The Shadow Dancers

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The Shadow Dancers Page 5

by Angus McLean


  He was distracted by the buzz of an incoming text on his cell. It was his contact at MI5, wanting to meet. Jedi had been on the money. He crooked a grin to himself.

  He was always happy to meet her.

  Chapter Nine

  It was 3pm by the time Moore stepped off Regent Street into Liberty.

  He made his way through the department store to the café, where he found his contact already waiting at a table for two.

  He smiled as he approached and she stood to give him a quick peck on the cheek before sitting again.

  Sarah O’Loughlin looked like what she was; a mid-forties mother of two teenage boys, constantly harassed and running late, and always wearing last year’s outfits.

  She was also a long serving Intelligence Officer with the Security Service, and was very good at it. She had been one of the first contacts Moore made when he took the London posting, and fortunately she remembered meeting him several years prior when he was on an attachment to Hereford. In her motherly way she had provided a steady guiding hand as he found his feet-as much as an officer from another service could, and probably a bit more besides.

  Moore had nothing but admiration for her.

  ‘Good to see you, Locky,’ he said, draping his jacket over the back of his chair before sitting.

  Sarah smiled. ‘You know you’re the one person who calls me that?’

  ‘You know you’re the one person I ever have high tea with?’ he returned with a grin.

  She shrugged. ‘Being married for twenty years, it’s the only time I ever get taken out,’ she said, ‘so I’ll take what I can get, even if the firm’s paying for it.’

  Moore didn’t bother checking the menu. ‘I take it you’ve already ordered for us?’

  ‘Of course.’ She glanced around the café, which was about half full. ‘How’re things at Haymarket?’

  ‘Same old.’ Moore gave a shrug. ‘You know what it’s like. I had a refresher which was hard, good catch up though.’

  ‘Boys and their toys.’ Sarah smiled at him across the narrow table. Her eyes were hazel, but the right one had a tiny brown spot in it, some kind of an irregularity that he had never asked about. Her hair was short and tidy, dark brown with warm streaks to help camouflage the greys coming through.

  ‘Aside from that just the normal stuff you already know about,’ he said with a shrewd look, knowing full well that the Firm were very well informed about anything going on in their patch. Sarah flicked an eyebrow but said nothing. ‘I’m glad this job’s come up, at least it’ll get me out of the office for a while.’

  ‘Hmm.’ Sarah paused and waited while a waitress delivered their afternoon tea-a pot of English Breakfast and a 3-tier plate of food. Beautiful sweets, delicate sandwiches and perfect scones with strawberry jam and cream.

  Moore waited until she had selected a red velvet cupcake with frosting, before helping himself to a ham sandwich. They ate in silence for a minute while the tea steeped. Moore had never heard of “steeping” before his first high tea with Sarah.

  ‘So,’ Sarah said, delicately slicing off a piece of cupcake. ‘How’s the love life?’

  Moore pulled a face and chewed. ‘What love life?’ he said. ‘So much time, so few opportunities.’ He gave her a cheeky grin. ‘Why, are you putting yourself back on the market?’

  ‘Fat chance.’ She popped the piece of red velvet into her mouth. ‘I heard a whisper that someone’s wife is being fairly indiscreet.’

  ‘Really?’ Moore raised an enquiring eyebrow, wondering how the hell she had heard that. Haymarket was obviously leaking like a broken sieve. ‘Who’s that then?’

  She studied him for a long moment across the table. ‘Mrs McGregor, I hear.’

  Moore said nothing. He picked up the pot and began to pour her tea. ‘Wow. You do have good sources. Better than me I’m afraid, Locky.’

  Sarah’s eyes were amused. ‘Really, Rob?’

  He moved on to his own cup, being careful not spill the tea and mess up the linen. Sarah finished her cupcake and selected a fruit pastry.

  ‘Apparently the lady herself is quite careless with who she mentions her activities too,’ she said, a hint of seriousness entering her voice. ‘I’d suggest that whoever was playing in that sandpit would do well to be very careful.’

  Moore glanced at her as he put the pot down. Her face gave nothing away but her meaning was clear. He took the small milk jug and added a dash to each of their cups.

