False Friends (16 page)

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Authors: Stephen Leather

BOOK: False Friends
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Shepherd carried the three coffees over to the corner table where Chaudhry and Malik were already sitting. He put the mugs on the table and sat down. They were in Caffè Nero on the ground floor of the Oracle Centre.

‘What I’ve been showing you is how to spot if you have a tail,’ said Shepherd, keeping his voice low. ‘But here’s the important thing: if you realise that you are being fol owed you mustn’t let on that you know. You guys are just regular citizens. You’re not spies and you’re not criminals. You shouldn’t be able to spot a tail, and you certainly shouldn’t have the skil s to shake one off.’ He sipped his coffee. ‘Vil ains are different. To them surveil ance is one of the hazards of the job. If you’re a career criminal then from time to time the cops wil fol ow you. They know you’re a vil ain and you know you’re a vil ain, and giving the cops the slip is part of the game. But say we’re looking at a guy who might be a spy. We put him under surveil ance. If we become aware that he’s spotted us then that’s a red flag right there. The very fact that he knows he’s being tailed almost certainly means he’s a spy.’

‘I don’t get it,’ said Malik.

‘If you’ve got nothing to hide you’l never know that you’re being fol owed. I could fol ow a civilian around al day and he’d never see me because most people are too wrapped up in their own lives. But someone with something to hide wil be looking around. If someone does start fol owing you, and they see you using anti-surveil ance techniques, they’l know that something is wrong.’ He sipped his coffee again. ‘That technique I used, the backtrack? You can do that and make it look natural. Walk past a newsagent and then go back and buy a pack of gum. Walk past a newspaper sel er and then go back and pick up a paper. Look at your watch and then change direction as if you’d forgotten you had to be somewhere. And you can use reflections. It doesn’t have to be a shop window; you can use car mirrors, mirrors in shops. Anything, so long as it looks normal. But if you do spot someone fol owing you the worst possible thing you can do is acknowledge it. You have to carry on as if nothing has happened.’

‘So what’s the point?’ asked Chaudhry.

‘The point is that if you ever do think that someone’s watching you, you let me know as soon as you can. I can then check it out, see if there is any surveil ance and decide what to do about it.’

‘Just phone you, is that it?’

‘Sure. Or text. Tel me your location and who you think is fol owing you.’

‘And what wil you do?’

‘I’l get a team out and put them in counter-surveil ance mode. There’s always at least one team of watchers on standby at Thames House. They’l check you over and identify anyone who’s fol owing you, and they’l do it without the tail ever knowing. People carrying out surveil ance are often the easiest to fol ow because they’re usual y so involved in what they’re doing.’

‘And you think Khalid or one of his people might fol ow us?’ asked Malik.

‘It’s possible,’ said Shepherd. ‘But that doesn’t mean it’l be somebody you’l recognise. They’re much more likely to bring in someone you don’t know.’

‘This backtracking thing, do we do that every day? Every hour? Or what?’

‘If you get the feeling you’re being fol owed, at any time, give it a go. You don’t want to be doing it al the time, that’s for sure. But if I’m on my way to a meeting I’l usual y do it at least once. And always when I’m on my way home.’

‘Why would anyone be fol owing you?’ asked Chaudhry.

‘Any one of a dozen reasons. It would depend on whatever case I’m working on,’ said Shepherd. He leaned closer to them. ‘There’s something else we need to set up. We need to agree an alarm code, a way of you letting me know that there’s a problem without anyone else being aware of what’s going on.’

‘Like a safe word?’ said Malik.

‘What’s a safe word?’ asked Chaudhry.

‘If you’re with a dominatrix you agree a safe word, so that if she’s hurting you too much you say the word and she knows to stop.’

Chaudhry laughed out loud and looked over at Shepherd. Shepherd grinned.

‘Hey, I read it somewhere,’ protested Malik. ‘Oh, screw the two of you.’ He folded his arms and glared at Chaudhry. ‘Ha ha bloody ha.’

‘To be honest, he’s right,’ Shepherd said to Chaudhry. ‘We need to agree a word or phrase that you can remember, and if you ever use it in conversation with me I’l know that you’re in trouble.’

‘Like what?’ asked Chaudhry.

‘Something that’s easy to remember but that you wouldn’t ordinarily say. But it has to be a word or phrase that won’t arouse suspicion.’

Chaudhry smiled slyly at Malik. ‘What do dominatrixes use?’ he asked.

