Read The Night Ferry Online

Authors: Michael Robotham

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Police Procedural, #London (England), #Human Trafficking, #Amsterdam (Netherlands)

The Night Ferry (33 page)

He continues: “Trying to explain why we form particular friendships is like trying to tel someone why we like a certain kind of music or a particular food. We just do.” He focuses on me now. “Your friend’s name is Cate Beaumont.”

How does he know that?

“Were you ever jealous of her?”

“I don’t know what you mean.”

“Friends can be jealous of each other. Oscar, here, is envious of my position and my wealth.”

“Not at al , my friend,” he beseeches.

De Souza smiles knowingly. “Did you envy Cate Beaumont’s beauty or her success?”

“Sometimes.”

“You wished she had less and you had more.”

“Yes.”

“That is natural. Friendships can be ambiguous and contradictory.”

“She is dead now,” I add, although I sense he knows this already.

“She paid money for a baby. A criminal act,” he states piously.

“Yes.”

“Are you trying to protect her?”

“I’m trying to rescue the surrogate mother and the babies.”

“Perhaps you want a baby for yourself?”

My denial is too strident. I make it worse. “I have never…I don’t…”

He reaches into a smal pouch tied to the belt of his tunic. “Do you think I am a criminal, Miss Barba?”

“I don’t know enough—”

“Give me your opinion.”

I pause. The faces in the circle watch with a mixture of amusement and fascination.

“It’s not up to me to say,” I stammer.

Silence. Perspiration leaks into the hol ow of my back, weaving between the bumps of my vertebrae.

De Souza is waiting. He leans close, his face only inches from mine. His bottom teeth are brittle and jagged, yel owing like faded newsprint. It is not such a perfect face after al .

“You can offer me nothing,” he says dismissively.

I can feel the situation slipping away from me. He is not going to help me.

The anger fermenting inside me, fueled by hostile thoughts and by images of Zala, suddenly finds an escape valve. Words tumble out. “I think you’re a criminal and a misogynist but you’re not an evil man. You don’t exploit children or sel babies to the highest bidder.” I point to Sunday’s wife who has come to col ect our plates. “You would not ask this woman, the wife of a friend, to give up one of her children or force her to have another woman’s baby. You support asylum seekers and il egal immigrants; you give them jobs and find them homes. They respect and admire you. We can stop this trade. I can stop it. Help me.”

Sunday’s wife is embarrassed at having been singled out. She continues col ecting the plates, eager to get away. The tension in the room is amplified by the stil ness. Every man’s eyes are upon me. Oscar makes a choking noise. He would slit my throat in a heartbeat.

De Souza stands abruptly. The meeting is finished. Oscar takes a step toward me. De Souza signals for him to stop. Alone, he walks me to the front door and takes my hand.

Pressed between his fingers is a smal scrap of paper.

The door closes. I do not look at the message. It’s too dark to read it. The taxi is waiting. I slide into the backseat and lean against Ruiz as I close the car door. Hokke tel s the driver to go.

The note is rol ed into a tube, wedged between my thumb and forefinger. My hands are shaking as I unrol it and hold it up to the inside light.

Five words. Handwritten. “She leaves tonight from Rotterdam.”

13

Our taxi driver takes an entry ramp onto a motorway.

“How far is it?”

“Seventy-five kilometers.”

“What about the port?”

“Longer.”

I look at my watch. It’s 8:00 p.m.

“The Port of Rotterdam is forty kilometers long,” says Hokke. “There are tens of thousands of containers, hundreds of ships. How are you going to find her?”

“We need a ship’s name,” says Ruiz.

“Or a sailing time,” echoes Hokke.

I stare at the slip of paper. It’s not enough. We can’t phone ahead and alert Customs or the police. What would we tel them?

“Most likely they want to smuggle her into the U.K.,” I say. “They’ve used Harwich before.”

“They might choose an alternative port this time.”

“Or stick to what they know.”

Hokke shakes his head. It is a wild impossible chase. Rotterdam is the biggest container port in Europe. He has an idea. A friend, a former police officer, works for a private security firm that patrols some of the terminals.

Hokke cal s him. They chat to each other gruffly, in stern sentences ful of Dutch consonants. Meanwhile, I fol ow the brightly lit motorway signs, counting down the kilometers and the minutes. In the moonlight I can make out wind turbines like ghostly giants marching across the fields.

