âWho were the two in the van?'
âFamily members, that's all we've got. No papers on file, though. They claimed they knew nothing about nothing, jobbing decorators waiting for a pick-up until you arrived and started waving guns in their faces. They looked terrified, according to the officer who interviewed them, but he thinks that was down to Soran hovering in the background like the angel of death.'
âSoran? Or Zubac and Ganic?'
âGood point. All three, probably. The cops didn't have reason to search so they had to pull back after talking to the two young ones. In the end, they had nothing to hold them on. My guess is they'll be out of the country by morning.'
âAnd no signs of Zubac and Ganic?'
âNo. Nothing obvious at the ports, anyway. They've probably gone to ground until the fuss dies down.' He paused. âAny idea what their plan was?'
âWith Jean? No.' Harry didn't like to think what would have happened if the two men had taken her. The message would have been simple: back off and stay that way. Whether that would have resulted in getting Jean back in one piece was a moot point.He doubted it somehow; the Protectory seemed to be playing for keeps, and getting him off their tail would have been a high priority.
Ballatyne continued, âWe're going to spring a surprise on Soran this evening, just for the hell of it. SO19 are going to raid the shop. If you want in on it, be my guest. You might find something. I'll let you know where and when.'
âThanks. I'll be there.' The answer was automatic. This had gone too far already, and Harry wanted to get the men responsible.
âYou didn't get far with Fort Knox, I hear.'
âNot yet. Why?'
âI had a call from the State Department. Seems Major Dundas carries some weight in the corridors of power, courtesy of a brother-in-law who's a state senator. He complained about interference from the British, namely you, and they're currently assessing how much to share with us.'
âDundas is an idiot. I asked for a check on a name, that's all.'
âRight. I think rubbing Bradley Manning in his face was a bit harsh. They're all a bit sensitive about that young man. Still, I'll leave it with you to sort out.'
Harry rang off wondering if the real purpose of that exchange had been to get him involved in the police raid on Soran. As for the message from the US State Department, he didn't hold out much hope of getting any further cooperation from Garcia. The lines would have been instantly shut down. But why the reluctance to help? All he was looking for was a name.
He was surprised, therefore, to find an email waiting for him at home. It was from someone calling himself candlepoint81 at a Gmail account, and the message read:
Master Sgt Gregory C. Turpowicz (âTurp') â b. 1968, Ft Worth, Texas â served 101st Airborne Div (Air Assault) Ft Campbell Kentucky â served Kosovo 2000 â Iraq and Afghanistan â wounded 2003 (Iraq) and 2008 (Afghanistan) â listed as deserter January 2010. Believed to be Canada or Europe.
It had to be Garcia, Major Dundas's assistant at Fort Knox. Harry was wondering why she should have contacted him via an anonymous email account, when he scrolled down and saw another line of text.
This soldier has been de-classified as NFA (No Further Action).
There was no signature. Harry was convinced the message came from Garcia. He debated dialling Fort Knox again, but decided against it. If Garcia was operating as some kind of whistleblower, he didn't see that compromising her would help. But it still didn't explain why Dundas and the State Department were being so coy. And what did an NFA classification mean? Had Turpowicz come back in? Or was he dead?
His phone rang. The number was withheld.
âMr Tate?' A woman's voice, cool and efficient, Home Counties smooth. Faintly familiar.
âYes.'
âI'm calling on behalf of Richard Ballatyne. He wonders if you could meet him in Victoria Embankment Gardens, same as last time. Thirty minutes from now. Can you confirm?'
âMake it forty,' Harry said automatically. He cut the connection and rang Ballatyne's number. A man's voice picked up.
âHe's not here. Can I help?'
âNo, thanks.' Harry couldn't think why a personal meeting was necessary simply to exchange information about a police raid, but Ballatyne was clearly comfortable at keeping up their contact. If that led through the Bosnians eventually to Paulton, he'd be stupid to throw his dummy from the pram just because he didn't like being tugged around. Even so, he felt uneasy and rang Rik and told him where he was going.
