‘The good news is that Harvey was clear. There was no one on his tail.’

‘And what’s the bad news?’

‘The two men who followed you are sitting outside in a van.’

Shepherd checked his rear-view mirror but Malik’s Golf was nowhere to be seen. He slowed to sixty. ‘I’ve lost eyeball,’ he said into his radio mic.

‘Delta One, I have them,’ said the driver of the surveillance vehicle closest to the VW. ‘We’re just coming up to junction three. All clear.’

Delta One was in a white Transit van with the name of a building company on the side. There were another two MI5 vehicles following Malik and Chaudhry. Delta Two was a middle-aged lady in a Mini and Delta Three was a young man in a suit at the wheel of a Ford Mondeo. All were highly trained in counter-surveillance and took it in turns to get close to the VW and check for anyone following.

Shepherd was in his Volvo and had been ahead of them since they had joined the M1. Prior to getting on the motorway Malik had carried out two simple anti-surveillance measures. He’d gone completely round a roundabout and exited without indicating, and he’d made a left turn after indicating right. Both times the VW had been closely followed by one of the MI5 surveillance team.

By the time the VW had joined the M1, the surveillance team were sure that there was no one following, but they had continued to keep the car under observation while Malik changed his speed according to Shepherd’s instructions: a spell at 80 mph was followed by five minutes at 50 mph. When they had reached junction two he indicated that he was going to leave the motorway but at the last moment changed lanes and continued heading north.

‘Let’s go on to junction four, just to be on the safe side,’ said Shepherd.

‘Delta One, junction four,’ echoed Delta One.

‘Delta Two, junction four.’

‘Delta Three, junction four.’

They carried on up the M1 to the fourth exit. It was starting to rain as Shepherd arrived at the Gateway Services and he switched on his wipers. He parked well away from the main buildings. Five minutes later Malik’s Golf arrived and parked four bays to the left of Shepherd’s Volvo. The rain was falling heavier, pitter-pattering on the roof of the car. Shepherd switched off the engine.

The three MI5 vehicles parked at various points around the car park. In the rear of the van there were two men in work clothes with holstered Glocks.

Shepherd climbed out of his Volvo, turned up the collar of his jacket and hurried over to Malik’s Golf. He got in the back and wiped the rain from his face. ‘Great weather for ducks,’ he said.

‘What does that mean anyway?’ said Malik. ‘I don’t see ducks looking particularly happy when it rains.’

Chaudhry punched his friend lightly on the shoulder. ‘Chill,’ he said.

‘Chill? We’ve had to drive to the arse end of nowhere again. Why couldn’t we meet in London?’

‘Because we don’t want to risk being seen. This way we can wipe your arse and know that no one sees us.’

‘Wipe our arse?’ asked Malik. ‘What do you mean?’

‘It’s how the surveillance boys refer to anti-surveillance,’ said Shepherd. He grinned. ‘Don’t worry, your arses are clean.’

‘So what’s the story?’ asked Chaudhry.

Shepherd took an envelope out of his jacket. ‘The van was outside your flat for most of the evening.’ He took out a photograph and showed it to Chaudhry. It was of a white van parked in a side street. There were two Asian men sitting in the front. ‘These are the guys,’ he said. ‘They stayed there until the lights went out. Then they drove to Willesden. They’re driving up to Scotland now. We’re tailing them to find out where they go. The good news is that they don’t seem to be pros. We didn’t see any sign of counter-surveillance activity. We’ve run a trace on the van and it’s registered to a trading company in Glasgow.’

‘Why would they send someone from Glasgow?’ asked Malik, taking the photograph from Chaudhry.

Shepherd ignored the question. He took two more photographs from the envelope, head-and-shoulders shots that looked as if they had come from a passport application. ‘Recognise them?’ he asked Chaudhry.

Chaudhry pointed at one of the pictures. ‘That’s the guy I saw,’ he said. ‘How bad is this, John? If it was serious they wouldn’t have gone back to Scotland, would they?’

‘They’re both British-born. Brothers. Their parents are from Pakistan.’ Shepherd tapped the photograph of the older of the two men. ‘Salman Hussain,’ he said. ‘He’s not on any watch lists and he’s not on the PNC, which is why we think they’re not pros.’

‘PNC?’ repeated Malik. ‘What’s that?’

‘Police National Computer,’ said Shepherd. ‘It means he’s never been in trouble with the police.’

He held up the other photograph. ‘This is his younger brother, Asad Hussain. Also not known to the police or the security services.’

Chaudhry frowned. ‘Asad? Asad and Salman?’

‘You know them?’

Chaudhry ran a hand through his hair. ‘Bloody idiots,’ he said. ‘Stupid bloody idiots.’

‘Who are they?’ asked Shepherd.

Chaudhry sighed and slumped back in his seat. ‘My dad’s trying to marry me off to this girl, the daughter of a friend of his. Jamila Hussain. She’s a student at UCL. I’ve been out for dinner with her a few times.’ He gestured at the photographs. ‘These idiots are her brothers. They’re obviously getting all protective over her, checking out that I’m suitable.’

‘By following you?’

‘Checking that I don’t have a girlfriend and that I’m not in the pub every night. Making sure that I’m a good Muslim and that I wouldn’t sully their virginal sister.’

‘And probably making sure that you’re not white,’ said Malik. He grinned at Shepherd. ‘No offence.’

‘None taken,’ said Shepherd. He looked at Chaudhry. ‘You’re sure, Raj?’

Chaudhry nodded. ‘I haven’t met them but she mentioned them a few times. Asad and Salman. Salman’s pretty fundamentalist but his dad keeps him in check. Asad’s more easy-going but they’re both very protective about Jamila. She said she had a real problem convincing them that she’d be okay in London on her own. In their eyes it’s worse than Sodom and Gomorrah.’ He smiled apologetically. ‘I’m sorry about that,’ he said. ‘Wasting everybody’s time.’

Shepherd put the photographs back in the envelope. ‘Hey, don’t worry about it,’ he said. ‘I’m just glad it had a happy ending. And it shows that the training we did worked just fine. You spotted the tail and we checked it out and no one’s the wiser.’

‘Are you telling me this has all been a waste of time?’ asked Malik.

‘Better safe than sorry,’ said Shepherd. ‘Think of it as another training exercise.’

‘And you’ll pay for my petrol, right?’

Shepherd took his wallet out of his pocket. ‘No problem, Harvey.’

Malik and Chaudhry were sitting on the sofa watching TV when Malik’s mobile rang. He looked at the screen but didn’t recognise the number. He frowned over at Chaudhry. ‘Dunno who it is.’ he said. ‘Do you think it’s Khalid?’

‘Tell you what, brother, why not press the green button and you’ll find out?’

Malik took the call.

‘Harvey?’ It was a girl.

‘Yes?’

‘It’s Nadia.’

‘Nadia?’

‘You’ve forgotten me already? Oh dear.’

Malik grimaced. The girl in the library. ‘Sorry, yes, Nadia, yeah, of course. Hey. How are you?’

‘I’m fine,’ she said. ‘But my laptop’s given up the ghost. I couldn’t ask a huge favour. .?’

‘Sure, you want me to have a look at it?’

‘Would you, Harvey? That would be great. I’ve got an essay here that’s got to be in tomorrow and the thing won’t even boot up. You couldn’t come round here now, could you?’

Вы читаете False Friends
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату