Read Games Traitors Play Online
Authors: Jon Stock
âYour brother has excelled himself,' Primakov said, walking around the bare hangar at Kotlas that had been Dhar's home for the past month. âDo you not want for any more comforts?'
âI have all that I need,' Dhar said dispassionately. He was sitting at a bare wooden table, a copy of the Koran open in front of him. The austerity made Primakov crave a drink, a nip of whisky, but he had learned not to offend Dhar on the few occasions they had been alone together.
âHe has proved that it is too easy to penetrate British airspace. You will have no problems.'
âWon't they be more alert now?'
âIf Marchant can knock out the system once, it can be done again.'
âWhen is he arriving?'
âWe will lift him tonight. The Americans are closing in on him.'
âAnd you are sure?'
âSure?'
âAbout Daniel Marchant.'
Sometimes, Primakov found Dhar's stare too chilling. He looked away, out of the window, steeling himself, then turned back to face him, hands clutched tightly behind his back.
âYour brother is ready.'
In normal circumstances, Fielding would have objected to the presence of James Spiro at the Joint Intelligence Committee table, but their relationship was now one of delicate expedience. Spiro had been useful in Madurai, unknowingly helping to build up Marchant's credentials for defection. In return, Fielding had agreed with the DCIA to drop British opposition to Spiro's rehabilitation. He had been suspended from his position as head of Clandestine, Europe, but was now back at his desk at the US Embassy in Grosvenor Square.
Everyone knew Spiro had messed up over the drone strike, but the truth was that the CIA needed people like him, and they didn't have anyone to replace him with. What Spiro didn't know, as he addressed the meeting in tones of barely disguised vindication, was that he was still dancing to Fielding's tune.
âI'm sorry to do this to you again, Marcus, but Daniel Marchant has got a lot of questions to answer.' Fielding had to admire Spiro's resilience. A few weeks earlier, he had been sitting at the same spot at the table, his career in tatters, listening to Paul Myers humiliate him.
âAre you saying that Marchant in some way facilitated the breach of airspace?' the chairman of the JIC, Sir David Chadwick, said, looking across at Fielding.
â“Facilitated” is one way of putting it,' said Spiro. âIt wouldn't surprise me if he was standing on the shores of Stornoway with a couple of paddles and a fluorescent jacket, instructing the MiGs where to taxi.'
A chuckle rippled through Sir David's jowls, then he checked himself when he realised that no one else was laughing. He was an odious chairman, Fielding thought, obsequious in the extreme, always looking to see where the real power lay. Not so long ago, Spiro had been trying to frame him in a child-porn sting. Now he was cosying up to the Americans again.
âThese are serious allegations,' Fielding said. âSorry to sound so old-school, but do we have any evidence?'
âI appreciate that this is the last thing you need, after the Prentice affair,' Spiro said, hoping to pile on the public embarrassment. Although he owed his own rehabilitation to Fielding, he couldn't resist the moment. There was too much history between the two of them, their respective organisations. âOne Soviet mole could be construed as careless. But twoâ¦'
âThe evidence, please,' Sir David said, convincing no one with his attempt at neutrality.
âWhere do we start?' Spiro asked, shuffling some papers and photos in front of him. âThe covert meeting with Nikolai Primakov in central London?' He waved a couple of photos in the air, one of Marchant entering Goodman's restaurant, the other of Primakov.
â“Covert” might be pushing it,' Fielding said. âI seem to remember the dinner â sanctioned by me â took place at a well-known Russian restaurant in the middle of Mayfair. We were listening.'
âSo were we,' said Spiro, âuntil the Russians jammed the entire area. Must have been quite an important meeting. Then we have Madurai, south India. After we took Dhar's mother off your hands, Marchant hitched a ride back into town with â guess who? â one Nikolai Primakov.'