Malik flashed him a tight smile. ‘You see, I know you’re taking the piss but the whole point is that the submissive uses the safe word. That way he has the ultimate power even though the dominatrix is in control.’

Chaudhry shook his head in mock sadness. ‘You know far too much about this domination stuff,’ he said.

‘I was Googling something else and it came up,’ said Malik.

‘Googling what? “Naughty boys want their arses spanked”? I have to say, Harvey, this is a very worrying side to you. Now I’m scared that I might wake up one morning and find myself tied to the bed and you standing over me with a whip in your hand.’

The mickey-taking was a good sign, Shepherd knew; it showed that they were relaxed. So he drank his coffee and let them get on with it.

‘Do you see what I have to put up with?’ Malik asked Shepherd.

‘I don’t know – I think he might have a point. You know that we do positive vetting, don’t you? Something like that would definitely show up.’

‘Are you serious?’ asked Malik, leaning forward, then he saw from the look on Shepherd’s face that he wasn’t. He sat back. ‘You’re as bad as he is.’

‘Al right, guys, let’s get back to the matter in hand,’ said Shepherd. ‘A phrase that I’ve used in the past is “like my grandfather always used to say”. You can start pretty much any sentence with that. How does that sound?’

‘I never knew either of my grandfathers,’ said Malik.

‘Grandmother?’ asked Shepherd.

Malik nodded. ‘Yeah, that’l work.’

Shepherd looked across at Chaudhry. ‘Works for me as wel .’

‘Excel ent,’ said Shepherd. ‘And it can work both ways too. If you hear me use that phrase it means there’s a problem and you need to treat with suspicion anything that I say.’

Chaudhry frowned. ‘Say what?’

‘Suppose there’s somebody listening in and I know they’re there. I could use that phrase to tip you off. Or say I was being forced to arrange a meeting with you – if I used that phrase you’d know right away that you’re not to turn up.’

‘Are you saying that someone might be after you?’ asked Chaudhry. ‘Is that what you mean?’

‘It’s just a safety net,’ said Shepherd. ‘It’s standard in undercover work. There’s another useful phrase I’l give you. If I cal you I’l ask what the weather is like. If you say it’s fine then I’l know that everything is okay. If you say it looks like rain or snow or anything negative then I’l know you’ve got a problem.’

‘Wel , why haven’t we needed it before now?’ asked Chaudhry. ‘What’s happened to bring this up?’

‘Nothing’s happened,’ said Shepherd. ‘It’s just standard procedure. We’re obviously getting close to the critical stage so we need to have al our ducks in a row. Show me your hands.’

‘What?’

‘Just let me see your hands. Palms down.’ Chaudhry held out his hands and Shepherd studied the fingers. Then he nodded at Malik. ‘You too.’

Malik held out his hands and Shepherd looked at them. ‘Okay, neither of you is a nail-biter, so we can use that as a visual sign. If there’s a problem, if you’re in danger or there’s something wrong, and we have visual contact but can’t speak, then make a point of biting your nails.’

Chaudhry frowned. ‘Now you’ve real y lost me,’ he said.

‘Suppose we arrange a meet. And you turn up and you’re waiting for me. But then you realise that you’re being watched. You might not have time to text me. I might be there already and walking towards you. If you start biting your nails I’l immediately abort the meeting. Ditto if you’re on your way to see me and I spot somebody who might know you. I see you, I bite my nails, you back off. Again, it’s a safety net. You’l probably never have to use it but we have it in place, just in case.’

‘Okay,’ said Chaudhry, but Shepherd could hear the uncertainty in his voice.

‘Trust me, we’re just being cautious,’ said Shepherd. ‘Best to talk it through now rather than trying to put something together at short notice. I’l give you another one while we’re at it. You both wear coats with hoods, right?’

‘Now you’re the fashion police?’ said Malik.

‘I’m just saying that you normal y wear your parka and Raj has his duffel coat. Changing the hood can be a sign that there’s a problem. Say it’s up and you want to let me know there’s a problem. If you’re sure I’m watching you, you put your hood down. Or vice versa. If it’s down you pul it up. It’s a natural gesture but it can let me know that something’s wrong. Got it?’

Chaudhry nodded. ‘Got it.’ He looked over at Malik and grinned. ‘Think that’l work with your dominatrix?’

Shepherd finished the last of his coffee. ‘Okay, let’s run through a few exercises in the mal . There’re a few more tricks I want to show you, then I’l put you on the train back to London.’

Shepherd was half an hour from Hampstead in his Volvo when his mobile rang. He took a quick look at the screen. It was Hargrove. He took the cal on hands-free.

