The Old Vengeful (37 page)

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Authors: Anthony Price

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“What about them?”

“Nothing about
them
—they did unearth a couple of references to a Michael Haggerty, who was an associate of an equivocal Irish American named Jim Burns … and there’s a
Michael Haggerty
in the
Vengeful
list. But it’s a common Irish name, and they’ve got nothing more at all on him than that. Whereas they’ve got a lot on Abraham Timms … It seems he became quite a distinguished man in the later post-war period—‘
self-taught scholar and naturalist; corresponded with Sir Joseph Banks and John James Audubon; issue one son, Thomas Chipperfield Paget Timms, note names

—that’s what it says: ‘
note names

—“ he looked at Mitchell “—the names are rather touching, don’t you think? His fellow escapers?”

“Yes.” Mitchell frowned. “What did the cousins find out about them?”

“Nothing, I’m afraid. There’s only Timms, and Haggerty—two mentions, associate of the egregious Burns, who was a merchant of some sort, always lobbying Congress to make war with the filthy British—no—no, the really interesting one—and also the most surprising one—is the one you least expect, which shouldn’t be there at all, Paul.” Audley looked at him slyly.

“Who?”

“The owner of the Vengeful box, Dr William Willard Pike, no less!” Audley bent over the page. “The CIA liked the sound of him—or, if not the sound, then the smell… because it’s a smell they know, I suspect—even at this length of time—the authentic whiff of the enemy within the gate!”

This time it wasn’t a question of not being drawn: it was as though Audley was talking to himself.

“This is pure Howard—pure Howard!” Audley shook his head admiringly.


There are two schools of thought about Dr Pike, another known associate of Jim Burns (who in our day would have undoubtedly have been wasting our time running hot Armalites across the Canadian border for the IRA to shoot Limeys in Crossmaglen). They both disappeared from the scene here in 1812, never to return, ostensibly to do George III a mischief. But for my money—and for that of Professor John Kasik, who is nobody

s fool—Pike was a British double-agent, who lit out one jump ahead of Burns with whatever passed for microfilm in those days in his pocket, on the first boat (which was a Portuguese brig bound for Lisbon) with Burns in hot pursuit in a Yankee trader licensed for Plymouth and Antwerp. Kasik and I can

t prove anything, but we

ve both got a

pricking of the thumbs

, as you and William S. of Stratford-upon-Avon would say. So forget Timms and check out Burns and Pike. Ends message

.

Mitchell had heard of Professor Kasik—had even corresponded with him on an American aspect of
Watch by the Liffey
, as the best-known living authority on Irish Americans. But that recollection was secondary to his growing sense of unreality over this turn in the conversation. Their interest in the true story of the old
Vengeful
ought to have ended, yet Audley seemed as enthusiastic about it as ever.

The big man was smiling at him. “We’re checking what we can of this in the Bodleian, in FitzGerald’s monumental history of the Paddies in America, as well as Kasik’s own book. But Howard’s chaps probably gained access to a lot of their unpublished material, so our new boy, Phillip Dale—the thin one—is burrowing into the old Foreign Office archives. If Pike was one of our agents he ought to turn up in association with some of Richard Wellesley’s bright boys of the period there. Our very own ancestors, in fact!”

Was it mere academic interest? But it couldn’t be that, surely— surely? Mitchell’s brain ached with tiredness.

“If he is … the Portuguese brig accounts for him being in Lisbon, and he picked up the
Vengeful
there, while Burns was putting out a general alarm for him. Which, of course, could be why the French eventually became so interested in the
Vengeful
, eh?”

The Portsmouth Plot, thought Mitchell. If Pike had had information about that which couldn’t wait, then that could be why he had trans-shipped to the less-damaged
Fortuné after
the battle.

It was all supposition—all pictures from a distant planet of a drama enacted long ago, in which the competing actors had been dust and forgotten for generations, mixed with the earth enriched by infinite millions of the long-dead heroes of lost causes. But if, when the Last Trump sounded, it was all of immense importance in some ledger of human courage and constancy in adversity, it added up to nothing in the cruel and selfish priorities of now.

“What’s the point of all this, David—the object of it?” He hated the question even as he asked it, but it was the only honest question left to him in the extremity of his weariness.

“The point—the
object
, my dear Paul … is
your
Elizabeth— potentially
our
Miss Loftus.” Audley’s voice was gentle, almost sad. “The object and the point is to make your history repeat itself in her … through you … for us—do you see?”

“No. I don’t see.” A huge disquiet enveloped Mitchell.

“No. Then perhaps this is not the time—“

“This is the bloody time!” Mitchell flogged himself awake. “What are you up to, David?”

“My duty. Or … what I conceive to be my duty.” The fatigue showed in Audley too. “They’ve pissed us around something shocking this time—you and me both, and your Elizabeth—Latimer has, anyway, to get him out of trouble! So now we must take our profit from it, if we can.”

“What profit?”

