Tag Archives: Duke and Duchess of Windsor

David, Wallis and the Mercenary Chapter Eighty-Five

Previously: Mercenary Leon fails a mission because of David, better known as the Prince of Wales. Socialite Wallis Spencer is also a spy. MI6 makes them a team. David becomes king. David abdicates, they marry and he becomes Bahamas governor. Leon dies and his son Leon becomes a mercenary and makes friends with Nassau street boy.
By April of 1942, Jessie Donohue’s intrigues to have the Duke and Duchess of Windsor dine at Cielito Lindo had come to fruition. During the great escape of socialites from Europe as Germany invaded France, Jessie gave shelter to Lord Sefton, allowing him to stay at Cielito Lindo until he received orders from the crown. Sefton had been a Lord-in-Waiting to David and remained an ally to the duke after the abdication. She pressed Sefton to inform the Duke of Windsor about the grandeur of Jessie’s winter home. She also suggested to her niece Barbara Hutton to insinuate herself into Wallis’ life.
Now Jessie waited with patience in her drawing room seated in a red velvet tufted arm chair next to her Renaissance fireplace. Patience. A virtue she had developed into a fine art.
She heard a commotion in the entry hall. The Windsors had arrived. Her sons Wooly, now twenty-nine, and Jimmy, now twenty-six, had greeted them. They were both handsome. The older Wooly had no spine and the younger had no morals; however, they practiced the highest form of social graces when necessary.
The first voice to echo down the marbled hall was that of the duke. She had heard it enough in the newsreels to recognize it.
One of the boys must have said something amusing. Probably Jimmy. Wooly didn’t have a sense of humor.
As the hubbub became louder, Jessie pulled out her compact and looked in the mirror. She lifted her left hand to pat her jaw.
If only someone could invent a makeup to create the illusion she had a chin. Too late for that.
She picked up a powder puff and daubed a dark shade of beige under her jaw line. Jimmy’s shrill laughter pierced the air. The duke, duchess and entourage was upon her. Jessie forced her best naïve smile upon her face and stood just as the couple entered the room, as she knew they would one day. Jessie had very good connections.
“My dear Mrs. Donohue,” David announced. “Your son has the most remarkable sense of humor.”
She looked at Jimmy and smiled.
“When I introduced myself as the Duke of Windsor, Wooly replied, ‘I am the duke of Cork’.”
Jessie’s jaw dropped. She had never heard Wooly make a joke in his life.
“Don’t worry,” David added. “I know he was referring to his Irish heritage. How clever.”
She glanced at Jimmy who rolled his eyes. Recovering her sense of decorum, she curtsied first to the duke and then to the duchess. While royal command forbade such a greeting to Wallis, Jessie did it any, just to get on the duchess’ good side.
Hooking her arm around Wallis’ elbow, she led her to French doors to her formal garden.
“I want you to meet my dear friends who will be dining with us today.”
Outside were twenty-five people dressed as though they were about to be presented to the King and Queen. Jessie was pleased to see they had practiced their bows and curtsies.
Footmen, costumed for an Austrian operetta, entered, each with a glass of champagne on small silver trays, one for every single guest. After a respectable amount of time the butler opened another set of French doors on the other side of the garden which led to an Italianate dining room. The footmen attended well to each guest.
Jessie placed David next to her, Wallis next to Jimmy while Wooly was hopelessly lost among the other guests.
“I know you are Anglican so I hope you don’t mind I invited the monsignor of our local diocese to offer the blessing.”
“Of course not,” David replied with smile. “We English haven’t burned a priest at the stake in years.”
Jimmy emitted a ruffian’s guffaw which Jessie found inappropriate; but after all, he was her little Jimmy.
The priest performed a short bland prayer, and the footmen served the salad in small bowls from the eighteenth century. Jessie had just started her salad when she noticed the muscles in David’s jaw flex as he masticated his lettuce. She leaned into him.
“I hope you enjoy the tomatoes,” she whispered. “They are grown locally.”
“Good for you.” David daubed his mouth with a linen napkin before adding, “I urge everyone to buy local produce. It helps stimulate the economy, don’t you think?”
Jessie paused to consider his blue eyes. No matter how much he tried with his pleasant demeanor he could not hide their innate sadness. For the first time in many years, she felt a twinge of romance undulate through her body.
“Oh my God, Mummy!” Jimmy exclaimed. “You should see this brooch on Wallis’s shoulder.” He turned to the duchess and smiled. “You don’t mind if I call you Wallis, do you?”
“Of course not.”
She replied in such a gracious fashion Jessie could not tell if Wallis were being sincere or not. Jessie admired that quality in a woman.
“It’s a flamingo made up of emeralds, rubies diamonds—and what are the blue stones?”
“Sapphires,” Wallis filled in as she raised her napkin to her mouth.
“Mummy, you’d just kill to have this flamingo.” He giggled. “Am I telling too many family secrets?”

David, Wallis and the Mercenary Chapter Eighty-Four

Previously: Mercenary Leon fails a mission because of David, better known as the Prince of Wales. Socialite Wallis Spencer is also a spy. MI6 makes them a team. David becomes king. David abdicates, they marry and he becomes Bahamas governor. Leon dies and his son Leon becomes a mercenary.
Sidney didn’t take long to walk the winding road across the hills separating Nassau and the community of black Bahamians. By the time he reached the other side the road was a mere path and the houses reduced to shanties. Dogs roamed the area looking for scraps of food and occasionally fighting when another dog had found a juicy bone. Women sat in their front yards tending huge vats of boiling soapy water to wash their clothes. Wearing his ragged fisherman clothes, he fit in. On the right was an elderly woman stirring a pot of clam chowder with a delicious smell, reminding him of his mother’s cooking. He closed his eyes and thought back to when his mother was alive. He pulled a pence from his pocket and handed it to her. She nodded and filled a soup bowl and handed it to him.
He sat on the ground nearby and closed his eyes again so he could savor the aroma. Sidney pushed the thoughts of his mission from his mind to contemplate whether life in the hills over Nassau might be preferable to the life he was living. His meditation crumbled when he felt another body plop next to him. When Sidney opened his eyes he saw a young man grinning at him.
“I like you,” the boy said. “You’re the only one who has more holes in his clothes than me.”
Sidney cocked his head.
“Don’t mind me. I’m always making bad jokes. I think it’s better to laugh than to cry, don’t you?” When no answer was coming, he stuck out his hand. “They call me Jimbo. Who are you?”
“Sidney.”
“You ain’t from around here. I know all the boys who are scratching out a living. Your parents dead too?”
“Yes.”
“Where you from?”
“Eleuthera.”
“Oh! A Out Islander. You don’t have to worry about food then. You can go fishing.”
“My whole family used to fish,” Sidney offered.
“Did you hear the story about the fisherman who got ate by a shark?” Jimbo asked. “It was years ago.”
“It was my grandfather.” Sidney’s voice was hardly above a whisper.
“Oh.” Jimbo stopped in mid-gulp of chowder. “So that’s why you don’t talk much.”
“Don’t worry about it,” Sidney explained. “Fishermen get used to hours of not talking. It takes our minds off business.”
“You talk good. You get to go to school?” Jimbo asked.
“My father taught me.”
“So, he went to school?”
“No, his father taught him.”
“The one who got ate by the shark,” Jimbo whispered as though connecting the dots of Sidney’s story.
“You don’t need a school to learn if you if listen and force your mind open to new things.”
Jimbo patted him on the back. “You need to meet Leonard Greene. You’re as smart as he is.”
Sidney finished his bowl of chowder. “And who is he?”
“He’s the leader of the Burma Road Boys.”
Sidney didn’t say anything but stood to return the bowl to the old woman. He considered how to learn more about the Burma Road Boys without acting too excited. This was his first lead on his mission, and he didn’t want to disappoint the organization.
“Is he the local preacher?” He chose not to sit.
Jimbo stood instead. “He’s more than a preacher.” He looked around as though checking who might be listening in. “Excuse me. I gotta give granny my bowl.”
When he returned, Sidney thought it best to change the subject a bit. “So, the chowder lady is your grandmother?”
“Oh no,” Jimbo replied. “That’s what everybody calls her. I’m like you. No relatives at all.” He motioned to Sidney to walk down the path. “That’s what Leonard Greene is. He’s like everybody’s father and best friend.”
Sidney decided it was best to continue appearing disinterested. “Where do you sleep? I gotta have a place to sleep.”
“A bunch of us boys have tents deep in the woods.” He pointed to the trees. “The bobbies come run us off every now and then to keep the Bay Street Boys happy. But we always find someplace else.”
“Can I sleep in your tent, just for tonight?”
“Sure. You can meet Leonard Greene. He’s holding a rally at our camp at sunset.”
The sun had just disappeared behind the hills when the camp began to fill with black men who gathered around a big fire. A tall man, dressed in a worn business suit, approached the group and gazed into their eyes. His wrinkled face shined with righteous hope.
“Did all of you work hard today?” Greene’s deep voice resonated around the camp and through the trees.
A discontented grumble arose. Sidney was sure they were all saying no.
“No! You may not have earned a single coin but you worked hard! You worked hard staying alive, keeping hope alive, defending your dignity so it’s still alive!
The negative rumble turned positive bit by bit.
“I guess you’ve heard there’s a new boss man down on Bay Street along with the rest of the rich white boys,” Greene began his speech. “It’s called the American Pleasantville Corporation. Don’t that sound nice? Don’t that sound friendly? And it’s going to create a heap of jobs for all you men and boys out there. Don’t that make you happy? They’re going to hire 2,500 of you to build two British air force bases south of Nassau and Grants Town. You know where that is, don’t you?”
A chant rose up. “Burma Road! Burma Road! Burma Road!”
“That’s right!” Greene replied. “The meanest plot of scrub brush God ever did put on this earth! And they’re going to use your muscle, your sweat, your blood to pull those thorn-infested bushes out so they can build a runway for all those pretty airplanes to land.” He paused to wipe his brow with his handkerchief. “But you don’t mind that, do you? You’re proud you can work hard, ain’t you? That scrub brush ain’t nothing to you, right?”
“Right! Right! Right!”
“But what they’re not going to tell you is that they’re going to pay you only part of what white men get for the same work! And the light-colored folks, who happen to have a white daddy and a black mama, they’re going to be paid more than you!”
“No! No! No!”
“You know the pretty pink building downtown where the government is run? It’s the representatives in that building who decide it’s all right to pay black folks less. And who elects those representatives? The white folks, not you!”
“Not me! Not me! Not me!”
“And why is that? Aren’t all men supposed to vote?”
“Yes! Yes! Yes!”
“So why can’t I vote?” Greene pounded his chest. “Just because I’m black! I’se a man too!”
“I’se a man! I’se a man! I’se a man!”
Sidney, not understanding why, joined in.
“I’se a man!”

