‘If Daniel had just called the switchboard, he could have been dismissed as a renegade trying to come in from the cold. But he asked to speak to me, and I took the call.’
‘So we’re heading for Fairford,’ Carter said. ‘In my untracked vehicle, not yours.’
Denton’s phone started to ring. He answered it, listened, then hung up. ‘That was Anne. They’ve come for you in the office, Marcus.’
Marchant had been lying on the
Marchant had spotted the old Nokia handset while he had been talking to Dhar, but assumed that he would take it with him. It was partially hidden under a copy of
He knew that there was a high risk that it was a targeted unit, but he had to get news about Dhar and his father to Fielding. He may not have the name of a mole in MI6, but at least he had an explanation for the unorthodox trip to Kerala that had so concerned the Americans. He pressed at the familiar digits with shaking fingers, praying that the phone had international access. Then he heard the ringing tone of a London number, and breathed in deeply, a sound that was heard two thousand miles away, in the headphones of a young operator at the National Security Agency in Fort Meade, Maryland.
Denton clipped the safety belt across his lap, and looked around the small cabin of the Gulfstream V: six seats, all buttermilk leather and chrome, a single divan and a mahogany-panelled buffet unit. Fielding fastened his belt opposite him, and caught Denton’s wry smile. The irony of senior intelligence officers fleeing Britain in a plane used for rendition flights was not lost on either of them. Carter was up with the pilot, briefing him on the route. He lifted a headphone from one ear and turned back to talk to them.
‘The pilot’s just filing some dummy flight plans,’ he said, louder than he needed to. ‘We’re operating under special status, but he says UK traffic control’s gotten a little stricter in recent months.’
‘Like hell it has,’ Denton whispered to Fielding, as Carter put his headphone back on and faced the front again. ‘Did you see where they put them?’
‘I didn’t want to look.’
‘Behind the buffet. Enough to put you off lunch.’ Denton had glanced through the door that separated the back of the plane from the main cabin. The contrast with the plush interior couldn’t have been greater. All the fittings had been stripped, leaving the bare-ribbed shell of the plane. Fixed to the matt metal floor were two small steel rings, three feet apart. There was a dark mark between them, where Denton assumed the human cargo had sat, feet and hands restrained. It might have been blood, or something worse, but the traces of pain remained. Had Daniel Marchant been shackled there on his flight to Poland? And, before him, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed?
‘Welcome to Air CIA,’ Carter said, sitting down next to Denton. ‘Twelve hours till touchdown in New Delhi.’
Denton hadn’t heard him. He was watching the blue flashing lights on the road beyond Fairford’s perimeter fence. At the same moment, the pilot called for Carter to return to the cockpit. Denton caught Fielding’s eye, and nodded out of the window.
‘There’s still time for you to go, Ian,’ Fielding said. ‘You don’t have to be here.’
Denton ignored his Chief. He knew they were right about Leila. Earlier, the three of them had entered the airbase with little difficulty. As far as the RAF was concerned, Fairford was now a standby facility. The USAF ran the place, keen to ensure the safety and secrecy of its B-2 Spirit Stealth bombers, as well as the occasional rendition flight. The guards on the main gate knew Carter well and had waved him through, but Denton feared that the phones would be ringing in Whitehall and Washington. It all depended on how much authority Carter still wielded, whether Straker had done the maths, and concluded that he was working with Fielding.
The twin turbojet engines whined as the pilot nursed the plane across the tarmac towards the end of the three-kilometre-long runway. Denton unclipped his seatbelt and went forward to Carter. For a moment, Fielding thought he was taking up his offer to get off the plane.
‘Everything OK?’ Denton asked.
‘We’re just clarifying with Langley that I’m on official Company business,’ Carter said.
‘You mean a rendition flight.’
Carter laughed. ‘Routine Clandestine work.’
‘Have you seen the police activity on the perimeter?’
‘Relax, it’s nothing. Just a bunch of plane-spotters, happens all the time. Guess the Spirit’s flying today. We always ask your police to clear them away. Nobody knows the Vicar’s on board, Ian. We don’t do passport control on these planes.’
46
William Straker sat back in the DCIA’s office in Langley, Virginia, and looked at the photos of his two boys on his desk. He had been an only child, and envied the camaraderie that his sons already enjoyed. He hadn’t checked, but he guessed Harriet Armstrong in London was a single child, too. She shared his natural distrust of others.
‘It’s a final green, Harriet, we’re going in now,’ he said on speakerphone. ‘Fort Meade picked up the call earlier. The strike point’s been relayed to the USS
‘The Prime Minister has requested that Daniel Marchant is taken alive,’ Armstrong replied.
‘I was afraid you’d say that. The DNI wants all threats in the region eliminated. And Dhar’s currently top of the lone-wolf list.’
‘Marchant might be useful,’ Armstrong said.
‘You’re not going soft on me, Harriet, are you?’ Armstrong said nothing. ‘India won’t allow Predator use in their airspace, so we’re sending in Seals, supported by some token Black Cats to keep Delhi onside. I’m sure your Prime Minister appreciates we can’t take risks with a presidential visit. There are too many already on this trip. Monk Johnson’s a wreck.’
‘We understand the threat, of course we do, but Marchant is a British citizen, and the PM is adamant he is not killed. We currently have an SAS unit on standby in Delhi, ready to help.’
‘You know, I think we can manage this on our own, but thanks for the offer. Here’s what I’ll do. Once we’ve pulled Marchant out of the jungle, he’s your prisoner. You might get a bit more out of him than we did in Poland. How does that sound?’
Not great, Armstrong thought. Body bags didn’t make great interviewees. ‘I’ll inform Cobra of the offer. It’s convening now.’
‘Your cooperation is appreciated, Harriet. You and I think the same. You saw the TX details of the call?’
‘Earlier, yes.’
‘Jesus, we were right about Stephen Marchant. Like father, like son. But what about Marcus? Daniel’s put through to his home, then the Chief chooses not to report the conversation to anyone. And now he’s gone AWOL. I thought this guy was on our side.’
‘It also bothers the PM.’
‘Glad to hear it,’ Straker said, failing to detect much sincerity in Armstrong’s reply. ‘Does the PM know about Chadwick, too?’
‘David?’
‘Sir David, knight of the realm.’
‘What about him?’ Armstrong tightened her grip on the phone. She had always liked Chadwick, even fancied him in her earlier Whitehall days. She wouldn’t hear a bad word said against him.
‘Seems like he’s been signing up to some illegal websites over here. The FBI passed over the credit card trail this morning, thought we should know.’
Armstrong, her resentment rising, wanted the conversation to end. She didn’t believe a word. The Americans were still on the warpath after removing Stephen Marchant, but this was new territory. They would go