âNames?'
âGanic and Zubac. Don't know their first names â we never got that friendly. They're Bosnians  . . . ex-military or militia, I'm not sure. Zubac's the boss; he's the smaller one, but not by much. Ganic is scary and doesn't care who knows it. There's not a lot goes on behind the face, if you know what I mean. I've seen guys like him before: dead on the inside. Wouldn't surprise me if they've buried a few where they come from.'
Harry didn't bother asking him where the hotel was; he was sure Ballatyne already had that covered. Besides, he was sure that the Protectory would have had it cleaned, checked and sanitized of anything incriminating.
âThere was another name I picked up,' McCreath continued. âSomeone called Nicholls. Deakin didn't seem to have much time for him, but he was obviously part of the group. He never came to Brussels, though, as far as I know.'
Funny how Brussels kept cropping up, thought Harry: first with Pike, then Paulton and Deakin, now McCreath and the Bosnian storm-troopers.
He made McCreath go through the descriptions again, getting him to paint a picture and give him every bit of detail he could recall. It was standard debriefing procedure tailored to drain the mind of every scrap, even to the point of recalling material that would serve no specific purpose, in the hopes that it would drag out something he could use.
But Deakin and his crew had been very clever.
âTell us about the Protectory,' said Ballatyne. âNames and numbers.'
âThey never told me much â and nothing about themselves,' McCreath replied. âI got the impression that there are three main guys running it, but Deakin hinted at others he could call on if needed. He laid it on that the Protectory was there to help people like me who'd been asked to do too much for Queen and country.' He grunted. âHe made it sound like a charitable organization for damaged squaddies. I fell for it, I admit. Christ, it was a no-brainer; I was in a mess, no life to speak of, no way back and they were offering me a way out. It was a bloody sight better than what I'd been living with for the past four years, so I said yes.'
âAnd what exactly were they offering?' Ballatyne asked.
âA new identity, ready cash and help with relocation. There were places I couldn't go, Deakin said, because I'd be vulnerable. But that left plenty of places I could disappear to, no bother.'
âLike where?'
âLow cost countries like Thailand, Cambodia, a couple of places in Latin America, even Australia and Canada. He said a fair number of Americans have ended up there.'
âWhat did they want in return?'
This time McCreath hesitated, and Harry guessed it was probably out of shame at having considered trading information for a better life. âThey wanted anything new, especially on comms systems, networks, satellites and ECMs â electronic countermeasures. They were particularly interested in the new battlefield communications system I'd been working on when I got wounded.' He scowled. âThey seemed to know quite a lot about it already, though. I think they'd already done some work on it.'
Pike, thought Harry. They'd have got something from him before he turned and ran. With another 251 Signals Squadron expert on their hands, Pike wouldn't have been worth trying to hold on to, not once he'd made his intentions clear.
âDid they ever mention any other British army personnel they were after?'
âNot to me. The focus was all on me.'
âAnyone named Tan?'
âTan? No. They didn't mention and I didn't ask. They didn't seem the kind of people to mess with; I got that message pretty quick.'
âSo what made you back out?'
McCreath sighed. âThey were asking too much. No way did I want to go back to Afghanistan, but that didn't mean I was prepared to sell the kind of information I had to the highest bidder.' He frowned and twisted his hands together. âI know it's easy to say it now, but I realized it was my mates I'd be selling down the river  . . . exposing them to God knows what, now or in the future. It wasn't like I'd planned on becoming a traitor, you know? I just wanted  . . . out. Anyway, I wasn't supposed to call anybody from the hotel, but I needed to talk to someone. So I bribed a cleaner to let me use her mobile and rang the mate I'd been staying with before Deakin turned up. He told me about Pike; said he'd heard on the grapevine that Pike had arrived back in London, ready to call it a day, but he'd been taken out.' McCreath looked down at the table. âI knew it had to be Zubac and Ganic. They'd been away for a couple of days by then. I was a bit slow on the uptake, but I figured if I stalled or tried telling them I wasn't going to sell, I'd be next.' He gave Harry an empty look. âSo I bugged out and headed back here.'
