Feverish in the torment of her uncertainty, Billy Downs’s wife had sent two of her children to the community crèche, and dumped the others with her neighbours. In her threadbare green coat and with her bag and purse she had taken herself to the shops at the top of the Ardoyne. The screw had been well twisted on her exhausted nerves.
The news programme less than two hours earlier had carried reports of the shooting at the policeman’s house, amplified by eye-witness accounts. The BBC had sent a man to the house, and his story made much of the gunman who hesitated, the intervention of the child, and the wounding of the gunman. There had been a trail of blood and the policeman was a trained marksman, the report said. The Irish News, which she had seen when she took the young ones three doors down, had shown a floodlit picture of the neat bungalow and white-faced detectives working with their fingerprint kits by the front door. The paper had also spoken of the wounding of the would-be assassin.
Men from the community association would come in later in the day to help repair the boards pulled up at dawn by the army, but for now the debris and confusion in the house and the noise of the children coupled with the danger to her husband to defeat her.
But the single factor that weighed most with her was the knowledge that the military knew of her husband, had identified him, and that their life together was effectively over. If he had survived last night then he would be on the run and go underground, otherwise the future held only the prospect of years in the Kesh or the Crumlin.
And for what?
She was not one of the militant women of the streets who blew the whistles and beat the dustbins, and marched down the Falls, and screamed at the soldiers and sent food parcels to the prisons. At the start the cause had not interested her, till parallel with the growing involvement of her husband she had become passively hostile to the movement. That a Cabinet minister should die in London, a soldier in Broadway or a policeman in Dunmurry was not the fuel that fired her. Her conviction was of far too low a grade to sustain her in her present misery.
Her purse had been full from the social security last Thursday. Now most of it was spent, with only enough for the basics of bread and milk bolstered by sausages and baked beans and tins. At the shops as she queued many eyes were on her. Word had passed in the streets that the army had raided her house, that they were looking for her man, that he had been out all night. Over the years it had become a familiar enough situation in the little community, but that it was this family that was at the centre of the morning’s swoop caused the stares, the muttered comments and the pulling aside of the front window curtains.
She glared back at them, embarrassing the lookers enough to deflect their eyes. She paid for her food, pecking in her purse for the exact money, and swung out of the door and back to the street. She had forty yards to walk to the top of? Ypres Avenue.
When she turned into the narrow long street the observation post spotted her. The soldiers were concealed in the roof of the mill, disused and now converted into warehouse space. They came and went by the back stairs, and where the boards were too rotten hauled themselves up by rope ladder. Once in position they put a heavy padlock on the door behind them, locking themselves in the roughly-fashioned cubicle, constructed out of sandbags, blankets and sacking. They had some protection and some warmth: that was all. To see down the Avenue they lay on their stomachs with their heads forward into the angle of the roof with a missing tile providing the vantage point. The two men in the post did twelve hours there at a stretch, and with three other teams would rotate in the position, familiarizing themselves enough with the street so that eventually they would know each man and woman and child who lived there. The comings and goings were logged, laboriously, in a notebook in pencil, then sifted each evening by their battalion’s intelligence officer. A synopsis of life in the street was sent each week to headquarters for evaluation. It was a process repeated in scores of streets in the Catholic areas of Belfast, as the security forces built up their enormous and comprehensive dossiers on the minority community.
Lance-Corporal David Burns and Private George Smith had been in the mill since six that morning. They arrived in darkness and would leave long after the few street lights had come back on. They had been in Belfast eleven weeks on this tour, five more to go. Thirty-four days to be exact.
To the OP they’d brought sandwiches and a flask of sugared tea plus the powerful German binoculars they used, a folded card that expanded to show a montage of the faces of wanted men, the rifles with daytime telescopic sights and also the bulging image intensifier for night work. They carried everything they needed for the day up the rope ladder to the roof. Only the radio telephone and the bulk treacle tin for emergency nature calls were permanent fixtures.
