Death on the Pont Noir - By Adrian Magson Page 0,28

the business, did he?’

There was a discreet cough and Tasker glanced at the other man, whose name was Leslie Brayne. A bluff, well-fed individual in an expensive suit, he had sleek grey hair and a silk handkerchief tucked in his top pocket. Trying to look like the accountant he used to be, thought Tasker, who knew the man’s history. Now he just looked like the crooked numbers man he really was. He was nursing a glass of whisky, his favoured tipple and, as Ketch’s trusted advisor, was never far from his side.

Tasker considered dropping Calloway in it, then decided against it. ‘He did all right. Good enough wheel man … for a nancy boy.’

He realised his mistake the moment the words had left his mouth. Ketch went very still, his eyes hooded. Tasker felt sick. It was rumoured that one of the Twins, whom nobody saw much, had once taken against an associate who’d made a joke about homosexuals. The associate had disappeared shortly afterwards. ‘Sorry.’

‘What do you reckon, Brayne?’ Ketch started playing with his pen again. Tap-tap. Tap-tap.

Brayne looked up at the ceiling, then at Tasker, before replying. ‘Well, no harm done, was there? They got a result, according to their man. No foul, no penalty.’

‘Their man?’ Tasker wondered what that meant.

Ketch didn’t answer. He dropped the pen onto the blotter and sat back, tugging at the sleeves of his pinstripe suit to reveal cufflinks glittering with stones. Nudged his large tie knot into place.

‘Yeah, I suppose.’ He leant forward and stared hard at Tasker, his eyes as cold as night. A thin bead of perspiration was showing on his brow. ‘Only thing is, I’m not sure what the result was. Are you, Brayne?’

‘A try-out, wasn’t that what they said? Testing the water.’

‘Yeah, but what for?’ Ketch was still looking at Tasker. ‘What do you reckon, George? What were they really looking for over there?’

‘No idea, boss. We did what you said, that’s all.’ He was puzzled. What the hell was Ketch talking about? How did he know what the point of it all had been? It was a job, that was all he knew. A bloody weird one, but just a job. Set it up, create the crash and away.

‘Yeah, so you did.’ He sat back. More tapping with the pen. ‘Okay. What about Fletcher?’

‘What about him?’

‘I hear he overdid things. Buggered the truck and bent the car. Could have been messy, getting stranded out there miles from home … especially if the cops had got involved. Not part of the plan, see, getting caught with the vehicles.’

‘That’s right.’ There was nothing more to say. Tasker was damned if he was going to defend the man. He was likely to end up going down with him if he did that, and he didn’t owe Fletcher a thing.

‘I reckon,’ Ketch murmured, ‘we might have to rethink Fletch’s terms of employment. Pity, though; he’s been with the Firm a long time. Knows a lot of stuff. And he’s got friends.’

Tasker waited, not sure if he was expected to make a contribution. If the ‘friends’ Ketch was referring to were the Twins, he was better off saying nothing. Let the man who was paid the money make the running with that one.

‘Yes, boss.’

‘You got lucky this time, George,’ Ketch murmured softly, and the temperature in the room suddenly seemed a few degrees colder. ‘Dead lucky. They had a watcher on you, see. Checking out how you and the boys did.’ He smiled without a trace of humour. ‘I bet you never saw him, did you?’

A watcher. Christ, where? Tasker had checked out the scenery before and after the crash. There had been nobody within miles, he was certain of it. Yet if Ketch said there was …

‘No, boss. Can’t say I did.’ He felt his ears redden at the admission.

‘Damn right, you can’t. Good job for you it went well, all I can say. They reckon it was just what they needed; they learnt a lot … whatever that was. Did you get rid of the wheels? Be a shame if they turned up and the cops got evidence. Did you know they still use the guillotine over there?’ His eyes were blank, and Tasker couldn’t make out whether he was out of the woods or not. This mad fucker could change at the snap of a finger. ‘Chop-chop. No coming back from the big blade, is there? No appeal, no further statements possible.’ He grinned suddenly. ‘Mind you, no more

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