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'No.'

Beats of silence: Forty… fifty… a minute over! Duclos must have headed south or was coming north towards him! 'TLN-493 — he could be heading down towards you. If so, he should be passing any second.'

'Okay.'

But his radio stayed obstinately silent as the seconds passed: a minute over heading south, two heading north. The chances that Duclos was heading his way increased, and Dominic slowed — honing in closer on each passing car: type, colour and finally number among the glare of oncoming headlamps.

Still silence from the radio.

Duclos must be heading towards him, he'd have reached either of the other points by now. Dominic pulled over at the first farm turning on a flat stretch and backed in so that he was side-on to the traffic, ready to turn out quickly.

Dominic's nerves tensed. Any second now: scrutinizing each passing car, looking ahead two and three cars at the first hint of shape and form on the horizon, lights and shapes becoming a blur, headlamp star bursts as his eyes watered… Come on… come on!

He knew that if he saw Duclos now, there would be little subtlety left: he would just ram his car broadside and yank him out at gun point. But each car that at first looked hopeful, then finally when closer he saw wasn't Duclos, raised his panic another notch. And sunk him deeper into despondency; Duclos' smug face seeming to rise up increasingly out of each set of passing lights… fooled you… fooled you again!

Dominic made a final check with the other two cars: nothing. Then looked at his watch: 9.57 pm. Duclos wasn't going to show! Dominic became frantic. He banged his fist on the steering wheel. Where? For God's sake… where? He stared blankly at the map. They'd had Duclos cornered, and he'd disappeared into thin air!

There was hardly anything in the triangle left worth Duclos heading for: Le Luc and small nearby villages such as Le Cannet, a few small roads leading to farms. Unless Duclos had taken the N7 doubling back so that-

Dominic froze. Airfield! The small yellow square to the right of the triangle suddenly leapt out at him.

The TB20 Trinidad banked at 9,000 feet as it came over the last stretch of the Alpes Maritimes.

There was a thin cloud layer, ghostly mist racing towards them and clinging to the windscreen. Then after a minute they were through and the lights of the Cote D'Azur were ahead. The pilot started a descent to 6,000 feet as he prepared to bank again.

His passenger had hardly said a word throughout, and his presence had increasingly unnerved him. A stocky man in his late thirties named Hector whose Swiss French had an Italian or Spanish accent, wearing a padded leather jacket which made him look even bulkier. The only bit of good news was that Hector would be staying in Portugal with his pick-up. At least he would have the journey back without his company.

6,000 ft… 5,600… 5,200. He dropped in stages following the lights along the coast, then as he saw the lights of Toulon ahead, banked sharply for the final descent.

Darkness. All they could see was the shape of three grey hangars at the far end of the airfield and another two to their far right by a small office building. Nine aircraft in totaclass="underline" two to their right, four spread between the more distant hangars, and three on a flat tarmac area at the end of the main runway. But there were no lights, no movement or activity.

Dominic had arrived at the airfield at 10.02pm, a minute after the Le Luc car with two gendarmes. The driver, a sergeant named Pierre Giverny, informed him that it was much the same now as when he had arrived. 'Total darkness. No sign of activity.' What Giverny hadn't noticed as he'd pulled in was one of the three planes on the tarmac beyond the runway taxiing slowly, starting to move to position to take off. It braked and stood motionless as soon as his lights appeared. Duclos' car was out of sight, tucked behind the back of the furthest hangar.

Dominic was parked next to the gendarme's car: two sets of headlamps on full beam, probing expectantly into the darkness, though most of their effectiveness faded less than halfway along the main runway. Everything beyond was just vague, grey shadow.

'Perhaps I was wrong,' said Dominic. He looked thoughtfully towards the distant hangars and planes.

In the darkness of the plane's cockpit, Hector commented: 'Give them a moment more and they'll probably go.'

The pilot nodded with a pained smile. Hector had suddenly found his voice: police and night-time raids. Probably familiar ground.

Duclos consciously held his breath as he looked on at the figures in the distance, shadowy silhouettes alongside the headlamp beams. His nerves were racing out of control. One of the cars he was sure was Fornier's!

He saw the figures huddled together talking, looking towards them. A shiver ran up his spine, his whole body suddenly shuddering. Then after a second they turned, seemed to be making their way back towards their cars.

'See!' Whispered, almost breathless exclamation from Hector.

Duclos thought Hector might have been a navigator, until he'd slipped in the back when Duclos had first got in. Hector's presence behind him made him uneasy. A final soupcon of tension he could have done without after the mounting panic of the day. Duclos felt his stomach in knots, his nerves breaking close to the edge.

Dominic got back into his car, starting her up. He moved forward, starting to turn… then suddenly stopped. He looked thoughtfully back at the runway fifty metres ahead, its long expanse of darkness and the planes and hangars at its end.

'What's he doing?' Duclos hissed. A frozen silence with no answer between them in the confined darkness of the cockpit. Only slow breathing, waiting. Then: 'Oh God… Jesus!' As Duclos saw the lights straighten, start to head towards them.

'Go… Go!' Hector shouted. 'Get going!' He took out a gun and waved it, though the pilot was unsure if it was as a threat or to fire at the oncoming car.

The pilot started up and jolted forward, completing the turn quickly so that they were in line with the runway. Then he throttled up high, starting to roll forward furiously.

The car had almost covered the fifty metres of tarmac beyond, was approaching the beginning of the runway…

The plane shook and rattled as they picked up speed. The pilot knew that once the car had covered half of the runway, it would be too late, they would be blocked from take off. He bit at his lip. It was going to be close.

80… 90…. He watched the speedometer climb quickly to over 100 kmph. But he could see that the car had already covered almost quarter of the runway.

'Are we going to make it?' asked Duclos. He was trembling, though he wasn't sure if it was more fear of collision or them not getting away.

'I don't know.'

As the reach of the car's beam hit them, the pilot switched on his own lights. A stronger marker of their own presence, hopefully intimidating, a deterrent. The car seemed to falter slightly before picking up speed again. The second car had also now started following, was just touching the start of the runway.

'Don't worry,' Hector said. 'As soon as he sees we're serious, we're not stopping — he'll back off.' But his undertone wavered; even Hector now wasn't sure.

As the airplane lights hit Dominic, he'd braked slightly on impulse — it suddenly appeared more ominous, threatening — before steeling himself again.

His first intention had been purely to investigate the planes and hangars ahead, so one of the planes moving suddenly from the group had surprised him. Turning quickly to panic as he realized it was turning, positioning, was starting along the runway. Making a bid for escape!