by Chris Ryan
"It doesn't take a Nobel prize winner to work out that the next in line for Mr. Meehan's attentions is myself," she said with a slight smile.
"I'm afraid it looks that way," Alex agreed.
"What precautions are you taking?"
"As few as possible, I'm afraid. I have to continue doing my job and I have to continue to be seen to do it."
"Have you moved house? Varied your routine at all?"
"There's no point, I'm afraid. I live as if expecting an assassin as it is and I have done ever since I inherited the Northern Ireland desk. I know you have your doubts about some of our people, Captain Temple, but I assure you the arrangements in place are good. Apart from anything else I have to receive ministers and diplomatic visitors and, well, all sorts of people. I can't just up sticks and move to some suburban safe house."
"Bet you wish you could at times," said Alex. The image flashed into his mind of Fenwick lying in a pool of blood with a nail through her head. She was certainly keeping up appearances, he thought. Perhaps she's worried that if she looks rattled or fails to show up for work she could lose out on the directorship.
"Perhaps I do, Captain Temple." Fenwick folded her hands in her lap for a moment, then one of the phones on her desk started flashing, and she marched over and picked it up.
"I'll wait outside," said Alex and left the office.
A minute later Dawn reappeared in the ante-room. In a couple of sentences Alex told her of his concerns for her boss's safety.
"She lives in a private block in a gated estate in Chelsea," said Dawn.
"It's one of the most secure addresses in London. There's CCTV everywhere, a security guard on the entrance, passes to get in and out, everything.
No one no window cleaner, no visitor, no one gets within fifty yards of the building without security clearance. The whole place is fully modified for at-risk personnel one-way windows, departure from an underground car park, the police a couple of minutes away in Lucan Place .
"He'll be checking the place out," said Alex.
"Probably even as we speak."
"I know," said Dawn.
"And that's why we're checking out anyone who goes near it and pulling in anyone who can't be personally vouched for by a resident or security staff member. Believe me, the job is being done and done properly."
"Does she live alone?"
"Drop it, Alex, please," Dawn said sharply.
"Our job now is to find the wasp's nest the place he always returns to and kill him there."
He nodded.
"OK. Just wanted to..
"I know. Let's go back in."
For a couple of minutes Dawn's fingers raced over one of the keyboards on Angela Fenwick's desk and the large flat-screen display on the wall opposite them flickered into life.
First, an enlarged area of Ordnance Survey map came up, with the village of Hurley, Staffordshire at its centre.
"No National Park or particular tourist area nearby," said Dawn.
"There's Blithfield Reservoir, but I don't think Meehan Senior would have driven a caravan halfway across the country to see that. Otherwise, the area on the screen is at the central point of a square formed by Stoke, Derby, Wolverhampton and Telford.
Not high on the list of tourist must-sees, I'd say." She struck the keyboard and two small areas of red appeared on the screen. Vis-~-vis suitably sized MOD properties in the area, we've got an RAF storage facility here near Yoxall and an old TA depot outside Colton but neither of them is less than a couple of miles from the River Blithe." She looked up at Alex.
"I'm assuming that the conclusion we're drawing is that he is staying beside the river and using it for drinking water, rather than gathering water from the river and drinking it somewhere else."
Alex nodded.
"He's probably got some sort of filtration system, but obviously nothing too sophisticated. Could well be using standard issue Puritabs. In the UK you tend to allow for water-borne bacteria and pesticides but not for heavy-duty chemical toxins like these PCEs or whatever they're called. And yeah, he'll definitely be holed up somewhere with its own water source rather than transporting a heavy canteen several miles across country. He'll be on the river itself- we know he likes them."
Angela Fenwick nodded grimly.
"Next possibility?"
Another section of map flashed up.
"Mynydd, Poxvys. Much more deserted, obviously. Area of outstanding natural beauty and definite tourist area in the summer months. Good for fishing, too, and we know Meehan and son enjoyed that. But no MOD properties nearby. The army and marines pass through the place pretty regularly on exercise but we don't actually own anything in the catchment area at all. Not so much as a Nissen hut on the Afon Honddhu."
