Prologue
Dark clouds hung low above the Irish Sea, fat in the
moist morning air, and tracked slowly over the assassin as
he stood on the wooden foredeck of the fishing boat. A few
screeching herring gulls had encircled the vessel while it
was still miles offshore; now that it had entered the harbor
channel, a flock one dozen strong swarmed above and around,
churning the mist with their white wings.
The sea birds shrieked at the vessel, bleated warnings to
the Irish coast of the arrival of a killer to its shores.
But their warnings were lost in the vapor.
The boat docked in its harbor slip just before eight a.m.
The assassin climbed off the deck and onto the quay without
a glance at the two crewmembers. Not a single word had been
exchanged in the three hours since the forty-foot Lochin had
picked its passenger up from a Lithuanian freighter in
international waters. He remained on the deck, moving
fore and aft, vigilantly scanning the roiling sea around
him, his black hooded raincoat protecting him from the salty
spray and the occasional shower, as well as the curious eyes
of the father and son who operated the boat. The crew
remained in the wheelhouse during the journey, following
strict instructions. They had been told to pick up a
passenger and then keep away from him, to return with him to
Howth Harbor, just north of Dublin. After delivering this
odd catch of the day, they were to enjoy their payment and
hold their bloody tongues.
The assassin walked through the seaside village to the
tiny train depot and bought a ticket to Connolly Station in
central Dublin. With half an hour to kill, he stepped down
the station steps and into the basement pub. The Bloody
Scream served a full Irish breakfast for the fishermen in
the harbor; the long narrow room was more than half-full of
men wolfing down plates of eggs and sausage and baked beans,
washing it all down with pints of ink-dark foamy Guinness
Stout. The assassin knew how to assimilate in unfamiliar
surroundings; he grunted and gestured to hide his foreign
accent, and ordered the same as those around him. He dug
into his plate and drained his beer before leaving the
Bloody Scream to catch his train.
A half hour later he trudged through Dublin. He wore his
brown beard thick and a blue watch cap down over his ears
and forehead, a scarf tight around his neck, and a dark blue
peacoat into which his gloved hands dug deep to hide from
the frigid air. Hanging over a shoulder a small canvas bag
swung with his footsteps. He headed south away from the
train station, then turned right at the quay of the River
Liffey, and followed it as chilled rain began to fall.
The assassin walked on.
He looked forward to getting this errand behind him. He
had not been comfortable at sea, nor was he comfortable now
in the morning crowd growing around him as he neared
O’Connell Street.
But there was a man here in Dublin who, it had been
decided by someone with money and influence, should cease to
exist.
And Court Gentry had come to see to that.
Chapter One
At a pharmacy he bought a pack of paracetamol tablets and
a bottled water. He’d been injured a few months back, a
bullet through the thigh and a knife blade into his gut. The
pain had lessened by the week. The body had incredible power
to heal, so much greater than that of the mind. Court had
grown dependent on the pills and injections: Vicodin and
OxyContin, Demerol and Dilaudid. A surgeon in Nice had kept
him supplied since the operation to clean and close his
abdominal wound, and Gentry had popped pills each day since.
But he’d purposely left them behind when he boarded the
freighter; he’d gone over a week now without his meds, and
this self-imposed detox was making him miserable.
The acetaminophen was no substitute for a heavy narcotic,
but his mind found comfort in the ritual of swallowing the
tablets nonetheless.
Three hours after leaving the boat, he checked in to a
Chinese-run budget hotel in a narrow alley off Parnell
Street, a half mile north of the river. His room was dark
and dank and smelled of mold and frying grease; the
restaurant two floors below him blew the stench through the
vents. A near-horizontal rain beat steadily on the dirty
window but failed to clean it; the oily grime covered the
inside of the glass.
Gentry lay on his back on the sagging mattress and stared
at the ceiling, his thoughts unfocused. He’d been on a boat
for over a week; it felt odd not swaying back and forth,
rising slowly up and down.
It took hours to drift asleep, the cold rain unceasing on
the pane next to his head.
In the mid-afternoon he sat at the Chinese restaurant in
the tiny hotel, ate noodles and pork, and used a
store-bought mobile phone to log onto the Internet. He
accessed a bulletin board on a Web site that sold adventure
tours of the Ural Mountains, entered a password to log on to
a forum for employees; with a further code he gained entry
to a thread with one other viewer.
Court typed onto his phone with his thumb while he drank
tepid orange juice.
“I’m here.”
A few seconds later the tiny window in the phone
refreshed. Someone had replied on the forum.
“In Bangkok, I trust?” This was the code that confirmed
the identity of the other party. Gentry’s identity was
established with his reply.
