Under Cover (Agent 21)

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Under Cover (Agent 21) Page 1

by Chris Ryan




  Available by Chris Ryan and published by Random House Children’s Publishers UK:

  The One That Got Away

  AGENT 21 series

  Agent 21

  Agent 21: Reloaded

  Agent 21: Codebreaker

  Deadfall

  CODE RED series

  Flash Flood

  Wildfire

  Outbreak

  Vortex

  Twister

  Battleground

  ALPHA FORCE series

  Survival

  Rat-Catcher

  Desert

  Pursuit

  Hostage

  Red Centre

  Hunted

  Blood Money

  Fault Line

  Black Gold

  Untouchable

  Published by the Random House Group for adult readers:

  NON-FICTION

  The One That Got Away

  Chris Ryan’s SAS Fitness Book

  Chris Ryan’s Ultimate Survival Guide

  Fight to Win: Deadly Skills of the Elite Forces

  FICTION

  Stand By, Stand By

  Zero Option

  The Kremlin Device

  Tenth Man Down

  Hit List

  The Watchman

  Land of Fire

  Greed

  The Increment

  Blackout

  Ultimate Weapon

  Strike Back

  Firefight

  Who Dares Wins

  One Good Turn (Adult Quick Read for World Book Day 2008)

  CONTENTS

  COVER

  AVAILABLE BY CHRIS RYAN

  ABOUT THE BOOK

  PRAISE

  TITLE PAGE

  PART ONE

  1 Thrown Away

  2 The Chuckle Brothers

  3 Feeding Time

  4 The Deal

  5 Homework

  6 Kim’s Game

  PART TWO

  7 Weapons

  8 Surveillance

  9 The Bleak Midwinter

  10 The Picture

  11 Keeper’s House

  12 Magic Tricks

  13 Trident

  PART THREE

  14 Izzy’s Escape

  15 The Blind Spot

  16 Sneak Thief

  17 NI

  18 Happy Valley

  19 All Souls

  20 Tracked

  21 Flashbang

  22 Alone Again

  23 Something Good and Clever

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  ALSO BY CHRIS RYAN

  COPYRIGHT

  ABOUT THE BOOK

  Ricky has lived on the streets for a while now. Life is tough, but he’s sharp and quick, and he gets by.

  Until he steals from the wrong people . . .

  Luckily for him he is rescued by a stranger who makes him an offer he can’t refuse: a flat and money in exchange for learning certain skills – surveillance techniques and hand-to-hand combat.

  But what is this all for?

  Ricky is about to find out . . .

  ‘Nobody takes you to the action better than Ryan because he is the real deal’ – Evening Telegraph

  PRAISE FOR CHRIS RYAN

  ‘Gripping from the off’

  Sun

  ‘SAS hero Chris Ryan sets a cracking pace’

  Lovereading

  ‘Fast-paced action thriller

  that hits all the right spots’

  The Bookseller

  ‘Chris Ryan proves, once again,

  that he is a master of suspense’

  Waterstones Books Quarterly

  You can find Chris on Twitter

  @exSASChrisRyan

  PART ONE

  1

  THROWN AWAY

  Trafalgar Square, London

  Thursday, 11:30 a.m.

  Police!

  How many?

  Two on the north side, three on the south.

  Are they going to be a problem?

  I hope not. We’ll keep an eye on them. If they look like causing trouble, we’ll move somewhere else.

  But Ricky Mahoney didn’t want to move anywhere else. This was the best place in London for what he had in mind.

  Ricky wasn’t like other fourteen-year-old kids. It wasn’t just the scruffy clothes or the second-hand trainers with the holes in them that made him different. It wasn’t just that he had spent the past year and a half living by himself, with no adults, in a sordid room in an overcrowded, falling-down old Victorian house in north-east London. It wasn’t just that, by his own admission, he was a sneak, a pickpocket and a thief.

  It was his habit of talking to himself that made Ricky think he was really weird. All day he discussed things in his head with an imaginary accomplice called Ziggy. Totally crazy, but Ricky didn’t care. Because when you don’t have any real friends, sometimes imaginary ones will do just as well.

  Ziggy was an argumentative so-and-so. Right now he was picking apart one of Ricky’s little lessons in the finer points of petty crime.

  – It’s the ones with the phones that get me, Ricky said. He never spoke to Ziggy out loud. Their conversations always took place in his head.

  – What do you mean? What’s wrong with them?

  Ricky never carried a phone. He had no need for it. If he ever managed to steal a decent one, though, he knew a place in the East End where he could sell it for up to fifty quid. So he always found it a bit weird how everyone else was so obsessed with them.