  ‘I see,’ he said finally, putting the jug down and looking at her. ‘Is this an official message?’

  ‘It’s an official message between friends,’ Sarah said quietly. She took a sip of her tea.

  Moore did likewise. It was hot and strong. ‘Common knowledge?’ he asked.

  Sarah gave a slight head shake. ‘Reasonably,’ she said. ‘But I’ve connected dots that others probably wouldn’t.’

  Moore nodded. ‘Point taken.’

  There was silence between them while Moore chewed that over. He didn’t want to ask the crucial question, and Sarah sensed it.

  ‘As far as I’m aware he doesn’t know the full details,’ she said. ‘I think it’s just her boasting to a girlfriend, but the conversation was overheard by someone else. No names were mentioned.’

  Moore selected a scone and spread it with jam and cream. ‘Thanks for the info,’ he said, and took a bite. ‘I’ll make sure that fire is put out.’

  Sarah nodded and sipped her tea. She took a bite of the pastry and gestured at him with it. ‘I do like these,’ she said. ‘Second only to The Ritz.’

  Moore smiled, grateful that part of the meeting was over. They made small talk about her kids for a bit and she brought him up to date on their activities and sporting endeavours. She finished the pastry and watched him while he devoured another sandwich.

  ‘Have you heard from Danni?’ Sarah asked. Danni was his daughter, and lived with his ex-wife in Brisbane. At best Moore saw her a couple of times a year; as often as The Dragon would allow it. It was a constant sore point with him. Not that Danni seemed terribly bothered.

  Moore nodded. ‘Got a phone call a couple of days ago and a card for my birthday.’

  ‘That’s nice. Oh, and sorry I forgot as usual.’

  Moore chuckled. ‘You mean it’s not on your calendar? I’m hurt.’

  She gave a wry smile. ‘Callum doesn’t even know you exist. I don’t think that would go down too well.’ She reached down to her handbag and took out a white envelope. She handed it across the table to him. ‘Compliments of HM,’ she said as he tucked it into his jacket pocket. ‘I expect it to be returned afterwards, of course.’ She crooked a smile at him. ‘No jetting off to Rio with your fancy woman or some other bint.’

  Moore had the grace to blush and helped himself to a second scone to cover his embarrassment. ‘Thanks,’ he murmured.

  ‘Any update then?’ Sarah asked, draining her cup and taking the pot to pour another.

  ‘Na.’ Moore wiped cream from his lip. ‘I’m just going to have to go over and see what I find. Bit of a needle in a haystack, I suspect.’

  ‘What’s your gut feeling on it?’ Sarah watched him over the rim of her cup. ‘Anything to be concerned about?’

  ‘Aside from a naïve young chick travelling on her own in a country where people are blowing themselves up? Nothing to say it’s anything but that.’ He wiped his hands on a linen napkin. ‘But who knows. At the end of the day it’s a politician’s daughter and the big boss wants me to look into it.’

  Sarah nodded and finished her cup. ‘Just be careful. I take it you’re going on your own?’

  He nodded. ‘Yes Mum.’

  ‘Don’t “yes mum” me,’ she scolded, pushing her chair back. ‘Just do it.’

  Moore grinned to himself and also stood, putting his jacket on. They made their way out to Regent Street again and paused on the footpath.

  ‘Thanks for the cuppa,’ Moore said.

  Sarah leaned in and he kissed her cheek. She
smelled like fresh vanilla and something else he couldn’t put his finger on.

  ‘Be safe,’ she murmured in his ear.

  Moore squeezed her arm and gave her a smile. ‘Of course,’ he said. ‘We’ll catch up when I get back. My shout.’

  He turned away and headed for Haymarket.

  Chapter Ten

  Not only did the Brits not like foreign agents running round carrying guns, it was also bad practice.

  A diplomatic passport wouldn’t stop an officer from getting a bullet in the head if things went awry, which was a good reason for weapons to be kept under lock and key.

  Moore kept a secure cabinet in his own office for some of his gear, but the rest was stored in the SCIF-a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility-down the hall from his office.

  This was an ultra-secure room, known as the “skiff room,” where a handful of select personnel would retreat should the world ever implode and necessitate using the stand-alone comms facility.