David, Wallis and the Mercenary Chapter Eighty-Three

Previously: Mercenary Leon fails a mission because of David, better known as the Prince of Wales. Socialite Wallis Spencer is also a spy. MI6 makes them a team. David becomes king. David abdicates, they marry and he becomes Bahamas governor. The Donohues scheme to meet David and Wallis.
Sidney walked into the secret room of his father’s bedroom closet in their home on Eleuthera. He wondered which weapon to take with him to the meeting of the Burma Road Boys in Nassau tonight. The organization had given him the mission of infiltrating disgruntled black laborers who, according to the whispers on the streets, were up to no good. Sidney’s long slender ebony fingers glided across a collection of various makes of revolvers but in due course pulled his hand away. He was there to observe not obstruct. Anyway, he was among his own people. He felt safe. He also felt like a traitor.
This mercenary business is more complicated than I thought.
To take his mind off the moral dilemma facing him, Sidney went across the room, thinking he would need money to feed himself and to pay for a bed, since the meeting would last late into the night and he didn’t want to cross back to Eleuthera in the darkness. On another table was his father’s treasure trove chest, filled with cold gold coins, pound sterling, half crowns and pence. Then there were bank certificates. His father Leon did not like depositing money into a bank which might create a trail leading back to him. But would it not be just as incriminating if the authorities found all this money in a house on poor Out Islander Eleuthera, Sidney wondered. He shook his head. That was a problem for another day. He grabbed a handful of coins and left the room. Sidney still couldn’t make himself spend the night in the bed where his parents slept.
Going down the hall to his own room, Sidney changed from his beachcomber wear to his old fishing clothes filled with holes and still smelled of fish guts. As he pulled up the pants he frowned. He wasn’t aware of it, but his thighs had thickened. He was becoming a man.
The sun was still high in the sky as he walked down the lane to the rickety old pier. People smiled and waved. The fat boy who once teased him for sounding like a girl—and received in turn a bloody nose—took off his hat and bowed. The community didn’t know exactly why, but Sidney had become a man to be feared and respected.
“All aboard!” Jinglepockets hollered as Sidney walked across the pier.
With ease the young man jumped on board and collapsed on a coil of ropes.
“What a wonderful day for a leisurely trip to Nassau. Not a care in the world.” Jinglepockets winked at him.
They had lost sight of land when Sidney cleared his throat and tried to start a casual conversation.
“You go to Nassau quite a bit, don’t you, Jinglepockets?”
“That’s where they pay the most for the fishes, yes.” He looked at Sidney and smiled. “And you’re not the only one who uses me as a water taxi to the big city.”
Sidney chose his words with care. “Do you ever hear scuttlebutt on the dock?”
“Oh sure. I hear all sorts of things. But a wise man knows when to just hear and when to listen. A man like your papa Leon should have told you that years ago.”
Sidney laughed and stayed quiet until the docks of Nassau appeared on the horizon.
“Okay.” Jinglepockets kept his eyes to the sea. “What is it you want to know?”
“Have you heard of Burma Road?” His mouth went dry.
“Everybody knows about Burma Road,” Jinglepockets started like he had a big yarn to tell. “It ain’t no road at all. It’s a big stretch of scrub brush on the south side of the island. The English who been to Asia say it reminded them of the part of Burma where they built a road one time. Toughest bunch of brush they ever did clear. So they call the land on the south end of the island Burma Road.”
“Oh, I’d heard of it too,” Sidney chimed in. “I just wanted to know what it was and why people were talking about it all the time.”
“The government is interested in it,” the old man told him. “Why, I don’t know and I don’t want to know. You live much longer if you don’t ask questions.”
The fishing boat hit the dock, and Jinglepockets jumped out to tie it up to the mooring. Sidney joined him, stood close and whispered, “Who are these Burma Road Boys?”
“Oh, you don’t want to mess with them.”
“Where are they?”
Jinglepockets nodded toward a low ridge of hills to the north. “Over there, where the poor folks live.”
“Can I get a place to sleep over there for the night and something to eat?”
“Folks gotta eat and sleep. I imagine if you got the money you can get just about anything you want over there.” He grabbed Sidney’s wrist. “Don’t flash those gold coins around. It won’t be healthy.”
Sidney smiled. “Oh, I save those for you, Jinglepockets.”
“Listen, boy, this is serious. I’ve known three generations of your family. Your grandpa was a good man. Your papa was a good man. If you live long enough you’ll be a good man.”
A shadow flew across Sidney then he grinned. “My papa taught me how to take care of myself.” He slipped a gold coin into the old man’s palm. “Be here in the morning to pick me up and I’ll have another coin for you.”
As he turned to walk away, Sidney heard Jinglepockets yell at him. “You be careful! I’m serious. I want my gold coin!”

