Parson said it sounded complicated. Stuck on the notion that HOSCO found itself to be a victim.
‘I want news on Sutler. I want you to keep me informed on what you’re finding.’ Could he give him something this morning? Anything? One small thing? Was he close? ‘As soon as you find him we can start to close this affair.’
Sensing that Geezler would terminate the search if he had no results Parson said he was close, as in closer but not quite closing in. It would be better, he realized, to invent small details than disappoint the man.
‘But nothing new?’ Geezler spoke in a crisp, self-important tone Parson just didn’t like. ‘I have a lot of people to satisfy. I need information. You should know I have an announcement to make this morning.’
There was plenty Parson couldn’t say. Tourists spread along the coast from Antalya to Bodrum had reporting sightings of Stephen Sutler. The sighting in Marmaris was one such example. After Kopeckale, Sutler had left no direct trail. Dissatisfied, Geezler needled him for news. He must have something?
‘What level of detail do you want? He was sighted last night at a bar in the Hotel Cettia in Marmaris,’ Parson lied, not exactly a lie, but a statement which gave credence to something he knew not to be true. ‘It’s a confident sighting, but it doesn’t look like he took a room. There’s a taxi driver who brought him from the hotel back to the coach station. I’m confident I’ll find out where he’s gone.’
‘Confident?’
‘There are booking clerks, ticket offices, bus drivers. I’ll know when he was at the station and for how long. Finding out where he’s going won’t be difficult. My guess is he’ll steer away from the coast where he’s likely to be spotted and find some other way out of the country. But that’s a guess. I’ll have more concrete information this afternoon. I’ll know where he’s heading.’
‘There are things you should know.’ Geezler drew a deep breath. ‘We have a report on Howell’s office, and we’re revising the idea that the attack on Southern-CIPA came from the outside. It looks like Stephen Sutler was the source.’
Parson said he didn’t understand, and then the suggestion became clear: somehow Sutler was the cause of the assault. It sounded improbable and went against the evidence. Both Pakosta and Clark had witnessed the attack, and they had both described the mortar arcing down, the impact, the type of blast. They were unequivocal about the source. Howell’s evidence concurred. This was an outside attack. ‘Pakosta and Clark both saw the mortar. It’s in their statements. I don’t see why Sutler would do this?’
‘All of the accounts and records were kept in Howell’s office and they’ve all been destroyed. Pakosta and Clark are either mistaken or lying.’ There was evidence, Geezler explained, that the men at Camp Liberty had accepted money and gifts from Sutler — some of them had received goods, Breitling watches, others the payment of debts. Thanks to Sutler’s patronage they lived like kings. According to the evidence the damage to Howell’s office came from a device set inside the office. ‘It looks like Stephen Sutler was responsible.’
‘And Paul Howell? What does he say? Has anyone spoken with him?’
‘Howell isn’t a military man. He wouldn’t know a mortar attack from a grenade attack. He sat in the State Department for five years, in an office without windows. He rides a desk. He knows administration not armament.’
Parson found the printout of the Sutler lookalike. He held up the paper and examined the marks drawn by the German journalist, the cut under his right eye, the scratches across his forehead. If Sutler was responsible for the damage to Howell’s office, then he was responsible for Kiprowski’s death. He waited for Geezler to comment.
‘When you find Sutler, you need to inform me directly, and we’ll call in the proper authorities to arrest him. You shouldn’t approach him. I want to hear from you directly. I spend my day assuring people that this is under control. In three weeks an enquiry opens into the Massive. I want them to know that we’re close to some kind of resolve, that we’re working together. Better still, I want a result. I want this over.’
Parson didn’t want to admit he was nowhere near close when it came to anticipating the man’s movements: it wasn’t that Sutler was unpredictable or impossible to anticipate, he’d simply disappeared as if he’d never been there. Sutler, with one verified sighting in Anatolia, was less substantial than dust, an absolute zero. ‘If you want me to continue looking for this man I’ll need more information.’ Parson felt the responsibilities of his job. ‘I have next to nothing from you, no employment file, no details. I have his date of birth but there’s no birth registered for a Stephen Lawrence Sutler on that date in the UK. London are checking this, but there’s no tax record, no National Insurance, no prior address. I know nothing prior to his arrival in Iraq. I have no idea where you found this man. I need to speak with whoever gave him this contract.’
Geezler promised assistance. ‘I have people looking here. It’s likely that he came through Iran or Syria on a different passport. If he was working with Howell, then Howell could have prepared this a long time ago as he understands the systems we use. The only way to trace Sutler is through the accounts, and because of the damage to Howell’s office we don’t have the full record. All we know is that the amounts were transferred by Howell under Sutler’s authorization. I’d keep an eye on the banks at the major cities. Istanbul, Ankara. He isn’t going to be able to move that money around in a small town, not without being noticed.’
‘I have no information about these accounts.’ Now Parson felt disadvantaged. ‘If he has access to money I doubt he’d stay long in Turkey. He could manage this money online or through another party, no one would know.’
Geezler cleared his throat. ‘Would you trust that amount of money to an online transfer? I’d look at the banks, the international banks — Istanbul, Izmir, Ankara.’ Geezler’s voice became hesitant. ‘If Stephen Sutler had one of these accounts he would be aiming to recover that money. Find the money and you find the man.’
* * *
Parson spoke with his wife. Her call came immediately after his discussion with Geezler. Her voice, denatured by the connection, suffered stutters, breaks, and hesitations. She wanted to tell him something, and warned him to listen before he made any comment. Would he promise to do that?
‘I don’t want to stay in Nottingham,’ she said. ‘I don’t, I know I don’t. I’d rather be on my own, back at home. There was a bonfire here in Wilford, by the river. A bonfire organized by the Rotary Club. And this man, a resident, threatened a volunteer helping with the car parking.’ Was he following? Did this make sense? ‘This man threatened the volunteer then returned twenty minutes later to beat him up. At a charity bonfire. In Wilford. It’s not the Middle East,’ she said, ‘it’s Wilford, Nottingham. I don’t want to be among these people. They complain about a charity bonfire, and right on their doorstep there are children as young as eleven selling drugs along the river. This, they could care less about. This is fine. Children on bicycles selling drugs. Children with dogs, Alsatians, children who hiss at you, who make suggestions of what you might like to do for them as you make your way home.’
Parson let her anger ride, anticipating its conclusion.
‘Your sister agrees, I’m better going home. I can’t do anything here. I feel useless. I’m waiting. That’s what I’m doing. I have three months of waiting. If I need to come back I can come back. I would rather be on my own. I was going to write, but I thought that if you called and I wasn’t here that you would worry and I don’t want you to worry. I wanted to tell you so you wouldn’t worry.’ She paused, a beat, as if to prompt him. ‘I wanted to tell you because you’d understand.’