"Did you do the taking out yourself? Single-handed, as it were?"
"I was part of it, sure."
"Of the fire team?"
"Of a cutoff group."
"Of how many?"
"We were a pair. Two. Brian and me."
"Brian."
"He was my oppo. Lance corporal."
"What were you?"
"Corporal. Acting sergeant. Our job was to catch them when they ran."
His face had grown a harder skin, Burr noticed. The muscles round the jaw were flexed.
"It was absolute luck," Jonathan said with clean-and-press casualness. "Everyone dreams of taking out a terrorist. We got the chance. We were just
"And you took out three. You and Brian. Killed three men."
"Sure. I told you. Luck."
Rigid, Burr noticed. Rigid ease and deafening understatement.
"One and two? Two and one? Who scored highest?"
"One each and one shared. We quarrelled over it at first, then settled on half each. Hard to tell who bags who in the heat of battle quite often."
Suddenly Burr didn't need to prod him anymore. It was as if Jonathan had decided to tell the story for the first time. And perhaps he had.
"There was this clapped-out farmhouse right on the border. The owner was a subsidies cowboy, smuggling the same cows over the border and claiming farming subsidies both sides. He had a Volvo and a brand-new Merc and this slummy little farm. Intelligence said three players would be coming across from the South after the pubs had closed, names supplied. We hunkered down and waited. Their cache was in a barn. Our hide was a bush a hundred and fifty yards away from it. Our brief was to sit in our hide and watch without being watched."
That's what he likes to do, thought Burr: watch without being watched.
"We were to let them go into the barn and collect their toys. When they left the barn we were to signal their direction and get out unobserved. Another team would throw up a roadblock five miles on, hold a random check, pretend it was all sheer chance. That was to protect the source. Then they'd take them out. Only trouble was, the players weren't planning to drive the weapons anywhere. They'd decided to bury them in a ditch ten yards from our hide. Sunk a box into the ground in advance."
He was lying on his belly in the sweet moss of a South Armagh hillside, gazing through light-intensifiers at three green men lugging green boxes across a green moonscape. Languidly the man on the left rises on his toes, lets go his box and spins gracefully round, his arms extended for the cross.
"So you shot them," Burr suggested.
"We had to use our initiative. We each took one, then we both took the third. The whole thing lasted seconds."
"Did they shoot back?"
"No," said Jonathan. He smiled, still rigid. "We were lucky, I suppose. Get your first shot in, you're home free. That all you want to know?"
"Ever been back since?"
"To Ireland?"
"To England."
"Not really. Neither."
"And the divorce?"
"That was all taken care of in England."
"By?"
"Her. I left her the flat, all my money and whatever friends we had. She called that fifty-fifty."
"You left her England too."
"Yes."
Jonathan had finished speaking, but Burr was still listening to him. "I guess what I