Burns, face intent behind the glasses, called out the details on the slight woman walking towards him.
‘The bird from forty-one. Must have been shopping. Didn’t go for long. Can’t be ten minutes since she went. Looks a bit rough. Didn’t find her husband, did they?’
The soldier squirmed closer to the aperture, pressing the glasses against his eyebrows, face contorted with concentration.
‘Hey, Smithie, behind her. I think he’s coming. Right up the top there. Sort of running. That is her old man, isn’t it? Looks like him. Have a squint yourself.’
‘I’m not sure, not at this range. We’ll be definite when he gets down the road a bit.’ Smith had taken over the hole. ‘Is he a shoot-on-sight, or what?’
‘Don’t know. They didn’t say nothing about that. I’m sure enough now it’s him. Get HQ on the radio. Looks like he’s run a bloody marathon. Knackered, he is.’
It was the pounding of his feet that first broke through her preoccupations. The urgency of footsteps dragged the woman away from the images of her wounded husband and the breaking of her home. She turned towards the noise, and stopped still at the sight.
Downs was struggling to run now, head rolling from side to side and the rhythm of his arm movements lost. His legs flailed forward over the last few paces to her, unco-ordinated and wild. The stitch in his right side bit into the stomach wall. The pallor of his face was slug-like, excavated from under something of permanence. His face was hollow at the cheeks as he pulled the air inside his lungs, eyes fearful and vivid, and round them the skin glistened with a sheen of sweat. He was shapeless, the big sweater worn over the left shoulder and arm giving him a grotesque breadth. But as he came towards her it was the eyes that held her. Their desperation, loneliness and dependence.
She put down her shopping bag on the paving, careful that it should not topple over, and held out her arms for her man. He fell against her, stumbling, and she reeled with the sudden weight as she took the strain. Against her he convulsed as his lungs forced down the air they needed. There were words, but she could not understand them as they buried themselves in the shoulder of her coat. Far distant, on the top street corner a knot of women had gathered.
‘They came for you, you know, this morning.’
‘I know.’
‘They searched all over, and they said they’d come again. Again and again till they got you.’ He nodded, numbed and shocked by the pain of the running and the throbbing in his arm. ‘They know, don’t they? They know it all. They’re not so daft as you said.’
‘I was told.’ The voice, the speaking, was a little easier now. The air was there, coming more naturally, and the legs steadied.
As she twisted herself against him, working away from the sharpness of his collarbone against her cheek, she felt him wince and tear away his left arm.
‘Is that where they hit you? Last night it was you. At the policeman’s home. Did he hit you?’ The pain came and went, surging and then sagging. ‘Has it been looked at? Have you seen a doctor?’ Again he nodded.
‘Where are you going now? What are you going to do?’
‘I’m going home. It’s over, finished. I just want to go home.’
‘But they came this morning for you,’ she screamed, her voice high, hysterical that he could not understand something so simple. ‘They’ll be back as soon as you walk through the door. They’ll take you. They were crawling all through, under the floorboards and into the roof, looking for you. They took the place apart trying to find you.’
He wasn’t listening. ‘They put a man in, just to find me.’ He said it with wonder, as if surprised that the enemy would classify him of such importance that they would take a step so great. ‘We found him first. We went to get him this morning, and it just ballsed-up. There’s two boys shot by him, the Englishman. And last night that was another cock-up. That bloody copper, he—’
‘I heard it on the radio.’
‘Well, there’s no point in running now. I’m finished with it. There’d be a reason to run if I was going on, but I’m not.’
‘You mean all this? It’s not just because you’re hurt? We can get you away from here, the boys will shift you.’
