[Jack Harvey Novels 02] Bleeding Hearts Read online




  For Elliot and Fawn

  part one

  ONE

  She had just over three hours to live, and I was sipping grapefruit juice and tonic in the hotel bar.

  “You know what it’s like these days,” I said, “only the toughest are making it. No room for bleeding hearts.”

  My companion was a businessman himself. He too was recovering from the recent highs and lows of the ’80s, and he nodded as vigorously as the whiskey in him would allow.

  “Bleeding hearts,” he said, “are for the operating table, not for business.”

  “I’ll drink to that,” I said, though of course in my line of work bleeding hearts are the business.

  Gerry had asked me a little while ago what I did for a living, and I’d told him import-export, then asked what he did. See, I slipped up once; I manufactured a career for myself only to find the guy I was drinking with was in the same line of work. Not good. These days I’m better, much cagier, and I don’t drink on the day of a hit. Not a drop. Not anymore. Word was, I was slipping. Bullshit naturally, but sometimes rumors are difficult to throw off. It’s not as though I could put an ad in the newspapers.

  But I knew a few good clean hits would give the lie to this particular little slander.

  Then again, today’s hit was no prize: it had been handed to me, a gift. I knew where she’d be and what she’d be doing. I didn’t just know what she looked like, I knew pretty well what she’d be wearing. I knew a whole lot about her. I wasn’t going to have to work for this one, but prospective future employers wouldn’t know that. All they’d see was the score sheet. Well, I’d take all the easy targets going.

  “So what do you buy and sell, Mark?” Gerry asked.

  I was Mark Wesley. I was English. Gerry was English too, but as international businessmen we spoke to one another in mid-Atlantic: the lingua franca of the deal. We were jealous of our American cousins, but would never admit it.

  “Whatever it takes, Gerry,” I said.

  “I’m into that.” Gerry toasted me with whiskey. It was 3 P.M.

  local time. The whiskies were six quid a hit, not much more than my own soft drink. I’ve drunk in hotel bars all over the Western world, and this one looked like all of them. Dimly lit even in daytime, the same bottles behind the polished bar, the same liveried barman pouring from them. I find the sameness comforting. I hate to go to a strange place, somewhere where you can’t find any focus, anything recognizable to grab on to. I hated Egypt: even the Coke signs were written in Arabic, and all the numerals were wrong, plus everyone was wearing the wrong clothes. I hate Third World countries; I won’t do hits there unless the money is particularly interesting. I like to be somewhere with clean hospitals and facilities, dry sheets on the bed, English-speaking smiles.

  “Well, Gerry,” I said, “been nice talking to you.”

  “Same here, Mark.” He opened his wallet and eased out a business card. “Here, just in case.”

  I studied it. Gerald Flitch, Marketing Strategist. There was a company name, phone, fax, and car-phone number, and an address in Liverpool. I put the card in my pocket, then patted my jacket.

  “Sorry, I can’t swap. No cards on me just now.”

  “That’s all right.”

  “But the drinks are on me.”

  “Well, I don’t know—”

  “My pleasure, Gerry.” The barman handed me the bill, and I signed my name and room number. “After all,” I said, “you never know when I might need a favor.”

  Gerry nodded. “You need friends in business. A face you can trust.”

  “It’s true, Gerry, it’s all about trust in our game.”

  Obviously, as you can see, I was in a philosophical mood.

  Back up in my room, I put out the DO NOT DISTURB sign, locked the door, and wedged a chair under the handle. The bed had already been made, the bathroom towels changed, but you couldn’t be too careful. A maid might look in anyway. There was never much of a pause between them knocking at your door and them unlocking it.

  I took the suitcase from the bottom of the wardrobe and laid it on the bed, then checked the little Scotch tape seal I’d left on it. The seal was still intact. I broke it with my thumbnail and unlocked the suitcase. I lifted out some shirts and T-shirts until I came to the dark blue raincoat. This I lifted out and laid on the bed. I then pulled on my kid-leather driving gloves before going any further. With these on, I unfolded the coat. Inside, wrapped in plastic, was my rifle.

