The Silver Stain Read Online Free Page A

The Silver Stain
Book: The Silver Stain Read Online Free
Author: Paul Johnston
Tags: Suspense
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her and she spat in my face. That was enough. I turned my attention back to the weapons canister. Just before I reached it, a grenade exploded in the tree and I was showered by branches, which reduced the force of the shrapnel.
    Stretching up, I cut the shrouds from the canister and it dropped to the ground. It had been damaged and wouldn’t open. I heard a burst of MP40 fire and turned to see another group of Cretans – old men in black jodhpurs and tasselled headscarves, and boys in shorts – crash to the earth. I pulled out my bayonet and inserted the blade in the canister catch. At last it sprang open and I found what I wanted – an air-cooled MG34 with a bipod and plenty of ammunition. I took a good position behind a tree trunk and set up the weapon facing the open ground. Another group of Cretans was advancing towards me, but that wasn’t the first of my problems – it wasn’t even the second.
    The young woman I had shot was on her feet again and charging me, the rifle raised with her good arm, while behind me I saw heavily-built figures slipping through the rows of trees, wearing battledress and slope hats. They were the enemy I least wanted to face. They were the New Zealand Maoris.
    Mavros managed a whispered conversation with the Fat Man in the kitchen, asking him to keep the plants watered if he was delayed.
    ‘What about your girlfriend?’ Yiorgos asked, smiling slackly.
    ‘Call her and tell her I’ve left her for a willowy American.’ Mavros shook his head. ‘Don’t even think about it. I’ll talk to her. And she’s not my girlfriend, she’s the woman of my life.’
    The Fat Man looked like he was going to vomit. ‘Keep in touch, young Alex,’ he said. ‘Maybe you’ll need a sidekick down there. You know how nasty the Cretans can be.’
    In your dreams, Mavros thought. The last time Yiorgos had got involved in a case, he nearly ended up dead.
    ‘Let’s go, fella,’ Luke Jannet called from the saloni . ‘I’ve got a scene to shoot this afternoon.’
    Mavros picked up the small bag he’d filled. Travelling light was essential to him, even if it meant buying clothes – they could always be put on expenses. He made sure he had his laptop and his phone charger. Niki had a tendency to punish him severely if he was out of touch for more than a day.
    ‘So what’s your story, man?’ Jannet asked, after they had crowded into the small lift.
    Mavros looked at him. He was pretty sure Kriaras had passed over the salient details, but for 2000 Euros a day, his client deserved a mini-biography.
    ‘Father Greek, mother Scottish. Degree in law and criminology from Edinburgh, worked in the Ministry of Justice here, set myself up as a missing persons investigator nine years ago. Never failed to find a misper.’
    Jannet raised an eyebrow. ‘Never failed, huh? That’s what your cop friend said. How d’you do that? Keep away from the real hard cases?’
    Mavros had already decided that the director was a dick – the kind of powerful man who got a kick out of needling his minions. ‘I can’t talk about previous cases – client confidentiality. You got that in the States?’
    Alice Quincy’s eyes sprang open, then she looked down in embarrassment.
    ‘Yeah, we got that. We got smart-arses too and I don’t like them. Watch yourself, Alex Mavros.’
    They went out into the sunlight. A long black Mercedes was blocking the street, a chauffeur in a grey suit standing by the rear door.
    A leather-clad man on a powerful motorbike tried to squeeze past the car unsuccessfully. He flipped up his visor and started cursing; something along the lines of rich masturbators being the ruin of Greece.
    ‘Excuse me,’ Mavros said, stepping towards him. On the long list of Athenian pains in the arse, he placed motorbike riders near the top. ‘Have you any idea who you’re yelling at?’
    ‘Should I?’ the biker demanded, his belligerence undiluted. ‘Looks like a pimp with his latest tart to me.’
    Mavros
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