The Hidden Assassins

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The Hidden Assassins Page 34

by Robert Wilson


  An army officer in white overalls with a green armband pushed his way through to the table.

  ‘So far we’ve only had full access to the area above the storeroom, because there’s no evidence of bodies or human tissue. We still believe that the main destructive explosion was caused by a large quantity of hexogen being detonated, but we have also found trace evidence of Goma 2 Eco, which is the mining explosive that was used in the Madrid bombings.’

  ‘Did one set off the other?’

  ‘It’s certainly possible, but we have no way of proving it.’

  ‘Is there any reason why two types of explosive would be used?’

  ‘Goma 2 Eco is industrial quality, whereas hexogen is military. If you have a large quantity of hexogen, which has greater brisance than Goma 2 Eco, I don’t see why you’d use a lower grade explosive, unless your intention was to cause other distracting explosions, or to hold people in a state of fear.’

  ‘You estimated the hexogen stored in the building to be in the region of 100 kilos,’ said del Rey.

  ‘Conservative estimate.’

  ‘What sort of damage would 100 kilos do to these schools and the university faculty on these drawings?’

  ‘A real expert, who understood the architecture of the buildings, could probably raze them to the ground,’ said the army officer. ‘But it would be a demolition job. They would have to drill into the reinforced skeleton of the building and wire the charges together for a simultaneous explosion.’

  ‘And what about people?’

  ‘If everyone was herded into one or two rooms of each building, with 30 kilos of hexogen there would be no, or only very few, survivors.’

  ‘Is it possible for you to tell how much Goma 2 Eco exploded in the storeroom of the mosque?’

  ‘Personally, I would say 25 kilos or less, but I wouldn’t be able to stand up in court and say that, because the hexogen trace is too dominant.’

  ‘Is hexogen manufactured in Spain?’

  ‘No. The UK, Italy, Germany, USA and Russia,’ he said. ‘They probably make it in China, too, but they’re not telling us if they are.’

  ‘Why go to the trouble of importing it?’

  ‘Its availability,’ said the army officer. ‘Wherever there’s conflict in the world, there’s ordnance, and hexogen can easily be extracted from it. You end up with low-volume high explosive which is untraceable, easy to transport, hide and disguise. Domestic gunpowder magazines are more tightly controlled since 11th March, although there have been thefts—for instance in Portugal last year. I would also say that the chances of hexogen being spotted in an open European transport system are slim. Whereas mounting a robbery of a gunpowder magazine in this country would get you lower grade explosive, and draw the immediate attention of the authorities.’

  ‘What about the home-made variety, used in the London bombings?’ asked del Rey. ‘Wouldn’t it be easier to mix up easily available ingredients than go to the trouble and risk of bringing in hexogen, or stealing Goma 2 Eco?’

  ‘You’re right, triaceton triperoxide can be made quite easily, but I wouldn’t like to be around someone dealing with it, unless he had a chemistry post-graduate degree and we were operating in temperature-controlled laboratory conditions. It’s volatile,’ he said. ‘Also it depends on what sort of atrocity you want to commit. TATP is fine if you’re intent on killing people, but if you want a spectacular explosion, with serious destruction and loss of life, then hexogen is much more capable of doing that. Hexogen is also stable and not temperature sensitive, something that’s important at this time of year in a place like Seville, where daytime temperatures can vary by as much as twenty degrees.’

  The work rate was increasing. Material was coming in at a constant rate from the bombsite. Bits of credit card, scraps of ID, driving licences, strips of clothing, shoes. The more macabre findings, such as body parts, were taken to the tented morgue next door. While del Rey watched the forensic work, Falcón briefed Elvira, who’d just arrived from a meeting in the town hall with the Mayor, Comisario Lobo and Magistrado Juez Decano Spinola. Elvira ordered searches of the three buildings immediately. Evacuation would be carried out by the local police and searches conducted by the bomb squad in case of booby traps. Elvira was concerned that other terrorist cells might have become active, preparing to take over the buildings. The CGI had to be alerted. Gregorio of the CNI was already in touch with Pablo, who was asking for the translations to be sent to him by secure email as soon as they were ready.