  – Well, how many people can we see? Five hundred? And half of them are staring at their screens or taking selfies. Seriously, I could pick the pocket of any one of them, easy as falling off a log.

  – Then why don’t you do it? Your rent’s due tomorrow, and we haven’t eaten for two days.

  Good point. Ricky’s stomach rumbled. He needed a meal.

  He was leaning against one of the stone lions in Trafalgar Square, having worked out ages ago that this was a good place to be invisible. Invisible was how he liked to be. Invisible was good for a pickpocket. There were loads of other young people there. Some of them were splashing in the fountains. Some were chasing pigeons across the square. Others were kicking their heels behind their mum and dad as if they were in the middle of the world’s most boring day. Nobody would ever notice just one more kid loitering by the lions.

  Trafalgar Square had another advantage. There were always tourists there. Packs of them, staring up to the top of Nelson’s Column and barely paying any attention to what was going on around them. These tourists were easy pickings. They were like walking cash machines where you didn’t even need to use a cash card to withdraw your money.

  – Hold up. Who’s that?

  – Where?

  – Over there. North side of the square. A couple of Thrownaways.

  ‘Thrownaways’ was the word Ricky used for the homeless kids who worked the streets of London. They were everywhere, if you just opened your eyes and looked – which most people didn’t, of course. At night they met in the dingier parts of King’s Cross or under the bridges that spanned the Thames. The Thrownaways were a rough bunch who congregated in gangs, which could be aggressive and violent – Ricky kept his distance. He’d only ever had one proper encounter with them. He glanced down at the wrist of his left hand to see a pale white scar following the line of his arm. It was a reminder of how that little encounter had ended badly for him.

  He squinted as he looked across the square. A girl about his own age was standing half a metre behind a Japanese man taking a photo of his girlfriend. A boy was walking swiftly in her direction. He’d be next to her in about five seconds. They made momentary eye contact.

  – Watch this. Oldest technique in the book.

&n
bsp; The girl stretched out her left hand. She slipped it into the side pocket of the Japanese man’s linen jacket. When she removed it, she was carrying something. A wallet. It all happened very quickly, like the flicking of a gecko’s tongue.

  Now the boy was right behind her, still walking. Even Ricky couldn’t see the moment when the wallet changed hands. The boy disappeared into the crowd. For all Ricky knew, he’d already handed the wallet to a third accomplice. A few seconds later, the Japanese man was asking the girl to take a photo of him and his girlfriend. She agreed with a smile.

  – Quite nicely done, Ricky thought grudgingly.

  – You could join the Thrownaways if you wanted, you know. Get someone to work as your partner. It’s safer that way.

  – Well, I don’t want to. If we had a partner, they’d grass us up if things got tricky. The do-gooders would have their hands on us before we knew it.

  And anyway, Ricky thought, he hadn’t been ‘thrown away’ in the first place. He’d left home – if you wanted to call it that – of his own accord. And he wasn’t a street kid, exactly. He wasn’t living in a doorway or a cardboard box, or under a bridge, or even in a hostel. He had a place to stay. In his position, little things like that made a difference. It was a question of pride – even if it did mean having old Baxter as a landlord.

  He continued to scan the crowd and ignored the gnawing hunger in the pit of his stomach. Ziggy was right. Today was Thursday. He hadn’t eaten since Tuesday lunch time. It wasn’t that he hadn’t been busy. Far from it. He’d grabbed three wallets since then. Forty pounds in the first, twenty in the second and fifty in the third. A good haul, but not enough yet to pay his monthly rent to old Baxter. Ricky’s vile landlord would be round for his money tomorrow evening, which meant Ricky had to turn at least one more trick. Especially if he also wanted to eat.

  He picked out a couple of possibles. There was a mum pushing her kid in a pushchair. Ricky never pickpocketed young mums. It didn’t seem fair, somehow. His eyes picked out a harassed-looking teacher with a bunch of school kids. No way. The teacher wouldn’t be a problem, but Ricky knew that children were more observant than adults. They saw everything.

  – So just go for one of the idiots looking at their phones, Ziggy suggested, if they’re so easy.

  – Nah. Like shooting fish in a barrel. Got to keep your skills fresh.

  – Oh, come on, Ricky. You must have stolen two hundred wallets in your time. You’ve never been caught.

  – Yeah. Because I keep my skills fresh.

  He continued to scan the crowds. A few seconds later, his eyes locked onto a man walking towards Nelson’s Column from the north-west corner of the square. He was tall, with broad shoulders. A black guy, his head was bald and shiny, and he wore a blue cagoule, even though there was no sign of rain. He seemed to be sweating a lot – as he walked, he patted his bald pate with a handkerchief. What was more important, the cagoule was flapping open, its unzipped outer pockets clearly visible, a map of the tube sticking out of the man’s trouser pocket.

