Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
material, which
e television monitor with the cables and the headset.
th
es waited.
Bill Davi
By his feet was the lunch-box given him by Mrs.
bed-and-breakfast, and his Thermos, which she had
Fairbrother at the
lled with coffee black, no sugar.
fi
He had discarded the shoulder
holster, left it locked in his bag in the room, gone for the waist-belt holster and put his loose change into his suit-jacket pocket; weight in
the pocket so that the jacket moved decisively back if he had to draw his firearm fast. He saw the neighbour leave for work with his wife, bustling out of his weathered, brick-built house, before stopping
and
peering at him as he sat in the car. Finally, the child ran from
the
house and into a car.
From the doorway, Perry waved for him to come inside. Davies, of
course, had a trained eye for descriptions: Perry was of average
height, average build, with fair hair and a face with no particular distinguishing marks. He was ordinary and unremarkable, the sort
of
98
man who was easy to miss in a crowd.
He took his time, straightened his tie and checked in the mirror that his hair was in order, then eased out of his seat. He didn't hurry.
He
was not there to be at the beck and call of the principal. The Glock in the waist holster lapped against his hip as he walked towards the door. He would set the rules, start as he meant to go on. He went inside.
Perry said softly, "I told my wife that the threat wasn't real."
"Then you'll have to do a bit of explaining, sir."
When the engine pitch changed he was sleeping. He stirred in the
hard
bunk bed, closed his eyes again, aware of the swinging turn of the tanker. Then he wiped his eyes, dragged at the floral curtain and peered through the porthole window. Beyond white-flecked sea was
a
horizon of dark land, browned cliffs, yellowed fields and the greys of
a town's buildings. In the sea, bucked and heaved by the swell, was a
small boat, its blue hull lost then found as the spray broke over
a
garish orange superstructure. The small boat closed on the tanker.
He
was awake, he remembered.
slowed to allow the pilot's launch to come alongside,
The tanker
rning to shelter it from the bluster of the wind.
tu
He pressed his
face against the weathered glass of the porthole and watched until the
launch was under the sheer wall of the tanker's side. He imagmed
the
pilot jumping across a void of water from the deck of his boat to
the
rope ladder cavorting from the bottom of the fixed steps, and if the pilot slipped... In the night, when he went over the side, his God rotect him.
would p
From his porthole window, he could not see the
pilot come aboard, but he watched the small boat heave away and head speed towards the land.
back at
He felt the turn of the tanker and
ed cruising speed.
heard the throbbing power as the engines regain
By
the time that the ship, guided by the pilot on the bridge with the 99
master, rejoined the northern lane of the English Channel's
traffic-separation scheme, he was asleep again. He needed the sleep because he did not know when next he would have the opportunity. He would sleep until the alarm on his watch woke him at noon, then pray, then sleep again until mid-afternoon, then pray, then sleep again
until
dusk, then pray, then ready himself.
"They bought it I don't believe it, but it's authorized." The faithful
Mary-Ellen tore the paper off the fax roll.
"That's just incredible. They swallowed it. You've got the
clearance,
you're on the freedom bird tonight." She laid the sheet of paper down
in front of him.
"Have you enough socks?"
The Special Agent (Riyadh) of the FBI and his personal assistant sat e each other and made a list of
besid
what he should pack, and what
he
ed to buy in the embassy shop. She wrote down, and
might ne
underlined,
the names of the pills for his blood-pressure problem.
list was complete, she made the airline reservation.
When the
rization is for a week is that OK? Book you back in a
"The autho
week?"
He nodded agreement.
attered on, "Don't you worry about me.
She ch
I'll be just fine. Be
glad to see the back of you for a week.
We're behind with accounts,
that stuff might just get the place cleaned out.
filing, all
I'll
ve
ha
a dandy time here."
But he was hardly listening. Duane Littelbaum would not have paused to
consider whether his personal assistant could cope with a week of
his
absence. His wife, Esther, was out in west Iowa, between Audobon, had been his home, and Harlan Valley,
which
100
had been reared.
where she
She was in the world of cattle and corn,
had brought up two daughters, and he hadn't lived with her, not
rly, for a few months short of twenty-one years. It did not
prope
seem
r to him, or to her. He went home, to the roadside house
to matte
between Audobon and Harlan Valley, every leave that was given him
and
every Christmas.
e was away
He wrote to his wife each weekend that h
and never forgot a birthday. It was a detached marriage but it stayed alive.
He had lived his life for the study of Iran.
Those who did not know him, the embassy staffers who passed him in the
corridors or saw him in the parking lot or at the ambassador's
functions, would have reckoned him an academic, eccentric and gentle.
They would have been wrong. He played the dangerous game of
counter-terrorism. It was a solitary, work-driven life, where
victims
ory was
held little relevance, where the requirement for vict
ramount.
pa
ittelbaum had a light, bouncing step as he left his office
Duane L
and
down the corridor, cheerfully slapping the arm of the Marine
went on
at
e grille. His stride was almost a skip of pleasure.
th
urpose in life, through all of twenty years, had been to put
His p
a
oking gun into an Iranian hand.
sm
If the chance came, he would act
with a ruthlessness unrecognized by those who did not know him well.
es he had written on his paper pad.
His finger hovered over the nam
nton stood over him.
