Authors: Nick Oldham
âDid you arrange his travel?'
âYes, sir.'
âHow did he travel?'
âAir.'
âFrom where to where?'
âBanjul to Gatwick, England.'
âHe just flew? Just like that?'
âYes â on a false passport.'
âAlso arranged by you?'
âI am a fixer,' Aleef said humbly.
âActually, you are as much of a terrorist as him.'
âI'm a businessman,' he protested. Aleef pulled down the handle with a metallic clang and eased open the safe door. He came slightly upright and showed Flynn the contents: stack upon stack of cash, many currencies, all denominations, all carefully bound.
âThat is what Mr Boone wanted.'
âStand away,' Flynn said.
Aleef edged back a few inches, his eyes jittery. Next to the desk was a waste paper basket lined with a supermarket carrier bag. Flynn pulled the bag out with his left hand, placed it on the desk, took hold of its base and tipped the contents on to the floor. He handed the bag to Aleef.
âFill it â dollars and sterling only.'
Colour seeped from Aleef's face. âThat is virtually all of my money.'
âEggs in one basket,' Flynn winked. âNow fucking fill the bag.' He pointed the gun at Aleef's groin.
Aleef swallowed and got to the task, half-filling the bag with many blocks of carefully counted money.
âHow much?' Flynn asked.
âThirty-two thousand US dollars, four thousand sterling.'
âNot even close to the value of a man's life,' Flynn muttered.
âHis choice, not mine.'
Aleef suddenly swung the bag at Flynn, let go of the handle and it flew towards him, the money inside helping to propel it. Flynn ducked instinctively. Aleef's right hand came up holding a small calibre gun. Flynn realized that the weapon must have been concealed in the safe, obviously for moments like this, and Aleef had managed to palm it without Flynn seeing it. Sneaky bastard, Flynn thought.
But as sneaky and underhand as he was, he was slow and Flynn had not relaxed enough for someone like Aleef to get the better of him. As soon as he saw the gun moving, the Glock jerked up and two bullets from it slammed into Aleef's chest, knocking him back against the wall. He slithered down it, dead.
Flynn picked up the carrier bag, slammed the safe shut with a kick, and left the office after locking it up.
Within minutes he was back at the place where Boone's Land Cruiser had been parked, expecting to find it gone, but Michelle was still there, having ignored his instructions. Just as he knew she would. He climbed into the passenger seat and they exchanged a look.
âJust get back to the boat,' Flynn said, âno questions.'
She nodded, started the engine.
âIt might be better for you to lie low for a while. Can you do that?'
She nodded again. âI have family in Sierra Leone. I can go there by bus.'
âWhat about by boat? Boone said you were a natural sailor. Can you pilot the boat?'
âHe taught me.'
âOn the ocean?'
âOn the ocean,' she confirmed.
âGood â take the boat. It would be a crime not to.'
âBut I don't have money. I couldn't afford to.'
âYou do now.' Flynn held up the carrier bag.
Henry, Rik, Donaldson and a CSI entered the flat in Blackpool that had been used by Zahid Sadiq and Rashid Rahman, and visited by Jamil Akram, the bomb-maker. The landlord, awakened at such an early hour, had been surprisingly cooperative, and let the detectives in again, not saying a word. He still had not managed to re-let it, nor had he received any word about getting the contents back from MI5. He let them in and said he was going back to bed and not to bother him unless absolutely necessary. He also reconfirmed that no one had been in or used the flat since their last visit.
Once inside, Henry looked expectantly at Donaldson.
âFollow me,' he said. He led them towards the bathroom, a fairly disgusting room consisting of toilet, wash basin and shower cubicle, all tiled, but the grout stained with black mildew. It was just about big enough for Donaldson to step into and turn around. He slid his hand into his back pocket and extracted a folded sheet of paper which he opened out. âI got the lovely Mr Beckham to fax this to me, obviously thinking he had nothing to lose by doing so.' He handed the sheet to Henry. âAn itemized list of property seized by his forensic team from this bathroom.'
Henry scanned the very short list. Two hand towels, a bar of soap, a roll-on deodorant, a shower mat. Henry shook his head, puzzled. âWhat's missing?' Donaldson said.
