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Authors: Hugh Miller

BOOK: Prime Target
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‘And do they buy your cover?'

‘Sure, they think I'm a New York cop. I chew plenty of gum and I swear a lot. It's not the hardest cover to maintain. But I'm sure you didn't get me to call just so we could engage in chit-chat.'

‘No, indeed. There's a little job I want you to do, while you're in the area.' Philpott explained about the Emily Selby shooting and the possibility of the case being taken up by UNACO. ‘You know the kinds of fears a case like this can raise. Apart from the possibility that Emily Selby was a spy, there are other worries. The gunman could have been an irate Palestinian.'

‘Was Emily Jewish?'

‘She was. Think of the possibilities: a Jewish employee of the US government gunned down by a man of Arabic appearance.'

‘It raises a lot of scenarios.'

‘Well, for the moment it's enough to be aware of them,' Philpott said. ‘Emily had a small suite at the Knightsbridge Lawn Hotel, and unless intergovernmental procedure has changed wildly in the past year or two, the rooms will be sealed off for a few days until it's decided who has the right to nose around in the dead woman's property.'

‘You want me to pre-empt the search.'

‘If you would.'

‘Any idea what I might be looking for?'

‘A journal, perhaps, cryptic notes, any item in her possessions that doesn't chime with the rest. Try to find out if Emily was less of a credit to her job than anyone suspected.'

Sabrina looked at the clock on the side of the main building. If she was going to get coffee before people started throwing bricks at her, she would have to go now.

‘Should I do the job tonight, sir?'

‘Not any later.'

‘In that case I'll have to do some manoeuvring.'

‘Why so?'

‘There's a full-scale military-style kit inspection tomorrow morning. My stuff's in a foul state. Getting it ready will be a three-hour job, at the tightest.'

‘You're an agent of UNACO, my dear, which means you count resourcefulness among your many qualities. I'm sure you'll manage. How much longer will you be at Hounslow?'

‘I finish tomorrow.'

‘Lord, time flies.'

‘I hope to be back in New York Saturday.'

‘By which time, I've no doubt, you'll be an even more finely-honed and efficient emissary of justice than you were before you left us.'

‘Are you being serious, sir?'

‘Not particularly,' Philpott said. ‘Take care, Sabrina.'

‘As ever,' she promised.

When she walked into the canteen three minutes later, the usual silence fell. It was momentary, a one-beat cessation of talk and rattling as the sixty-two men and four women in the place stopped everything to register her arrival.

Sabrina was not embarrassed or discomfited. She had been attracting overt interest since a few months past puberty; also, at Hounslow there was the added professional factor. The blonde was an American cop - or so they believed - and since all dreams of slick law enforcement centre on the US police image, Sabrina realized she was as much a focus of envy as anything else.

‘It's coffee, black, no sugar, right?' Plump Inspector Lowther was on his feet, pointing to the chair opposite his own at the table nearest the door. ‘I was on my way to get seconds anyway. Sit down, I'll only be a minute.'

‘Thanks.'

As she pulled out the chair a young officer at the next table said, ‘Hey, settle an argument, will you?'
He pointed to her black cotton coverall suit. ‘You had that made special, didn't you?'

‘Nope.' Sabrina patted the gold-and-blue embroidered badge on her sleeve. ‘It's standard NYPD issue.'

‘Really? Has it got special deep pockets for the bribes?'

Sabrina smiled back. ‘You must watch an awful lot of bad movies. Get out more often in the real world. Bribe a girl to go with you.'

He blushed, and the jeering laughter of his companions obviously stung. He looked away and said no more.

‘Here we go…' Inspector Lowther put a cup of coffee in front of her and sat down with his tea and a jam doughnut. ‘I hope it's hot enough.'

‘It's fine, thank you.'

He was a sweet soul, and even though he was on the make Sabrina found the attentiveness endearing. He had latched on to her from the start and had helped her over the early hurdles without once making a move on her. But she could tell the hope was there. When she left England she would not miss Lowther, but at least she wouldn't remember him with distaste.

‘So,' she said, making small talk, ‘today's the grand finale, huh?'

He nodded. ‘Rocks, bottles, firebombs, burning buildings, the lot. Nervous?'