âTo do what?' said Ballatyne.
âI don't know. Hand myself in, I suppose. I wasn't exactly thinking clearly, but I knew if I stayed where I was, I'd most likely end up dead.'
Harry let the silence lengthen, then said, âYou were lucky.'
âI know. I should say thanks, but I suppose it would be pointless, wouldn't it?' He looked miserable and suddenly couldn't meet Harry's eye.
âNo, I mean you were lucky before today. You heard names, saw two of the Protectory and the two Bosnians face to face. That was a lot of exposure for someone who was going to be allowed to disappear into the sunset with a new ID and a load of cash.' He stood up. He needed to keep moving. âFact is, from that moment on, you could identify all of them and that made you a liability. Whatever else we know about the Protectory, one thing's clear: they've survived for a long time now. They only let out the kind of personal information you got for one reason.'
McCreath swallowed as the full realization of his position began to sink in. âGo on.'
âBecause once they'd drained you of the information they wanted, you weren't going to be allowed to live long enough to pass anything on.' He walked to the door. âThere was nothing in this for you and never has been. Just like Neville Pike and at least three others we know of. No future, no money, no new ID. You were expendable.'
THIRTY-SIX
W
hile Harry and Ballatyne were talking to McCreath amid the wreckage from the attack on the police station, Zubac and Ganic were closing in on the M25 motorway, the eastâwest link south of London, their sights set on taking a ferry to France. Their exit from the attack site had been a close-run thing; as they left through the rear gate, they had run into an armed response vehicle responding to an all-units call. But they had been undeterred; a few rounds of fire from the Rugers had disabled the police vehicle and they had managed to walk away amid the confusion and screams from pedestrians ducking for cover.
Two hundred yards further on, they had made a pre-arranged hand-off of the rucksack containing the weapons to an elderly Jamaican at a grab-and-go craft stall. It disappeared under the table and in return they got a holdall and keys to an anonymous grey Renault waiting in a pub car park off Coldharbour Lane. From there it had been a simple route through the back streets to take them south and out of immediate trouble before a cordon could be set up.
Zubac was feeling humiliated by the results of their attack. They had not failed to carry out an assignment like this in a long time â especially on a lightly armed facility where resistance should have been minimal. With superior firepower and the element of shock backed up by the M84s, it should have been a cake-walk. They should have been able to clear a route to McCreath and eliminate him with the minimum of fuss and walk away before anyone could stop them. Instead, they had been drawn like amateurs on a chase of their quarry through the corridors of the police station, only to run into a choking cloud of potassium bicarbonate in a stairwell. Zubac suppressed the desire to rub his eyes and scrabbled around in the footwell where he found a plastic bag containing a bottle of water, a change of clothing, packs of sandwiches and a packet of antiseptic wet-wipes.
He ripped out a handful of wet-wipes and handed them to Ganic, who was driving. His friend was red around the eyes from the effects of the potassium, but had avoided the worst of the powder. Zubac had been leading the way and had started up the stairs just as the first wave had come down, cloaking him in its embrace before he could back off. He poured water into his cupped hand and splashed it over his face, swearing fluently at the man who had done this to them.
â
We had guns and stun grenades!
' he howled angrily, splashing more water. âHow could this happen? They had silly little sticks, that's all!'
Ganic shrugged and lit a cigarette one-handed, and Zubac swore at him in frustration. His knew his friend of old; Ganic wasn't so concerned with failure. For him, the occasional setback was an operational hazard. It happened when you were least expecting it and was something you lived with, even Zubac had to admit that. Not that Deakin would see it that way.
He drank some water and tried not to think about the head of the Protectory. The former Scots Guardsman didn't even come close to scaring him, but he was undoubtedly living on a hair-trigger and liable to go off at any moment. And unpredictable men like him were always a worry. Fortunately, Turpowicz was calmer, a restraining influence on his colleague; but he, too, was a former soldier and would do whatever Deakin told him. God knows what they would say about this setback, though.
