[Redaction Chronicles 02.0] Sentinel Five

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[Redaction Chronicles 02.0] Sentinel Five Page 25

by James Quinn


  Gorilla removed the empty '39 from the holster at his hip. He pulled back the slide to make sure it really was empty, an old habit. He traced his fingers once more over the contours of the weapon, remembering its history, what it had helped him do, the number of Redactions it had carried out in his capable hands. Operations gone now, lost forever. The weapon would be a liability, traceable, compromised, and to hang onto it would mean a prison sentence or worse. He knew he could never use it again. He looked at it one last time, then threw it deep into the heart of the blazing inferno. The heat would melt the metal and destroy any evidence… the '39 would be lost forever.

  “What was that?” she asked, sounding confused. “Why did you throw it away?”

  “It was nothing,” he said sadly. “Just a relic from the past…”

  Book Four: Retribution

  Chapter One

  LONDON – MARCH 1968

  Three days later, Jordie Penn met them both at London Airport. They'd been shepherded into the rear of his Jaguar and whisked through the streets to a safe flat for de-briefing. He'd provided them with a status update, sounding like a newsreader, reading out the information almost in a daze. Initial news reports suggested that the pagoda in Japan had been the subject of an unfortunate fire, there were not thought to be any survivors. The inferno had been so severe, identifying the multiple bodies was proving difficult, if not impossible. There were unsubstantiated rumours that one of the bodies was that of respected businessman Yoshida Nakata, but more would not be known until a post-mortem had been conducted.

  On the same day, according to Penn, the Japanese National Police Agency and the Public Security Intelligence Agency received several anonymous tip-off's regarding criminal activities at Nakata Industries of Tokyo. The informant mentioned terrorism-related offences, money laundering and financial links to illegal arms dealing. The officers of the NPA and the PSIA arrived the next morning, with warrants giving them carte blanche to search every room in the multi-storey Nakata Industries office building. Several senior executives at Nakata Industries had already been arrested, and several more had abruptly committed suicide. An in-depth investigation was underway.

  Penn handed Grant two final gifts. He'd unfolded the small piece of paper Penn passed to him and raised an eyebrow at the figure in the 'balance' column. It was enough to set him up for the next few years, he would have a chance to start again and provide for the family. Penn had then handed Grant a small automatic pistol. “One's for protection and the other's to keep the bank manager happy,” Penn said. “You decide which is which. The Colonel will eventually want to thank you personally, Jack. I'm on my way to meet him later… hopefully… haven't been able to get through to him today. Phone just keep's ringing and ringing.”

  “He's probably just celebrating, Jordie. The way we used to do it in the old days in Berlin,” said Grant, trying to calm his case officer's concerns, but he could see the worry etched on Penn's face. The intervening months of the operation had been hard on him and he'd visibly aged.

  The two men shook hands and Grant had kissed Miko briefly on the cheek, the kiss of a friend rather than a lover and wished her well before he left them to catch a train north to Scotland. They'd had their time and now their destinies would send them in different directions.

  * * *

  Penn and Miko watched Jack Grant through the window as he walked away to catch a taxi. Miko turned to Penn and smiled demurely. “And for me, Mr. Penn? What do you have for me? Money, rewards?”

  Penn smiled. “I have an end to this operation, Miss Arato. One final job to do, one final target… if you want it? After that, I have a ticket home, or to wherever in the world you wish to go, compliments of Sentinel.”

  “And the target?” she asked, intrigued.

  Penn gave her all the information he knew about the target. His name, his location, and his dealings with the Raven.

  “Weapons?” she asked.

  “There is a specialist piece of equipment waiting for you in the boot of my car. A British made Parker Hale rifle.”

  “Ah, an old friend of mine,” Miko said, remembering Lochailort. Now it seemed a lifetime ago.

  “An old friend indeed. Are you interested?” asked Penn.

  She smiled at him, that sweet smile of hers, both playful and demure. “I think that you and I should go on a little journey, Mr. Penn.”

  “I think we should, Miss Arato.” She's both beautiful and deadly, thought Jordie Penn. It was a devastating combination.