‘Very,' she lied. ‘How about you? Have you ever been in a real-life situation like this one? People
throwing stuff, hating you, too far gone to hear reason?'

‘I got a taste of it in 1990, at the Poll Tax riot in Trafalgar Square. A man with a broken chair leg and a hatred of the police put me in hospital for ten days.'

‘Wow.'

‘But you must get into some vicious scrapes in New York.'

‘I never faced a mob.'

‘Ever had to shoot anyone?'

‘No,' she lied again, thinking,
More people than you'd believe.
‘Up to now I've dealt mostly with traffic violations.'

‘Well, at least you have an exciting working environment.'

‘I wouldn't say that. Frantic's a better word.'

And then, without any lead-up or warning, Lowther leaned forward and said, ‘Would you have dinner with me tonight, Sabrina?'

That look,
she thought: the wistful smile, the eyes telling her he'd be devastated if she said no. It never worked, she always saw it as emotional blackmail, something else about men to despise. On this man, however, it simply looked pathetic.

‘I have an engagement already this evening,' she said, simultaneously spotting an opportunity.

‘Oh.' He shrugged.

‘But I'll tell you what - we finish at noon tomorrow, right? How about lunch somewhere in the West End? My treat. I'd have loved to make
it dinner, but I have to catch an overnight flight to New York.'

She watched the flicker of changes in his expression, all desperately transparent. This was less than he'd had in mind; she had side-stepped the proposition, but it was better than rejection; what she suggested still wasn't dinner, it was unromantic daytime stuff, but it still wasn't rejection…

‘Well, that would be great,' he said. ‘But I can't let you pay.'

‘NYPD pays,' Sabrina said. ‘They're covering me for two goodwill entertainments and I haven't done one yet, so we can have a splash.' She gave him her friendliest smile. ‘Is it a date?'

He nodded, thoroughly charmed.

‘Oh, and by the way, I was going to ask you, it's presumptuous of me, I know…'

“Go ahead,' he said generously, ‘anything at all.'

‘Well.' She made an uneasy face. ‘It's the passing-out kit inspection tomorrow morning. It's obvious they take it seriously. I wouldn't want to lose the points, but I'll be squeezed for time, because I have to go to this woman's place -'

‘You want me to get your kit ready?'

‘Oh, no! God, no, I wouldn't dream of imposing. I thought maybe you could find me somebody who would take on the job for a consideration.'

‘I'll do it for you myself.'

‘Really?'

‘Consider it done.'

‘But that's so -'

‘Look, Sabrina, don't mention it. It'll be a pleasure.'

She touched his hand. ‘You're a real friend.' His gratitude was something to see.

3

When Philpott stepped into the semi-darkness of the Secure Communications Suite he found Mike Graham hunched in front of six computer screens, three on three.

‘I know you said another hour.' The padded walls and ceiling muffled Philpott's voice. ‘But I got fidgety.'

‘I'm antsy myself, now,' Mike said. ‘One damned detail has bugged me for twenty minutes. I'm getting nowhere with it.'

He leaned back and stretched. He was a lithe man, conventionally handsome with even features and an easy way of smiling. Philpott, never keen to admit that anything or anyone was without major flaw, often remarked that Mike's hair was too long.

‘When will you have results worth examining?'

‘I've got them now.'

‘Excellent.' Philpott took the swivel chair next to Mike's. ‘Do you have a tentative verdict?'

‘Well this could certainly be UNACO's kind of case, because the dead man had a terrorist pedigree. His real name was Yaqub Hisham, and he was Arabic, as everybody thought. He was registered with the Department of Social Security in London as Kamul Haidar, twenty-six years old, living in rented accommodation in Chelsea, with a home address in Morocco. He'd been in London a month, allegedly studying history and English at the Monkfield Institute.'

‘Never heard of it.'

‘Scotland Yard's SO11 gave it the once-over. It's a couple of rented rooms off the Edgware Road, run as a school by a retired teacher. Plenty of students are registered with the Institute, but nobody seems to show up for classes.'

‘Another dismal racket,' Philpott sighed. ‘Something in the atmosphere of England nurtures seedy hustlers.'

‘Aside from his scholastic work, our man was a part-time porter at the Wimcote House Hotel in Paddington.'

‘But in spite of that, he could afford digs in Chelsea. All of this was a cover, I presume.'