He waved another surveillance photo in the air. âI'm not sure I want to ask why Marchant's meetings with Primakov, former director of K Branch, KGB and now high-ranking member of the SVR, were sanctioned by MI6, so let's not go into that here. It kind of brings back bad memories when you discover Primakov had been good friends with Marchant's father. Of more interest to today's meeting is what Marchant was doing in an Internet café yesterday â after knocking off work early and dropping in for a warm beer or three at his favourite pub â forwarding photos of the MIG-35s to various national newspapers.'
Another sheaf of documents was waved in the air, this time press cuttings, as a murmur went around the room. Fielding was conscious that all eyes were on him now, but he had read the cuts in the car into work, smiled at the quotes from the twitchers. He was a bit of a birder himself, when he had the time, although these days he was reduced to spotting oystercatchers on the bank of the Thames below his office window.
âHe used an anonymous Gmail account,' continued Spiro, âbut our people at Fort Meade narrowed the IP address down to three Internet cafés in Victoria. They needn't have bothered. All emails leaving that particular café go out with marketing headers and footers â unless you switch them off, which Marchant failed to do. I don't know how much evidence you need, Marcus, but we have photos of him entering the café five minutes before the anonymous emails were sent out.'
Fielding didn't reply. Instead, he was thinking of Marchant, the intentional trail he was leaving. Primakov must be close to exfiltrating him. According to the UK Border Agency, the Russian had left on a flight to Moscow earlier in the day, which Fielding took as a good sign. Marchant had been smart to attract the attention of the Americans: it was the easiest way to reassure Moscow Centre that it had the right man, that he was ready to defect, keen to meet Dhar. But it was a risk if the Americans got to him first. He hoped Marchant had his timing right.
âMarcus?'
âLet's bring him in,' Fielding said. He had no choice. He must be seen to be hard on Marchant.
âI kinda hoped you'd say that,' said Spiro. âHe's with Lakshmi Meena as we speak. Having yet another drink. She's ready when we are. I just thought that, you know, in the interests of resetting our special relationship, I should inform you first.'
Spiro looked around the table. His eye was caught by Harriet Armstrong.
âWould you like us to handle Marchant?' she asked. Fielding turned away. It was an unusual offer, a blatant challenge to MI6 that had all the hallmarks of their old turf wars. She was also reaching out to Spiro, a man she had once admired before she had fallen out of love with America. Fielding knew that she had felt increasingly sidelined by Six, but he was still surprised by the move.
âThat's kind of you, Harriet,' Spiro said. âAnd unexpected. I appreciate it. But I think, if it's OK with the assembled, this has now been upgraded to a NATO Air Policing Area 1 issue. And as such, we'd like to take care of it.'
Marchant knew his defences would drop if he had any more alcohol. Meena was looking more beautiful than he could remember, wearing the same embroidered Indian
salwar
that she had worn in Madurai. Her body language then had been diffident, hard to read. Tonight she was radiant, the mirrorwork on her neckline reflecting the candlelight, lightening her whole demeanour. He just wished they were meeting in different circumstances, where they could be true to themselves rather than to their employers' agendas. The last time he had felt like this was when he had said goodbye to Monika at the Frederick Chopin airport in Warsaw, hoping that she would step out of her cover and into his life.
âMy mother used to read me a new tale every night,' Meena was saying as they sat at the small bar in Andrew Edmunds, a restaurant in Lexington Street. Her mask was slipping too. Marchant stuck to his script, trying to stay sober behind the miasma of Scotch. Soon they would be moving from the bar to the cramped dining area, where the lines of sight were less good. In his current position he had a clear view of the main entrance and the door to the kitchen. Tonight he needed to see everyone who came in or out.
âAfter each story, I would ask if Scheherazade had done enough, if King Shahryar would spare her,' Meena continued. âI was more worried about her dying than anything else. And each time, the King let her live for another night. I was so relieved.'
âAnd this all took place in Reston? In between trips to the mall?'
Marchant had eaten a meal in Reston once, as part of a visit to the CIA's headquarters down the road, in the days before the Agency had become too suspicious to allow him on campus. All he could remember was the piazza at the Reston Town Center, an open-air mall that had boasted Chipotle, Potbelly Sandwich Works and Clyde's, where he had been taken for lunch by a gym-buffed field agent who swore by its steaks. It was strange to think of Meena living in such a sterile suburb in Virginia.