‘It’s definite,’ he said. He was very tired now, deeply tired and needing to sit down, to take the great weight from his legs. He picked up her shopping bag with his right hand, and draped the injured left arm over the small woman’s shoulder. They began to walk by the terraced doors and the chipped and daubed red brick of the street. It was a grey Belfast morning, rain threatening, wind cold and from the east, coming in over the Lough. The two threaded a path over the fractured paving stones, past the endless heaps of dogs’ mess towards the house that had become Downs’s goal.
The moment the two had created for each other was broken by the footsteps behind. Instinctively both knew the noise of pursuit. In the Ardoyne the knack of recognizing it was inbred.
The women on the corner were silent as Harry ran by them down the gentle incline towards where the man and his wife were walking away from him. He held the revolver close to him, reassured by the hardness of the wooden handle, roughened with age and usage. He pulled up twenty feet short of them. The pair swung round to face him.
‘Don’t move. Don’t try to run or get your firearm. If you do I’ll shoot.’
Harry barked the instructions. The harshness of his tone and its assurance surprised him. He felt almost detached from the orders he was shouting.
‘Put the bag down and begin to walk towards me, and slowly. Your hands on your head. The woman — she stays where she is.’
Be strong. Don’t mess about with him. You’ll be a long time before you shift the bastard. Don’t let him dominate you. Keep the gun on him, look at his hands the whole time. Watch the hands, and keep the gun in line. Keep it so it’s only got to come straight up to fire, and the catch off. Check with the thumb that the catch is off. It is, certain. Now separate them, don’t let them be together so she can shield him. She’ll do that, they all will, throw themselves at you to give him a yard. And shoot. If he moves shoot him. Don’t hesitate. Stay still yourself. Don’t march about. That disorganizes the shot you may make. Two bullets only. One up the spout, and the other in the next chamber, that’s all.
Harry studied him hard. The other man, the opposition. Dirty, cowed and frightened — is that the terrorist? Is that all he is? Is that the killer in all his glory? Not much to look at, not much without his Kalashnikov.
‘Start walking now, and remember: keep it very cool, or I shoot. What’s your name?’
‘Billy Downs. You’re the Englishman they sent for me? The one that had the girl killed?’?They’d told him the Britisher hadn’t come to take him, not to put him in the Kesh, but to kill him. The fight of survival was returning, steadily and surely. ‘You won’t get out of here, you know. Not with me on the end of your pistol, you won’t.’
He looked past Harry and seemed to nod his head into the middle distance. It was cleverly done. Good try, Billy boy. But you’re with the professionals now, lad. A squaddie might have turned and given you the third of a second you needed to jump him. Not Harry. Pivot round. Get your back to the wall. Keep going till you feel the brickwork. But watch the bastard. All the time keep your eyes on his hands.
Faced with troops in uniform, Downs would probably have submitted without a struggle and climbed into the armoured car to start whatever segment of his lifetime in captivity they intended for him. But not this way. No surrender to a single hack sent from London to kill him watched by his wife and in his own road. For a year it would be talked about — the day when a lone Englishman came into the Ardoyne and shot down meek little Billy Downs. The day the boy’s nerve went.
He was formidable, this Englishman, in his old jeans and dark anorak, with the clear-cut face, softer than those fashioned in the bitterness of Belfast. He had not been reared through the anguish of the troubles, and it showed in the freshness of his features. But he was hard, Downs had no doubt on that. They’d trained him and sent him from London for this moment, and Downs knew his life rested on his capacity to read the expressionless mouth of his enemy. When he made his break all would depend on how well the Englishman could shoot, and, when he fired, how straight. Downs made his assessment… he’ll fire, but fire late, and he’ll miss. He turned himself now from the waist only, and very slowly, towards his wife. He was close to her, much closer than Harry, and with his face in profile he mouthed from the far side of his lips, the one word:
‘Scream.’
She read it in the shape of his mouth, the way the lips and gums twisted out the message. Harry didn’t see the instruction, and was still concentrating on the man’s hands when she yelled. It came from deep down, a fierce noise from so small a woman. Harry jerked from his preoccupation with Downs as he searched for the source of the noise, his eyes shifting direction.