  It’s impossible to be too careful, and no matter how careful you are you leave traces. I try to keep up with advances in forensic science, and I know all of us leave traces wherever we are: fibers, hairs, a fingerprint, a smear of grease from a finger or arm.

  These days, they can match you from the DNA in a single hair.

  That’s why the rifle was wrapped in plastic: it left fewer traces than cloth.

  The gun was beautiful. I’d cleaned it carefully in Max’s workshop, then checked it for identifiers and other distinguishing marks. Max does a good job of taking off serial numbers, but I always like to be sure. I’d spent some time with the rifle, getting to know it, its weight and its few foibles. I’d practiced over several days, making sure I got rid of all the spent bullets and cartridge cases, just so the gun couldn’t be traced back to them. Every gun leaves particular and unique marks on a bullet. I didn’t believe that at first either, but apparently it’s true.

  The ammo was a problem. I didn’t really want to tamper with it. Each cartridge case carries a head stamp, which identifies it.

  I’d tried filing off the head stamps from a few cartridges, and they didn’t seem to make any difference to the accuracy of my shooting. But on the day, nothing could go wrong. So I asked Max and he said the bullets could be traced back to a consignment which had accompanied the British Army units to Kuwait during the Gulf War. (I didn’t ask how Max had got hold of them; probably the same source as the rifle itself.) See, some snipers like to make their own ammo. That way they know they can trust it. But I’m not skilled that way, and I don’t think it matters anyway. Max sometimes made up ammo for me, but his eyes weren’t so great these days.

  The ammo was .338 Lapua Magnum. It was full-metal-jacket: military stuff usually is, since it fulfills the Geneva Convention’s requirements for the most “humane” type of bullet.

  Well, I’m no animal, I wasn’t about to contravene the Geneva Convention.

  Max had actually been able to offer a choice of weapons.

  That’s why I use him. He asks few questions and has excellent facilities. That he lives in the middle of nowhere is a bonus, since I can practice all day without disturbing anyone. Then there’s his daughter, Belinda, who would be bonus enough in herself. I always take her a present if I’ve been away somewhere. Not that I’d . . . you know, not with Max about. He’s very protective of her, and she of him. They remind me of Beauty and the Beast.

  Bel’s got short fair hair, eyes slightly slanted like a cat’s, and a long straight nose. Her face looks like it’s been polished. Max on the other hand has been battling cancer for years. He’s lost about a quarter of his face, I suppose, and keeps his right side, from below the eye to just above the lips, covered with a white plastic prosthesis. Sometimes Bel calls him the Phantom of the Opera.

  He takes it from her. He wouldn’t take it from anyone else.

  I think that’s why he’s always pleased to see me. It’s not just that I have cash on me and something I want, but he doesn’t see many people. Or rather, he doesn’t let many people see him. He spends all day in his workshop, cleaning, filing, and polishing his guns. And he spends a lot of his nights there, too.

  He had
a Remington 700, pre-fitted with a Redfield telescopic sight. The U.S. Marines use this military version of the Varmint as sniper rifles. I’d used one before, and had nothing against it. More interesting though was a Sterling Sniper Rifle.

  Most people I’d met thought only cars were made in Dagenham, but that’s where the Sterling was crafted. It was user-friendly, down to the cheek rest and the grooved receiver. You could fit it with any mounting plate you wanted, to accommodate any telescope or night sight. I admit, it was tempting.

  There were others, too. Max didn’t have them, but he knew where he could get them: an L39A1, the ugly Mauser SP66, a Fusil Modele 1 Type A. I decided I wanted British; call me sentimental. And finally Max handed over the gun we’d both known I’d opt for: a Model PM.

  The manufacturers, Accuracy International, call it the PM. I don’t know what the letters stand for, maybe Post Mortem. But the British Army knows it as Sniper Rifle L96A1. A mouthful, you’ll agree, which is why Max and I stick to calling it the PM.

  There are several versions, and Max was offering the Super Magnum (hence the .338 Lapua Magnum ammo). The gun itself is not what you’d call a beauty, and as I unwrapped it in my hotel room it looked even less lovely, since I’d covered its camouflage with some camouflage of my own.

