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  Azrael

  A Clifford Driscoll Mystery

  William L. DeAndrea

  Contents

  Author’s Note

  Prologue

  Part One

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Part Two

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Part Three

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Part Four

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Part Five

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Part Six

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Part Seven

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Part Eight

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Epilogue

  For Meredith

  Author’s Note

  THIS IS THE THIRD book in my series of mythologically titled spy stories. All the characters, incidents, and institutions are fictitious, except for the FBI and the KGB, which are used fictitiously. The Northside Church is intended to represent no actual religious denomination. The town of Kirkester and its neighboring towns are invented as well.

  The only factual element of the story is the running catalog of Soviet atrocities, which are well documented, though you wouldn’t think so if all you see are regular American media.

  As in Cronus and Snark, the previous books in this series, I want to stress that while there is a Congressional committee that oversees American intelligence operations, and it has a chairman, the character called the Congressman is in no way intended to represent anyone who has ever held that office.

  Finally, I wish to thank Richard Meyers, for help on some technical details, and Barbara Gonzo, without whom Azrael would never have flown at all.

  —WLD

  Prologue

  Kirkester, New York, May

  HE HELD THE BOY’S head under until the bubbles stopped, then gently lowered it through the last few inches of cold, clear stream water until it rested on the bottom.

  He was—had been—a fine-looking boy, Saturday Evening Post material, sandy hair, bright hazel eyes, freckles. He had just landed a sunny when Roger spoke to him for the first time.

  “Nice fish,” Roger said.

  “Not bad for a sunny,” the boy conceded. His name, Roger knew, was Keith Smith. He was three weeks short of his tenth birthday.

  “I didn’t expect anyone to be out here,” Roger said.

  “Usually isn’t,” the boy told him. He finished unhooking the fish and put it in a water-filled plastic bucket. Then he reached into a plastic bag that sat beside him on the rock, took out a slice of white balloon bread, tore off a piece, wadded it into a ball, stuck it on a hook, and tossed his line back into the stream.

  “The trouble with sunnies is that they’re too easy to catch. Nobody usually comes here, because the water’s too calm. All you get here is sunnies, and little ones, at that. All the real fishermen are upstream, where the water is faster and the good fish are. Except, every once in a while, I see a couple of colored guys on the other bank fishing for eels. Did you ever eat an eel?”

  “Sure,” Roger said.

  Keith looked at him skeptically. “Okay, well, I never have. Sounds gross to me. Still, the black guys swear by them.”

  “Are they here today?”

  “Naw, never on a weekday. They used to. They’re pressmen. When they worked the night shift, they were here a lot, but they got rotated onto days, so they can only come on Saturday and Sunday.”

  “Sounds like you’re here a lot,” Roger said.

  “Sometimes. I like to go where the bigger fish are, but my dad has to take me. I was going to go there today with him—he’s on vacation—but he got called in special because of that thing in the Middle East.”

  “Is your father a diplomat?” Roger asked, though he already knew what Frederick Smith did for a living.

  “No,” the boy said. “He’s associate managing editor of Worldwatch magazine. He’s on call all the time.” Keith’s voice held a mixture of pride and a sort of wistful resentment.

  “But what brings you out here?” Keith asked. “Not fishing.”

  Roger grinned at him. If he let himself, he could get to like this boy. Of course, there wouldn’t be time. “That was easy enough to figure out,” he said. “No gear.”

  Keith grinned back; Roger went on. “No, I just like to walk in the woods, by the stream. I’m new around here, so I try to take a different direction every day. Except when it rains, of course. Didn’t expect to find anyone to talk to. My name’s Roger.”

  “Mine’s Keith,” the boy said. “I don’t mind talking.” He slid over to make more room, but Roger never joined him. Instead, taking care to walk only on the rocks (it wouldn’t do to leave footprints), he circled around to the side of the boulder the boy sat on. At one point he lost his balance and went down. One knee and one hand landed in the water.

  “Are you okay?” Keith asked.

  “Fine, fine. Just slipped. The sun will dry me out in no time.” He rose again. In his hand, he could feel the weight of a moss-covered stone. He showed it to Keith. “I think this is the one that got me.”

  The boy nodded. “The moss makes it slippery. You could break your head.”

  Roger came closer, then hit Keith in the temple with the mossy side of the rock, a short, straight blow that did the job with merciful efficiency. Keith slumped over sideways without making a sound. Roger lifted the boy’s body carefully and brought him down to the stream, to the place where he’d slipped and picked up the rock. He put the stone back in its place, mossy side up, then took Keith’s head between his hands and held it under the surface. Roger’s lips moved.

  When it was done, Roger looked around for traces of his presence. He had walked where he’d leave no footprints, and the rough natural surfaces of the rocks and trees would take no fingerprints.

