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Robert Harris - The Ghost

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Robert Harris The Ghost

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The Ghost

Robert Harris

Picture 1

ALSO BY ROBERT HARRIS

FICTION

Imperium

Pompeii

Archangel

Enigma

Fatherland

NONFICTION

Selling Hitler: The Story of the Hitler Diaries

Picture 2

Picture 3 Simon & Schuster 1230 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10020

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright 2007 by Robert Harris

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Simon & Schuster Subsidiary Rights Department, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.

SIMON & SCHUSTER and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Harris, Robert. The ghost: a novel/Robert Harris. p. cm. 1. GhostwritersFiction. 2. Exprime ministersGreat BritainFiction. 3. War on terrorism, 2001 Fiction. 4. London (England)Fiction. 5. Northeastern StatesFiction. I. Title. PR6058.A69147G48 2007 823'.914dc22 2007029670

ISBN-13: 978-1-4165-7147-6 ISBN-10: 1-4165-7147-7

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To Gill

AUTHORS NOTE

I would like to thank Andrew Crofts for permission to use the quotes from his excellent handbook, Ghostwriting (A & C Black, 2004). Two other successful ghostwriters, Adam Sisman and Luke Jennings, were kind enough to share their experiences with me. Philippe Sands, QC, generously provided advice about international law. Rose Styron spent several days showing me round Marthas Vineyard: I could not have had a more gracious and well-informed guide. My publisher, David Rosenthal, and my agent, Michael Carlisle, were even more helpful and encouraging than usualalthough each is as unlike his fictional counterpart as it is possible to be.

Robert Harris Cap Bnat, July 26, 2007

I am not I: thou art not he or she: they are not they.

Evelyn Waugh, Brideshead Revisited

THE GHOST

ONE

Of all the advantages that ghosting offers, one of the greatest must be the opportunity that you get to meet people of interest.

Andrew Crofts, Ghostwriting

THE MOMENT I HEARD how McAra died, I should have walked away. I can see that now. I should have said, Rick, Im sorry, this isnt for me, I dont like the sound of it, finished my drink, and left. But he was such a good storyteller, RickI often thought he should have been the writer and I the literary agentthat once hed started talking there was never any question I wouldnt listen, and by the time he had finished, I was hooked.

The story, as Rick told it to me over lunch that day, went like this:

McAra had caught the last ferry from Woods Hole, Massachusetts, to Marthas Vineyard two Sundays earlier. I worked out afterward it must have been January the twelfth. It was touch-and-go whether the ferry would sail at all. A gale had been blowing since midafternoon and the last few crossings had been canceled. But toward nine oclock the wind eased slightly, and at nine forty-five the master decided it was safe to cast off. The boat was crowded; McAra was lucky to get a space for his car. He parked belowdecks and then went upstairs to get some air.

No one saw him alive again.

The crossing to the island usually takes forty-five minutes, but on this particular night the weather slowed the voyage considerably: docking a two-hundred-foot vessel in a fifty-knot wind, said Rick, is nobodys idea of fun. It was nearly eleven when the ferry made land at Vineyard Haven and the cars started upall except one: a brand-new tan-colored Ford Escape SUV. The purser made a loudspeaker appeal for the owner to return to his vehicle, as he was blocking the drivers behind him. When he still didnt show, the crew tried the doors, which turned out to be unlocked, and freewheeled the big Ford down to the quayside. Afterward they searched the ship with care: stairwells, bar, toilets, even the lifeboatsnothing. They called the terminal at Woods Hole to check if anyone had disembarked before the boat sailed or had perhaps been accidentally left behindagain: nothing. That was when an official of the Massachusetts Steamship Authority finally contacted the Coast Guard station in Falmouth to report a possible man overboard.

A police check on the Fords license plate revealed it to be registered to one Martin S. Rhinehart of New York City, although Mr. Rhinehart was eventually tracked down to his ranch in California. By now it was about midnight on the East Coast, nine p.m. on the West.

This is the Marty Rhinehart? I interrupted.

This is he.

Rhinehart immediately confirmed over the telephone to the police that the Ford belonged to him. He kept it at his house on Marthas Vineyard for the use of himself and his guests in the summer. He also confirmed that, despite the time of year, a group of people were staying there at the moment. He said he would get his assistant to call the house and find out if anyone had borrowed the car. Half an hour later she rang back to say that someone was indeed missing, a person by the name of McAra.

Nothing more could be done until first light. Not that it mattered. Everyone knew that if a passenger had gone overboard it would be a search for a corpse. Rick is one of those irritatingly fit Americans in their early forties who look about nineteen and do terrible things to their body with bicycles and canoes. He knows that sea: he once spent two days paddling a kayak the entire sixty miles round the island. The ferry from Woods Hole plies the strait where Vineyard Sound meets Nantucket Sound, and that is dangerous water. At high tide you can see the force of the currents sucking the huge channel buoys over onto their sides. Rick shook his head. In January, in a gale, in snow? No one could survive more than five minutes.

A local woman found the body early the next morning, thrown up on the beach about four miles down the islands coast at Lamberts Cove. The drivers license in the wallet confirmed him to be Michael James McAra, age fifty, from Balham in south London. I remember feeling a sudden shot of sympathy at the mention of that dreary, unexotic suburb: he certainly was a long way from home, poor devil. His passport named his mother as his next of kin. The police took his corpse to the little morgue in Vineyard Haven and then drove over to the Rhinehart residence to break the news and to fetch one of the other guests to identify him.

It must have been quite a scene, said Rick, when the volunteer guest finally showed up to view the body: I bet the morgue attendant is still talking about it. There was one patrol car from Edgartown with a flashing blue light, a second car with four armed guards to secure the building, and a third vehicle, bombproof, carrying the instantly recognizable man who, until eighteen months earlier, had been the prime minister of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

THE LUNCH HAD BEEN Ricks idea. I hadnt even known he was in town until he rang me the night before. He insisted we meet at his club. It was not his club, exactlyhe was actually a member of a similar mausoleum in Manhattan, whose members had reciprocal dining rights in Londonbut he loved it all the same. At lunchtime only men were admitted. Each wore a dark blue suit and was over sixty; I hadnt felt so young since I left university. Outside, the winter sky pressed down on London like a great gray tombstone. Inside, yellow electric light from three immense candelabra glinted on dark polished tables, plated silverware, and rubied decanters of claret. A small card placed between us announced that the clubs annual backgammon tournament would be taking place that evening. It was like the changing of the guard or the houses of parliamenta foreigners image of England.

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