And two months later in another hospital, Our Lady of Mercy in New York on the other side of the Atlantic, young Tony Jackson clocked in for night duty as darkness fell. He was a tall, handsome man of twenty-three who had qualified as a doctor at Harvard Medical School the year before. Our Lady of Mercy, a charity hospital mainly staffed by nuns, was not many young doctors' idea of the ideal place to be an intern.
But Tony Jackson was an idealist. He wanted to practice real medicine and he could certainly do that at Our Lady of Mercy, which could not believe their luck at getting their hands on such a brilliant young man. He loved the nuns, found the vast range of patients fascinating. The money was poor, but in his case money was no object. His father, a successful Manhattan attorney, had died far too early from cancer, but he had left the family well provided for. In any case, his mother, Rosa, was from the Little Italy district of New York with a doting father big in the construction business.
Tony liked the night shift, that atmosphere peculiar to hospitals all over the world, and it gave him the opportunity to be in charge. For the first part of the evening he worked on the casualty shift, dealing with a variety of patients, stitching slashed faces, handling as best he could junkies who were coming apart because they couldn't afford a fix. It was all pretty demanding, but slackened off after midnight.
He was alone in the small canteen having coffee and a sandwich when the door opened and a young priest looked in. "I'm Father O'Brien from St. Marks. I had a call to come and see a Mr. Tanner, a Scottish gentleman. I understand he needs the last rites."
"Sorry, Father, I only came on tonight, I wouldn't know. Let me look at the schedule." He checked it briefly, then nodded. "Jack Tanner, that must be him. Admitted this afternoon. Age seventy-five, British citizen. Collapsed at his daughter's house in Queens. He's in a private room on level three, number eight."
"Thank you," the priest said and disappeared.
Jackson finished his coffee and idly glanced through the New York Times. There wasn't much news: an IRA bomb in London in the city's financial center, an item about Hong Kong, the British Colony in China which was to revert to Chinese control on the first of July, nineteen ninety-seven. It seemed that the British governor of the colony was introducing a thoroughly democratic voting system while he had the chance and the Chinese government in Peking was annoyed, which didn't look good for Hong Kong when the change took place.
He threw the paper down, bored and restless, got up and went outside. The elevator doors opened and Father O'Brien emerged. "Ah, there you are, Doctor. I've done what I could for the poor man, but he's not long for this world. He's from the Highlands of Scotland, would you believe? His daughter is married to an American."
"That's interesting," said Jackson. "I always imagined the Scots as Protestant."
"My dear lad, not in the Highlands," Father O'Brien told him. "The Catholic tradition is very strong." He smiled. "Well, I'll be on my way. Good night to you."
Jackson watched him go, then got in the elevator and rose to the third level. As he emerged, he saw Sister Agnes, the night duty nurse, come out of room eight and go to her desk.
Jackson said, "I've just seen Father O'Brien. He tells me this Mr. Tanner doesn't look good."
"There's his chart, Doctor. Chronic bronchitis and severe emphysema."
Jackson examined the notes. "Lung capacity only twelve percent and the blood pressure is unbelievable."
"I just checked his heart, Doctor. Very irregular."
"Let's take a look at him."
Jack Tanner's face was drawn and wasted, the sparse hair snow-white. His eyes were closed as he breathed in short gasps, a rattling sound in his throat at intervals.
"Oxygen?" Jackson asked.
"Administered an hour ago. I gave it to him myself."
"Aye, but she wouldn't give me a cigarette." Jack Tanner opened his eyes. "Is that no the terrible thing, Doctor?"
"Now, Mr. Tanner," Sister Agnes reproved him gently. "You know that's not allowed."
Jackson leaned over to check the tube connections and noticed the scar on the right side of the chest. "Would that have been a bullet wound?" he asked.
"Aye, it was so. Shot in the lung while I was serving in the Highland Light Infantry. That was before Dunkirk in nineteen-forty. I'd have died if the Laird hadn't got me out, and him wounded so bad he lost an eye."