  Someone, some uneducated person, might wonder about the serene expression on the boy’s face, might say that if he’d slipped and fallen and hurt his head, there should be a surprised look there.

  Someone might say that, until someone of superior knowledge informed him that there was no scientific basis for that kind of assumption.

  Roger wasn’t worried about it. There was a good chance that there would be no recognizable expression on the face by the time the boy’s clay was found.

  Besides, Roger had no intention of changing the boy’s expression, even if he could. Keith had done no one any harm. He deserved the peace.

  Roger looked down at him for a long moment, then took a deep breath and walked away. He was careful to step only on stones, to leave no traces of his having been there.

  August
>
  The heat and humidity had steamed the neighborhood clean. There was a patch of shimmer above the sidewalk, and swing sets and tricycles sat gleaming and abandoned in small front yards behind low privet hedges.

  This was the Flats, the lower-middle-class section of Kirkester (there were no poor), but life was pleasant here all the same. All the men of the neighborhood, and most of the women, were out working in air-conditioned offices or printing plants or stores or restaurants or at the new Quality Inn near the Hudson complex. Those who didn’t work would be lying down in air-conditioned bedrooms after a tough morning’s housework or with their children at the James Hudson, Sr., Memorial Pool.

  No one would see him, Roger was sure, and if someone did, no one would recognize him. He looked like an exhausted door-to-door salesman. Kirkester was a town that still got door-to-door salesmen; the police kept them away from the fancier neighborhoods.

  Roger had a sweat-stained hat on his head, a pair of lavender-beige summer suit pants on his legs. He carried the jacket. His shirt sleeves were rolled up, his tie was loose and his collar was open. He was carrying a sample case that was obviously heavy. He was trying very hard to look like a man who was just hoping to make it to where his car was parked on the next block.

  He was, in fact, headed away from his car. Well, not his car. It had been provided for him by his employers. Untraceable. They were good at things like that.

  He followed the sound. As his groundwork had shown him, it was very likely to be the only sound in the neighborhood, aside from the hum of air conditioners. This sound was the clang of metal on metal to a rock beat. Roger was close enough to hear the lyrics of the song now. It seemed the singer (presumably, but not demonstrably, a male) wanted to make love to a girl during a nuclear holocaust. Roger shook his head and followed the music up a driveway.

  Louis Symczyk was lying on his back under a wheelless sports car supported by blocks. Every once in a while an oily hand would appear and grab one of the wrenches arrayed just in reach. From under the car came alternating grunts, first of effort, then of, Roger supposed, musical ecstasy.

  The song—it was coming from a tape player—was very loud, and Roger walked quietly.

  He stood and watched the young man for a minute. He never went more than ten seconds without changing wrenches, and he never touched more than one wrench each time he reached for one. It was a pleasure to watch someone at work who knew what he was doing.

  Roger sometimes wished someone would appreciate what he did. But his employers judged him only by results; technique didn’t come into it. And of course, Roger didn’t dare breathe a word about purpose. Not theirs, and definitely not his.

  And that left only the work to be done.

  “Hello,” Roger said.

  Casters rolled on concrete, and Lou’s face appeared from under the car.

  “Oh, hi,” he said. “Didn’t hear you come up.” Even with sweat-soaked hair and oil marks on his face, he was a handsome young man.

  “Sorry to bother you,” Roger said. The idea was to sound a little breathless, which wasn’t difficult, considering the weight of the briefcase. “It’s just that it’s so hot, I feel like I’m burning up. I think I’m going to have a stroke in a second if I don’t splash some water on my face.”

  “Geez,” the young man said. He pointed over Roger’s shoulder at a sink Roger already knew was there. “Help yourself,” he said. “You want a beer or something? Soda? Ice water?”

  To make it look good, Roger had already put down the case and made for the sink. He was splashing water over his face. It was part of the plan, but it felt good all the same.

  He paused between double handfuls of water to tell Lou no thanks. When he was finished, he turned back to the young man and thanked him. “You probably saved my life.”

  Lou smiled at him. “You’re still dripping,” he said.

  “It feels good,” Roger told him. “A man has to be crazy to go door-to-door on a day like this. Nobody’s home, anyway. I don’t know what you were doing out, but thank God you’re here.”

  The young man’s smile took on a slightly wicked gleam. “Heavy date tonight. Have to make sure the mechanical phallus is in perfect shape. Believe me, when I’m done here, I’m standing under a cold shower until it’s time to get dressed, then I’m hitting an air-conditioned movie.”

  Roger said it sounded like a good idea to him. “Well,” he said, “better get going. Thanks again.” He bent to pick up his sample case, then straightened suddenly, swinging the case in a wide arc into the side of Louis Symczyk’s head.

