âNot yet. He had to pick something up on his way in.'
âCould you do us a favour, then?'
âI can try.'
âThanks. It's just that we need to get someone back to UK soonest. I want him on a plane today. Could you be an angel and book a ticket?'
âReturn?'
âNo â one way.'
âWhat's the passenger's name?'
âEllis. Richard Ellis.'
âWhat flight shall I go for?'
âAny flight â the earliest he can catch. He'll have to get from here to the airport, that's all.'
âAll right, then. I'll call you back.'
I urgently needed to speak to the CO in Hereford, but the time there was still only 6.30 a.m., so I decided to wait until he came into his office.
When Kate rang back, she gave me another jolt. âI'm sorry,' she said, âI can't get through to any of the airlines. The reservation lines are all jammed.'
âIs that normal?'
âCertainly not. I phoned a friend in the Lufthansa cargo department, and she says there's some sort of a panic on. People are trying to get out of Moscow in a hurry. There are no seats available before next Thursday.'
âJesus! It must be this thing about the American Ambassador.'
âThat's right. There's a lot of really nervous talk coming out of the FCO.'
âLike what?'
âThe international situation deteriorating, that sort of thing.'
âWell, listen. I really need this guy on a plane as soon as possible. Can you keep trying?'
âOf course.'
Ten minutes later she rang again and said, âI got through in the end, but no luck. I tried BA, Aeroflot and Lufthansa, and they're all fully booked. There are no seats available before next week. The only chance is to send him first class. Lufthansa may have a seat at 1520 this afternoon, but it's via Berlin, I'm afraid.'
âThat'll do,' I said. âTake it.' Privately I was thinking, I don't care if he goes via Timbucfuckingtoo, as long as I get him off my hands. The idea of Rick sipping champagne in a first-class seat gave me a royal pain in the arse. But then I consoled myself by thinking, If he's getting binned, back to the Green Army, it's the last time he'll be travelling like
that
for a while.
âI'll charge it to the Embassy for now,' Kate was saying. âThen we'll send the bill to Hereford. He'll have to collect the ticket from the Lufthansa desk at the airport. He needs to be there by 1400 at the latest.'
âNo bother. I'm very grateful to you. Has David appeared yet?'
âJust this moment. D'you want a word?'
âYes please.'
I hung on, then heard Allway say, âGood morning.'
âGood morning,' I went. âCan you fill me in on what's happening?'
âThe situation's pretty confused at the moment.'
âWhat's causing the panic?'
âClinton said something about Russia being on the point of becoming ungovernable.'
âDon't you feel that's exaggerated?'
âPersonally, yes.'
âSo what line's London taking?'
âNo special line yet. But Washington is advising Americans to leave unless they have urgent business here. Are you people all right out at Balashika?'
âFor the time being. Everything's been going fine. I don't know how this will affect things, though.'
âNo,' Allway said cryptically. âI get the impression that your team may be off home fairly soon.'
âOh, really?' I went. âWe'll have to wait and see.'
I rang off, and called Hereford on the secure satellite link. By good luck the CO was already at his desk, and sounding cheerful.
âHi, Geordie,' he went. âHow are things?'
âRough. You've heard the news?'
âYes. It sounds a bit dicey. How does it feel at that end?'
âCan't tell yet. But listen, Boss. That's not what I'm calling about. It's Rick Ellis. I'm sending him home.'
âOh God!' he said. âWhat's happened?'
I told him in short, sharp sentences. He didn't query my decision, and I was glad of that. He saw my point. I summed up by saying, âHe's dropped us right in it. At the very least, the Mafia know there's a Brit presence in the barracks here. That means there's a threat to our lads, quite apart from the potential disruption of Operation Nimrod.'
âAre you going to need a replacement?'
âNot worth it. We can manage as we are.'
âOK, then. I'll see Rick as soon as he gets back.'
âDo you need a report immediately?'
âIt can wait. I'm sure you've got plenty on your hands. You can give me a full statement when you get back.'
âWill do.'
âWhat's the state of play with the operation?'
âApple's in place, as you know. We've got a site for Orange, and we're just waiting for a chance to do the insertion.'
âSooner the better,' said the CO sharply. âIf the situation gets much worse we may have to pull you out.'
âRoger. But â Boss?'
âYes?'
âThere's no chance the Yanks are going to start playing funny buggers and press the button on Apple?'
âDon't be silly, Geordie. Things aren't
that
bad.' Then suddenly he switched mode and made what seemed to me a lousy joke. âBut if they were, you'd be the last people to know anything about it.'
âHa ha,' I said.
âSorry, Geordie.' He realised he'd pissed me off. âSeriously, things look OK from this end.'
âThey don't from here, I can tell you. People are pouring out of Moscow like fucking lemmings.'
âIs that right?'
I told him about the airlines, then said, âWhat I'm saying is this. Isn't that exactly what these bloody devices are for â to use as blackmail if things get tense, to bring the buggers to their senses in an emergency?'
âPrecisely. But we're nowhere near the stage of using them yet.'
âI hope to hell you're right. Once Orange is underground we're going to be in the killing zone ourselves, never mind any radiation that might drift this way from Apple.'
âTake it easy, Geordie. Your imagination's running away with you.'
âI hope you're bloody well right.'
The lads reassembled, looking rather surprised. Having sent Rick away to his own room, I got everyone sat down and went straight into it.
âI'm sorry to say that there's a high probability Operation Nimrod's been compromised.'
Everyone sat very still. Several seconds passed before Whinger said, âFor Christ's sake, what's happened? Have they found the bomb?'
âI hope not. But next worst: Rick's sent the Mafia a message saying the SAS is in town.'
âDon't be stupid!' went Whinger.
âI'm not,' I told him. âI exaggerated slightly, but only a little.'