Downs had made his decision. Now or not at all, either now or the bastard has you in his own time, to shoot like a rat in a cage. He pushed his wife violently towards Harry and started for the freedom of the open street down the hill. His first two strides took him to the edge of the pavement. A flood of adrenalin… anticipating the shot, head down, shoulders crouched. This was the moment. Either he fires now or I make it, three, four more paces then the range and accuracy of the revolver is stretched. His eyes half closed, he saw nothing in front of him as his left foot hit hard on the steep edge of the pavement. For his heel there was support, for his sole there was nothing, only the gap between the flagstones and the gutter eight inches below. His weight was all there, all concentrated on that foot, as he catapulted himself forward, the momentum taking over.
He realized the way he was falling, and tried to twist round onto his back, but there was no time, no room. He hit the rough gravel of the road on his left arm, right on the spot where the flesh had been twice torn open by Rennie’s bullet. The frail lint bandage gave no protection. With his right arm he clawed at the road surface trying to push himself up and away from Harry, who was coming to him, revolver outstretched…
Harry saw the pain reach over and cover the man’s face. He saw the hand scruffing under the body. If the man had a gun that was where it would be, down by the waist, where the hand was fumbling now. It wasn’t a difficult decision any more. He raised the revolver so that the line went down from his right eye, down his right arm to the ‘V’ of the back sight and along the black barrel to the sharp foresight, and then on to the man’s upper chest. He held the aim just long enough for his hand to steady, then squeezed the trigger gently into the cup of his forefinger. The noise was not great. The revolver gave only a slight kick, jolting down the rigid arm to Harry’s shoulder. Below him Downs’s body began to twitch, giving way to spasmodic convulsions. The blood found its own pathway from the side of his mouth out onto the greyness of the road. Like water tracking across dry earth it kept its course, faster, thicker, wider as the road discoloured with its brightness.
There was no need for the second bullet, Harry could see that.
‘Why did you shoot him? He had no gun. Why did you kill him?’ She was moving towards Downs, looking at Harry as she spoke. ‘You didn’t have to shoot. You could have run after him, and caught him. You know he was shot last night, and hit. He wasn’t much opposition to you, you Britisher sod.’
She knelt down beside her husband, her stocking dragging on the harsh surface of the road. He lay on his side, and she could not cradle him as she would have wanted. Both her hands touched the face of her man, unmarked in his death, fingering his nose and ears and eyes.
Harry felt no part of the scene; but something was demanded of him, and painstakingly he began to explain.
‘He knew the rules. He knew the game he was playing. He came to London and murdered the Cabinet Minister. In cold blood. Shot him down in front of his house. Then he went to ground. It was a challenge to us. He must have known we had to get him — you must have known that. It was a test of will. There was no way we could lose — we couldn’t afford to.’
Harry had wondered how this moment would be. How he would feel if the man were dead, destroyed. There was no hatred, no loathing for the slight body that lay on the grit of the tarmac. There was no elation, either, that his world and his system had beaten that of the young man who they had told him was the enemy, evil, vermin. Harry felt only emptiness. All the training, all the fear, all the agony, directed to killing this awkward, shapeless nonentity. And now nothingness. He looked again at the wife as she stayed bent over her lifeless man, and began to walk up the hill out of the Ardoyne.
She was watching him, hands still on the man’s body, when the shot came. Simultaneously with the crack she saw Harry stagger, appear to regain his balance, and then career backwards, before thudding against the front wall of a house. His arms were pressed against the middle of his chest. Then he toppled in slow motion over onto the pavement.
In the OP it was Smith who was at the aperture, giving a continuous description to the lance-corporal who relayed the message back to headquarters over the radio telephone.
‘There’s a man running up behind Downs. With a shooter. A revolver, looks like, a little one. Tell ’em to shift ’emselves back at HQ. Downs has his hands up, and they’re talking. Not much, but saying something.’