  Chapter Two

  ARISAIG, SCOTLAND

  Twelve hours after bidding farewell to Penn and Miko, Jack Grant stepped into the porch of the little cottage, shook the rain from his shoulders and felt the warmth of the hearth from the sitting room filtering through into the hallway. He knew instantly that something was wrong; there was heaviness in the air and the cottage was ominously silent. The cottage didn't work like that; there was always noise, clutter and voices. But silence. Never!

  He dropped his bag by the coat stand and listened. He gently shut the front door behind him, and instinctively reached a hand to the pistol in its holster. He would leave it undrawn – for now. As Penn had said, having it was a precaution and he had it ready, near, in case he should need it. He stepped through the connecting door and into the main living room. It was covered in a subdued glow of orange, the light from the fireplace providing both heat and light. In the corner, he took in the sight of May and Hughie, his sister and her husband, sitting on the settee. Their hands were tied, legs bound and each had a gag across their mouths. They looked exhausted, as if they'd been held for quite some time. They both had the desperate eyes of the prisoner who was terrified for their life.

  His gaze moved over to the opposite side of the room. He had to squint until his eyes became accustomed to the gloom. He saw the small dining table they normally sat around, the four of them at the end of a working day and talked and chatted and laughed and cried. There was nothing normal about it now; today it looked like a scene from one of Grant's worst nightmares. For sitting in a chair facing the door where he stood, was Frank Trench and on his lap, with a gun pointed at her head, was the girl with the long, black curly hair.

  “Take a seat,” said Trench, indicating the wooden chair directly opposite his. “You carrying? What am I talking about? Of course you are.”

  “Don't make me draw my gun, Frank, that would be a death sentence for you,” growled Grant, lowering himself into the seat.

  “Oh, I'm not stupid Jack. You think I'd let you use your gun? No, put it on the floor and kick it over to me… carefully, fingertips only please. We don't want to have an accident now, do we,” said Trench, nodding his head towards the child.

  Grant removed the gun from the holster on his right hip and carefully placed it on the floor by his feet, a quick brush with his shoe slid it over towards Trench. Trench expertly back heeled it away, out of reach.

  “Who's the girl? She's a pretty little thing,” said Trench nodding a head towards the child while he stroked her hair. “Is she your niece?”

  Grant narrowed his eyes and fixed Trench firmly in his sights. He shook his head and said simply, “Daughter.”

  Trench barked out a triumphant laugh. “Well, the ultimate prize, eh! So she's the little secret you've kept hidden all these years? Be a shame if something dreadful was to happen to her, because of her old man.”

  Grant rested his hands on the edge of the table and glared at the man who had once been his colleague. “What do you want, Trench? The mission is over, the Raven's dead. The best thing you can do is to bugger off and leave us all be. None of this will solve anything.”

  Trench smiled and smelled the child's hair. “Umm, she smells of strawberries… lovely. I'll tell you what I want, Jack. We're going to play a little game and decide once and for all who's the best stone cold killer in this rotten bloody business. Now, how does that sound?”

  * * *

  “The rules are simple. If I win, I get to t
ake apart what's left of your family, piece by piece. I'll leave the girl until last… she's a bit young, but I'm sure I could have some fun with her. I'll let the old couple watch, before I finish them off. You'll be dead anyway, so you'll miss it all, unfortunately,” sneered Trench.

  Trench had made the child sit in the corner by the fireplace, away from the action at the table and Grant's gun laid on the floor beneath his chair. She sat with her knees huddled up by her chin, eyes fixated on the two men squared off at the kitchen table. In the firelight, her black hair had taken on an almost silk-like quality.

  “If you win, well obviously, you'll have the pleasure of killing me yourself. One pistol, one full magazine placed directly in front of us both on the table, safety off and ready to fire. On the count of three, first one to grab it and fire… wins.” Trench's voice had become more animated now, almost as if he was enjoying himself, ready for the revels that were to come.

