TV stations neither man recognized. Large satellite dishes were mounted on the roofs of the majority of the trucks, but most were folded down because the crews would be using the on-site facilities to relay the events being filmed in the stadium direct to the studios in the country where their TV stations were based.

Bronson and Weeks walked down the side of the fence, looking closely at every single truck as they passed it, alert to anything unusual or suspicious but, as far as they could tell, all the vehicles seemed to be legitimate. Several had their doors open as technicians and other staff bustled purposefully about, getting a few last items of equipment as the media circus prepared for the imminent opening ceremony.

“This is hopeless,” Weeks muttered, as they strode past yet another group of lorries. “There are just too many of them.”

Bronson shook his head.

“I don’t believe that Marcus is planning a suicide trip, for himself or for any of his men, so what we’re looking for, I guess, is a lorry that looks more or less the same as the others, but is probably locked and with nobody working anywhere near it.”

“Okay,” Weeks conceded. “I suppose that does narrow the field slightly.”

Bronson shook his head again. “We’re not going to achieve anything wandering about out here,” he said. “We have to get inside this compound right now, find the truck and work out how to stop the device from being triggered.”

He pointed at a set of gates wide enough for a truck to pass through easily, gates that were of course closed, and beside which was a smaller pedestrian gate set into the boundary fence, with a booth containing the security checkpoint beside it.

“Just follow behind me,” Bronson said, “because I’ve got a warrant card, and that should be enough to get us inside.”

Half the skill of being an impostor is attitude. People judge others by their bearing, by the way they walk or the way they talk, and Bronson and Weeks knew this as well as anyone. So as they approached the entrance to the compound where the trucks were parked, both men adopted a slight swagger, trying to exude confidence. They weren’t the only armed police in the area. Several pairs of officers were patrolling different parts of the Olympic Park, and that should also help them reach their objective.

The civilian staff member manning the entrance in a glass-fronted booth looked up as they approached.

Bronson stepped forward and held up his warrant card, Weeks right behind him, and strode up to the barrier.

“Let us through,” he instructed.

“What’s the problem, officer?”

“I didn’t say there was a problem,” Bronson replied.

“But we already have a police patrol covering this area. An unarmed patrol,” he added.

“And now you’ve got an armed patrol as well, okay? Nobody told you to expect us?”

“No.”

“So after you’ve let us through, you’d better check with whoever your supervisor is and find out who needs a swift kick in the nuts.”

The civilian gave a resigned nod and gestured for them to enter.

The two men strode on without a backward glance, crossed over to the parking area and then started working their way down between the lines of trucks.

“There’s something else that might help us,” Bronson said. “As far as I can see, none of these trucks are connected to external power, because the crews are using the built-in facilities in the media center. Before the Bell can be activated, it’ll need some form of power supply, so if you see a lorry that’s got a generator running, that could be it.”

And almost immediately, they found one. And the truck seemed to fit the bill in other respects as well. It had a Star of David painted on the side, was somewhat battered around the edges, and had the name of a television station that neither Bronson nor Weeks had ever heard of handwritten on the side panels. And from inside there was a distinct noise of some kind of a motor running.

“God, I hope this is it,” Bronson said. “Cover me, will you?”

Weeks stepped back a few paces and leveled his MP5 to cover the side of the truck over to Bronson’s right.

“Ready.”

Bronson nodded, readied his own weapon, then stepped forward and rapped smartly on the double side doors of the vehicle.

To his surprise, one of them opened almost immediately, and a man wearing blue jeans and a white shirt peered out.

“Hello?” he asked.

As soon as the man spoke, and Bronson could see into the truck behind him, he knew that it wasn’t the vehicle they were looking for. It was very obviously full of recording and other equipment, and he could now identify the noise he’d heard as a heavy duty air-conditioning unit, maybe with worn-out bearings.

Bronson looked at the man for a few seconds, then turned away, gesturing for Weeks to follow him.

“Wrong one,” he muttered.

He walked back to the end of the parked truck and turned right to continue the search.

53

27 July 2012

“Damn it!” shouted Bronson. “Keep looking. I’m certain it’ll have generators running inside. And the doors will probably be locked, because the weapon must be triggered by some kind of timing circuit.”

“I’ve got it,” Weeks nodded. “Bit of a bloody needle-in-a-haystack job, though. There must be hundreds of trucks here.”

That was a slight exaggeration, but there were a lot of trucks in the park.

They walked along the first double row of trucks side by side, looking at every vehicle they passed, searching for any that met the rough criteria Bronson had specified.

“Hang on a second,” Weeks said, as they reached the end of the row. “All these lorries are parked in a kind of herringbone pattern.”

“Yes.” Bronson nodded. “So what?”

“So if that bloke Georg was telling the truth, and the truck only arrived today, it’s probably been parked in one of the spaces off the central avenue. It can’t be in any of these other rows because those vehicles are boxed in by the trucks behind them.”

“Bloody good thinking, Dickie,” Bronson said.

They jogged over to the center of the truck parking area and started heading back the way they had come, checking the vehicles on both sides of them as they did so. They had almost walked back as far as the closed entrance gates before either of them saw anything that looked like a possibility.

And then it wasn’t something they saw, but rather something they heard.

Bronson stopped short and raised his hand. Even over the all-pervading noise of the crowds of people that surrounded the Media Center, he’d heard something distinctive: a deep rumble, overlaid with a higher-pitched mechanical noise, like a small petrol engine running at constant power. He turned his head to the left and right, trying to identify the source of the noise.

On the opposite side of the open central avenue was yet another of the heavy trucks, an articulated unit, the sides bearing logos that identified the vehicle as belonging to Karel TV in the Czech Republic, and a quick glance at the registration plate confirmed the truck’s origin.

“Dickie,” Bronson called, pointing across to the truck and starting to move. “Over there.”

Weeks trotted across the tarmac, following Bronson.

“You reckon this is it?”

“Maybe. There’s an engine of some sort running in this truck,” Bronson said as he stopped beside the truck

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