Authors: Nick Oldham
Mark's eyes darted to Donaldson as though he expected another attack. âJust ask, OK?' he said, keeping his eyes on the American, though addressing Henry.
âRemember you talked about Sadiq and Rahman being like the musketeers? What did you mean?'
âUh, that they always hung around together. All for one, that kind of shit. All the time, in each other's pockets. Didn't even have much to do with any other of the Asian students. Always whispering and looking at the rest of us like we were shit.'
âBut there were three musketeers.'
âThere were three of them.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âAramis, Porthosâ'
âNo you idiot â Sadiq, Rahman â and who? Do you mean there was another one of them?'
âUmar Ali.'
âWho's that?'
âAnother student.'
âWhy didn't you say anything about him last time we talked?'
âYou didn't ask.'
Henry's right hand bunched into a fist, but it was himself he wanted to punch. In his experience, anyone talking unwillingly to the cops, as Mark was, doesn't just blab unless they're unloading guilt. No one tells you anything, was what he'd learned over the years, unless you ask them. Henry kicked himself for not being on the ball.
âDo you know anything about Umar Ali?'
âJust a student. On the same course as the other two, politics, or something crap like that  . . . But you're wrong,' Mark finished.
âAbout what?'
âThere were four musketeers  . . . well, sort of.'
âHow do you mean?' Henry glanced at Donaldson. Still brooding.
âAramis, Porthos, Athos  . . . and d'Artagnan. Well, he's a sort of apprentice musketeer, but he's one of them. Seen the films.'
âHow does that relate to Sadiq and Rahman?'
âWell, there was Umar Ali, making three  . . . and Mr Haq, making four.'
âWho the fuck's Mr Haq?'
âCollege lecturer. He was always knocking around with them â and Natalie. She was always sniffing around them, too. If you ask me, Mr Haq was a bit too friendly with her â and them â and other girls. They were well into girls, cos they were good-looking lads and a bit mysterious.'
âIn what way?'
âAlways whispering, like I said.'
âDo you know anything about Umar Ali?'
Mark shrugged, rubbed his throat, eyed Donaldson warily. âNot much  . . . but there is one thing  . . . I heard he was living with Mr Haq. Not arse-bandits, like. A lodger, I think.'
A feeling of dread washed through Henry. âShit,' he said. âDo you know where Haq lives?'
Mark looked uncomfortable. âMight do.'
âJust tell me.'
âJust off the town centre. I once followed Natalie to his place.'
âStreet name?' Henry demanded.
âNo idea.'
Henry turned to Donaldson. âShit,' he said again.
âWhat?' Donaldson grunted.
Henry took out his mobile phone, half-expecting there not to be a signal. There was. He dialled Rik Dean's number. âWhere are you?' he demanded curtly of the DI.
âMIR, why?'
âNatalie Philips? When we spoke to her mum, there was mention of a teacher at college, yeah? Hadn't her mum found something in a diary? Do you remember? I should fucking know this, but I don't,' Henry said, infuriated at himself.
âI remember. It got actioned. One of the teams went to see him, but there was no reply and, as far as I know, no revisit as yet. What's the rush? You sound stressed up again.'
âFind the guy's name and address.'
Henry heard Rik shuffling through papers. âHere it is  . . . yep, no reply, revisit to be allocated. I think things have moved on a bit since, though.'
âName and address,' Henry said.
âSalim.'
â
Salim?
'
âYeah  . . . Salim Haq, or Haq Salim  . . . interchangeable, I suppose.'
âAddress?'
âIt's  . . . it's on Springfield Road, Blackpool  . . . ooh,' Rik said, realizing. âWhich is where Driver picked up Natalie from  . . .'
âWhat number Springfield Road?'
On receiving the information they moved quickly into position. Eight men, all dressed similarly in zip-up wind jammers, jeans and trainers. All were unshaven, their hair unkempt, their age ranging from twenty-six to forty-two. They travelled in four vehicles, a Range Rover, Ford Galaxy, BMW 320 and an Audi A4, two in each. They were at the address within minutes.
They were not overly concerned about having next to no time for preparation. This was how they were used to operating. Prep time was a luxury; nice when it happened, but unusual.
That did not mean they were reckless. They were a close-knit unit, knew precisely how each other worked, were fitter than Olympic decathletes and they trained constantly using highly stressful scenarios that were as close to reality as could be. Sometimes they were allowed to plan, sometimes they just acted, ad-libbed and relied on their extreme professionalism and disregard for human life.
They had spent the previous night on the Lancashire Moors and the pre-dawn hitting their practice target, a disused hospital in which a hostage was being held. The place was booby-trapped throughout with tripwires, beams, alarms and people waiting to kill them. Their only briefing had been that this was a hot operation and that the hostage had to be freed. They did this at 5.05 a.m., successfully killing every terrorist and releasing the hostage. Then, before they could debrief, they had received the call from London ordering them to move to Blackpool and be ready for a real event. Training was over.
They had no time for anything other than a drive-by reconnaissance, their orders being that they had to act immediately. They discussed their tactics on the move, then went for it, all checking the mug shot they had received on their mobile phones and the names of the other two people suspected to be inside.
Gaining access to the building was easy. It was a terraced house, divided into two large flats, ground and first floor. They were in the hallway, outside flat number one, when they pulled on their full-face ski masks and drew their weapons out of their clothing.
