The Robert Finlay Trilogy
Page 39
There appears to have been no separate motive in the murders of PCs Evans and Duncan, who appear to have been killed because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Since the deaths of both Monaghan and Webb, the attacks have ceased. This tends to corroborate the preceding evaluation.
In conclusion
Dominic McGlinty and Michael Hewitson are awaiting trial on charges of conspiracy to murder and to cause explosions.
Following the decision of the Home Secretary to allow Finlay and Jones to operate in an armed unsupervised role, a report was submitted to the Crown Prosecution Service as to whether either officer should be charged with any offence. The decision was made (with Home Secretary and DPP authority) that no criminal action would be taken against either officer.
Inspector Finlay, together with his family, is currently being provided with secure accommodation by MI5 and is expected to return to work soon.
PC Jones has made a good recovery from his injury, has declined the offer of secure accommodation and is also expected to return to full police duties in the near future.
Media interest
While some speculation has appeared in the press with regards to the attacks on Metropolitan officers, no mention has been made or theory attributed to the involvement of former armed services personnel.
The Metropolitan Police Press Bureau has ensured all arrests resulting from this operation have been credited to police enquiries. Deaths of suspects have been attributed to self-inflicted injuries (Webb) and lawful police action.
Full report
My understanding is that Director ‘T’ has tasked MI5 officer Antonia Fellowes to act as support officer to the Finlay family and PC Jones and to complete a final confidential report to the Home Secretary on the activities of Monaghan and Webb.
Respectfully submitted,
William Grahamslaw
Commander, SO13
Anti-Terrorist Squad
Specialist Operations Directorate
New Scotland Yard
Chapter 2
Just as Grahamslaw reached for his pen to sign the report he sensed he had company.
He looked up and saw Toni Fellowes standing in the doorway. ‘May I join you?’ she asked.
Without speaking, the Commander indicated his visitor should use the seat on the other side of the desk. The MI5 officer looked smart and business-like: a dark-blue trouser-suit complemented by matching shoes – low heels, she always wore low heels – and a white blouse. Under her left arm she was carrying a stiff, buff-coloured folder. Given her next port of call would be the Home Office, she gave the appearance of being well prepared.
‘Apologies for my lateness, Commander. Is that the Hastings report?’ Fellowes closed the door behind her and sat down.
‘Hot off the press, you might say. Taken me the best part of a week to finish, it has.’ Grahamslaw quickly signed the final page, tapped the pages together neatly and slid them across the desk. It wasn’t, he mused, a particularly lengthy or complicated report, just that the previous few weeks had easily been the busiest of his police career. Demands on anti-terror policing had increased manyfold since the New York attacks on September 11th. Finding the time to complete a report hadn’t been easy.
As Fellowes flicked through the document, his gaze returned to the window.
He was pleased the Director of Public Prosecutions had seen fit to take no further action against Finlay and Jones. They had faced a situation most would find beyond imagination. Their former Commanding Officer had played a game with the two former soldiers – leading them a merry dance in order to draw them in, mislead and then kill them. That they had managed to turn the tables on him was to their immense credit. What troubled the Commander now was whether there was really a need to continue the investigation. The decision to appoint an MI5 liaison officer to look after both PC Jones and the Finlay family was well founded and Toni Fellowes had handled the responsibility with her usual professionalism. But as to whether there was a point in continuing to dig, he had serious doubts. From his limited experience of the murky world of the men in suits, he had learned that such things were often best left alone.
But now, with his report signed, the enquiry was effectively out of his hands.
After her brief flick through the document Fellowes slipped it back into the buff folder.
‘I thought you’d want to read it now … just to check it over, perhaps?’ he said.
She shook her head. ‘No time. I’m hoping the Security Service contribution will simply be a rubber stamp to your conclusions.’
He smiled, broadly. ‘Let’s hope so, Toni. This wasn’t the kind of thing that happens every week, was it?’
‘It wasn’t. Do you mind if I ask what your plans for Jones and Finlay are, now the Home Secretary has approved the decision not to prosecute?’
‘With Jones it should be fairly straightforward. He’s making a decent recovery from his injuries and he told me he wants nothing more than to get back to being a normal cop. For Finlay, things are more complicated, as you know.’
‘I spoke to his Chief Superintendent.’
‘Let me guess,’ said Grahamslaw, ‘not keen on having him back?’
‘He’s a realist. Finlay is something of a pariah, now. Too many people know both his background and about the attacks on him.’
‘The Met rumour mill always did work quickly.’
‘I spoke to Hereford as well. They’ve had calls – people checking up on him, some of them former members of the regiment who were being nosy.’
‘He won’t be easy to place … and he’s too young to retire.’
‘And his skill set isn’t what you might describe as easily transferrable.’
Grahamslaw shrugged. ‘You sound like you’re building up to something. If it’s a position with the Security Service, I can tell you now, he won’t go for it.’
‘I know. He’s made that more than clear when I’ve talked it over with him. I was thinking of something closer to home.’