As he stepped outside the building, he met one of his neighbours. Mrs Fletcher lived on the ground floor and saw herself as the local neighbourhood watch. She was fencepost slim and seemed permanently dressed in an elegant long coat and scarf.
âMr Tate,' she greeted him. âDid your visitor get hold of you?'
Harry was forced to stop. The manner in which she blocked his way indicated that it was more than just a passing question, and he wondered if she had ever worked for the Security Service. âWhat visitor was that, Mrs Fletcher?'
âThe young woman I saw coming down the stairs earlier today. I didn't recognize her, and when I asked if I could help, she more or less brushed me off. I must say, you try to help people and they respond with rudeness.' Her expression was accusatory, as if Harry was in the habit of consorting with riff-raff.
âCan you describe her?'
âJust a young woman. Reasonably well dressed, early thirties, I'd say. A business person, perhaps, maybe an estate agent?' She fixed him with a stare. âYou're not thinking of moving, are you?' She made it sound like jumping a sinking ship.
âNo, I'm not.' It must have been one of Ballatyne's people, he decided, and made a mental note to check. He went to move past Mrs Fletcher, but she touched his arm, a tentative smile hovering around her eyes.
âA few of us in the block are having a coffee morning later this week. We were wondering if you would like to come. Maybe we could get to know a little more about you. Say Thursday?'
Harry wondered how to refuse without upsetting her. She was only being neighbourly, and telling her to mind her own business was a bit strong. She and her coffee table irregulars had undoubtedly discussed him at length already. Instead he said, âSounds very nice. But Thursday is my day for gun practice.'
FORTY-SIX
V
ictoria Embankment Gardens held its customary gathering of desperate smokers, leisurely tourists and a growing flow of early homeward-bound commuters. Harry was early, having hit the underground on the run just as a train was arriving.
He did a tour of the area, checking the access paths before entering the garden. There was no sign of Ballatyne or his posse of outriders, but that didn't mean he wasn't waiting nearby. Georgio's restaurant apart, he wondered if the rumours surrounding the Vauxhall Cross collective weren't true; that like some rare breeds of wild cat, they rarely revisited the same place twice.
He approached the bench where he and Ballatyne had sat last time. It was vacant and he took a seat at one end and stretched his legs. Maybe a few minutes alone would be good for his thought processes. If he could just get rid of the minor prickling feeling on the back of his neck, he might almost manage to relax.
âHello, Harry.'
The prickling feeling intensified. He recognized the voice. It was the young woman who had called to set up the meeting. But that wasn't why his internal alarm bells were ringing. The recognition came from further back, when it had been face to face and unencumbered by the distortion of a phone line.
As she sat down beside him, he turned and looked her in the eye.
It was Clare Jardine.
FORTY-SEVEN
H
arry stared at her, wondering what had brought this cold, calculating killer back into his world at this particular moment in time. Whatever, he doubted it would be good news.
âGot a moment?' she said chattily. âWe need to talk.'
He wanted to refuse, to walk away and not look back. But he couldn't. He had to know what she was doing here. The last time he'd seen her, she had been sitting on the Embankment alongside her former boss, Sir Anthony Bellingham, Deputy Director (Operations) of MI6, moments before she killed him by slicing into his femoral artery.
âWhy not?' There would be no Ballatyne, then. No wonder her voice had sounded vaguely familiar; he'd heard it often enough in the flesh. It must have been Clare who had warned Jean about the Bosnians, too. The realization that she knew that much about his private life was deeply unsettling.
âSorry, Harry. Secret squirrel habits never die, do they?' She patted his knee. âStill, this is nice.' She was dressed in a smart leather jacket and slacks, and looked fit and capable  . . . and to Harry, quite lethal. Her hair was cropped short and her face had lost the drawn look he remembered from his last sighting of her on the way back from Red Station. But then, he reminded himself, she had still been getting over being shot at. That kind of experience has an effect on people.
âWhat do you want?'
âYou're going after Paulton.' It wasn't a question.