  Falcón, Ramírez and del Rey stripped off their boiler suits in the forensic tent’s anteroom and went back to the pre-school to resume their meeting.

  ‘What do you make of that development, Inspector Jefe?’ asked del Rey.

  ‘We were asked to keep an open mind in this investigation, especially by the senior CNI man,’ said Falcón. ‘And yet, since we found the Peugeot Partner and its contents, almost all subsequent findings have directed us towards the belief that an Islamic terrorist campaign was being planned in this mosque.’

  ‘Almost all subsequent findings?’

  ‘We cannot satisfactorily explain the fake council inspectors and the electricians, and yet we are very suspicious of their involvement,’ said Falcón. ‘They seem to be an intrinsic part of the actual explosion. Now that we’ve spoken to the bomb squad officer it seems clear that a smaller device was planted, which set off the stored hexogen. We have a link between Miguel Botín and the electricians. He was seen handing over the card to the Imam. But who was he working for?’

  ‘You don’t buy the CNI line either?’

  ‘I would if there was any proof for it, but there’s none.’

  ‘What about those keys from the Imam’s apartment opening the box?’ said Ramírez. ‘Where does that place the Imam now?’

  ‘As part of the plot,’ said del Rey.

  ‘Except that the keys were found in a kitchen drawer,’ said Falcón. ‘I find that strange when all the other keys were kept in his desk. And the two keys were identical. Would you keep them together?’

  ‘If we are to believe that Botín was a double agent and that he was serving up the Imam to the CGI on behalf of another terrorist commander, as the CNI seem to think, then what are we to make of the drawings in the metal box?’ asked del Rey.

  ‘The Imam’s keys opened the box, therefore whatever is in that box is an expendable operation,’ said Falcón. ‘The CNI would be forced to admit it was another part of the diversion.’

  ‘And what do you think, Inspector Jefe?’

  ‘I don’t have enough information to think anything,’ said Falcón.

  ‘You said you were keeping an open mind, Inspector Jefe. What does that mean exactly? That you’ve been conducting other enquiries?’

  Falcón told him about Informáticalidad, giving the background on Horizonte and I4IT. He gave their reasons for buying the property and how the sales reps used it. He also told him about Informáticalidad’s recruiting procedure.

  ‘Well, all that sounds strange, but I can’t see anything in particular that’s pointing to their involvement in this scenario.’

  ‘I’ve never heard anything like it,’ said Ramírez.

  ‘So far, the only illegal thing I can find is that they used black money to buy the apartment,’ said Falcón. ‘I’ve been trying to find something that links them to what was going on in the mosque.’

  ‘And you haven’t found it.’

  ‘The only connection is that one of the churches used in recruiting employees for Informáticalidad was the same one used by the CGI antiterrorist agent Ricardo Gamero—San Marcos.’

  ‘But you have no proof that Gamero met anyone from Informáticalidad?’

  ‘None. I spoke to the priest from San Marcos and I would describe some of his responses as extremely guarded, but that’s all.’

  ‘Are you hoping that the police artist’s drawing of the man Gamero met in the museum is going to provide that link to Informáticalidad?’

&nbs
p; ‘That’s a tricky process: to extract a likeness from a museum security guard’s view of a person he wasn’t particularly interested in,’ said Falcón. ‘They’re looking for troublemakers, not two adults having a conversation.’

  ‘Which is why, after five hours, we still have nothing,’ said Ramírez.

  ‘We’re also pushing forward with an enquiry we started the day before the bomb,’ said Falcón, and described the circumstances of the mutilated corpse.

  ‘And because of the timing, you think that there might be a link to the bombing?’ asked del Rey.

  ‘Not just that; after this particularly brutal treatment to hide the victim’s identity, the body had been sewn into a shroud. That struck me as respectful and religiously motivated. The corpse also had what is known as a Berber genetic marker, which means that he was either from the Iberian peninsula or North African.’

  ‘You said he was poisoned.’

  ‘He ingested it,’ said Falcón, ‘which could imply that he didn’t know he was being “executed”. Then they removed his identity but treated him with respect.’

