When she came to the part where she described leaving the Whitcott â Lyddingham road to follow the two men into the hills, she saw Tregalles and Paget exchange glances, but they remained silent.
âThe trouble was, once I was on that road, there were so many twists and turns, and it was so black out there, that I lost sight of the car, so I have no idea where they went.'
Emma gave an involuntary shiver. âI wanted to go back, but I didn't dare try turning around, so I waited a bit, then carried on down to the main road and went back home the long way round.
âI'm not usually that impulsive,' she concluded, âbut it's been so long since Mark disappeared, and I thought if there was anything I could do . . .' She shrugged helplessly.
âWhat prompted you to come in today?' asked Paget.
âTo be honest, I wasn't sure that the man I spoke to yesterday had taken me seriously, and I wanted to talk to Molly, because I knew she would.'
âHow did you get here?'
âBy bus. I would have come by car, but I must have run over some glass or something the other night, because two of my tyres were flat yesterday morning, and I haven't had time to do anything about them. I missed the express bus this morning, so I had to take the one that goes all round the villages, which is why it's taken me so long to get here.'
Emma paused, frowning as she looked from one to the other. âBut you knew that, didn't you? About the car, I mean. Otherwise you wouldn't have asked how I got here.'
âDC Forsythe told us when she went looking for you this morning.'
âHave you told anyone else about following these men?' Tregalles asked. âTalked to anyone about it at all? Your friends, perhaps?'
Emma was shaking her head. âNo. To tell you the truth, I felt a little foolish about it, so I didn't intend to tell anyone but Molly or you.'
âEven inadvertently? Anyone at the college or the Red Lion, perhaps?'
âNo, no one,' Emma said emphatically. âBut why are you asking?'
âBecause,' Paget said quietly, âwe have reason to believe that the two men you've described are extremely dangerous, and I think it is possible that they may have become aware that you were following them.' He eyed Emma speculatively for a long moment before going on. âAnd if that is the case â and I hope it's not â but if it is, then I think it would be advisable for you to stay somewhere else for at least the next few days. Do you have somewhere else you can go? You mentioned a sister? The one who loaned you the camera. Could you stay with her? Or perhaps with your uncle, the chief constable.'
Emma made a face. âI don't think so,' she said. âMy sister has a houseful of children, and Uncle Robert is . . . Well, to tell the truth I'd sooner go home if you think it's
really
necessary. The trouble is, I have exams coming up in three weeks, so I really should be studying.'
âWhere's home?' asked Paget.
âGloucester. But I don't have a car, at least not until I get the tyres repaired.'
âI don't want you going back to Wisteria Cottage for any reason,' Paget said. âIn fact I think it would be best if you go directly to Gloucester from here.'
âBut I didn't come prepared for anything like this,' Emma protested. âSurely I can go back to get some clothes and other things I'll need?'
âYou have more clothes in Gloucester?'
âOf course, but . . .'
âAnd I imagine that's your laptop in the satchel you're carrying?'
âYes . . .?' she said cautiously
Paget leaned forward to add emphasis to what he was about to say.
âLook, Miss Baker,' he said quietly, âI can't order you to stay away from Whitcott, and I cannot say for certain that you would be in danger there. But I would feel much happier if you would take my advice and go home for a few days. And you can study for your exams, using your laptop. Isn't that right?'
âWell, yes . . .' Emma looked troubled as she sat back in her chair. âYou are serious, aren't you, Chief Inspector? I mean
really
serious!'
âYes, I am,' he said.
Emma was silent for a moment. âWhat about Tom and Sylvia?' she asked. âAre they in any danger?'
âNo. And as I said, you may not be either, but I don't want to take any chances. Now, about getting you there . . .'
Emma smiled as she shook her head. âNo need to worry about that,' she told him. âWhat's the point in having a chief constable for an uncle if you can't call on him for a favour now and then?'
B
en Trowbridge sat at the table that had served him as a desk for the past few weeks, fingers drumming nervously on the polished surface as he watched through mullioned windows the deepening shadows inch their way across the slopes of gently rolling hills. The sun would drop behind them in less than half an hour, but it couldn't go down fast enough for him.
His temporary headquarters were in what once had been a manor house situated four miles from the Roper farm. Too costly to maintain as a residence, the house had been made over into what was advertised as a âquiet country retreat removed from the pressures of everyday living'. Seminars ranging from corporate strategy to fitness and meditation had been held there, and as far as the outside world was concerned, its present occupants were members of SSIS, a strategic studies group concerned with internal security. They had taken over the premises for a month, and they had brought their own household and kitchen staff with them.
Trowbridge looked at his watch for perhaps the tenth time in the last half hour: twenty-six hours to go before they could make their first move. After that, there would probably be another two or three hours of waiting for the signal that would tell them that Kellerman was actually there.
If they missed him this time . . .
Trowbridge closed his eyes. He didn't even want to think about that possibility. So many things had gone wrong already, and they still didn't know what had happened to that idiot of Paget's. He must still be down there somewhere, because Paget would have let him know if the man had managed to get out of the valley under his own steam. Trowbridge's men had searched the area as best they could, but even night vision goggles couldn't penetrate the heavy blanket of mist that lay in the valley. And concealed in their camouflaged hides on the brow of the hill during the day, they had scanned the area with high-powered scopes without result, so God knows where the man had got to.
Perhaps he was dead. Perhaps he'd killed himself in a fall down the hillside and had fallen miraculously into a place of concealment. Trowbridge grimaced. An uncharitable thought, perhaps, but he couldn't help taking some small comfort from it. But whatever had happened to the man, Trowbridge hoped he would stay where he was for the next â he glanced at his watch again â twenty-five hours and fifty-three minutes.
The phone rang. He picked it up and said, âYes?'