“No. Singipore.” Only by the misspelling was the identity
check complete.
“Nice journey, my friend?” came the next reply. Court
read it, bit into a fried wonton as greasy as the window in
his upstairs room.
He tried not to roll his eyes.
It had not been a nice journey, and Gregor Ivanovic
Sidorenko was not Court Gentry’s friend. Court had no
friends. And it was unlikely Sidorenko, or Sid to all those
in the West who knew of him, had any himself. He was Russian
mob, an over boss in Saint Petersburg. He ran an
organization that controlled illegal gambling and drugs and
hookers and hit men and . . . out of
desperation on the part of the American assassin, he now ran
Court Gentry, the Gray Man.
While ostensibly in the same line of work, Gregor
Sidorenko was no Donald Fitzroy. Sir Donald had been Court’s
handler for years, ever since the CIA had chased Court out
of the U.S. with a burn notice and a shoot-on-sight
directive. Fitzroy had taken him in, had offered him good
jobs against bad men, had paid him fairly for his work, and
had even once hired him to protect his own family. But then
Fitzroy had been pushed into a corner, had turned on Court,
and though he’d apologized profusely and even offered up his
life to his American employee in recompense, Gentry knew he
could never trust him again.
He would never trust anyone again.
Sid was scum, but he was a known quantity, Court knew he
couldn’t trust the forked-tongued Russian fuck as far as he
could throw him, but Sid could supply access to some of the
most lucrative contracts in the industry. And Sid agreed to
Gentry’s caveat that he would only accept those hits he
deemed righteous, or at least those that tipped slightly to
the good side of the “morally neutral” category.
Which had lead Court here to Ireland.
This trip to Dublin was Court’s first op for Sid. He’d
read the dossier of the target, agreed to the job, argued
online about the low wages offered for the contract, and
then reluctantly accepted.
He needed to stay operational. The downtime and the
wounds and the drugs were softening him, and he was a man
who absolutely could not afford to soften.
Court had memorized the relevant portions of the target’s
dossier. Standard operating procedure before a wet
operation. Name: Dougal Slattery. Age: fifty-four years.
Nationality: Irish. Height: big. Weight: fat. He’d been a
boxer as a young man but couldn’t break out of the thick
midlist of local pugilistic talent. Then he found work as a
tough guy, a bouncer in Dublin nightclubs. He branched out,
did some rough stuff for a local syndicate, slapping around
lazy Polish hookers and knocking Turkish drug dealers’ heads
together for not making quota. He graduated to some
low-level killings: gang versus gang stuff, nothing fancy
till he was sent on an errand to the Continent. In Amsterdam
he’d made the big time, killing his boss’s rival in a hail
of bullets after using his gnarled fists to bash in the
faces of two of his bodyguards.
From there he’d climbed to the second tier of the
killer-for-hire trade. Wet jobs in Ankara, in Sardinia, in
Calcutta, in Tajikistan. He did not run solo, Court had
noticed in his file; he wasn’t the brains behind his
operations, but his curriculum vitae included some
respectable kills. Not respectable in the moral sense; no,
he’d reportedly killed a police detective, an honest
businessman, a journalist or two. But Court appreciated that
the operations themselves had been, if not spectacular, at
least competently executed.
But his last hit on file was six years ago. Court
couldn’t help but notice that Sid’s dossier on Slattery went
wafer thin after that. A few speculative inferences aside,
all that was known about his life since then was that he
played the drum in a traditional Irish band that performed
five nights a week in the touristy Temple Bar section of
Dublin.
Hardly work that got your name scribbled onto a
termination order.
Gentry found this to be one of his more morally neutral
operations. The man was a killer, but so was Court. Court
rationalized the difference; he vetted his targets, made
sure their deeds warranted extrajudicial killing. Dougal
Slattery clearly did not. According to Sid, the Irishman was
now on retainer for an Italian-run international criminal
organization. His next victim might well be a recalcitrant
prostitute or the owner of a restaurant that failed to pay
protection money to the Mafia.
Killing Dougal Slattery wouldn’t much improve the evil
ways of the world, Court decided, but it certainly wouldn’t
hurt.
Well, it wouldn’t hurt anyone who was not named
Dougal Slattery.
“Hello? You still there?” Sid’s previous post was three
minutes old. Court had drifted off-mission for a moment. He
forced himself to concentrate on his phone’s tiny screen.
“I’m here. No problems.”
“How long will you need?”
“Unknown. Will assess situation tonight. Act at first
prudent opportunity.”
“I understand, my friend. Don’t take too long. I have
more work after.”