"The Laird, you say?" Jackson was suddenly interested, but Tanner started to cough so harshly that he almost had a convulsion. Jackson grabbed for the oxygen mask. "Breathe nice and slowly. That's it." He removed it after a while and Tanner smiled weakly. "I'll be back," Jackson told him and went out.
"You said the daughter lives in Queens?"
"That's right, Doctor."
"Don't let's waste time. Send a cab for her now and put it on my account. I don't think he's got long. I'll go back and sit with him."
Jackson pulled a chair forward. "Now, what were you saying about the Laird?"
"That was Major Ian Campbell, Military Cross and Bar, the bravest man I ever knew. Laird of Loch Dhu Castle in the Western Highlands of Scotland as his ancestors had been for centuries before him."
"Loch Dhu?"
"That's Gaelic. The black loch. To us who grew up there it was always the Place of Dark Waters."
"So you knew the Laird as a boy?"
"We were boys together. Learned to shoot grouse, deer, and the fishing was the best in the world, and then the war came. We'd both served in the reserve before it all started, so we went out to France straight away."
"That must have been exciting stuff?"
"Nearly the end of us, but afterwards they gave the Laird the staff job working for Mountbatten. You've heard of him?"
"Earl Mountbatten, the one the IRA blew up?"
"The bastards, and after all he did in the war. He was Supreme Commander in South East Asia with the Laird as one of his aides and he took me with him."
"That must have been interesting."
Tanner managed a smile. "Isn't it customary to offer a condemned man a cigarette?"
"That's true."
"And I am condemned, aren't I?"
Jackson hesitated, then took out a pack of cigarettes. "Just as we all are, Mr. Tanner."
"I'll tell you what," Tanner said. "Give me one of those and I'll tell you about the Chungking Covenant. All those years ago I gave the Laird my oath, but it doesn't seem to matter now."
"The what?" Jackson asked.
"Just one, Doc, it's a good story."
Jackson turned off the oxygen, lit a cigarette, and held it to his lips. The old man inhaled, coughed, then inhaled again. "Christ, that's wonderful." He lay back. "Now let's see, when did it all start?"
Tanner lay with his eyes closed, very weak now. "What happened after the crash?" Jackson asked.
The old man opened his eyes. "The Laird was hurt bad. The brain, you see. He was in a coma in a Delhi hospital for three months, and I stayed with him as his batman. They sent us back to London by sea, and by then the end of the war was in sight. He spent months in the brain-damage unit for servicemen at Guy's Hospital, but he never really recovered, and he had burns from the crash as well and almost total loss of memory. He came so close to death early in forty-six that I packed his things and sent them home to Castle Dhu."
"And did he die?"
"Not for another twenty years. Back home we went to the estate. He wandered the place like a child. I tended his every want."
"What about family?"
"Oh, he never married. He was engaged to a lassie who was killed in the London blitz in forty. There was his sister, Lady Rose. Although everybody calls her Lady Katherine. Her husband was a baronet killed in the desert campaign. She ran the estate then and still does though she's eighty now. She lives in the gate lodge. Sometimes rents the big house for the shooting season to rich Yanks or Arabs."
"And the Chungking Covenant?' "Nothing came of that. Lord Louis and Mao never managed to get together again."
"But the fourth copy in the Laird's Bible, you saved that. Wasn't it handed over to the authorities?"
"It stayed where it was in his Bible. The Laird's affair, after all, and he not up to telling anyone much of anything." He shrugged. "And then the years had rolled by and it didn't seem to matter."
"Did Lady Katherine ever come to know of it?"
"I never told her. I never spoke of it to anyone and he was not capable and, as I said, it didn't seem to matter any longer."
"But you've told me?"
Tanner smiled weakly. "That's because you're a nice boy who talked to me and gave me a cigarette. A long time ago, Chungking in the rain and Mountbatten and your General Stillwell."
"And the Bible?" Jackson asked.
"Like I told you, I sent all his belongings home when I thought he was going to die."
"So the Bible went back to Loch Dhu?"
"You could say that." For some reason Tanner started to laugh and that led to him choking again.