Trucks and semis are nose-to-tail in the outside lane. I wonder if Samira could be inside one of them. What must it be like? Deafening. Black. Lonely.

Hokke finishes the cal and outlines the possibilities. Security is tight around the terminals and docks with CCTV cameras on the fences and regular dog patrols. Once inside there are Customs checks, heat-seeking scanners and more dogs. More than six and a half mil ion shipping containers pass through the port every year. These have to be special y sealed.

Empty containers awaiting transfer are a different story but even if someone breached the security and reached the containers, they wouldn’t know which ship it was meant to be loaded on unless they had inside information.

“Which means they’re more likely to target a truck
before
it reaches the port,” says Ruiz. “One they know is traveling to the U.K.” Hokke nods. “We’re probably looking at rol -on, rol -off ferries. There are two major ferry operators doing North Sea crossings. Stena Line has a terminal on the Hook of Hol and. PO

operates from a dock fifteen kilometers farther east, closer to the city.”

We’re stil twenty miles away and it’s nearly eight thirty.

Hokke makes another cal , getting a timetable of departures, cal ing out the details. A PO ferry sails for Hul at nine o’clock. The Stena Line night ferry to Harwich leaves at eleven.

Both arrive in the U.K. in the early hours of tomorrow morning.

“Are you carrying a passport, grasshopper?”

“Yes, sir.”

“You want to take the first ferry or the second?”

“I’l take the second.”

Ruiz nods in agreement. “Anyone know the weather forecast?”

Hokke is on the mobile to PO seeing if they wil hold the passenger gates open. They’re supposed to close fifteen minutes before departure, which means we won’t make it.

We’re basing our assumptions on a ratio of about 2 percent detail and 98 percent desire. Even if Samira is on board one of the ferries, she won’t be mingling with other passengers.

They’l keep her hidden. How are we going to find her?

My mind aches when I think about her. I made promises. I said I would find Zala and keep her safe. What am I going to say to her?

De Souza asked if I wanted the babies for myself. It was a ridiculous suggestion. Why would he say that? I’m doing this for Cate and for Samira. For the twins.

The docks are lit up for miles. Cranes and gantries act as massive lighting towers, painting the hul s of ships and rows of stacked containers. The water is dark and solid in between, and the waves are hardly waves at al , they’re wrinkles on a sluggish river.

The taxi pul s up outside the PO terminal. Ruiz is out the door before we stop moving. A week of maddening pain and morphine won’t slow him down.

“Good luck,” he yel s without turning back. “I’m going to find her first.”

“Yeah, right. You’l spend your entire time throwing up.”

His hand rises. One finger extends.

The Stena Line terminal is at the western edge of the port where the Hook of Hol and reaches out into the North Sea. The taxi drops me and I say goodbye to Hokke.

“I can never repay you.”

“But you wil ,” he laughs, pointing to the meter.

I give him al my remaining Euros for he stil has to get home.

He kisses me three times—left cheek, right cheek and left cheek again.

“Be careful.”

“I wil .”

I have an hour until the
Stena Britannica
leaves. The ship dominates the skyline, towering over the surrounding structures. It is the length of two footbal fields and the height of a fifteen-story building, with twin stacks that slope backward and give the impression, although not the conviction, of speed.

Seagul s circle and swoop for insects in the beam of the spotlights. They appear so graceful in flight yet they squabble like fishwives on the ground. And they always sound so desperately sad, wailing in misery like creatures already condemned to hel .

Many trucks and trailers are already on board. I can see them lined up on the open decks, a few feet apart, buttressed hard against the stern railings. More trucks are queuing on the loading ramp. Meanwhile cars and vans are being marshaled in a different parking area, waiting their turn.

A young woman in the ticket office wears a light blue skirt and matching jacket, like a maritime stewardess. “You wil need to write down the details of your vehicle,” she says.

“I don’t have a vehicle.”

“I’m sorry but there is no pedestrian footbridge on this service. We cannot board foot passengers.”

“But I have to catch this ferry.”

“That is not possible.” She glances over my shoulder. “Perhaps…?”