‘Here at the Yard, you mean?’
‘Yes, exactly. Easy commute from the safe house and somewhere we can keep an eye on him.’
‘But doing what? He has no detective experience and he’s not the kind of man to slip easily into some kind of administrative role.’
Fellowes paused for a moment. ‘Is it too late in his career to be taught to do detective duty?’
‘Depends what you have in mind. Junior CID courses are normally for DCs … but I’m sure I could swing something, if needed.’
‘How about your new trafficking squad? It’s undermanned and underfunded.’
‘Max Youldon’s team, you mean?’
‘That’s right. I thought he might do well working with Nina Brasov.’
Grahamslaw pondered the idea. ‘It might work. Brasov is damn good … Finlay would learn a lot from her. She’s been doing some undercover work lately that takes her away from the office, though.’
‘I could have a word at the Home Office, if that would help?’
‘To what end?’
‘Your budget. A little help with the cost of running the squad.’
‘You’re suggesting, if I put Finlay on that squad, the Whitehall mandarins might be more sympathetic to our requests for more funding?’ The Commander laughed. ‘I’m not so green as I am cabbage-looking, you know.’
Fellowes smiled, her expression open and betraying no guile.
He returned her gaze, maintaining a friendly exterior, but he wasn’t fooled. It was his guess Toni Fellowes was using him to help get Finlay placed so she could concentrate on the work that would have been building up in the aftermath of 9/11.
‘OK, I agree,’ Grahamslaw said. He grinned, almost imperceptibly, and this time to himself. He hoped Finlay would prove agreeable to the offer. The first step would be to get him up to the Yard to talk about it. And if a little plan he had in mind proved successful, that might happen sooner rather than later.
&nbs
p; Chapter 3
MI5 safe house, West London
The transition from the disturbed world of my subconscious to self-awareness was brutal.
As I woke, I found the bed beneath me was wet, soaked in sweat, my skin dripping. Although I was hot, I shivered, my heart pounding, my chest heaving with huge, deep breaths.
My senses returned, and with them awareness … familiarity. I recognised where I was. Home.
Our new home. And I was alone.
I’d been dreaming again, one of a number of disturbing nightmares that now regularly troubled my sleep and ended with me waking, like this, gripped by panic. And although the scenes varied, they were always very similar. Sometimes I would be fighting with my fellow policemen, desperate to alert them to some form of danger. In other scenarios, the strength in my limbs would be overcome by gravity and the unnatural, weighty resistance of the air around me. Time and again, these dreams would feature people from my past – ghostly memories returning to haunt me. Most nights I would lie on a bath towel in anticipation of the moment when my dreams would wake me. It helped to absorb the sweat and saved on bed sheets.
I lay quietly for a few moments, waiting for my body to wind down from its imaginary exercise. My eyes, accustomed to the dark, allowed me to pick out the now familiar window of our bedroom. I say ours, although it was no longer shared.
Jenny had recently taken to sleeping in the spare room. Twice, while asleep beside her, I had struck out and hurt her. I hated sleeping alone, we both did. But, for the sake of our health and her safety, it became unavoidable.
We were now resident in West London. Home was a big, Edwardian place in a quiet side street. It had four bedrooms – all with high ceilings and decorative plasterwork – and a wonderful modern kitchen and living room. Jenny loved it. It came fully furnished, so the bulk of our furniture had been put into storage. All there was for us to do was look after the garden and keep the place fairly tidy. As I whiled away the days thinking about what had happened and deciding on when to return to work, I found the distraction of that garden very therapeutic.
For the first three weeks in our new home, a combined team from MI5 and Special Branch had kept guard. While it was in some ways uncomfortable – you could never relax, knowing someone was the other side of the door – it did give me an interesting insight into how the Royal Family and senior politicians must feel to have people like me shadowing their every move. The Royals seemed used to it; we found it a struggle.
Jenny and I had been debriefed by an efficient yet considerate MI5 officer called Toni Fellowes. Toni had been appointed as our family liaison officer and had now become something of a friend. She and Jenny seemed to get on particularly well.
As Toni and I got to know each other, we had, inevitably, compared backgrounds. She was also ex-services, having been a Lieutenant in the Royal Navy, seconded to the Special Boat Squadron, before her skills with language and computers had seen her recruited by the Security Service.
Having gained her trust, and become easier with her company, I probed Toni for information on Richard Webb, the man who had tried to kill us. Toni appreciated that, even though Monaghan was dead, I still had questions outstanding: Had Webb been acting alone or were there others? Was there a cell that might still have me as a target? And what about Monaghan, my old boss? What part had he played in the conspiracy to kill my former colleagues? Was he actually MI5?