  Grant considered the proposition. A half chance was better than no chance, at least in his experience. But something didn't smell right…

  “Why take the risk, Frank, why take the risk that I could blow your head off? Why not just kill us all now and be bloody done with it?” asked Grant, his fingers gently drumming on the edge of the table, bleeding off the adrenaline which was coursing through his veins.

  Trench's mood turned quickly and when he spoke, the hatred in his voice was tangible. “Because, you little shit, I was always in your shadow! All these years; first at Redaction, then working for the Raven! Gorilla, the gunman, Gorilla, the best Redactor in the business… pah… bullshit! You were just an oik from the Army who kissed the right arses, namely that cripple, Masterman – who, by the way, I paid a little visit with last night. He's a cripple no more, if you get my meaning. The old KGB-style bullet to the back of his head; him and his good lady wife. Bastard tried to stab me with a commando knife, he nearly succeeded, so I had to beat him with my gun before he'd settle down. He didn't sing though, still a tough old bugger right until the end.” He shook his head violently. “No… I want to settle this once and for all, man against man, speed against speed. No excuses or third parties involved, totally fair. One chance and one winner!”

  Grant shrugged. Trench had always been ambitious and egotistical; he just hoped that in the next few minutes it would be one of those things which would give him a tactical advantage over his enemy. Pride and ambition could be terminal for a Redactor.

  “I'm going to show you something – don't try anything, or I'll have to hurt the old people,” said Trench. Like a magician demonstrating a card trick to a captive audience, Trench moved the gun forward. It was a standard Browning 9mm. He expertly removed the magazine, pulled back the slide lock and ejected the chambered round. Then he placed the vacated round back into the magazine, slammed it back inside the weapon and let the slide run forward, chambering a round. As a last measure, he flicked off the safety making the weapon ready to fire, before gently placing it down onto the centre of the table and spinning it around like a carousel. The gun came to rest with the butt facing Trench and the slide facing Grant.

  Both men stared down at it for a moment, pensive, each gauging if the other would make a pre-emptive grab for it. The air was still, the only noise the faint crackle and popping of the fire in the hearth. Then the moment was past and the two gunmen sat back to weigh up their options for this macabre game. It was Grant who broke the silence. “So how does it work then, Frank; you call the numbers, or do we just bluff it out and go for it rough and tumble style?”

  Trench shook his head, his eyes hard and cold. Then he lifted an accusing finger and pointed at the little girl sitting in the corner of the room. “She counts to three and on three, we make our play. Fastest to the draw wins.”

  Grant nodded his understanding of the rules and smiled. He also understood how Trench operated and he doubted if the killer would play by the rules at all, even if he had been the one to initiate them. Trench was a man who wasn't to be trusted… or underestimated. Grant glanced over at his daughter. “Close your eyes and don't look up, no matter what happens. Understand?”

  The girl nodded and dropped her head forward so that it rested on her knees, then as an extra protection against the violence to come, she covered her head with her arms, fingers interlinked, locking them in place.

  “Katie, in exactly one minute I'll tell you to start counting. I want you to count to three, one, two, three – exactly like you would in Mrs. Morrison's class. Can you do that,” said Grant. He heard a whimper in reply.

  Grant turned his gaze towards Trench. Both men locked eyes and studied each other. The seconds dragged by, what seemed like endless hours was in fact, mere seconds. The rain outside, the howling wind, the crackling fire and the grandfather clock's ticking filled the void of silence. For Grant, everything was shut out. Only he and the Browning pistol resting on the table mattered. He flicked a final glance at Trench, dismissed him and then spoke to his daughter. “Start counting, slowly.”

  The child took a breath and then with a wavering voice she began “One.”

  The pistol… my hands… the target… the pistol… my hands… the target, that's all, thought Grant. He ignored Trench's stare, noticing instead that the other man's hand was edging slowly downwards, until only his fingertips were resting on the table top. But why?

  It hit Grant in a stunning moment of realisation. The main weapon was a ruse, a distraction, because Trench planned to do his killing with a secondary weapon… a back-up gun. Trench's fingers were moving further along the edge of the table, placing his hand to grab the concealed weapon.

  “Two,” whispered the little girl, her voice catching in her throat.