From the telephone set Burns called, ‘What about the other bloke, they want to know, what’s he look like?’
‘Civvies, anorak and jeans. It’s a short-barrel revolver he’s got, not Downs… the other man. Scruffy-looking. He’s making a run for it, Downs is. Bloody hell, he’s down, tripped himself. Fuck me, he’s going to shoot him, he’s going to shoot him!’
High in the hidden observation post Burns heard the single shot.
‘I can get the bugger, can’t I, Dave? He just shot the other bastard. Waving a gun about and all that, it’s enough.’
Smith was manœuvring his rifle into position. The old Lee Enfield with the big telescopic sight, the sniper’s weapon, the marksman’s choice.
‘I’ve a good line on him from here. No problem.’ Smith was talking to himself, whispering into the butt of the rifle. Burns was motionless and watched from the back of the OP, nestled among the blankets and sacking as Smith drew back the bolt action, and settled himself, shifting his hips from side to side to get comfortable for the shot. He was a long time aiming, wanting to be certain the first time. The firing echoed round under the roof of the mill.
‘Did you get him?’ urged Burns.
‘A real bloody peach.’
The sharpness of the pain numbed Harry. As he lay, stomach down on the pavement, he could feel nothing, his head was facing the walls of the houses away from the street. Green moss rubbed close to his nose, and beyond that lay the jagged edge of a milk bottle, and, huge and high, a front doorstep. There was no understanding of what had happened. Just the noise, and the helpless collapse, the blow that had carried him from his feet.
He worked his right hand slowly from under him where it had gripped his chest. The fingers were scarlet and shiny. The effort was so great. No strength left, no power, and endless labour just to move an arm. The action of all the muscles, all working in his biceps, his heavy shoulders, and deep behind the ravaged rib cage, combined to bring on the first stabs of agony. Bruised from his fall, his face contorted with pain, the upper teeth clamping on the softness of his lip, he struggled to control the spasms.
And with the pain came the realization of what had happened. They’ve had you, Harry. As you stood there like a big idiot, consumed in your inviolability, they took you. So silly. Just standing there, in the heart of the Ardoyne, standing and waiting, and they obliged. His mind was clearing as the flesh and tissue round the great wound torn by the bullet throbbed out its protest. This is the way it ends, he knew that. Here against the dampened pavings, by the weeds and the fractured glass, among hatred and loathing. Some little swine out there with a rifle, taking a long time, waiting for the moment, not hurrying. That was the way death comes, Harry. Billy Downs already dead, the woman beside him; that was somewhere in the greater distance, away beyond.
Other faces were closer, sharp-etched now… Davidson, in the garden near Dorking — it’ll be dangerous, he had said. Hadn’t wanted to say it, thought it might frighten… Mary came closer to him, and the boys, big faces happy with laughter, all noise and running to him. Take hold, Harry, fight it.
The impact of the shot had flung Harry several feet back before it felled him. His hands with animal instinct had closed on his stricken body, the revolver careering from his fist and bouncing into the roadway where it rested.
Harry forced himself upwards, using his right hand to provide the lever till he could jackknife his lower body under him and spread the great weight from the arm onto his knees. The first time he failed, collapsing back into the pool of blood. Again he attempted it, this time with greater success, till, like a pantomime dog, he began to work his way up the hill. There were people at the doorways now, but none moved or spoke as the Englishman dragged his way past. A single child screamed as his opened coat slipped from his left hand fingers, and permitted a flow of blood down onto the ground and over the hardness of the pavement before his knees smeared its ordered passage.
A hundred pairs of eyes watched Harry move away, aware that this was the effort of a man already doomed but unable to accept it. These people knew the inevitability of death, knew how a man fought to stave off its coming, and knew from the signs when he would win, and when lose. The Englishman they knew would lose, the blood told them that, the whiteness of his face, the breathing, irregular and bubbling. And then they saw Billy Downs’s wife rise up from the road where her man lay and walk with quick, neat steps towards Harry. They saw that in her path was the revolver.
