“This summit happens in the morning. The Pashkin thing.”
“And you think there’s a connection,” he said flatly.
“Arkady Pashkin,” she said. “Alexander Popov. That doesn’t worry you?”
“Give me a break. I’ve got the same initials as … Jesus Lhrist, but I don’t go on about it. This isn’t an Agatha Christie.”
“I don’t care if it’s a Dan Brown. If the two are connected, then something’ll happen in Upshott. Soon. We should let the Park know.”
“If Dander’s Taverner’s mole, they already do. Unless you want to take a punt on this initials thing.” Lamb scratched his chin thoughtfully. “Think they’ll call a COBRA session?”
“You’re the one who put all this in motion. And you’re just going to wait and see what happens?”
“No, I’m just going to wait for Cartwright’s call. Which he’ll make when he’s back from the MoD place. You think I’m still here this time of night because I’ve nothing better to do?”
“Pretty much,” Catherine said. “What’s happening at the MoD place?”
“Probably nothing. But whoever laid a trail didn’t do it to keep what’s going to happen a secret. So I’m assuming Cartwright’ll find a clue somewhere. Now bugger off and leave me in peace.”
She rose but paused at the doorway. “I hope you’re right,” she said.
“About what?”
“That whatever’s going on isn’t a plan to assassinate River. We’ve already lost Min.”
“They staff us with screw-ups,” Lamb reminded her. “We’ll be back up to strength in no time.”
She left.
Lamb tilted his chair back and gazed at the ceiling for a while, then closed his eyes, and became very still.
Ho sucked his teeth as he worked. What Standish had done with her data was old schooclass="underline" she’d processed it looking for common threads. You could do the job faster if you just printed it out and read it, biro in hand.
Going Amish, they called that. Applied to Catherine Standish too. The woman wore a hat.
Ho’s method didn’t have a name, or not one he could think of. What he did came naturally, like water to a fish. He took the names, plus their DOBs, ignored everything else Standish had supplied, and ran them blind through engines both backdoor and legal. Legal was anything in the public domain, plus various government databases his Service clearance gave him access to: tax and national insurance, health, driving licence; what he thought of as data-fodder.
The backdoor stuff was more potent. For starters, he had an NCIS trapdoor. Ho limited himself to brief forays, because its security was improving, but it gave near-instant rundowns on even peripheral involvement with criminal investigations. It wasn’t likely a deep-cover spook would have form, but it wasn’t impossible, and Ho liked to keep in practice. After that came the premier division. Back when he’d been a junior analyst at the Park Ho had been given one-off access to the GCHQ network, and had made a clone from his temporary password. He’d subsequently upgraded himself to administrator status, and could pull up all existing background on any name he chose. This covered not only subversive activity—which included relationships with foreign nationals from any country on the suspect list; travels to unfriendly nations, which for historical reasons included France; and any contact whatsoever, up to vague geographical proximity, with anyone on the watchlists, which were updated daily—but also digital footprint, phone use, credit rating, litigation record, pet ownership: everything. If GCHQ sold user-lists to direct-mailing companies, it could fund the war on terror by itself. In fact, an enterprising freelancer might take advantage of this, Ho thought; a topic worth researching, though maybe not right this moment.
He let himself in, entered the target names, created a destination folder for the results, and exited. No point hanging around while the Matrix did its stuff, which was to accumulate, assess and regurgitate data, with crossover points neatly highlighted so even an Amish could assimilate the bullet points. Kind of like playing Tetris. All the little blocks of info, settling into place. No gaps.
Like that, only much more cool … If Shana could see him now, that boyfriend of hers would be dust. And Roderick Ho lapsed into happy daydream, while the machine-world did his work.
“Why’d you stop me?”
The tube was quiet: a few homegoers down the far end; a lone woman plugged into her own little iWorld; a drunk man by the doors. But Louisa kept it low, because you never could tell.
Marcus said, “Like I told you. Trying to take down Pashkin on your own’s a good way of getting hurt.”
“And what’s that to you?”
“I was ops. We had this thing about watching each others’ backs.” He didn’t appear offended. “You think he killed Harper, don’t you?”
“Or had him killed. You think I’m wrong?”
“Not necessarily. But don’t you think he’s been looked at?”
“By Spider Webb.”
“Who’s not been straight with us.”
“He’s a suit, he’s the Park. He wouldn’t be straight if you rammed a telegraph pole up his arse.” She stood. “I change here.”
“You’re going home?”
“Now you’re my dad?”
“Just tell me you’re not heading back for another crack at him.”
“You took my cuffs, Longridge. And my spray. I’m not going back for another crack, no, not with just my bare hands.”
“And you’ll be there in the morning.”
She stared.
He spread his hands wide: look at me; nothing to hide. “Maybe he had Min whacked, maybe not. But we’ve still got a job to do.”
“I’ll be there,” she said through gritted teeth.
“That’s good. But one other thing, yeah?”
The train pulled into the station, and suddenly there were white tiles and lurid posters visible through the windows.
“Tomorrow, I’m working security. And my job’s to neutralise any threat to the principal. Understand what I’m saying?”
“Good night, Marcus,” she said, stepping onto the platform. By the time the train moved off, she’d disappeared down an exit tunnel.
Marcus remained in his seat. Two other people had left at Louisa’s stop, three more had got on, and he knew exactly which were which. But as none represented a threat, he closed his eyes as the train picked up speed, and for all the world looked like he’d fallen asleep.
Ho woke, straightened his neck, and the thread of drool bridging the corner of his mouth and his shoulder broke and pooled on his shirtfront. He wiped his mouth blearily, dabbed at his shirt with his fingers, and wiped his fingers dry on his shirt. Then he turned to his computer.
It was making a contented humming sound; the friendly noise it made when it had finished a task he’d set it.
He rose. This was a sticky business—his clothing clung to his chair. In the hallway, he paused. Slough House was quiet, but didn’t feel empty. Lamb, he guessed, and probably Standish also. He yawned and padded to the toilet, peed mostly into it, then padded back to his office and slumped back into his chair. Wiped his fingers on his shirt again, and drank some energy drink. Then tilted his flatscreen to see the results of his searches.
As he scrolled down, he leant forward. Information interested Ho to the precise degree that it might prove advantageous, and the data he was looking at had no relevance to himself. But it was of interest to Catherine Standish. Among the names he’d processed, she hoped, was that of Mr. B’s contact; a Soviet sleeper from the old days. Finding out who it was would impress her. On the other hand, she already knew he was shit-hot at this, and while it was true she was nicer to him than anyone else in this dump, the fact remained that she’d blackmailed him into—