the last moment. The station they had stopped at now was named Shiel according to the board at one side of the ticket office. They seemed to be standing there for quite some time. It was very pleasant, a mountain above them rearing three thousand feet into the clear blue sky, sunlight glinting on a waterfall that spilled over granite into birch trees.

Asta Morgan suddenly stepped onto the platform. She wore a leather jacket and linen slacks and leather brogues. She made an attractive sight in the quiet setting. She moved across to the ticket collector who stood at the barrier. There was some conversation, a burst of laughter, and she went through the barrier.

The ticket collector moved to join the guard, who was standing by the open door beside Dillon. “You’ve lost a passenger, Tom.”

“Do you tell me?”

“A bonny lass, a Miss Morgan, hair of corn and a face to thank God for. Her father is yon fella Morgan that’s just leased Loch Dhu Castle. She’s away over the mountain. You’ll put her luggage down at Arisaig and leave a message.”

Dillon grabbed his Burberry trenchcoat and brushed past the guard. “Do you mean there’s a shortcut over the mountain?”

“Well that would depend where you want to be.”

“Ardmurchan Lodge.”

The guard nodded. “Over the top of Ben Breac and a twelve-mile walk to the other side. You’ll be staying with Brigadier Ferguson, the new tenant?”

“My uncle, he’ll be waiting at Arisaig. Perhaps you could tell him where I am and give him my luggage.” Dillon slipped a five-pound note into his hand.

“Leave it to me, sir.”

The guard blew his whistle and boarded the train. Dillon turned to the ticket collector. “Where do I go?”

“Through the village and over the bridge. There’s a path through the birches, hard going, but you can’t miss the cairns that mark the way. Once over the top the track is plain to the glen below.”

“Will the weather hold?”

The man looked up at the mountain. “A touch of mist and rain in the evening. I’d keep going, don’t waste time on top.” He smiled. “I’d tell the young lady that, sir, no place for a lassie to be on her own.”

Dillon smiled. “I’ll do that, a pity to see her get wet.”

“A thousand pities, sir.”

 

 

At the small village store he purchased two packs of cigarettes and two half-pound bars of milk chocolate for sustenance. Twelve miles on the other side of the mountain and that didn’t count the miles that stood up on end. Something told him he could be hungry before he reached Ardmurchan.

He marched down the street and crossed the bridge. The track snaked up through the birch trees, lifting steeply, bracken pressing in on either side. It was cool and dark and remote from the world, and Dillon, thanks to his renewed energy, was enjoying every moment of it. There was no sign of Asta, which suited him for now.

The trees grew sparser and he emerged onto a bracken-covered slope. Occasionally grouse or plover lifted out of the heather disturbed by his presence and finally he came to a boulder-strewn plain that stretched to the lower slopes of Ben Breac. He saw Asta then, six or seven hundred feet up on the shoulder of the mountain.

She turned to look down and he dropped into the bracken. When he glanced up a few moments later, she had disappeared round the shoulder of the mountain. She was certainly moving fast, but then she was young and healthy and the track was plainly visible.

There was another way, of course, though only a fool would try that, which was straight up the breast of the mountain and the granite cliffs beyond to the summit. He took out an Ordnance Survey map of Moidart and had a look at the situation. Dillon glanced up. What the hell, strong nerves were all that was needed here, and with luck he might actually get ahead of her. He tied his Burberry around his waist and started up.

 

 

The lower slopes were easy going with his new-found strength, but after a half hour he came to a great cascading bank of scree and loose stones that moved beneath his feet alarmingly. He went to his left, found the waterfall he’d noted from the station, and followed its trail upwards, moving from boulder to boulder.

Finally, he reached the plateau and the final cliffs were before him and they were not quite as intimidating as they’d looked from the station, fissured with gullies and channels reaching to the top. He looked, checking his route, ate half a bar of chocolate, then made sure his raincoat was secure and started up, climbing strongly, testing each handhold. He looked down once and saw the railway station in the valley below like a child’s toy. The next time he looked it had disappeared, blanked out by mist, and a sudden breeze touched him coldly.

He came over the granite edge to the summit a few minutes later to find himself cocooned in mist and he’d spent enough time in hill country in the past to know that there was only one thing to do in such conditions. Stay put. He did just that, lighting a cigarette, wondering how Asta Morgan was getting on. It was a good hour later when a sudden current of air dissolved the curtain of the mist, and down there the valleys lay dark and quiet in the evening sunlight.

In the distance was a cairn of stones marking the ultimate peak, but there was no Asta. He cut across the track and followed it back until he reached a point where he could look down almost three thousand feet to the railway line, and there was no sign of her. So she had beaten him to the summit, hardly surprising, for with the track to follow the mist would have been no problem.

He turned back, following the track to descend on the other side and paused suddenly as he stared down at the incredible sight before him. The sea in the distance was calm, the islands of Rum and Eigg like cardboard cutouts, and on the dark horizon, the Isle of Skye, the final barrier to the Atlantic. It was one of the most beautiful sights he had ever seen and he started down.

 

 

Asta was tired and her right ankle was beginning to ache, legacy of an old skiing accident. It had been harder crossing Ben Breac than she had imagined and now she was faced with a twelve-mile hike. What had originally started as an amusing idea was now becoming rather a bore.

The track along the glen was dry and dusty and hard on her feet, and after a while she came to a five-barred gate with a sign that said LOCH DHU ESTATE — KEEP OUT. It was padlocked and she pulled herself over and limped on. And then she rounded a curve and saw a small hunting lodge by the burn. The door was locked, but when she went round to the rear a window stood ajar. She hauled herself through and found herself in a small kitchen area.

