CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
THE DOOR AT the top of the stairs stood open, the garden was floodlit again, a place of wonder and delight, sweetly perfumed in the rain.
I paused to one side of the door and considered the situation for a while, then moved along the landing, tried another door and found myself in a study of sorts.
The room was in darkness, the inevitable glass doors that formed the other side standing open. Which way would he expect me to come, that was the thing. I stood there in the darkness, drained of all emotion, suddenly tired, caught by some strange fatalism that seemed to say it didnt really matternothing mattered. We were on our predestined course, Burke and I. What would be, must be.
I went out through the glass doors in three quick strides and dropped into the green jungle of the garden.
His voice sounded clearly. Over here, Stacey, I know youre there.
You and me, Sean? I called. No one else?
As ever was, Stacey boy. The more Irish he sounded the less I trusted him. Piet isnt here. He went up to the airstrip with our baggage. Were getting out tonight.
Which was a lie. Had to be because whatever else Hoffer had paid him, there was the bearer bond for fifty thousand dollars in that bank vault in Palermo and as today was Sunday he couldnt possibly have collected it on his return. He wasnt going to leave that.
But trapped by that strange fatalism, I decided to play his game and stepped out through the ferns into a narrow path between vines. He stood at the end on the terrace beyond a wrought iron table, his hands behind his back.
What are you holding there, Sean? I called.
Nothing, Stacey, dont you believe me?
After the mountainafter Cammarata?
Both hands came into view empty. Im sorry about that, but I knew youd never stand still for killing the girl. He shook his head and there was a kind of admiration in his voice. But you, Staceyyou. Christ, you are indestructible. I thought you in pieces.
Youre losing your touch, Seanold age, I said. If youre interested, you didnt do much of a job on the girl either. Shes doing fine. Hoffers the one whos in trouble. Explaining himself to the devil about now, I should think.
That got through to him and the slight smile left his face. Youre a bloody swine, Sean, I said. You always were only I never saw it before. Nothing on earth could excuse what you did up there on the mountain. You and Hoffer should get on fine when you next meet.
You wouldnt kill me in cold blood, Stacey, after all weve been through together.
He spread his arms wide. Thats just the way I intend to do it, I told him and Rosa screamed from the doorway behind me.
I swung, dropped on my face, pain tearing at my right shoulder as Piet Jaeger jumped from the vines no more than seven or eight feet away.
For some odd reason the weapon he clutched in both hands was a lupara which had presumably belonged to one of Hoffers men; just the thing for assassination at close-quarters.
I shot him three times, two bullets catching him in the heart, the third in the throat as he went down, dropping the lupara. I turned, the Smith and Wesson ready, and looked into the Browning, rigid in Burkes hand.
Stuck it in my belt at the rear, he explained. Whos slipping now?
Arent you going to shed a tear for lover boy? I asked.
His face went very still. You bastard, Ive wanted you like this for a long time.
But you needed me, didnt you? I said. I only discovered that tonight. You only had them carry me out when I was wounded on the Lagona job because I was essential to you. Without me you were nothing. I laughed harshly. The great Sean Burke. Thats a joke. Every move you ever made, every plan, originated in my head. Without me you were nothing and I thought you were some kind of god. You wouldnt even have got into the Cammarata without me or come within ten miles of Serafino and the girl.
You poor bloody fool, he said. You think I needed you for the Cammarata job? You think thats why I brought you out of Egypt instead of leaving you to rot?
Youve got a better story?
Try this. He savoured every word as he spoke. Hoffer wanted Vito Barbaccias head, but getting at him was impossible until he hired me and I remembered my old friend Stacey Wyatt in the Hole at Fuad. The problem was getting into the Barbaccia villaall visitors cars left outside the gate, but would that apply to Barbaccias grandson? It was worth a try.
I stared up at him and he laughed out loud, the only time Id known him to do it. The two gunmen at the villa that nightthey were in the boot of the car. Thats how they got in. My idea, Stacey, just like Troy and the wooden horse. Worth bringing you out of Fuad for and it nearly worked.
How true it all was I had no means of knowing, but it seemed unlikely that it would have been the only reason for bringing me out of Fuad. No, he had needed me for Cammarata, however much he tried to deny it to himself now. On the other hand I had certainly mentioned my grandfather to him in the distant past and a name which meant nothing to him then would have assumed a new importance when first heard from Hoffer.
So, he had used me again. Ironic that in this case I was also the one who had foiled him, but I now understood why he had been so quick to shoot the boy with the lupara that night in the garden. The only way of guaranteeing a still tongue.