David, Wallis and the Mercenary Chapter Eighty-Two

Previously: Mercenary Leon fails a mission because of David, better known as the Prince of Wales. Socialite Wallis Spencer is also a spy. MI6 makes them a team. David becomes king. David abdicates, they marry and he becomes Bahamas governor. David and Wallis meet the wheeler dealers over dinner.
Jessie Donohue lounged in her bed past ten o’clock one Sunday morning in December of 1940, which was her usual routine while wintering in Miami. She found, however, waking with a headache and aching arches were becoming the norm for her. Jessie realized she could not remain out after midnight at her favorite haunts drinking and dancing without some physical repercussion. But she so hated missing out on the best society gossip which usually slipped out of drunken lips in the wee hours of the morning.
Reaching over for her silver case on her night stand, Jessie took a cigarette out and lit it. She wondered where that girl with the unpronounceable name was with her breakfast tray and morning edition of the Miami Herald.
Where is that girl? If I could remember her name I’d have her fired.
Just then the door opened but instead of the girl entering with her tray it was her darling son Jimmy, with his usual twinkle in his eyes.
“Here’s your breakfast and newspaper, Mummy,” he announced.
“Oh, I’m so glad it’s you. What happened after I left the party last night?”
Jimmy adjusted the tray over her lap, took the tea rose from his lapel and placed it in her graying thick hair.
“Something quite unusual.” He pecked her on the cheek and then plopped into an upholstered chair next to her bed, throwing one leg over the arm of the chair. “I came straight home to you Mummy instead of with the handsome busboy.”
“Oh, that reminds me I’m quite cross with you.” Jessie sipped her coffee. “It’s cold. Even that awful girl, what’s-her-name, brings me hot coffee.”
Jimmy smiled with a glint of the devil in his eyes. “I was afraid you’d throw the hot coffee at me. You were in such a tizzy last night.”
“As well as I should have been.” She bit into her toast which was slathered with orange marmalade. “Imagine my horror to have Lord Beaverbrook stagger up to my table—of course, he had four or five too many martinis—“
“More like six or seven, but go on.” Jimmy rolled his eyes. “You remember I was right there and heard the whole thing.”
“That’s why I’m telling it to you again.” His mother sniffed. “It’s part of your punishment. Anyway, Beaverbrook, full in his cups, said Lord Mountbatten had told him about your little dinner party for his nephew the Marquess of Milford Haven.”
By this time both of Jimmy’s legs were over one arm of the chair and his head lolled back over the other. “Oh, it was just a joke for goodness sake. Haven is as dull as dish water. The tweedy type you know. I thought he needed something to loosen him up.”
“Imagine, a marquess of the British Empire having luncheon with a roomful of prostitutes.”
Jimmy lifted his head. “They were all very pretty prostitutes. Six boys and six girls who looked like they could have posed for Harper’s Bazaar.”
Jessie wiped a bit of marmalade from the corner of her mouth. “And then you asked him if he wanted to see my collection of bronzes. I’ve never had the least bit of interest in bronzes.”
“You wouldn’t have liked these either.” Jimmy laughed. “When Haven opened the door he saw six men covered in bronze paint posing like they were Greeks.”
Jessie picked up the newspaper, threw aside the news and sports sections to go straight to the society columns in the women’s pages. “Thank goodness Louis Mountbatten has a good sense of humor. He’s a bit of an odd duck himself.”
“So what’s all the fuss?” Jimmy faked a yawn.
“The point is that I had to pretend like I didn’t understand a thing Beaverbrook was saying. You know I don’t care what your predilections are, but they are illegal, and if you ever get into real trouble I’ll have to pretend I didn’t know anything about it.”
“I guess Wooly’s philandering with women is perfectly all right.” Jimmy curled up in a peevish fetal position.
“Your brother Wooly, when he knocked up a girl, had the decency to marry the girl, pay for the abortion and then divorce her.”
“Is that what decency amounts to these days?” Jimmy replied with a sneer. “I’d rather be indecent.”
Jessie without warning sat up in bed as she focused on a particular gossip item. “Shut up. Now this is something really important.”
Jimmy went completely prone in the chair as though he were in a coffin ready to be viewed. “Oh no. If it’s about another one of those tweedy types from England I’ll die.”
“Forget the tweeds. It’s the Windsors.”
“I told you I’m not accompanying you to Nassau. The Bahamas bore me to tears.”
“No, no. They are coming here. Wallis has an impacted wisdom tooth.”
“Is that all?”
“It’s worse than that. The tooth is infected, and the infection has spread to her jaw. She’s coming to Miami for surgery.” She lowered her newspaper for a moment. “I hope they don’t have to remove part of her jaw. It would ruin her looks.”
“I didn’t think she had any looks to ruin,” Jimmy sniped.
“A disfigured Wallis won’t help me break into the Four Hundred,” she murmured.
“Mummy, you have more money than all of the Four Hundred combined. What do you care if they don’t want to be around you? They’re the ones who should be groveling—“
“I don’t grovel,” Jessie snapped. “But a Duchess of Windsor turning into Quasimodo won’t help.” She shook her head. “I must stay positive that the operation will be a success. I can’t control the surgery but I can control how she is greeted when their boat lands.”
Putting her newspaper aside, Jessie stared at her son. “Straighten up. I have a job for you.”
Jimmy sat aright in the chair, but his drooping eyelids revealed he wasn’t happy about it.
“I want you to contact all your friends on the Miami party circuit and tell them to be on the pier when the Windsors land. Encourage them to bring as many people as possible, even if they have to bring all their maids and lawn attendants. Get all your special friends to participate, even those busboys.”
He leaned forward. “This is beginning to sound like fun.”
“Have the street lined all the way to St. Francis Hospital. Order tons of flowers for her hospital room. Put a different name on each bouquet. Plant positive articles in the newspaper columns about them. When they think of Miami I want them to smile.”
“Do you want me to wheedle you an invitation to visit her in her room?”
Jessie shook her head. “No, no. Too soon. Have the biggest flower arrangement sent from us. But we must respect their privacy on this first trip to Miami. Then we wait.”
“You love to wait.”
“Yes, then we wait until they decide to visit friendly Miami on a pleasant holiday. At that time, and not before, we will issue the invitation for them to stay at Cielito Lindo.”

David, Wallis and the Mercenary Chapter Eighty-One

Previously: Mercenary Leon fails a mission because of David, better known as the Prince of Wales. Socialite Wallis Spencer is also a spy. MI6 makes them a team. David becomes king. David abdicates, they marry and he becomes Bahamas governor. Leon dies. His son Sidney mourns his death but joins the ‘organization’.
On the boat trip from Nassau the next morning to Eleuthera after the dinner party at Harry Oakes’ mansion, Sidney sat in contemplation as he watched Jinglepockets steer his fishing boat with one hand in his pockets tickling coins with his fingers. After long thought, Sidney broke the silence.
“You have taught me well, Jinglepockets.”
“You have learned well.” The old man kept his eyes straight ahead. “Which, in the long run, is more important.”
Moments passed before Sidney whispered, “You know, I have to leave now.”
“Yes, I know.” Jinglepockets’ voice was serene. “Just like your father left Joe.”
“My father loved Joe. He had nothing but good things to say about him.”
Jinglepockets glanced over his shoulder. ”Then you don’t know the story.”
“What story?” Sidney leaned forward.
The Eleuthera coast began to peek over the horizon.
“After your father began taking his long mysterious trips, Joe continued to give him free boat rides back home. One time you father stepped onto the pier and tossed a gold coin to Joe and smiled.”
“That was a nice thing to do, wasn’t it?” Sidney scrunched up his face. He didn’t understand what Jinglepockets was trying to say.
“Less than a week later Joe took to his bed and died.”
“What did he die of?”
“Heartbreak.”
“Heartbreak? Are you saying my father giving Joe a gold coin killed him? I think my father did a good thing, to show his gratitude for all Joe had done for him.”
Jinglepockets looked straight ahead. “How do you put a price on years of friendship? One gold coin equals years of loving someone as family?”
“But my father said you must fill the bellies of your family.” Sidney began to feel defensive for Leon.
“Yes, you fill their bellies because they are family and you love them, not pay them off like they were a servant.”
The pier appeared closer and closer.
“This I must think about for a long time,” Sidney whispered.
Jinglepockets laughed. “Don’t think too hard on it. Your father was a young man. Like you. In many ways still a child. And Joe was a proud man. Perhaps too proud.” He tied up the boat when they reached the pier. Giving Sidney a hand onto land, Jinglepockets smiled.
“Me? I like to hear the sound of coins clanging against each other too much. So when you come home after you become a rich man like your father, feel free to toss a gold coin or two my way. Each member of the family is different. Just remember old Uncle Jinglepockets is just a little bit greedy.”
When Sidney arrived at his family home, he noticed the dead plant was askew in its pot by the front gate.
What? Another assignment so soon? Now I understand how my father felt.
Sidney lifted the pot to find a note.
“I’m waiting on the beach behind your house.”
When he walked around the wall Sidney saw her, the blonde who had broken into his home and who had introduced him to the world of the organization. She lay prone on a beach towel wearing a tight red swimsuit.
Sidney sauntered down the sands to the edge of the shore and plopped next to her. He was not sure whether he liked her or not. He didn’t like people who didn’t introduce themselves as etiquette dictated. She slipped an envelope toward him.
“This is for last night. Don’t look at it but just put it in your pocket.”
Sidney did as he told. He watched the Atlantic waves. “You’ve never told me your name.”
“And I’m not going to.”
“Why not? You know my name.” He felt himself becoming peevish.
“That’s because you’re below me on the ladder of the organization—several rungs below. So take my advice. Do what you’re told and you’ll get paid.”
“Did my father know your name?”
“There you go asking questions again. That’s not good for your health.” She leaned back to feel the sun on her face.
She’s older than she tries to look. She must have joined the organization when she was very young, just like me.”
“So how did the job go last night?” she asked.
“The two men were fat, old, loud and talked with their mouths full.”
She smiled and looked at him with condescension. “And I suppose you have perfect table manners, being from Eleuthera.”
“Yes, I do.” His answer came quick. “My father slapped me upside the head if I talked with food in my mouth. He knew I would have to blend into society if I were to become a mercenary.”
“That’s such an ugly word, mercenary.” She returned her gaze to the water. “You’re an independent businessman dealing in making things—unpleasant things—happened. So enough small talk. What did you think of the other guests?”
“I think I liked this count. I can’t remember his name…”
“Alfred de Merigny. Memorize it. He’s important. Why did you like him?”
“Because he had the courage to ridicule the old men.”
“And the duke and duchess, what did you think of them?”
“The duke was brave too. He asked very pointed questions about the casino and the race problem in Nassau. Both the old men fumbled their answers.”
“And the duchess?”
“She was the only one who noticed me,” Sidney replied. “She acted like she had met me before. Maybe she had encountered my father somewhere.”
‘Yes, maybe.” She looked in her beach bag. “Do you have any cigarettes?”
“I’m only sixteen.”
The blonde laughed. “That doesn’t make any difference.”
“I’m not going to smoke.” It was a solemn pronouncement.
“That’s what you say now.” Derision tinged her voice.
“I saw what smoking did to my father. By the time he died I could outrun him.”
“You can’t outrun a bullet.”
Sidney considered the remark heartless. “Then you are not a true mercenary.”
He watched her eyes narrow into little slits.
“Did they talk about the Burma Road boys?”
“And the Bay Street boys as well.”
“Your mission has slightly changed.” Her voice hardened. “We want you to infiltrate the Burma Road boys. This will be very tricky. Mostly we want to know what they are thinking. You will have to become friends with them, a confidante. But ultimately you have to deter them anyway you can from a political uprising. Riots will destabilize the region. We are in agreement with the British Empire on this one point. We want the Bahamas to remain a safe haven for our activities. Also, the Duke of Windsor may try something stupid, like being a hero on the street and catch a stray bullet. This ties into your original assignment.
“Of course.”
“You have no qualms betraying your own kind?” The blonde raised a plucked eyebrow.
Sidney had not thought of that dilemma. He would have to think about it, so he decided on evasion for now.
“The organization is my own kind.”

