Authors: Mark Dawson
Weapons first. He took out the Heckler & Koch MP7A1 machine pistol wrapped in oilcloth, followed by the sound suppressor. Beneath that were three thirty-round magazines and six boxes of ammunition. There was a FNP-45 .45 calibre double action semi-automatic with one extra magazine.
He put the guns into the suitcase and went back to the crate.
There were six Tesco plastic bags, the heavy duty ones that were supposed to last for life, and, inside, was thirty thousand pounds and ten thousand dollars, all in tens and fifties. A ziplock freezer bag held French and German passports in different names and matching driver’s licenses. There was a wallet with a third driver’s licence, a credit card in the name of Peter McGuigan that would allow him to access the Cayman account with two hundred thousand dollars in it. There was a packet of hair dye, a pair of spectacles with clear frames and a handheld GPS.
He packed the items into the suitcase, left the empty crate behind him, locked the door to the storage room and went back outside to his car. He put the suitcase into the trunk and, before he closed the lid and after checking that he wasn’t observed, he opened the case, withdrew the semi-automatic and covered it beneath his overcoat as he went around to the driver’s side and got into the car.
#
IT WAS a two hour drive to the south coast from Waterloo. He drove carefully so as not to draw attention to himself, following the A23, M23, A23 again and then the A26 until he reached Lewes. He passed the Beachy Head Hotel and the sign for the Samaritans at the side of the road: ‘Always There, Day or Night’, the last appeal to those who were intent upon doing away with themselves. It was a beautiful spot, the exposed promontory whipped by the winds that blew in from the Channel. The white chalk cliffs were five hundred feet high here and the vertiginous drop to the spume-crested rocks below had claimed hundreds of lives; Control had read somewhere that it was the third most popular place for suicides in the world.
He parked the Jaguar in the car park, leaving the keys in the ignition, collected the suitcase from the trunk, and wheeled it back to the bus stop that he had passed as he drove in. There was a telephone box next to it. He went inside and called the local minicab office that had left business cards wedged into the sides of the window.
The operator picked up after a dozen rings.
“I need a taxi.”
“Where are you, mate?”
“Beachy Head.”
“And where do you want to go?”
“Southampton Airport, please. Quick as you like.”
Control stood outside the telephone box and watched as the fiery rim of the sun slid above the edge of the cliff, the light flooding into the midnight blue of the sky. The dawn chorus greeted it noisily and, back at the pub, a milkfloat rattled and chinked as the driver pulled in with his delivery. Control drew his overcoat around him and breathed in a lungful of fresh, salty air.
It looked like it was going to be a beautiful day.
MILTON GOT off the underground at Heathrow Terminal Five. The platform was crowded with travellers, some with handheld luggage, others hauling cases on wheels. Milton was unencumbered: all he had was his watch, his oxidised Ronson lighter, a packet of cigarettes and three thousand pounds that he had withdrawn from an account he had opened five years earlier and never touched. He didn’t need anything else. He took his place on the escalator and rode it all the way to the first floor and the departure lounge. A travelator hurried the seemingly endless queue of travellers onwards: parents corralling boisterous children; business travellers with newspapers open before them; backpackers with grungy t-shirts and brightly-coloured bracelets on their wrists. Milton waited in line. There was no sense in rushing; he wasn’t in any kind of hurry.
The huge, cavernous shed opened out before him: hundreds of check-in desks, thousands of passengers. There was a Starbucks concession this side of security and Milton headed for it.
A man was sitting at one of the shiny metal tables. Milton sat down opposite him.
“Pope.”
“Milton.”
Pope’s face still bore the evidence of his beating at the hands of Pascha Shcherbatov. His eyes were still bruised, but the vivid purple had faded away, to be replaced by a dull puce. He shifted in his chair, better to accommodate the residual pain from the ribs that had been broken.
“How are you feeling?”
“I’m fine.”
“You don’t look it.”
“But I look better than I did?”
“You look old.”
“We both look old, John. We
are
old.”
“Speak for yourself.”
