Three Great Novels (44 page)

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Authors: Henry Porter

Tags: #Thrillers, #Action & Adventure, #Fiction

BOOK: Three Great Novels
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She picked up her cell phone and called Dolph again, who answered on the first ring.
‘Welcome back, Isis,’ he said, on hearing her voice. ‘By Christ, we were all relieved when we heard you were okay.’
‘Thanks,’ she said. ‘Look, I need to ask you something. A couple of weeks back you mentioned some photographs from Bosnia. You had an idea that there was a photographer on the front line where Loz and Khan were serving. Am I imagining it or did you actually say that? I was half-expecting you to send me some material by email.’
‘That’s right, but I never got hold of him.’
‘Can you trace him and see if he is willing to empty his archives for us? Photographers keep everything, and he might just have what I’m looking for.’
‘Sure.’
‘And there was a French journalist who covered the siege of Sarajevo - I think you said she now works for Nato. Can you get hold of her too? It’s important.’
‘I thought you were retired from this inquiry.’
‘Not that I’ve heard.’
‘Yeh, I can’t imagine that Vigo and Spelling missed out on the full story of what happened. I mean, it doesn’t look good for the people who went on the pyramids package tour.’
‘Thanks for the encouragement. I was acting on the Chief ’s orders throughout. You know that.’
‘The
former
Chief ’s orders. He’s been airbrushed from the official history. He left on Friday, although he’s not actually due to leave until Wednesday of this week.’
‘Christ!’
‘But I’ll stand by you all the way.’
‘Somehow that doesn’t reassure me in the way it’s meant to.’
‘Seriously, Isis, you have my support, if it counts for anything. Look, I’d better go before you give me something else to do. We’ll speak tomorrow when I know about the photographer and the French hackette.’
‘Thanks Dolph, you’re a good friend.’
The moment she hung up her phone rang again, and she answered to Harland, who asked, ‘Can you do dinner tomorrow? I’ll be at Brown’s Hotel, Albermarle Street. We’ll speak then.’
She managed to say yes before he hung up.
 
Monday morning came early with a summons from Vauxhall Cross. Spelling wanted to see her in the Chief ’s office no later than eight-thirty.
She took a cab into London. It was again a beautiful day, and as they drove through Kensington Gardens she suddenly felt a calm resignation about what was going to happen. If she was to be expelled from the Service under a cloud, so what? A summer in Scotland beckoned and then she’d find a job in the autumn and begin to lead a normal life, without having to allow for the possibility that every call she made was being listened to. There was nothing Vigo or Spelling or any of the other whey-faced bureaucrats could do to her, and she felt good about that.
As the taxi crept through the rush-hour traffic down Vauxhall Bridge Road towards SIS headquarters, her phone rang again.
‘Hello, it’s Leonard Jay.’
‘Hello,’ she said doubtfully.
‘Dr Jay from Oxford!’
‘Oh yes. Do you have any results for me?’
‘Yes, that’s what I’m ringing about,’ he said huffily. ‘I was concerned to get them to you as soon as possible since you did sign up for the priority service and we have already received payment. I would have sent them by post, but you specifically instructed us to convey the results of the analysis to you personally by phone.’
‘Absolutely right. What are the results?’
‘Well, it was difficult with the first sample because while there was a preponderance of material from one individual - ninety per cent of the scales of skin and the hairs came from that person - there were traces of other people too. So we made the assumption that it was this person who interested you and obtained a clear picture of his genetic profile.’ He drew breath. ‘Now the second sample, which reached us about ten days ago, was from one person. There was no contamination to contend with and we had—’
‘And?’ she said impatiently.
‘To answer the question in your letter, these two samples are from different people.’
‘Are you certain about that?’
‘As certain as I can be about anything. We do a lot of forensic work, Ms Herrick, and we applied the same rigorous standards to your samples as we do to evidence for a criminal case. These are two different people. I am absolutely sure of it. I had a slight worry that sample B, that is the second one you sent me, might be matched against some of the minority material in the first sample. But we found B did not match any of the traces in A. There is no doubt about this.’
Herrick pressed a finger in her ear as the cab roared forward to make the lights on Vauxhall Bridge, and asked if the results could be couriered to London.
Dr Jay said that would be no problem.
‘Is there anything else you can tell from either sample?’ she asked.
‘As a matter of fact there is. Both are male and both come from Mediterranean stock.’
‘You can say that for certain?’
‘Yes, recent advances mean we can show that on the Y chromosome of both men there is a common mutation present that originally appeared in the peoples of the Middle East. Indeed this marker has been very useful in the study of ancient migration patterns. There is still a distinction to be found in the character of the Y chromosome between the men of northern and southern Europe.’
‘So you can assert that neither sample comes from, say Anglo-Saxon or Indian men.’
‘Well, not categorically, but you might conclude that the two were from roughly similar genetic stock.’
‘You might be able to say they were Arabs, for instance?’
‘Yes, you could certainly argue that.’
The cab pulled up a little distance from the main entrance of SIS and Herrick asked the cab driver to wait while she finished her conversation.
‘But to be sure,’ she said, ‘you would have to do the test again with new samples, is that right?’
‘Oh, I don’t think there’s much point. As long as you are not proposing to take this to a court of law, I think we’re on pretty safe ground.’
She gave him an address in central London used by SIS as a letter-box and then hung up.
 
