"Can you give me fuller descriptions?"
"I'll get the guard supervisor to call you with that information in a minute-he saw them, I didn't. Three: we have two injured people here, one who has been coshed and the other kicked in the head."
"How serious would you say the injuries are?"
She thought she had already told him that, but he seemed to be asking questions from a list. "The guard who has been coshed should see a doctor."
"Right."
"Four: the intruders were armed."
"What sort of weapons?"
Toni turned to Steve, who was a gun buff. "Did you get a look at their firearms?"
Steve nodded. "Nine-millimeter Browning automatic pistols, all three of them-the kind that take a thirteen-round magazine. They looked like ex-army stock to me." Toni repeated the description to Reid.
"Armed robbery, then," he said.
"Yes-but the important thing is that they can't be far away, and that van is easy to identify. If we move quickly, we can catch them."
"Nobody can move quickly tonight."
"Obviously you need snowplows."
"The police force doesn't have snowplows."
"There must be several in the area; we have to clear the roads most winters."
"Clearing snow from roads is not a police function; it's a local authority responsibility."
Toni was ready to scream with frustration, but she bit her tongue. "Is Frank Hackett there?"
"Superintendent Hackett is not available."
She knew that Frank was on call-Steve had told her. "If you won't wake him up, I will," she said. She broke the connection and dialed his home number. He was a conscientious officer; he would be sleeping by the phone.
He picked it up. "Hackett."
"Toni. Oxenford Medical has been robbed of a quantity of Madoba-2, the virus that killed Michael Ross."
"How did you let that happen?"
It was the question she was asking herself, but it stung when it came from him. She retorted, "If you're so smart, figure out how to catch the thieves before they get away."
"Didn't we send a car out to you an hour ago?"
"It never got here. Your tough coppers saw the snow and got scared."
"Well, if we're stuck, so are our suspects."
"You're not stuck, Frank. You can get here with a snowplow."
"I don't have a snowplow."
"The local council has several-phone them up."
There was a long pause. "I don't think so," he said at last.
Toni could have killed him. Frank enjoyed using his authority negatively. It made him feel powerful. He especially liked defying her-she had always been too assertive for him. How had she lived with him for so long? She curbed the retort that was on the tip of her tongue and said, "What's your thinking, Frank?"
"I can't send unarmed men chasing after a gang with guns. We'll need to assemble our firearms-trained officers, take them to the armory, and get them kitted out with Kevlar vests, guns, and ammunition. That's going to take a couple of hours."
"Meanwhile the thieves are getting away with a virus that could kill thousands!"
"I'll put out an alert for the van."
"They might switch cars. They could have an off-road Jeep parked somewhere."
"They still won't get far."
"What if they have a helicopter?"
"Toni, curb your imagination. There are no thieves with helicopters in Scotland."
These were not local hooligans running off with jewelry or banknotes-but Frank had never really understood biohazards. "Frank, use your imagination. These people want to start a plague!"
"Don't tell me how to do the job. You're not a cop anymore."
"Frank-" She stopped. He had broken the connection. "Frank, you're a dumb bastard," she said into the dead phone, then she hung up.
Had he always been this bad? It seemed to her that when they were living together he was more reasonable. Perhaps she had been a good influence on him. He had certainly been willing to learn from her. She recalled the case of Dick Buchan, a multiple rapist who had refused to tell Frank where the bodies were despite hours of intimidation, shouting, and threats of violence. Toni talked quietly to him about his mother and broke him in twenty minutes. After that, Frank had asked her advice about every major interrogation. But since they split up, he seemed to have regressed.
She frowned at her phone, racking her brains. How was she going to put a bomb under Frank? She had something over him-the Farmer Johnny Kirk story. If the worse came to the worst, she could use that to blackmail him. But first there was one more call she could try. She scrolled through the memory of her mobile and found the home number of Odette Cressy, her friend at Scotland Yard.
The phone was answered after a long wait. "This is Toni," she said. "I'm sorry to wake you."
Odette spoke to someone else. "Sorry, sweetheart, it's work."
Toni was surprised. "I didn't expect you to be with someone."
"It's just Santa Claus. What's new?"
Toni told her.
Odette said, "Jesus Christ, this is what we were afraid of."
"I can't believe I let it happen."
"Is there anything that might give us a hint about when and how they plan to use it?"
"Two things," Toni said. "One: they didn't just steal the stuff-they poured it into a perfume sprayer. It's ready to use. The virus can be released in any crowded place-at a cinema, on a plane, in Harrods. No one would know it was happening."
"A perfume spray?"
"Diablerie."
"Well done-at least we know what we're looking for. What else?"
"A guard heard them talk about meeting the client at ten."
"At ten. They're working fast."
"Exactly. If they deliver the stuff to their customer by ten o'clock this morning, it could be in London tonight. They could release it in the Albert Hall tomorrow."
"Good work, Toni. My God, I wish you'd never left the police."
Toni began to feel more cheerful. "Thanks."
"Anything else?"
"They turned north when they left here-I saw their van. But there's a blizzard, and the roads are becoming impassable. So they probably aren't far from where I'm standing."
"That means we have a chance of catching them before they deliver the goods."
"Yes-but I haven't been able to persuade the local police of the urgency."
"Leave that to me. Terrorism comes under the Cabinet Office. Your hometown boys are about to get a phone call from Number Ten Downing Street. What do you need-helicopters? HMS Gannet is an hour away from you."
"Put them on standby. I don't think helicopters can fly in this blizzard and, if they could, the crew wouldn't be able to see what's on the ground. What I need is a snowplow. They should clear the road from Inverburn to here, and the police should make this their base. Then they can start looking for the fugitives."
"I'll make sure it happens. Keep calling me, okay?"
"Thanks, Odette." Toni hung up.
She turned around. Carl Osborne stood immediately behind her, making notes.
2:30 AM
ELTON drove the Vauxhall Astra station wagon slowly, plowing through more than a foot of soft, fresh snow. Nigel sat beside him, clutching the burgundy leather briefcase with its deadly contents. Kit was in the back with Daisy. He kept glancing over Nigel's shoulder at the briefcase, imagining a car crash in which the briefcase was crushed and the bottle smashed, and the liquid was sprayed into the air like poisoned champagne ro kill them all.
He was maddened with impatience as their speed dropped to bicycle pace. He wanted to get to the airfield as fast as possible and put the briefcase in a safe place. Every minute they spent on the open road was dangerous.