There was always more “work,” Court knew. But most “work”
involved contracts Gentry would never accept. Court would be
the judge if there was “more work after.” He didn’t argue
the point with Sidorenko, though. Instead he just replied,
“Okay.”
“I look forward to good news. Do svidaniya,
friend.”
Court just logged off. He shut down the phone and stuck
it in the side pocket of his peacoat. He finished his meal,
paid, and left the hotel.
In the late afternoon he walked the neighborhoods around
Grafton Street. He’d spent an hour looking at the dress and
mannerisms of the locals, trying to assimilate. It would not
be hard for the trained professional; Dublin was an
international city full of Poles, Russians, Turks, Chinese,
South Americans . . . even here and there a
few Irish. There was no one look or walk or attitude to
parrot; still, Court stepped into a used clothing shop on
Dawson Lane and stepped out with a bag. In the bathroom of a
department store he changed into worn blue jeans, a hooded
sweatshirt, and a black denim jacket. Black athletic shoes
and his dark blue watch cap finished off the ensemble.
By nightfall he was a local, moving with the masses. He
ran a security sweep, backtracked, stepped on and off a few
trains on the DART, Dublin’s mass transit, all to make sure
he was not being followed. There were more people in this
world who wanted Gentry dead than would ever give a rat’s
ass about Dougal Slattery, and Court kept this in mind, just
to keep his operation in perspective. His secondary
objective was to kill the Irishman; the primary objective,
as always, was to keep his own ass alive for another day.
His PERSEC, or personal security, needed to remain at the
forefront of his thoughts.
Satisfied he had not grown a tail, he headed to the
Temple Bar neighborhood on the southern bank of the River
Liffey.
At ten o’clock he sat at the bar at the Oliver St. John
Gogarty. Although it was a Wednesday evening, the touristy
pub was packed full. Americans, Continental Europeans,
Asians. The only Irish in the bar were likely the barmaids,
the bartenders, and the band.
Court hadn’t spent much time in raucous juke joints in
the past few months. He’d laid low in the south of France,
lived in the tiny attic room of a tiny cottage in a tiny
hillside village and rarely ventured out past the little
corner market for canned foods and bottled water. Even his
few visits into Nice to see his doctor were tame. It was the
winter season, the nightclubs and the kitschy shops on the
Promenade des Anglais, always bursting at the seams during
the tourist season, were nearly empty or boarded up. That
was the way Court liked it. The Oliver St. John Gogarty was
anathema to his standard tradecraft; already the female
bartender had asked him his name, and two Englishwomen next
to him had tried to engage him in small talk. He’d ignored
their overtures, sipped his Guinness, scanned the room,
wished he had four milligrams of Dilaudid to relax him, and
then angrily told himself to unfuck himself and get his head
back on this job.
There are two types of people in the world. Only two.
Sheep and wolves. Court was a wolf, and he knew it. The past
few months had weakened him somewhat, but a wolf was always
a wolf, and it had never been more evident to him than it
was here at the bar, surrounded as he was by a hundred
sheep. No one in the crowd scanned for threats like he did.
No one in the crowd had pinpointed the exits and the fit men
in the room and the type of glass in the front window. No
one in the crowd had taken note of the paucity of law
enforcement on the street or the lighting scheme of the back
alley. No one in the crowd knew where to sit so no mirror’s
reflection cast his image about the room.
No one in the crowd had a plan to run for his life if
necessary.
And no one in the crowd had a plan to kill everyone else
in the crowd if he had to.
Yes, he was in a crowd full of sheep, but there was, in
fact, one more wolf in the room. According to Sid’s dossier,
the drummer onstage was a hard man as well. There were five
in the traditional, or “trad” band, and though Gentry was no
expert on such matters, from the reaction of the patrons, he
supposed they must have been very good. The big man with the
white hair sitting on a bench to the side of the stage
played a bodhrán, a traditional handheld Irish drum. He took
his work seriously, kept his head down and leaned forward as
if to pick up on the subtleties of the music. He looked to
Court more like a middle-aged musician and less like a
middle-aged hit man. Maybe it had been a while since he’d
worked his “day job.” Next to him, a young thin man played a
tin whistle into his microphone, the guitarists strummed and
sang in harmony, and the crowd of sheep went wild. Court
couldn’t make out many of the words of the song, but it had
something to do with a beautiful young woman and a bad
potato harvest and husband dead from drink.
Court finished his stout and headed out the door.
