Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
by
Gerald Seymour
PRAISE FOR THE WAITING TIME:
"One of the best plotters in the business." Time Out "Seymour is ing at the peak of his powers... in a class of his own." The writ
Times
tain's foremost pacy thriller writers."
"One of Bri
Sunday Express.
. Seymour on top form." Mail on Sunday.
Stunning..
ld Seymour has
Once a reporter for Independent Television News, Gera
ved in the West Country for the last thirteen years.
li
His previous
bestsellers include Harry's Game, The Glory Boys, Red Fox, Field of
, The Journeyman Tailor, The Heart of Danger, Killing Ground
Blood
and
tly The Waiting Time.
most recen
by Gerald Seymour Harry's Game The Glory Boys Kingfisher Red
Also
Fox
Archangel In Honour Bound Field of Blood A Song in the
The Contract
n Condition Black The Journeyman
Morning At Close Quarters Home Ru
ilor
Ta
The Fighting Man The Heart of Danger Killing Ground The Waiting
Time
GERALD SEYMOUR
A Line in the Sand
BANTAM PRESS
NEW YORK TORONTO SYDNEY AUCKLAND
LONDON
To Harriet
RS LTD
TRANS WORLD PUBLISHE
Road, London W5 5SA
61-63 Uxbridge
D
TRANS WORLD PUBLISHERS (AUSTRALIA) PTY LT
Avenue, Moorebank, NSW 21U TRANS WORLD PUBLISHERS (NZ)
15-25 Helles
1
D
LT
bany, Auckland Published 1999 by Bantam
3 William Pickering Drive, Al
ess a division of Transworld Publishers Ltd Copyright (c) Gerald
Pr
our to be identified as author
Seymour 1999 The right of Gerald Seym
of
th sections; 77 and 78
this work has been asserted in accordance Wi
of
the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988. All of the characters in
this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons,
living
or dead, is purely coincidental A catalogue record for this book is e from the British Library. ISBN 0593 044592 (eased) All
availabl
rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,
stored
in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, nic/mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise,
electro
without
ssion of the publishers Typeset mil 13pt Palatino by
the prior permi
Phoenix Typesetting, Ilkley, West Yorkshire Printed in Great Britain by
Mackays of Chatham pie, Chatham, Kent.
Prologue.
He knew it was the last time he would be there.
He stepped through the double door of the administration building, held
open for him, and the sinking afternoon sun blasted against his face.
d hard, momentarily blinded, and stopped disorientated in
He blinke
his
ks.
trac
He lowered the glasses from the crown of his head on to the
bridge of his nose. They were all around him, crowded in the doorway, e his Wends -more than just the people he did business
and they wer
with, true friends.
The car
waiting. The
was
driver stood beside the rear door and smiled
him with respect. The technicians, engineers and managers
at
pressed
ose to him to shake his hand, hold his arms and brush-kiss his
cl
cheeks. The women who worked at the computers and the design benches men and their eyes beneath their close-wrapped head
were behind the
scarves were lit with warmth, but they did not touch him or speak.
The
friendships had been nurtured over many years. When he had left the 2
f the project manager, three or four minutes before, he had
office o
started a stuttering progress down a shadowed, cool corridor,
ing
stopp
by each door to make his farewells. He had been wished a good
journey,
a safe return home, and he had been told how welcome he would be when ck the next time.
he came ba
knew there would not be a next time.
He
full and gold turning to scarlet, hit his face and pierced
The sun,
the
n of his darkened glasses.
protectio
He grinned and responded to the
friendship and trust that was shown him. He had betrayed their
trust.
ct manager took his arm, led him towards the car, murmured
The proje
appreciation that he had fallen in with the change of schedule, and ed his arm in implicit thanks for the present of a Toshiba
squeez
laptop. On each visit, three times a year, he brought many presents the complex, and they had a sliding scale of value
with him to
dependent on the position in the complex of his friends. He brought him computer equipment and gold or sterling-silver ink pens,
with
toilet soaps and packs of toothpaste. He had come, as always, five before, his bags weighted with the gifts that cemented the
days
friendship and bound the trust. The vomit was in his throat, and
he
swallowed hard. As their friend, each time he came, he was invited to
restaurants to eat battered prawns or shrimps, or whitefish, and he was
invited to their homes.
ad taken years of visits to build the
It h
iendship and the trust that were a sham.
fr
e driver opened the door of the car. The project manager was
Th
flicking the buttons of a personal organizer, a secondary present
from
the previous visit, to confirm the date on which he would next return.
oked past the project manager at the straggling line by the
He lo
double
ll smiling and waving.
doors, a
He said it again, as he had said it
many times in the last five days: it had been no problem for him to schedule and come a week earlier than originally planned.
change his
He
d them well. He did not know what would happen to them. It
wishe
was
the mark of their friendship, their trust, that they had left the
3
cool
y
air-conditioned offices and design rooms to stand in the ferocit
of
ght to see him on his way, and he had betrayed them. He
the sunli
could
k into their faces or into the eyes of the project manager.
not loo
he ducked down into the car, a last time, he raked the
Before
buildings, scarred by the sun and the salt carried from the sea by the
s if it were important that he should remember each final
winds, a
detail.
