Ian Hocking - Déjà Vu
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- Название:Déjà Vu
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- Издательство:Writer as a Stranger
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- Год:2011
- ISBN:нет данных
- Рейтинг книги:5 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Déjà Vu: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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Déjà Vu Literary awards: Red Adept Indie Awards winner for Science Fiction (2011)
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The DSI arched an eyebrow. ‘I thought that the “something” was a result of Proctor’s own actions.’
Saskia said, ‘I realise, sir, that we are not in a position to verify or falsify Proctor’s charges. But we are also not required to accept them. I mean, we must not accept conclusions unless we make them ourselves from available evidence. Nobody, so far, has been able to produce evidence to show that Proctor is responsible for anything. It is conjecture. A jury might not convict him.’
The DSI was grim. ‘You should attend more trials.’ Seeing Saskia’s expression, he pulled a face, as if to dismiss his own comment.
‘If Proctor is an innocent party, then I believe he will wish to gather more information about his predicament. At the very least, more information would bolster his defence against the charges. Under EU law, it is not illegal for an innocent person to attempt an escape.’
Jago gave her a warning look but the DSI nodded. ‘Well, I can’t argue with your research, Detective.’
‘Kommissarin,’ Saskia said. She felt her voice strengthen. ‘Proctor is a university professor. It is a comfortable existence. We know from his e-mails that his relationship with his daughter is strained. The last few days will have proved to be very difficult, even life-altering. Proctor will undoubtedly feel the need to leave the country. Here he is hunted. In America he is not. His daughter is in America. In addition, she gave him the warning. If he is indeed innocent, then his search for answers must begin with her. Flying out would “kill two birds with one stone”. We must assume it is within his capability.’
The DSI said, ‘I’m with you. Jennifer is his daughter. The person who helped organise his escape is someone who would risk everything for him. Jennifer fits the bill. Was she the woman who broke Proctor out of the Park Hotel? Who knows, maybe her employers—if they are the US government, like you say—helped to falsify her passport and formulate Proctor’s escape plan. If we get her, we get Proctor. But is she still in the country?’
‘I think it is unlikely,’ Saskia replied. ‘If you are correct and she has the backing of the American government, they would advocate a plan with minimum risk. Perhaps she has already risked a great deal by personally overseeing her father’s escape. If they were to attempt an escape together, the probability of their apprehension would increase. In that case, I would suggest that she left immediately via the nearest airport, Edinburgh.’
Jago shook his head. ‘I don’t know. If the Americans really wanted Proctor, why not smuggle him out by military transport?’
‘Secrecy,’ the DSI said. ‘And cost. How much do they want him? What can he be worth?’
Saskia replied, ‘Perhaps everything, perhaps nothing. However, with the correct advice and documentation, there is no reason why Proctor should not be able to leave the country through an airport.’
‘Edinburgh?’ Jago asked. ‘You think he showed up in Northallerton to throw us off the scent?’
‘Why not?’
‘No,’ said the DSI. ‘We had Edinburgh locked down tight. To get lost in the crowd he would need somewhere bigger.’
‘Like where?’ Saskia asked.
‘Heathrow, Gatwick, Luton, Stansted,’ Jago said. ‘Take your pick.’
‘Which is the largest?’
‘Heathrow,’ said the DSI. ‘And its surveillance is poorest due to the volume of traffic. We’ve had a team researching this scenario. If he took a car or a train, he would have left the country by now. If he’s still on the bike, and using minor roads, he could catch a flight at midnight—if he rides hard. Personally, I think he’ll lie low for a week.’
‘Those flights need to be checked, sir,’ said Saskia.
‘I agree with you, Brandt. Check each person who flies to America between midnight and 6:00 am. Check them by hand. If you don’t find Proctor, we can assume he’s already gone or he’s lying low. We have other people working those leads.’
Jago said, ‘There are about thirty-five thousand people who can do that for us, sir. They’re called the Metropolitan Police Service.’
The DSI shook his head. ‘Think. If Proctor takes his holiday tonight, I want us to nab him, not our Cockney friends. No sense having the Met solve our cases.’
‘But Saskia is a neutral party.’
The DSI grinned, revealing a gold canine. ‘It’s that kind of clear thinking that stops you advancing through the ranks, Phil. Saskia is a neutral party accompanied by a Lothian and Borders liaison officer.’
‘Yes, sir,’ Jago said quietly.
‘You two can hitch down to Heathrow with a friend of mine, Sam Langdon. He comes here for the golf. My secretary will give you his number. Have a nice trip.’
He held open the door. Saskia and Jago walked through. In the waiting room, Jago said, ‘I was his mentor when he joined the service.’ He checked the time. ‘Right, we’d better find this Langdon character. Saskia?’
She was watching Besson and Garland at the coffee machine. They looked up and smiled. Even the loneliest person has the memory of company, but she did not even have that.
David glanced at the bike’s dashboard. It was 4:00 p.m. He had been riding for nearly nine hours. It was time to gather the elements of his disguise. He took his lead from Ego, who had downloaded three SAS survival guides and related them to David in a digested, if sensational, form. Ego wanted him to change his vehicle and his clothing. David disagreed. Clothing, yes; vehicle, no. The bike was uncomfortable but it was fast, all-terrain, and easily camouflaged.
Now he stood next to the parked, cooling Moiré and considered Ego’s advice. He leaned towards the microphone in the helmet, which he had secured to the petrol tank. ‘Bike, change to green,’ he said. ‘Do it gradually, over the next hour.’
David walked into town. The pedestrians cut unpredictable zigzags in front of him. After only two days on the bike, he had forgotten how to walk in a crowd.
Inside the first shop, the owner’s smile froze on contact. To be sure, David had a thickening beard and grimy clothes. His head was bowed to avoid surveillance cameras. And he paid cash. Physical money was risky, but he had to assume that the credit card, issued in the name of David Harrison, had been blown since his escape from The Poor Players . Prudently, his passport carried a different name.
He abandoned his old coat in a public toilet and walked on. He purchased new clothes and, item by item, left their predecessors about the city centre. In a gentleman’s outfitters he bought a suit. In another he bought a beige briefcase, a pair of tinted glasses, a shaving kit, some paper overalls, a wedding ring, and a startlingly expensive belt. In each shop he lamented the loss of his bank card and shrugged wistfully at the need to carry so much cash. The shopkeepers made clicking noises and were sorry to hear that, sir, and said no more. Finally, he bought some aftershave and a universal storage crate for the bike. At the invitation of the last sales assistant, he stuffed his shopping into the box. Both he and the assistant stared at the crumpled suit for moment.
‘Travel iron, sir?’
‘Can’t hurt.’
Shopping completed, David returned to the bike. The universal box was not as universal as its manufacturers had enthused. It took fifteen minutes to attach. He rode away with his new clothes and a bike that was nearly green. He rode away a different person.
Different enough?
He was still a man on a bike.
‘Ego,’ he said, pulling out into traffic.
‘David.’
‘Does it strike you as odd that I haven’t been captured?’
‘Yes, you have been lucky to an extent, but it is not surprising that you have evaded capture. Though there is an All-Points Bulletin out for your arrest, the description is rather average. I have read two more espionage novels in the past hour and, judging by these, I do not believe that the British police have the manpower to find you unless you make a serious mistake: that is, break the law. They do not know your location, your destination, your purpose; nor do they have a current physical description. If you continue to ride under the speed limit and use minor roads, your chances of reaching locker J327 are good.’
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