The truth was, he’d been bullied and flattered into it by Bellingham’s smooth talk. But now there was no way out. Even worse was the knowledge that he had agreed to Bellingham’s ‘enhancement’ of the Station scenario by the addition of a second team of watchers. Originally using one team to monitor the movements of the Station’s members, he now knew there was another, far more proactive unit in place, with the unsubtle title of the Hit. They had been used twice so far. He prayed it didn’t happen again.

‘You got something on your mind, George?’

Bellingham was like bloody Merlin, reading his mind. Paulton wondered how much the man knew.

‘I think Rudmann suspects something.’ He paused, not sure how to broach the news about Whelan. ‘Whelan was sniffing around after Tate,’ he added. ‘Rudmann seemed to think he ought to be dissuaded.’ He shot his cuffs, wondering if it was too early for a stiff drink.

‘Did she now?’ Bellingham burst in before he could finish. ‘Getting above herself, isn’t she?’ He scowled, then. ‘Christ, don’t tell me she had anything to do with his death. I’d agree to almost anything nasty happening to that little shite, but we can’t go round knocking off the fourth estate, can we? Well, not yet.’ He smirked and stood away from the window. ‘Come on, George, buck up. Are you going to offer me a drink or what?’

‘Of course.’ Paulton felt faint. The solution had presented itself. Why not let Bellingham believe Rudmann was responsible? He’d never prove otherwise, so why not. He stood up and went to the drinks cabinet.

THIRTY-FOUR

Harry decided it was time to test the Clones. They had been notable by their absence the previous day when he was out with Rik, and he hadn’t seen them when Clare Jardine took him out of town. They might have been assigned to other duties, or replaced by a different team. Yet Rik had said they were always around.

If so, it represented a break in continuity. And that made him uneasy.

‘Why do you want to do that?’ queried Mace, when he suggested a brief tag-and-tail exercise. It wouldn’t take long, but to do it properly, he would need Jardine, Rik and Fitzgerald to act as decoys.

‘It’s a simple field test,’ said Harry. ‘It’ll keep us on our toes, and we’ll see if the Clones are out and about.’

Mace nodded reluctantly, brow crinkling. ‘Not a bad idea, I suppose,’ he conceded. ‘But no confrontations. We don’t need any grief from the local security police.’

Harry gave the other three a quick briefing, then let them go. Nobody argued — not even Jardine. He gave them a head start, and once Mace had gone back to his office, made sure both his mobiles were fully functional. He had no intention of using the Ericsson — that was for communicating with Maloney. But if one packed up, he wanted to be sure he had a stand-by.

Fitzgerald was the first to call in. Harry had given each of them instructions to walk to various points in the town, then to phone him with any news of tails. Fitzgerald’s objective was the central post office. He was carrying a large brown envelope in plain sight. It would be enough to attract attention, and easy enough to follow.

‘Got a tail,’ he reported succinctly. ‘White male, late-twenties, casual clothes. He knows what he’s doing, although he made a couple of minor errors.’

The next caller was Clare, from outside the station. She said, ‘I picked up one man a hundred yards from the office. Looks military; young and fit. Reasonably good but no expert. Should I lose him?’

‘No. And don’t stab him, either.’ Harry rang off. It was getting interesting.

Rik was last, calling from the town’s museum. He also had a follower, with a similar description to the men he had seen before. He said he had performed a simple in-and-out manoeuvre of a shop, and caught the man flat- footed in the middle of the pavement.

Harry took the calls on the hoof while making his way in a lengthy fashion to a local spa bath he’d picked out on the map. His route crossed several streets, allowing him to spot anyone who might be on his tail. He picked up a tail after three blocks; another male, white and slim, with short hair and dressed in jeans and a ski jacket.

He had instructed the others to return to the office after calling him, and not to show they had seen their followers. He continued walking, taking in the spa, the library, a cafe where he enjoyed coffee and cake, and several statues of fallen heroes. By the time he had seen enough sights for one day, he had been out for two hours. He had not only retained his original tail, but had picked up two more.

He hailed an unmarked cab and jumped in. He knew it was a cab by the way the driver, a whiskery old man with a beret, was drifting along hugging the kerb. He spoke no English, but Harry had the address of the office written on a piece of paper. The old man nodded and turned on his radio, drowning the back of his battered Renault in the local brand of folk music.

‘So what did it prove?’ Mace asked, when they assembled back at the office. The other three had already told him what they had accomplished, and were waiting for Harry to complete the picture. ‘And what the hell took you so long? You go to the border and back?’

‘There are four of them,’ said Harry, ‘as Rik thought.’ He caught a grin from the younger man out of the corner of his eye. ‘We each got tagged, and when Clare, Fitz and Rik came in, their tails latched on to me.’

‘Really?’ Mace frowned. ‘How?’

‘By using mobiles,’ said Clare. ‘The moment they didn’t need to follow us, they switched to Harry, to see where he was going.’ Her expression was cool, but there was grudging approval in her voice at what Harry had accomplished.

‘I still don’t see what you’ve learned about them,’ said Mace heavily. ‘You don’t know who they are or what they want. It’s just another surveillance operation by local security cops. We should all be used to that.’

When they all dispersed, Harry sat at one of the desks, wondering what the hell was going on. So a group of unnamed men was following their every move. Not unusual in itself, given the territory and the in-built suspicion of foreigners. But there were inconsistencies in the Clones’ individual skills. They operated well as a team, but at different levels. It still meant they were a team… but this wasn’t their usual job.

Another thought occurred to him. He’d seen no sign of the Clones during his two trips out of town with Clare Jardine, nor when he’d gone to meet Mace. Neither had he seen a trace of them when he and Rik had gone shopping for the mobile phone. If they were as unskilled as he had witnessed today, he’d have seen at least one of them.

So why the uneven pattern?

There was only one answer: the Clones usually knew where their targets were going. Today, because he’d sprung the test on them, they’d scrambled all hands.

It meant someone was keeping the Clones informed of their movements. But who? Everyone was out and walking within minutes of his briefing.

Everyone except Mace.

‘Why are you here, Harry?’

Clare Jardine stopped him as he was about to leave. Her expression was not unfriendly, but he detected a tone of puzzlement. He thought she looked tired.

‘Because London sent me. I was a bad boy, remember?’

‘I mean why did you agree to take this posting? You can’t have wanted it — you must have known they only wanted rid of you until the fuss dies down.’

‘Your point being?’ He didn’t feel inclined to discuss his decision to take the posting with Clare or anyone else. They were hardly friends, and there were people he knew better with whom he wouldn’t ever talk about it.

‘My point,’ she said, with a flush of colour, ‘is that I was finished when I came here — might still be for all I know. If they ever let me back inside Vauxhall Cross, it’ll probably be in some lowly post where I’ll die of boredom. I’m not sure I could take that.’

Harry wasn’t sure what she was getting at. ‘Rik Ferris is in the same boat. Same with me, same with Mace. So what?’

‘Rik Ferris didn’t know any better, did he? He was just grateful they didn’t charge him under the anti- terrorism laws and throw him into prison for twenty years. They’ll let him back sooner or later because they need his skills.’ She paused, then said vaguely, ‘I don’t know about Mace.’

‘Really?’

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