Stuart Woods_Stone Barrington 14
call him and give him new instructions; we need for the authorities to know exactly what happened to the yacht and to Pitts.â
Thomas was still quiet.
âAm I making sense, Thomas?â
âYes, Iâm afraid you are.â
âThen what are you going to do?â
âIâm going to call Teddy and tell him to hide himself while Stone and Holly are looking for him, and that Iâll get him off the island in a few days, when things have cooled off a bit.â
âI hope that works. And if it doesnât?â
âThen Iâll do what has to be done and take care of the disposal.â
âIâm sorry itâs come to this, Thomas. I know you didnât expect to have to kill anyone yourself.â
âIâm sorry, too, but donât worryâIâll take care of it.â
âAll right. Iâll call the others, and weâll meet here tonight. You bring some food from the inn, and weâll call it a dinner party, if the police should show up.â
âIâll be there around seven,â Thomas said.
âGood luck, Thomas, and thank you.â
âGood-bye, Leslie.â Thomas hung up. He went to his safe, opened it and took out the snub-nosed .38 that he had carried as a backup piece when he was a New York City cop. He strapped the holster to his ankle, checked to be sure the gun was loaded, then shoved it into the holster and secured it.
He called Teddy.
âYes?â
âStone and Holly are going to be there shortly. Itâs important that you secrete yourself while theyâre looking for you and, probably, for a few days after that. Do you have food in that bunker of yours, or do you want me to bring you some?â
âIâm quite self-sufficient, Thomas, and donât worry, they will not find me. I know youâre worried about my being apprehended, but you may put that out of your mind; it wonât happen.â
âI hope not.â
âI know that my capture would endanger your prospects for forming a government, and I will not put you in that position, I promise you.â
âThank you, Teddy; Iâm glad you understand whatâs at stake for the future of St. Marks.â
âI do. Give me as much time as you can; Iâm nearly ready now.â
âGood-bye, Teddy,â Thomas said, and he meant it. One way or another, this would be their last conversation.
Thomas left his office and went to pick up Stone and Holly.
S tone and Holly were waiting outside their cottage for Thomas to pick them up when her satphone rang again.
âYes?â
âItâs Lance. Harold Pittsâs house is less than ten miles from the front gate here; I sent two men to look it over, and Pitts answered the door. He returned home last night after six weeks of touring the country in an RV.â
âSo our Harold Pitts is Teddy.â
âNo doubt about it,â Lance said. âHolly, youâre not going to be able to bring him back with you, and you canât allow him to be caught.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âI mean that if the St. Marks police get their hands on him, theyâll torture him until they know everything; I mean that heâs not going to get onto that airplane with you; he just wonât. He knows exactly what that would mean when heâs back in the States, and heâll kill you rather than allow that to happen.â
âIâm armed; Dino had brought a weapon with him.â
âIâm glad to hear that,â Lance said. âIt means that you wonât have to kill him with a knife or your hands.â
âLance, Iâm going to try to take him alive.â
âIt canât be done, Holly. The very best outcome of such an effort would be that he might kill himself, but he very likely would kill you first. He will be armed to the teeth, and heâs not going to have a conversation with you before he starts shooting.â
âWe donât know that.â
âI donât want to lose you, Holly. Quite apart from my personal loss, the Agency would be left holding a very large bag.â
âThatâs not what Iâm thinking about,â Holly said.
âItâs what you must think about. You can only prevent a horrible mess for the Agency, and perhaps for the country, by remaining alive, and that means killing Teddy at the first opportunity, do you understand?â
âI suppose so.â
âThese
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