Sanders saw Treece glance quickly at him and Gail. Treece looked uncomfortable, eager to change the subject.
“Leave it be, Cloche. All you need know is that I’ll not let you get those drugs.”
“What a pity,” Cloche said. “The enemy is there and you will not fight him. Are you worried about your little kingdom on St. David’s? I have no designs on that.”
Treece said nothing.
“Very well,” Cloche said at last. “With you or without you, the result will be the same.”
Two men moved out of the darkness and stood behind Cloche. Each carried a crossbow, loaded and cocked and pointed at the door. Cloche took a small bag from one of the men behind him. He held the bag by the bottom and flung its contents toward the door. Three linen dolls, each with a steel feather-dart in its chest, rolled in the dust.
Treece did not look down.
The crossbowmen fired.
Sanders slammed Gail against the wall and shielded her with his body. Treece dropped onto one knee and, in the same motion, reached for the shotgun. Sanders heard the arrows buzz through the doorway and clatter against the stone fireplace.
Treece fired three times, holding the trigger down and pumping the action. In the narrow hallway, the sound of the explosions was thunderous and painful.
When the echo of the last explosion had died, and all that remained was a ringing in Sanders” ears, he turned and looked at Treece. He was still on his knee, the gun cocked and ready to fire.
Where Cloche and his men had stood, now there was nothing but the two torches-abandoned, burning scattered pools of spilled oil.
“Hit anybody?” Sanders asked.
“I doubt it. They broke and ran when they saw this.” Treece patted the gun. “I don’t think they expected it.”
Sanders felt Gail trembling and heard her teeth chattering. “Cold?” he said, putting an arm around her shoulders.
“Cold? Terrified! Aren’t you?”
“I don’t know,” Sanders said honestly. “I didn’t have time to think about it.”
Gail touched the knife in Sanders’ undershorts.
“What’s that for?”
“I had it… just in case.”
Gail said to Treece, “Will the police come?”
“The Bermuda police?” Treece stood up.
“Hardly. I told you, they don’t muck about with St. David’s. If they heard anything-and I don’t imagine they did-they’ll pay it no mind. Just the half-breeds shooting each other up. It’s the Islanders that concern me.”
“Why?”
“They’ll have seen, and heard. They’re a superstitious lot. I venture that was part of the purpose of Cloche’s visit, to throw the fear into them.”
“Fear of what?”
“Of him. They see a coal-black man, dressed all in white comt’s what they dress ’em in when they die-coming up a hill in the dark of night with two torchbearers and two crossbowmen: that’s powerful bush. If he comes again, there’s nothing short of holocaust that’ll bring people out of their houses.”
Sanders said, “Should we set watches?”
Treece looked at him. “Watches?”
“You know: four hours on, four hours off… in case he comes back.”
“He won’t be back tonight.”
“How do you know? Christ, you didn’t think he’d dare come up here in the first place!” Sanders was surprised at the harsh sound of his own words. He was challenging Treece, which was not what he had intended, and from the look on Treece’s face, a challenge was not what he had expected. Sanders knew he was right, but he didn’t care. He wanted to expunge his words. “I didn’t mean…”
“If he comes back,” Treece said evenly, “I’ll hear him. Or Charlotte will.”
“Fine.”
“It’s late. There’s a lot to be done tomorrow.”
Treece nodded to Gail, turned, and walked down the hall toward the living room.
David and Gail went into the bedroom and closed the door.
“Bite your tongue,” she said.
“I know.”
“Never mind. There’s no harm in letting him know we’re scared.”
“It wasn’t that. It’s just better to be prepared.”
Sanders pulled off his shorts and climbed into bed.
Gail sat on the edge of the bed and hugged her bathrobe around her. “I can’t go back to sleep.”
“Sure you can.” Sanders stroked her back. He smiled, wondering if the sudden, surprising flood of ardor had anything to do with the danger they had just been through.
When they awoke in the morning, they heard voices in the kitchen. Sanders put on a pair of trousers and left the room.
Treece was sitting at the kitchen table, cradling a cup of tea. Across from him, dressed in a stained sleeveless T-shirt, his mouth full of dark bread, was Kevin. They looked up when Sanders entered the kitchen. Kevin’s face conveyed no sign of recognition, even when Treece said, “You’ve met.”
“Sure,” Sanders said. “Hello.”
Kevin said nothing, but Sanders thought he saw him blink in his direction. He poured himself a cup of coffee and took a seat at the table.
Treece said to Kevin, “Does he have anybody who can use the equipment?”
Kevin shrugged.
“Does he have an air lift?”
“Papers didn’t say.”
“What’s this?” Sanders asked.
“You remember Basil Tupper, the
jewelry-store fellow who paid you a visit? Two crates of diving gear came in on the Eastern flight from Kennedy this morning, addressed to him.”
“How do you know?”