Audley considered the question. “I want you to go to Hadfields tomorrow—or today, as it is now—to see Elizabeth Loftus. And I want you to chat her up—I want you to be very nice to her … I want you to offer to finish off her
Vengeful
book, as you promised you would do in the first place, Paul—“ A little twitch of pain there: Audley always knew when he was being devious “—you can even take my name in vain, if you have to—but not too much, for safety’s sake—“

“Why?”

“Why me? Because she mustn’t hate me too much!” The pain became pure. “Why you? Because you’re the ideal man for the job—she knows you, and maybe she likes you … and I
know you
like her. And isn’t it true that in Lieutenant Chipperfield’s day the best press-gangs were always made up of men who’d been press-ganged themselves?”

It was like being swallowed by a boa constrictor: you went in still alive, but in the end the crushing pressures and the stifling digestive juices made you an accepted part of what had swallowed you.

“She’s
ideal
, Paul.” Audley willed him to accept the compact. “It was in my mind that first time I met her, after what you said. What’s happened since only confirms it—she’s the finest natural recruit I’ve met since I set eyes on you back in ‘74—“ the smile mixed pain with happy memory “—in some ways she’s maybe even better than you, actually.”

The shared memory tore Mitchell back to the British Commonwealth Institute for Military Studies—to the packed shelves of the Great War Documents Room in which he had been researching the West Hampshires’ attack on Fontaine-du-Bois, when he had first locked horns with Audley.

But only for an instant, because he knew at last what they were both about—
dear God, he knew
!

“She’s perfect,” said Audley, sharing the knowledge with his press-ganged press-gang commander. “Independent means and no ties—unmarried, and not likely to be—no inconvenient boy-friends, no nosey relatives—“

Dear God
! Audley must once have had a conversation like this with someone about
Paul Mitchell
—with Colonel Butler maybe, or old Brigadier Stocker or even Sir Frederick Clinton … but—
history was repeating itself now
with
Elizabeth Loftus
for
Paul Mitchell

No!

“You’ll have to go carefully.” Audley took his silence for agreement, and stared into space. “You’ll need professional advice before you pop the question—“

No! Never mind
Paul Mitchell
—they must have considered
Frances Fitzgibbon
like this, once upon a time, and he wasn’t having
Elizabeth Loftus
go the same way—
no
!

“You look doubtful.” Audley had come down out of space a moment too quickly, to catch his expression.

“Yes—“ Mitchell choked on the admission.

“Yes. It
is
a responsibility.” Audley nodded understandingly. “But, when you think about it, Paul, recruitment is one of the most important jobs we have—in peacetime.” He nodded again. “In wartime, it’s easy—we get the cream then. But in peacetime …” the nod became a shake of the head “… that’s when we have to keep our eyes open for natural talent.”

A terrible heresy sapped Mitchell’s faith: it could be that Audley was right—she was clever, and more than that—she was intuitively quick … and more than that—
more than that
—she was resolute—
she had killed a man
!

“But if you’d rather not do it I won’t force you. It isn’t a job to everyone’s taste.” Audley looked at him, and then brightened. “In fact … I could always ask James Cable as soon as he’s free again— he’s ex-RN, and the Cables are an old naval family. She’s bound to like him.”

Elizabeth would like James Cable—everyone liked James Cable, thought Mitchell miserably. So it wouldn’t make a damn of difference if he refused: Audley had it all worked out; and, what was worse, he probably had it worked out
right
this time, just as he had once done in the case of a certain Paul Mitchell.

Apart from all of which, it was up to Elizabeth to make up her own mind, for better or for worse—it was her
right
, just as it had once been his, and he had no right to influence her.

Then, suddenly, his own thought echoed in his head:
for
better or for worse

“Well? Will you do it?”

Mitchell heard the rain beat against the windows. He could see his reflection mirrored in their blackness, distorted by the leading of the diamond panes. It reminded him of his first sight of her, in the mirror at the church fete. She had been scowling in his direction, and he had thought to himself that she was even plainer in the flesh than her picture in the file. But that first glimpse had been just as much a distortion of the true image as his own in the windows.

Audley stretched wearily. “You can sleep on it if you like. She’ll keep for a few more days.”

For better or for worse
—the idea flowered in Mitchell’s brain, opening like the speeded-up film of a natural growth which normally took far longer to mature. For a second it astonished him, it was so far from anything he had thought himself capable of imagining. But then it surprised him that he had not thought of it before, it was so beautifully simple.

“No—“ He tried not to smile foolishly “no—“

Merely thinking of it gave him all the rights he needed; if he managed it she would be beyond Audley’s reach—and it would serve Audley right for the use he’d made of them both.

“No, I’d like the job, David.”

Audley looked pleased. “You think you can win her over, do you?”

That was the big question: she might turn his offer down in favour of Audley’s. But then, he didn’t need to tell her about Audley’s offer at all: The beauty of the thing was that Audley was giving him the perfect opportunity to plead his own case, free of interruptions.

“I’ll have a damn good try,” he said. “You can depend on that, David.”

It was a double-cross. But, like they said, love and war were about winning, not fair play.

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