She bent down and picked it up. It was heavy, cumbersome in her small hand. Her index finger had to strain forward to find by feel the metal coldness of the trigger arm. She didn’t look at the gun, or check it as a man used to handling firearms would have done. Those people at their doors who saw themselves in line with her and Harry backed away, seeking the safety of their front doors, but the uninvolved stayed to see what would happen.
Eighteen inches from his head a door slammed, its noise breaking Harry’s thought, diverting his attention from his sole preoccupation of taking himself beyond the pain of Ypres Avenue, and then he heard the brush of her feet, scurrying closer to him. She walked on past him and then spun round, blocking his way till his face was close to her legs. Harry subsided backwards, his hand still holding his body up, but his weight down on his hips. He could see all of her from there, not just the legs and the feet, but her coat that was old and tired, her face once pretty and now hideous from the grief and shock of the last few minutes, and her short narrow arm, and the tight, pale-skinned clenched fist. And the revolver, too big for her, grotesque.
The barrel of the gun was steady, so were her eyes, nothing distracting her from the man near-prone in front of her.
She said, ‘You didn’t have to shoot my man. What was Billy to you? What did it matter to you, what happened to him? He was finished, broken, and you cut him down like a rat in the gutter. And you talk about rules and challenges. What rule was that, to kill Billy, hurt and unarmed?’
There was no fear in Harry now. It had all evaporated a long time back. The words came hard to him. ‘You know why he died, what he did. He was against us. Each was determined to destroy the other. He understood that.’
‘You never knew anything of him — what sort of man he was, how good he was to us. And yet you come to our street, and shoot him down, defenceless.’
Harry struggled to speak again to her. So difficult, so exhausting, this twisted, shattered face above him, not understanding the world of her man, not understanding the war that was being fought out on her own streets. It was all so simple, so easy, but Harry felt the waves of tiredness pouring over him, and no longer had the strength to reason with the woman.
She went on: ‘You think we’re all animals over here. But what’s it to you if Danby gets killed, or a soldier, or a policeman, what’s it to you, over from England? Do you think you’re any better than our people?’
Harry stayed silent a long time as he struggled to concentrate his thoughts.
‘He deserved to die. He was an evil little bastard. He’s better off—’
The fingers wrenched at the trigger. The noise mingled with her sobs as Harry rolled slowly and with precision over onto his back. At the top of Ypres Avenue the first two Saracens were arriving.
The soldiers looked over the two bodies, made the decision that both were beyond medical help, and left them where they had fallen. Both Harry Brown and Billy Downs were in the awkward, sack-like form that the troops could recognize as death. Downs lay a few feet from the kerb, out in the road. The blood had run from him to create a lake, dammed from escaping farther by the debris of the gutter. His wife was beside him again, and still holding the revolver loosely and without interest. The sergeant of the platoon walked towards her and, with nervousness showing in his voice, asked her to hand over the gun. She opened her fingers and it clattered noisily on the road. When the soldier spoke again to her there was no reply. She stood, quite still, swamped by her emotions.
Harry was sprawled face up close to the wall of a house, his head beneath the front room window from which a face, old but without the softness of compassion, looked down on him. The women of the street edged their way closer to Billy Downs’s wife, the men gathered in clumps, leaving the business of comforting and abusing to their women.
In their shawls and head scarves and short skirts they shouted at the officer who came with the platoon. ‘He’s one of yours. That bastard dead over there.’
‘He’s a fucking Englishman.’
‘Shot a man without a gun.’
‘SAS killer squads.’
‘Killed an unarmed man. In front of his wife, and he never in trouble before.’
