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He wasn’t so far away from the truth. We were out on the roads around Einsbaden, which seemed to be made up of a mixture of twisting humps and dips, and deceptive fast open stretches like a rally stage. Working out one from the other was the tricky part.

If you got it wrong there was an interesting selection of landing sites on offer, from solid-looking sheaves of timber to rocky drop-offs deep enough to qualify for the title of ravine. Some of them did indeed have water in the bottom of them. Great. Survive the fall and you drown. All in all, it was a combination designed to make the most proficient driver nervous.

I was terrified.

The idea was that we were there to practise our general driving skills and observation. In theory, I was supposed to be giving a running commentary of the sparse other traffic and spotting possible obstacles or likely spots for an ambush. In reality, I was just hanging on for grim death to the mechanics of actually controlling the car.

Fortunately, Figgis proved less hair-trigger than the other instructors. Maybe because he realised that if he yelled to the point where one of his pupils froze, they were likely to put their foot down and head for the trees.

Out of a vehicle he was a tall, almost ungainly figure, with rounded shoulders and arms that seemed to swing loose and disconnected around his body. Put him behind the wheel, though, and there didn’t seem to be anything the man couldn’t make a motor car do.

He’d given us a demonstration drive before we started and his skill was uncanny. He’d make some casual, unhurried movement with his hands and feet, and all of a sudden the car had swapped ends and you were hurtling backwards, but still going in the same direction that you had been. The easier he made it look the more difficult I knew it was going to be for any of us to replicate the manoeuvre.

“That’s much better,” he said ten minutes later, when I’d successfully navigated my way along a contorted stretch of open road. “You’ve got a great eye for a line through a corner, Charlie. It’s just your clutch control that stinks.”

“It’s not logical,” I complained. “Why on earth do you operate something as straightforward as a gear shift with your hand, but something as delicate as a clutch with your boot? Now on the bike it’s—”

Another car overtook us suddenly then, so quick and so close that the shock of it made me twitch towards the side of the road and Figgis had to grab the wheel to steady us. I caught the briefest snapshot of a big dark saloon with four men in it as the driver flashed past. They all seemed to be staring intently at us.

“Somebody’s in a bloody hurry,” Figgis muttered once we’d straightened out again and my nerves had settled, but his eyes had narrowed. He shifted round in his seat. “Right everyone, tell me everything you remember about that car. Every detail. You first of all, Charlie. How long’s it been following us?”

I did some frantic mental searching. “He closed on us at such a rate that I’m not entirely sure,” I admitted, “but we passed a crossroads on a long straight about two klicks back, and I’m pretty sure he wasn’t behind us before that.”

Figgis nodded, and Romundstad gave him the fact it was a black Peugeot 406. Someone else had caught the registration number. They’d noted the number of occupants, too.

“This all part of the exercise, yes?” Romundstad asked.

Figgis grinned at him. “We like to see how awake you all are.”

But as he faced front again I caught the anxiety in his face, the deep frown. As though aware of being watched, he flicked his eyes sideways and I jerked mine back onto the road ahead.

Something about his expression niggled at me, but it wasn’t until we got back to the Manor that I put my finger on it.

We pulled up to change teams on the rough car park behind the house to find another of the Audis already there, stopped at an angle with the doors open. Everybody was standing around the car watching two men face off as if for a fight.

I stopped quickly and we all jumped out. Ran across to see what was happening.

McKenna had his nose stuck under Major Gilby’s and was yelling at him, arms waving. The lad’s pale complexion was slashed with pink across his cheekbones as though he’d been slapped, and all the cords stood out in his neck. The Major was so stiff you could have ironed shirts on him. O’Neill was trying, not too successfully, to calm McKenna down and pull him away.

“What the hell’s going on?” Figgis asked Blakemore, who was standing watching the tableau with his arms folded, not making any moves to intervene.

“Oh, they were buzzed by some heavies in a Peugeot,” I heard Blakemore reply. “Nearly ran them off the road, apparently, and McKenna’s gone off at the deep end about it being dangerous.”

“Is that so?” Figgis murmured. “The same thing happened to us.”

Blakemore glanced at him sharply, and it was then that the niggle unfolded fully. I realised why I’d had the feeling that Figgis was lying when he’d said our near miss was all part of the game plan.

I’ve always been good with faces. I knew I’d caught enough of a glimpse of the men in the Peugeot to recognise them if I saw them again. But, if they were all part of the Einsbaden staff, how come I hadn’t known them already?

I don’t know how truly unnerved Gilby was by McKenna’s outburst, or by the fact that his pupils were being harassed. He was either being very calm about it, or he didn’t fully realise the dangers that had been involved.

Either way, after that he sent the cars out in pairs. There were no more sightings of the black Peugeot or its occupants. Even though we were keeping more than a careful eye out for them.

Trouble was, that didn’t necessarily mean they weren’t there. Maybe they were just being a lot more stealthy.

Six

“They’re pushing us hard,” I said. “All those damn silly exercises that are designed to break you rather than get you fit. It’s like being back in bloody basic training.”

“And I know how much you enjoyed that,” Sean said, his voice made vaguely unfamiliar by the limitations of the mobile phone. “Didn’t stop you passing out top of your class though, did it?”

It was difficult to read the hidden shifts and meanings in his tone without being able to see his face as he spoke. I couldn’t tell if I was reading too much into his words, or was taking them too lightly.

“Yeah,” I murmured. “It was a laugh a minute.”

I shivered more closely into my jacket, jamming the phone against my ear to keep out the wind. I’d wanted somewhere private to call Sean after supper and the only place I could be sure of getting it was outside, despite the dark and the cold.

I’d found a staircase leading to the roof and a door that was only secured by bolts, rather than lock and key. Almost the entire roof of the Manor was flat, with a low wall that made up the facade of the building.

I sat in the lee of a chimney stack with my back against the stonework, and kept one eye on my exit. If anyone found the door open and shut it again without me realising it, I was likely to freeze to death up there before morning.

“So, how are you coping?” Sean asked.

“With what?” I said, a little sharply. Somehow I knew it wasn’t just the training he was talking about. It put my back up that he could still so accurately pinpoint my weaknesses. It had always been his speciality.

Right from the first moment I’d seen him I’d known that Sean Meyer was a danger to me. I was one of only three women who’d fought their way through selection to make it onto the Special Forces course. Sean, like the rest of the instructors, seemed to instantly zero in on the three of us as the candidates mostly likely to be the first drop-outs. There was nothing natural about the means of their selection.