David, Wallis and the Mercenary Chapter Eighty

Previously: Mercenary Leon fails a mission because of David, better known as the Prince of Wales. Socialite Wallis Spencer is also a spy. MI6 makes them a team. David becomes king. David abdicates and they marry. Leon dies. His son Sidney mourns his death but joins the ‘organization’. MI6 describes their duties in the Bahamas.
Wallis had a headache. If she had not escaped the reconstruction dust at the Government House she knew her head would explode. Her throbbing temples had not abated as she sat at the dining table at Westbourne House in the posh Cable Beach section of Nassau.
Both the host Harry Oakes and his business partner and personal chum Harold Christie smoked large cigars. During the infrequent times they placed their smokes in the ash trays by their plates, they shoved a large bite of roast beef into their mouths, and carried on a conversation while chewing. Wallis was amazed they didn’t choke to death. At the same time, however, her stomach felt queasy.
On one side of her at the table was Oakes’ young wife Eunice who was charming and educated but ultimately boring. For one thing, Wallis did not approve of Eunice’s choice of dark mahogany paneling throughout the house. At least there weren’t any dead animal heads on the walls.
“The grandest thing about Harry being named a baronet was that it increased my chances of meeting a movie star,” Eunice announced in a sweet simpleton voice. “Many people have mentioned to me Nancy looks like Katharine Hepburn.”
Wallis forced a tightly slit smile while glancing at Nancy sitting on the other side of Count Alfred de Merigny.
I met Miss Hepburn and didn’t think much of her appearance at all.
“I especially love English leading men.” Eunice’s eyes twinkled.
“Well,” Wallis replied with a dry enthusiasm, “I hope you meet a star, very soon.”
The duchess turned to the person on the other side of her, Count de Merigny. He was tall, gaunt and almost cadaverous. All these features would make him look dead but the fact he possessed the deepest tan Wallis had ever seen on a man.
“Count, I understand you met the Oakes through your hobby of yachting.” She smiled again. “I wish David and I were able to partake in such a charming pastime, but we’re too busy attending to the affairs of state here in the Bahamas.”
“Yes, we are very fortunate to have two such international luminaries governing us.”
Merigny’s voice startled Wallis. The deep, rich baritone reeked of an accent from some small country hidden in the mountains of Western Europe.
“And you are a very close friend of Nancy.” She paused and looked at Nancy sitting on the other side of the count. “You don’t mind my talking about you to the count, do you?”
“Why, of course not.” The girl giggled.
“Good.” Wallis narrowed her eyes as she returned her focus to Merigny. “She’s very young, isn’t she?”
“Yes, very inspiring to a person approaching middle age, such as I.”
My dear Count, I think you have finished approaching middle age and have arrived at the station with all your baggage. She briefly considered saying it aloud but prudence ruled the moment.
Before Wallis could say another word, David spoke with a genial grace which she knew he used when prying for information.
“Sir Harry, I must commend on your estate,” David smiled so hard his dimples burst out in all their glory. “It reminds me of my own estate in England, Fort Belvedere.”
What a lie. Wallis restrained herself from guffawing. Belvedere was tastefully decorated. Besides that, it wasn’t even his estate anymore.
“Why, thank you, Your Highness.” Oakes had just swallowed a chunk of beef, sparing his guests from seeing it go down his gullet. “Coming from you that is high praise indeed.”
“And your casino, the Rialto, is an equally successful architectural wonder,” David continued.
Uh oh, here it comes. Wallis tapped her mouth with her napkin and returned it to her lap. As they unpacked before dinner, David set forth his ideas about the Rialto’s gambling operation. Oakes was using it to launder money. It was up to us to find out if it were for the Nazis, mob or the organization.
“The Rialto is not a casino,” Christie, with firm hospitality, corrected him. “Casinos are strictly forbidden in the Bahamas.”
“I have embarrassed myself.” David chuckled. “I am so fortunate to have two such esteemed citizens to guide me in my new duties as governor.”
“The Rialto is a high-class supper club. We have a ballroom with a range of top dance bands from around the world performing there.”
“I’m hoping Daddy will book Frank Sinatra.” Nancy twittered. “He’s so dreamy.”
Harry ignored his daughter. “And our restaurant is well known throughout the Caribbean for its cuisine and the views from our terrace.”
“And don’t forget our theater on the top floor.” Harold blew a ring of smoke from his cigar. “We’ve got dance girls that make them Follies Bergere dames look like slobs.”
“I’m sure they do,” Wallis murmured which made Marigny laughed.
“I have no doubt, but Wallis and I were there a couple of nights ago and passed through what was labeled as ‘The Lounge’ where people were undeniably playing blackjack with dealers who were attractive young ladies seductively dressed in tuxedo tops only.”
Oakes shrugged. “The Lounge was designed to give customers the opportunity to have a beverage and smoke while discussing intellectual topics with their friends without distraction.”
“But everyone was at a table playing poker, and I saw money being exchanged,” David persisted.
“Ah!” Christie bellowed smoke from his mouth like a backfire from a large delivery truck. “There’s a difference. In a casino they use chips and cash them in through the business where the gambling occurs.”
“Then you admit there is gambling on the premises.” David leaned back and smiled.
He sounds like a lawyer. Wallis licked her lips. Some of the most fascinating men I ever met were lawyers.
“Well, gentlemen are allowed their vices, aren’t they?” Christie’s eye brows lifted lazily, as though he were giving the hundredth performance of the same play. “For example, if Harry and I were sitting in the lounge swirling our warm brandy, we could have a bit of fun wagering on the color of the dress on the next dame to come through the door. I say red and Harry here says blue and, bam, a lady in red enters. So Harry pays off his debt. Nobody’s business but ours.”
Merigny leaned forward with a very wicked turn of the lips exposed beneath his mustache. “So that’s why I can’t get a free martini during a game.”
Nancy frowned and shook her head. “Alfred, please. You promised to behave tonight.”
“That’s right, Alfred.” Harry forced a laugh. “Stop trying to get free drinks at my place, dammit.”
Nervousness made Eunice erupt into giggles. “Perhaps we could move on to a different topic of conversation.”
“My apologies.” David nodded to his hostess. “I know England can be quite priggish about things like this, but Wallis and I have lived in France the last few years and have noticed, well….”
“A dirty, stinking business, ain’t it?” Harry shoved mashed potatoes into his mouth. “When you went to the Rialto I’m sure you and the Duchess noticed some colored folks eating dinner.”
“Frankly, no.” Wallis stared at Harry with no regrets.
“Must have been a slow night,” Harold interjected.
“Our point is that if the colored person can pay our prices and dress up nice, why we don’t mind taking their money,” Harry explained.
“Like a white linen suit.” I don’t know why I said that. Perhaps it was the man on the Tanganyika Express who saved my life.
“Yeah, sure.” Harold puffed on his cigar. “Them colored like those suits. But they have to have money to buy them. We ain’t running no charity here.”
“Is that the general opinion of the Bay Street Boys?” David asked.
Uh oh, another touchy subject. Wallis ran her tongue across her teeth to ensure no lipstick had stuck to them. During his briefing Greene informed us that the Bay Street Boys’ practice of underpaying the natives might undermine the economic and social balance in the region.
Harold threw his napkin down on his plate. “I don’t know what you’re getting at, Duke; but yes, I’m proud of being a Bay Street Boy. And so is my buddy Harry here.”
“Nothing thrills me so much as a man who is proud of being who he is,” Wallis added in a subdued tone.
Caught off guard, Harold displayed what might be interpreted as an honest expression on his face. “Thank you, ma’am. I appreciate that.”
My God, he took it was a compliment. How stupid could he be?”
“And what is it they call the black men who sweat for slave wages around here?” Merigny’s eyes twinkled. “Ah yes. The Burma Road Boys.”
“Alfred! I don’t know why you want to upset Daddy that way!” Nancy huffed.
Eunice was almost in tears. “I think it’s time for coffee.” She turned her head and called out, “Sidney!”
A young black man in a white servant’s jacket appeared with a tray of coffee cups. He went to Wallis first.
“Would you care for coffee, madame?”
She looked up at the servant to reply but stopped, her mouth agape.
Except for an age difference, this boy looked like the man in a white linen suit I met on the Tanganyika Express. I know it’s been several years but I never forget the face of a man who saved my life.