"Go on," said Angela Fenwick.
"Beeston, Lancashire, on the Douglas, halfway between Wigan and Southport.
No MOD facility on or near the river. Nothing touristy about the area, particularly."
"Go on."
They went through all nine of them. For Alex's money there was one definite front runner a small tanning plant on a stream named the Hamble, which ran off Black Down on the western boundary of Dartmoor. This was the one he would have chosen this or the Mynydd one in Wales. Both were remote but served with metal led roads; both were close to popular tourist destinations; both offered vast areas of wild country in which, if need be, an experienced soldier could survive for weeks.
"It'll be one of the two, I'm sure of it," he said.
"We've got nothing registered to the MOD on either river,~ said Dawn doubtfully.
"Suppose the MOD has recently sold the property," suggested Alex.
"For the last hour we've been looking for MOD properties and for a small village with a church, because we know that Meehan specifically mentioned the existence of a church. But if the property was classified secret, at some point, and so not marked on any map, and was recently sold..."
Fenwick nodded.
"Yes, that's true. There's no reason to suppose that it's marked on current maps I can't believe the MOD bothers to inform Ordnance Survey whenever it sells and declassifies property. And of course it wouldn't be included in the MOD's current portfolio either."
"From Meehan's story," said Dawn, 'doesn't it sound as if this place, or at least its original purpose, has been forgotten? That nobody really knows why it was classified in the first place? It can't have been set up much later than 1940 and there's been a lot of inter-departmental paper shuffling since then."
Fenwick reached for a phone, pressed the scramble button and dialled a number.
"Is that 1129? Jonathan? Angela Fenwick here... Yes, bless you for that, Jonathan. Look, I want you to do something further for me. Go back five years and check for top-security-rated but untenanted MOD properties abutting the following rivers and within five miles downstream of the following grid references. Got a pencil?" As Dawn scrolled back through the maps, Fenwick read out the tannery locations.
"And if five years doesn't throw anything up," she continued calmly, 'then try ten and then fifteen .. . Yes, soonest, please. Ring me back the moment you find anything."
Replacing the phone, she turned to the others.
"With a bit of luck he won't be too long," she said.
"Shall we call up for some more coffee and some sandwiches?"
In the event, they finished the sandwiches before the call from Room 1129 came in. As she listened, Fenwick took notes.
"And that's the only one?" she concluded.
"Right. I'm grateful. Thank you." She turned to Dawn.
"Can you get the Hamble map back up?"
Alex felt a sharp prickle of excitement.
From her chair, Fenwick aimed a red laser pointer at the screen display.
"Right," she said.
"A
recent source of perchloroethylene pollution is this building here a small tanning plant presently engaged in litigation with the National Rivers Authority. One and a half mil
es downstream of the plant is Black Down House and its outbuildings, including the shell of a church, standing on some forty acres of land. Evacuated in August 1940 by order of the War Office for reasons pertaining to national security and later classified as a secret location under the Act in relation to Operation Gladio. For the last eighteen months, following sale by auction, Black Down House and its outbuildings have been the property of Liskeard Holdings, an Exeter-based property development company. Their present condition is unknown."
The three of them looked at each other.
"What was Operation Gladio?" asked Alex.
"An anti-communist stay-behind network set up immediately after the war by SOE and MI6, and funded by the CIA. To be activated in the event of a Soviet invasion. The idea was that agents should be put in place and materials hidden at secret locations so that any Western European country that was rolled over would be in a position to resist, communicate with the outside world et cetera."
"And Black Down House was one of those locations?"
"So it seems," said Fenwick.
"So all that kit Meehan found as a kid has sat there for fifty years, waiting for an invasion that never came?"
"Longer, probably. Britain established a stay-behind force as early as 1940 in case of German invasion. After the war a lot of the facilities were simply reassigned. Everything to do with Gladio and the stay-behind units has been classified top secret ever since, although bits and pieces have come out, particularly in Italy. Returning to the present day, however, it looks as if we might have found our man's base. Congratulations, captain."
