detail had been obscured. A big headline said:
WELL, I’LL BE
BUGGERED,
MR BRECHAN!
Niemand took the newspaper from the next table when he sat down with his breakfast on a styrofoam tray. The story was about a politician called Brechan, filmed having sex with someone called Gary. Gary was quoted as saying: ‘Look about fifteen, don’t I? That’s why they like me. I’m twenty-two. Believe that? Anyway, Angus passed me on to this other bloke. Not a clue till I saw him on telly. Oh my god, I said to…’ Niemand ate the scrambled eggs, powdered eggs, and the small tasteless meat patty and the piece of extruded bacon. He didn’t mind food like this. It was assembly-line cooking, reasonably clean. They couldn’t risk people getting ill. Counter-productive. Easier to be hygienic. Just like the military.
He turned the page. The story went on. Three politicians were involved but the others weren’t named. The writer said they would be: tomorrow.
The writer’s name was Caroline Wishart. There was a picture of her above her byline. She had long hair and her nostrils were pinched as if she were drawing a big breath, sucking in air. He sat and thought, eyes on the street. London was much dirtier than he remembered, more poor people, more junkies.
A face. Inches away, beyond the glass, bulging hyperthyroid eyes stared at him, a woman in a knitted hat, dirt marks on her face, ash smears, darker marks. She tapped on the glass, a hand in a cotton gardening glove with its fingers cut off at the second joint.
Niemand looked away. The woman tapped again, angrily, then gave up. He watched her go. Her crammed plastic bag was splitting. Soon her possessions would begin to fall out, just more rubbish on the street.
He couldn’t deal with Kennex Imports. They wouldn’t send a fat and a slow the next time. He was well ahead, he had Shawn’s money. He should cut his losses, take a ferry to France, Holland, Belgium, anywhere, post the tape to a newspaper or a television station.
But he didn’t like being thought of as something they could simply squash, a capsule of blood, like a tick. They had tried to get the tape for nothing. Next to nothing. The price of hiring a fat and a slow.
What was the tape worth?
He found the newspaper’s telephone number in the middle of the paper, on the opinion page. They kept him on hold for a long time.
He had to listen to a news radio station. Then she came on.
‘Caroline Wishart,’ she said, a voice like the women on English television, the newsreaders who could talk without moving their lips.
He used his Glasgow accent again. ‘I’ve got something that will interest you,’ he said. ‘A film. Much more important than that article today.’
‘Really,’ she said, dry. ‘I get a lot of calls like this.’
‘A massacre in Africa.’
‘A lot of that goes on.’
‘Soldiers killing civilians.’
‘What, the Congo? Burundi?’
‘No. White soldiers. Americans.’
‘American soldiers killing civilians in Africa? Somalia?’
‘No. This is…it’s like an execution.’
‘You’ve got a film?’
‘Yes.’
‘What’s your name?’
‘Doesn’t matter. Just give me five minutes of your time.’
He heard her sigh. ‘You’ll have to come here. Not today, today’s impossible.’
‘Has to be today.’
‘Are you, ah, offering this film for sale?’
‘Twenty thousand pounds.’
Caroline Harris laughed. ‘I don’t think you’ve come to the right place.’
‘See it and decide,’ said Niemand.
She laughed again. ‘Are you a crank? No, don’t answer that. Let me see, ah…twelve noon.’
She gave him the address. ‘Tell reception you’ve got an appointment. Give me a name.’
‘Mackie,’ he said, seeing in his mind’s eye the little redheaded killer, the empty blue eyes, the big freckles. ‘Bob Mackie.’
16
…HAMBURG…
Anselm sat in the driver’s seat of the Mercedes and watched the ferry heading for the landing. It was a windy day, tiny whitecaps on the water, windsurfers out, three of them, insouciant, skidding over the cold lake on a broad reach.
‘Noisy,’ Tilders said. ‘May not work.’ He had a scope suspended from roof brackets trained on the boat. It was an English instrument made for military use with an image-stabilised lens, 80x magnification. A small LCD colour monitor sat on the console. He fiddled with the plug in his ear. Its cord ran to a black box on his lap.
They had nailed Serrano inside the hotel. He was alone, bodyguard no longer needed. In the lobby, a frail- looking old man crossed his path, stumbled and fell. For a moment, it looked as if Serrano was going to walk around him, then he bent down, put out a helping hand. The old man got up shakily, leaned on Serrano for a few seconds, thanked him profusely. Serrano continued on his way to the restaurant for breakfast.
Outside, in the car, they waited. Tilders was looking upwards, pensive. Then he closed his eyes, nodded.
‘Working,’ he said. ‘Orange juice, eggs Florentine.’
Serrano was now wearing a micro-transmitter.
‘Working,’ said Tilders.
In the BMW, watching the ferry, Anselm raised his right hand, the hand that worked fully, mimed. Tilders raised the volume.
Serrano, speaking German:
Kael:
Serrano:
Kael:
Serrano:
The transmission went fuzzy, fragmented for about five seconds, abrasive sounds.
Serrano:
Kael:
Kael:
Serrano:
Kael:
Serrano:
Kael:
Serrano: