Adrian Magson - Execution

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Paulton turned his head, a sly smile of triumph on his face.

‘By close of business today? Especially a photo.’

‘What? No. . I can’t.’ Then he saw the look on Paulton’s face. He nodded. ‘Very well. What’s the name?’

‘Jardine. Clare Jardine.’

FIFTEEN

Harry was walking back to his car when his phone rang. It was Ballatyne.

‘I’ve a possible sighting of Jardine. A female figure walking down Caldicot Road away from the hospital, timed at oh-two-thirty three. She was heading towards Coldharbour Lane, Harry. The imagery isn’t great, taken from a CCTV camera at the far end of a car park, but it’s all I could get so far.’

Harry felt a jolt of something approaching excitement. If it was Clare, it gave him a start point. Instead of having to cover the 360-degree field around the hospital, gradually widening the scope of the search and adding an impossible area of streets, road and buildings, they now had a single direction to focus on.

‘What about inside?’

‘So far, nothing. I’ve put in requests but I’m not holding my breath. The longer we wait, the less likely it is that we’ll get anything. And waiting won’t help her chances.’

‘How did you find this one, then?’

‘I couldn’t get the hospital coverage, so I put one of my whizz-kids on checking out cameras outside the hospital perimeter. He got lucky.’

‘You mean he broke some laws.’ Harry had no doubts that Ballatyne would do whatever it took to find what he wanted. Accessing NHS digital records was clearly not possible without a court order. But having his man hack into local authority or private contractor digital records was less of a problem.

‘I don’t know what you mean.’ The voice was bland. ‘Did you find anything?’

Harry relayed what Casey had told him. Ballatyne swore softly when he got to the bit about the guard leaving, but didn’t volunteer an opinion. Undoubtedly he would begin an internal investigation, but finding out who the man was, or why he had left, might not be so simple.

‘You’ll have to take it from here,’ Ballatyne said. ‘I’ll see if I can access street cameras in the area, but don’t wait for me.’

‘Are you giving me authority to break down a few doors?’ He was certain Ballatyne had just given the silent nod to do whatever he could to track down Clare Jardine. That could only include using Rik’s skills to the maximum effect.

‘I never said that. I’ll be in touch.’ The phone went dead.

Harry rang Rik. The younger man answered, sounding bored and slightly out of breath. He was a hundred yards south of the hospital campus and had so far drawn a blank on any useful cameras.

‘The ones in place are either busted or giving the wrong coverage.’

‘Doesn’t matter, we’ve got a lead,’ Harry told him, and gave him directions to the junction of Caldicot Road and Coldharbour Lane. ‘You take the east side and I’ll take the west. We’ll work our way north until we hit something.’

‘Why north?’

‘I think she’ll make for the city centre. Anywhere else is too open. In her state, she’ll stand out too much. She needs cover, somewhere to hide while she gets help and recuperates.’

‘Fair enough. And if we don’t find anything?’

‘Then you get to let your fingers do the walking.’

‘Yowzer,’ Rik muttered quietly. ‘At last.’

Votrukhin and Serkhov were just as keen to be doing something, but for different reasons. After making their excuses to Gorelkin, they had left the Grosvenor House Hotel and headed south and across the river, on their way back to King’s College Hospital. Votrukhin had outlined his plan as they went, meeting no resistance from Serkhov, who favoured action rather than words.

‘I’m not having that traitorous little Englishman looking down his nose at us,’ he muttered darkly, as Serkhov pulled out into Park Lane. ‘Did you see the look on his face? I wanted to lean across and punch that smile all over the room.’

Serkhov nodded sympathetically as he took the dark blue 3-series BMW skilfully across to the outside lane and squeezed between two taxis aiming for a space on Hyde Park Corner. Ignoring the looks from the other drivers, he accelerated hard and shot across towards Grosvenor Place. One of the training courses in the SPC was extreme offensive and defensive driving, at which he had excelled. ‘You should have given me the nod,’ he said tersely. ‘I’d have followed him out and rammed that phone down his throat.’

Votrukhin gave an appreciative grunt. They were on the same page, Serkhov and him; neither man had enjoyed the lambasting that Gorelkin had given them for not dealing with the Jardine woman, but they could live with that. Operational errors happened in the best run organisations. What counted was putting them right in time and proving their worth for future missions. But having an outsider — a foreign outsider at that — present at the time and smiling at their discomfort was hard to take.

Votrukhin also had a bad feeling about Paulton. Even accepting the Englishman’s previous job, which had required a talent for lies and deceit in spades, there was something in the man’s face that had made him uneasy from the moment he’d met him. Gorelkin seemed unaware of it but Votrukhin had sensed it like an aura — especially when the ex-MI5 man had returned from making his telephone call.

‘Why are you going this way?’ he asked Serkhov. He knew the layout of London well and guessed that the sergeant was heading towards Vauxhall Bridge. It didn’t really matter which one they used, but he was intrigued.

‘Because,’ Serkhov replied, ‘when I joined the centre, I promised I’d spit on MI6 if I ever got close enough. Don’t worry, I won’t actually stop and gob on the building. Even I can handle symbolism.’

‘You’d better not. They’ll have our faces on film in seconds and their FRS systems will light up like St Basil’s Cathedral.’

Facial recognition software was patchy at best, as both men knew, especially in moving vehicles with the play of light off windows. But neither wished to take the risk of being ‘pinged’ by a random lucky shot. The result would be embarrassing for all concerned, and career destroying at the very least for them.

Serkhov glanced across at his colleague. They had worked together several times, forming an effective team. But seniority in the SPC was a divider of men, and there was always a slight hesitation in both men when talking non-operational matters.

‘What is it?’ Votrukhin had noticed the look. Serkhov had something on his mind.

‘I’ve never worked a black operation before. Have you?’

‘No.’ Votrukhin sighed. ‘But it’s what we do, isn’t it? It’s just a name. What’s your problem?’

‘This. . no contact stuff the colonel talked about — ’ he steered through a narrow gap and accelerated hard — ‘it sounds extreme.’

Votrukhin didn’t reply immediately. He’d been having similar thoughts. From what had started out as a tough but straightforward operation — if terminating a man could be called that — it had taken a slightly nasty turn. Chyornyiy . The word was so bland, in normal circumstances merely a colour. Yet here and now, it had taken on a completely different tone. Sinister. Now they were cut off from all outside contact, with only Gorelkin and their wits to keep them out of trouble. And Votrukhin wasn’t entirely sure why it had gone this way.

‘It’s extreme only if we get caught,’ he concluded, and focussed on the job in hand. ‘We’d better make sure we don’t, right? Then we can go home.’

Forty minutes later, they pulled into a car park near the hospital and dutifully fed the meter. Only amateurs took chances; it was how they got caught. Then they set about scouting the area outside, trying to find a lead, any lead, that might point towards where the Jardine woman had gone. Inevitably, that proved fruitless, and merely increased the chance of them being noticed. Votrukhin finally led the way back to the hospital.

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