Anna Vasil’yevna Kushchyenko walked towards them from Boots, a small bottle of water in her hand. She stood at the table and offered Milton her hand; he took it.
“Mr. Milton,” she said with cold formality.
“Anna. How are you?”
“I’m very well.”
The conversation was stilted; he had hurt her pride for the second time.
“Are you going to sit down?”
“I don’t think so. My flight leaves soon.”
She was dressed in a business suit with a white shirt, similar to the outfit that she had been wearing when she had got him out of trouble in Texas. That seemed an awfully long time ago now.
She looked down at him: beautiful, frigid, haughty.
“I’m not going to say I’m sorry, Anna. It was business. It had to be done. But, for what it’s worth, you are an excellent agent. You just need a little seasoning.”
She stiffened. “I don’t need your apology,” she said curtly, “and I don’t need your advice.”
“I’m sorry about the colonel. What happened to him wasn’t what we planned.”
Anger flashed. “No? What did you have planned?”
“I was going to give the flash drives to him.”
Did she believe him? It didn’t look like it. She shook her head derisively, the curtain of red hair shifting across her shoulders. She collected her bottle of drink from the table. “I should be going,” she said. “Goodbye, Mr. Milton.”
“Goodbye, Anna.”
“Perhaps we will see each other again.”
“Perhaps.”
MILTON AND POPE wandered across to the wide windows of the observation lounge. It was a dark night, the moon and stars hidden by a thick blanket of low cloud. The 747 that was liveried in the colours of Aeroflot lumbered down the runway, raised its front wheel from the tarmac and struggled into the air. Anna Vasil’yevna Kushchyenko would be back in Moscow in four hours.
“Have we spoken to the Russians?”
“I believe so.”
“And?”
“They’re not unhappy. As far as they’re concerned, you did what you said you’d do.”
They strolled to a couple of empty seats and sat down.
“Here,” Pope said, proffering a new passport. Milton flicked through the pages; they were clean, unstamped, virgin. There was something to be written there. Possibilities.
“Thanks.”
“Look at the last page.”
Milton did: the passport was in his own name, not an alias.
“You’re in the clear, John. You are officially retired.”
“That’s easy for you to say.”
“I’m serious. It’s finished, John. You can do whatever you want to do.”
“You know that for a fact?”
“I do.”
“And does Control see it that way?”
“He isn’t going to be a problem any more. Not for you, anyway.”
“They got rid of him?”
Pope paused, an awkward grimace on his face, and Milton connected the dots.
“Seriously? They took him out?”
“He’s been given a file.”
“But?”
“But he can’t be found. His car was found at Beachy Head last night. The keys were still in the ignition.”
“No way,” Milton said. “He’s faked it. He didn’t jump. He’s a cockroach, Pope. It’s going to take more than that to get rid of him.”
Pope nodded his agreement. “They’ve searched the rocks and they didn’t find anything. We don’t think he jumped either. He’s running. I don’t even want to think what they’re going to find out when they dig into what he’s been doing all this time. The number of files he passed down to us for actioning … how many of those were people he wanted out of the way? I can deal with it if I know that the target deserves what’s coming to him. If they were to cover for him, though, that’s something else.”
“I’ve been thinking that, too.”
“Shcherbatov would have been pleased.”
“He would have said the job was only half done.”
“Yes, but we’ll finish it. He can’t run forever. We’ll find him.”
Milton stopped, looking at his old friend. “Hold on,” he said, a slow realisation dawning. “Who’s replacing Control?”
Pope shrugged.
“You?”
“They asked me yesterday.”
“And you said no.”
He smiled ruefully.
“You said yes? Don’t be an idiot, man.”
“It’s the only way they’re ever going to get off your back.”
“You don’t have to do that for me.”
“It’s not just for you. I’m the same age as you. You think I want to be in the field for ever? I’m old and slow. I was sloppy last time. I got lucky.”
Milton protested. “But you’re not a politician. Get into private security. Go and be a consultant somewhere. Make some money. You think you can work with the government? They’ll eat you up.”