  The young man dropped to the floor like a pile of laundry. Roger put the brick-loaded case down again and bent over the young man. No moans. No detectable breathing. Roger brought his hands up close to his chest and carefully flicked them dry. Tiny drops of water beaded up on the skin of the young man’s face.

  Carefully, Roger placed Louis Symczyk back on his mechanic’s dolly and rolled him back under the car. He made certain that the young man’s shoes stayed clear of the cement floor. This was not likely to be investigated too thoroughly, but if by any chance it should be, Roger was too professional to leave drag marks on clothes or shoes.

  When he had the body positioned, he spent a few seconds taking stock. The head was under a suspension spring. Right. He’d put the bricks back at the construction site and burn the briefcase tonight. Right.

  Mission accomplished. Or it would be, in just a second. Roger kicked out the left front block, and the car came down. Tendrils of red began to trace their way across the black grease on the floor.

  Roger turned and left before any could reach him.

  September

  In some ways this would be the easiest job yet, in some ways the hardest. Easiest because it demanded no guile, no deception. The victim didn’t need to be lulled. Hardest because it involved breaking into a house, with others home. Breaking in was simple enough—a butter knife could move a window latch, and the rattle of raindrops and the banging of thunder from the late-summer storm tonight would cover any noise he happened to make.

  But there was always a chance someone would walk in on him, wanting to “check on the baby” or something, and if that happened, everyone in the house had to die. That would be bad for two reasons: it would dilute the message his employers were trying to send, and it would force him to use fire. He didn’t like to use fire. Fire diluted the message Roger was sending.

  Still, he had his mission. Window latch slipped, sash slid up during a crash of thunder. A roll of dry plastic taken out from under his jacket, spread out on the floor to save wet footprints on the rug. A few soft, crackling footsteps across the plastic to the crib.

  He could hear voices from another room. He held his breath to hear better. Someone said, “Blake.” Television. Roger let his breath go.

  The baby was asleep, which was good. Quieter. The wadded towel in one hand, the kid’s head in the other. It was over in seconds.

  Now, a few quiet steps back to the window, pull the plastic out behind him and relatch with a piece of waxed dental floss. In the morning, or whenever, they would discover the tragic crib death. The water on the sheet, on the baby’s head, from Roger’s rain-wet hands, would have dried. And no one would ever know.

  Except, of course, the one who was supposed to know. That, however, wasn’t Roger’s department. All he had to do now was go back to his other life and await further orders.

  PART ONE

  Chapter One

  SHE WOULD HAVE HAD more fun if she’d gone to the funeral.

  Not, of course, that the funeral wouldn’t have been gruesome enough. God knew the other ones had. Weeping mothers. And fathers. Regina had been shocked and disappointed in herself to discover that a weeping man upset her much more than a weeping woman. A minister of God telling the mourners, as if he thought they didn’t already know, what a tragedy it was for a life to be snuffed out so young, with so much ahead of it. Back in May, the minister at the service for Keith Smi
th had told everyone to take comfort in the knowledge that God knows what he’s doing but that it is not always given to man to understand. He also assured them that God Never Tries Us Beyond Our Strength, and that Faith Would See Us Through. The priest at the services for Lou Symczyk had been much simpler about it—Lou was in heaven, and for that we should be happy.

  Maybe so, Regina thought. It was hard, though, to be happy for someone whose head had been crushed by a ’77 Firebird slipping off a jack onto his head. Heaven had also been problematical, considering the number of speeding tickets and public scalps Lou had managed to accumulate with a succession of faster and faster cars in the three years between his reaching driving age and his death. He had even had the nerve to ask Regina to “go for a ride” with him once. She had, of course, refused. It would have been ridiculous. Regina was aware, though, that if she had been Lou’s age or younger, instead of four and a half years older, she might have been tempted.

  Regina had spent an August morning sweltering in black at the side of Lou’s soon-to-be grave, hating every minute of it, as she had hated the glorious late-spring day she’d spent with the box containing little Keith Smith. She’d gone because, as her mother said, the Hudson Group was more than just a publishing concern. To the millions of people its two-hundred-odd local newspapers, radio and TV stations and cable systems reached, it was a spokesman, a teacher, and a goad. It informed them, spoke up for them, challenged them. To the readers of Worldwatch it was a fresh and different look at each week’s national and international news.

  To the people of Kirkester, especially to those who had given up Manhattan or Chicago to come work here in the boonies at the home office, the Hudson Group was family.

  Regina grinned. Speaking about the billion-dollar business Father and she (mostly she) had built, Mother had a tendency to sound like a rough draft of the introduction to the annual report.

  But she meant every word of it, including the business about family. When tragedy struck, the Hudsons had to be there. It made no difference if the employee involved was top management, like Fred Smith, or a janitor, like Kasimir Symczyk. Duty called; Regina went.