  The PM is olive green in color, fine if you are hiding in the trees, but not so inconspicuous when surrounded by the gray concrete of a city street. So in Max’s workshop I’d wound some gray adhesive tape around it, wearing my gloves all the time so as not to leave prints on the tape. As a result, the PM now looked like the ballistic equivalent of the Invisible Man, all bandaged except for the bits I needed left open to access. It was a neat job of binding; the wrapping around the stainless-steel barrel alone had taken a couple of hours.

  The PM is a long rifle, its barrel nearly four inches longer than the Remington. It’s also heavy, even though it’s mostly plastic, albeit high-impact plastic: double the weight of the Remington, and over four pounds heavier than the Sterling. I didn’t mind though; it wasn’t as if I’d be carrying it through the jungle. I made it even longer by fitting a flash hider of my own construction. (Max smiled with half of his face as he watched me.

  Like me, he is an admirer of beauty and craft, and the best you could say of my finished product was that it worked.) All the guns Max had offered me were bolt-action, all were 7.62mm, and all had barrels with four grooves and a right-hand twist. They differed in styles and muzzle velocity, in length and weight, but they shared one common characteristic. They were all lethal.

  In the end, I decided I didn’t require the integral bipod: at the angle I’d be shooting from, it would hinder rather than help.

  So I took that off, minimally reducing the weight. Although the Super Magnum accepts a five-round box, I knew I’d have two bullets at most, preferably only one. With bolt-action rifles, you sometimes didn’t have time for a second shot. While you were working the bolt, your quarry was scuttling to safety.

  I picked the gun up at last, and stood in my bedroom staring into the full-length mirror on the wardrobe door. The curtains were closed, so I was able to do this. I’d already fitted the telescopic sight. Ah, Max had made things so difficult. He could give me a Redfield, a Parker-Hale, the Zeiss Diavari ZA . . . even the old No. 32 sniping telescope. But the PM wasn’t geared up for these, so instead of fussing and having to make my own special sight-mounting plate, I opted for a Schmidt and Bender 6x telescopic sight, all the time telling myself I was maybe, for once, going to too much trouble.

  I was ready to pick off a flea from a cat’s whisker at six hundred yards, when all I had to do was hit a human target, out in the open, at something like a tenth of that. What was I doing buying all this lavish craft and expertise when something bashed together in China would achieve the same objective? Max had an answer.

  “You like quality, you like style.”

  True, Max, true. If my targets were suddenly to depart this world, I wanted them to have the best send-off I could give them.

  I checked my watch, then double-checked with the clock-radio.

  She had just over two hours to live.

  TWO

  Everything was waiting for Eleanor Ricks.

  She’d woken that morning after a drugged sleep, knowing yet another day was waiting out there, ready to bite her. Breakfast and her husband, Freddy, were waiting in the kitchen, as was Mrs. Elfman. When Eleanor and Freddy were both working, Mrs. Elfman came in and got breakfast ready, then cleaned everything away and tidied the rooms. When they weren’t working, she did the cleaning but no cooking. Freddy insisted that one or the other of them had to be capable of preparing cereal or sausage and eggs and a pot of coffee, so long as their minds weren’t on work. Funny, usually Eleanor ended up cooking if Mrs. Elfman wasn’t around, even if she had to go to work while Freddy was “resting.” Today, however, was a workday for both of them.

  Freddy Ricks was an actor, of consequence (albeit in TV sitcoms) in the early ’80s but now squeezing a living from character parts and not many of them. He’d tried some stage acting but didn’t like it, and had wasted a good deal of their joint savings by spending fruitless time in Hollywood, trying to call up favors from producers and directors who’d moved on from British TV.

  Today, he was starring in a commercial for breakfast cereal. It would be head and shoulders only, and he’d be wearing a yellow oilskin sou’wester and a puzzled expression. He had two lines to say, but they’d dub another actor’s voice on later. Freddy couldn’t understand why his own voice wasn’t good enough for them. It had, as he pointed out, been quite good enough for the twelve million viewers who’d tuned in to Stand by Your Man every week of its runs in 1983–4.

  He sat at the table munching cornflakes and reading his pre-ferred tabloid. He looked furious, but then these days he always looked furious. The radio sat on the draining board, volume turned down low because Freddy didn’t like it. But Mrs. Elfman liked it, and she angled her head toward it, trying to catch the words, while at the same time washing last night’s dishes.

