He hoped the slight chill in their relationship was only temporary. Even in the fog that seemed to distort everything connected with Milraud, he knew that Liz promised a happy life ahead and Milraud only represented the past.
He was annoyed when the phone rang on the table in his study and broke into his reverie. It turned out to be his young colleague from the safe house in Montreuil, Jacques Thibault.
‘Yes? What is it?’ he asked sharply.
‘He’s had an email.’
Seurat was alert now. ‘What did it say?’
‘It’s calling him to another meeting – in London. It’s encoded in the form he described when your British colleague was here. He says it’s from the Arab.’
So Liz was right, and the UK connection was proving key. ‘When’s the meeting and where?’
‘Two days from now. We’re working out exactly where but I wanted to tell you straightaway. The instructions are in the form of coordinates disguised as sports scores. As soon as we’ve unzipped it, I’ll let you know.’
‘Do you know the time?’
‘Four o’clock in the afternoon.’
Dusk at this time of year, which would make surveillance of the meeting more difficult. ‘I’ll let London know. Contact me as soon as you’ve worked out all the details.’
‘OK. I’ll get back to you shortly.’
Young Thibault was a computer genius, a real geek, thought Martin. Let’s hope he can get more out of that message than the time and place of the meeting.
Chapter 27
When the all-clear came through from the A4 team looking for counter-surveillance, Milraud was let out of the car. He walked along Regent’s Park Road, and turned left through the open gate of Primrose Hill Park. Eight pairs of eyes watched him go.
The light was fading now after a bright late-autumn day. It was 3.45 in the afternoon and it would be practically dark by 4.30 at this time of the year. Maureen Hayes, sitting in an apparently closed up and deserted park-keepers’ shed, was observing Milraud’s progress across the park. His light-coloured raincoat made him easy to spot as he sat down on a bench at the top of the hill. She didn’t envy him sitting out there on this chilly evening.
His was the only bench occupied; the wind was getting up and everyone else in the park seemed to be hurrying home. A woman in a fake fur coat was dawdling along, holding a little plastic bag in one hand and apparently urging the terrier she had on an extending lead to do his business so they could leave. Three small boys in school uniform went out of the gate chattering, one holding a football under his arm. A faint aroma of burning leaves seeped through the wooden slats of Maureen’s hut.
For a second the setting sun caught a window of one of the tall glass buildings somewhere in the City to the south, and a flash of brilliance lit up Milraud’s figure, sitting alone at the top of the hill, and momentarily blinded Maureen as she peered at him through her binoculars.
When she could see again, she noticed several people were walking into the park through the same gate Milraud had used. Perhaps an underground train had just come in or maybe they’d got off a bus. Then, as she watched, a young man separated from the others and turned up the path that led to the seat where Milraud still waited.
Could this be Zara, as Milraud’s Arab contact was now codenamed? She had been told to expect a tall, thin young Arab, dressed scruffily like a student. But this young man was wearing a dark business suit and carrying a briefcase and a rolled-up copy of the Evening Standard. He was tall and thin all right, and dark-skinned, but he looked more like a City worker returning to his flat in this expensive part of London than a student or a jihadi.
The man was passing Milraud without a glance, when he suddenly stopped, and seemed to be admiring the view. To Maureen’s practised eye he was looking for signs of surveillance. Then he stepped behind Milraud’s bench and seemed to be rubbing his hands up and down the Frenchman’s back. Maureen stared at them through her binoculars, thinking that in other circumstances this would look like some kind of gay encounter.
The newcomer slowly circled around the bench and sat down at the far end from Milraud. There was a pause and the two men seemed to be talking. Then Milraud got up and took off his raincoat, folding it and laying it on the bench. Again the smart young man appeared to be stroking Milraud’s body, his chest this time. Whatever was going on? After a short time, Milraud got up, put his raincoat on again and the two men conversed, apparently calmly. After a further ten minutes, the young man stood up and walked away down the hill, in the opposite direction from which he had come, and Milraud retraced his steps to the waiting car.
As Zara headed for the far gate, Maureen alerted the Ops Room, and as he left the park six of Maureen’s colleagues were on his tail.
Chapter 28
Liz had had a bit of a struggle persuading the Home Office that she had enough on Lester Jackson to justify a warrant to intercept his communications. On the face of it, a small-time Manchester club owner with no criminal record, let alone any proved involvement in terrorist-related activity, did not present any threat to national security. She had argued strongly that his covert contact with Milraud, a man well known to the French as an arms supplier, in an apparent plot to supply weapons to a group of jihadis, justified the warrant. Eventually she had won the day, but the warrant was to be reviewed after two weeks and if by then no information indicating a national security threat had emerged, it would be cancelled. She had come away from the meeting in Whitehall feeling disgruntled. Two weeks was a very short time in which to prove anything.
She was reading the first transcripts when her phone buzzed – an internal call. She picked it up, impatient at the interruption.
‘Liz, you’d better come down.’ It was Wally Woods in the A4 Operations room.
‘What’s happened?’
‘Your Zara operation. The meeting took place and we’ve got the Frenchman back safely in our custody. That’s all OK, but we’re following Zara and I need to know how you want us to handle it.’
‘Give me five minutes?’
‘Make it three.’
She rang off and looked at the transcripts again. At 16:45 the day before, Jackson had taken a call on his mobile. The caller had been located two thousand miles away, though they still hadn’t tracked the signal down specifically. The conversation had been in English, with the caller speaking fluently but with what sounded like a Russian accent. The transcript read:
Caller: It’s Tag here.
Jackson: What’s the state of play?
Caller: It’s ready to go.
Jackson: There may be some more to come. But for now, have you got everything?
Caller: Yeah, all of it.
Jackson: Twenty pieces?
Caller: (Impatiently) Yes, yes. They all look good to me, though I’m no expert.
Jackson: Can you confirm the route?
Caller: Same as last time.
Jackson: Why not a different port?
Caller: That’s up to me, my friend. Once I deliver, the shipment’s all yours. Until then it’s my worry.
Jackson: Have you got a date?
Caller: Not yet, but it won’t be long now. We have some snow so it is hard to be more specific than that.
Jackson: I need 12 hours’ warning.
Caller: I can do better than that – I’ll give you 24.
Jackson: OK, I’ll hold you to that.
Liz shook her head, trying to make sense of it, then got up and walked to the lifts in the centre of Thames House. As she went, she thought about the transcript. Given Jackson’s background, it would be fair to assume the conversation was about human trafficking – the goods being East European women shipped over on a lorry for service in places like Slim’s.