The crescendo gathered round the young man. In a few moments his Company commander and Battalion commander would be there, and he would be spared, but till then he would take the brunt of their fury. Faced with the accusation that Harry was one of theirs the soldiers looked curiously at the body of the big man. They knew a certain amount about the undercover operations of the army, particularly the Mobile Reconnaissance Force (MRF), but to the men in uniform it was a different and basically distasteful world. The soldiers had their rules and regulations to abide by. The book was near to God.
In exasperation the lieutenant shouted above the babble:
‘Well, if you say the chap who shot Downs is one of ours, who shot him then?’ He’d phrased it clumsily, said it in anger and expected no answer.
The chorus came back, gloating, satisfied. ‘The Provies got him. A Provie gunman. One shot. From the bottom of the street.’
The far end of the street down the hill was deserted, dominated only by the massive red-brick wall and grey-slate roof of the old mill. The lieutenant looked up at it, and winced.
‘Bloody hell,’ he said.
His sergeant, who had been examining Harry, came over to him. ‘The chap on the pavement, sir. He’s been hit twice. First I would say was high velocity, there is an entry and exit wound and a big blood marker, looks as if he tried to get away, you can follow the trail, about fifteen yards to where he is now. He was shot again then, right in the head, no exit, and it must have been a hand gun or something, that killed him.’
‘Thank you, sergeant. The woman who was holding the pistol, you’d better put her in the Saracen. Go easy with her, she’s in shock, and I don’t want a riot here.’
‘It’s just as we found it, as you requested,’ they told Frost when he arrived.
The Battalion commander briefed him. ‘The chap by the wall shoots Downs and then is shot himself. I’m not a hundred per cent sure where the second shot comes from. Still waiting for all the reports. Indications are that it’s my OP in the mill roof. We’re rather quiet about that position, but I haven’t spoken to the men up there yet. Seems they wounded the fellow, then Downs’s wife, she’s in the Saracen now, came in and finished him off.’
There was no reaction on Frost’s face. His eyes travelled round the street taking in the faces and the scene. He walked over from one body to the other, his bodyguards hovering at each shoulder. He recognized Harry from the photograph that had been sent the previous evening from England. It should never have worked, but it had. And now right at the end was all loused up. Poor devil.
He paused where Downs lay, looking into the profile of the face and running a check against the picture they’d issued. We’d have been lucky to spot him from that, the colonel thought, not really good enough, something to be learned from that. He went past the open door of the Saracen. Mrs Downs sat huddled deep in the shadow of the interior. She sat totally still, staring at the armour-plated sides, festooned with pick-axes, CS gas-grenade canisters, ammunition boxes. Two soldiers guarded her.
‘It’s not for general release,’ he said to the Battalion commander, ‘but you’ll hear about it soon enough anyway. The Prime Minister ordered a special man put in, with the sole job of finding Danby’s killer, right? The Cabinet Minister shot in London, what is it? six or so weeks ago. Downs was the assassin. By something of a miracle, and a quite unaccountable amount of good luck, the agent tracked him down. That’s not a generous assessment, but that’s how I evaluate it. He tracked him and shot him dead about fifteen minutes ago. I think your OP has just shot the Prime Minister’s man.’
Frost knew how to play his moment. He stopped there, let it sink, then went on.
‘We’ll deflect it as much as we can, but I suggest you leave it to Lisburn to make the statements. It may be some consolation to you, but I didn’t know much about the agent either. He wasn’t working to me. I wouldn’t worry about the role of the OP in all this.’
‘I wasn’t worrying—’
Frost cut across him.
‘It’s happened before, it’ll happen again. Marines shot their own crowd in the New Lodge. RUC have shot our people, we’ve killed theirs. Bound to happen.’
The other man considered. They stood alone in the street away from the people of Ypres Avenue, with the bodyguards and troops giving them room to talk. He remembered now the soldier they had sent to Berlin; what he had seen in the green-topped social club less than three hundred yards from where they stood. There was nothing to say, nothing that would help the prone figure by the wall, nothing that would achieve anything beyond unnecessary involvement. Business-like, brisk as always, he said to Frost:
‘Is there any reason for us not to clean this lot up now? Our photographer has done his stuff, and the RUC people won’t want to come in here.’
