Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
driving it should have checked his mirror, seen whether the escort car
was clear to follow, but he hadn't. No bloody option for Paget but to
break the red light and follow across the junction. Rankin hit the siren button and the cars coming at them across the junction from
right
and left were braking and swerving to avoid them, all except one.
The
car heading straight for them was a battered old Cavalier with a
toothy, grey-haired black at the wheel. They were two, three seconds from a disabling, side-on collision.
153
ndow down, the siren scream in his ears, and the
Rankin had his wi
H&K
up. The gun was racked, bullet in the breach, and Rankin's thumb
was
resting on the lever at safe. As the escort team, they should have been right up behind the prison van. The guy in it was important, a
plier and a bad bastard, on the daily run between the Old
drugs sup
Bailey and the Brixton gaol remand block. He had the contacts and cash
resources to buy a rescue bid, which was why armed police escorted him
ch day from his cell to the court and back.
ea
The bullet was in the
breach, Paget and Rankin were not there for the ride, and they knew it.
The old Cavalier was coming right for them, on target for the driver's door.
med
If the bad bastard had bought a rescue, the copper-botto
certainty was that the armed escort car would be isolated and rammed, taken out. Rankin was close enough to see, through the Cavalier's grimy windscreen, the gold teeth in the black's wide open mouth and the
big mahogany eyes. Rankin's aim, held steady in the swaying escort car, was on the black's forehead. His thumb hardened on the safe
lever.
If he
t
sho
to kill the law was bloody vague. Section 3 of the Criminal
Law Act, 1967, would back him if it were a genuine escape attempt
and
crucify him if it was only a traffic accident. They were on collision course and closing, and Paget was wrenching the wheel to avoid the old
ght succeed, might not.
Cavalier, mi
It'd take Rankin about half a
second to depress the lever from safe and put a double tap, two
bullets, through the man's forehead. He'd get a commendation if it was
a rescue bid and a murder charge if it was not..~ And they were
through, the junction cleared. Paget was ~~celeratmg like a mad
idiot,
wrong side of the road, to get back up behind the prison van, and
in
their wake, the old Cavalier had careered into a traffic bollard.
The
H&K was back on Rankin's lap.
154
"Where were we, Joe?"
No fast breathing, no taut hands, like it was a weekend run-out with the wife.
"We were on about who was in charge, Dave Box "What I said, totally fucking useless. Who's the principal?"
"Civilian, ordinary, an obstinate sod because they offered him the chance to bug out and he wouldn't."
"What's the opposition?"
'fran -he's up the mullahs~ noses.~ "That's bloody choice, that's not
clever. When do we get there?"
"Go down tonight, recce, take over in the morning from the half-arsed locals."
They had left a minor traffic accident behind them and were
comfortably
cosied up behind the prison van. Constables Joseph Paget and David Rankin were a team and inseparable. The driver, Paget, was a
toadlike
man, short and squat, bald with a thick Zapata moustache, and he had been changing the oil, checking the tyre pressures and vale ting the interior during the long wait at the court, while his colleague had been given the new assignment's briefing. With the H&K resting loose on his thighs, Rankin was a wafer-thin willow of a man with a brush of
on of a child, and a
cropped dark hair, the smooth-skinned complexi
moustache identical to his colleague's. Anyone meeting them for the first time and noting their language and gait would have believed
they
made conscious efforts to ape each other. They were both forty-nine years old, lived in adjacent streets in north London, went on holiday together with their wives, and grumbled with each other like a married couple. They would retire on the same day. Both Joe Paget and Dave Rankin were considered expert marksmen. But they'd never done it.
Been
the courses, been endlessly on the range, been on every exercise,
on
but never actually done it. For all of their training and with a
total of thirty-two years' service with firearms, neither
combined
had
r real.
fired fo
155
ey saw the prison van go through the big gates of the gaol, and
Th
swung
ay.
aw
They stopped
at a news agent and Paget went in. He bought three books
of crossword puzzles, some soft-drink cans and two packets of
sandwiches.
had come back up from the canteen and his supper, but before
When he
he
nt to Fenton's room to collect the American, Geoff Markham took
we
a
et of white paper and the roll of Sellotape from his desk.
single she
He
e paper to the outer face of his door, then scrawled on
fastened th
it,
th a black marker pen, DAY ONE.
wi
The FBI man had said it would be
o the end of the first day.
over within a week. It was near t
The American had gone off with Markham, and the fax purred on. to n's machine.
Fento
He thought of Markham, like a worrying dog at the
heels of a sheep as he'd rounded up the American, made sure he had his
ons of his waistcoat
coat, gently chided him for fastening the butt
t
ou
upid and
of kilter and done them correctly himself. Sheep were st
lful, a bloody nuisance, and necessary... He read the fax from
wi
Special Branch operations.
Incredible, an eighth wonder, remarkable. SB had done a deal with the
local
Must
force.
have been the angle of the moon, or some such crap,
for SB and a local force to have done a deal.
d
He would have predicte
an on-going, entertaining dispute. SB would provide the
close-protection detail and had liaised with 5019 of Scotland Yard for
a static uniformed presence. The local force would offer armed
vehicles to watch the single road into the godforsaken dead end and to
cruise the area.
