The Thirty-One Kings Read online




  THE

  THIRTY - ONE

  KINGS

  RICHARD HANNAY RETURNS

  ROBERT J. HARRIS

  PEGASUS BOOKS

  NEW YORK LONDON

  To the 78ers – my own personal Die-Hards

  His thoughts had been dwelling on his reunion with friends. Those friends would all be scattered. Sandy Clanroyden would be off on some wild adventure. Archie Roylance would be flying, game leg and all. Hannay, Palliser-Yeates, Lamancha, they would all be serving somehow and somewhere.

  JOHN BUCHAN, Sick Heart River

  CONTENTS

  PART ONE: THE PILGRIM’S ROAD

  1 A Message from Icarus

  2 The Stranger on the Train

  3 The Imaginary Ex

  4 The Eccentric Bibliophile

  5 Encounter with a Wing Three-Quarter

  6 Shell Game

  7 The Flight of the Blessed Antonia

  8 A Sporting Chance

  9 The False Prisoner

  10 The Special Reserve

  11 Beside The Still Waters

  PART TWO: THE CITY OF LIGHT

  12 A Knight Errant

  13 The Last Guardians

  14 The Conjurer

  15 The Blighted Spirit

  16 The Oracle

  17 Scavenger Hunt

  18 A Matter of Kings

  19 The Host of Heaven

  20 The Hunting Party

  21 The Return of Odysseus

  22 The Final Beginning

  Author’s Note

  PART ONE

  THE PILGRIM’S ROAD

  1

  A MESSAGE FROM ICARUS

  We were hiking through the familiar landscape of my childhood when the sound of an aeroplane changed everything. That reverberation in the distant air brought back memories very different from my boyhood in the Scottish Lowlands, before my father moved us all to South Africa. It reminded me of a time many years ago when I had fled through these hills as a fugitive from justice, chased by the police and by agents of the Black Stone, who were the real perpetrators of the murder of which I stood accused.

  Now, in June of 1940, my circumstances were very different. For one thing my wife Mary was walking at my side, the bright northern sun gleaming on her fair hair, swinging her arms as carelessly as a schoolgirl on the first day of a summer holiday.

  For another, I was as far from being a wanted man as it was possible to be. Several times in the past I had been flung into the most extraordinary adventures, such as when the doomed Scudder waylaid me at my front door and pitched me into a deadly cat-and-mouse game with the Black Stone. More than once during the Great War, Sir Walter Bullivant had summoned me from the front lines in France to be sent off on a perilous mission across enemy territory. But now that a fresh conflict had broken out, it appeared that no one required the services of Richard Hannay.

  Upon the declaration of war with Germany, I had immediately telegraphed the War Office, asking that my commission might be reinstated so that I could play a full part in the struggle to come. When this appeal met with no reply I wrote directly to Sir Walter Bullivant’s successor at the Foreign Office, Lord Charnforth, setting forth my qualifications and experience at greater length than I felt comfortable with, as it goes against the grain to sound my own trumpet.

  The dispiriting reply I received was signed by a subordinate I had never heard of and was couched in the most bland and bloodless language. In short it advised me that a large number of requests from former service personnel were currently being processed and that it would require a considerable time to give them all proper consideration, especially in view of more pressing concerns.

  My attempts to contact Lord Charnforth directly by phone were rebuffed at every turn by an impenetrable wall of secretaries and minor functionaries who were bent on preventing his lordship from being disturbed by anyone other than the king or the prime minister. I was advised repeatedly to ‘bide my time’.

  Bide my time! With Europe going up in flames!

  What had been loosed upon the world was not, as the poet warned, mere anarchy, but a dreadful iron order that crushed all under the wheels of its relentless advance. Nations to the east and the north had fallen before its lightning aggression and now France, whose mighty army we expected to stand as a bulwark against the coming storm, had crumbled before it. Armour and manpower were flooding through her shattered defences like water through a collapsing dam.

  And here was I, as useless as a sword left rusting in the scabbard.

