‘I am. Your call is very timely, Pat.’ What was Fordwater up to?
‘Timely?’ Lanigan quizzed.
‘Tell me what you know about this character, Major Johnny Fordwater, Pat?’
‘Sure, that’s why I was calling you. Johnny Fordwater flew over from London to see me this week. I met with him and Matt Sorokin in my office. Fordwater’s a nice guy, I felt kind of sorry for him, you know. He recognized he didn’t have a cat in hell’s chance of recovering a cent, but he wanted to find some way of hitting back at the bastards who’d rinsed him. Both guys asked if I could use any of my contacts here in the NYPD or the FBI or the Secret Service Homeland Security teams.’
Grace felt a prickle of anxiety at what he was hearing. ‘Were you able to, Pat?’
‘I told them I’d been doing some digging around and it seemed the ringleaders are almost all based either out of Africa or Eastern Europe. I gave them a name I’d been given, of someone on your patch, Roy. Someone the FBI cybercrime unit has worked with in the past. This is one smart guy — he’s been an advisor to both Apple and Microsoft on cybersecurity. Recently retired from the Sussex Police Digital Forensics Team due to a health issue. Set himself up as an independent consultant investigating internet fraud. I’m told he’s the man.’
‘That’s Ray Packham!’
‘You’re kidding! You know him?’
‘I’ve used him many times — he’s been a huge help in a number of my investigations. We’ll get in contact with him right away. I really appreciate your help, Pat.’
‘No worries, pal. Any plans to be in New York?’
‘Well, actually Cleo did say a while back she’d love to go Christmas shopping there this year, if we had the time — and I have a load of annual leave owing. So maybe.’
‘Just let me know. I’ll pick you guys up from the airport, show you around, give you a great time.’
‘For sure!’
‘You got it.’
The moment he ended the call, Roy Grace opened the address book on his phone and looked for Packham’s number, thinking that the last thing he needed was a vigilante.
116
Friday 12 October
‘Roy!’ Ray Packham answered, sounding genuinely pleased to hear from him.
Grace cut to the chase. ‘I’ve got a fast-time situation, Ray. Can you tell me if a Major Johnny Fordwater has been in touch with you — he was given your details by a detective in the NYPD on Monday.’
‘Hmmm,’ Packham replied. ‘Not sure whether I should be pleading client confidentiality.’
Grace was unsure from the tone of his voice whether he was joking or not. ‘There’s possibly life at stake here, Ray.’
‘Mate, I’ll always give you priority over any client. Yes, he’s been in touch, came to see me on Tuesday. He’s a pretty angry man — and with good reason. He wanted to pay me every penny he has left in the world to track down the scammers who’d targeted him. I told him he’s up against very smart operators, who hide behind a virtually untraceable digital trail, and the best thing he could do was write-off what he had lost, put it down to experience and try to enjoy the rest of his life and what money he had left. But he wasn’t having it. He’s just dead set on revenge.’
‘So how did you leave it with him?’
‘He wanted to hire me to have a go at finding them. But I genuinely felt I couldn’t help him. Frankly, if I’d taken his money I would have been conning him, too, and I wouldn’t do that to anyone. I gave him the name of a contact I’ve had some dealings with, who’s made something of a speciality in the internet romance field, and told him he’d be better off spending his money with him.’
‘Who’s that, Ray?’
‘A PI called Jack Roberts — has a company called Global Investigations.’
‘Interesting.’
‘You know this character?’
‘I do, yes.’
‘Roberts has a great reputation — seems to be able to do a lot more for his clients than any of the current police forces around Europe.’
‘By taking the law into his own hands, Ray?’
‘I couldn’t possibly comment on his methods.’
Once again, Grace was unsure whether Packham was joking or not. But he was starting to have an idea what Major Johnny Fordwater might be doing at Primrose Farm Cottage.
And it wasn’t to enjoy a few hours of autumnal Sussex countryside.
Thanking Packham, he ended the call, then sat, absorbing what he had just been told. Thinking back to last week when he and Glenn Branson had met Jack Roberts in his company’s Kingston offices. When Roberts had, none too subtly, made clear his views on the ability of the police, with current resources, to effectively tackle internet fraud. And his chilling words.
I’ll give you one piece of advice. You’d better act fast and hard on this. Otherwise you’re going to find vigilantes doing your job for you.
So, he thought, Major Johnny Fordwater had gone to see Jack Roberts. Fordwater was angry, wanting to hit back at the scammers. Was Lynda Merrill also, possibly, a client of Roberts? Had Fordwater gone to Primrose Farm Cottage to protect her — or with the intention of confronting Jules de Copeland?
The bloody idiot was in danger of messing up his whole planned operation. He looked at his watch: 3.40 p.m. There was time. Should he send someone in to tell Fordwater to get the hell out of there?
He weighed up the pros and cons, and realized there was a definite pro to letting Fordwater remain in situ. If the retired major was in cahoots with Lynda Merrill and was planning to confront Jules de Copeland when he entered, he would be giving her protection until the police went in. The con was—
He was interrupted by a call from an officer at the Silver command centre. ‘Sir, Mike Whisky One has just called in a woman, fitting the description of Mrs Lynda Merrill, arriving at the cottage. The front door was opened by our mystery man and he has helped her unload several bunches of flowers and Waitrose carrier bags from her car, into the house.’
Grace began to panic. Could the intelligence he’d received be wrong? Were Lynda Merrill and Johnny Fordwater now lovers, having a romantic weekend together?
He’d put together this entire, huge and costly operation on the information from Aiden Gilbert’s team at Digital Forensics. What if they’d got it wrong and Copeland had slipped the net and left the country?
He didn’t even want to think about what Cassian Pewe would have to say. And yet.
He had to hold his nerve.
Had to remind himself that £300,000, in cash, was a lot of money. An amount worth taking a risk for. And from his past history, Copeland was a risk taker.
‘What else has happened during the day — have the CROPS reported any other activity?’
‘Nothing significant since the covert entry team, only the arrival of the postman around 1 p.m., and another van dropping what looks like an Amazon delivery, who left a package on the doorstep, about 2 p.m., sir.’
‘OK, patch the listening devices in the house through to me. Are the CROPS hearing it, too?’
‘They are, sir.’
Moments later, Grace followed the very clear dialogue between the couple.
It wasn’t the conversation of intimate lovers.
The woman said, ‘We need to find somewhere for you to hide.’
The man, in an upmarket voice, said, ‘What time is this runt meant to be arriving?’
‘Around 6.30.’
‘I’ll be ready. Just keep him sweet-talking. Tell him you’re going to fetch the cash and make him a drink. Whatever he wants.’
‘You’re not going to attack him?’
‘No, I just want to see the bastard face to face. See what he has to say. I’m wearing the wiretap Jack Roberts put on me. My goal is to get him to confess.’