Добавить в цитаты Настройки чтения

Страница 110 из 112

He kissed her warm lips, unashamed of the tears of joy and relief that finally, after all these years, he allowed to course down his cheeks.

Pelham found the two of them sleeping on the sofa wrapped in each other’s arms. He placed the fur coverlet over them, stifled a yawn, and walked out into the hall. It was half past one and he was anxious for his warm bed.

He’d no sooner mounted the first step than he heard the sound of the bell downstairs. The front door! At this hour? Madness.

He descended to the ground floor, muttering to himself about what kind of fool would be out on a night like this, especially at this hour. The bell rang once more.

He swung the wide door open.

There was a man standing there in the pouring rain. He wore a long black cloak, buttoned closely about him. His face was hidden by a large black umbrella.

“Yes?” Pelham said, not bothering to be polite.

“Is this the home of Lord Alexander Hawke?” the man asked.

“Lord Hawke has retired for the evening. Who shall I say is calling?”

“Just give him this,” the man said, and handed Pelham a small gold medallion. The old butler looked at it in the light of the carriage lamp mounted beside the door. It was a medal of some sort, a St. George’s medallion. He turned it over. On the reverse were Alex’s initials and the date of his seventh birthday.

“What do you mean by this? What is—”

“Just give it to him,” the man said. As he turned to go, Pelham caught the barest glimpse of his face. He was astounded by what he saw.

The man’s eyes had no color. No color at all.

60

“I sure am glad you were able to make it down here, Mr. Hawke,” the senator said. “Mighty glad.”

“Thank you for inviting me,” Hawke said, taking another sip of the delicious whiskey. It was more like some locally grown nectar than any whiskey he’d ever tasted. It was Maker’s Mark, the senator’s favorite, and he’d brought along a bottle as a house gift.

“Little early to be drinking fine bourbon where you come from, I suppose,” the senator said.

“Oh, I’m sure the sun is over the yardarm in some formerly far-flung outpost of the British Empire, sir.”

They were seated in a pair of old rockers out on the verandah, gazing down the long allйe of pecan trees in full bloom that led all the way to the levee. There were three or four sleepy bird dogs puddled on the steps. The late-afternoon air was cool and heavily scented with the arrival of spring.

Looking over the sprig of mint in his glass, Hawke was thinking he’d never seen a more beautiful place. The sun was a thin band of bright orange and scarlet, lying just along the top of the levee. Everywhere he looked, riots of color had broken out. Redbud trees grew just beyond the faded white railing, and beyond them were azaleas bursting with clouds of coral and pink blossoms. The enormous old rhododendron bushes that rose up to the second and third floors of the house were heavy with crimson blooms.

There was the hoot of a boat, somewhere out on the river.

“You know, my dear wife didn’t care much for whiskey, Mr. Hawke,” the senator said, with a tinkle of ice cubes and looking over at Hawke with a smile.

“I think a lot of women don’t, Senator.”

“I agree,” the senator said, “but Sarah, well, she had convictions about it. None of ’em very favorable, I might add, sir.”

“Well,” Hawke said, rocking back in his chair, “I’ve got convictions about those little tiny watercress sandwiches some ladies seem to favor.”

“Now, that’s damn well said.”

They were silent for a few moments, savoring the whiskey and the companionship of the dusky hour, and then the senator again turned toward Alex with a happy grin on his face.





“You know, I used to say that trying to sneak a second whiskey past my Sarah was like trying to sneak dawn past a rooster!”

Alex laughed and raised his glass, clinking it against the senator’s.

“That’s quite good,” Alex said. “Another quotation.”

“Son … you ever seen a bona fide Parker Sweet Sixteen?”

He picked up a double-barreled shotgun that had been leaning against one of the massive fluted columns beside his rocking chair.

“No, sir, I don’t believe I—”

“Finest upland bird gun a man could ever …” The senator stopped, overcome by emotion. “Good God almighty, Mr. Hawke, I don’t want to talk about any damn guns. What I been trying to say to you, what I been meaning to do since the minute I laid eyes on you, is to thank you, sir, from the bottom of my heart, from the very bottom of my heart, for what you did.”

Alex saw there were tears welling in the old man’s eyes.

“Well, I—”

“No, no, I don’t want to hear any of your self-deprecating nonsense. No. You found my little girl and you brought her home, just like you said you would, only—”

The senator had to stop and pull his handkerchief from the breast pocket of his old hunting jacket. He rubbed it roughly across his face and stuffed it back inside the pocket.

“Only she’s sitting out there right now in the top of that old oak tree of hers writing her new book instead of … instead of buried beneath—” The old man bent down and scratched one of his dogs behind the ears. He couldn’t continue.

“What’s her new book about?” Alex asked, trying to help the old fellow through the moment.

“Pirates, I think,” he replied, not looking up.

“Does she still not know I’m here?” Alex asked after a few moments had passed.

“ ’Course she don’t know!” the senator exclaimed. “She hasn’t got the foggiest notion I called you either. But, well, she’s been down here with me for over a month now. Not a lot to do around here and I could see on her face she was pining away for you. Plain as day.”

“Did she talk about what happened, Senator?” Hawke asked.

“Well, she told me a little. I didn’t push her. She was fu

“I’m still trying to put it all together, sir. She’d gone to a club the night before our picnic. She told me she spoke to a Russian at the bar that night. She’d suffered a mild concussion, you know, and she doesn’t really remember, but she may have unwittingly told him our plans for the next day. I don’t know. At any rate, the Cuban submarine I was tracking was in those waters at the time. And the Cubans at that point were trying to use Vicky to get to me. Suddenly, there was an opportunity for a kidnapping.”

“I still don’t understand how they managed to get hold of her,” the senator said. “Out in the water.”

“My guess is that they did know our plans that day. They hid in the trees on the small island just across the cut from the one I’d chosen for the picnic. They probably had us under optical surveillance, waiting for an opportunity. And when Vicky went swimming alone, they had it.”

“But you would have seen them, right, Mr. Hawke?”

“Normally, yes, but she was taken from below. Vicky was grabbed by the ankles and pulled underwater by two Cuban thugs wearing scuba gear. Apparently they called themselves Julio and Iglesias. They’re the ones she overheard bragging about the bomb being hidden in the teddy bear. Anyway, they dragged her ashore, hid her in the pines, and they were all picked up by the Cubans’ submarine later that night.”

“Did they hurt her, Mr. Hawke? Tell me the truth. Did those people harm my little girl?”

“No, sir, they did not. She was smart and brave and used her wits to stay alive. But I would say we arrived pretty much in the nick of time.”

The senator just nodded his head and took a sip of his drink. In the silver ice bucket at his elbow, there was a lovely sound as ice melted and shifted.