An elderly couple has just pul ed up in an early-model Range Rover towing an old-fashioned caravan that looks like a Cinderel a pumpkin carriage. The driver is bald with a smal goatee that could be a shaving oversight. His wife is twice his size, wearing acres of denim across her hips. They look Welsh and sound Welsh.

“What is it, pet?” she asks, as I interrupt their cup of thermos tea.

“They won’t let me onto the ferry as a foot passenger. I real y need to get back to England. I was wondering if I could ride with you.” Husband and wife look at each other.

“Are you a terrorist?” he asks.

“No.”

“Are you carrying drugs?”

“No.”

“Do you vote Tory?”

“No.”

“Are you a Catholic?”

“No.”

He winks at his wife. “Clear on al counts.”

“Welcome aboard,” she announces, thrusting out her hand. “I’m Bridget Jones. Not the fat one from the movies—the fatter one from Cardiff. This is Bryce, my husband.” The Range Rover is packed to the gunwales with suitcases, shopping bags and duty-free: Dutch cheeses, French sausage, two cases of Stel a Artois, a bottle of Baileys Irish Cream and assorted souvenirs.

They are very cute. A twee couple, with matching lumbar cushions and traveling mugs. Mr. Jones is wearing driving gloves with cut-off fingers and she has road maps, color-coded in a pocket on the dashboard.

“We’ve been to Poland,” she announces.

“Real y?”

“Nobody we know has ever been to Poland. Not even our friends Hettie and Jack from the caravanning club, who think they’ve been everywhere.”

“And to Estonia,” her husband adds. “We’ve done 3,264 miles since we left home on August 28.” He strokes the steering wheel. “She’s managed eighteen mile to the gal on, which is pretty bloody good for an old girl, especial y after that bad batch of diesel in Gdansk.”

“Gdansk was very dodgy,” agrees his wife.

“It must be cold to be caravanning.”

“Oh, we don’t mind,” she giggles. “A spouse is better than a hot water bottle.”

Mr. Jones nods. “I get pretty good mileage out of this old girl.”

I don’t know if he’s referring to his wife or stil talking about the car.

Ahead of us the traffic is moving. Vehicles pul onto the ramp and disappear inside, maneuvered into marked lanes barely wide enough for their axles. Engines are turned off. The caravan is strapped down. Men in fluorescent vests direct us to the air-lock doors, which lead to stairs and lifts.

“Don’t dawdle, pet,” says Mrs. Jones. “The buffet is included in the price. You want to beat the queue.”

Mr. Jones nods. “They do a fine apple crumble and custard.”

A key card is included with my ticket. It corresponds to a cabin on one of the accommodation decks. Deck 8 has signs asking passengers to be quiet because truck drivers are sleeping. Some of them must have boarded hours ago. How am I going to find Samira?

I don’t bother visiting my cabin. I have no luggage to stow. Instead I study the ship’s floor plan, which is bolted to the wal near an emergency exit. There are four vehicle decks which are restricted to authorized personnel during the voyage. Deck 10 is crew only. It must be the bridge.

The corridors between the cabins are just wide enough for two people to pass. I search them, looking for the familiar or the unfamiliar. This used to be my job when I worked for the Diplomatic Protection Group—looking for smal changes, trying to sense the presence of someone in a crowd or notice their absence in the instant of looking. It could be a person who doesn’t belong or who tries too hard to belong or who draws the eye for some other reason.

The ship’s engines have started. I can feel the faint vibrations through my feet and they seem to transfer to my nerve endings.

The buffet is being served in the Globetrotter Restaurant. Most of the passengers seem to be truck drivers, dressed in jeans and T-shirts. Food is piled high on their plates—

congealed curries, cottage pie, vegetarian lasagna. Big engines need refueling.

The Dutch drivers are playing cards, while the British drivers smoke and read tabloids. The ferry has slipped its moorings and pul ed out into the river. As the shore lights slide past the window, it feels as though the land is moving and not the ferry. England is five hours away.

Hokke was right. This haystack is too big. I could search the ferry for weeks and not find Samira. She could be locked in a truck or in one of the cabins. She might not even be on board. Perhaps de Souza had no intention of letting me find her and was simply getting me out of the Netherlands.

The cavernous vehicle decks are below me. Some are open to the elements while others are enclosed. I have to search them. How? Do I hammer on the side of each truck, cal ing her name? Wil she answer?

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