You Will Never Find Me (47 page)

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Authors: Robert Wilson

BOOK: You Will Never Find Me
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Mercy drove Bobkov south of the river to the Internet café in Clapham Junction. He was silent, completely lost in thought, staring out the window at London life drifting past.

‘I'm very sorry about Tracey,' said Mercy.

‘Thank you,' he said. ‘I'm sorry too. She deserved a better life than the one I gave her.'

Mercy dropped him off just after 18:30 and headed straight out to Chiswick, picked up Papadopoulos from Baron's Court on the way.

‘Any news?' she asked.

‘Nobody's left the house yet. We're not to go anywhere near it until the operation is under way.'

 

Over a period of two hours the police surveillance teams, now installed at the front and rear of the house on Milnthorpe Road, confirmed the presence of six men inside, one of whom was almost permanently stationed in front of the CCTV monitors in the study. They took it in turns, rotating between playing cards in the dining room, sitting in front of the screens and going down to the basement.

One of the surveillance team had firearms experience and was relaying information about the house to the team waiting in their van on Eastbourne Road. The biggest problem was a line of sight for a sniper to the person manning the CCTV screens. His seat was in the corner of the room and the only possible angle was from the neighbour's garden over a high fence. To make it more difficult, there were trees and a bush in front of the crucial window. The MI5 operative posing as the house alarm service engineer was going to have his work cut out.

 

At 18:50 three men left the house on Milnthorpe Road and headed for Chiswick railway station. There were already two MI5 agents in position on the platform: a woman with a child in a buggy and a punk rocker. The train arrived and they all boarded.

At 18:55 the MI5 operative posing as the Barrier Alarms service engineer telephoned the Milnthorpe Road house, introducing himself as Tom Brewer. He said he would be there in around fifteen minutes.

Two of the three men who'd boarded the train in Chiswick got off at Wandsworth Town, while the third stayed another stop and got out at Clapham Junction. The punk rocker remained on the train. The woman with the buggy got off and watched the Russian walk up the hill in the direction of Wireless Up the Junction. She split away and went into a department store.

Meanwhile the police firearms unit van moved up Eastbourne Road in Chiswick and repositioned itself on Milnthorpe Road, where it parked thirty metres up from the house.

At 19:07 a Barrier Alarms van pulled up outside the electric gates of the house on Milnthorpe Road. The MI5 operative got out and rang the bell, showed his face to the camera set into the gatepost and gave his name. The gates opened. He got back into his van and drove into the off-street parking area, which triggered lights on the front of the house on either side of a large arched window above the front door. The door remained closed until he approached it with his case of tools.

A well-built man who spoke English with a thick Russian accent brought him into the hall, which had a magnificent sweeping wooden staircase to the left with some colossal artworks hanging on the wall going up the stairs. A triple-level chandelier, reflecting light off the white walls and white marble floor, lit the hall to a surgical brightness. The keypad to the alarm system was to the right of the front door. Tom Brewer inspected and memorised all its features. He asked the Russian for a quick tour of the house before he got down to testing the system.

The Russian started with the study next to the hall, where the screens were housed in a large open wall cabinet. There was a desk and chair in front of them and an empty cup of tea next to a full ashtray. There was a door to the stairway down to the basement in the far corner of the room. Across a corridor was the kitchen, where another man in his early thirties, who looked as fit as the Russian who'd opened the door, was making a pot of tea. He nodded but said nothing. The rest of the ground floor was empty. The dining room showed evidence of a card game, with decks of cards, score pads, ashtrays and cups of tea and coffee.

‘I'll start at the top of the house and work my way down,' said Brewer. ‘I'll leave the alarm test until last, if that's O.K.?'

The Russian nodded and joined him as he started up the stairs. He watched as Brewer checked all the contact plates on the bedroom and bathroom windows on the second floor.

They went through the same process on the first floor. There was a room off the master bedroom, which was only accessible through double doors in the west wall. It was a walk-in wardrobe and dressing room with access to a large bathroom. Brewer noticed how carefully he was being watched and how the Russian made sure that he never got behind him.