âWhere did you hear that?' There was no point denying it; she probably had an inside track on security matters and knew roughly what was going on, even if not the fine details. Professional links made in the service were not always easily broken, no matter what the circumstances. And Clare's circumstances were that if she were spotted by the security establishment, she would go away for a long time. They didn't like their senior people being murdered within sight of the building, no matter how badly they might have deserved it.
âI've got friends. They don't condone what I did, but they understand.'
She hadn't taken her hand from his knee, he noticed, and it was now covered by a folded newspaper. He got a memory flash of her sitting alongside Bellingham not very far from this spot, and felt a sudden tightness in his belly.
âYou slotted a senior figure in SIS,' he reminded her. âThat kind of thing catches up with you sooner or later.'
âMaybe. Maybe not. Be honest, Harry, didn't you want to do the same? He tried to have you topped, for God's sake.' Her voice was low but there was a sharp brittleness he didn't recall from their last meeting, and a faint tic beneath one eye.
She was right, though. He'd thought about it many times since, and wondered what he'd have done if Clare hadn't got there first. Paulton had already disappeared by the time they returned from Red Station in Georgia, getting out just ahead of the invading Russians. Turning in Bellingham to the authorities and relying on them to take appropriate action wouldn't have been enough; the man had the connections if not to evade punishment altogether, certainly to avoid its more damaging extremes. In the end, he would have disappeared into a quiet retirement, countering the token establishment slap on the wrist by claiming that he had done it all for Queen and country.
âHow do you know about Jean? And my address?' he added. The mystery caller Mrs Fletcher had seen. It had to have been her.
âSame friends, how else? The intel community is the biggest gossip mill in the world, you know that. Bunch of floppy lips, most of them.' She shrugged. âThere are no secrets in our profession, Harry. I even know what you're up to. The Protectory is for real, isn't it? Who'd have thought  . . . a branch of the Samaritans for deserters and conchies.'
âHow did you know to warn Jean?'
âI'd tried making contact at your place, but the resident dragon down the hall put me off, so I decided to think laterally and asked around.'
âIt's hardly public knowledge.'
âOh, come on  . . . you know what I mean. Like I said, nothing's totally secret, is it?'
âYou trawled Six's files.' It was the only way she could have known  . . . unless she had friends in Five, too.
She gave him a teasing smile but didn't deny it. âIt's what they trained us to do, isn't it â use whatever assets we have? She looks nice; just your type. Bit too elegant for my tastes, though.'
âI'll be sure to tell her.' She was trying to annoy him. âHow did you spot the two watchers?'
âThe two wannabes in the red van?' She rolled her eyes. âGod, they were too obvious. So obvious, in fact, that I scouted around and saw the others. They looked the real deal. Tough job you've got on, Harry. Is it your way of laying ghosts?' Suddenly the humour was gone and she was searching his face for something, trying to read his expression. âIs that it?'
âI'm doing what I can, Clare. It doesn't explain why you're here, though.'
âSimple. I've got ghosts, too. And Paulton was part of setting up Red Station. Maybe I don't forgive as easily as you, or maybe I'm just a bad-tempered, hormonal bitch. Call it what you like. I'm hoping you won't get in my way, that's all.' She shuffled a little closer to him on the bench seat and smiled, a hint of perfume overlaying the metallic smell from the river. She tightened her hand on his thigh. It was a strange gesture of intimacy given their last meeting, which hadn't been particularly warm, and the fact that she had no interest in men. Indeed, her reason for being banished from MI6 in the first place had been due to falling victim in a honey trap, where the intended target â a woman â had reversed the roles with career-damaging consequences for Clare.
Then she moved the newspaper to one side and looked down. Harry couldn't help it; he did the same.
She was holding a powder compact, silvered and elegant and entirely ordinary. In fact it was very ordinary, an accessory nobody would look at twice, wouldn't even give a passing thought to. Except that this one had an extra, sinister facility beyond the cosmetic: it housed a three-inch razor-sharp curved blade now protruding from the edge, retractable at the push of a button. And the blade was resting against Harry's inner thigh.