David, Wallis and the Mercenary Chapter Seventy-Nine

Previously: Mercenary Leon fails on a mission because of David, better known as the Prince of Wales. Socialite Wallis Spencer is also a spy. MI6 makes them a team. David becomes king. David abdicates and they marry. Leon dies. His son Sidney mourns his death but is approached to join the organization.
Before David and Wallis had settled in the Government House on a high hill overlooking Nassau, they noticed the wall cracks left unrepaired by the previous governor. Soon they found the reason for the cracks—termites. Also they decided the furniture wasn’t up to the standards of British royalty.
Within a week a team of contractors invaded the residence, each concentrating on a different problem area. One of them dressed in overalls and a hard hat linked arms with the Windsors to lead them out to the swimming pool filled with debris.
“We should have privacy out here,” the contractor whispered.
David squinted. “And who, exactly, are you?”
Wallis lifted the man’s hat and smiled. “This is Gerry Greene, the young man who recruited me into MI6. Well, not so young any more, but much more fascinating.”
“Where’s the general?” David felt a twinge of jealousy at Wallis’ attention to the agent. None of this was supposed to be for real.
“General Trotter has retired.” Greene smiled. “And he’s moved to somewhere we’ll never find him.”
David knocked twigs off three lawn chairs and motioned to the others to sit.
“The last time we spoke to General Trotter,” David began, “he informed us we were ordered to the Bahamas to determine exactly who this Harry Oates—“
“Oakes.” Wallis touched his arm.
David was disturbed he enjoyed her correction too much. He winked at her. “Thank you, darling. We don’t know who he’s in bed with.”
“Well,” Greene relied, “you’ll be up close and personal with him very soon.”
“What?” Wallis’s eyes widened.
“The Oakes family has graciously extended an invitation for you to stay at their estate Westbourne, one of the most exclusive Nassau neighborhoods, while the renovations are being done on the Government House.”
“I don’t remember making that request.” David frowned.
“I did,” Greene replied, “on your behalf.”
“How kind of you.” Wallis smirked.
“Harry’s quite a boor,” Greene continued. “Evidently he bought himself the title of baronet, so he’s Sir Harry. When he’s overly excited he slips into this rough American accent.”
“I do that myself sometimes,” Wallis observed.
“He does have a charming family. His wife Eunice is half his age. She has all the social graces. She usually summers at the family home in Bar Harbour, Maine. When she learned she would be hosting the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, she flew back immediately with her a lovely sixteen-year-old daughter Nancy. Nancy’s supposed to look like that Hollywood star—oh, what is her name, ah yes, Katharine Hepburn.”
“I met Katharine Hepburn once, when I lived in California with my first husband—“
“Please, dear, no one cares.” David was delighted that he was able to get even for her correction of his pronunciation of Oakes’ name.
“She’s thought to have inherited her father’s devil-may-care attitude.” Greene, used to be interrupted on a regular basis, carried on with typical British aplomb. “When Nancy is in town, she’s been seen with the yachting crowd, particularly in the company of a much older man, Count Alfred de Marigny who gained his fortune through a couple of quick but profitable marriages with heiresses.”
“My kind of guy,” Wallis murmured.
“We’re not sure if he’s in love with the delightful Nancy or her father’s millions. He also has a reputation for his close friendships with members of the Nazi Party.”
“He’s not going to try to kidnap us, is he?” Wallis asked.
David considered her tone to being in mocking apprehension, but sometimes he couldn’t tell when she was serious or not. What concerned him most was that he found that aspect of her personality erotically provocative.
“Oh no. I think Hitler’s given up on that idea and has resigned himself to putting you two on the throne when—as he said—Germany wins the war.”
“Ooh, the crown jewels,” Wallis cooed.
This time David knew she was joking and let out a slight laugh. “Please dear, Mr. Greene doesn’t know that you’re just kidding.”
“Am I?”
“Yes, you are,” Greene replied with confidence. “After all, the duke here has already bought you jewelry that cost more than the crown jewels. Besides I know for a fact you had your hands on the crown jewels once and you returned them like a good MI6 agent should.”
“Worst decision of my life.” She cackled.
“Very clever but we must stay on topic,” Greene continued. “Our main concern with Harry is his ownership of the Rialto, a renowned restaurant, dance club and musical revue agenda. It also has a casino, which is strictly illegal in the Bahamas. Every time the authorities ask him about it, he acts surprised and says if people want to use the tables in the Rialto lounge for a friendly game of poker, who is he to say no. The authorities point out the female blackjack dealers, all wear similar tuxedo jackets with no pants. Harry just nods and says, ‘Yes, they are lovely, aren’t they? I don’t know where they come from’. “
“And you believe that crap?” Wallis lit a cigarette.
“They’ve spent years trying to find a paper trail connecting the casino operation to Oakes, and it isn’t there.” Greene shrugged.
“That sounds pretty smart.” Wallis blew smoke out of the corner of her mouth. “I thought Harry was supposed to be stupid.”
“He is,” Greene replied. “But he has this partner Harold Christie who is the brains of the operation. The problem with Christie is that he has relationships with Meyer Lansky and the rest of the mob.”
David leaned forward. “What about the organization?”
“Oh, I don’t think we have to worry about them. They’re strictly for-hire thugs.”
“So we do have to worry about who hires them,” David pressed.
“That’s our main concern. “ Greene nodded. “Who is Harry working for? And what do they want?”

David, Wallis and the Mercenary Chapter Seventy-Eight

Previously: Mercenary Leon fails on a mission because of David, better known as the Prince of Wales. Socialite Wallis Spencer is also a spy. MI6 makes them a team. David becomes king. David abdicates and they marry. Leon dies. His son Sidney mourns his death but must defend himself against assassins.
Aline awoke early the next morning, anticipating a report from the three dock workers whom she had hired to kill Sidney Johnson in his Eleuthera home last night. All of them were dumb as rocks, but how could they have a problem killing one sixteen-year-old boy who was probably in his bedroom crying himself to sleep because both of his parents were dead? She walked down to the dock, but they were not there. A police motor boat approached the pier. Every stevedore crowded around. Aline listened in on the whispers. Rumors started before day break that three bodies had been found on Eleuthera.
Screams drew Aline closer to the government vessel. Officers lifted three body bags onto the pier and unzipped each one. Several men looked and then ran to the edge of the pier to vomit. When Aline stepped close to see, she muttered obscenities under her breath. Two of them had been beheaded. The one left with a head Aline recognized as the smartest of the group. His eyes stared into the sky, his tongue lolled out of the side of his mouth and his belly was a mush of blood and ripped intestines. She identified the other two headless corpses by their body type. The short, broad-shouldered boy was the least maimed. Just his head was gone. The rest of him looked just fine, except for all the blood that had flowed from the severed neck onto the torso. The third body belonged to the dumbest one. He was overweight and his six-foot frame was clumsy. Not only was his head missing, his midsection was almost dissected by sharp punctures.
