Nichols panned the sensor over the scene. He could just make out the figures in the street and hear the engines of the vehicles but the intense heat of the day made it hard to distinguish much.
‘Come on, you bastard,’ muttered Slater. ‘Where are you hiding?’
‘Got him,’ said Nichols. ‘West, about four hundred metres. Two figures on top of a building.’
‘A sniper and his spotter,’ said Slater. He moved the joystick to the left and increased the magnification, found the two figures and zoomed in. The men filled the screen. One was holding a rifle. ‘We have a target confirmed,’ he said.
‘Let’s do it,’ said Howell.
Slater hit the laser illuminator button that bathed the two figures with invisible light. ‘Target locked,’ he said.
‘Missile away,’ said Howell. He pressed the button that launched one of the Predator’s two Hellfire missiles. The Thiokol solid-propellant rocket motor kicked into life and the missile roared away. It had an effective range of almost eight thousand metres but the two men on the roof were much closer than that. Within seconds the five-foot-long missile had reached its maximum speed of Mach 1.3. The laser seeker in its nose locked on to the laser light illuminating the two men and the missile changed direction so that it was heading straight for them. Just behind the sensors and computer in the nose was the missile’s payload, an eight-kilogram charge capable of destroying a tank.
Shepherd knelt beside Mitchell, staring in horror at the wound in his friend’s skull. It was fatal, no doubt about it. Mitchell’s chest was still heaving and his legs were twitching but the movements were reflex. Mitchell was dead, but his body hadn’t realised it yet. The bullet had hit him in the right cheekbone and blown out a big chunk of his head. Clumps of bloody brain matter were smeared across the pavement and his left eye dangled from a blood-filled socket.
Shepherd groped for Mitchell’s hand and squeezed it. ‘I’m sorry, Geordie,’ he whispered. The hand trembled, then went still. The legs stopped twitching. The chest rose and fell for the last time. Blood continued to ooze from the head wound but no longer pulsed. The heart had stopped.
‘Spider, get to cover!’ shouted the Major. He and O’Brien were behind one of the Humvees, while Shortt and two American soldiers had rolled behind the Bradley.
Yokely had stood his ground. He was scanning the surrounding buildings.
‘Richard, get the hell down!’ shouted the Major.
‘Fuck him,’ said Yokely. ‘He doesn’t scare me. Can you see him, Spider?’
Shepherd kept hold of Mitchell’s lifeless hand. Snipers usually operated between two hundred and six hundred metres. Any closer and there was too big a chance of being spotted by the target; further, and the shot was too difficult. Mitchell had been standing with his back to the building when he’d been shot, so Shepherd concentrated on an arc away from Mitchell, his eyes darting from side to side. ‘Where the hell is he?’ he muttered.
‘Spider, get the hell over here!’ shouted the Major.
Shepherd made out a dark shape on the roof of a building. As he stared he caught a flash of light: the sun glinting off a scope. ‘I see him,’ he shouted, and pointed. Yokely squinted and raised his M16.
The Sniper’s finger tightened on the trigger. There was virtually no wind. He took a breath, let half out, then centred his sights on the face of the man kneeling next to the one he’d shot.
‘He sees us,’ said the Spotter.
The Sniper ignored him. The American soldiers had M16s and they were too far away to reach him. The turrets of the Bradleys were pointed in the wrong direction and the men operating the machine-guns on the roofs of the Humvees had ducked inside their vehicles. He had plenty of time to make the kill and escape. All the time in the world. He smiled and started to pull the trigger.
He never heard the Hellfire missile because it was flying at thirty per cent faster than the speed of sound. He never felt the heat of the blast or any pain as the impact fuse detonated the eight kilograms of high explosive and blasted him and his spotter into fragments no bigger than a fingernail in a fraction of a second. One moment he was alive, about to squeeze the trigger and whisper, ‘ Allahu Akbar,’ the next he was dead.
Shepherd flinched at the explosion. Out of the corner of his eye he’d seen the missile streak through the azure sky, leaving behind a thin white trail, but hadn’t realised what it was until the top of the building had exploded in a ball of flame. The noise was deafening and his ears were ringing as the thick plume of smoke spiralled up into the sky.
The Major and O’Brien came out from behind the Humvee. ‘What the hell was that?’ asked Armstrong.
‘A Hellfire missile,’ said Yokely. ‘Courtesy of my guardian angels.’
Shepherd gazed at Geordie. The Sniper was dead. There was no question of that. But so was Geordie Mitchell, and he had been worth a hundred Iraqi snipers.
Three days later
Shepherd checked himself in the hall mirror. Black suit, white shirt, black tie. His funeral outfit. ‘You look very smart, Daniel,’ said Moira, behind him. ‘You should wear a suit more often.’
‘The job doesn’t always call for it, Moira.’
She adjusted his tie. ‘Maybe you should look for a job where a suit is the usual attire.’ She took a step back and flicked a speck off his shoulder. ‘The last time you wore it…’
‘I know,’ he said quickly. Sue’s funeral.
Liam came out of the sitting room. ‘Why can’t I come?’ he asked.
‘It’s a memorial service, not a party,’ said Shepherd. ‘And you didn’t know him. He was someone I knew at work.’
‘How did he die?’ asked Liam.
‘Liam!’ said Moira, shocked. ‘That’s not a polite question to ask.’
‘That’s okay, Moira,’ said Shepherd, and put a hand on his son’s shoulder. ‘He was killed in Iraq.’
‘What happened?’
‘He was shot.’
‘It’s a terrible place,’ said Moira. ‘I don’t understand why our troops are there. That Mr Blair has a lot to answer for.’
‘Was he a soldier, Dad,’ asked Liam, ‘like you?’
‘Yeah. He was in the SAS with me. He helped me when I was shot in Afghanistan.’
‘So that’s why you’re going to his funeral?’
‘It’s not a funeral, Liam. He was cremated in Iraq. This is a memorial service where we all get together and say goodbye to him.’
‘Just be thankful your father isn’t a soldier any more,’ said Moira. ‘He doesn’t have to go to terrible places like Iraq.’
Shepherd’s mobile rang and he took it out of his jacket pocket.
‘I hope that’s not work,’ said Moira, disapprovingly.
‘So do I,’ said Shepherd, and looked at the screen. It was Jimmy Sharpe. He took the call and walked into the sitting room.
‘Have you seen the news?’ asked Sharpe.
‘About you threatening the guy who bought my house?’
‘What?’
‘You know what, Razor. You threatened the guy who bought my house. Threatened to have his company turned over.’
‘It wasn’t like that,’ said Sharpe. ‘We just had a chat.’
‘Razor, aren’t you in enough trouble already? If Charlie finds out, she’ll hit the roof.’
‘Charlotte Button is going to have a hell of a lot more to worry about than me,’ said Sharpe. ‘It’s on Sky News now but it’ll be all over the media within the next few hours.’
‘What the hell are you talking about?’
‘The Birmingham cops have just shot the wannabe terrorists.’
‘You’re joking.’
‘Yeah, I called you up to make you laugh. The armed cops went in on the back of local intelligence, something about anthrax or a chemical bomb. The guys had the Ingrams we sold them and it all went tits up. Three dead, one’s in intensive care.’
‘And did they find the bomb?’
‘My guy says no they didn’t. Just the guns.’
‘Shit.’
‘Yeah, deep, deep shit. But I guess we’re in the clear. It was an Anti-Terrorist Branch case, so it’s their fault for not liaising with the local cops. Just thought you’d like to know. Button said you were taking some time off. When are you back in harness?’