  When I could bear inaction no longer, I sought to soothe my frustrations by getting far away from the brass hats in London. Mary insisted on joining me, declaring that I was not to have all the fun while leaving her in the clutches of the local Ladies’ Literary Circle. She added that this would be an opportunity to visit friends in Scotland we had not seen in ages.

  Tramping through the country where once I had played, fished in the streams, swum in the quiet pools, I hoped to find the calm I so ached for. But today, instead of being comforted, I found my thoughts turning to the very different fate of one of my oldest friends whose recent death haunted me like a melancholy ballad.

  Mary’s voice broke in on my solemn reverie. ‘You’re thinking of Ned Leithen again, aren’t you?’

  Though she was many years younger than I, she had always been the wiser of us two. ‘Do you always know what I’m thinking?’ I asked in surprise.

  ‘Not always, but when I see that pained crease form between your eyebrows, I can be pretty sure your mind is on thoughts of lost friends. I saw that look many times after the last war whenever you were remembering Peter Pienaar or Launcelot Wake.’

  ‘I had no idea I was so transparent.’

  ‘Only to me, darling. Besides, it was just a few days ago you met with Lamancha, Palliser-Yeates and the others for your private memorial. It’s the sort of occasion it takes you a while to shake off.’

  Indeed it had been only five days since that gathering in London where we toasted the memory of our late friend Edward Leithen. A noted lawyer and respected MP, Leithen had enjoyed his own share of adventures over the years, but the damage done to his lungs by a gas attack in the Great War had proved to be a slow killer, dogging his footsteps until his doctor gave him no more than a year to live.

  Rather than spend the remaining months in comfort, Leithen determined to die on his feet and trekked off into the northern wilderness of Canada in search of a lost soul in need of rescue from more than the viciousness of the Arctic climate. That mission accomplished, Leithen had spent his final days among a brotherhood of missionary priests serving a native tribe devastated by a virulent outbreak of fever.

  ‘It’s true,’ I admitted. ‘I can’t help reflecting on the contrast between Ned’s final quest and my pleasant walking tour of Dumfries and Galloway.’

  ‘Speaking for myself,’ said Mary, ‘I’m perfectly happy not to contend with freezing blizzards and mountains of ice. Remember, Dick, he knew his time was up, whatever he did. You’re in the best of health with many good years ahead of you.’

  ‘Yes, but what sort of years? Am I going to carry on comfortably tending to the garden, checking the livestock, seeing to repairs around the house? There was a time I did want that, resisted any efforts to drag me away from the good life we’ve made together. But not now, not while other men are placing their lives at the ultimate hazard.’

  ‘You’ve done more than your share, you know that,’ said Mary. ‘But I don’t doubt that a call will come.’

  ‘When?’ I demanded impatiently. ‘Archie Roylance is back in uniform, game leg and all. Lamancha is a member of the War Cabinet with responsibility for munitions. Nobody seems to know where Sandy is, but I’ve no
doubt he’s off on some mad jaunt aimed at bloodying Hitler’s nose. And me? By the time my call comes I’ll be too decrepit to answer it.’

  ‘Don’t be ridiculous, Dick,’ Mary responded with a chuckle. ‘You may have a few grey hairs, but you haven’t exactly gone to seed.’

  ‘Oh no? Let me tell you something. Just last week I ran into that dull fellow Welkins.’

  ‘What, the podgy banker?’

  ‘Yes. And do you know what he said to me? He suggested that I take up golf. I ask you, do I look like a man who’s so far gone that he’s ready to take up golf?’

  ‘No, not yet.’ Mary laughed. ‘But if you want to stave off that awful day, you can stay in shape by keeping up with me - if you’re up to it.’

  She tripped off through the heather, so fleet of foot one would have thought the pack on her back weighed nothing at all. I hooked my thumbs through the straps of my own pack and followed as keenly as a man in an old folk tale chasing fairy lights through the gloaming.