Once they had cleaned their hands and faces as thoroughly as they could, they stopped long enough to remove their jackets, shirts and trousers, which they emptied and bundled into a plastic charity shop collection bag and dropped out of the window. Give it an hour or so and the contents would be recycled on the street or sitting in a shop somewhere, waiting for a grateful customer. The holdall they'd received from the Jamaican contained replacement clothing, cheap, commonplace and untraceable.
âYou going to call him?' said Ganic. He was steering one-handed, twirling a triangular metal ring on his finger and flicking it with his thumb with an irritating pinging sound.
âIs that what I think it is?' Zubac gave him a sour look. Tough as he was, his friend was disturbingly childish in the things that amused him. Here he was playing with a pull ring from one of the M84s.
âSure.' Ganic grinned and studied the ring. âThis is neat. I think I'll have it silvered and put it through my
kurac
. The girls, they go for that weird shit. What do you think?'
âI think you're the weird one.' Zubac took out a disposable mobile phone with a pre-programmed number. He wasn't looking forward to this, but was feeling sour enough to not give a damn.
He pressed the speed-dial key.
Deakin listened in open disbelief to the call, then cut the connection without comment. He looked at Turpowicz and shook his head. They had moved to a hotel on the outskirts of Nürnberg awaiting the outcome of the Brixton assault, and a meeting with Paulton to discuss future plans. Zubac had just called with the bad news.
âProblems?' Turpowicz tried not to look unsurprised. Lately he'd come to expect almost anything of the men he referred to as Beavis and Butt-head, given their unsubtle methodology of eliminating the people Deakin sent them after. Following the attack on Pike in broad daylight, and the careless manner in which they had left Barrow's body to be found, he'd had his doubts about the wisdom of making a suicidal assault on a police precinct, even with the traditionally unarmed British policemen they'd be up against. But Deakin hadn't listened, intent only on teaching McCreath a lesson and sending a warning to anyone else who changed their mind about cooperating with the Protectory.
âBastards!' Deakin looked ready to spit. âThey missed McCreath! God Almighty, how hard can it be to walk over a bunch of noddies? All they had to do was get inside and finish him off.' He paced up and down, then jumped as his mobile rang again. He listened for a second, then said, âYeah, come on up.' He disconnected and said, âPaulton's here.'
âAre we going to tell him about Tate?'
Deakin shrugged. âWhy bother? What difference does it make?'
âYou said Paulton knows his way around. He might give us a line on getting this guy stopped. We could do without this right now â especially as we still haven't located Tan. Every time he interferes, he's eating away at our deadline.'
âYou worry too much.'
âYeah, well, worrying has kept me out of trouble so far. But this is moving on to a whole new level.'
âWhat are you talking about?' Deakin scowled.
âThis.' Turpowicz waved a vague hand in the air. âPike, Barrow, those guys in Australia, now going after McCreath in a police precinct building. We've changed the rules of engagement, Deak â don't you see? We've come out and given the establishment the finger, saying “take this, suckers, we do what the hell we like!”' His face twisted. âThey'll only stand so much of that shit before they come after us with all guns blazing.'
Deakin squared up to him. âWhat's the matter, Turp? Not losing your nerve, are you?'
âNo, I'm just saying we should back off a little. We'reâ'
He was interrupted by a knock at the door. It was Paulton.
âHello, boys,' he said smoothly. âAm I interrupting something? Much louder and the whole hotel will know our business.' He dropped his coat on a chair and headed for the mini-bar. âCome on, what's the problem? Mr Wien Lu Chi putting the pressure on, is he?' He opened a miniature of whisky and poured it into a glass. âI told you getting into bed with the Chinese was a risky business. They don't play like the rest of us, believe me.'
âIt's not him,' Deakin growled. âI sent Zubac and Ganic after McCreath. They missed him.'
âNever mind. It wasn't necessary, anyway. What happened?'
Deakin told him in a few brief sentences, ending with a description of Harry Tate.