Jackson got the oxygen mask and the door opened and Sister Agnes ushered in a middle-aged couple. "Mr. and Mrs. Grant."
The woman hurried forward to take Tanner's hand. He managed a smile, breathing deeply, and she started to talk to him in a low voice and in a language totally unfamiliar to Jackson.
He turned to her husband, a large, amiable-looking man. "It's Gaelic, Doctor, they always spoke Gaelic together. He was on a visit. His wife died of cancer last year back in Scotland."
At that moment Tanner stopped breathing. His daughter cried out and Jackson passed her gently to her husband and bent over the patient. After a while he turned to face them. "I'm sorry, but he's gone," he said simply. • • • There it might have ended except for the fact that having read the article in the New York Times on Hong Kong and its relations with China, Tony Jackson was struck by the coincidence of Tanner's story. This became doubly important because Tanner had died in the early hours of Sunday morning and Jackson always had Sunday lunch, his hospital shifts permitting, at his grandfather's home in Little Italy where his mother, since the death of his grandmother, kept house for her father in some style.
Jackson's grandfather, after whom he had been named, was called Antonio Mori and he had been born by only a whisker in America because his pregnant mother had arrived from Palermo in Sicily just in time to produce her baby at Ellis Island. Twenty-four hours only, but good enough and little Antonio was American born.
His father had friends of the right sort, friends in the Mafia. Antonio had worked briefly as a laborer until these friends had put him into first the olive oil and then the restaurant business. He had kept his mouth shut and always done as he was told, finally achieving wealth and prominence in the construction industry.
His daughter hadn't married a Sicilian. He accepted that, just as he accepted the death of his wife from leukemia. His son-in-law, a rich Anglo-Saxon attorney, gave the family respectability. His death was a convenience. It brought Mori and his beloved daughter together again plus his fine grandson, so brilliant that he had gone to Harvard. No matter that he was a saint and chose medicine. Mori could make enough money for all of them because he was Mafia, an important member of the Luca family whose leader, Don Giovanni Luca, in spite of having returned to Sicily, was Capo di tutti Capi. Boss of all the Bosses in the whole of the Mafia. The respect that earned for Mori couldn't be paid for.
When Jackson arrived at his grandfather's house, his mother Rosa was in the kitchen supervising the meal with the maid, Maria. She turned, still handsome in spite of gray in her dark hair, kissed him on both cheeks, then held him off.
"You look terrible. Shadows under the eyes."
"Mamma, I did the night shift. I lay on my bed three hours, then I showered and came here because I didn't want to disappoint you."
"You're a good boy. Go and see your grandfather."
Jackson went into the sitting room where he found Mori reading the Sunday paper. He leaned down to kiss his grandfather on the cheek and Mori said, "I heard your mother and she's right. You do good and kill yourself at the same time. Here, have a glass of red wine."
Jackson accepted it and drank some with pleasure. "That's good."
"You had an interesting night?" Mori was genuinely interested in his grandson's doings. In fact, he bored his friends with his praises of the young man.
Jackson, aware that his grandfather indulged him, went to the French window, opened it, and lit a cigarette. He turned. "Remember the Solazzo wedding last month?"
"Yes."
"You were talking with Carl Morgan, you'd just introduced me."
"Mr. Morgan was impressed by you, he said so." There was pride in Mori's voice.
"Yes, well, you and he were talking business."
"Nonsense, what business could we have in common?"
"For God's sake, grandfather, I'm not a fool and I love you, but do you think I could have reached this stage in my life and not realized the business you were in?"
Mori nodded slowly and picked up the bottle. "More wine? Now tell me where this is leading."
"You and Mr. Morgan were talking about Hong Kong. He mentioned huge investments in skyscrapers, hotels, and so on and the worry about what would happen when the Chinese Communists take over."
"That's simple. Billions of dollars down the toilet," Mori said.
"There was an article in The Times yesterday about Peking being angry because the British are introducing a democratic political system before they go in ninety-seven."
"So where is this leading?" Mori asked.