It was gloomy now, darkness falling, but there was an oil lamp and kitchen matches. She lit the lamp and went into the other room. It was adequately furnished with whitewashed walls and a wooden floor and a fire was laid in the hearth. She put a match to it and sat in one of the wing-backed chairs, suddenly tired. The warmth from the fire felt good, and her ankle didn’t hurt now. She added pine logs to the fire and heard a vehicle drive up outside. A key rattled in the lock and the front door opened.

The man who stood there was of medium height with a weak, sullen face and badly needed a shave. He wore a shabby tweed suit and cap, his yellow hair shoulder-length, and he carried a double-barreled shotgun.

“Would you look at that now?” he said.

Asta said calmly, “What do you want?”

“That’s a good one,” he said, “and you trespassing. How in the hell did you get in here?”

“Through the kitchen window.”

“I don’t think my boss would like that. He’s new. Just took over the estate yesterday did Mr. Morgan, but I know a hard man when I see one. I mean, if he knew about this he might make it a police matter.”

“Don’t be stupid. I turned my ankle coming over Ben Breac. I needed a rest, that’s all. Now that you’re here, you can give me a lift.”

He moved closer and his hand was shaking as he put it on her shoulder. “That depends, doesn’t it?”

His blotched face, the stink of whiskey on his breath was suddenly repulsive to her. “What’s your name?”

“That’s more friendly. It’s Fergus — Fergus Munro.”

She pulled away and sent him staggering with a vigorous push. “Then don’t be stupid, Fergus Munro.”

He reached angrily, dropping the shotgun. “You bitch, I’ll teach you.” He grabbed at her, catching the blouse beneath the leather coat, the thin material ripping from her left shoulder to the breast.

She gave a cry of rage, striking out at him, her nails gouging his right cheek, and then beyond him she saw a man materialize from the darkness into the doorway.

 

 

Dillon punched him in the kidneys very hard and hauled him back by the scruff of the neck and hurled him across the room. Munro hit the wall and fell to one knee. He reached for the shotgun which Dillon kicked out of the way, grabbing for his right wrist, twisting it up, taut and straight, ramming Munro headfirst into the wall. He scrambled up, blood on his face, and plunged through the open door.

As Dillon went after him Asta cried, “Let him go!”

Dillon paused, a hand on each side of the door frame, then he closed it and turned. “Are you all right?”

Outside an engine burst into life. “Yes, fine, what was that?”

“He had a Shogun.”

She eased herself back in the chair. “I was really beginning to despair, Dillon, I thought you were never going to catch up with me. What on earth are you doing here?”

“Confession time,” he said. “I’ve an uncle, Brigadier Charles Ferguson, who rented a place called Ardmurchan Lodge not far from here for the shooting, which it shares with the Loch Dhu Estate.”

“Really? My father will be surprised. He never likes to share anything with anyone.”

“Yes, well, when I read that item in the gossip column in the
Daily Mail
, saw your photo, I couldn’t resist wangling myself an invitation to the Brazilian Embassy to meet you.”

“Just like that?”

“I’m terribly well connected. You’d be surprised.”

“Nothing would surprise me about you, and for what it’s worth, I don’t believe a word of it.” She put down her right foot and winced. “Damn!”

“Trouble?”

“An old injury, that’s all.”

She pulled up the right leg of her slacks and he eased off the shoe and sock. “I’d have thought you would have caught up with me.”

“I tried the short route straight up and it proved longer. I had to sit down in the mist.”

“I just kept on walking. I noticed you at the station in Glasgow. I was coming out of the toilets and saw you buying a map at the bookstall. I waited till you boarded the train before getting on board myself. Most intriguing, especially when you changed trains as I did at Fort William.”

“So, you left the train to draw me on?”

“Of course.”

“Damn you, Asta, I should put you over my knee.”

“Is that a promise? We Swedes are reputed to be terribly oversexed.”

He laughed out loud. “I’d better get on with this foot while Fergus Munro hotfoots it to Loch Dhu Castle with his tale of woe. I should think we can expect company soon.”

“I should hope so. I haven’t the slightest intention of walking any further.”

Dillon raised her foot. There was a faint puffiness at the ankle and a jagged scar.

“How did you get that?”

“Skiing. There was a time when I was an Olympic possibility.”

“Too bad. I’ll take the lamp for a minute.”

He went into the kitchen, checked the drawers, and found some kitchen towels. He soaked one in cold water and returned to the living room.

“A cold compress will help.” He bandaged the ankle expertly. “Tired?”

“Not too much. Hungry though.”

He got one of the half-pound blocks of chocolate from his Burberry pocket. “Bad for your figure, but sustaining.”

“You’re a magician, Dillon.” She ate the chocolate greedily and he lit a cigarette and sat by the fire. She suddenly paused. “What about you?”

“I had some.” He stretched. “The grand place this. Fish in the burn, deer in the forest, a roof over your head, and a fine, strong girl like yourself to help on the land.”

“Thanks very much. An arid sort of life, I should have thought.”

“Haven’t you heard the old Italian saying? One can live well on bread and kisses.”

“Or chocolate.” She held up what was left of the bar and they both laughed.

Dillon got up, went and opened the door. There was a full moon and the only sound was the burn as its waters ran by.

“We could be the last two people left on earth,” she said.

“Not for long, there’s a vehicle coming.” He moved out of the porch and stood there waiting.

 

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