As he checked the bathroom window he noticed that the Russian was standing in the double doors between the bedroom and dressing room and that he was getting bored. He yawned and stretched and put his hands behind his head and twisted from side to side. As Brewer finished checking the dressing-room window the Russian turned without thinking.

That was when Brewer hit him.

The Russian was sharp and was able to make a significant move by the time the first blow landed on his neck so that Brewer missed the carotid. The Russian turned. Brewer aimed a punch to his throat. The Russian fell back, bounced back up off the bed and drove his fist into the side of the MI5 man's head. Brewer went down, lashing out with his foot, sideswiping the Russian, who collapsed onto the carpet. He drove the heel of his boot into the Russian's face, whose head kicked back and hit the wooden frame of the bed. Brewer saw that he was stunned, got to his feet and drove his heel twice more into the Russian's head, knocking him unconscious. He dragged him into the dressing room, cuffed his hands and feet with plastic ties from the tool case and stuck tape over his mouth.

The door to the master bedroom overlooked the staircase and hall below. Brewer glanced down, saw nobody. He trotted down the stairs, looking over the bannister to make sure there was no one underneath. He opened the front door, stuck two fingers in the air and headed for the study and the monitors connected to the CCTV cameras. Nobody there. As he cut across the corridor to the kitchen he heard the toilet flush to his left. He waited in the doorway of the kitchen. The toilet door opened, feet came up the corridor. He stepped out of the kitchen and chopped the Russian beneath the ear on the jawline with the edge of his hand. The Russian went down hard and fast on the marble tiles.

Brewer ran to the front door, hit the button to open the electric gates and opened the rear doors of the Barrier Alarms van. Two helmeted firearms officers got out and another three came in from the van outside the gates.

‘Dressing room,' he whispered, pointing upstairs.

Two officers ran up the stairs.

‘Corridor,' he said, and two officers dragged the other Russian into the reception room on the far side of the hall and closed the door.

Brewer took the remaining officer to the door in the study which led downstairs to the basement.

The firearms officer handed Brewer a Glock 17 pistol, opened the door and followed him. There were two closed doors in the area at the bottom, one leading to the sauna and utility room and the other to the cinema. The wine cellar was only accessible from the cinema.

Brewer pointed the firearms officer into the cinema. The padded doors opened noiselessly. It was dark and he turned on a helmet light. The cinema was empty. He moved up through the seating to the wine cellar, which was locked as the owner said it would be. He came back, signed this to Brewer.

They turned to the final door. Brewer crouched down and opened it. The utility room was in semi-darkness, the only light coming from a large glass panel set into the door of the sauna. With the light on inside, the occupants couldn't see out. Brewer looked through the glass across a small anteroom to another door with an identical glass panel. Through it he could see a man in shirtsleeves wearing an empty shoulder holster and sitting on a towel on a wooden slatted bench. The boy was lying next to him on another slatted bench. He was blindfolded and had his hands cuffed behind his back.

Brewer looked for the gun. Couldn't see it.

Brewer rearranged the grip on his Glock, nodded to his partner. He was going to go for it. He opened the door and slipped into the anteroom, where the heat and steam was generated for the sauna. He tried the next door, but it wouldn't budge. This was the one door in the house that the owner had assured him could not be locked from the inside. The Russian must have wedged it shut. He looked through the window and saw that the Russian now had Sasha in his lap and his gun to the boy's head. Brewer spotted a broom in the anteroom, jammed it against the window panel frame and pushed hard, feeling the obstruction slide back. Two bullets came through the half-open door and embedded themselves in the wall.

The Russian was standing now, holding Sasha, who was rigid with fear, the gun at the boy's head.

‘Put your gun down,' he said.

Brewer put the Glock on the floor and backed away from it.

‘Tell your friend to do the same.'

The policeman obeyed.

‘Hands on heads,' said the Russian. ‘You both walk in front of me.'

They shuffled into the area at the foot of the stairs.

‘How many upstairs?'

‘Two in the reception room,' said Brewer.

