Authors: Nick Oldham
Martin Beckham thanked him for the information, ended the call and redialled another number that was answered immediately.
âDo we have any resources in the north of England, Lancashire in particular?'
The question was directed to MI5's operations manager who chuckled and said, âIronically, yes.'
âWhy ironically?'
âWe have an SAS unit training. The irony being they're on land owned by our good friend, Sir Hugo Marchmaine.'
âAhh.' Beckham smiled. âAre they ready to roll?'
âAt a moment's notice, sir.'
When Beckham had finished briefing the ops manager, he hung up the phone and settled back into his bed. The figure next to him said sleepily, âWhat's going on?'
âNothing you need to know about. Now try to get back to sleep, Tom, my love.'
On the landing outside the tiny flat, Henry and Donaldson stared blankly at each other. Rik hovered close by.
Donaldson broke the silence. âWhere do we take it from here?'
âTalk to a murderer for a start,' Henry replied.
Ten minutes later Henry was entering the custody suite at Blackpool police station, Donaldson close behind. Henry walked straight past the custody officer into the cell complex.
Driver's cell door was open. A uniformed gaoler sat on a chair outside, keeping a suicide watch on the prisoner, who, still in the billowy forensic suit, was sitting up on the bench bed. The gaoler stood up, but Henry waved him back down, and stepped into the cell.
Driver looked up, his eyes raw. âCome to interview me in a cell?' he dared. âOut of order, isn't it?'
âI want to clear something up. Where exactly did you pick up Natalie Philips?'
âI don't know. I picked her up and killed her, isn't that enough?'
âWhere, exactly, did you find her in the first place?' Henry insisted.
Driver held a thumb and forefinger to the bridge of his nose. âI don't know. Somewhere just off the town centre. Not sure of the street name. I don't really know Blackpool that well.'
âIf I showed you a street map, could you pinpoint it?'
âMaybe, why?'
âI think the time for you asking why is long gone, don't you?'
Driver glared insolently at Henry, then his expression altered slightly and he dropped his arrogance. âSpringfield Road,' he said.
Just on the northern edge of the town centre.
âAnd what exactly did she have to say about shaving her boyfriend?'
Driver shrugged. âDunno. Sounded sexy, though. Shaved him and his two mates, apparently.'
There was a street map underneath the custody officer's desk. Henry and Donaldson inspected it, Henry putting his finger on Springfield Road, which was about a quarter of a mile from where Donaldson had first spotted Sadiq on the prom, clean-shaven and ready to explode. It was at least a mile away from the flat further north that had been under police observation, the one Sadiq and Rahman were believed to have been in.
âShe went with Sadiq to an address somewhere around here,' Henry said, his finger circling the street map. âHad sex with him and Akram, then they ditched her after she shaved them from head to toe â is what I think. Which is when Driver found her.'
âOK,' Donaldson said. âSo they had access to the apartment under surveillance, but they sure as hell did not prepare for their last journey there.'
âBingo,' Henry said. âYou said your insider found out there were three of them, not two â which fits. They used someone else's flat to prepare, and to have sex with Natalie.' He mulled it over, his mind suddenly alive again. âWe caught two of them, and you almost nailed Akram, which put a spanner in their works and obviously bomber number three was aborted.'
âAnd if what Flynn says is true, that Akram has come back to finish what he started, then there will be another one of them waiting for him. Akram himself won't be the third one, because he's the one who sends others to their deaths. So we were right â it's not over. He could be back in town right now, strapping explosives on to another poor schmuck. He needs to be there to push the buttons, metaphorically and literally.'
âThen again,' Henry said, âwe could be completely wrong.'
âI'd rather have egg off my face, H.'
âMe too,' Henry agreed. Henry led Donaldson back through the station corridors to Rik Dean's office, both wondering how best to come at the problem. Rik was in his office, and so was an exhausted looking Chief Constable Robert Fanshaw-Bayley. He had felt it his duty to turn out because of PC Driver's arrest.
âMorning, boss,' Henry said, his enthusiasm waning.