  For four days we had enjoyed the invigorating freshness of the air sweeping in from the Irish Sea and the unfailing hospitality of the local cottagers. Each morning we were sent off on a hearty breakfast of ham and eggs, while any daytime stops were met with buttered scones and treacle biscuits washed down with mugs of coarse India tea brewed strong enough for a mouse to walk on. And at night, of course, there was always the obligatory nip of whisky before settling into a rough bed for a welcome sleep.

  It had rained heavily in the night but the morning sun had burst through the clouds to cast a bright sheen over the freshly washed landscape. Fed by the overnight rain, the streams bounced and gurgled over pebbles and rocks, as excited as children escaping from school. As the sun slanted towards the west, the cries of plovers and curlews echoed off the hills and the breeze carried a tang of burning peat from the hearth of a far-off cottage.

  All at once, as if the musical piping of the birds were the introductory notes of an accompanist, Mary began to sing ‘Cherry Ripe’, just as she had when I came across her for the first time in the garden at Fosse Manor. It was then that she had identified herself as my contact with instructions from Sir Walter Bullivant. I had been gladly following her orders ever since.

  Her song was cut short when we caught the noise of an engine approaching out of the eastern sky. The sound reminded me of how my enemies had once used a plane to pursue me across this very landscape. The memory quickened my pulse and I felt my heels itching to take flight. It was a ridiculous reaction, given that I was no fugitive, but a respected war hero living in comfortable retirement. And yet my instincts told me clearly that something was up.

  ‘Look, he’s turning this way,’ said Mary, shielding her eyes against the sun to examine the approaching plane.

  I could see now that it was a two-man biplane, the two wings fixed together with an arrangement of struts and wires. It wasn’t unlike the plane Archie used to take me up in to reconnoitre the German positions before their big push of 1918. The pilot had completed his turn and was now flying directly towards us.

  ‘Yes,’ I agreed, ‘it’s almost as if he were looking for us.’

  Mary laughed at my wary tone of voice. ‘Dick, I hardly think with all that’s happening in France, anyone would spare an aeroplane to seek out a pair of ageing hikers.’ She squinted at the approaching craft and pursed her lips. ‘It looks like a Tiger Moth. A DH.82, probably, with a de Havilland Gipsy III hundred and twenty horsepower engine.’

  I knew she had been considering a position with the Observer Corps, which required the ability to accurately identify aircraft at a distance. To that end she had made an extensive study of aircraft design, both ours and those of the Germans. I also knew she had no intention of taking up such a post so long as I was forced to remain inactive, knowing that it would only exacerbate my own chafing frustration.

  While I didn’t have her knowledge, my eyes were just as keen. ‘I don’t see any markings on it,’ I noted.

  ‘No, it’s a civilian plane,’ said Mary, ‘but the RAF are drafting them in to use as trainers.’

  ‘Yes, I can see it’s a two-man job,’ I said. ‘But it looks like there’s only the pilot aboard. You know, I swear he’s waving at us.’

  ‘Probably just being friendly,’ said Mary. ‘I don’t think I could be that casual while flying. I would keep thinking of Icarus flying too close to the sun and his wings melting.’

  ‘Icarus’s wings were made from wax and feathers,’ I said. ‘I’m sure that crate is fashioned out of something more durable.’

  Even as I spoke, there came a dull boom, and a gust of smoke blossomed from the rear of the approaching plane. Immediately it began to sway and buck. As it roared directly over us we could see the pilot struggling desperately with the controls.

  He plunged so low over the nearest hill that he panicked the sheep grazing there and put them to flight. As the plane disappeared over the hill, we raced up the slope as fast as our legs would carry us with our packs bumping against our backs. We were mounting the crest when we heard the sickening crump of the aircraft striking the ground.

  We scrambled down the other side towards the wreck, fragments of loose scree flying up from our heels as we descended. The wheel struts were crushed, the fuselage was cracked in two, and the pilot lay slumped over the controls. As we drew closer I could see sparks sputtering from the electrics and smell the dangerous stink of petroleum in the air.

  ‘Stay back!’ I warned Mary.

