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First published in Great Britain by HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2014
Copyright © Harry Patterson 2014
Cover layout design © HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2014
Jacket photographs © Slow Images/Getty Images (lighthouse and sea); Shutterstock.com (all other images)
Harry Patterson asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
A catalogue copy of this book is available from the British Library.
This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the authorâs imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.
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Source ISBN: 9780007585847
Ebook Edition © December 2014 ISBN: 9780007585854
Version: 2014-12-02
The island of Nantucket, Massachusetts â high summer, the western end of the harbour crowded with boats, many tied up at the jetty. Among them was a scarlet-and-white sport-fisherman named Dolphin. On the flying bridge, a grey-haired man sat at the wheel playing a clarinet, something plaintive and touching. He was around sixty, a white curling beard giving him the look of an old sailor.
The man who joined him from below, wearing swimming trunks, had dark tousled hair and the beard of some medieval bravo. He was fit and muscular, his smile pleasant enough, his only unusual feature two scars on his left chest which any doctor would have recognized as relics from old bullet wounds.
He spoke in Irish. âBig night, Kelly!â
The other answered in the same. âYou could say that. Itâll be dark soon, Tod â if youâre going to grab that swim, itâd better be now.â
âI will. Keep your eye out for that kid, Henry, from the harbourmasterâs office. Heâs bringing our passports and the credit card, so donât forget to speak like the Yank your passport says you are.â
He slid down the ladder, vaulted over the rail, and swam away. Kelly heard a call from the dock.
âMr Jackson, are you there?â
Kelly descended the ladder. âHeâs having a swim. Iâm his partner, Jeremy Hawkins.â
Henry handed over the two passports. âThere you go, sir, Mr Jacksonâs credit card is in the envelope and your mooring licence covers you until Friday.â
Kelly took the package. âThanks, son.â
âThatâs great clarinet I just heard. Kind of sounds like Gershwin, though I donât recognize the tune.â
âItâs an Irish folk song called âThe Lark in the Clear Airâ. And youâre right, I did put a bit of Gershwin in there.â
âI think he would have been pleased, sir. Are you and your friend professional musicians?â
âI was for a while and he does play decent piano, but on the whole we found other things kept getting in the way.â
âWell, that seems like a damn shame to me,â Henry said, and walked away, calling at another boat.
Kelly turned and looked out over the harbour to see how Tod was getting on, and saw him swimming towards a round buoy floating on a chain. Many people were diving or jumping off the boats, some in wet suits, generally having a good time while the light still held.
For his part, Tod stroked the last couple of yards, then grabbed onto the chain, aware of the unmistakable sound of a helicopter descending somewhere in the distance.
He hung there, listening, and two young men erupted from the water, like black seals in their wet suits. They were like twins, darkly handsome, the same wildness apparent in their faces.
The nearest one grabbed the chain and laughed as his brother joined them. âMr Jackson, I recognize you from your photo. Weâre the ones you came to meet. The Master sends his regards and hopes that success in our venture will make us your favorite Chechens. Iâm Yanni and this is Khalid.â
He had no accent, which his brother explained in a rather mocking tone. âOur parents were killed by barbaric Russian soldiers in the Chechen war. The wonderful American Red Cross saved us and our grandparents, and gave us a new life in good old New York.â