I explained what had happened. Mal â careful, steady Mal â surprised me by starting to stand up for Rick. âIf he stuck to the cover story about the film, we don't need to worry.'
âWe bloody do! That woman's obviously in the hands of some pimp or other. It'll take the guy about ten seconds to recognise the number Rick gave her. I bet you the Mafia have got us pinpointed already.'
âEh!' said Johnny. âLet's fuck off out of here while the going's good.'
âThat's what Rick's going to do,' I said. âI'm sending him home right away. The lucky bastard's flying first class because there are no other seats. And Toad â I want you to take him to the airport. OK?'
Nobody put up any good reason for keeping Rick on the team. Mal saw the point of what I was saying and finally agreed that Rick should go. The only argument was about his share of the Mafia dollars â and in the end we voted that he should still get it, provided he kept his mouth shut about the whole episode when he reached home.
So the day's training got under way an hour late. I stayed in barracks, fighting to catch up with paperwork â mainly the course reports on the students, which we were supposed to be continuously updating.
All morning I kept remembering how, at the climax of the siege of the Libyan Embassy in London, the police negotiators had kept the terrorists in play by telling them direct lies: that the Libyan Ambassador was on his way, that a coach was coming to take them to Heathrow, and so on. Even Trevor Lock, the policeman trapped inside the building, couldn't get any straight answers from the police. Several times he asked for an assurance that the building wasn't going to be assaulted â and at the very moment when the SAS men were laying out their abseil ropes on the roof, the cops promised him blind that all they were trying to arrange was the villains' getaway.
Now we seemed to be in an unpleasantly similar situation. The boss would go on saying, âNo, no, Geordie, everything's fine,' until the very moment when Clinton or some other jerk in Washington pressed the button. The CO was bound to toe the line. But for us poor sods at the sharp end it was different. Maybe we'd see a brilliant white flash. Maybe we wouldn't.
At midday I called the Chargé again and heard that the American Ambassador had died from his wounds. All US flights into Moscow had been suspended, and American citizens advised not to travel to Russia by any means. More and more I was needled by apprehension that this whole train of events had been set off by us â by our participation in the hit on the apartment. Then I told myself that if we hadn't gone along with it the result of the shoot-out might have been much the same, with a few more casualties to the forces of law and order â but still the feelings of guilt were building up.
Before Toad left I took him aside and asked, âIs there any way you can disable Apple?'
âNot unless we go back down the tunnel,' he replied. âNow it's live, it's live.'
TWELVE
We seemed to have two options. One was to call in an RAF aircraft and lift the whole team out, taking Orange with us, on the grounds that the situation was too dangerous to stay. That definitely went against the grain: it would be unprofessional and would smell of panic. If we quit, we'd have failed in one of our main objectives.
The second option was to carry out our task and get Orange into place as soon as possible â after which we could assess the position again, and decide whether to carry on with the training course or leave immediately.
To reach a decision we held a Chinese parliament out in the open, in the middle of the assault course, well away from any bugs. Toad, as usual, remained silent, but the rest of the lads were emphatically for Option Two. The only disagreement was about what we should do once we'd buried Orange in the old air-raid shelter.
Whinger, croaking through his laryngitis, was all for playing it straight. âWe might as well see the course through. Nobody's going to push any button. They wouldn't fucking well dare.'
Johnny and Pavarotti agreed with him. But Mal, who'd done a two-year tour attached to the US Marines, had a low opinion of American decision-taking in general, and reckoned somebody in a key position in Washington might easily lose his cool under pressure. Dusty and Pete tended to go along with that, and so did I. That meant that three of us were for remaining on the team task, and four for opting out: the narrowest possible majority. In the end we agreed to debate the matter again once Orange had gone down.
Our plan for the second device was perfectly simple. Whinger and I had already decided we couldn't start digging on the site before we were ready to insert: otherwise somebody might see the spoil. Therefore, we'd fetch the components from the Embassy that evening, bring them to the camp, stash them temporarily, and take them out to the shelter the next night, starting and finishing the insertion in one shift.
Or so we thought.
For this next run we adopted the same tactics as before: using both cars and keeping well apart, in radio contact. We left Balashika at 8.00 p.m., and reached the Embassy at 8.55. Taking our normal precautions, Whinger put in a drive-past with the grey Volga; he had Johnny riding passenger with him, and when they reported all clear, Pavarotti, Toad and I went in with the black vehicle to load the components. We'd done what we could to make the Volgas more roadworthy, getting them both a service and replacing three of the worst tyres.
As we drove along the embankment and over the line of the tunnel, I got a peculiar fizzing sensation in my stomach.
I'd already sent word to the Chargé that we were coming in. My spiel had been that, because of the international tension, we wanted to recover the last of our bits and pieces so that we'd have everything in one place if the Regiment decided on a quick evacuation. Allway had said that was OK by him: there'd be no one to meet us, but he'd leave word with security, and we could hand them the keys of the garage on our way out.
That suited us fine. We loaded up at leisure, locked the door and handed in the keys. In the car, before I drove off, I got Toad to hand me Orange's Rat, and clipped the device to my belt.
We were rolling again less than ten minutes after we'd arrived. Pav was beside me in front, Toad in the back.
âClearing now,' I called to Whinger.
âRoger,' he answered. âI'll fall in behind.'
On our way out through the city centre I couldn't distinguish his lights from all the others behind us; but I knew he was there, because we kept exchanging messages. The traffic began to thin out, and on the highway the vehicles were well spaced. Fine rain had set in, reducing visibility. The black Volga wallowed on the wet road like a boat under its heavy load, and I kept our speed down to sixty-five ks to give myself time to avoid potholes. That meant we were one of the slowest cars on the road, and we kept getting overtaken, but I felt in no particular hurry.