This boy must be the devil incarnate.
Family members soon pushed their way through the crowd. A short woman threw herself on top of the beheaded young man. Another woman holding a baby leaned over to touch her child’s face to the bloated lips of the tall man. A third woman scrutinized the bloodied belly of the third victim and shook her head.
“This cannot be my husband. This corpse was a man of violence. My husband was a strict follower of Obeah and never would have participated in any activity that would end in such devastation.” She looked around. “Where is the high priestess Pooka? She will know. She will know.”
No she won’t.
Aline tried not to smile as she turned to walk to the Rialto. She was having lunch with her father Harry Oakes, and she needed a good reason to explain why Leon Johnson’s son was still alive. She heard the church bells toll twelve. She had to hurry.
Think fast. Even Harry won’t fall for just any story.
When she arrived at the Rialto terrace restaurant, Harry already was there, gulping a beer and wiping the sweat from his greasy brow. He turned his head and saw Aline walking towards him. Jumping up, he ran toward her, placing his big hammy palms on her shoulders. She knocked them off.
“The kid, is he dead? Did your guys do the job?”
Aline walked past him and sat at the table. “It’s not my fault. They told me they were the three best goons on the dock.”
“So they didn’t kill him?” Harry came up and leaned in to whisper.
“I just saw the bodies.”
“The bodies? Whose bodies? Not the boy, right?”
“The goons’ bodies. Two of them were beheaded and the other disemboweled.”
“So the kid is okay?” Harry almost missed the chair as he sat.
“He’s not okay.” She took out a cigarette to light it. “The little monster killed all three of them.”
“Oh, thank God.”
“Harry, you’ve got to lay off the booze. You’re not making any sense.”
The waitress came up and took their orders. Harry asked for another beer while Aline wanted a fruit salad and red wine. Harry watched the waitress walk out of earshot.
“I screwed up big time.” His voice was shaking. “I misunderstood the orders. The commander told the next in charge who called me. It was a bad connection.”
“Cut the crap, Harry. The less I know about the big shots the better. Remember, that was one of the first things you told me.”
“I thought they said to kill all the Johnsons.” His eyes were wide in fear. “You weren’t in Lisbon to kill Leon but to make sure nobody would kill him. See, the Nazis wanted to kidnap the duke and duchess but they knew as long as Leon was around they didn’t have a chance. And to keep Leon happy, his family had to be safe.”
“So how the hell did you screw that around to kill all of them?” Aline’s low opinion of Harry was sinking fast.
“Like I said, it was a bad connection. I had too much to drink. My wife was on my ass about something.”
“Have you always been this stupid?”
The waitress appeared with Harry’s beer and Aline’s wine and salad.
“Are you sure you don’t want anything to eat, sir?” the waitress asked.
“Naw. My stomach is already tied up in knots.”
After she left, Aline pushed a pineapple chunk into her cheek. “They don’t blame me for this foul-up, do they? I was just following orders.”
“They know.” Harry slammed back his beer. “It’s my ass on the line. You’ve got to recruit the son immediately. If he’s as tough as you say, we’ll be okay. Oh, and make up a really good lie about who killed his father. Tell him it was the Commies, the Nazis, the British, hell, tell him it was the Windsors’ idea. And for God’s sake don’t even let him think it might have been us.”
“Of course not. I’m not ready to die yet.”
By late afternoon Aline arrived on Eleuthera and walked down the sandy road to Sidney’s house. She pulled her hair back and tied a scarf around her head. She wore a ragged blouse, dirty skirt and sandals. She didn’t want to be noticed. She tugged on the handle to the gate and found it unlocked.
Looking down she saw the dead plant in the pot. She was the one who sent messages for Leon through Pooka who put them in the pot. She’d have to find someone new, someone less nosey.
Aline slipped in and walked to the front door. She was surprised to find it unlocked. Stepping inside she called out hello, but no one answered. First she saw a trail of smeared blood leading away from a darkened pool on the living room tiled floor. A kerosene lamp lay shattered next to an overturned end table. Looking to her right, she saw another smeared path beginning at the kitchen door where there was second pool of blood. On the kitchen wall was a blotch of blood, probably where one of the heads hit.
She walked to the bottom of the stairs. Her eyebrows went up when she saw no blood. She had counted three bodies on the pier that morning. How did the boy get his third victim out of the house? Going upstairs she looked down the hall to see the third pool of blood. Aline went to the room and found a path of red leading to a window. She looked out of it and saw three trenches in the sand leading to different areas on the beach.
One thing the boy needed to learn was how to cover his tracks. Other than that, bravo.
She turned to go back down the stairs. Aline alit from the bottom step when she looked in the door to see a short, slight Bahamian boy wearing soiled clothes covered with fish guts. He carried a bag of the catch of the day. She noticed the tight, hard ball of muscle in his bicep.
“What are you doing in my house?”
“You sound like a girl.”
“You sound like a bitch. What are you doing in my house?”
“You should learn to lock all the doors when you leave, even if you are upset and tired.”
“You need to mind your own business.”
“I knew your father.”
“Are you with this organization he told me about?”
“Yes.”
“Go to hell.”
“I have money for you.”
“I don’t care.”
“The organization knows the Nazis had your father killed. We were too late to save him. We heard about your mother. Very sad. We learned late last night the Nazis hired three Bahamian thugs to kill you. Again we were too late to defend you, but you seemed to have handled the situation yourself quite well.”
“You always seem to be late.”
“I’m on time today. I can have men out to this house tonight and clean it up, paint it and no one will know what happened.”
“Are they going to wipe me out too?” Sidney’s high voice went down an octave with cynicism.
“My dear, you must realize you’re on our side.”
He walked to the kitchen with his bag of fish. “I’m not your ‘dear’.”
“The organization wants to be your ‘dear’.” Aline followed him.
“I’m not interested.” He dumped the fish in the sink, took out a knife and started cutting their heads off with resounding thuds.
“We think your father trained you well.”
“My father did only what every father should do. Teach his son how to survive in this world.” He kept his back to Aline, who could not help but notice his shoulders were broad and thick.
“We pay well. You can wear white linen suits, like your father. You will see the world, eventually.”
“I‘m not interested.” He started slitting the fish open and gutting them.
“You will have just one job at first—protecting the Duke and Duchess of Windsor while he’s the governor of the Bahamas.”
Sidney stopped in mid-slice when she mentioned those names. His memory was blurry on this point but he was sure his father told him once the Windsors were like their family, and he had to make sure their bellies were filled. He considered his decision a long moment then slit open another fish.
“Very well. I accept. Give me the money you owe me. And tell those men to arrive soon. I don’t want to lose any sleep listening to them stumble around the house. I have to go fishing tomorrow.” He turned to point his knife at her. “And tell them I don’t want any paint on the furniture.”