"How do you want to handle it?" asked Dawn.
"I think I should just get down there as soon as possible," said Alex.
"Stake the place out, try and identify him, and, uh, kill him, basically."
"Killing him would be best," confirmed Angela Fenwick.
TWENTY-FOUR.
Dawn drove. They were carrying too much unusual baggage, she insisted, for them to risk being picked up for speeding. And Alex, sooner or later, would nudge the car up to 80 or 90 mph. It was in his nature.
Alex shrugged and sat back, and with the Range Rover tucked well into the slow lane, they made their steady way westwards. Their purpose, Alex had reluctantly agreed with Angela Fenwick, was to recce the area and determine their next step. There were to be no cowboy heroics or one-man initiatives as there had been at Longwater Lodge. If further manpower was needed then MI-5 would provide it. And with this Alex had had to content himself On his right he could see Stonehenge, like an assembly of frozen NAAFI chips.
"I'm beginning to enjoy our little trips away together," said Dawn.
Alex squeezed her thigh.
"This might not be quite the honeymoon that Spain was," he warned her.
"Worst-case scena no we could run into a contact. Have you had any time on the range recently?"
"Just the odd twenty-five rounds at lunchtime," she answered.
"And then mostly for fun. I did my time on a watcher team, though, and I can't imagine surveillance has changed much since then."
"So what weapon did you draw this morning?"
"A Walther PPK. Call me old-fashioned but..
Alex was surprised. The PPK was a highly serviceable weapon but famously unforgiving in the hands of a beginner. As a straight blow-back pistol it had a very stiff recoil spring and a pretty snappy perceived recoil as well.
"You don't have any trouble racking the slide?" he asked her.
"Or working the double action trigger?"
"I've got nice strong fingers," she replied, flexing them on the steering wheel. She glanced at him sideways and he smiled.
Turning, he cast an eye over the rear of the vehicle. He had tried to think of everything and if in doubt he had over specified. There were sleeping bags, a stuff sack of spare clothing, dry boots, maps, compasses, binoculars and ajumble of other articles that a couple on a hiking holiday might carry with them. Mounted on a steel frame on the back of the Range Rover was a trail bike. It hadn't occurred to Alex to drive a motorcycle down to Dartmoor, but the moment he saw it in the MI-5 vehicle pool he realised just how useful it might prove in that terrain. For that reason two sets of motocross goggles and helmets lay among the hiking gear.
There were also a handful of rather less common items: two pairs of night-vision goggles for a start, and a box each of 9mm and .38 hollow-point rounds. Had the car been stopped and searched by the police there would certainly have been a raised eyebrow or two.
"When we get there," said Alex, "I want you to promise to do what I say. If I say pull back to the vehicle, for example, I want you to do just that, OK? No arguments, no bullshit."
"Fine by me. Just run through the schedule."
"We'll do a single pass past the place, see what we can see. Then push on for a couple of miles and park up I've chosen somewhere on the 1:15,000 map a car park by a transport cafe. Then we'll cut back across country there's a streamside path that should take us to the boundary of the estate work our way round, and see what there is to be seen."
"You think we'll find him?"
"Who knows what we'll find. Or how long we'll have to wait."
"This is just a recce, right? You're cool with that?"
"Just a recce," Alex confirmed.
"On the other hand, if you get him bang to rights..
"You don't get men like Meehan "bang to rights"," said Alex flatly.
"Negative thought leads to negative action," said Dawn.
"Spare me the fucking zen, Harding." He intertwined and cracked his knuckles. The slow drip of adrenalin into his system had begun.
"Don't worry, you'll get a corpse, one way or another."
Two and a half hours later they were driving north from Tavistock across the western plain of Dartmoor Forest. The roads were narrower now, and Dawn edged the Range Rover carefully between high banks edged with fern, hawthorn and bracken as a solitary kestrel pinwheeled above them. At intervals, as the banks fell away, a vast and baleful reach of heather revealed itself.