It was early days, though. Toni was helpful but what she could tell me was limited. She made no promises but explained that initial analysis by SO13 suggested Webb had been acting outside any terrorist command structure in order to pursue his own deadly agenda. Monaghan really had been MI5, it was just his wife’s affairs had eaten away at him to such an extent, he decided upon revenge. He had got it into his mind that his late wife had been sleeping around and, as a result, he had decided to deal with all her supposed lovers. The two men had then linked up to pursue their deadly agenda. Monaghan had needed a team to take on the attacks; Webb wanted to find me. Now, with both of them dead, Toni explained the threat to my family had almost certainly disappeared.
I remembered her words exactly, so important were they to me and my family. It may have been something or nothing, but Toni’s use of the word ‘almost’ troubled me greatly.
And the dreams continued.
Chapter 4
I was now awake and alert. Experience had taught me a return to sleep would be impossible. I lay still and, as I often did these days, I worried about the future.
In the period since the attacks, I’d been doing a lot of thinking: about how I could get back to work, what role I could find, that kind of thing. I knew it wasn’t going to be easy.
A meeting with Bob Sinclair, my Chief Superintendent at Stoke Newington, hadn’t gone well. It might have best been described as a ‘full and frank’ discussion. He pulled no punches and, as reasonably as he could, he explained to me I had become something of a problem.
To his mind, the best thing for me was a move away from the frontline to an office job at Scotland Yard, maybe as a staff officer to one of the senior ranks. Intelligence work was also a possibility. He did his best to put a positive spin on my predicament, explaining there were a myriad of non-operational jobs in the Met – projects and departments where you could spend a whole career moving from one role to another, never wearing a uniform or going on the streets again. He was sure I would find something to suit me.
I saw his point: colleagues thinking of me as a bullet magnet wouldn’t exactly make me sought-after on any shifts. So, even though I didn’t like what he was saying, I understood it. A job sat behind a desk didn’t appeal to me, though. It suited some; the kind that liked to be tied to a career structure and a pension but had lost the taste for front-line policing. As one desk job came to an end, they would simply apply for another. We called such people ‘plastics’. In time, they were policemen in name only. No way was I going to become a plastic.
Having spent the afternoon in the garden, I was still turning these questions over in my mind as I left home late that night to drive the familiar route back into the Hertfordshire countryside. It had now been some time since we had moved away from our old home and I needed to return to collect a few items I was anxious should remain secret.
In a hide concealed within the old oak tree at the end of the garden of our cottage, lay an Armalite rifle and a Heckler & Koch MP5. Disassembled but complete, they needed to be moved somewhere more secure before somebody found them and I ended up in even more difficulty.
In the aftermath of the firefight in which Richard Webb had tried to kill us, the Anti-Terrorist forensic people had seized my old pistol, the Beretta trophy weapon I had kept since my time in Northern Ireland. I had been sad to see it go; it was like parting with an old friend.
A lot of the guys from Hereford had trophy weapons they were supposed to hand in to the Quartermaster but had ‘forgotten’ to do so. Small arms and ammunition, knives and other weapons would be dropped by both enemy and friendly combatants during skirmishes. It was said that, during the Gulf War, more small arms seized from enemy soldiers were secretly brought into the UK by returning soldiers than there were weapons taken into the war in the first place. Stories like that have a habit of becoming exaggerated, but I wondered if some might be true.
I approached the cottage from the north, across the fields behind the back garden. I didn’t expect the place to still be under surveillance – human or electronic – but I wasn’t about to take any chances. To protect my clothes, I’d pulled on an old RAF boiler suit I had picked up in an army surplus store. Cheap and cheerful, it didn’t exactly flatter my figure, but it would do the job. I was planning a long crawl through the fields and hedges to reach the garden of our former home.
Progress across the fields was slow. There was only a little light from a half-moon, and, for much of the time, I had to feel my way. I made best use of the firm areas adjacent to the hedges and the additional cover this also prov
ided. At about four hundred yards short of my target, I started to belly crawl. Within a very short distance, I was breathing hard and my elbows were starting to bruise. I had known it wasn’t going to be easy and promised myself that soon I would start making an effort to get fit again. It was months since I had done any running and my lack of fitness made hard work of what should have been a simple job.
I lost count of the number of times I stopped to gain my breath. Eventually, after about an hour, I reached the end of the garden and sat back against the old oak tree. Here, I was well hidden and able to rest, my heart rate dropping gradually as I recovered from the exertion. I waited for several minutes, listening and watching. All was quiet.
Hidden by the trees surrounding me, I eased myself to my feet and quickly located the loose bark that concealed the hide. In the dark, I had to feel for what lay within. I was careful, moving very slowly, cautious for any sign things were not as I had left them many weeks previously.
I’d wrapped the component parts in oiled paper. Five small packages contained bolt carriers, stocks, grips, magazines; and then a final box held the two firing mechanisms. There was some body armour, a veil, gas mask and fire-resistant coveralls. With everything safely stored in my bag, I was just about to replace the bark when my hand touched something unexpected.
It was paper. An envelope.
For a few moments, I stood immobile, my arm still inside the tree trunk, contemplating the implications of what I held in my hand. Certainly, the envelope wasn’t mine. Jenny knew about the hide but she hadn’t mentioned anything.