"So I am right in assuming that you and your associates have business interests in Hong Kong?"
His grandfather stared at him thoughtfully. "You could say that, but where is this leading?"
Jackson said, "What if I told you that in nineteen forty-four Mao Tse-tung signed a thing called the Chungking Covenant with Lord Louis Mountbatten under the terms of which he agreed that if he ever came to power in China he would extend the Hong Kong Treaty by one hundred years in return for aid from the British to fight the Japanese?"
His grandfather sat there staring at him, then got up, closed the door, and returned to his seat.
"Explain," he said.
Jackson did, and when he was finished his grandfather sat thinking about it. He got up and went to his desk and came back with a small tape recorder. "Go through it again," he said. "Everything he told you. Omit nothing."
At that moment, Rosa opened the door. "Lunch is almost ready."
"Fifteen minutes, cara," her father said. "This is important, believe me."
She frowned but went out, closing the door. He turned to his grandson. "As I said, everything," and he switched on the recorder.
When Mori reached the Glendale Polo ground later that afternoon it was raining. There was still a reasonable crowd huddled beneath umbrellas or the trees because Carl Morgan was playing and Morgan was good, a handicap of ten goals indicating that he was a player of the first rank. He was fifty years of age, a magnificent-looking man, six feet in height with broad shoulders and hair swept back over his ears.
His hair was jet black, a legacy of his mother, niece of Don Giovanni, who had married his father, a young army officer, during the Second World War. His father had served gallantly and well in both the Korean and Vietnam wars, retiring as a Brigadier General to Florida, where they enjoyed a comfortable retirement thanks to their son.
All very respectable, all a very proper front for the son who had walked out of Yale in nineteen sixty-five and volunteered as a paratrooper during the Vietnam War, emerging with two Purple Hearts, a Silver Star, and a Vietnamese Cross of Valour. A war hero whose credentials had taken him to Wall Street and then the hotel industry and the construction business, a billionaire at the end of things, accepted at every social level from London to New York.
There are six chukkas in a polo game lasting seven minutes each, four players on each side. Morgan played forward because it gave the most opportunity for total aggression and that was what he liked.
The game was into the final chukka as Mori got out of the car and his chauffeur came round to hold an umbrella over him. Some yards away, a vividly pretty young woman stood beside an estate car, a Burberry trenchcoat hanging from her shoulders. She was about five-foot-seven with long blond hair to her shoulders, high cheekbones, green eyes.
"She sure is a beautiful young lady, Mr. Morgan's daughter," the chauffeur said.
"Stepdaughter, Johnny," Mori reminded him.
"Sure, I was forgetting, but with her taking his name and all. That was a real bad thing, her mother dying like that. Asta, that's kind of a funny name."
"It's Swedish," Mori told him.
Asta Morgan jumped up and down excitedly. "Come on, Carl, murder them."
Carl Morgan glanced sideways as he went by, his teeth flashed, and he went barreling into the young forward for the opposing team, slamming his left foot under the boy's stirrup and lifting him, quite illegally, out of the saddle. A second later, he had thundered through and scored.
The game was won, he cantered across to Asta through the rain, and stepped out of the saddle. A groom took his pony, Asta handed him a towel, then lit a cigarette and passed it to him. She looked up, smiling, an intimacy between them that excluded everyone around.
"He sure likes that girl," Johnny said.
Mori nodded. "So it would appear."
Morgan turned and saw him and waved, and Mori went forward. "Carl, nice to see you. And you, Asta." He touched his hat.
"What can I do for you?" Morgan asked.
"Business, Carl, something came up last night that might interest you."
Morgan said, "Nothing you can't talk about in front of Asta, surely?"
Mori hesitated. "No, of course not." He took the small tape recorder from his pocket. "My grandson, Tony, had a man die on him at Our Lady of Mercy Hospital last night. He told Tony a hell of a story, Carl. I think you could be interested."
"Okay, let's get in out of the rain." Morgan handed Asta into the estate car and followed her.