‘Oh sure.' Mike tapped a button on the console and a Mossad Criminal Data card appeared on the third screen of the top row. The Arab's picture was at the left with his fingerprints at right and a summary of his criminal record below. ‘No information at Scotland Yard or Interpol, but the Israelis have the goods on him. The picture was taken a
month after he had his face changed. His prints were altered too, acid and pumice powder they reckon. Mossad's fingerprint boys used a latency comparator on smudgy dabs they picked up in Hebron, and the comparator turned up this guy's original set of prints.'

Philpott peered at the text on the screen. ‘It's in Hebrew.'

‘I got a translation.' Mike held up a printout sheet. ‘Courtesy of Mossad Criminal Records.'

‘I'm impressed. You have better connections every time I see you.'

Mike ran a finger down the sheet. ‘Hisham had sixteen listed aliases and was a known terrorist from the age of eleven. During his middle and late teen years he managed to study history as well as sedition and anarchy. He was a prominent graduate of the Jezzine terrorist movement in Lebanon. Known to be energetic, technically skilled, resourceful and, unusually, the guy was multi-lingual. He wasn't strong on ideology, but he got by on plain hatred of the Jews. He was made an honorary member of the Brotherhood of the Civet when he was eighteen.'

‘Brotherhood of the what?'

‘Civet. It's a kind of cat. The brotherhood are sworn to do harm to Jews in any way they can, which doesn't make them unique, but they
are
customized. They have a tattoo of a civet's head in the right armpit. The animal's supposed to be lucky and to ward off danger.'

‘Every day,' Philpott said, ‘I learn a little more…'

‘In June 1994 the Israelis bombed a Hezbollah training camp in southern Lebanon and killed forty guerrillas. Six people survived. Yaqub Hisham was one of them.'

‘He was with Hezbollah?'

‘The Israelis believe he was training them. For a while after the bombing he was treated like a living martyr, and he made a public declaration that he would double his efforts against Jews. Three weeks after that he ambushed three officers of Shin Bet at a checkpoint in the Bekáa Valley and butchered them. Mossad's been on his tail ever since. He was believed to be holed-up in Tetuán, Morocco, which isn't an easy place for Israelis to go looking for somebody. Mossad are very surprised that he showed up in England.'

‘Indeed. What was he doing in London, shooting a political analyst from the White House? I mean, why him? Why a seasoned, Jew-hating Middle Eastern terrorist?'

‘Emily Selby was Jewish.'

‘Not the kind of Jew that Arab terrorists travel all the way to Europe to assassinate, surely?'

‘If we knew the link between Emily and the other woman in the picture, Erika Stramm, I'm sure we would be standing in a brighter light.'

Philpott looked at the screens. ‘What's the loose end you're chasing?'

‘Yaqub's gun. I checked the serial number with the makers at Deutsch-Wagram, and they say it's
from a batch of fifty bought in Vienna last July for export to the USA. Buyer's name was Albert Torrance of Denver, Colorado, which turns out to be a fake ID. But the guns did clear US Customs. I have the other weapon numbers from the consignment and I've been flagging law-enforcement nodes on ICON, but nobody has a thing on Glock 17s.'

‘Am I right in thinking the Glock 17 is the gun people were making so much noise about at one time? The gun that panic-merchants thought could escape airport X-ray detection?'

Mike nodded. ‘There's a lot of plastic in its construction. But there's enough steel to show up on X-rays. What really grabs the enthusiasts is the seventeen-shot magazine.'

Mike tapped a picture of the Glock 17 up on to a screen.

‘There's a lot going for it. It's hefty, it's accurate, and it's got enough rounds to let you do shot-clustering if that's what a job calls for.' Mike looked at Philpott. ‘I'm just intrigued to know how the weapon got from the States to Yaqub Hisham.'

‘And I'm intrigued to know why he shoved it in his mouth and took the back off his head just because four London bobbies were chasing him.'

‘He probably didn't want to be arrested,' Mike said. ‘Superstition and obsession are primary components of a fanatic's mental structure. They're
also the elements that can undermine him. In my experience, a terrorist's superstition and fear often take the form of an abhorrence of being captured, of being
contained
on somebody else's terms. Remember in Rome, three years ago? I cornered a bullion hijacker, a Lebanese guy -'

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