âOur home was a little corner of India. At least, my bedroom was. Wall hangings, incense, my own
pooja
cupboard. Mom didn't want me to forget.'
Marchant signalled to the barman for another drink.
âI don't want to sound like your mom, but haven't you had enough?'
She was right. Marchant was at the very edge of what he could consume and still be able to react quickly when it happened. There were only a few more hours, maybe less, of playing the drunk. A coded text from Primakov had told him it would be sometime tonight. It wouldn't be pretty. The American presence had made sure of that. He looked again around the small, candlelit room, scanning the punters. Someone had followed him to the restaurant, but he was confident that they were still outside.
âI don't blame you for Madurai,' he said. âYou had your orders.'
âThat didn't make it any easier.'
He wanted to ask if Shushma was OK, but he knew he couldn't. It was better that he could still entertain the possibility that she was with Spiro. The thought of her in CIA custody, the genuine anger the thought stirred, was central to his imminent defection. It might even save his life when he finally met Dhar.
âI'm going away,' he said quietly. âI've had enough.'
âOf me?'
Marchant managed a smirk. âOf the West.'
âWas that why you helped to give the MiG breach so much publicity?'
He struggled to conceal his surprise.
âI don't know what you're talking about.'
âDan, we met here tonight because I've got orders to bring you in.'
âSpiro's?'
âWith the Vicar's blessing.'
Marchant paused, weighing up the situation. He was pushing it to the limit, and hoped that Primakov would move soon. Meena knew how to look after herself, but he was still concerned for her. And for the first time he felt that she was being straight with him. He wished he could reciprocate, but he knew that he couldn't, not yet.
âAre you going to ask me to come quietly?' he asked.
âNo. I'm not going to do anything.'
âNothing?'
âI just want you to tell me what's really going on.'
âYou know I can't do that.'
âIf you did, then maybe I'd know how best to help you.'
Marchant studied her eyes, calculating the implications. She was speaking too freely to be wired, which made him believe her. âYou really mean that, don't you?'
âI want to do one worthwhile thing while I'm still with the Agency, and I'm not sure bringing in a drunken MI6 agent with a penchant for rare Russian seabirds is what I had in mind.'
âThe Steller's eider breeds in Alaska, too, you know.'
âSpiro's fallen for it, hasn't he?' Meena said, turning the wine-glass in her hand. âHe's seen you go off the rails, but he's forgotten to ask why. Well, I know what makes a British MI6 agent try to be recruited by the Russians. Because he knows they have someone he desperately wants to meet. Fielding knows it too, which is why he asked Spiro and me to take Dhar's mother away. You hated the West for that, didn't you? And it made the Russians love you even more. That helicopter in Morocco â I know now that it was Russian. You were right all along. Tell me what I need to do, Dan. You're the only person who can stop Dhar.'
Marchant hesitated before speaking. âHow many people have you got outside?'
âTwo vehicles, six people.'
âDo you know any of them?'
âSome, yes.'
âGood friends of yours?'
âDecent colleagues.'
âWalk out into the street and tell them I'm leaving in five. Then go home. All of you.'
âWhy?'
âBecause I don't want anyone to get hurt.'
But he already knew it was too late. He heard the car before he saw it, a black Audi pulling up outside. Two men wearing balaclavas got out from the back and ran into the restaurant while a third stood by the front passenger door, a handgun aimed into the dark street.
âDon't touch her!' Marchant shouted, as several diners screamed. The men grabbed him by both arms and frogmarched him out of the restaurant, barking orders at each other and at the diners, and waving a gun at Meena. The men were Russian, and it wasn't subtle, just as he had predicted. A moment later, the shooting started. The third man fired down Lexington Street towards Shaftesbury Avenue, where a black SUV had stopped at a diagonal, blocking the road. As Marchant was bundled into the back of the car, he looked back at the restaurant. The front window had been shot out, and the noise of the screaming diners was sickening. There was no sign of Meena.