Henry looked blankly at his friend. He was too tired. âJust tell me.'
âOther than soap, no toiletries.'
Henry's expression was still blank.
Donaldson sighed. âWhat do you have next to your sink at home?'
Henry could have fallen asleep standing up. âLike I said, justâ'
âOK, I'll tell you. Shaving foam or gel and a razor, yeah?'
âMaybe they used an electric one.'
âNot in the complete inventory for the rest of the flat.' He tapped his back pocket. âGot it here.'
âWhat are you getting at?' Henry's shoulders had sagged.
âDid you bring a wrench?'
âI've got it,' Rik said. He was behind Henry, who said, âEven got the monkey.'
Rik held up a large adjustable wrench that Henry had acquired from the police station janitor.
âGimme.' Donaldson took it from him, turned to the sink and went on to his knees in front of it. The pipe down from the plughole dropped into a plastic U-bend with large plastic nuts that were capable of being loosened by hand. They unscrewed easily after the first use of force and a moment later Donaldson stood up with the complete U-bend in his hands. He fitted the plug into the sink and then emptied the contents of the U-bend into it.
The water in it had obviously been standing for about a fortnight and was scummy and stinky.
âThere,' he declared proudly, âwhat do you think?'
Henry, Rik and the CSI crammed into the bathroom to have a look.
âWater. From a U-bend. What am I missing here?' Henry said.
Donaldson reached into his other back jeans pocket and pulled out four crumpled photographs.
Zahid Sadiq and Rashid Rahman. Two students prepared to give their lives for a highly suspect cause. There were two shots of Rahman: one that Donaldson had downloaded from the video, the other a close-up of his face on the mortuary slab after having been shot on the motorway. And two of Sadiq: a college photograph and a mug shot taken on his arrest.
âWhat's not in here?' Donaldson indicated the room.
âShaving gear,' Henry said, as it started to dawn on him.
âWhat was not on their faces or heads when we got to them? Me in town, you on the motorway.' Donaldson held up the photographs for them to see.
Henry felt a lurch inside him. âThey were clean-shaven.'
âExactly,' Donaldson proclaimed. âReady to be received into heaven. In fact, their whole bodies were clean-shaven.'
Henry thought back to Rahman's corpse in the mortuary. No pubic hair, no head hair, no armpit hair, legs shaved, face smooth.
Donaldson's eyes were wild.
But Henry said, âThat's not to say they didn't shave here. They could have done it in the shower.'
âI'll wager a million dollars of FBI money we won't find a trace of anything down that shower drain either. Which is where you come in.' He shot a look at the CSI, who nodded, knowing what his job was.
âGet on with it,' Henry said to the man, and he and Donaldson reversed out of the shower room into the living area. âWhat are you saying?' Henry asked his friend.
âThat one way of spotting a potential male suicide bomber is the lack of facial hair. And something else has been bugging me about that morning, even though I didn't really get a grip of it until now. This place was under police surveillance from quite early on. When I saw Sadiq walking down the promenade it was simply assumed that somehow he had either been out before the cops arrived to watch him, or he'd managed to get out undetected.' Donaldson shook his head. âEven as ineffective as Lancashire Constabulary are, I say, to use one of your words â bollocks! It was never even thought through. The car they were supposed to be using was outside, tick! So they musta been here, tick! Assumptions, ass bites.'
âYou're saying they weren't even here that morning?'
âThis might well be their flat, but you're right. They prepared themselves and set off from somewhere else, which means they had a hidey-hole of their own elsewhere and that someone else was involved in this.'
There was a crash and cracking noise from the bathroom, then the CSI came out bearing the drainage pipe from underneath the shower tray. âNothing down here but scum. No trace of hairs.'
âAnd there would be a lot of hair,' Rik said.
Henry turned on Donaldson and said, âHow many musketeers are there?'
Puzzled, the American said, âThree, I guess.'
âExactly.' Henry, now rejuvenated, got out his mobile phone and opened it, at which moment it rang.
