SIXTY

Ganic was lying to one side of the trail, face up, arms flung out to his sides.

As the police helicopter assigned to pick Harry up slid alongside the old railway cutting, Harry could see that the Bosnian’s hands were empty. He checked the cutting in each direction. Nobody about. But just beyond where he was lying, the remains of an old vehicle crossing were just visible where a track met the railway at right-angles.

There was no sign of a getaway car. Zubac’s suspicions had been correct: Soran had failed to keep to this part of the plan.

‘Drop me here,’ he said, pointing to the top of the slope leading to the track, where long grass would make a soft landing and give him some cover if Ganic was still a danger.

The pilot nodded and lost height, and Harry dropped from the doorway and rolled, feeling the impact through his legs. He stood up and took out his gun, then stepped over the wooden fence rail and crouched at the top of the slope just above where Ganic was lying. He hadn’t moved.

The helicopter pulled away, the down-draught fanning the surrounding vegetation and lifting Ganic’s jacket.

Harry mentally crossed his fingers, then slid down the slope. Holding his gun two-handed, he fixed the sights on the man below. Any movement and he was going to start shooting, and to hell with Ballatyne’s reaction.

He breathed a sigh of relief when he saw Ganic’s gun lying nearby. Too far for the Bosnian to reach out for it, even if he’d wanted to. It was covered in blood, with a trail of bright red splashes leading back in the direction of the bridge. Ganic’s shirt front was awash with red, too.

His eyes were open, watching as Harry approached. He showed no expression. But a blink showed he was still conscious.

‘You’re a tough man to stop,’ said Harry.

‘Fuck you, Englishman.’ Ganic’s whisper was faint, his Adam’s apple bobbing up and down. ‘You lucky.’

Harry squatted down alongside him, showed him the gun. He felt no emotion at seeing this man down; Ganic had planned on taking Jean and killing Rik, and had a long list of bodies to his name, including the officers in Brixton. In the grand scheme of things, his time was long overdue.

‘Where’s Deakin?’

A red bubble formed at the corner of Ganic’s mouth. He shook his head and coughed, his face twisting with pain. The bubble popped and a string of reddened saliva slid down the side of his chin.

‘Come on, what’s the point of defending him? Deakin stiffed you; he left you here with no car and no way out.’ He nodded in the direction of the crossing, which he could just see from here. Ganic must have seen it, too, before he fell. An empty track with no car in sight. It had probably been the last straw for a dying man. ‘What do you owe him?’

Ganic swallowed, but said nothing. The helicopter had gone, and Harry guessed it had landed to conserve fuel. Overhead the skylarks had started up again, and a pigeon added its melancholy tune to the landscape.

‘Milan?’ The man’s voice was fainter, his breathing faster. ‘Where’s Mil. . Milan?’

‘He’s dead.’

Ganic’s eyes swivelled. ‘You?’

‘No. Not me.’

‘Then. . the woman?’ He tried to laugh, but choked noisily instead.

Harry waited for him to recover, and his breathing to settle. ‘He took his eyes off her.’

Ganic coughed, liquid burbling in his throat. ‘Bloody fool,’ he murmured. ‘He always talked too much.’

‘Deakin,’ said Harry, sensing Ganic’s clock was fast running down. ‘Where do I find him? And Paulton.’

‘Do not. . know. . Pault. .’ Ganic swallowed. ‘Turpowicz. American airborne. . Nich. .’ He seemed to run out of names, as if it had all been too tiring.

‘But Deakin. Where does he hide out?’

Ganic’s head flopped sideways. For a moment, Harry thought he’d gone. But when he bent closer he was surprised to pick up a flutter of breathing. ‘Deakin. . is English. . asshole,’ Ganic whispered.

Then he died.

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