Chapter Eighteen
Lee
'Anything?' I asked.
'No. Just static,' replied Tariq.
'And you're sure you got the frequency right?'
'Of course.'
'And the clock's right?'
'She said three every morning. She'll be here, Lee. Relax.'
The radio gave two bursts of white noise.
'That's her.' Tariq pressed the speak button on the Stryker radio and squawked back four times. There was a pause and then the radio crackled into life.
'That you, Tramp?' It was Sue, whispering.
'Yes. Where are you?'
'South perimeter. There's a firing range by the fence.'
'I know where she is,' said Jack. 'We can be there in five minutes.'
'Did you hear that, Lady?'
'Sure did. There are perimeter patrols, so go carefully. I'll be waiting.'
'See you soon.' Tariq clicked the radio off and we primed our weapons.
We had parked the armoured car in woodland close to the base. Although we'd encountered no patrols or guards of any kind, Blythe had begun stamping his authority on the area.
We'd passed Stonehenge on the way to the base; the ancient stone circle was full of staked soldiers, hundreds of them, lined up in concentric circles, staring at the stars, like an offering to an ancient God.
We had no doubt that we'd suffer a similar fate if we were caught. I used the periscope to scan our surroundings. 'All clear,' I said. We turned off the interior lights and cracked the hatch, climbing out into the cold night air. It was a dark, moonless night, but Jack was wearing a nightsight Jamal had given us before he left.
Leaving the Stryker behind us, we let Jack take the lead. I didn't know what to make of this boy king. He was an uneasy mix of overconfidence and insecurity. He'd been reticent about his royalty, unwilling to explain how he ended up the ceremonial head of state, at least in the eyes of the British Army. Green told me he'd been eager to blend into the background, unwilling to draw undue attention. Yet here he was leading us into the heart of enemy territory on a mission to rescue two children he'd never met. When I asked him why he had insisted on accompanying us he just said it was his duty. I had no idea how he'd fare in combat, but his knowledge of the base, and the ordnance contained within it, was our ace in the hole.
We reached the edge of the trees, where the cover abruptly ended in a fifty metre stretch of clear grass. Beyond this stood a high chain-link fence. Crouching down, Jack scanned the buildings for movement. He saw a patrol and gestured for us to retreat back into cover. Hidden by the shadows, we watched the two guards walk past us and disappear past the barracks.
'That's the firing range.' Jack pointed to a high brick wall just inside the fence. I reached behind me and pulled the wire cutters from my back pack.
'Stay here,' I whispered.
I broke cover and scurried to the fence. Lying on the wet grass, I cut a small hole at the base, wincing at the noise each wire made as it snapped. I pulled back a flap of the fence to make an entrance and waved the other two forward. Once they had crawled inside, I followed and pulled the fence closed again. With any luck, the guards wouldn't notice the hole on their next circuit. Stashing the wire cutters back in my bag, I followed Jack as he led us round the wall at the far end of the firing range to a sandpit where cardboard cut out soldiers stood like silent sentries.
'Psst.' It was Sue, standing at the corner of the wall, dressed in black, her face covered in boot polish just like ours. She didn't waste any time. 'There are three perimeter patrols and they pass here about every twenty minutes. There are other random patrols wandering the base. They don't have a set pattern, so we have to move carefully.
'Where are they?' I asked.
'The boy is being held in the tunnels under the main building, which is where Blythe works and sleeps.'
'How did they get into the tunnels?' asked Jack.
'They blew up the door by the main building,' replied Sue.
'And the other door?'
'What other door?'
Jack turned to me and grinned.
'And the girl, Caroline?' I asked.
'They never found any girl,' said Sue. 'What's the plan?'
Tariq told her and she pursed her lips in surprise. 'That's a bit extreme,' she said. But she didn't raise any objections.
'This way,' said Jack. He led us down the length of the firing range and across a road to a small outbuilding with a big metal door. He punched a code into the keypad beside the door and it clicked open. We hurried inside and pulled the door closed behind us, then crept down the concrete steps into the system of tunnels that lay beneath the base. The walls were concrete, with electric cables and pipes running along them. It smelt of damp. The lights were on.
'Knives only,' whispered Tariq, drawing his blade and pushing his gun back over his shoulder. 'A shot down here would be heard through the whole tunnel system.'
Jack moved quickly and confidently, sure of the way. He led us past endless doors, all locked tight. 'Some of these go down to other chambers, some are just offices. The two places we're interested in are at opposite ends of the complex.'
'Okay,' I said. 'Two teams, as discussed. Sue, we're going to get Rowles. Tariq and Jack, rendezvous back at the door we came in by.' They nodded. 'And if you hear shooting, just run. Don't wait for us, or come to help. Just go.'
Tariq took my hand and shook it firmly. 'See you soon.'
They vanished around a corner and I turned to the small, squat nurse. 'Lead on.'
She moved with remarkable grace for someone so solid, and we hardly made a sound as we moved deeper into the tunnels. Eventually she held up her hand.
'One more corridor and a left turn,' she whispered. 'There aren't guards outside the actual cell; they're up top at the door. So we shouldn't meet anyone.' I stepped forward and took the lead, knife at the ready.
'Stay here,' I said. I walked down the corridor, feeling my nerves giving way to the calm that comes before the kill. I reached the corner and took a quick look. Nobody. I waved Sue forward. She went past me to a nondescript wooden door.
'I lifted this earlier,' she said waving a key in the air and then using it to open the door. We entered a small, bare room. All the furniture had been removed, leaving it a cold concrete box. There was no light and the smell was awful. The light that seeped in from the corridor revealed a small figure curled up asleep in the corner, and a bucket in the opposite corner. It was just like the cell where I'd found Dad in Basra. Blythe's bag of tricks was small but effective.
I crouched down and shook the boy's shoulder. He was awake instantly. I don't know what I'd been expecting to find. The Rowles I knew was quiet and brooding, utterly self contained and unemotional. He was so ruthless, so terrifying, that I'd forgotten one simple fact: he was an eleven-year-old boy.
His right eye was horribly bruised, swollen shut. His front teeth were gone, as were his fingernails, and his bare arms were covered in tiny cigarette burns. His one good eye wasn't the cold orb I remembered; instead it was full of fear. Rowles scrambled away from me, trying to hide himself in the corner, burying his head in his arms and keening like a kicked dog.
'My God,' breathed Sue.
'Rowles,' I said firmly. 'Rowles, it's me. It's Lee. We've come to get you out of here.'
The ruined child couldn't hear me above his petrified whining. I reached out and put my hand on his shoulder,