There was, had to be, a little scorpion's sting. At the tail of the message: "SB, on own behalf and that of local force, will negotiate with Security Service for budget funding during operation concerning en, with view to reimbursement of expendihire." It was
Juliet Sev
156
the
bare,
basic level for protection, and it would cost a goddamn fortune,
and the resources bucket was not bottomless. He pondered how to
limit
the extent of the commitment. He put on his coat, picked up his
and switched off the light in his room.
briefcase
e budget ruled his life and would until the day he filed his
Th
application to join the Portcullis Society, until he joined the rest of
e Christmas reunion, reminiscing and carping
yesterday's spooks at th
out days gone by. The commitment could not be endless,
ab
e cursed the bloody obstinate fool who had refused a most
and h
reasonable offer of help in moving on.
As if with a sudden afterthought, Fenton went back into his darkened nd dialled the home number of their duty solicitor.
room a
re, G Section, sorry to, call you this late, Francis.
"Harry he
Can
I
n this past you? We have a man who we consider to be an
just ru
ppears and we've
assassination target. We've suggested he disa
offered
the means to do that. He won't take our advice, says he's staying s. Does the law provide us with powers to remove him
where he i
forcibly from his domicile, against his will, and place him in
protective custody?... I see.. . Assault, civil liberties, yes...
Not
on, eh?.. . It's just that these things are so bloody expensive.
our time, Francis, and regards to Alison..."
Thanks for y
e crossed the silent, deserted work area, Fenton saw the sheet
When h
of
paper fastened to young Markham's door. DAY ONE.
There had to e
b
a containment on the commitment or the operation would
eed his section dry. He went out into the night.
bl
He had
ked
wal
quickly along the hedgerows and into what the map called
Sixteen-acre Wood and, from the safety of the trees, watched her drive away.
h his back against a big trunk, Vahid Hossein used the last
Wit
light of the day to study and memorize the map.
When darkness came, and he could no longer see the trellised patterns per branches, he had again moved forward.
of the up
157
The map was in his mind. He took a length of dead branch from the ground, and used it as a blind man would. He had friends who were blinded in the marshes by mustard-gas shells, and he used the stick in
the darkness as they used their white wands in daylight. The stick told him where were the desiccated lengths of wood that he could have stepped on, broken, left a trail. He walked carefully from
Sixteen-acre Wood into Big Wood, then on to Common Wood. From Common Wood he skirted open fields and then he sheltered by a road, and
watched and waited and listened. The caution was instinctive. He had
crossed the road and passed what the map called a tumulus but did
not
know what the word meant, and then he slipped into Fen Covert.
It was in Fen Covert that he first smelt the salt of the sea, and
that
he first heard the screaming.
The smell was soft, the same as the tang off the Shatt-al-Arab
waterway
and at the Faw peninsula. Then the screaming had come again.
At the Shatt-al-Arab and the Faw, when the salt scent had been in
his
nose, he had heard the screaming of a man wounded or gassed and left behind in the retreat. It had been his duty, then, inescapable, to go
back into the marshes to find a man with a shrapnel-severed leg or with
the gas droplets on his skin and in his eyes. He moved towards Fen Hill, cat-like and quiet, where the scent was stronger and the
screaming louder. Ahead of him, dappled by thin moonlight, was the open expanse called Southmarsh on the map.
At the slight slope of Fen Hill he angered himself. His mind had
been
on the scent and the screaming, and on the ribbon of lights that he estimated to be three kilometres away, when he set up a pheasant.
If
mong the marsh reeds of the Shatt-al Arab or the Faw,
he had been a
he
would have given his enemy his position. It would have been a fatal error. He stopped, and stood motionless against a tree-trunk so that his body made no silhouette, smelling the sea and listening to the 158
screaming.
The distant sound of a car's horn, among the ribbon of lights, carried over the Southmarsh.
He found the rabbit, its throat caught by a snare. He did not use his
torch, but felt it first with his stick and then with his hand. His fingers brushed the fur of the animal's back and then came to the
restraining wire. The movement of his fingers, caressing it, had
quietened the terror of the rabbit. He held it by the fur at its
neck
and loosened the fine wire. He could not see it, could only sense it
hanging supine from his grip.
Because of his mistake in disturbing the pheasant, his anger and
self-criticism, he felt a need to reassure himself. He killed the rabbit with a chop from the heel of his hand against its neck, one blow. He reset the snare and covered the ground where his feet had been with loose brushwood because at first light someone would come to
check the snare.
dead and warm, and moved
He pocketed the rabbit,
on.
He came to rest in the heart of a thick tangle of bramble on the edge of Foxhole Covert. Not for hunger, but to purge himself of his
, he tore a leg from the rabbit carcass, pulled the skin from
mistake
it, and ate it. He chewed on the raw sweet meat. It was important to
el no revulsion, to be strong.
him to fe
He chewed at the leg until
his
rcass beside him and the
teeth scraped on the bone, then put the ca
cleaned bone, and wiped the blood from his mouth. The act of killing and the eating gave him strength.
The sausage bag was beside him. Through the bramble branches he saw se-set lights across the Southmarsh.
the clo
He had the photograph
of
nd the man.
the house a
His hand, stained with the rabbit's blood,
rested on the bag and sometimes found the shape of the launcher and sometimes the outline of the automatic rifle. He thought that it
would
be as easy for him to kill the man as it had been to chop the rabbit's neck and eat its leg.
159
He tried, lying on his back in the silence, to think of his wife,
Barzin, and of the home that they shared, and of the rooms they had decorated and of the possessions they had gathered together, and of the