The explosives expert fitted the plastic explosive to the front door of the flat in such a way that the hinges and lock would be blasted off and the door itself would be left standing, ready for the boot down and entry of the first two members of the team. The explosion was muffled, hardly loud enough to hear, and then they were in.
Once inside, they worked in pairs, moving through the lounge area, then into the two bedrooms.
Not one of the three occupants had been roused by their entry.
They found their first target in bedroom number one, the man whose face they'd just looked at on their phones. He stirred groggily, lifted himself on to his elbows and was dead before he'd even had a chance to rub his eyes. A silenced double-tap to the head.
The other bedroom contained the other two men, sleeping in camp beds. These men were woken, thrown out of their beds and their names demanded of them.
Then they too were shot dead.
And that was it. Job done. And away.
Karl Donaldson stood mutely over the body of Jamil Akram, still in his bed. He rubbed his tired face and shook his head. Henry came up behind him and laid a hand on his shoulder. Donaldson turned to look at him. His eyes were sunken, red and watery, his skin tight.
âThey wanted him and they got him,' the American growled.
âThis is what you wanted, isn't it?' Henry nodded his head at the dead man.
âI wanted him my way, but we gave him to them.'
âWhat do you mean?'
Donaldson brandished his mobile phone in front of Henry's nose. âThey were listening to everything, one step ahead.'
âThat much is obvious.'
âAnd they had a team ready and waiting.'
âSAS?'
âProbably, who knows? Another thing for sure, this will get well buried.'
âAlready happening,' Henry said.
Donaldson exhaled. Henry thought he looked much older now. The extraordinarily good-looking college-boy Yank had somehow gone and been replaced by a more weary, haggard, battle-scarred individual.
âAt least they were stopped,' Henry said.
Explosives, detonators, time switches, power sources, fishing vests and maps of the Blackpool resort had all been found in the apartment. A quick scan of the maps and some tourist information leaflets had pinpointed the target and the mission. It all pointed to the third musketeer, Umar Ali, strapping explosives to his body and walking into Blackpool Pleasure beach, the huge amusement and ride site in Blackpool south. He would have joined a queue for the most popular attraction therein. Then, when the queue snaked into the covered waiting area in which about two hundred people would be patiently waiting their turn, he would have detonated himself. The name of the attraction was the Big One, one of Europe's biggest roller coasters; making sense of the claim made by Rashid Rahman that this was just the start of a campaign and that the big one was yet to come.
âWhat's that?' Donaldson nodded down at a book in Henry's hand.
Henry held up the exercise book in a clear plastic evidence bag. Flowers and love hearts were inscribed on the front and back covers, brightly coloured by an immature artist. There were names in the love hearts  . . .
Zahid  . . . Rashid  . . . Lewis  . . . Mark
.
âOne of Natalie's school books,' Henry said sadly. âThere're others. And this.' Henry lifted up a supermarket carrier bag which looked like it contained a hairy animal of some sort, but closer inspection revealed that it was human head and body hair. âThis is where they prepared themselves.'
Donaldson didn't seem to hear. He held Henry's gaze, his eyes watering over. âThey killed her, Henry,' he said. âNo, scratch that  . . . I got Edina killed.'
Two weeks later. Henry's mobile phone rang, ringtone
Miss You
. It was 4.30 a.m. He rolled over with an annoyed curse, thinking, âThis cannot be right. I'm not even at home. I'm on leave.' His fingers found it. He tapped on the bedside light and rose on to his elbow and answered it.
âHenry â you awake?' It was Donaldson.
Henry slumped back on to the bed. âAm now.'
âWhere the hell are you? There's no reply at your house.'
âAway  . . . posh hotel in the Cotswolds.'
âGot access to a TV?'
âGot a friggin' bubble bath thing in the bathroom,' he said, unable to remember the word âjacuzzi'.
âSwitch it on â find a news channel.'
The line went dead. Henry sat up and found the TV remote, pointed, pressed and the 42 inch TV affixed to the wall opposite the king size bed flickered to life. He found a news channel, then sat bolt upright, with a âJeez' on his lips. The American President Barack Obama was standing at a podium. He switched up the volume slightly, the figure in the bed next to him stirring and sitting up groggily. âSorry, love,' Henry said.
âWhat is it?'
âLook at this,' Henry said.
Alison Marsh sat up and draped an arm across Henry's shoulder and focused on the TV at the announcement that American Special Forces had tracked down and killed Osama Bin Laden, leader of al-Qaeda. Henry watched, stunned by the news. Alison was less impressed.
âDoes this happen a lot?' she asked after the cameras cut away from the president and back to the studio. âPeople ringing you up at strange times?'
âUnfortunately, yes.' He slid his arm around her naked body and pulled her to him.
âKnow what I want?' she said dreamily. âI want to be wined and dined. I want to be loved in public. I want us to say, “Hey, here we are â a real couple”, then take the flack and move on. I also want you to change that ringtone!'
Henry pulled her to him, one eye still a little tiny bit on the TV, and said, âSomehow, I think the world as I know it has just changed.'
She grabbed the remote control out of his hand, switched off the TV, threw it aside and forced him down on to the bed, then climbed on top of him.