“Ouch,” he said. “A little more credit, please. It’s in your interest to see me do well. I’m the one who’s saying there’s no point in chasing you halfway around the world anymore. I’m the one saying you’re free to do whatever you want. I rescinded your file. That was the first thing I did.”
The two of them paused; Milton didn’t know what to say. He knew that Pope was a superb agent, not as good as he had been but
good
, and that having him ride a desk was a criminal waste of his talents. But, as his old friend smiled with patient affection at him, he realised that, maybe, his promotion had benefitted from a little good sense. Pope was solid and dependable and, after the corruption and avarice that had latterly been exposed in his predecessor, those were not unhelpful qualities to have. He was strong-willed, the kind of man who would question his orders and, Milton thought, that too would be a useful trait.
“You’re not going to congratulate me?”
“For accepting a poisoned chalice? You couldn’t pay me to do that job.”
There was a moment of awkwardness between them. Pope slapped his hands on his knees, dispelling it. “What are you going to do next?”
Milton thought about that. “I don’t know,” he said. “If the Group isn’t looking for me, I don’t have to hide.”
“No,” Pope agreed. “You can go wherever you like. You need money?”
“Does it look like I’m begging?”
“No. I think it looks like you’re leaving with nothing.”
“What else do I need?” Milton shrugged.
“No luggage at all?”
“If I need something, I’ll get it when I arrive. I’ve always travelled light.”
“You know where you’re going?”
“I’ve made a habit of not telling people that,” he said, and then when Pope frowned at him, he added, “Wherever seems right.”
“I can’t persuade you to stay around?”
“There’s nothing for me here.”
Milton really didn’t know what he wanted to do or where he wanted to go. His plan was to walk into the departures lounge, look at the flights that were leaving in the next couple of hours, pick one, buy a ticket, and go.
“You want some advice? If it were me, I’d find somewhere I liked and I’d stay there a while. Put down some roots.”
“That’s not me,” Milton said. “I’ve been on the move for six months. I’ve got no ties. Don’t think I want any.”
“You don’t want a woman? Get a family?”
“Do I look like a family man? I’ll leave that to you. I’ve never been cut out for it.”
And, he thought, I’ve got too much that I need to do. Too much to make amends for.
“Alright, then,” Pope said. “I’ll leave you to it.”
He offered his hand and Milton took it.
“Thanks,” he said. “You didn’t have to do what you did. I won’t forget it. If you need me, you know where I am. Alright?”
Milton felt a moment of hesitation.
He looked up at the screen with two dozen destinations on it.
“Good luck,” Pope said.
“You too.”
Milton put the new passport in his hip pocket and walked towards the nearest ticket desk.
POPE HAD LEFT his car in the short-stay car park. They had offered him a driver and a better car but he wasn’t interested in either; the old Control had been in post for so long that it felt like the time was right for a change in approach. He would do things his own modest way, and if that meant doing them quietly and without extravagance, then so be it. He could only be himself.
He unlocked the door and sat down. He was reaching for the engine start button when he was aware of someone in the car behind him.
“Easy.”
He felt a prickle of tension across his shoulder blades. “Who are you?”
“It’s Beatrix Rose.”
He looked into the rearview mirror: it was dark but there was enough of a glow from the courtesy light to see her sallow face and long blonde hair. She was sitting back against the seat, unmoved and unconcerned, her cold blue eyes staring at him in the mirror. She was wearing a tight-fitting leather jacket.
“Relax? Are you serious? I’ve seen what you can do. And you’ve broken into my car.”
“I needed to speak to you,” she said.
“You couldn’t make an appointment?”
“I’d prefer it if we could keep it between us.”
The courtesy light faded out and Pope could only see her as a dark shadow. “You don’t have anything to hide from any more.”
“Old habits die hard.”
“No-one is looking for you, Rose. Control has gone.”
“Yes,” she said. “That’s what I want to talk to you about.”
Pope rested his hands on the wheel. “I’m sorry. I don’t know where he is. No-one knows. You have my word.”
“You understand why I want him?”
“Yes. What happened to your family. I know. Milton told me.”
“And you know I can’t let that stand.”
“Yes, of course. I’d be the same.”