The President's Daughter

The President's Daughter by Jack Higgins Page B

Book: The President's Daughter by Jack Higgins Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jack Higgins
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers, Espionage
Ads: Link
branch of British intelligence. I was in Sicily to arrest in a highly illegal manner a much-wanted Arab terrorist. My partner was with me, Chief Inspector Hannah Bernstein of Special Branch at Scotland Yard. The whole thing turned out to be a setup. They took mebut left Hannah to report back to my boss, Brigadier Ferguson. What about you?”
    “I was on a painting holiday in northeast Corfu on the coast, and on my own because I prefer it that way at the moment.”
    “You’re French,” Dillon said.
    “That’s right. I was painting at the beach when the one called David, David Braun, appeared, with another called Moshe. They packed up my clothes, and picked me up with no explanation. The rest you know.”
    “There’s got to be a reason,” Dillon said. “I mean, what’s special about you? Tell me about yourself.”
    “Well, my father was General Comte Jean de Brissac, and a war hero. He’s been dead for some years. My mother died a year ago and I still haven’t got over that. It means I am now Comtesse de Brissac. The title goes that way. From my mother or my father.”
    “But nobody would snatch you for that reason,” Dillon told her.
    “I am also wealthy. Perhaps they want a ransom.”
    “That could have made sense, except that it doesn’t explain why they’ve snatched me.” He poured some more tea. “Look, from what this character Judas said to me, they’re some sort of Jewish extremist group.”
    “Which makes it even more absurd. I have no Jewish connections.” She frowned. “Our family lawyer in Paris, Michael Rocard, is Jewish, but what’s that got to do with anything? He’s been a lawyer to the de Brissacs for at least thirty years. The cottage I rented in Corfu is his.”
    “Is there anything else?” Dillon demanded. “Anything in your life? Come on, girl.”
    “Not that I can think of.” But there was a great reluctance there and he seized on it at once.
    “Come on, the truth.”
    So she sighed and sat back. And she told him.
    Dillon was stunned. He walked to the table by the window and helped himself to one of her cigarettes. “Jake Cazalet. That’s got to be the reason.”
    “But why?”
    He sat on the edge of the table as he talked to her. “Just listen and you’ll see the connection.” And he told her all about Sicily and the people who were killed there, then about Judas and the Maccabees, and finally about the Nemesis plan.
    When he was finished, she could only shake her head, her turn to be stunned. “I can’t believe it,” she said. “It’s so awful. All that death, and on such a grand scale.”
    “Personally, I believe Judas is barking mad, but then many extremists are.”
    “But they’re Jewish. You don’t—”
    “You don’t expect Jews to be terrorists? And who was it assassinated Prime Minister Rabin? All it takes is one small, hard, dedicated group. Take Ireland. More than twenty-five years of the bomb and the bullet, thousands killed, hundreds of thousands wounded, sometimes crippled for life, yet at no time has there been more than three hundred and fifty active members of the IRA. The majority of the Irish people hate the violence and condemn it.”
    She frowned. “You’re well informed.”
    There was a question there, and he replied to it. “I’m from Belfast originally. When I was nineteen, I was a young actor in London. My father went home on a visit, got caught in an exchange of fire on a Belfast street, and died from British Army bullets.”
    She said, “And you joined the IRA?”
    “The kind of thing you’d do at nineteen. Yes, Countess, I became a gunman for the glorious cause, and onceyou put your foot on that road there’s no turning back.”
    “But you changed. I mean, you work for British intelligence and this Brigadier Ferguson.”
    “I didn’t have much choice. I had the prospect of a Serb firing squad in Bosnia in front of me or accepting Ferguson’s offer to go and work for him.”
    “Doing the same sort of things you’d

Similar Books

Turning Payne

Chantel Seabrook

The Woman of Rome

Alberto Moravia