Selim was trembling a little. “Not for years.”
“Then have one now. It’ll help settle your nerves. Stay here and Belov’s people will get you one way or another, but you’re too valuable to waste, which is why I’m taking you back to Ferguson. As I’ve told you, play ball and you’ll be fine.”
“But my roots are here.”
“Bollocks,” Billy said. “Look out there at the romance of Iraq. Bleeding peasants at this time of night in the pouring rain, leading donkeys for the morning market in Baghdad to make a few bob. It’s a shithole.”
“And you’re British anyway,” Dillon said. “Born in London, went to St. Paul’s, Cambridge.”
“You went to St. Paul’s?” Billy said. “I didn’t know that. I was there for two years. My uncle Harry wanted to make a gentleman of me.”
Selim was interested in spite of himself. “What happened?”
“They expelled me when I was sixteen for beating up two prefects. I’ve never told anyone that before, not even you, Dillon.”
“Well, there you go.” Dillon smiled. “A great man once said England was a splendid, tolerant and noble country, and even though I’m Irish, I’d have to agree. Let’s put it this way. There are mosques all over London.”
The first thing Greta did at the cottage when she got back was to call and arrange an early-morning departure for the Falcon. Then she phoned Ashimov, finding him in bed, because in London it was three in the morning. He was all attention, sat up and reached for a cigarette.
“How’s it going?”
“I’m on my way back, that’s how it’s going. Sharif sold us out.”
“I’ll have his balls for that, I promise.”
“No need. They ambushed us at Ramalla – Dillon, Slater and Sharif. There was a firefight. Zorin and Makeev were killed. I managed to shoot Sharif and got away in the darkness. I saw Dillon, Salter and some other men take Selim away to a station wagon. I was close enough to hear Dillon say something like ‘Let’s get out of here. Next stop the airport.’ I waited until they’d gone and came back to the house in the Jeep.”
“It’s like a black comedy,” he said. “A total farce.”
“I’m sure they’re going to squeeze Selim dry in some London safe house,” she said.
“Yes, I’ll have to find out where that is. But at least you’re safe, my love. I’ll expect you tomorrow.”
She put the phone down, quite pleased with herself, and went to bed.
At Baghdad Airport, they gained access through a discreet security entrance, where Robson and Lacey waited in a Land Rover.
“Follow us, Sergeant, straight to the plane,” Robson called.
They did and found the Citation waiting, ready to go. The two vehicles stopped at the bottom of the steps and they all got out.
Robson said, “Please board now, gentlemen. You’ve sort of never been here, if you follow me. Much better all round.”
“You’ve got a good man here.” Dillon turned and shook hands with Parker. “We’ll do it again sometime.”
“Once around the houses with you is enough for any man, but good luck.”
Billy pushed Selim up the steps, Dillon followed and then Lacey, who closed the door. Selim sank into a seat. Lacey joined Parry in the cockpit.
Dillon took out his Codex Four and called Ferguson, as Greta had done with Ashimov, finding him in bed.
“Who in the hell is it at this time in the morning?”
“Dillon. Just leaving Baghdad Airport.”
“Have you got him?”
“That we have.”
“Was it bad?”
“Oh, the usual. Billy did well. Two more notches.”
“And Novikova?”
“Still in one piece. Quite a girl, but I’ll tell you later.”
“Good man, Sean, we’ll be waiting at Farley.”
The Citation started along the runway, lifted and rose very quickly. Billy tilted his seat. “I’m for a nap,” he said and closed his eyes.
Selim was shaking slightly, and Dillon opened one of the lockers, produced a blanket. “There you go, wrap yourself in that.”
Selim said in a small voice, “Thank you, Mr. Dillon.”
Dillon opened the bar box, found half a bottle of Bushmills whiskey and a glass, into which he poured a large one.
“That ‘Committee for Racial Harmony’ you’ve been sitting on at the House of Commons, play your cards right and you could be back there before you know it, sitting on the Terrace by the Thames, with tea, cakes and cucumber sandwiches. Think about it.”
He sat back and poured himself another whiskey.
LONDON
10
The Citation landed at Farley Field at ten in the morning, under gray skies and heavy rain, remarkably like Iraq. Ferguson waited in the Daimler, Hannah Bernstein standing beside it in a raincoat, an umbrella over her head. Behind them was a Land Rover containing two men in civilian clothes. They were, in fact, staff sergeants in the Royal Military Police, named Miller and Dalton, and they worked for Ferguson at the Holland Park safe house. As the Citation rocked to a halt, they got out of the car.
The door of the plane opened, the steps came down. Lacey came first, followed by Dillon, Selim behind him huddled in his blanket. Billy was next and then Parry. Ferguson went to greet them.
He said formally, “You are Dr. Ali Selim?”
“That’s right.” Selim seemed quite calm now.
Ferguson turned and said to Hannah, “Superintendent?”
There was a reluctance to her, but she said, “Under the Anti-Terrorism Act, you may be held indefinitely. Under the Official Secrets Act, you may not speak of it or why you are here.”
“Am I not entitled to a lawyer?” Selim asked.
“No.” Ferguson turned to the staff sergeants. “Deliver him to the safe house. Treat him well. Give him a change of clothes and whatever food he wants. Remember that he’s a Muslim.”
Hannah said, “I’d like to go with him, sir.”
The military police were putting Selim in the rear of the Land Rover, and Ferguson took Hannah to one side. “I know you don’t approve, my dear, but desperate situations require desperate remedies. However, we’re not the Gestapo. We won’t mistreat him. Now, off you go. I’ll see you later.”
She turned to Dillon, obviously unhappy. “Good to see you back, Sean.”
Dillon felt sorry for her, but it was Billy who said, “Don’t waste your sympathy, Superintendent. They’d have killed us, and they tried hard enough – even wanted to kill Selim. People like you, your conscience, your morality. Nothing’s ever enough, is it?”
Dillon said, “Leave it, son,” and she turned and got in the Land Rover and was driven away.
The rain suddenly increased. Billy said, “To hell with it. It’s me for the Dark Man and a full English breakfast.”
“An excellent idea.” Ferguson turned to Lacey and Parry. “My thanks, gentlemen. We’ll be seeing each other soon, I’m sure.”
He got in the Daimler with Dillon and Billy and was driven away.
The Dark Man, like most London pubs these days, offered breakfast. Dora was on duty, greeted them with enthusiasm and vanished into the kitchen. The place was quiet, and they settled in a booth, and five minutes later, Harry burst in with Joe Baxter and Sam Hall. He embraced Billy in a bear hug.
“Jesus, that was quick.”
“The way it happened, Harry,” Dillon said.
Salter turned to his nephew. “What was it like, Baghdad?”
“Well, it wasn’t like a Sinbad movie. It was pissing with rain most of the time. To be honest, Harry, I feel sorry for them.”
“So you got Selim?”
Dillon glanced at Ferguson, who nodded. “You might as well tell him.”
Which Dillon did, as Dora arrived with the breakfasts.
Afterward, Harry put an arm around Billy. “You young bastard, you’ve done it again.”
“We were lucky this time,” Billy told him. “Or at least Dillon was. If it hadn’t been for Novikova, he’d have been a dead man. That Makeev creep was a bad sod.”