What Gavin Hughes saw.. . The complex was a series of wire-fenced s.
compound
Above the wire-mesh fences around each compound were the
silver- and rust-coloured coils of razor wire.
entry points that were
At the gates to each compound were sandbagged s
covered with decaying canvas to give shade from the sun. The
watch-towers at the corners of the compounds were built on weathered wood stilts, and the dipping sunlight caught the barrels of the
machine-guns jutting above the parapets. Between the compounds were four anti-aircraft defence positions, two with multiple-barrel
Qerlikon
guns and two housing a cluster of squat ground-to-air missiles. If it
had not been for the friendship and the trust, Gavin Hughes, who was a
salesman in engineering machinery, would never have gained access
to
the complex... He saw the entrance tunnel to the building with the buried concrete walls and bomb-proof ceiling, and that was Project 193.
He saw the dun-painted building, into which he had never been
admitted,
that housed Project 1478. He saw the building where the hot-die
forge
was installed, where heated metal for the warhead cone was compressed and then cooled for turning and grinding and milling, the home of
Project 972. The buildings were spread out across the bright sand, scattered inside the complex perimeter that stretched three
kilometres
in length and two kilometres in width, and contained the lathes,
mixers, presses and machine tools.
r,
He would be asked the day afte
or
after that at the latest, what he had seen, what was different
the day
4
from before.
d down into the back of the
He droppe
car and the driver closed the
or
do
behind him. He wound down the window and reached out to shake the manager's hand, but still could not look into his eyes.
project
He
freed his hand and waved at the crowd by the double doors as the car d away.
pulle
ey drove past the three-storey dormitory block that was used by
Th
the
e.
Chines
He had never met them; he had seen them from a distance;
they
worked on Project 193, where the lathes shaped the solid fuel
charges.." and past the tennis courts, which were floodlit in the cooler evenings and had been built for the Russians, to whom he had never spoken. He had passed them in corridors but his friends had made the introductions; they worked on Project 1478 where the
never
machines he had supplied mixed the coating capable of withstanding the
temperature of 3,000 degrees generated in the core of the missile
tube.." and past the volleyball court scraped from the coarse sand and
y the North Koreans and played on in the half-light of dawn.
stone b
slowed as they approached the main gate of the complex.
The driver
Gavin Hughes was sweating and he loosened his tie. He twisted and d
looke
through the rear window, back at the small group still standing
by the main doors of the administration building, toy figures waving him on his way.
Two guards came forward. When he had first come to the complex they had scowled and taken their time over studying his papers. Now they grinned and saluted, their automatic rifles slung casually on their shoulders. Three visits before he had brought one a Zippo
liquid-fuel
lighter with a Harley Davidson motif. On the last visit he had
brought
the other a carton of Marlboro cigarettes.
This would be his final visit. He would never see these men again.
It
had been made plain, at the last briefing. In a discreet
second-floor
room of a Georgian house behind the line of gentlemen's clubs in Pall Mall, the satellite photographs of the complex had been mounted on 5
a
display-board. The images of the roofs of the buildings were
pinpoint
sharp and the entrances to the underground workshops, the tennis
en the volleyball area, and the positions of the
courts, ev
anti-aircraft de fences
This was Gavin Hughes's kingdom. He had access. He was a salesman for
standard engineering machines and could tell them what they needed to
know when the images failed them. At the last briefing, the night before he had flown, over the tired sandwiches and the stewed coffee, he had told them why his visit had been moved forward a week, what was
happening at the complex on the days that he should have visited if the
original schedule had been maintained.
nd
None of their satellites a
high-optic lenses could provide them with that kernel of detail. The ng had been suspended.
meeti
For two hours he had been left in the
room
with only his controller, an un giving and aloof woman, younger than himself, for company. When the meeting had resumed, the senior man requested he repeat the ground covered earlier, why his visit had
been
put forward. In the second session two new men had been present.
An
American, perspiring in a suit of brown herringbone tweed, had sat behind him and to his right, and never spoken. A leather-faced
Israeli, a Star of David in gold hanging in the chest hair under an open-necked shirt, had been equally silent.
Afterwards, the controller had walked him back to his hotel, and
warned
her agent to go carefully on this visit, take no risks. Her last
words, before they parted, reiterated what would be his fate and his death if he created suspicion.. . as if Gavin Hughes did not know.