Mori joined them. "Here we go." He switched on the tape recorder. • • • Morgan sat there after it had finished, a cigarette drooping from the corner of his mouth, his face set.
Asta said, "What a truly astonishing story." Her voice was low and pleasant, more English than American.
"You can say that again." Morgan turned to Mori. "I'll keep this. I'll have my secretary transcribe it and send it to Don Giovanni in Palermo by coded fax."
"I did the right thing?"
"You did well, Antonio." Morgan took his hand.
"No, it was Tony, Carl, not me. What am I going to do with him? Harvard Medical School, the Mayo Clinic, a brilliant student, yet he works with the nuns at Our Lady of Mercy for peanuts."
"You leave him," Morgan said. "He'll find his way. I went to Vietnam, Antonio. No one can take that away from me. You can't argue with it, the rich boy going into hell when he didn't need to. It says something. He won't be there forever, but the fact that he was will make people see him as someone to look up to for the rest of his life. He's a fine boy." He put a hand on Mori's shoulder. "Heh, I hope I don't sound too calculating."
"No," Mori protested. "Not at all. He's someone to be proud of. Thank you, Carl, thank you. I'll leave you now. Asta." He nodded to her and walked away.
"That was nice," Asta told Morgan. "What you said about Tony."
"It's true. He's brilliant, that boy. He'll end up in Park Avenue, only unlike the other brilliant doctors there he'll always be the one who worked downtown for the nuns of Our Lady of Mercy, and that you can't pay for."
"You're such a cynic," she said.
"No, sweetheart, a realist. Now let's get going. I'm famished. I'll take you out to dinner."
They had finished their meal at The Four Seasons, were at the coffee stage when one of the waiters brought a phone over. "An overseas call for you, sir. Sicily. The gentleman said it was urgent."
The voice over the phone was harsh and unmistakable. "Carl. This is Giovanni."
Morgan straightened in his seat. "Uncle?" He dropped into Italian. "What a marvelous surprise. How's business?"
"Everything looks good, particularly after reading your fax."
"I was right to let you know about this business then?"
"So right that I want you out of there on the next plane. This is serious business, Carl, very serious."
"Fine, Uncle. I'll be there tomorrow. Asta's with me. Do you want to say hello?"
"I'd rather look at her, so you'd better bring her with you. I look forward to it, Carl."
The phone clicked off, the waiter came forward and took it from him. "What was all that about?" Asta said.
"Business. Apparently Giovanni takes this Chungking Covenant thing very seriously indeed. He wants me in Palermo tomorrow. You too, my love. It's time you visited Sicily," and he waved for the head waiter.
They took a direct flight to Rome the following morning where Morgan had a Citation private jet standing by for the flight to Punta Raisi Airport twenty miles outside Palermo. There was a Mercedes limousine waiting with a chauffeur and a hard-looking individual in a blue nylon raincoat with heavy cheekbones and the flattened nose of the prize fighter. There was a feeling of real power there, although he looked more Slav than Italian.
"My uncle's top enforcer," Morgan whispered to Asta, "Marco Russo." He smiled and held out his hand. "Marco, it's been a long time. My daughter, Asta."
Marco managed a fractional smile. "A pleasure. Welcome to Sicily, Signorina, and nice to see you again, Signore. The Don isn't at the town house, he's at the Villa."
"Good, let's get moving then."
Luca's villa was outside a village at the foot of Monte Pellegrino, which towers into the sky three miles north of Palermo.
"During the Punic Wars the Carthaginians held out against the Romans on that mountain for three years," Morgan told Asta.
"It looks a fascinating place," she said.
"Soaked in blood for generations." He held up the local paper, which Marco had given him. "Three soldiers blown up by a car bomb last night, a priest shot in the back of the neck this morning because he was suspected of being an informer."
"At least you're on the right side."
He took her hand. "Everything I do is strictly legitimate, Asta, that's the whole point. My business interests and those of my associates are pure as driven snow."
"I know, darling," she said. "You must be the greatest front man ever. Granddad Morgan a General, you a war hero, billionaire, philanthropist, and one of the best polo players in the world. Why, last time we were in London, Prince Charles asked you to play for him."