The man at the other end had barely spoken a dozen words before Trowbridge interrupted him with, âWhen?' Then: âWhy wasn't I informed before this, for God's sake?' He slammed the phone down without waiting for an explanation.
They'd lost Kellerman in London. They'd followed him as usual to his favourite coffee shop in Horseferry Road for his morning coffee and bagel. He would normally spend half an hour there; one cup of coffee, a refill and a toasted bagel while he read the paper, and then he'd move on. But when he didn't appear after forty-five minutes, one of the watchers had gone in to find that Kellerman had given them the slip.
He supposed it wasn't necessarily
bad
news. It had been clear for some time that Kellerman was aware that he was under surveillance, in fact there had been times when he had turned and given them the finger, so it was hardly surprising that he had made his move early in order to make sure he could leave London without worrying about being followed. And that was encouraging, because it suggested Kellerman did not believe he had any reason to worry once clear of London. The one thing that Trowbridge
had
been afraid of was that Kellerman might call the whole thing off after Newman stumbled into the local operation, and Doyle had to be dealt with. But from what Trowbridge had learned from his source inside Kellerman's organization, Luka had downplayed the breach of security when talking to Kellerman in order to save his own neck.
The one thing that
did
bother Trowbridge, however, was the ease with which Kellerman had shaken the trackers. Someone should have been inside the coffee shop, but they'd been lulled into believing that the man would follow his daily routine, and Kellerman had counted on that.
He just hoped that no one on his team here would make a mistake like that. If Kellerman was even the least bit suspicious that things were not right, he would stay away. Not only that, but the auction would be scrubbed and his people would melt away. Months of planning would go down the drain, and dozens of women and children would simply disappear.
âAll quiet?' asked Mike Bell, Trowbridge's second-in-command, as he entered what was once a library but was now a temporary control centre. âAny activity at the farm?'
âNothing out of the ordinary,' the man said, scrolling through the messages. âA Crawley's van came in at 16.22 to pick up what looked like scrap left over from whatever it was they've been doing in the house to cover their real operation down below. Roper helped the driver carry everything out, then went back in the house when the van left at 17.04. The white van we've seen before came back again at 18.13. Stopped at the farmhouse, then went on down to the barn. Looks like it's still there, and that's about it.'
He fell silent for a moment, watching closely as another message appeared on the screen. âSeems like RGS is a bit busier than usual, though,' he said. The information in front of him was coming in from the watchers in the field using hand-held units.
âOne of those big RangerContinental removal vans came in after most of the staff had gone home at 18.22. But since then, they've had two Ford Transit vans come in, stay about twenty minutes, then leave again.'
âAnd now,' he said slowly, as his eyes followed the words appearing on the screen, âUnit Three says he can see another one approaching.'
âAre they loading? Unloading? What?' Bell demanded. He fidgeted impatiently while the message was being relayed.
âThree says they don't know,' the operator said. âThey drive inside, the door comes down, then some twenty minutes or so later the door goes up again and they're off.'
âIn which direction?'
âToward Lyddingham.'
Bell bent to look at the screen himself. Unit Three was the observation post in a hide on the edge of a small copse on a hillside about a third of a mile away from RGS Removals. But now that it was dark, a two-man team would have moved in much closer to the buildings, and it would be they who were relaying information back to base.
âSo the RangerContinental is still there?' he said.
The man frowned. âDon't think so,' he said slowly as he scrolled back. âNo. It left again at 18.50.'
Bell's eyes narrowed. âYou're telling me a RangerContinental came and
left
again in less than half an hour?'
âThat's right, sir. It . . .' The man grimaced guiltily and sucked in his breath. âAh! Yes, I see what you mean, sir,' he said.
âDo you?' Bell snapped. âPity you didn't before, becauseâ'
âHold on a minute, sir,' the man interrupted. âI've got something coming from Unit One. Looks like one of those vans has just been spotted on the road to the Roper farm. Same description.'
Bell stood up. âGive me voice contact with all units,' he said tersely.
âRight sir. Speaker-phone is on.'
âUnit Four. This is Control. An unmarked Ford Transit is moving in your direction. Watch for it. If it's on its way to the target, you should be seeing it in about ten minutes. Report when you see it.'
Bell stood back, arms folded, eyes on the clock, counting off the minutes. Eight . . . nine . . . ten . . . eleven . . .
âGot it!' said a disembodied voice. âUnit Four reporting.' There was a pause, then, âTurning in. Sidelights only on its way to target. Unit Two should be seeing it any minute now.'
âUnit Two . . .?'
âUnit Two. In sight now. Pulling in behind target. Can't see it now for buildings. Hold on a sec. It's going on. Headlights on, going down into the valley.' There was a long pause. âDisappeared into the trees. Headlights off.'
âUnit One,' a second voice said quietly. âAnother van on its way up.'
âHear that Four?'
âWe'll watch for it.'
The muscles around Bell's jaw tightened. He picked up the phone and punched in an internal number. âBell here, sir,' he said when Trowbridge answered. âI'm in the control room and I think you'd better get down here now! Vans are leaving RGS at regular intervals, and they're going to the Roper farm. We've heard nothing from inside, but I think the cunning bastards have brought everything forward by twenty-four hours, and they're going to hold the auction tonight!'
âWe knew they wouldn't bring their cargo in until the last minute,' Trowbridge told Paget, âso we're guessing that they were brought up here in the RangerContinental, then transferred into the smaller vans at the RGS terminal. There's very little traffic on the road up to the farm, especially after dark, so anything bigger than the vans might have been noticed and remarked upon. And by sending them up there at intervals, they reduce the risk of losing too many if anything should go wrong. There have been five of them so far.'
âYou say you're
guessing
, Ben?' said Paget. âDon't you
know?
What happened to your informant?'