are you?’

‘How do you want it paid?’ said Claudine evenly, refusing any reaction.

‘Arrangements are being made.’

‘I’m sure,’ said Claudine disbelievingly.

‘Seven hundred and fifty thousand!’ declared the woman. ‘You’d better watch your mouth. Every time you say something I don’t like I’m going to fine you.’

‘How much longer?’ said Claudine, with another sigh. Psychologically she had to press the woman as far as she could. And she was as confident as she could be that the woman had developed a bizarre love for Mary.

‘I’ll tell you when I’m ready.’

‘It’s taking a long time.’ Like this conversation, Claudine thought: ten minutes without any indication from outside that the scanners had traced the signal.

‘The newspapers say McBride’s a friend of the President but I don’t believe it.’

Claudine frowned, unsure of a response. Go with it, she decided. ‘Why not?’

‘They’d have sent someone better than you if he was really important.’

The almost juvenile desperation was unsettling. ‘Maybe it’s you who aren’t sufficiently important,’ she said.

‘You really do have to watch your mouth. We’re up to a million now.’

‘Why not collect it?’

‘You haven’t suffered enough yet. Maybe Mary hasn’t, either.’

‘Mary Beth!’ broke in Hillary at last but there was no response from the other end. Just before it went dead she and Claudine heard Mary’s distant, muffled shout. ‘Please, dad… please…!’

McBride looked at Claudine, his face purple with rage. ‘You stupid bitch! You made her hang up!’

‘I hope it was because of me and not the sudden interruption from someone she didn’t expect!’ said Claudine. Furiously confronting the woman, she said: ‘Mrs McBride, you could have just killed your daughter.’

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

Jean Smet was the way to bring the woman back. Only if she failed to respond would Hillary McBride have caused a catastrophe by confronting her with something for which she hadn’t been prepared, and Claudine regretted her outburst against the ambassador’s wife.

Hillary and McBride were literally eyeball to eyeball after Claudine’s accusation, screaming abuse at each other. Claudine shouted: ‘Shut up! Shut up and start thinking properly about Mary Beth!’

The fresh outburst silenced both of them. Claudine said: ‘It’s recoverable. The important thing is that I’ve become the person she hates: the person towards whom all her hostility is directed now. And today I was coming very close to gaining control without her knowing it: making her do what I want. Which is seriously to attempt a ransom. I’ve challenged her: doubted that she’s capable.’

‘If today’s call didn’t start out to fix a ransom what was it for?’ demanded Hillary, wanting to recover from her mistake.

‘She wants Mary to hate me as much as she does. You heard what Mary said, about not liking me. And her reply when I asked her why.’ With perfect recall, Claudine quoted: ‘“Not letting me speak to dad… Not today. Before.” She’s transferring the blame in her own mind and trying to do the same in Mary’s for what’s happened to Mary. She’s trying to bond the child to her.’

‘Make Mary like her, you mean?’ asked McBride incredulously. ‘How the hell can she do that!’

‘I didn’t say she could do it. I said that’s what she’s trying to do.’ Paradoxical though it seemed it was psychologically possible, particularly with someone impressionable, for a victim to become emotionally dependent upon a captor.

‘What about the fingers and toes remark?’ persisted the father.

‘That’s to alienate you from me: continue the attack upon me,’ Claudine assured him. ‘She won’t maim someone she wants to like her.’

‘Why is she doing that? I don’t understand!’ protested Hillary.

She’d spare them by not talking about love. ‘It’s the way her mind works.’

Claudine was momentarily surprised to see Hugo Rosetti with everyone else in the briefing room when she reentered. He smiled, fleetingly, and just as quickly she smiled back. Blake, expressionless, watched the interchange.

‘What happened to the scanners?’ demanded Claudine at once.

‘The transmission was too far away: that’s why the volume fluctuated so much,’ said Volker. ‘They couldn’t get any sort of fix, although they don’t think she was moving around, the way she did yesterday.’

For Poncellet’s benefit Claudine summarized to its minimum but still accurately the complete profile she’d given to McBride. To get rid of the police chief, she said she needed to assess the woman’s mental state before they held another planning meeting, and the moment Poncellet left the embassy Peter Blake gave them his explanation for the mobile telephone number.

‘They didn’t have the telephone,’ he said. ‘Only the number, knowing it was stolen. So they had to get an instrument to programme it into.’

‘Jesus!’ said Harding.

‘The simplest answer is always the best,’ said Rampling, in immediate agreement. ‘It was too obvious for us to see!’

‘So who’d have access to stolen numbers?’ asked Harrison, anxious to contribute.

‘Too many people,’ said Blake. ‘Belgacom, the Brussels manual exchange, the mobile phone company…’

‘That’s not the way to find them,’ said Claudine. ‘We can make whoever it is come to us through Smet. All he’s got to believe is that we’ve got a lead to him. His own fear will do the rest.’

‘How?’ demanded Harrison.

‘We give Smet the same reason we gave Poncellet for not meeting again today, but add that there’s an even more important development with the phone, as well. He’ll immediately warn whoever it is.’

‘He’s waiting in his office,’ said Rampling. ‘He’ll do it from there and we don’t have it tapped.’

‘We force him home,’ said Blake at once. ‘When we speak to him in his office we say that there’s something important about the phone but that we’re not sure what it is: forensic haven’t yet spelled it out. And promise to call him at home tonight, if it’s really important. Which we’ll do-’

‘Smet’s telephones,’ interrupted Volker. ‘Do they have dials? Or are they push button?’

‘Push button,’ said McCulloch.

Volker gave a satisfied nod. ‘It’s not possible to trace the number of an incoming call on a bugged telephone. But it is when a number is rung out. Each number on a push button phone has a different electronic signal: that’s how the system works, tonally. And Smet will dial out to speak to whoever it is, won’t he?’

‘As soon as he does we’ll have him!’ Rampling said.

‘And it’ll be someone in Belgacom, not the mobile company,’ added the German. ‘A technical expert, with access and ability far beyond phones. That’s who set up the e-mail exchange in the beginning.’

‘This is coming together!’ enthused Rampling.

‘Who’s going to make the bastard dance?’ asked Harding.

Rampling looked at Sanglier. ‘You’re the task force head, the senior investigatory officer.’

‘He couldn’t argue against my decision to cancel,’ agreed Sanglier, alert to a safe advantage. He was already committed, as far as the illegality was concerned, so he’d hardly be enmeshing himself further. And later, when that illegality became acceptable, he would have done something positive, definitely involved himself, in the investigation. A lot of worthwhile publicity could be worked up for his political emergence. He’d be the only Justice Minister in the world personally to have headed the investigation into a famous crime. And the fame would be his, not inherited from his father.

Jean Smet responded at the first ring, the respectful tone discernible as soon as Sanglier identified himself. Sanglier spoke autocratically, a police commander complying with a liaison agreement but not inviting a protracted discussion. It had been his decision not to have another meeting. Dr Carter thought there was a lot to be gained

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