Schofield frowned, thinking.
This was like building a jigsaw puzzle, piece by piece, until slowly a picture emerged. He had some pieces, but not the whole picture. Yet.
He said, 'So who does know, Mr Beaton? Where has MI-6 been getting all this top secret US information from?'
'The Mossad,' Beaton breathed. 'They have a field office in London at Canary Wharf. We managed to bug it for a few weeks last month. Trust me, the Mossad knows everything. They know about Majestic-12. They know about Kormoran and Chameleon. They know about every name on that list and why they are on it. They also know one other thing.'
'What's that?' Schofield said.
'The Mossad knows Majestic-12's plan for October the 26th.'
KING'S TOWER,
CANARY WHARF, LONDON
26 OCTOBER, 1200 HOURS LOCAL TIME
(1300 HOURS IN FRANCE—0700 HOURS E.S.T USA)
Book II and Mother rode up the side of the 40-storey King's Tower inside a speeding glass elevator.
The Thames stretched out before them, brown and twisting. Old London receded to the horizon, veiled in rain.
The Canary Wharf district stood in stark contrast to the rest of London—a crisp clean steel-and-glass business district that boasted skyscrapers, manicured parks, and no less than the tallest building in Britain: the magnificent Canary Wharf Tower. While much of London was faded 19th-century Victorian, Canary Wharf was crystal-cut 21st-century futurism.
Book and Mother rose high into the grey London sky. Four other glass elevators ferried people up and down the side of the King's Tower, identical glass boxes rushing past them in either direction.
Book and Mother wore civilian clothes: suede jackets, boots, blue-denim jeans and turtleneck jumpers that covered their throat-mikes. Each had a Colt .45 pistol wedged into the back of their
jeans.
A pretty young executive in a Prada suit stood in the lift with them, looking very small next to the broad-shouldered and shaven-headed Mother.
Mother inhaled deeply, then tapped the girl on the shoulder. 'I really love your perfume. What is it?'
'Issey Miyake,' the girl replied.
'I'll have to get some,' Mother smiled.
They'd made good time.
After entering British airspace under active stealth, Rufus had dropped them off at an abandoned airfield not far from London City Airport. From there they'd hitched a ride on a charter helicopter, piloted by an old friend of Rufus's. He'd dropped them at Canary Wharf's commercial heliport 15 minutes later.
Ping.
Their elevator stopped on the 38th floor. Book II and Mother stepped out into the enormous reception area for Goldman, Marcus & Meyer, Lawyers. Goldman Marcus occupied the top three floors of the tower—the 38th, 39th and 40th floors.
It looked like the reception area of a big city law firm—plush, spacious, great view. And indeed to the casual visitor Goldman Marcus was a full-service legal provider.
Only this wasn't just a law firm.
In amongst its many offices, meeting rooms and open-plan areas, Goldman Marcus's offices contained three rooms on the 39th floor that all the lawyers were forbidden to enter—rooms that were kept for the sole and exclusive use of the Mossad, the notorious Israeli Secret Service.
The Mossad.
The most ruthless intelligence service in the world, protecting the most targeted nation in history: Israel.
No other nation has experienced such a continued threat of terrorism. No other nation has been surrounded by so many openly hostile enemies—Syria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, not to mention the Palestinians inside its borders. No other nation has seen eleven of its Olympic athletes killed on international television.
So how has Israel dealt with this?
Easy. It finds out about foreign threats first.
The Mossad has people everywhere. It knows about international
upheaval before anyone else does, and it acts according to an immovable policy of 'Israel First, Last, Always'.
1960. The kidnap of the Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in
Argentina.
1967. The pre-emptive strikes on Egyptian air bases during the
Six Day War.
August 31, 1997. There had been a Mossad agent in the bar at the Ritz Hotel in Paris on the night Princess Diana died. He had been shadowing Henri Paul, Diana's driver.
It has even been said that the Mossad knew about the September 11 attacks on America before they happened—and didn't tell the Americans. Because it suited Israel to have the US enter the war on
Islamist terrorism.
In global intelligence communities, there is one golden rule: the
Mossad always knows.
'May I help you?' the receptionist's smile was polite.
'Yes,' Book II said. 'We'd like to speak to Benjamin Rosenthal,
please.'
'I'm afraid there is no-one here by that name.' Book II didn't miss a beat. 'Then please call the Chairman of Partners and tell him that Sergeants Riley and Newman are here to see Major Rosenthal. Tell him we're here on behalf of Captain Shane Schofield of the United States Marines Corps.' 'I'm terribly sorry, sir, but—'
At that moment, as if by magic, the receptionist's phone rang and after a short whispered phone call, she said to Book: 'The Chairman is sending someone down to collect you.'
One minute later an internal door opened and a burly man in a suit appeared. Book and Mother both registered the Uzi-sized bulge under his jacket— Ping.
An elevator arrived. Ping.
Then another one.
Book II frowned, turned.
The doors to the two elevators opened—
—to reveal Demon Larkham and his ten-man IG-88 assault squad.
'Oh, shit,' Book II said.
They came charging out of the elevators, dressed in their charcoal-black battle uniforms, their high-tech MetalStorm guns blazing.
Book and Mother flew over the reception desk together, just as the whole area around them was raked with whirring hyper-machinegun fire.
The burly man at the internal door convulsed under the barrage of gunfire and fell. The receptionist took a bullet in the forehead and snapped backwards.
Demon's team rushed inside, one man lagging behind to take care of the two civilians who had dived over the reception desk.
He rounded the counter and—
—blaml-blaml—
—received two bullets in the face from two separate guns. Book and Mother leapt to their feet, pistols smoking.
'They're here for Rosenthal,' Book said. 'Come on!'
It was like following in the path of a tornado.
Book and Mother entered the main office area.
Men and women in suits lay draped over desks, their bodies riddled with bloody wounds, their workstations smashed.
Up ahead, the IG-88 force stormed through the open-plan office area, their MetalStorm guns blazing.
Glass shattered. Computer monitors exploded.
A security guard drew an Uzi from beneath his jacket—only to be cut down by hypervelocity MetalStorm bullets.
The IG-88 men raced up a beautiful curving internal staircase, up to the 39th floor.
Book and Mother gave chase.
They reached the top of the staircase just in time to see three members of the IG-88 team break away from the others and enter an interrogation room, where they promptly killed two senior Mossad men and dragged a third—a young man who could only be Rosenthal—from the room. Rosenthal was thirty-ish, olive-skinned and handsome; he wore an open-necked shirt and he looked tired beyond belief.
Book and Mother wasted no time. They bounded off the stairs and took out the three bounty hunters, working perfectly as a pair—Book dropped the man on the left, Mother the one on the right, and both of them nailed the man in the middle, blowing him apart with their guns.