‘No reason at all. Get it out of the way before the press and cameras start showing up.’
‘Will there be much aggro, the fact that this fellow Downs wasn’t armed when he was killed?’
‘I wouldn’t have thought so,’ said Frost, ‘there isn’t usually when we get one of the real ones. They seem to accept that, part of the game. Right at the beginning there used to be mayhem. But they’ve become tired of saying it. They’re all unarmed men — that’s the charm. Doesn’t work them up any more. Be interesting to see what sort of show he gets in the death notices in the press tomorrow morning. We’ll see how highly they regarded him then. A big man can get three or four columns. Be interesting. Come from the Brigade command, their Battalions, Companies and a good number from the Kesh. Costs them a fortune — and keeps the papers going.’
They walked together back towards Frost’s Land-Rover.
Frost was gone by the time Rennie was brought to Ypres Avenue in a Saracen from Battalion headquarters. He climbed gingerly out of the protection of the personnel carrier and jumped down onto the road. First time in the Ardoyne for sixteen months. The Special Branch had no love for parading their faces on the streets of the Provisional heartland. He was conspicuous, he knew that. Anyone in civilian clothes who needed five soldiers and a three-ton armoured car to take him in and out would attract attention. He was conscious of the eyes at the doors, blank and subdued but watching him.
‘Are the bodies still here?’ he asked the Battalion commander.
‘We’ve shifted them, I’m afraid. My people have taken the necessary pictures. There’s not much to see now. That’s where Downs died, the blood on the road. The other fellow, McEvoy, he was shot on the pavement by number twenty-nine. There’s a small blood pool there.’
‘Who’s McEvoy?’ said the detective.
‘I fancy you’ll hear more of him from your own office. But he’s a rather sensitive creature right now. One of ours, they tell me. Trailed Downs back here and shot him. I’m still waiting for the details on the rest. Looks a bit black, though. I think one of my OPs shot him. McEvoy was waving a gun round, in civilian clothes. It’s pretty definite.’
He had no need to ask about Downs. The wild, staring face that had confronted him fourteen hours earlier across the width of his bright living room remained vivid in his mind.
But Downs was dead now. Rennie thanked the officer and hurried back to the Saracen.
The press statement from Lisburn was short and took something more than two hours to prepare. It was the result of a series of compromises but owed most of its drafting to the civilian deputy head of the army public relations department who had recently transferred from the Treasury, and had experience of the art of communiqué writing.
Billy Downs, a known IRA gunman, was shot dead at 09.10 hours in Ypres Avenue where he lived. He was involved in an exchange of shots with a member of the security forces, an officer engaged in plain-clothes surveillance duties. The officer, who will not be named till his next of kin have been informed, was hit by a single shot in the chest and died before medical treatment reached him. Downs was high on the army’s wanted list in Northern Ireland, and was also wanted in London for questioning by detectives investigating the murder of Mr Henry Danby.
The main object was to keep it short, pack it with information and deflect the press away from the sensitive bit. There was, he said when he had finished typing it, more than enough for the scribes to bite on without them needing to go digging round any more.
A solitary journalist moved towards the delicate area that first day, but without knowing it, and was easily put off.
‘Then this man Downs was carrying a gun?’ he asked the duty press officer.
‘Obviously, old man, it says in our statement that there was an exchange of shots. Have to be armed, wouldn’t he?’
There were no other questions to be asked. Amongst the resident reporters in McGlade’s pub that night interest was warm but not exceptional, and the treatment of the story was straight and factual.
Locally it was denied that Downs had been armed, and three hours of rock-throwing followed the news bulletin that contained the army statement. By then it had started to rain.