Authors: Jon Stock
Spiro didn't like the CIA sub-station in Warsaw. He didn't like the coffee, he didn't like the tired, 1970s hellhole of an embassy in which the Company was housed (an opinion confirmed when his driver took him past the glistening new premises of the British Embassy), but most of all he didn't like the station chief. By rights, Alan Carter should have been fired years ago. He had messed up over the Agency's post-9/11 rendition flights to Stare Kiejkuty, a programme based on tight cooperation between the CIA and the WSI. Its basis was total denial, but word had got out, and Spiro blamed Carter.
Now he had messed up again. Marchant's release was in danger of sparking a three-way diplomatic row between Poland, America and Britain. Poland's new prime minister had already been in touch, saying it had been a case of mistaken identity. His office had received reports of a Westerner at the remote airport, and a team of special forces had been sent over to take a look. When the Poles had come under fire, they had returned the compliment, and the detainee escaped. Spiro had never heard such bull-shit, but there was nothing he could do. His allies in WSI were becoming increasingly powerless, and the protocol simply didn't exist for lodging a complaint about a deniable project such as Stare Kiejkuty, particularly as it was meant to have been shuttered.
Spiro looked around at the bank of screens in the dimly lit room at the back of the US Embassy, a team of five junior officers keeping their heads down as he made his displeasure clear.
âDo we have eyes at the airport?' he barked at Carter.
âWe've picked up a feed from CCTV in immigration,' Carter said. âWe'll see him if he's got a passport.'
âAnd the Brit Embassy?'
âStill trying. It's pretty secure over there.'
Unlike here, Spiro thought.
âWe're also live at the station, and most of the city's malls,' said another officer.
âWhat have we got on him?' Spiro asked.
A photo of Marchant and Pradeep, running side by side in the marathon, was projected onto the wall in front of the computers. In the foreground, Turner Munroe, the US Ambassador to London, was clearly identifiable.
âClose to his target, wasn't he?' Spiro said. âToo fucking close.'
âSir,' one of the youngest officers asked tentatively, looking up at Carter for support. âShouldn't London be helping us on this one?'
âDon't even go there,' Spiro snapped. âWe're flying solo, that's all you need to know.' He turned to Carter. âWhere else might Marchant be heading? Krakow? The border? Why are we so sure he's coming to town?'
âWe have an asset in a village four miles south of Stare Kiejkuty. He says an unmarked military truck drove through the village on the main road to Warsaw at fifteen hundred hours. Our guys at the airbase raised the alarm at twenty hundred last night, approximately five hours after Marchant was freed.'
âFive friggin' hours? What were they doing? R and R in the waterboarding pool?'
âSir, they had been drugged, bound and gagged by the Poles â they were Grom, elite special forces. It's a credit to their training that they managed to free themselves at all.'
âIs that right? Well, it isn't a credit to your training that we have no fucking idea where Marchant is now.'
âWe're into the city police's traffic cameras,' another officer announced, hoping to bail his boss out of trouble. They worked hard for Carter, and didn't like to see him humiliated.
âScreen one,' Carter said. A moment later, black-and-white images of slow-moving traffic were being projected onto the main wall.
âGridlock,' Spiro said. âJust like Route 28 after a Red Sox game.'
âIf the truck was coming into Warsaw, it would have entered the city on the MoscowâBerlin road,' Carter said, looking over his junior colleague's shoulder at the computer screen again. He was avoiding eye contact with Spiro as much as he could. The screen was split into three sections: the main traffic image, a city map, and a database displaying a list of camera positions throughout the city. âSwitch to camera 17,' Carter said. The junior officer scrolled down the list.
A new image, less grainy than the first, was projected onto the wall. The queue of traffic leaving the city was moving slower than the cars arriving.
âHow long does it take to get from Stare Kiejkuty to Warsaw by truck?' Spiro asked.
Carter nudged the junior officer, who looked at his map again and zoomed out from the city to an image of the north of the country. A route highlighted in red wormed its way almost instantly from the airbase to Warsaw.
âTwo hours fifteen,' Carter said, reading from the screen.
âCan you get us into traffic archive?' Spiro asked him.
âIt'll take some time.'
âI want everything from eighteen to twenty-one hundred hours. Let's see if that truck showed up in the city last night. We also need passenger lists from Warsaw, Krakow and Gdansk airports. And I want the names of any Brits who are even thinking about flying out of Poland; then crunch them through Langley. How many have we got up at the airport?'
âTwo units. We called in back-up from Berlin.'
âMarchant cannot leave this lousy country, is that clear?'