I got to one knee and he shook his head. Youre wasting your time. Ive been counting. One in the garden, one on the stairs, three for Piet. That makes five which is all you ever carry in that thingunless you reloaded on the way up.
A gamea monstrous game in which we each played our parts. I shook my head and dropped the Smith and Wesson into my pocket. No, youre right, its empty.
This is it, then, Stacey, he said. Weve come a long way since the Lights of Lisbon.
I picked up the lupara. You know what this is?
SureHoffer showed it to me. The Mafia favour themthe traditional way of finishing off a vendetta. Not much use beyond six feet. Youd have to get close, Stacey.
Ill get close, I said, stood up and thumbed back the hammer. You never amounted to a row of beans without me at your back. Lets see how good you are on your own.
He was right, of course. A sawn-off shotgun spreads so quickly that I hadnt a hope in hell of really hurting him where he stood which was a good twenty paces away.
I started to walk, staring death in the face, and Rosa cried out sharply. Somewhere I heard a car engine and then another, the slam of doors, voices in the night. Mafia arriving too late.
There was only the rain and Burke standing there at the end of a dark tunnel, his face frozen, every line etched deep, the eyes boring into me so that we were caught together in our own timeless moment.
And then a strange thing happened. The Browning wavered. He took a step back and then another. I dont know what it was that caused it. Perhaps my relentless approach, my apparent contempt for sudden death, the expression on my face! Whatever it was, he crackedcame apart at the seams.
Stay away from me! Stay away!
He took three quick paces back, lurched into the low retaining wall and went over with a desperate cry.
I stood there swaying slightly, then dropped the lupara. Rosa was there, holding on to me tightly, crying into my shoulder. I stroked her head absently, then moved to the wall and looked down at him, broken across the steps of the terrace sixty feet below.
When I finally turned, my grandfather was there and Marco together with three hard-looking gentlemen who clutched machine pistols as if thoroughly accustomed to their use.
Youre too late, I said. All over.
Barbaccia moved towards me. Youre all right?
Me? Im fine. Just Burke and his boy friend dead and a couple of Hoffers thugs chipped up a little. What do you think Ill get? Ten years? Fifteen? Rome doesnt like this sort of thing any more. Its bad for the tourist trade.
He put a hand on my shoulder. Stacey, listen to me. All this is nothing. Burke and his friend go so deep under the earth that no one ever finds them. The others, I fixI fix everything. They know better than to cross Mafia.
Thats good, I said. Thats marvellous because to tell you the truth, Ive had enough gaols to last me a lifetime and Ive got other plans like taking the first plane to anywhere out of Sicily tomorrow.
He looked completely shocked, reached out an uncertain hand. Stacey, you dont know what youre saying. You must stay with me.
Stay with you? I laughed out loud. I wouldnt cut you down if you were hanging. Ive news for you. I made a very interesting discovery tonight. I found out who murdered my motheryou did.
It was the cruellest thing I could have said, however true, and he wilted, became old before my eyes. I turned and pushed my way past his bully boys, feeling suddenly very, very tired.
I got as far as the door and staggered a little and then there was an arm supporting me. Rosa was there, her face full of pride and she had stopped crying.
Let me help you, Stacey.
Can you cook as well?
Youve never tasted pasta like it.
Then youre the girl for me. Only one stipulation. We do things right at the first opportunity. Im sick of irregular habits.
She started to cry again as we descended the stairs and I patted her shoulder. My clothes will still be in my room, I suppose. Pack a bag for me and whatever you need for yourself, and dont forget your passport. Ill see you downstairs. And Ill have my wallet.
She gave it to me and went into her room and I made it down to the hall under my own steam. It was raining harder than ever when I went into the garden and moved along the terrace at the front of the villa.
He seemed peaceful enough lying there in the rain, although from the look of him his spine was broken and the back of the skull was crushed.
I thought about a lot of things standing there, but mainly of that first time wed met at the Lights of Lisbon. If only one could hold moments for ever, if only people didnt change, but that was not possible. Life was not like that.
Now I was tired, now all I wanted to do was shelter from the darkness in some corner of warmth and if I was lucky, luckier than most people ever are, Rosa would provide that. Rosa and the piece of paper worth fifty thousand dollars that reposed in the lining of my wallet and I smiled wryly, remembering him solemnly sealing the manilla envelope containing the blank withdrawal form Id substituted for the real thing that day at the bank.
Poor Seanpoor Sean Burke. I took out the Smith and Wesson, dropped it on his chest and left him there in the rain. A poor exchange, perhapsfor him, but not for me.