"Follow the sign for North Brent Tor," said Alex, 'and then for either Chilford or Hamble."
To their left a series of rocky outcrops stood like iron teeth against the sky. This was the Watchman's terrain, Alex was sure of it.
"We should pass Black Down House on our right any minute now," said Alex.
"Take it as slowly as you can without looking suspicious."
They drove for ten minutes down a side lane which was little more than a farm track. Not many people came down here, Alex reflected, noting the lane's poorly maintained surface and overgrown verges.
And there the house finally was, set well back from the road, its windows boarded and its decades-old paintwork weather-streaked and flaking. Beyond it the ground fell away sharply towards the river. There was no sign of any other buildings. Nor, apart from a temporary steel baffler which had been erected in front of the former gateway, was there any indication that the property had been developed in any way since its sale. No structural supports had been erected, and the overgrown trees and bushes surrounding the building had clearly been untouched for years. The air of neglect surrounding the place was palpable.
"Not the most inviting place in the world," said Dawn as the property slid from view.
"I think that's rather the point," Alex observed.
"Like the fact that you can't see much of it from the road. There's a church and several outbuildings down there somewhere, plus twenty-odd acres of woodland."
"No vehicle anywhere near it."
"No. Which makes me think he might not be around. After all, he'd have no particular reason to to hide it."
"But it does beg the question as to where the hell he is," said Dawn worriedly.
"First things first," said Alex.
"If we're going to recce the place I'd much rather he wasn't around.
As long as your boss goes straight from Thames House to the Chelsea flat she should be safe enough assuming the
security's everything you say it is."
Five minutes later they parked the Range Rover on the cinder forecourt of the Cabin Cafe. For appearance's sake they went in for a cup of tea and a slice of sponge cake. There were several other people in there, the majority of them wearing brightly coloured anoraks and carrying map cases.
Alex's and Dawn's appearance, by contrast, was decidedly sombre. Alex was wearing grey wind-proof trousers and an old combat smock; Dawn had on black jeans and a lightweight forest green jacket, and her hair was concealed beneath an army surplus jungle hat. Both were wearing nondescript hiking boots.
When they had paid, Alex and Dawn began to walk back up the road in the direction from which they had come. Both were carrying rucksacks and Alex now had a pair of high-powered binoculars round his neck. Once out of sight of the cafe, the pair cut left-handed into a field and descended the few hundred brambled yards to the river.
Or to the stream, for the Hamble was hardly a river. Not at this time of year, anyway. Such water as it contained tumbled quietly from pool to shallow pool, brimmed darkly for a moment and hurried on. A sheep path ran above it, disappearing at intervals but soon reprising its dry erratic track. Hanks of wool hung from a barbed-wire fence.
They slid down the nettled bank to the water and for twenty minutes Alex set a fast pace up the stream bed. The day was a warm one, despite the fact that afternoon was swiftly becoming evening, and soon they were both sweating.
Alex's thigh swiftly began to throb where the stitches pulled at the wound, but he consigned the discomfort to a distant part of his mind.
They covered the ground fast. The banks of the stream were eight or nine feet high and the foliage had clearly not been cut back for years, allowing them to stay well-concealed from any watching eyes. Despite the absence of any vehicle, Alex was not convinced that the Black Down estate was unoccupied and a careful study of a large-scale map had convinced him that this was the safest approach. Meehan could not watch the entire half-mile perimeter, he could only patrol it, and Alex suspected that he slept through the day.
The estate, they soon discovered, was surrounded by a chain-link fence topped with razor wire. This was not new long streaks of rust discoloured the galvanised metal but at ten feet high it was still effective enough. The banks flattened at the point the stream met the perimeter, so that the lowest chain-linked strands went to within inches of the stream bed. The fence continued in both directions and there was every reason to suppose that it surrounded the estate entirely. It was clearly not proof against determined assault, but it would undoubtedly have deterred the curious over the years.