Marchant lay on the bed, watching Monika as she undressed and slipped onto the sheets next to him, at ease with her nakedness. Earlier she had offered to take his ticket to her friend, who could postpone his flight by a day. He had been more than happy to let her, falling into a surprisingly deep sleep while she was away. The less time he spent on the streets of Warsaw, the better, and they would be watching all the airports. Changing his flight departure might buy him a little time. The alarm would have been raised by now, and Prentice had made it clear that the Service's help was over.
Monika's kindnesses continued, but Marchant was far from certain that they were unconditional, particularly when she announced that she would be coming with him to the airport.
âIndia is calling you, I can tell,' she said. âBut firstâ¦'
She hooked a leg over his, but just as she started to kiss Marchant, he stopped her, noticing for the first time his rucksack in the corner of the room.
âSomething wrong?' she asked.
âDid you bring my rucksack over?' he asked, propping himself up on one elbow.
âOf course. You're staying over, remember?'
âDid anyone see you, carrying it?'
âNo, why? Is there a problem?'
He said nothing, and sank back on the bed. So far, he had avoided telling Monika anything that might arouse her suspicion, sticking as close as possible to his legend: he had been bumming around Europe, checked into the Oki Doki before flying out to India, but had been delayed by the bohemian charms of a beautiful receptionist. Par for the course for David Marlowe. But he knew he would soon have to say something more: their journey to the airport would need to be discreet. He decided to opt for the truth, give or take a few dollars.
âThe Americans are looking for me,' he began, taking a pack of her cigarettes from the bedside table and lighting up. He had forgotten how it felt to embark on a lie, that exquisite moment when you step off from ordinary life into the shadows of deceit, where anything is suddenly possible. For a moment the thrill was intoxicating.
âWhy?' She seemed genuinely surprised, resting her chin on both hands to listen.
âI needed dollars for India, the new bank at the US Embassy was offering the best rate, so I went along. But they wouldn't let me in without searching my rucksack.' He paused, relishing the options, wondering which way to take his story. âI had a row.'
âYou should have left your rucksack somewhere, like at the station. It's the same everywhere.'
âI know. But I'd only just arrived in Warsaw. OK, I also had a bit of puff on board. I didn't want a scene.'
âWas it just a row?' Monika asked, putting one hand over her mouth to stifle a laugh.
âWhat's so funny?' he asked.
âNothing. I just can't imagine you angry. Did you get very cross? Like really crazy?'
Her manner was coquettish, playful, and he wondered again whether she was playing a game too. âThere was a bit of mutual pushing. Your police were called, but they weren't interested.'
âBut the Americans are?'
âMaybe I'm being paranoid. I had that rucksack with me, that's all. And they started to ask what was in it when I wouldn't show them.'
âNo one saw me, Mr Angry-man. And you're with me now. I checked you out.' He stared at her through his smoke. âFrom the hostel,' she added, kissing him.
Leila had met Jago, a tousle-haired six-year-old, once before, but this was her first time on the London Eye. Fielding had emailed her earlier in the day with the unusual time and place, explaining that he would have a godson in tow. Everyone in the Service knew the Vicar had an inordinate number of godchildren (fourteen at the last count). Less well known was how he found time to see them all. They were a lucky bunch, she thought, as Fielding led them through the shadows to an empty capsule, bypassing the long queue. He ushered Leila and Jago before him, nodding at an attendant as the doors closed. It evidently wasn't Fielding's first visit.
As Jago swung on the metal handrail, looking fearlessly at the Thames below him, Leila took in London from a new perspective. All around her, as they rose almost imperceptibly into the night sky, buildings coyly revealed parts that had seldom been seen by the public before: pointed skylights, roof gullies, curved domes.
âWe always try to get a sunset flight,' Fielding said, looking west, where the high clouds were tinged with red. âDon't we Jago?'
But Jago was too preoccupied by a passenger boat making its way up the river, its wake spreading like spilt salt behind it.
âHe's grown up a lot since I last saw him,' Leila offered, doubting whether Fielding's effort to include his godson in their conversation was genuine.
âThey do, you know,' he said, still looking out west. âSorry to bring you up here.'
âIt's great. I've never been.'
âWe just can't be sure about Legoland at the moment.'
âNo?'
She presumed he meant MI5, but Fielding didn't elaborate. âStay away from the doors and these pods are almost impenetrable,' he continued. âAt least at the top. Curved glass, you see. Sometimes I reckon there are more of the world's intelligence services flying the London Eye than tourists. Word's got out.'
