‘I don’t get it. Why would a Brit be watching us?’
‘My guess?’ Stanbridge was pretending not to listen, and Harry took a leap in the dark. ‘London thinks we’re a security risk. This is their way of making sure we don’t jump the reservation. Unfortunately, the only way number four is going to tell me exactly what they’re doing is when I start cutting off his fingers.’
‘What?’ Jardine’s voice went off the scale, and Stanbridge’s face went pale.
‘Sure, why not? At least we’ll find out what’s going on. I’ll tell you how it went in the morning-’
‘Wait… wait!’ Clare interrupted quickly. ‘Don’t. There’s something else I didn’t mention. The men outside… they’re armed.’
That brought him up short. Stanbridge wasn’t armed — he’d have found the weapon otherwise. So why were the others? Did they have another purpose other than watching?
Maybe it was time to discourage them. And to see how serious they were.
‘Stay away from the windows,’ he told her, ‘and keep your door locked. Don’t answer if anyone knocks.’
‘Why, what are you going to do?’
‘I want to take a look at the three on your place. What’s your address?’ He reckoned it would take ten to fifteen minutes to reach her place on foot. More if he had to avoid any armed patrols.
She gave him directions to an apartment block not far away. ‘Don’t come to my door, though. My neighbours are jumpy already. They’ve had trouble with drunken militia and call the police at the slightest noise.’
‘OK. I’ll see you later.’
‘But what if you’re wrong? What if-?’
He cut her off in midstream and took out Stanbridge’s mobile. Then he left the flat and went downstairs.
Like the back passage, the stairs to the basement were covered with accumulated junk. He switched on the light and looked around. Most of it was a jumble of damaged furniture and discarded boxes, all beyond salvage and covered in mouse droppings. An ancient moped stood against one wall, the rubber grips perished with age. He shook it and heard liquid sloshing about in the pear-drop tank.
It was a start.
He searched through a pile of cardboard cartons and found a bathroom cabinet with broken mirrors. One side contained an empty toothpaste tin, several rusty razor blades, some dried soap and a half-empty tube of shower gel. Whoever had owned this was unlikely to be coming back for it. The other side held two shower caps and a box of foil-wrapped condoms. He opened one of the packs. The rubber looked in good condition; not that he’d chance using one of them as the makers intended, but for his purposes, they would do fine.
He emptied the petrol out of the moped’s tank into a discarded wine bottle, then squirted the shower gel in after it and gently shook the contents for a few seconds before stuffing the neck of the bottle with a piece of rag. He placed the condoms and bottle in his pocket. If he got stopped carrying this lot, he might try claiming he was going round to warm up a girlfriend’s flat and fuel her car, but he doubted anyone would believe him.
He turned off the light and left the building by the back door.
The walk to Jardine’s flat took twelve minutes, using narrow alleys and back streets. He relied on his inner navigator to stay on the correct heading in the direction Rik had given him. Street lights were intermittent and weak, but provided enough ambient light for him to negotiate the route without incident. He saw neither military nor police patrols, but didn’t argue with his luck. The further they stayed away, the better he liked it.
When he arrived at the end of Clare’s street, he peered round the corner. A plain saloon was parked fifty yards away, facing the other way. The windows were misted over, but he could just make out a vague shape shifting on the passenger side.
He retreated and circled the block. He found an alleyway similar to the one behind his own flat, and counted doorways until he reached the building next to Clare’s. The back door opened with a faint creak, and he made his way up the stairs to the roof. The muffled sound of voices and music came from behind the doors as he passed, but he encountered nobody.
At the top a small door opened on to a flat area littered with flowerpots and tubs. Doves or pigeons in a succession of wire cages cooed gently as he passed, and a web of clotheslines and aerial wires brushed his head. He ducked beneath them and padded quietly to the front of the building.
He peered over the parapet. The car with the Clones inside was directly beneath him. The windows were up, but the angle prevented him seeing any detail of the men inside. Taking out the condoms, he opened three of them, unrolling the rubber to the fullest extent. Removing the rag stopper from the bottle, he fitted a condom over the neck of the bottle and tilted it, filling the sheath with the mix of petrol and gel. Then he knotted the condom and placed it carefully on the floor before repeating the exercise.
When he had his three devices ready, he looked over the edge of the roof and took out Stanbridge’s mobile phone.
He pressed the re-dial button.
THIRTY-NINE
The atmosphere inside the car was foetid. Two of the men were snoring gently, the third was keeping watch and trying not to join his colleagues.
Nick Brockley was bored with this assignment. He’d been here too long and wanted to get out. Either home or Iraq. At least Basra offered some excitement. But they had been told to remain in their position until morning.
They called this gig a training exercise, but there was little variation and the training aspect offered nothing in the way of a challenge. Surveillance was an art learned best on hot targets, not these unsuspecting misfits. Brockley and his colleagues knew perfectly well what the people in Red Station were here for, and it wasn’t for being top of their class.
The briefing files on each person had been cursory and lacked specific detail other than the basics needed to help the watchers identify their targets. But they’d heard enough from the previous team to know that they had each screwed up in some way. They had been consigned to this dump until they got recalled or jumped ship. It was the jumping ship — and every other movement they made — which had to be recorded by the team of watchers, and noted for later evaluation.
So far, other than a couple of authorized trips out of town and the daily journeys to work and back, there had been nothing to get excited about.
He shifted his weight to ease an ache in his back, a hand-me-down from too many days and nights on watch, and peered upwards. He wondered what the Jardine woman was doing. Having a bath, most likely, or lounging around in her jammies, all soft and smelling of soap. He shifted in his seat, the image burning in his brain. He wouldn’t mind seeing some of that; she was quite fit… for a spook. Small rack under that jacket, but a nice arse to compensate. The others reckoned she was butch but he could overlook that. She was still better than most of the women he knew back home in Brighton.
His phone buzzed, making him jump.
He checked the screen. Stanbridge. He’d said he wanted to check out Tate, the latest addition to the bunch of Security Service losers, and Brockley had agreed. There was bugger all else to do, so why not, if it kept him quiet. He’d told him to stay off the phone until they met in the morning. So what was he playing at?
‘What?’ He nudged Tucker with his other elbow. Time to wake them up, anyway. Maybe send them off for a brisk stroll round the block.
‘This is your first warning.’
It was a voice Brockley didn’t recognize. The hairs stirred on the back of his neck.
‘Stan? What the fuck are you playing at?’
There was no answer. Instead, he heard a soft thump on the roof of the car. He looked up through the windscreen. A pigeon, maybe? The place was full of the bloody things. Flying vermin.
A trickle of clear liquid ran down the side window.
‘Stan? You daft git-’