  ‘And how will this help us to identify the fake council inspectors and the electricians?’

  ‘I won’t know that until I identify the murdered man,’ said Falcón. ‘I’m hoping that can be done now that an image of the victim’s face and a full set of dental X-rays have been sent out to intelligence services worldwide, including Interpol and the FBI.’

  Del Rey nodded, scribbled notes.

  ‘We’re not getting anywhere looking for these electricians through conventional channels,’ said Ramírez.

  ‘While the bomb squad officer was talking, it occurred to me that an explosives expert would have to know about electronics and therefore probably electrics in general,’ said Falcón. ‘Goma 2 Eco is a mining explosive, so perhaps we should sit our witnesses down in front of photo IDs for all licensed explosive handlers in Spain.’

  ‘Have your witnesses been able to describe the electricians?’

  ‘The most reliable one is a Spanish convert called José Duran, but he couldn’t describe them very well. There didn’t seem to be anything particular about them.’

  ‘Witnesses plural, you said.’

  ‘There’s an old Moroccan guy, but he didn’t even spot that the two labourers weren’t Spanish.’

  ‘Maybe we should send an artist along to see José Duran while he looks at the licensed explosive handlers,’ said Ramírez. ‘I’ll get on to it.’

  Falcón gave him his mobile to extract Duran’s number. Ramírez left the room.

  ‘I’m concerned that the CNI are either not seeing things straight, or they’re not telling us everything we should know,’ said del Rey. ‘I don’t know why they haven’t let you into the Imam’s apartment yet.’

  ‘They’re not concerned about what happened here any more,’ said Falcón. ‘This explosion was either a mistake or a decoy, and either way there’s no point in expending energy to find out very little when there’s possibly another, more devastating attack being planned elsewhere.’

  ‘But you don’t agree with the CNI’s point of view?’

  ‘I think there are two forces at play here,’ said Falcón. ‘One force is an Islamic terrorist group, who appeared to be planning an attack using hexogen, brought here in the Peugeot Partner and stored in the mosque…’

  ‘An attack on those schools and the biology faculty?’

  ‘Let’s see what forensic information we get, if any, from the drawings and the texts,’ said Falcón. ‘And also the content of the translations.’

  ‘And the other force?’

  ‘I don’t know.’

  ‘But how does this force manifest itself?’

  ‘By a breakdown of logic in the scenario,’ said Falcón. ‘We can’t fit the council inspectors and the electricians into our scenario, nor can we explain the Goma 2 Eco.’

  ‘But who do you think this force is?’

  ‘What are these Islamic terrorist groups fighting for, or who do you think they’re fighting against?’ asked Falcón.

  ‘It’s difficult to say. There doesn’t seem to be any coherent agenda or strategy. They just seem to be meting out a series of punishments. London and Madrid were supposedly because of Iraq. Nairobi, the USS Cole and the Twin Towers because they believe that America is an evil empire. Bali because of Australian action in East Timor against the Islamic nation of Indonesia. Casablanca was supposedly against Spanish and Jewish targets. Karachi…I don’t know; it was the Sheraton, wasn’t it?’

  ‘And that’s our problem here,’ said Falcón. ‘We have no idea who their enemy is. Perhaps this other force is just a group of people who’ve had enough and decided they don’t want to be passively terrorized any more. They want to fight back. They want to preserve their way of life—whether it’s considered decadent or not. They could be the people behind the VOMIT website. They could be an unknown local Andalucian group who’ve heard about the MILA and perceived it as a threat to them and their families. Maybe it’s a religious group who want to maintain the sanctity of the Catholic faith in Spain and drive Islam back into North Africa. Or perhaps we are even more decadent than we know and this is pure power play. Somebody has seen the political or economic potential in terrifying the population. When those planes hit the Twin Towers everything changed. People see things differently now—both good and bad people. Once a new chapter in the human history of horror has been opened, all sorts of people start applying their creative powers to the writing of its next paragraphs.’

  29

  Seville—Thursday, 8th June 2006, 13.10 hrs

  ‘Did you manage to talk to your ex-mentor, Marco Barreda, at Informáticalidad?’ asked Falcón.

