The Chinaman

The Chinaman Read Free Page A

Book: The Chinaman Read Free
Author: Stephen Leather
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evaporated and he was soon through to the office and dictating to a copytaker straight from his notebook. Twenty-five paragraphs, and he knew it was good stuff. When he’d finished he asked the copytaker to transfer him to the news desk and he checked that everything was OK with Simpson.
    â€˜Got it here, Woody,’ he said. ‘Great read.’
    â€˜OK, I’m going back to see what else I can get. I’ll call you.’ He hung up before Simpson could order him back to base. On the way out he got a receipt from the waiter.
    There was a pub down the road and Woody gratefully walked up to the bar and ordered a double Bells. It was only when the whisky slopped around the tumbler that he realised how badly his hands were shaking.
    The intercom buzzed, catching them all by surprise, even though they were waiting for him. There were three of them in the flat, drinking tea and watching television. They were casually dressed – baggy pullovers, faded jeans and grubby training shoes – and looked like sociology students stuck with nothing to do between lectures. One of the men was smoking and on the floor beside his easy chair was a circular crystal ashtray overflowing with cigarette butts. He leant over and stubbed out the one in his hand, pushed himself up and walked into the hall. On the wall by the door was a telephone with a small black and white television screen; he pressed a square plastic button and it flickered into life.
    â€˜Welcome back,’ he said to the figure waiting down below and pressed a second button, the one that opened the entrance door four floors below. As he waited for him to come up in the lift he went back into the lounge. ‘It’s him,’ he said, but they knew it would be because no one else knew they were there and if they did they wouldn’t be coming in through the front door but through the window with stun grenades and machine guns.
    There was an American comedy show on the television and canned laughter filled the room. Through the floor-to-ceiling sliding windows at the end of the lounge the man saw a tug struggle along the Thames, hauling an ungainly barge behind it.
    He went back into the hall and opened the door as the lift jolted to a halt. The man who stepped out of the lift was in his early twenties, wearing grey flannel trousers and a blue blazer over a white polo neck sweater. He had dark-brown curly hair and black eyes and was grinning widely. ‘Did you see it?’ he asked eagerly, before the other man even had a chance to close the door. He punched the air with his fist. ‘Did you bloody well see it?’
    â€˜Calm down, O’Reilly,’ said the man who’d let him in.
    O’Reilly turned towards him, his cheeks flaring red. ‘Calm down?’ he said. ‘Christ, man, you should have been there. You should have seen me. It was fan-bloody-tastic.’ He turned back to look at the television set. ‘Has it been on yet? How many did we get?’
    â€˜Fifteen so far,’ said the man sitting on the leather Chesterfield directly opposite the pseudo-antique video cabinet on which the television stood. ‘You did well, O’Reilly.’ He was the oldest of the group but even he had barely turned thirty. Although he had the broadest Irish accent he had Nordic blond hair and piercing blue eyes and fair skin. His name was also far removed from his Irish origins but Denis Fisher was Belfast-born and he’d killed many times for the Cause. ‘What about the helmet and the leathers?’ he asked O’Reilly.
    â€˜In the boot of the car. Just like you said. It was so easy.’
    â€˜Not easy,’ said Fisher. ‘Well planned.’
    â€˜Whatever,’ said O’Reilly. ‘I deserve a drink.’ He went into the white-and-blue-tiled kitchen and opened the fridge. ‘Anyone else want anything?’ he called, but they all declined. O’Reilly took out a cold can of Carlsberg

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