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“Seeing you’s the same.” Roarke’s voice was warm, but he’d had time to recover from that instant of surprise and pleasure. A part of him held back, calculating what this ghost from the dead past might want of him. “Have a seat, Mick, and catch me up.”

“I’ll do that.”

The hotel office was designed to uplift its more pedestrian functions. And as anything Roarke designed, it was as much concerned with comfort as with efficiency. The topflight communication center and equipment were blended into graceful furnishings and stylish wall panels. The ambiance was of an urban exec’s fashionable pied-á-terre.

Mick took a seat in one of the deeply cushioned chairs, stretched out his legs, scanned the room—and Roarke imagined, the fenced value of its contents. Then he sighed and studied the view out the wide glass doors and the stone balcony beyond them.

“Yes, you’ve done for yourself.” His eyes darted back to Roarke, the laughter in them impossible to resist. “If I give you my word not to lift any of your doodads here, will you stand an old friend to a pint?”

Roarke moved to a wall panel and, opening it, ordered two Guinnesses from the AutoChef inside. “It’s programmed to draw them proper, so it’ll take a minute.”

“Been a while since we lifted one together. How long do you think? Fifteen years?”

“There or about.” And the fifteen before that, he thought, we had been as thick as, well, thieves. Roarke leaned back against the table while the Guinnesses were built, but didn’t fully relax his guard. “I’d been told you’d bought it in a Liverpool pub. Knife fight. My sources are usually reliable. So why is it, Mick, you’re not making book in hell?”

“Well now, I’ll tell you. You may recall my mother, God bless her cold, black heart, would often tell me that it was my fate to die with a knife in my belly. She claimed whenever she had a good snootful of the Irish to have the sight.”

“Is she still living then?”

“Oh aye, last I heard. I left Dublin some time before you did, you’ll remember. Traveling here and there, out to make my fortune however it could be made. Doing bits of business, mostly moving merchandise of one kind or another from one place to another place where it might cool off before moving it yet again. Which was what I was doing in Liverpool on that fateful night.”

Idly, Mick opened a carved wooden box on the table beside him and arched his brows at the French cigarettes inside. They were vicious in price, and the use of them banned nearly everywhere a body could go.

“Mind?”

“Help yourself.”

For friendship, Mick took only one rather than palming a half dozen as he would have otherwise. “Now where was I?” he said as he lit it with a slim gold perma-match out of his pocket. “Ah, yes. Well then, I had half the take in my pocket, and was to meet my . . . client for the rest of it. Something went wrong. Port Authority garda got wind, raided the warehouse. They were looking for me, as was the client who got it into his head I’d weaseled on the deal.”

At Roarke’s suspicious frown, Mick laughed and shook his head. “No indeed, I did not. I’d only half my take, so why would I? In any case, I ducked into the pub to think it through and see if I could arrange for some quick and quiet transpo. Getting out was the main thing, what with the cops and the thugs out for my blood. And wouldn’t you know it, while I’m sitting there stewing about losing my fee, about going on the run, a fight breaks out.”

“A fight in a waterfront pub in Liverpool,” Roarke said mildly as he slid two pints of dark, foamy Guinness from the AutoChef. “Who’d believe it?”

“A hell of a one it was, too.” Mick took the beer, pausing in his story to raise his glass to Roarke. “To old friends then. Slainté.”

“Slainté.” Roarke took a seat, tasted the first thick sip.

“Well, I tell you, Roarke, fists and words were flying, and there I was just wanting to keep what you’d call a low profile for the time being. The barman, well, he’s got himself a bat and he’s banging it on the bar and the patrons are starting to whistle and take up sides. Then the two who started it—and I never heard what set them off—draw knives. I’d’ve slipped out at that point, but there was no getting past them without risking losing a slice of something off me person, which I wasn’t willing to do. It seemed wiser to blend with the crowd, which was taking bets and circling. And some of the onlookers got into the spirit and began to punch each other for the fun of it.”

It was easy to picture, and easy to remember how many times they’d started such an evening’s entertainment themselves. “How many pockets did you pick during the show?”

“I lost count,” Mick said with a grin, “but I made up a small portion of my lost fee. Chairs began to fly, and bodies with them. I couldn’t help but get caught up in the thing. And damned if the two who’d started it didn’t end up sticking each other. Mortal, too. I could see that right off by the blackness of the blood. And the smell of it. You know how that whiff of death hits the nose.”

“Yes, I do.”

“Well, most of the crowd backed off then quick enough, and began to disburse like rats leaving a ship. And the barman, he goes to call the cops. So it comes to me, like a flash of light, this one dead man here’s my coloring and close to my build as well. So, it’s fate, isn’t it? Mick Connelly needs to vanish, and how better than to be dead on the floor of a Liverpool pub? I switched IDs with him and ran.

“So Michael Joseph Connelly died bleeding there, as his mother had predicted, and Bobby Pike took the next transpo for London. And that’s my story.” He drank deep, let out a breath of pleasure. “Christ, it’s good to look at that face of yours. We had some times, didn’t we? You and me and Brian and the rest.”

“We did, yes.”

“I heard about what happened to Jenny, and to Tommy and Shawn. It broke my heart knowing they died as they did. There’s only you and me and Bri left from the old Dublin gang.”

“Brian’s in Dublin still. He owns The Penny Pig, and mans the bar himself half the time.”

“I’ve heard it. I’ll wind myself back to Dublin town again, and see for myself one day. Do you go back much?”

“No.”

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