"He wants me next month." She laughed and he added, "But never forget one thing, Asta. The true power doesn't come from New York. It lies in the hands of the old man we're going to see now."
At that moment they turned in through electronic gates set in ancient, fifteen-foot walls and drove through a semitropical garden toward the great Moorish villa.
The main reception room was enormous, black-and-white-tiled floor scattered with rugs, seventeenth-century furniture from Italy in dark oak, a log fire blazing in the open hearth, and French windows open to the garden. Luca sat in a high-backed sofa, a cigar in his mouth, hands clasped over the silver handle of a walking stick. He was large, at least sixteen stone, his gray beard trimmed, the air of a Roman Emperor about him.
"Come here, child," he said to Asta and when she went to him, kissed her on both cheeks. "You're more beautiful than ever. Eighteen months since I saw you in New York. I was desolated by your mother's unfortunate death last year."
"These things happen," she said.
"I know. Jack Kennedy once said, anyone who believes there is fairness in this life is seriously misinformed. Here, sit beside me." She did as she was told and he looked up at Morgan. "You seem well, Carlo." He'd always insisted on calling him that.
"And you, Uncle, look wonderful."
Luca held out his hand and Morgan kissed it. "I like it when your Sicilian half floats to the surface. You were wise to contact me on this Chungking business and Mori showed good judgment in speaking to you."
"We owe it to his grandson," Morgan said.
"Yes, of course. Young Tony is a good boy, an idealist, and that's good. We need our saints, Carlo, they make us rather more acceptable to the rest of the world." He snapped a finger and a white-coated houseboy came forward.
"Zibibbo, Alfredo."
"At once, Don Giovanni."
"You will like this, Asta. A wine from the island Pantelleria, flavored with anise." He turned to Morgan. "Marco took me for a run into the country the other day, to that farmhouse of yours at Valdini."
"How was it?"
"The caretaker and his wife seemed to be behaving themselves. Very peaceful. You should do something with it."
"Grandfather was born there, Uncle, it's a piece of the real Sicily. How could I change that?"
"You're a good boy, Carlo, you may be half American, but you have a Sicilian heart."
As Alfredo opened the bottle, Morgan said, "So, to the Chungking Covenant. What do you think?"
"We have billions invested in Hong Kong in hotels and casinos and our holdings will be severely damaged when the Communists take over in ninety-seven. Anything that could delay that would be marvelous."
"But would the production of such a document really have an effect?" Asta asked.
He accepted one of the glasses of Zibibbo from Alfredo. "The Chinese have taken great care to handle the proposed changes in the status of Hong Kong through the United Nations. These days they want everything from international respectability to the Olympic Games. If the document surfaced with the holy name of Mao Tse-tung attached to it, who knows what the outcome would be."
"That's true," Morgan agreed. "All right, they'd scream forgery."
"Yes," Asta put in, "but there is one important point. It isn't a forgery, it's the real thing, we know that and any experts brought in will have to agree."
"She's smart, this girl." Luca patted her knee. "We've nothing to lose, Carlo. With that document on show we can at least hold the whole proceedings up if nothing else. Even if we still lose millions, I'd like to mess it up for the Chinese and particularly for the Brits. It's their fault they didn't sort the whole mess out years ago."
"Strange you should say that," Asta told him. "I'd have thought that was exactly what Mountbatten was trying to do back in forty-four."
He roared with laughter and raised his glass. "More wine, Alfredo."
"What do you suggest?" Morgan asked.
"Find this silver Bible. When you have that, you have the Covenant."
"And that must be somewhere at the Castle at Loch Dhu according to what Tanner said," Asta put in.
"Exactly. There's a problem. I had my London lawyer check on the situation at the house the moment I received your fax. It's rented out at the moment to a Sheik from Trucial Oman, a Prince of the Royal Family, so there's nothing to be done there. He's in residence and he won't be leaving for another month. My lawyer has leased it in your name for three months from then."