  He swiped his card and punched in two PINs before the door unlocked. He closed it behind him and went to the heavy steel gun locker in one corner, unlocking it with another PIN. A small number of firearms were kept there for defensive purposes, available to all trained embassy staff should the need arise. Of course, being a bureaucracy, not all those actually had access to the safe.

  On the top shelf was a long narrow lock box, which Moore removed and placed on one of the worktops, being careful not to bump any of the sensitive comms gear there. He unlocked the box with his own small key and removed one of two Kevlar pouches, zipped closed and secured with a PIN-locked padlock. No need to check it-both pouches were identical. He locked the box again, secured the cabinet and let himself out.

  As he turned away he noticed McGregor standing outside his own office, watching him. His expression gave nothing away. Moore ignored him and took the stairs two flights up to the High Commissioner’s level.

  The wide reception area was bright and cheery, with the original wall coverings from various Kiwi artists lending it a unique flavour. Moore liked the current High Commissioner-far from being a stuffy politico, he was a former surf lifesaver with a passion for skydiving. Whenever Moore was required to provide personal protection services for the boss, as he was known, they had got on well.

  The High Commissioner’s Executive Assistant was equally affable, but with the steely edge required in her position.

  ‘Afternoon Gabby,’ Moore smiled, crossing the foyer towards her desk.

  Gabrielle Stone looked up, her brow furrowed. She was in her late thirties with stylish shoulder length blonde hair and light green eyes behind her glasses. Moore knew she was a lawyer by trade, and suspected she had quietly been placed in her position by the Service.

  ‘Oh, it’s you,’ she said.

  Moore casually leaned a hip against the corner of her desk. ‘Sorry to disappoint,’ he said, hoping his smile was engaging.

  Gabby remained remarkably unaffected. A sign of a good EA, he decided. She wore a dark skirt suit with a sharp white blouse, unbuttoned just low enough to show the barest hint of cleavage. Moore appreciated the effort-the hint was more enticing than a blatant display.

  ‘Bet I’m not the first girl you’ve ever said that to,’ she returned crisply, and Moore recoiled with a grimace.

  ‘Ouch,’ he said, ‘cutting. Wake up on the side of the wrong bed this morning, Gabs?’

  She gave him stern. He gave her cheeky schoolboy, and she relented.

  ‘No, but the boss is in a bit of a tizz, that’s all. We do actually do a lot of work up here, you know.’

  ‘I never doubted it,’ Moore said. He passed the Kevlar pouch to her. ‘Any chance you could flick this over to Ankara for me?’

  She took it and weighed it in her hand.

  ‘Is this what I think it is?’ she asked.

  ‘Probably.’

  ‘When d’you need it there?’

  ‘I’m going tomorrow.’

  ‘No probs.’ Gabby put it aside. ‘It’ll be there. I’ll let them know. You going to pick it up?’

  ‘Yeah, I’ll be in touch with JJ once I’m over there.’

  Gabby nodded efficiently. They still used a diplomatic bag facility, allowing them to send freight across borders purportedly without interference from the host nation’s intelligence service. She turned back and looked at him, still leaning casually against her desk.

  ‘Was there something else?’ she asked pointedly. ‘Or are you just lounging around now?’

  Moore pushed up and straightened his pants. ‘You old flirt,’ he said with an easy grin and a wink, ‘I haven’t got time for your shenanigans.’

  Gabby stifled a smile but her eyes twinkled. ‘I haven’t shenanigised since the eighties, Rob,’ she said. ‘In fact, I don’t think anyone has but you.’

  He backed towards the door to the stairs. ‘Play your cards right, Gabby…’

  ‘Bugger off,’ she said, ‘I’m busy.’

  She watched him disappear through the door, and shook her head, a smile playing on her lips.

  Chapter Eleven

  Istanbul was one of the many continental cities Rob Moore had never been to. The closest he’d got was fighting insurgents over the border in Iraq, but that was a lifetime ago.