  “Morning, Mrs. E.”

  “Morning, Mrs. Ricks, how did you sleep?”

  “Like a log, thanks.”

  “All right for some,” Freddy muttered from behind his cereal spoon. Eleanor ignored him, and so did Mrs. Elfman. Eleanor poured herself a mug of black coffee.

  “Want some breakfast, Mrs. Ricks?”

  “No thanks.”

  “It’s the most important meal of the day.”

  “I’m still full from last night.” This was a lie, but what else could she say: If I eat a single morsel I’m liable to be throwing up all morning? Mrs. Elfman would think she was joking.

  “Is Archie up?”

  “Who knows?” growled Freddy.

  Archie was their son, seventeen years old and the computer player in a pop group. Eleanor had never heard of anyone playing the computer as a musical instrument, until Archie had shown her. Now his band was making its second record, the first having been a success in local clubs. She went to the bottom of the stairs and called him. There was no answer.

  “He’s like bloody Dracula,” complained Freddy. “Never seen in daylight hours.” Mrs. Elfman threw him a nasty look, and Eleanor went through to her study.

  Eleanor Ricks was a freelance investigative journalist who had somehow managed to make a name for herself without re-course to the usual “investigations” of pop stars, media celebrities, and royalty. But then one day she’d found that magazines wanted to send round journalists to profile her, and she’d started to rethink her career. So now, after years of newspaper and magazine articles, she was finally going into television—just, it seemed, as Freddy was moving out of it. Poor Freddy: she gave him a moment’s thought, then started work.

  Today she was interviewing Molly Prendergast, the secretary of state for social security. They were meeting at a central hotel.

  They wouldn’t be talking about anything concerning the department of social secur
ity, or Molly Prendergast’s position there, or even her standing in her own political party. It was much more personal, which was why they were meeting in a hotel rather than at the department’s offices.

  It was Eleanor’s idea. She reckoned she’d get more out of Molly Prendergast on neutral ground. She didn’t want to hear a politician talking; she wanted to hear a mother . . .

  She went through her notes again, her list of questions, press clippings, video footage. She spoke with her researchers and assistant by phone. This was an initial interview, not intended for broadcast. Eleanor would make a tape recording, but just for her own use. There wouldn’t be any cameras or technicians there, just two women having a chat and a drink. Then, if Prendergast looked useful to the project, there’d be a request for a proper on-screen interview, asking the same or similar questions again.

  Eleanor knew that the Molly Prendergast she got today would not be the one she’d get at a later date. On screen, the politician would be much more cautious, more guarded. But Eleanor would use her anyway: Prendergast was a name, and this story needed a name to get it some publicity. Or so Joe kept telling her.

  The batteries for her tape recorder had been charging up overnight. She checked them, taping her voice then winding it back to listen. The recorder, though small, had a stereo micro-phone built into it and a tiny but powerful external speaker. She would take three C90 tapes with her, though it was expected to be an hour-long interview. Well, it might overrun, or a tape might snap. What was she thinking of ? It wouldn’t overrun. Two C90s would do it. But she’d best take a lot of batteries.

  She rewound the video compilation and studied it again, then went to her computer and tweaked some of her questions, deleting one and adding two new ones. She printed off this new sheet and read it over one more time. Then she faxed it to her producer, who phoned back with the okay.

  “You’re sure?” Eleanor asked.

  “I’m sure. Look, don’t worry about this, Lainie.” She hated him calling her Lainie. One day, she’d tell him to his face . . . No, that wasn’t true, was it? It was a small price to pay for Joe Draper’s backing. Joe was an excellent producer, if, like so many of his television colleagues, a bit of a prima donna. He’d earned his money doing a cop drama series and a couple of sitcoms (one of them with Freddy playing the errant next-door neighbor), then had set up his own production company, which specialized in documentaries and docu-dramas. These were good days for independent producers, so long as you knew your market and had a few contacts in the TV broadcasting companies. Joe had plenty of friends: the weekend coke parties at his home in Wiltshire were very popular. He’d invited her along a couple of times, but had neglected to invite Freddy.