"Fine," Morgan said. "That gives me plenty of time to clear the decks where business is concerned. That Bible must be there somewhere."
"I instructed my lawyer to get straight up there and see this Lady Katherine Rose, the sister, to do the lease personally. He raised the question of the Bible, told her he'd heard the legend of how all the Lairds carried it into battle. When he phoned me he said she's old and a bit confused and told him she hadn't seen the thing in years."
"There is one thing," Asta said. "According to Tony Jackson, he said to Tanner, 'So the Bible went back to Loch Dhu?' "
Morgan cut in, "And Tanner replied, 'You could say that.' "
Asta nodded. "And then Tony said he started to laugh. I'd say that's rather strange."
"Strange or not, that Bible must be there somewhere," Luca said. "You'll find it, Carlo." He stood up. "Now we eat."
Marco Russo was standing by the door in the hall and as they passed him, Luca said, "You can take Marco with you in case you need a little muscle." He patted Marco's face. "The Highlands of Scotland, Marco, you'll have to wrap up."
"Whatever you say, Capo."
Marco opened the dining room door where two waiters were in attendance. Back in the reception room Alfredo cleared the wine bottle and glasses and took them into the kitchen, putting them beside the sink for the maid to wash later. He said to the cook, "I'm going now," went out, lit a cigarette, and walked down through the gardens to the staff quarters. Alfredo Ponti was an excellent waiter, but an even better policeman, one of the new dedicated breed imported from mainland Italy. He'd managed to obtain the job with Luca three months previously.
Usually he phoned from outside when he wanted to contact his superiors, but the other two houseboys, the cook, and the maid were working, so for the moment he was alone. In any case, what he had overheard seemed important so he decided to take a chance, lifted the receiver on the wall phone at the end of the corridor, and dialed a number in Palermo. It was answered at once.
"Gagini, it's me, Ponti. I've got something. Carl Morgan appeared tonight with his stepdaughter. I overheard them tell a most curious story to Luca. Have you ever heard of the Chungking Covenant?"
Paolo Gagini, who was a Major in the Italian Secret Intelligence Service from Rome posing as a business man in Palermo, said, "That's a new one. Let me put the tape recorder on. Thank God for that photographic memory of yours. Right, start talking. Tell me everything."
Which Alfredo did in some detail. When he had finished, Gagini said, "Good work, though I can't see it helping us much. I'll be in touch. Take care."
Alfredo replaced the receiver and went to bed.
Gagini, in his apartment in Palermo, sat thinking. He could let them know in Rome, not that anyone would be very interested. Everyone knew what Carl Morgan was, but he was also very legitimate. In any case, anything he did in Scotland was the responsibility of the British authorities, which made him think of his oldest friend in British intelligence. Gagini smiled. He loved this one. He got out his code book and found the number of the Ministry of Defence in London.
When the operator answered he said, "Give me Brigadier Charles Ferguson, Priority One, please."
It was perhaps two hours later when Morgan and Asta had retired that Alfredo was shaken awake to find Marco bending over him.
"The Capo wants you."
"What is it?"
Marco shrugged. "Search me. He's on the terrace."
He went out and Alfredo dressed quickly and went after him. He was aware of no particular apprehension. Things had gone so well for three months now and he'd always been so careful, but as a precaution, he placed a small automatic in his waistband.
He found Luca sitting in a cane chair, Marco leaning against a pillar. The old man said, "You made a phone call earlier."
Alfredo's mouth went dry. "Yes, my cousin in Palermo."
"You're lying," Marco said. "We have an electronic tracking machine. It registered the no return bar code so the number can't be traced."
"And that only applies to the security services," Luca said.
Alfredo turned and ran through the garden for the fence and Marco drew a silenced pistol.
"Don't kill him," Luca cried.
Marco shot him in the leg and the young man went down but turned on the ground, pulling the automatic from his waistband. Marco, with little choice in the matter, shot him between the eyes.
Luca went forward, leaning on his cane. "Poor boy, so young. They will keep trying. Get rid of him, Marco."
He turned and walked away.