Flynn was in the wheelhouse of
Faye2
, heading out to sea from the estuary of the Gambia River. Fast.
âWhat?' Henry said, screwing up his face. âWho?'
âFlynn, Steve Flynn.'
âWhat the hell are you calling me for? And at this time of day?' Henry had little time for the man. Their history was rocky to say the least.
âThat's not very nice,' Flynn said. He took a swig of the mug of tea he'd prepared, which tasted amazing in the present circumstances.
âI'm busy.'
âGot something for you.'
âIf you're phoning to tell me you never stole that million quid â wrong time, wrong bloke.' Henry, now standing on the landing outside the flat, gave Donaldson a weary look, then said, âDid you try to phone me earlier?'
âYup.'
âWhy? I'm not interested in anything you might have to say.'
âIn that case I'll hang up, find someone who does want to listen, and make you look stupid into the bargain.'
âLook, Flynn, what the hell d'you want? I am seriously busy here.'
âJamil Akram,' Flynn stated. Besides the mug of tea, he had made himself a couple of slices of thick toast coated in butter and marmalade. He folded half a slice into his mouth.
âWhat? Say that again.'
âYou heard,' Flynn said through a mouthful of toast.
âSpeak, now,' Henry said, and mouthed â
Jamil Akram
' to Donaldson.
âI know where he's been hiding out â and I know he isn't there any more.'
Flynn set the autopilot, slid off the seat and walked on to the rear deck of
Faye2,
sat on the fighting chair, mug in one hand, toast in the other, mobile phone clamped between his shoulder and ear.
âWhat? How do you know?' Henry asked.
âI think you should call me back,' Flynn said. âCosting me money, this.'
âNo â I don't want to lose the connection. I'll reimburse you.'
âThat's what I like to hear.'
âWhere are you? Can we speak face to face?'
âOnly if you can get to the Atlantic Ocean, eight miles west of the Gambia.'
âSteve â Karl Donaldson's here. You know him, the FBI guy?'
âThe Yank, yeah.' Flynn had met Donaldson the previous year when all three of their paths crossed in the village of Kendleton when they found themselves in the middle of a gangster war zone.
âI'm going to put my phone on speaker, so he can hear too. He has a vested interest.'
âAnybody else there?' Flynn said. âNot sure I want anyone else listening in.'
âJust me and him,' Henry lied. âTrust me.'
Flynn guffawed and tossed his toast crust into the wake being churned up by the boat.
Henry pressed the speaker button and held the phone between himself and Donaldson.
âSteve â it's me, Karl Donaldson. How ya doing?'
âHow do, buddy?'
âWhatcha got?'
âJust the basics, OK? And no nooky questions from you lot, OK? When you guys came across Akram, he had started his journey from the Gambia. After you screwed up his plans he returned here via Gran Canaria and Mauritania, where he recuperated from the gunshot.'
âHow did he get off Gran Canaria?' Donaldson asked.
âPrivate airstrip north of Las Palmas, to Mauritania, then by sea to the Gambia where he holed up.'
The line suddenly went dead.
âSteve!' Henry said. âSteve, fuck!'
âStill here,' Flynn's voice came back.
âHow do you know all this?' Donaldson asked.
âNooky question  . . . no time for that, but there is something you need to know. He'sâ'
The line went dead again
âOh great,' Henry uttered.
âBack again,' Flynn said.
âHe's what?' Donaldson cut in.
âHe's gone back to finish what he started. Check recent flights into Gatwick from the Gambia and a passport by the name of Masud Aziz. Say in the last two days. And that's as much as I know, take it or leave it. So watch your arses because he's one dangerous fucker. Do with that what you will. You've got a dangerous terrorist back on your patch.'
Flynn ended the call. He finished his tea and toast, then picked up the Glock and threw it out of the boat, together with the keys for Aleef's office. Then he went back to the wheel, checked the autopilot settings, and tried to relax.
The GCHQ operative who had picked up the mention of Jamil Akram in the conversation between Flynn and Jerry Tope had been waiting for more from Flynn's mobile number. And, when it came, he picked up the secure landline phone next to him which was programmed to automatically dial a number so that he could pass on anything further.