âUncle Marcus?' Jago asked, not waiting for an answer. âAre we moving faster than a clock?'
âA clock? Well, faster than the long hand, slower than the second hand.'
âWhat's the time now, then?'
âThe time?' Marcus repeated, barely missing a beat. It was why he always accepted invitations to be a godfather: children's random thought patterns kept his brain nimble. âAlmost 12 o'clock,' he said, winking at Leila. âWhen we reach the top it will be exactly midnight.'
âAnd then we'll all turn into pumpkins on the way down?'
âEvery one of us.'
âHassan was a disappointment, in many ways,' Leila said, checking that Jago was distracted again. The boy seemed to be deep in thought, contemplating his imminent transformation.
âReally?'
âI think he was just lonely.'
âDid youâ¦?'
âSqueeze the pips? Yes.'
âAnd?'
âWhen pushedâ¦squeezedâ¦he mentioned the Russians, said how they had liked the instability of last year, of seeing the Service wobble.'
âI'm sure they did. It wasn't the Russians.'
âNo.' She paused, squatting down next to Jago. She had forgotten how brusque Fielding could be in his dismissals.
âWhat's that?' the boy asked, pointing almost directly beneath them.
âThat's called a carousel,' she said, looking at a circular disc of colours far below them. They were almost at the top of the wheel now. Midnight was approaching. âHorses and music andâ¦'
âOh yes, we saw it down there,' he said, already looking elsewhere, across the river towards Big Ben.
âThere's something else I need to talk to you about,' Leila said. She stood up and walked over to Fielding, who was still looking upriver.
âOf course.'
âI need a break. From Britain, from everything that's happened.'
âAs far as I'm concerned, you can have as long off as you want. Travel, see the world as a tourist for a bit. I thought HR had talked to you about this?'
âI don't want a holiday. I need to keep myself busy while he's away. But not here.'
âYour next foreign tour is, when, next year?'
âJuly.'
âI'm sure we could bring it forward.'
âI had something else in mind. The CIA's exchange programme. They've just advertised another position.'
He looked at her for a moment, studying her face. She was strikingly beautiful, he thought, particularly in the soft light of the setting sun. âIs that what you really want? I'm surprised. Genuinely. Langley's no fun at all, you know that.'
âIt's not in America. A three-month tour on the subcontinent. India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka. I'd start in the Delhi station.'
A thought crossed Fielding's mind with the fleeting transience of one of Jago's random musings; but it left a trace that was to linger much longer than he would have liked.
Spiro looked again at the grainy image of a two-tonne, dark-blue military truck, standing in heavy traffic on the northern edge of Warsaw.
âGrom. Polish special forces. When was this taken?' he asked, pulling hard on his cigarette.
â20.30 hours,' Carter said.
The room had gone quiet as everyone stared at the truck.
âBring us in closer,' Spiro said, walking up to the wall as the image grew bigger and more blurred. âThis part here, the windscreen.'
The truck's windscreen was highlighted with an animated dotted line, before it expanded to fill the entire wall. The driver could clearly be seen on the right-hand side of the cabin, and the outline of another figure was visible in the passenger seat. But it was the profile of a third person between them that had interested Spiro.
âCan we rebuild this?' he asked.
The atmosphere grew tense as Carter and his team exchanged glances with each other, realising that Spiro was about to show them up. They had been more interested in establishing where the truck had gone next, and whether any of the city's other unreliable cameras had captured its progress.
In a few moments the image had been enhanced enough to reveal the blurred features of a familiar figure. Spiro turned to address the room, one side of the projected figure dappling his own. âHugo Prentice, employee of Her Majesty's Secret Service, Warsaw station. I guess his mother loved him. Langley wants him fried.'
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Hugo Prentice wandered through Kolo Bazaar, aware of at least one set of watchers on his tail. He had already counted three of them, and spotted a fourth in the antique mirror on the stall in front of him. They had picked him up after he had left the embassy by car after lunch, following at a safe distance. He knew what their presence meant: they had spotted his image on the traffic CCTV. On the journey down from Stare Kiejkuty he had leant forward in the Grom truck at almost every set of lights, hoping that at least one of the ancient police traffic cameras had been working.
He walked down to the end of the market, stopping occasionally to look at items that genuinely caught his eye: Russian samovars, iron crosses, old leather sofas. It was important for his followers to believe that they had not been spotted. When he made his move, he must do it with the purpose of an intelligence officer who was taking the usual precautions before meeting his agent, rather than someone who was panicking under surveillance.
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Spiro was agitated, watching Prentice on the main screen as he moved through the market in the fragmented images of the city centre's CCTV network.