The Chief ’s office had clearly suffered an unceremonious exorcism. Propped against the wall outside were Sir Robin Teckman’s library of books about the Soviet Union and the Middle East, his family photographs and his collection of landscapes by Cavendish Morton. On the other side of the entrance was some rugby memorabilia that she recognised from Spelling’s office, and a new widescreen TV.
After a few minutes in the corridor, Spelling’s assistant told her to go in. Vigo and Spelling were sitting on one side of the maple veneer conference table that had also migrated from Spelling’s office over the weekend. Vigo indicated that she should take a chair opposite them. Spelling did not look her way, but it was already plain to her that the battlefield general was glorying in his new power and the bold decisiveness that was expected of him.
‘We haven’t long,’ he said, removing his glasses. ‘I must be at Downing Street for a meeting of COBRA within the hour. Walter, where are the others?’
Herrick reflected that Teckman would never have announced he was going to Downing Street. She found herself idly wondering why COBRA - the Prime Minister’s emergency committee, named after Cabinet Office Briefing Room A - had been convened.
‘I believe they are on their way,’ said Vigo. His eyes appeared more hooded than usual and the pallor and puffiness of his skin betrayed his long hours in the Bunker.
The others, it turned out, were the new head of Security and Public Affairs, Keith Manners, who had returned from the Joint Intelligence Committee, a man named Leppard, who was responsible for the ‘deep background’ briefings of the media, and a polished, dapper little fellow from the legal department, named Bishop. Finally came Harry Cecil, who had risen over the weekend on the thermals of sycophancy.
Isis was left with several seats empty either side of her, while the six men were ranged opposite, a seating plan eloquent of the trouble she was in. She noted too that she was unperturbed, crossed her legs and leaned back in the chair.
Spelling cleared his throat. ‘Following a break-in at 119 Forsythe Street on the night of May twenty-four you were formally warned by Walter Vigo that your behaviour was not only illegal but a serious security risk. At that time Mr Vigo took pains to explain to you that anything which allowed Mrs Rahe to believe her husband was dead might in turn alert the suspects that we were aware of the Heathrow switch. Is this so?’
‘I’m not sure what you’re saying,’ said Herrick coolly. ‘If you’re asking me whether I agree that it jeopardised security the answer is no. If you’re asking whether Walter spoke to me, yes.’
‘Don’t play the dumb bunny with me, Ms Herrick,’ said Spelling nastily.
‘Okay, I agree that Walter did talk to me in the company of Nathan Lyne. But since Mr Lyne is not a member of this Service and nor was Mr Vigo at the time, I do not think that it can be classed as an official warning, not in the terms of current employment legislation at any rate.’
‘It is not for you to question Mr Vigo’s position with this office,’ said Spelling.
‘But I am right,’ she said, ‘and any lawyer would certainly back me on that, unless you can prove that Walter was re-employed by that date.’
Bishop from the legal department looked unsettled.
‘Ten days ago,’ continued Spelling, ‘you were among a number of people from this office who became involved in an illegal operation in Cairo, during which you seized a known terrorist suspect by force from the custody of the Egyptian security services. By the extent of this operation and the measure of violence offered to the Egyptians, this action can only be classed as a very grave offence indeed. It was certainly an illegal one, both in terms of the remit granted to the Secret Intelligence Service by Parliament and in the context of Egyptian law.’
Herrick felt her temper rising and she cut in. ‘Is that the same legal context that allows the Americans to export suspects to countries where torture is routine? Are the “extraordinary renditions” that emerge from these sessions part of the legal framework you refer to?’
‘Torture is irrelevant to your behaviour,’ said Spelling.
‘As a matter of fact it is entirely relevant. Karim Khan produced a great deal more valuable intelligence when he was free of duress than he did when he was being threatened by the Albanian Intelligence Service and the CIA and then subsequently electrocuted, burned and hung from the ceiling by the Egyptians. That intelligence is still live and useful, particularly in regard to his association with Dr Sammi Loz.’
‘Sammi Loz was a minor player,’ said Vigo, shifting in his chair, ‘and certainly not worth the grave risk you exposed this Service to both in Cairo and on the island.’
‘So you were aware of the location,’ said Herrick sharply. Vigo did not have time to reply before she set off again. ‘Actually, Sammi Loz is, or was, a critical part of a network we are only just beginning to understand. The Americans have long appreciated this, even if their focus on Khan concealed that fact. I assume that my communications from the island were intercepted by them and that they are in possession of everything I got from my questioning of Loz and Khan. If Loz was worthless, why on earth would they aim two Hellfire missiles at the place they knew him to be staying? If they believed he was just a bit player, why would they have mounted a surveillance operation on his apartment and offices in New York?’
Spelling leaned forward over the desk. ‘It is not for us to answer to you, Miss Herrick. And it’s not for you to lecture us on spurious terrorist networks. It is simply our concern to process the disciplinary procedure against you as fast as possible. Believe me, you are in serious trouble.’
Harry Cecil, who had been making a note of the exchanges, licked his lips in anticipation of the kill.
‘Really? I don’t see that at all,’ said Herrick. ‘I was asked by the Chief to take part in an intelligence operation overseas. In case it escaped your notice, that is the job of this Service.’
‘I will not have you tell me what our job is,’ snapped Spelling.
‘Nevertheless, I
am
going to tell you about this operation, the sole purpose of which was to wrest a valuable suspect from certain death, to say nothing of torture. It must be clear to you by now that the Chief ’s plan entailed reuniting two suspects in circumstances likely to induce them to betray their past and the associations they had in Bosnia and Afghanistan. This was beginning to work. It was an ingenious and thoroughly legitimate plan, and I am certain that anyone in the media would agree with that.’
‘Let me just make this utterly clear,’ said Spelling. ‘You have signed the Official Secrets Act. Any notion you have of leaking the events of the last week will meet with the gravest possible response from this office.’
‘I am sure of that, but you cannot deny that for me to have refused the Chief would have placed me in breach of both my contract of employment and my moral obligation to this country.’

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