David, Wallis and the Mercenary Chapter Seventy-Seven

Previously: Mercenary Leon fails on a mission because of David, better known as the Prince of Wales. Socialite Wallis Spencer is also a spy. MI6 makes them a team. David becomes king. David abdicates and they marry. The Windsors escape oncoming Nazis. Leon shadows their every move. Leon dies. His son Sidney mourns his death.
As Sidney Johnson went back into his house after watching his mother march into the sea to die, he felt a lump rise in his throat. In one day he lost his father and his mother.
Go ahead and cry. No one will see you. No one could blame you. But I never saw my father cry, even when Grandma Dotty died. When he saw his father killed by a shark, what did he do? He looked for a job to feed his family. When I was a small child the other boys made fun of me because I talked like a girl. When I cried they only laughed more. When I hit back they stopped laughing. I will never cry again.
He washed the dishes. His grandmother told him to wash dishes as soon as he finish the meal or else all kinds of disgusting bugs would crawl over them. Housework gave a certain order to life. The lump in his throat went away. He considered wandering up and down the dark beach straining for any sign of his mother’s body wafting on the waves until the sun rose.
But what good would that do? I’d be so tired I couldn’t work for old Jinglepockets tomorrow. I need to catch fish to eat. I must keep my own belly full so I can fill the bellies of my family.
Sidney put the last dish in the cupboard and closed the door.
Except I don’t have a family to feed any more.
That lump returned to his throat. He willed it away.
Mother said always take a shower before I went to bed.
Sidney walked out into the courtyard where a small enclosure held a shower. Rain water flowed when a rope was pulled on a barrel overhead. On a small shelf his mother had already placed soap, a towel for him and a clean shirt and trousers to wear to work the next morning.
She always thought of things like that. I’ll have to remember all the details of daily living on my own now. Concentrating on the details will make the pain go away. No, I mustn’t even admit the pain exists. I’m a man now.
After his shower and he put on his clean clothes, Sidney walked in and extinguished all the kerosene lamps except for one which he carried upstairs. Tonight he would sleep for the first time in his house alone. This was the moment, he thought, that’d make most men might break out it tears. But no tears came. Sidney could not remember the last time he cried. His earliest memories were of looking up to his father as the example of how a man should act. He never saw his father cry. Tears only clouded the mind, and the mind had to stay clear and aware of surroundings if a man wanted to survive.
At the top of the stairs was a long hall, one side with a railing overlooking the living room below. A random thought entered his head. They had never spent time in the living room. It was filled with potted plants, lush carpets, tufted arm chairs and sofas with end tables, each with an elaborate kerosene lamp. His parents never invited anyone over for dinner and an evening of conversation. His grandmother and mother spent hours cleaning it just so they could stand proud if visitors walked in. But no one ever came. Sidney decided it was his father’s choice not to trust anyone to enter his home. He did appreciate it being clean, if only for his eyes.
His parents’ bedroom was at the top of the stairs and had double hand-carved wooden doors. The next bedroom had been for his grandmother and the last at the end of the hall was his. Sidney took a moment to rest his hand on the handle to his parents’ bedroom before opening it. A large bed filled the center of the room. His mother, of course, had smoothed out every wrinkle and arranged several pillows in embroidered cases at the head. A large window opened over the courtyard outside. Bottle shards lined the top of the courtyard wall. He remembered his father holding him up to that window.
“Always look out your bedroom window before you go to sleep. You don’t want to let anyone sneak up on you.”
Against the far wall of the bedroom was a large walk-in closet. He had never been in that room.
“This is where I keep my unmentionables,” his mother told him. “And a gentleman must never enter the room which holds a lady’s unmentionables.”
Now that he was the only person living in the house, he felt he had the right to go into the closet, which he found remarkably vacant. Sidney was not surprised. His parents rarely left Eleuthera, except for his father. His mother preferred simple native attire. Sidney wanted to see his father’s wardrobe. He wondered how many of those white linen suits he owned. He also wanted to see if this was where Leon kept his weapons, the stock-in-trade of his mercenary business.
At first Sidney was disappointed. He only found one white linen suit and no sign of knives or guns. He leaned against a far wall which automatically opened to a small dark room. Sidney held up his lamp to see a long narrow table of all sorts of knives, machetes, stilettos and switch blades; guns, rifles, pistols with silencers and small revolvers masquerading as cigarette lighters and flashlights; and even a small collection of vials filled with yellowish liquids, obviously poison. He discovered disguises, false teeth, wigs, beards and fake rubber bellies.
The most important discovery was a metal box which contained hundreds of bills of almost every currency in the world. Then there was Leon’s bank ledger, listing accounts in institutions around Europe, South America and the United States. He was a wealthy man, Sidney realized, but the realization meant nothing to him. All the money in those bank accounts would not bring his mother or father back alive. He could have bought himself a fancy white linen suit but his father was at his happiest when he was barefoot running on the beach wearing a coarse weave shirt and pants. Sidney could not imagine a finer house than the one in which he had grown up, but it seemed sad and empty now. He decided what would truly make him happy right at this moment was a good night’s sleep so he could work for Jinglepockets tomorrow.
For a brief moment, he considered sleeping in his father’s bed. It looked so comfortable. This had to be the same bed the rich people slept in when his father worked as their bodyguard. Sidney shook his head. He did not deserve it, at least not yet.
Walking down the hall toward his bedroom with his lamp, he looked at the living room below. Through the many windows the moon shone, illuminating the room very well. He searched for items that might be used for weapons. Sidney didn’t understand why such a thought would cross his mind. Then he remembered his father’s advice: “You have good instincts. Never ignore them.”
In his room, he took off his clothes. Like his father he slept naked. He looked out his own window at the thatched-roof garden shed directly below. He knew in it was a rake with pitchfork-hard tines. A machete which he had just put to the grinder yesterday so he knew it was glistening sharp. Also a length of rope which could be used for a whole list of purposes—a garrote, a noose, something to tie together his weapons. Sidney leaned further out the window to check the glass shards on top of courtyard wall which went around three sides of the house and connected to the home in the back. The only way to get to the shed was outside of the front garden gate.
Sidney plopped into the bed and went to sleep straight away. He never let the cares of the day to ruin his deep, trance-like sleep which resuscitated his body for another day of work. He never dreamed. When other people described their bad dreams, Sidney had no idea what they were talking about.
He didn’t know what caused him to sit up in his bed. He had no idea how long it had been since he went to sleep. All he did know was something was not right. He slid from the bed. He didn’t take time to put on his clothes. Each second could mean the difference between life and death. Sidney padded his way to the bedroom door which he cracked open. Sidney heard thumps and muffled voices in the front courtyard.
Through one of the high, wide front living room windows he saw one man, perhaps two hundred pounds and six-foot tall, already in the yard. Coming over the wooden gate was another, also tall but lighter, a very agile man. His father forgot to put shards on top of the wooden gate. Sidney remembered to lock it and the front door to the house earlier in the evening. By now a shorter man had scrambled over the top of the gate. He was broad in the shoulder and had thick arms. Since they were all dark skinned and wore native clothing, Sidney guessed they were Bahamians and likely to know all the self-defense moves he had learned.
The intruders headed to the front entrance. Sidney figured they had a metal gadget to unlock the door. Sidney could not tell if they carried any weapons. Evidently they were told he was a young small man but might not be aware of his abilities. Perhaps they were confident they could overpower him with brute strength and kill him in silence. Such arrogance could be their downfall, Sidney thought.
He calculated he had three or four minutes before they were in the house. At first he considered running down the hall to his father’s bedroom and his cache of weapons. He decided against that option, because the men might see him on the balcony. Running to the window, he opened it and jumped onto the thatched roof. He rolled off it and landed on his feet on the ground by the shed door. He entered and felt around in the darkness until he found the rake, machete and rope. Outside he wrapped the rope around his waist with a loop to attach the machete. With the rake in his hands, he ran around the house. By this time he figured the intruders had gained access to the house. When he reached the front he stuck the sharp end of the rake in the ground and using the leverage flung himself to the top of the gate. From there he leaned over and pulled it from the ground then jumped into the courtyard.
As he suspected, the three assassins left the front door open. Sidney did not see any of them in the living room but he heard someone stumble against the table in the kitchen. Laying the rake aside, he pulled the machete from his waist and held it in striking position as he crept toward the sound. As Sidney reached the door, the short broad-shouldered man appeared. Before the intruder could react, Sidney swung the machete with all his might, and the man’s head flew back onto the kitchen floor. Blood spurted like a fountain from the man’s neck. Sidney felt acrid bile rise in his throat, but he forced it back down. He didn’t have time to puke right now. His father always told him to keep the element of surprise on his side.
Retrieving the rake, he put the machete, slick with blood, back in the rope around his waist and moved upstairs. He noticed only one bedroom door was open. It was his at the end of the hall. Whoever it was had been given information by an insider. The only one who could obtain such private details was Pooka. Sidney vowed to kill her. He held up the rake, with the sharp tines leading the way. Sidney waited outside the door in the shadows for the man to walk out. That was another advantage to being naked. He blended into the night. Coming out of the door was the tall heavy one. Before the intruder even saw him, Sidney rushed toward him, cramming the tines into his belly, pinning him to the wall. Taking no chances the man might shout, Sidney pulled out his machete and with one swift blow beheaded the man. Once again he remember his father’s lesson, act swiftly and without mercy. Sidney’s nose wrinkled at the sulfur smell of the blood. He took a step to turn and his bare foot slipped in a puddle of blood flowing down the man’s leg to the floor. Sidney grabbed the balcony railing to keep from falling.
Below him was the tall lithe man, running from the direction of the servant’s quarters which were below Sidney’s bedroom. Of all the men, this was the one Sidney took most seriously. He could jump from the balcony with the machete but that could put him in danger if the blade fell into the other man’s hands. He didn’t like it, but the only approach he had with his would-be killer was hand-to-hand combat.
When the man was directly under him, Sidney dropped the machete and jumped down on the man, landing on his back, causing the intruder to fall on his face. Sidney took the man’s hair and bashed his head into the tiled floor. When he felt the man stop resisting, Sidney rolled him over, reached out to grab a pillow from the sofa, put it over the man’s face and sat on it. To his side was an end table with a large lamp. He kicked the table over, the glass lamp cover fell and shattered on the tile. Sidney picked up a jagged edge and repeatedly plunged it into the man’s belly. He didn’t stop until the last breath left the assassin’s lungs.
Sidney squatted on the floor and hung his head between his knees. Sweat dripped off the end of his nose and mingled with the blood on the floor. He used the back of his hand to wipe the sweat off his brow leaving a smear of blood across his forehead. He stared at the dead man and knew he could not rest until he got the three assassins out of his house.
Sidney took his rope and tied it around the man’s neck, dragging him out the front door. He went through the gate and around the house to the shore line. He untied the rope and rolled the body into the surf until he felt the tide grab the corpse. Sidney didn’t know how he know instinctively knew what to do; perhaps, his father was speaking to him from beyond the land of the living. He didn’t take time to ponder it.
With the rope he ran back to the kitchen where he tied the short man’s feet together. Tucking the head under his arm Sidney began dragging him out. He was surprised how light the body was. As he headed to the beach, he decided to dump it further away from his house. When he was in an appropriately dark location, he tossed the head as far as he could into the ocean, untied the feet, and rolled the corpse into the surf.
His job was almost done. He looked around and not another soul could be seen. Sidney decided to walk back to the house taking time to catch his breath. He trudged up the stairs. Dragging the big man all the way to the beach might be beyond what his exhausted body could handle. He pulled the rake out from the assassin’s belly. The body plopped to the floor. Sidney looked across his room to the window. He had an idea. Tugging the body to the window, he grunted as he lifted it onto the sill. Sidney aimed it so that the corpse would not go through the thatched roof. The body landed inches to the left of the shed. Then he found the head and tossed it out. With grace he jumped onto the roof. He tied the feet of the large man with the rope and dragged it directly from his house to the shore. At this point he didn’t care if anyone in the neighborhood found it or not. As his final gesture, he threw the head into the dark Atlantic.
Sidney went back into the courtyard and went into the shower. He scrubbed his body down, washing away all the blood and body matter. Lumbering upstairs he stopped by the double doors to his parents’ bedroom. He ached all over. Sidney opened the door and walked in. He thought he heard his father’s voice commend him on a job well done.
He crawled between the sheets of the large bed and fell asleep. For the first time he had a dream. It was of little Sidney asking his father if he could do another job rather than kill people. For the life of him he could not remember his father’s answer. For the first time that night he was afraid. Two Sidneys resided in his body. The first was a quiet timid boy who just wanted to make people happy. The second was the young man who had just killed three men and now had no worries, no regrets. Which one was the real Sidney?