  She ignored my advice and followed me at a run to the plane. When we reached the pilot I undid his safety harness and the two of us hauled him out of the cockpit. Supporting him between us, we hurried to a safe distance. As soon as we laid him out on the ground, there came a stomach-wrenching blast as the fuel tank exploded, setting the ruined craft ablaze.

  I snapped loose the strap of his leather flying helmet, pulling it off along with his goggles. The face that stared blearily up at me was youthful, and from its pallor and the blood oozing from his mouth, I could tell he had suffered terrible internal injuries from the impact of the crash.

  As Mary yanked open his heavy flying jacket to ease his respiration, he gazed at me with a glint of recognition in his eyes.

  ‘General Hannay!’ he croaked.

  Somehow my intuition had been correct. He was looking for me.

  ‘Rest easy,’ I cautioned him. ‘We’ll find a doctor and get you to a hospital.’

  He shook his head and took a feeble grip on my arm. Face contorted in agony, he forced out a hoarse jumble of words: ‘London trails . . . latest Dickens . . . missing page . . .’

  I felt his fingers slip from my arm, as if he had summoned the last of his strength to deliver this incomprehensible message.

  ‘Please don’t strain yourself,’ Mary pleaded, gently brushing the sweat-stained hair from his brow.

  I could hear in her voice that she was as aware as I that the young man was a goner. However, as a spasm of pain shook his body, he made a further effort at speech. If his words so far had been enigmatic, his final exhortation was utterly baffling.

  ‘Thirty-one kings,’ he whispered with his dying breath. ‘Find the thirty-one kings!’

  2

  THE STRANGER ON THE TRAIN

  I felt for the pilot’s pulse as his eyes fixed sightlessly on the sky from which he had fallen. Turning to Mary, I sadly shook my head. She gazed down pityingly at the young man.

  ‘Dick, what on earth was he talking about? I can’t make head nor tail of it.’

  ‘Given the condition he was in, he might just have been raving,’ I said dubiously. ‘And yet he obviously knew who I was.’

  ‘You were right all along,’ she agreed. ‘He was looking for you. So that must be some sort of message, however garbled.’

  I closed the young pilot’s eyes and we straightened up. I saw Mary’s gaze drift towards the burning wreckage of the crashed Tiger Moth and the plume of acrid smoke that floated above it. Her eyes narrowed and her mouth
took on an atypically grim cast. I knew at once that she was thinking of our son Peter John who was now a pilot in the RAF flying sorties across the Channel.

  It seemed only fitting that he - who so loved birds of prey that he had raised and trained several of them - should have become one himself. The terrible difference was that the quarry he hunted had talons of its own with which to strike back.

  I knew that if Mary did take a post with the Observer Corps she would not simply be scanning the skies for enemy aircraft. She would, whether consciously or not, be keeping watch for the safe return of her son.

  With an effort she tore her eyes away from the scene. ‘Do you think this was just an accident?’

  ‘It’s too much of a coincidence to swallow,’ I said. ‘I’d bet a pretty penny the plane was sabotaged.’

  Before we could speculate further a voice hailed us from a hilltop to the north. A shepherd in a tartan bonnet was shaking his crook at us to get our attention. I waved back and he loped down the hillside towards us with a pair of excited collies scampering after him.

  When he reached us he paused to catch his breath and stared down grimly at the pilot. ‘When I saw yon plane drappin’ oot o’ the sky, I kent well there was little hope for the man that flew it. There’s enough o’ they laddies lost o’er in France wi’oot this.’ He removed his bonnet as a mark of respect and stroked his shaggy beard at the tragedy of it. ‘It’s doonricht lamentable.’

  ‘We’re strangers around here,’ I told him. ‘Can you contact the local authorities to come and take care of him?’

  ‘Aye, Dougal Mackie’s place is no far off,’ said the shepherd. ‘He’s had a phone put in, swell that he is. I could fetch the polis on that.’

  I indicated to Mary that we should be on our way and we started off at a brisk pace.

  ‘Where are ye off tae?’ the shepherd called after us. ‘The polis might ask efter ye.’