  She'd barely finished saying 'two' when Jack Grant lifted his leg sharply, kicking upwards with full force, his shoe connecting with the rickety table and sending its opposite end, Trench's end, heading towards the ceiling. It looked like a seesaw trying to ascend upwards. Grant heard a sharp gasp from Trench as the gun, through sheer force of gravity, slipped out of his reach and headed towards Grant's stomach, where his hands were waiting to receive it. Grant felt the gun slip smoothly into his grasp and then instantly had it up and out above the table, mere inches from Trench's forehead. Grant pulled the trigger, just once. Trench tried to draw his back-up weapon, but he never made it.

  The explosion of noise lasted only a moment. One shot, one kill.

  The smoke cleared and Grant was aware of his nemesis, still sitting bolt upright in the chair, surprise etched upon his face and his newly acquired third eye, just above his left eye, had started to weep blood. Trench had managed to access his back-up weapon, a small .25 Colt, which hung limply in his fingers. He heard Trench give out a last exhalation of breath before his chest stilled.

  Grant sat in the darkness, staring at Trench for a few moments more until he was satisfied the man was truly dead. He lifted the pistol, removed the magazine and racked the slide back until it spat out the bullet. With the gun safe he slammed it down onto the table, glad to be rid of it from his hands. His mind was already clicking back into professional mode. Dispose of the body; Trench inside a sack weighted with chains, a trip out to the centre of the Loch in Hughie's rowing boat at dead of night… he glanced over at May and Hughie, their eyes agog at what had just happened. “Are you alright?” he said. His sister nodded, and her body crumpled with a mixture of stress and exhaustion.

  Grant stood and walked over to where his daughter was still hidden in her own private cave, her arms wrapped over her head. He stood over her, aware of her violent trembling, and gently laid one hand on her black hair and stroked it. “Katie, come here. Come here my sweet, sweet girl. I'm sorry love, so, so sorry,” he said.

  She looked up, recognised the man standing above her and held her arms out to him. They embraced, holding each other tightly and she whispered into her father's ear. “Daddy, daddy, its fine, don't you worry yourself… you're home now. I read your letter; I read it every day…”


  Chapter Three

  MOEL FAMU, WALES – APRIL 1968

  Sir Marcus Thorne, AKA the Salamander, and now, the newly appointed Chief of the British Secret Intelligence Service, dug his hiking stick deep into the earth of the Welsh mountain Moel Famu, and pushed himself ever onwards up the side of the hill. He loved walking in this region of Wales. The mountains, the wide open spaces, the quiet, the freedom; all gave him the opportunity to think and escape. It was his release. He needed these small moments, perhaps once a month, to let him bleed out the tension of his double life and the nefarious workings of the British Secret Service. This was his luxury.

  His hopes of manipulating the Kyonshi Crisis had all come to nought. His accomplice – the Raven and his organisation – were defeated… destroyed… at least, if the police reports coming in from Japan were to be believed. He'd grieved for his long-time friend and co-conspirator, had lit an incense candle out of respect. Thorne had spent a decade or more moving the pieces on the chess board that was the Great Game. The inside knowledge on how to extort money from the British government; moving Trench into position; manipulating SIS and MI5 into looking one way, while the Raven moved in another; the 'hit' on Masterman; negotiating as part of the extortion process and promoting that buffoon, Hart, into the role of being the new C … it had all ended in disaster.

  The Salamander and the Raven's original plan had been to both extort money from the British and also to move Thorne into a more powerful position within the government, hopefully a Cabinet position, something which brought him ever nearer to his ultimate goal: becoming Prime Minister. Thorne was to step in once the Kyonshi Crisis was in full swing, take the reins as the Deputy Chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee, and oust the reigning, and failing, Home Secretary. The man was an old fool, who would be out of his depth with this type of attack. That had been the plan… and the world would have been their oyster. Unfortunately, Masterman's private enterprise had put paid to that. Years of planning and strategically moving assets into place had been blown by a few gunmen taking down the Raven and destroying the stockpiles of the Kyonshi virus.

 

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