Fe
off Markham recited, "Yusuf Khan, disappeared off the face of the Ge
earth.
eefed up Nottingham from Manchester and Leeds, but
SB have b
ey don't have him.
th
He's not been home since he was lost, and has
not
work.
showed at
The one associate we have listed is Farida Yasmin
nes, the convert, but that's a problem because she's dropped out,
Jo
doesn't go to the mosque now and has moved out of her bed sit I can't her electricity, telephone and gas bills for a new address,
trace
101
like
s covering a trail and intentional which is to me both interesting it'
and worrying.
officer given to Perry hasn't called
The protection
back
to his co-ordinator. It's a slow haul."
"Keep pushing, keep kicking bums. I'll be at lunch."
He nibbled at the fringes of impertinence.
"That's nice, enjoy it."
Fenton grinned.
"I will. Need to get up to speed. I have a good feeling about this one. In my water, I've the feeling this might even be exciting. I'm preparing for a jump on to the learning curve."
His superior had
transferred
been
from the Czech! Slovak I Romanian/
Bulgarian desk only fourteen months before, which was why Cox had
been
able, effortlessly, to win promotion over him. Markham thought
Fenton
should have been on his learning curve a year ago. He stepped over the
fringes.
"I am sure that Mr. Perry would be pleased to hear that he's providing
a bit of excitement."
"You want to make anything of this job? My advice, take the heat."
"I'll be here."
"Where I would expect you to be."
Markham did not look up. Fenton was going to the door, whistling
lf.
happily, and he steeled himse
"Mr. Fenton."
The whistling stopped.
"Mr. Fenton, I know we're in unpredictable times, but I need to be out
102
about an hour."
tomorrow afternoon, for one o'clock, be
Fenton would have been looking at the photo on his wall of Vicky,
the
one where she wore the short skirt. He asked, "Going to get a little cuddle in, to see you through the day?"
"I am entitled to an hour at lunch, Mr. Fenton." Vicky would maul him
if he didn't put his foot down. He said doggedly, "I'm not obliged to
work right through a night, but I did."
"No call for claws, Geoff. If you can be free then you will be."
"Sorry, Mr. Fenton, it's not "if". I have to be out of here for one
o'clock tomorrow."
"Clock-watching, Geoff, does not fit the Service ethos. May be all right in a bank... but secret work, security work, makes a bad
bedfellow with a clock face
Fenton was gone. Geoff Markham sat at the console and hammered out the
text, giant format, then printed it. He took a roll of Sellotape
from
his drawer and stuck the paper to the outside of his door.
"This Project is so SECRET even I DON'T KNOW what I'm doing."
The principal and his wife were subdued, out of sight, when the van arrived with the men from London. Davies jumped out of his car to meet
them. He took the foreman down the narrow track at the side of the house and showed him the rear garden, the facade of old stone, and gave
him the sketch map he'd drafted of the layout for the property, and its
interior.
Two more men were at the front now, unloading the cables and boxes from
the van, and unhitching the ladders' stay ropes from its roof. He had
his own key to the front door now, and took the foreman inside. He'd 103
kitchen, where the principal was with his wife, until last.
leave the
The foreman hadn't wiped his boots and left a trail of wet earth round the rooms. They went through the house, and the foreman never
lowered
his voice as he discussed arcs of surveillance for the cameras and the
frared beams and through which upper window-frames
sighting of the in
they would drill the cable holes, and which ground-floor windows and doors should be alarmed. They came to the kitchen last. She sat
with
her back to them, didn't acknowledge them. Perry tried to make
small-talk but the foreman ignored him. It was usually like that, when
the gear was put in, and there was no easy way of riding out the
shock.
Outside, the ladder scraped as it was extended. The kitchen window darkened as a man's body settled on the lowest rung to test its
reliability. The wife had her head down and her lunch half eaten
in
front of her.
Perry said, "I thought I had the choice on the new locks."
"It's a bit more than locks, Mr. Perry. It's cameras and infrared and
tumbler wires and-' "What's going on?"
They were always worse, more aggressive, in front of the lady, as
if
they felt the need to make a stand and pretend they were in charge.
The
principal was not in charge, not any more, of his house, and certainly not of his life.
"I can't tell you, Mr. Perry, because I don't know and if I did I couldn't tell you."
He went outside. There was a light rain falling and the sky
threatened
les
more. Another ladder was up against the front wall, the cab
dancing
as they were unrolled. An electric drill was whining through the
wood
ive
of an upper window-frame. It wasn't the job of the detect
sergeant
104
feel sympathy, but already, inside their home, their lives were
to
being violated and this was merely the beginning.
There would be some who would say afterwards that this had been the War
of Fenton's Belly. They were the bureaucrats of the first floor
tration Sub-Branch Accounts), tasked with the study of
(Adminis
expense
and entertainment bills.
receipts
Five bills in a week for expenses
and entertainment handed in by the head of Section 2, G Branch, and the
written demand for reimbursement. They would call, after the
hand
business was completed, for explanations and would receive only the nformation of what had happened, what had been at stake,
vaguest i
and
its outcome.
rry Fenton would have preferred to walk on nails rather than go
Ha
to
Bridge Cross with an invitation to Penny Flowers to join
Vauxhall
him
for lunch. He said it to whomever would listen, often enough, that the
Secret Intelligence Service treated the Security Service as lesser tures.