  ‘I did better than that,’ said David Curado. ‘I went to see him.’

  ‘How did that go?’

  ‘Well, I called him and started to tell him what you and I talked about, and he stopped me, said it was a pity we hadn’t seen each other since I’d left the company and why didn’t we meet for a beer and a tapa?’

  ‘Has that happened before?’

  ‘No way, we’ve only ever talked on the phone,’ said Curado. ‘I was surprised; you’re not even supposed to talk to ex-employees, let alone meet them for a beer.’

  ‘Was it just the two of you?’

  ‘Yes, and it was odd,’ said Curado. ‘He’d been all enthusiastic on the phone, but when we met it was almost as if he’d changed his mind about the whole thing. He seemed distracted, but I could tell it was an act.’

  ‘How?’

  ‘I told him about our conversation and he barely took any notice,’ said Curado. ‘But then I asked the question about Ricardo Gamero and he was stunned. I asked him who this Ricardo Gamero was, and he said he was a member of his church who’d committed suicide that afternoon. As you know, I used to go to San Marcos myself and I’d never come across Ricardo Gamero, so I asked him if he’d killed himself because the cops were after him and Marco said that the guy was a cop.’

  ‘How do you think he’d taken the news of Ricardo Gamero’s suicide?’

  ‘He was sick about it, I could tell. Very upset, he was.’

  ‘Were they friends?’

  ‘I assume so, but he didn’t say.’

  Falcón knew he had to speak to Marco Barreda directly. Curado gave him his number. They hung up. Falcón sat back in his car, tapping the steering wheel with his mobile. Had Gamero’s suicide made Marco Barreda vulnerable? And if that was a weakness and Falcón could get some leverage, would it reveal enough, would it, in fact, reveal anything?

  He had no idea what he was getting into. He had spoken to Juez del Rey about these two forces—Islamic terrorism and another, as yet unknown—both of whom had demonstrated a ruthlessness in their operations, but he knew nothing about their structures, nor their aims, other than a preparedness to kill. Had the one movement learnt from the other: declare no coherent agenda, operate a loose command structure, create selfcontained, unconnected
cells who, having been remotely activated, carry out their destructive mission?

  Talking this through to himself produced a moment of clarity. That was one cultural difference between Islam and the West: whenever an Islamic attack occurred, the West always looked for the ‘mastermind’. There had to be an evil genius at the core, because that was the order that the Western mind demanded: a hierarchy, a plan with an achievable goal. What was the chain?

  He worked back from the electrician who’d planted the bomb. He’d been brought in by a call from the Imam, who in turn had been given the electrician’s card by Miguel Botín. The card was the connection between the mission and the hierarchy who’d ordered it. Neither the electricians, nor the council inspectors for that matter, had been in the building at the time of the explosion, and both sets of people were as much a part of the plan as the card. This would not be how an Islamic terrorist cell would operate. That would mean, logically, that the only other person who could have activated Miguel Botín was Ricardo Gamero. Why had Gamero committed suicide? Because, in activating Miguel Botín with the electrician’s card, Gamero did not realize that he was making him the agent of destruction of the building and all the people inside.

  That would be reason enough to take your own life.

  On the day of the bombing, the CGI antiterrorist squad couldn’t move because of the possibility of a mole in their ranks. Only on day two could Ricardo Gamero have got out and demanded to see someone senior—the older man in the Archaeological Museum—from whom he demanded an explanation. That explanation had not been good enough to prevent his suicide. Falcón called Ramírez.

  ‘Has that police artist come up with a sketch of the man Gamero met in the museum yet?’

  ‘We’ve just scanned it and sent it to the CNI and CGI.’

  ‘Send a copy to the computer in the pre-school,’ said Falcón.

  ‘The witness José Duran is due here any moment. We’ll show him the shots of the licensed explosive handlers, but I’m not holding out much hope,’ said Ramírez. ‘The bomb could have been made up by somebody else and left in the mosque, or he could have been an assistant to an explosives expert and learnt everything necessary.’

 

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