‘How many outside?'

‘Two.'

‘Snipers?'

‘One.'

They went up the stairs and came out into the study.

‘Tell everybody to stand down, drop their weapons, leave the building inside and out.'

The firearms officer spoke into his cheek mike.

‘What transport have you got?'

‘A van.'

‘Where?'

‘Outside the front door.'

‘We take the van. You drive,' he said to Brewer. ‘You stay. Tell them to move all the vehicles apart from the van away from the house.'

As they came into the hall the firearms officer spoke into his cheek mike again. The front door was open, the forecourt lit by automatic lighting sensors. Vehicles started backing out and driving away.

‘We get to the front door, you stop. I want you close in front of me when we go out.'

The two officers in the reception room had left but the two upstairs had stayed. They looked down through the bannisters and saw the procession moving towards the front door. As the four made their way through the hall a clear metre opened up between the Russian and the two other men. The Russian was carrying Sasha on his left hip while his gun was pointed at Brewer's back.

The shot was unsilenced and very loud.

It hit the Russian in the back of the neck.

The boy fell from his paralysed arm, the gun clattered to the floor and the Russian's legs crumpled beneath him.

Mercy waited for the all clear and moved into the house. Sasha Bobkov was on his feet and the firearms officer was cutting through his plastic cuffs. She put her arms around the boy, partly to comfort him but also to stop him removing his blindfold.

‘I'm Mercy,' she said. ‘You have to keep the blindfold on for the moment. We've got to get your eyes used to the light gradually, O.K.?'

‘Where's Daddy? Is he here?'

‘He's coming, don't worry,' said Mercy, taking him by the hand. ‘We're going outside now and I'm going to take you to an ambulance, and they'll give you a check-up. Are you feeling all right?'

‘I'm O.K. I just want my dad, that's all. I really want to see him.'

‘He's not far away. He just had to make it look as if he was delivering the ransom to the kidnappers while we got you out of the house. He'll be coming soon.'

‘And where's my mum? Is she here?'

‘Let's just get you to the ambulance,' said Mercy, hugging Sasha to her, who put his arm around her waist. ‘You've been a very brave boy, you know that, don't you?'

‘I don't think so,' he said. ‘What's wrong with my mum? There's something wrong with her. I know. They told me she was in hospital.'

She took him up the steps into the ambulance, where they laid him down. The paramedics cut away the material around the clasp at the back of the mask, turned the lights down, told him to close his eyes, pulled it off and fitted the boy with a pair of dark goggles.

‘Will you stay with me?' asked Sasha, reaching for Mercy's hand. ‘I like your voice.'

She couldn't stop herself, leaned forward and kissed him on the head. He wanted her to hold his hand while they gave him a check-up. He looked at her intensely, as if she was his guardian angel.

‘Thank you,' he said. ‘Thank you for saving me.'

He said it so sweetly and earnestly she nearly broke down and wept.

‘You don't know it,' said Mercy, ‘but you've been a big help to me.'

‘Tell me what happened to my mum?' he asked. ‘I know she'll have been worried and she probably had to have a drink to help her cope. Was that why she had to go to hospital?'

‘I think she was very upset when the school called to say you hadn't arrived and she started drinking. When they came to speak to her they couldn't get in and your father was called because he had keys to the house,' said Mercy. ‘Your mum wasn't in a good state. I don't think she'd been eating properly, she was dehydrated, and they thought the best thing was to take her to hospital.'

One of the paramedics tapped her on the shoulder.

‘We're going to have to get going now.'

‘I'll go with you.'

‘That's not going to be possible,' said the paramedic.

‘He's under sixteen and I haven't finished talking to him.'

The paramedic shrugged.

A text came in on her phone: DI Hope telling her he would start interviewing Lomax in about half an hour.

‘Where are we going?'

‘Charing Cross Hospital,' said the paramedic, closing the door. Mercy called Papadopoulos and told him to follow the ambulance in her car. She put the phone away, stroked Sasha's forehead, squeezed his hand. The ambulance set off with a whoop from its siren.

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