David, Wallis and the Mercenary Chapter Seventy-Six

Previously: Mercenary Leon fails on a mission because of David, better known as the Prince of Wales. Socialite Wallis Spencer is also a spy. MI6 makes them a team. David becomes king. David abdicates and they marry. The Windsors escape oncoming Nazis. Leon shadows their every move. Leon dies. His family mourns his death.
The blonde was back at her blackjack table at the Rialto in Nassau, none worse for the wear. The buzz around the casino was the arrival of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor in Freeport where he would take up duties as governor. He and his wife arrived safely because of the work of Leon Johnson, now dead. She thought she should feel some guilt for putting a bullet in his back, but she did not. Her only regret was that she never went to bed with him. From the first moment she saw him saunter into the casino in his white linen suit she thought him so desirable she wanted to throw herself into his arms, but that would not have been professional. And she always thought of herself as a professional.
Her real name was Alina Romanov, perhaps the last of the Russian dynasty still alive, although she had no way of knowing for sure. The name her mother told her to use was Aline Montgomery—a reference they now lived in Montana. Her mother changed her own name from Anatolia Ribbentrop to Toni Montgomery. Her mother said the name Montgomery would give a hint they were of English descent, which, of course, they weren’t. Aline had never had any contact with the Romanovs or Ribbentrops. Her mother Toni told her not to try to make a connection with them or else her life might be endangered. Aline took comfort in the stories her mother told her to while away the evenings in their Butte, Montana, brothel. It didn’t bother her. She slept well every night—hardly any noise at all, unlike most respectable hotels.
Her mother, Toni, never kept the truth from her, no matter how ugly it was. Because of her upbringing, she was able to make it seem not that bad at all. Toni was a member of one of the oldest, most wealthy monarchies in Europe, the Romanovs. As a child, Toni had no idea there was evil in the world and its appearance shocked her very much. She told her daughter she never wanted her to be sheltered from evil. That way she would never be shocked by it. The evil first appeared with the coming of the Bolsheviks who vowed to kill everyone in the royal family, even the cousins. Her parents paid a handsome sum for a member of the Ribbentrops of Germany to marry her and take her away to live in the Bahamas. The Bolsheviks would never find her, her parents told her. But, of course, they did. The Bolsheviks assassins killed her husband and would have killed her if it hadn’t been for a Bahamian bodyguard. He was only sixteen years old, but he dispatched the assassins efficiently.
As Aline grew, her mother added details to the story. Toni made love to the bodyguard, and it was wonderful. A sad romantic husky tone entered her voice, as though that one night was the most fulfilling moment of her life which she would never have again.
“His name was Leon Johnson.” Toni’s voice became husky as she spoke his name. “He was the best lover I ever had.”
Perhaps the earliest emotion Aline experienced was that of deep sorrow for her loving mother. She decided to ask her mother about this man every chance she got. Aline loved the twinkle that entered her mother’s eyes when she said his name.
Leon Johnson. She paused and gazed out the window to the long verandah. What if he was the same man she killed in Lisbon? The same name. The same lethal skills. The same sensuality. What a waste.
“Hey, stop daydreaming!” A man’s rough voice interrupted her thoughts. “I said hit me!”
Aline dealt the card, but she continued thinking about her past. Toni told her she felt safe once she reached the wilds of Montana. No Bolshevik would think of looking for her there. She settled in Butte and with ease found a job at the local whore house. None of the other girls had her looks and refinement. From the beginning she earned top dollar for her skills.
Within a month of her arrival at the brothel, an out-of-shape young man who had not yet developed his paunch stopped over for the night. After his brief encounter with Toni, he stayed on for six months. He was a gold miner named Harry Oakes. He was born in Maine and went to medical college until he heard about the Klondike gold rush. He dropped out of college and mined in the Klondike, California and anywhere else where there was the slightest hint of a gold vein. He was on his way to Kirkland Lake Northern Ontario until he became enamored of the wiles of the wayward cousin of the Romanov family.
“For a brief moment in time,” Toni told her daughter, “I thought I was about to return to a life of opulence to which I had been born when I told Harry I was carrying his child.”
“How do you know it’s mine? After all, you’re a whore,” Harry protested.
“But you paid me to move into your hotel suite six months ago, and we’ve been playing house ever since,” she told him.
She described to her daughter exactly how dejected Harry looked. It was like the recess bell had rung and he had to go back to class.
“Babe, you know I love you, but I got my future to think about. I told you my parents are rich. That’s how I could afford medical school and afford to run around the continent looking for gold. I’ve even got some high falutin’ relatives in England. If I play my cards right, I could end up as a duke or earl or something.” He grimaced. “I’ve even got to get rid of this American accent I’ve picked up along the way. Why, if I go home after striking gold and with a wife from a brothel and a baby, I’d might as well kiss my dreams of high society good-bye.”
Toni shrugged. “Well, I know what it’s like being high society one day and out on my ass the next.” She stuck out her hand. “Been nice knowing you, Mr. Oakes.”
He shook his head. “Oh no, I’m not going to be that way. Hang on here until I hit the mother lode. I promise to send you a healthy check every month for you and the baby. And when the kid is old enough to work, send him to me. I know I can fix him up with something.”
Aline smirked as she dealt out a new hand of cards. Well, he got the gender wrong but at least he was good to his word. He didn’t say he’d fix me up with something respectable, just with something.
“When do you get off work tonight, gorgeous?” one of the men sitting around the table asked.
“Passed your bedtime, gramps.” Aline threw in a snipe about the guy’s age to make him shut up. It always worked.
Gramps, like I ever knew what it was like to have a gramps. I mean a nice old man who loved me and kept his hands to himself.
The man she called gramps stood and walked off in a huff.
“We’re starting a new game, ladies and gentlemen,” she announced in a clear, well-intoned voice. After all, her mother taught her to behave like a lady even if she wasn’t one. She paused hardly a moment before dealing the cards.
I actually loved my mother. She did what she did to stay alive. And she made only two mistakes in her life, and they were both Harry Oakes. I can’t blame her for the first one. At least I’m alive because of it. She couldn’t be held completely accountable for the second one. Mother was on her death bed because of pneumonia in 1925 when the letter came from Harry saying he had a glamorous job lined up for me in the Bahamas. My mother encouraged me to go to the Bahamas, even though I was only twelve years old. I always looked older than my age. That was better than dying a whore in Butte, Montana.
Aline could tell when she walked down the gangplank that Harry—now in his middle-aged full rotundity–didn’t know whether to embrace her with the full sentiment of a father/daughter reunion or to shake hands as a business courtesy to a new employee. Aline made it easy on him by extending her hand to him, which he shook with the efficiency of a stock broker. Harry meant nothing to her.
The past was the past. Hatred just made wrinkles show up on your face sooner with nothing to show for it. Revenge was for suckers.
Harry took her to the Rialto, showed her around the casino and asked her about her poker skills.
“Mother taught me all about poker, among other things,” she replied.
They settled on the terrace where a server took their orders for lunch. Sipping his wine, he gazed out at the ocean. “I hope all the checks I sent your mother arrived every month.”
“What checks?”
“Didn’t she tell you? I sent monthly checks to help raise you.”
Aline shrugged. “All I know is I never went hungry and always had nice clothes to wear.”
Harry nodded. “She got the checks all right.” He kept staring at the shore. “I don’t blame her for not telling you. She was a classy broad.”
“She wasn’t a broad,” she replied in a firm voice.
“You’re right, of course.” His apology was quick. “I’m the guy who spent his life digging in dirt for gold. I ain’t got no class.”
She didn’t say a word but just stared at him.
“Did Toni ever mention anything about the organization?”
“What organization?”
“Good. She had a head on her shoulders.” He took another sip of wine. “How can I explain this? Each country’s government has spies to resolve problems they don’t want splattered across the newspapers. But ordinary wealthy people have problems they don’t want splattered across newspapers either. So who are they going to hire to resolve their problems?”
“I thought that was what the Mafia was for.” So far, Harry wasn’t impressing Aline at all.
“They’re a very clannish group,” he explained. “Besides, they like to be the bosses, and rich people want to run things themselves. They want someone to go in, get the job done, take their money and forget about it.”
“Mercenaries.” Aline rolled her eyes. “They’re called mercenaries, Harry.”
“Yeah.” He nodded. “That’s a good name for them.”
“Are you telling me my mother was a member of this group of scumbags?”
“No, no. She was one of the poor ordinary rich people who hired the scumbags.”
“So you’re one of the scumbags.” Aline enjoyed nettling her father.
“Well.” He smiled rakishly. “I didn’t get all my money mining gold.”
“So, you think I’d agree to be one of these scumbags?”
“They pay very well. And you’ll be groomed before the first mission. Right now all you have to do is pass messages to our top agents.”
She finished her drink. “Well, if my mother thought well of this organization, then who am I to say no?”
“Glad to hear it.” He rubbed his hands together. “Now we can eat.”
The server put plates in front of each of them.
“Your first assignment is tonight. You will pass a note to a Bahamian man who will be wearing a white linen suit.”
Aline remembered her first meal at the Rialto as the best meal she ever had. Ever since then she’d never had any regrets, until Lisbon.
“Baby, if you don’t get your head out of the clouds, I’m leaving.”
When she focused on the present of 1940, she saw gramps had returned. “You promise?”
The other men around the table laughed. Aline looked over the shoulder of the old man and saw Pooka standing in the casino door.
“The table’s closed.” Aline walked straight to the old woman, took her by the elbow and escorted out to the beach. “Let’s go for a walk.”
“Won’t that mess up your pretty shoes?” Pooka asked.
“I don’t give a damn about the shoes. Walk.”
It didn’t take them long to be at water’s edge and out of the lights of the Rialto.
“I told you never to come here.”
“But I thought you’d want to know Jessamine is dead. As soon as she heard about Leon she walked into the ocean.”
“And the boy?”
“You wanted him dead too?” Pooka’s eyes widened. “He’s so strong. Like his papa. I know I can control him for you.”
“You know very well the orders from the commander was that the entire Johnson family was to die.” Aline twisted Pooka’s arm.
“Are you sure?” the old woman asked.
Aline took off her left shoe and pressed a button on the heel. A sharp, slender knife shot out. She slammed it repeatedly into Pooka’s neck. The old woman crumbled to the sand. Aline looked down at her and noticed how wrinkled she was. She kicked her over and over until the body entered the surf.
She must have been eighty or ninety years old. It was time for her to die.