Chapter Two
Dougal Slattery said good-bye to his band mates at eleven
thirty, covered his thick white hair with a Donegal wool
walking cap, and left the Oliver St. John Gogarty with his
drum in its leather case hanging over his shoulder. It was a
cold but clear evening, like a thousand other nights he’d
played in the bar, and also like most other nights, he
fancied a pint before heading back to his flat. There were
three dozen pubs within a few minutes’ walk, but his flat
was a mile away on the other side of Pearse Station. He’d do
what he usually did: head to his local watering hole for a
nightcap.
Slattery walked with a limp, a bad knee. Actually, a bad
knee and a worse knee, but limping on both legs was out of
the question, so he leaned into the better of the two
weakening joints, his thick body lumbering on through the
cold night.
It took the big Irishman nearly thirty minutes to make it
to the Padraig Pearse, named after the Irish Catholic leader
executed by the British in the 1916 Easter uprising. It was
a staunch Irish Catholic pub, photos and relics of the
Rebellion decorated the windows of the small establishment.
Dougal limped in, placed his coat and his bodhrán in a
corner booth, and headed to the bar for the pint of Guinness
already being poured from the tap.
Court Gentry found a darkened doorway and sat down on the
stoop. He’d done more walking today than he’d done in
months, and he was surprised to feel the ache in the muscles
of his thighs and his calves and thought he sensed a faint
sting where the bullet had torn into his right leg the
previous December. He wished he had a Vicodin, but he knew
he couldn’t be doped up and operational at the same time, so
he just sat there and stared at the front door of the pub
across the street. Tonight was reconnaissance only; he’d
follow his target home and then assess where and when to act
afterwards.
The Padriac Pearse it was called. A tiny saloon by the
looks of it from the outside. Probably Slattery’s regular
haunt, seeing how he’d made a beeline here past countless
other opportunities to sit and drink. There were more bars
per capita here in Dublin than any city in the world. The
Irish loved their pubs, and Court was not surprised to find
himself spending a portion of his evening watching the front
door of a tavern, waiting for his target to down a couple of
brews.
Gentry rose stiffly to his feet. He wanted to move his
muscles, he was cold as well as sore, and he needed a toilet
or a back alley. He knew the most reasonable place for a
young local such as himself to be caught taking a piss would
be the narrow passage alongside the Padraic, so he crossed
the empty street and headed into the dark. Once there, he
sniffed his way to a wall beside some rubbish tins, undid
his belt, and then quickly retightened it. A noise farther
down the alley had caught his attention: two men exiting a
back door, a shaft of light fifty feet down from him, and
the sound of other men talking from inside the building. The
men went to a back wall and pissed, then returned inside a
minute later with no idea a stranger stood in the dark
nearby.
It was clearly a back door to the Padriac Pearse that
they’d passed through. So the pub was much larger than Court
had originally thought. He did his business against the
brick wall and then walked to the back door. On the other
side he heard the cracking of a pool cue against a cue ball
and gruff men’s voices audible but unintelligible. Looking
ahead, Gentry saw the back alley gave access to a side
street, and he wondered if Slattery had already left the bar
via this route. Perhaps he’d even made the tail on him, but
Court had seen no hint of that at any point in the half-hour
walk from the Temple Bar.
Shit. Gentry knew he either needed to knock off the
surveillance tonight, try again tomorrow, or head into the
pub and take a look to see if his man was still there. The
danger of being compromised in a tavern this large would be
minimal; it sounded as if there were dozens inside, and the
Gray Man knew how to melt into his surroundings indoors as
well as outdoors. He headed back to the front door, tucked
his neck deep into his denim jacket to make himself an inch
shorter, and then pushed open the front door of the Padriac
Pearse.
Gentry entered the pub and immediately knew he’d made a
grave mistake. It was incredibly small. The pool area he’d
heard from the back was shut off with an access door against
the back wall of the tavern with a large sign that said
Members Only. The room Court had entered contained just a
small bar, three tables, and a few snugs along the wall. He
strolled to the bar and took a stool, did not turn his head
left or right, just pulled out his wallet and stared
straight ahead at the bottles behind the bar. He felt the
eyes of the dozen or so patrons, but he did not yet know if
Slattery was in the room with him.
There was a hard edge to the pub and its clientele, which
Court sensed immediately. Malevolence filled the air.
This was no place for strangers.
Finally he glanced up into the mirror behind the bar.
Every man in the pub, Dougal Slattery and his two young
mates seated with him included, stared at him through the
glass.
Tough crowd, Gentry thought.
A sign taped to the mirror caught his eye: No Singing
Allowed.
Tough joint.
Shit.
The bartender eyed him for a long moment over his
newspaper, finally laid it down, and raised his red eyebrows
slightly.
“Pint of Guinness,” Court said.