âHe's about to dry-clean,' he said. âMoscow rules, British style. They should put this guy in a museum.'
Spiro knew what Prentice was up to. Marchant was too hot to be kept at the British Embassy â they needed to deny all involvement â so he had been secreted somewhere in the city. Prentice was now on his way to meet him. Spiro had asked old friends in the WSI for assistance, but he wasn't sure if they would be in a position to help after the Stare Kiejkuty fiasco.
âEyes on the tram, unit three,' he said, as Prentice quickened his pace.
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The number 12 pulled in just as Prentice reached the stop. He stepped aboard, glancing casually at his watch as he did so. The tram was crowded with afternoon commuters, and there were no seats available, but he wasn't going far. At the next stop he would get off, descend into the nearby underpass by a subway, and then leave from exit four, one of six possible exits, which was at street level. The street was one-way â the wrong way for any vehicle that might have been following the number 12 tram.
âSomebody better be following him,' Spiro said as Prentice disappeared down the underpass. âHe's in dead ground.'
âUnit four?' the junior officer said.
âThe busker's playing our song,' a relaxed voice said on the intercom.
An image of a guitarist, sitting on the floor of the underpass, flashed up on the main screen. Carter allowed himself a nervous smile, pleased that his men were performing well on Spiro's watch. But Spiro wasn't impressed.
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âSomething's not right here,' he said. âIt's all too predictable, even for the British.'
âExit four,' said the junior officer.
Spiro watched as Prentice sauntered up onto the street.
âWe have a problem. It's one-way.'
âThat's better,' Spiro said. âThe old soldier's warming up.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Prentice slowed down to look in the window of a shoe shop, checking for trams as he did so. Number 23 was coming down the road, but was still fifty yards from the stop. If he increased his pace now, he just might make it. But he needed his tail to catch the tram too, and he was still packing up his guitar in the underpass.
The lights ahead changed, delaying the traffic enough for Prentice to walk slowly towards the stop. He didn't need to check that the busker was behind him. Prentice climbed on board at the front of the tram and worked his way down, searching for a seat. The busker was good, Marchant thought. He never once looked up to see where Prentice had sat, which made him think he was wired. He would know in a few seconds. Just as the front and rear doors were about to close, Prentice slipped back out onto the street, synchronising his exit with the moment when the busker had a ticket in his hand.
The doors closed with the busker still inside.
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âTextbook,' Spiro said.
âUnit 3's approaching now,' Carter said, watching the screen.
âReminds me of my first surveillance op in London,' said Spiro. âThe Russian was sitting in the last carriage of the subway train, front end. When the train pulled into Charing Cross, Northern Line, he walked off just before the train left. I tried to follow, but the last set of doors don't open at Charing Cross. I must have been the only spook in London who didn't know. I swear the guy waved as the train pulled out.'
âSir, target's on the move again,' one of the junior officers said. âBoarding a 24, heading uptown.'
âStay with him,' Carter said. âThese guys can take all day to clean up.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Prentice, it was true, had been known to spend twenty-four hours establishing that he wasn't being followed, but he didn't have that luxury today. Instead, he took the tram towards the central railway station, getting off on the corner of Jerozolimskie and Jana Pawla II. The next ten minutes would be critical. He walked past the station's entrance and headed towards Zlote Tarasy, the latest in a series of huge shopping malls to have opened in the capital in recent years. Prentice knew the Varsarians loved to shop, but even he was surprised by Zlote Tarasy's opulence and range of familiar Western names. He could have been in Bluewater.
He headed for the escalator that would take him down to the lower ground floor. At the bottom, he moved confidently around to the base of the up escalator and rode back to the ground floor, glancing across at the escalator he had just come down on. He knew the Americans wouldn't fall for it, but today was about maintaining appearances. The CIA's watchers had never rated the Service's counter-surveillance skills, and he was more than happy to play down to their expectations.
He glanced at his watch and then headed for a café on the ground floor, where he ordered a black coffee, sat down at a small corner table, and started to read a copy of the
International Herald Tribune
that he had picked up from the counter. His table was discreet, with an empty seat opposite him.
For a few minutes he looked through the paper, concentrating on stories rather than just pretending to read them. He was always reminding his officers that the best counter-surveillance watchers were trained to spot eye movements. The vibration of his mobile phone interrupted a story on Belgium beer prices. Prentice reached inside his jacket pocket and read the text.
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âThis is it,' Spiro said. âAll units, I want Daniel Marchant brought in the moment he shows. Alive.'