‘I’ve had Fenby on the phone. Good news and maybe not so good news,’ said Hargrove. ‘Kettering and Thompson are okay to meet you in London. But they want to see you at a charity boxing night.’

‘What?’

‘They’re down tomorrow for a charity do at a hotel in Russel Square. The Royal National Hotel. They’ve got a table and they want you there.’

‘That’s not on, is it? What if I bump into someone I know? Is it a big event?’

‘Four hundred-odd people, mainly from south London. The event’s to raise money for a boxing club in Croydon. A couple of fighters that Kettering knows are coming down from Birmingham so Kettering has told Ray that he wants to kil two birds with one stone.’

‘We’re not going to be able to arrange an arms deal at a table ful of boxing fans,’ said Shepherd. ‘We’re going to have to give this a body swerve.’

‘No can do,’ said Hargrove. ‘You’ve got to look at this from their point of view. They don’t know you – you’re Fenby’s contact. So they want to meet you in a social context first.’

‘So we’l have a pint in a quiet pub somewhere off the beaten track. I’ve done God knows how many jobs south of the river and if anyone there recognises me I’l be blown.’

‘We can run a check on the guest list for you,’ said Hargrove. ‘Look, Ray has already tried to put them off but Kettering is insisting and if we start to make a fuss he’s going to get suspicious. He just wants to sit down with you and get to know you.’

Shepherd sighed. ‘If that’s the way you want it I won’t argue, but don’t blame me if it goes tits up,’ he said.

‘Your reservations are noted,’ said Hargrove. He cut the connection.

Shepherd phoned Damien Plant and asked him how he was getting on with the Garry Edwards legend.

‘I put the finishing touches to it this morning,’ said Plant.

‘I need it for tomorrow evening,’ said Shepherd. ‘The clothes and bling, anyway.’

‘Where are you?’

‘On my way to Hampstead.’

‘I could drop it off on my way home,’ said Plant. ‘In an hour.’

‘Perfect,’ said Shepherd. ‘It’l give me time for a shower.’

‘Don’t go to any trouble on my account,’ said Plant.

‘I’l have coffee ready for you,’ said Shepherd. ‘How do you like it?’

‘Same as I like my men,’ said Plant. ‘Black, sweet and with bulging forearms.’

Shepherd laughed and ended the cal .

The traffic was light heading into London and he had parked the car, showered and changed, and was stirring sugar into a mug of black coffee when his intercom buzzed. He pressed the button to open the downstairs door. Plant was wearing blue Armani jeans and a blue blazer over the sort of tight white T-shirt that he’d threatened to make Shepherd wear. He was carrying a blue nylon holdal in his left hand and three grey garment covers in his right.

Shepherd showed him through to the sitting room.

‘I’d forgotten how cosy this place was,’ said Plant, looking around. He had chosen everything in the flat, from the furniture and LCD television to the books on the shelves and the pictures on the wal s.

‘Yeah, it’s not exactly a cat-swinging room, is it?’

‘Perfectly in keeping with a freelance journalist,’ said Plant. ‘Frankly we were lucky to get you into Hampstead the way rents are moving here.’

He sat down and sipped his coffee as Shepherd opened the garment covers. There was a dark-blue single-breasted suit, several shirts, a black linen jacket not dissimilar to the one that Plant had been wearing at Thames House, and a brown leather jacket that zipped up the front.

‘The leather jacket’s Armani,’ said Plant. ‘I’ve scuffed it a bit to give it some character. I wouldn’t mind it back when the job’s finished; it’s the sort of thing I can use again and again. The suit you can keep. The shirts too.’

Inside the holdal was a padded manila envelope. Shepherd opened it and slid out a driving licence. It had his photograph and the name of Garry Edwards, with the signature that he’d given Plant in Thames House. Shepherd didn’t recognise the address on the licence and he frowned at Plant.

Plant smiled. ‘I’ve used an office address for you. They’l have the Edwards name on file so wil field any enquiries.’

‘I doubt I’l be flashing it around,’ said Shepherd. Also inside the envelope was a gold Cartier wristwatch, a gold money clip and a heavy gold bracelet.

Plant took a sheet of paper from his jacket pocket and handed it and a slim gold pen to Shepherd. ‘The jewel ery you’l have to sign for,’ he said.

‘It’s ful y insured but please take care of it.’

‘I’l do my best,’ said Shepherd, signing the form and giving it back to Plant.

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