âAnd Mr Donaldson, too,' FB said. âSometimes I think you guys are joined at the hip. Anyhow, come in and grab a seat. DI Dean is just bringing me up to speed with PC Driver. Good arrest, Henry. Shame it's a cop. And you thought she might've been murdered by our terrorist friends.'
âNot a bad guess, based on the fluids inside her.'
âI know all that, but it wasn't them.'
âNo, but I'm sure she was with them in the hours before her unfortunate meeting with PC Driver.'
FB nodded, then looked at Donaldson. âAnd why are you back up in this neck of the woods?'
âOur terrorist friends.'
âMeaning?'
âAkram is back on UK soil,' he stated, then turned to Henry. âI know this guy, Henry. I've been on his tail since 1988. He's here in town, I feel it. He finishes jobs, and whether it's today or next week or next month, a lot of people in Blackpool are going to die en masse, but my guess is sooner not later. He's a quick operator. It would have all been set up until we spoiled it. He won't hang around. He's a busy guy, lots of people to kill the world over, and, according to my sources, there is someone else involved.' He paused â a little too dramatically for FB, but it was to good effect â and turned to the chief, âYou need to launch a manhunt â sir.'
âBastard laughed at me,' FB said. The chief had made a call to Beckham at MI5, while Henry and Donaldson went up to the canteen to order breakfast. He'd then climbed the stairs to the dining room, arriving red-faced and breathless and not a little annoyed.
A coffee and bacon sandwich were waiting for him and he dived on to them with gusto, tore a few mouthfuls from the sandwich, wiped his mouth and then declared Beckham's reaction to him.
Henry said, âWhat did he actually say?'
âI told him we suspected another person was involved and he said, “What, three?” I said, “Yes, is that correct?” He said no, but wanted to know where my information had come from, and I told him I wasn't at liberty to reveal my source.' FB looked pointedly at Donaldson, who experienced an unsettling quiver through his intestines, and not from the look or the food. âHe laughed and said, “From a Yank, I'll bet” â then he clammed up.'
âDid you press him on that?' Donaldson asked. FB shook his head. Donaldson fell silent and Henry watched him working through this new piece of information.
âTwo things,' Donaldson said at length. âI think I've been fed a hook, line and sinker here. They ensure that Edina â' Donaldson held up his hand to stop FB's question ââ hang on a minute  . . . they ensure Edina comes across some information that might be of value to me. In other words, they feed her what they think is false information to see if it surfaces somewhere, then they can backtrack it. And now it has surfaced â' he looked at FB â âand now she'll need to really watch her ass. She thought they were on to her, now it's for sure.' He shook his head at the enormity of the situation.
âYou said two things,' Henry reminded him.
âOh yeah. Thing is, therefore, MI5 don't actually know there's a third party involved. They don't know. They made it up, like spies do, to feed the “enemy” â me â a line.
They don't know.
They knew about the two lads and about Akram, but they haven't yet worked out that they set off from another location, just assumed, like us all, they managed to get out of the flat without the cops seeing them. Shit like that happens. They didn't even check the drains. I'll bet their scientists haven't found any traces of explosives or anything in that flat â because the lads simply lived in it, but didn't operate from it.'
âHalf-baked Intel,' FB spat. âAnd if it hadn't been for you guys, Blackpool would have been blown to smithereens.'
Henry blinked. FB handing out accolades. Almost unheard of.
âIt still might be,' Donaldson warned. âAkram is back in town. Don't forget Rahman's video  . . . “the big one is yet to come”.' He exhaled. âThat said, I need to make a phone call and warn somebody.'
As Donaldson stuffed the remainder of his bacon sandwich into his mouth, swilled it down with his coffee and got to his feet, Henry remembered something. It was eight fifty and Mark Carter was due to answer his bail at nine.
âI need to move, too.' Then Henry realized something else that he'd nearly forgotten. He put a hand on Donaldson's sleeve. âCome down to the front desk with me. Might be something, might not  . . . make your call on the way.'
Hung over, Mark Carter sat disconsolately in the public waiting area of the police station. He rocked slightly whilst waiting for the chance to get to the front counter and present himself, but there was a queue and he wasn't in a hurry. His face fell when Henry appeared and beckoned him across. Henry opened the door for him and led him through to the custody office, booking him back into the system.