  He caught a cab to Heathrow for an early departure, ate a bland and expensive breakfast in the departure lounge and ended up sitting beside an overweight young woman in a Greenpeace T shirt who was in need of a good waxing. He ignored her and buried his nose alternately in a guide book and a well-thumbed paperback copy of Alistair MacLean’s Where Eagles Dare, finishing with a solid hour’s sleep before lunch. The flight landed at Ataturk Airport at 1245pm and by 2pm Moore was hunting for a cab.

  The current tensions were evident in the faces of the people hurrying by without making eye contact, and in the numbers of armed soldiers and Police at the airport and on patrol. There was a definite edge in the air, something almost palpable, as if everyone was just waiting for something to kick off.

  The taxi driver who delivered him to his hotel drove a battered grey Mercedes 280 like it was a dodgem at a fairground, heavy on the pedals and horn and jerky on the wheel, ear-rupturing Turkish pop music blasting all the while from the cassette deck.

  Moore settled into the back seat and silently willed the ride to end. They pulled into a cobbled lane in the centre of the city, manoeuvring around other taxis and tourist buses until the driver pulled up outside the Altan Hotel and jabbered something at Moore.

  He got out and grabbed Moore’s bags from the boot, dropping them at the feet of his passenger with one hand and holding the other out for his fee.

  Moore shoved cash into his paw and grabbed his bags, making his way to the front door of the hotel. He stood outside while a gaggle of young tourist girls-Scandinavian, by the looks, with their blonde hair and universal beauty-came through, chattering excitedly over each other as one of them read aloud from a Lonely Planet. He ran an eye over them as they headed off to explore. If they were typical clientele of the hotel, then he was certainly going to stand out, regardless of his cover.

  Moore crossed the foyer to the desk and presented his passport with a smile to the young clerk.

  The clerk booked him in without fuss and with minimal conversation, taking payment off Moore’s credit card and copying his passport before handing him a key and a brochure.

  ‘Upstairs to the second floor,’ he said in flawless English, indicating the stairs off the foyer. ‘Room 212. Okay?’

  ‘Sweet as mate, cheers.’ Moore gave him another grin and grabbed his bags. As he reached the stairs a girl came down and he automatically moved aside, glancing up as she came abreast of him. She was young, maybe mid-twenties, with long black hair tied back in a ponytail. She wore the standard tourist uniform of hiking shoes, cargo pants and a polar fleece, with a daypack over one shoulder. She was slim and slightly taller than average.

  She cast a quick look at him as she went past, and he immediate
ly noticed two things about her eyes. Firstly they were bright blue, the sharpest, clearest blue he had ever seen. Secondly, they were watchful. Not the normal watchfulness of a tourist in a foreign city, of a girl alone assessing a bloke approaching her. No, these eyes were wary, calculating.

  In a second she was past him without a second look and making for the front doors. Moore paused to watch her go, unable to shake the tiny alarm bell going off in his subconscious, before continuing up to his room. Years in the game had ingrained strong instincts in him, and he had learned to trust these instincts implicitly, to literally trust them with his life. There was nothing he could do with that right now, so he filed it away and got on with the task at hand.

  His room was half way along a corridor and faced out over the lane at the front of the hotel. The Altan clearly had a low budget for furnishings, which explained the backpacker rates. The room was basic but serviceable, with a double bed and a tiny kitchenette, and a separate bathroom.

  Moore locked the door behind him and tossed his bags on the bed. He crossed to the front windows and pulled back the net curtains, opening the windows to let in some fresh air. On the road below a new tourist bus arrived and disgorged passengers. A small restaurant was across the road and, according to the guide book he’d read on the flight over, it offered mid-priced good local cuisine.

  He had already decided to eat there tonight before getting his head down and aiming for an early start in the morning.

  He turned back to the bed and began to unpack the Berghaus backpack. The late notice of the mission had meant a quick trip to a camping store to kit himself out for the trip. Most of the gear he kept in his small Camden flat was either ex-military or bought in New Zealand, neither of which was suitable for the task.

  He had bought a new pack, hiking gear and travel kit. He paused as he uncovered the small electronic device buried in with his tablet and iPhone. No need to check for listening devices just yet, so he put it aside. In theory, nobody from the Turkish National Intelligence Service should know he was there, having travelled on a clean passport and having never operated in the country before.

 

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