âDo I need a brief?' Mark asked when the question of his rights came up.
Henry said, âNo.'
âCan I trust you?'
âNo. This way.' Henry steered him into an interview room and sat him down. âWe need to wait a minute for someone to arrive, then we need a serious talk.'
âOh, it's just been fun up to now, has it?' Mark sneered.
âC'mon babe,' Donaldson whispered into his phone as he listened to it ring out.
Then a man's voice came on. âHello, Edina Marchmaine's phone  . . . could I ask who's calling, please?' He had a southern accent and Donaldson was thrown slightly off kilter. Was this her husband, Hugo?
âCan I ask who that is, please? I'm calling to speak to Mrs Marchmaine.'
âMy name is PC Archer from the Metropolitan Police.'
âWhat are you doing with Mrs Marchmaine's phone?'
âI'm sorry, sir, but you need to tell me who you are.'
Feeling this ping-pong could go on for a while, Donaldson said â with dread â âAn old friend  . . . John Hancock from America,' a poor ad-lib, but all he could come up with there and then. âWe're due to have lunch today, Mrs Marchmaine and I.'
âI'm sorry,' the voice said, âbut Mrs Marchmaine has had an accident  . . .'
âA bad one?'
âI'm sorry to say, sir, but she died in a fall from her balcony last night  . . . you wouldn't happen to knowâ'
Donaldson hung up. He stepped aside as two office workers crushed past him on the stairwell. He had to grab the banister to steady himself and to swallow hard so as not to vomit.
EIGHTEEN
H
enry could not understand what the look on Donaldson's face meant when he came into the interview room. He could see there was an expression of deep shock, but beyond that he didn't have a clue. Henry looked at his friend with his own brow deeply furrowed and asked, âAre you OK?' Donaldson gave a quick shake of the head. Henry gave him a further â brief â puzzled look, then turned back to Mark Carter sitting at the interview room table.
âYou guys know each other,' Henry said. Mark and Donaldson had met as a result of Mark having witnessed a hit and run that had involved an Italian mobster who was hiding out, and ultimately the FBI. âI won't waste time on introductions.'
Henry expected Donaldson to offer at least a handshake, but nothing came.
Mark squinted at Henry, alcohol-induced pain behind his eyes, and said, âBig guns, eh? Brought in the Yanks.'
âMark, serious this,' Henry said. The lad shrugged insolently. Donaldson, seemingly in his own world, leaned back on the wall. To Henry, he seemed to have lost his focus all of a sudden. Ten minutes before he'd been excitedly jigsawing the pieces together, now he looked as though he didn't give a damn.
Phone call
, Henry thought. He said, âI'll get straight to itâ'
âHang on,' Mark interrupted. âFirst off,
do
I need a brief, or what? Second, I haven't heard you caution me. Third, why's the tape not turned on?'
There was a rapid blur of movement as Donaldson erupted without warning. He shot across the gap between him and the teenager, and before Henry could react, Mark was hoisted by his throat off the chair, which went over with a clatter, and found himself pinned hard against the back wall. Donaldson's face was less than an inch from Mark's, his features contorted with fury.
âListen, fucker,' he growled, âdon't make the mistake of thinking this is anything like a police interview. It isn't. This is about terrorists who kill fuckers like you. So sit and answer these questions or I'll make a point of seeing you outside these walls, then you can answer my questions.'
Donaldson swung Mark back around, righted his chair for him and plonked him back down into it.
Mark rubbed his neck, gasping for air, having realized that Donaldson was something different and dangerous. Nervously Mark said, âLook man, I didn't kill her. Honestly.'
Donaldson had returned to the wall, arms folded, as though he had expended no effort.
Henry, stunned for the moment, had not moved. He swallowed and wondered if he might sneak out of the room and submit his âIntention to Retire' report before he lost his job. He cleared his throat. âWe know you didn't. This is about her, but in a different way. You need to answer everything I ask truthfully, even if you're repeating gossip, OK?'