  – A tourist, Ricky thought. He bent down and undid the lace of his right shoe. Then he jumped down from the plinth on which the stone lion sat. He walked twenty paces north before turning ninety degrees to the right. Ten paces, he reckoned, before his path crossed his target’s. He watched the man out of the corner of his eye, and even from a distance he could tell where the wallet was – the right-hand pocket of the man’s cagoule was slightly weighted down, as though it contained something heavy. In Ricky’s line of work, heavy wallets were the best kind. He also saw something he hadn’t noticed from his vantage point on the plinth. The man had a stout walking stick in his right hand, and walked with a slight limp.

  Five paces.

  – Here goes.

  Ricky was a metre away from the man when he ‘tripped’ over his undone shoelace. It was, he thought, quite an impressive fall – one that he had practised in private probably a hundred times until he could do it without hurting himself. But now, splayed on the hard ground directly in front of the man’s feet, he screwed up his face in pain and started to shake.

  The man stopped. He looked down at the figure sprawled at his feet. ‘What the hell’s this?’ he said. ‘Are you auditioning for Coco the Clown?’ He sounded like he had something in his mouth, and Ricky realized he was sucking a sweet.

  ‘Ow!’ Ricky wiped away a non-existent tear with the back of his left hand. He held his hand up, so the man could pull him to his feet. The man peered at him. He looked slightly amused.

  – Don’t do it, Ziggy warned. Don’t pick his pocket. This one’s not as stupid as he looks.

  – It’ll be fine.

  A weighty wallet was worth a bit of risk.

  Ricky staggered up. As he did so, he slipped his right hand into the man’s cagoule pocket. Sure enough, there was a fat wallet hiding inside.

  – There you go. Easy as falling off a—

  ‘You should do your laces up, Coco,’ the man said.

  ‘Yeah,’ Ricky said, looking directly into the man’s eyes to stop his target’s gaze from wandering. The man returned the stare with a strange sort of half-smile.

  ‘Probably.’ He had the wallet in his fist now. It felt good and heavy. He slipped it up into his right-hand sleeve where he had sewn a little pocket.

  – Job done.

  ‘Unless you’re planning another pratfall sometime soon.’

  Ricky hesitated, just for a moment.

  – He knows you were faking it.

  – No he doesn’t. He’s just a weirdo who wants to chat.

  But Ricky did feel a little uneasy as he got down onto one knee and started doing up the lace. The man was standing over him.

  ‘Would you like a sweet?’ the man asked. ‘I’ve got some here somewhere.’ He started patting down his cagoule with his free hand.

  ‘No, really,’ said Ricky as the man’s hands drifted alarmingly close to the pocket that had once held his wallet. ‘I . . . I don’t really eat sweets.’

  The man blinked in surprise. ‘Weird,’ he murmured. ‘Still, if you’re sure.’

  ‘Quite sure, thanks.’

  ‘OK. No sweets. But there is one other thing.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘You should probably give me my wallet back.’

  Ricky froze. His laces were still undone as he got to his feet. ‘I don’t know what you—’

  ‘It’s up your right sleeve. Just in case you’ve forgotten.’ The man grinned, and Ricky saw a mouthful of yellowing and rotten teeth. ‘Happens to the best of us.’

  Ricky sized the man up. He was tall and looked strong, but there was that walking stick, not to mention the limp. Ricky, on the other hand, was thin and gangly. A bit of a weakling. Rubbish at fighting.

  But fast.

  And he knew that sometimes you have to play to your strengths.

  His mouth was dry. His heart was pumping.

  – Run! said Ziggy.

  Ricky ran.

  2

  THE CHUCKLE BROTHERS

  Crowds, Ricky had noticed, always seem busier when you’re trying to escape them. He felt his loose shoelaces whipping round his ankles as he swerved at top speed around the tourists. His pulse was racing as he approached the busy road circling Trafalgar Square.

  – Mind the cars! Ziggy screamed.

  The road was crammed full of buses, black cabs and other vehicles. A couple of them sounded their horn furiously as Ricky sprinted across the road towards the Strand, dodging the moving cars as he went.

  He was sweating heavily by the time he made it safely to the other side. He allowed himself a moment to look over his shoulder.

  The man was standing on the edge of Trafalgar Square. He didn’t look flustered. In fact, he still had that slightly amused look on his face as he stared directly at Ricky.

  – He makes me nervous.

  – Me too.

  – You couldn’t fool him.

  – Thanks for the reminder.

 
– Maybe your skills aren’t so awesome after all.

  – Shut up, Ziggy.

  Ricky looked forward and started running again, east along the Strand.

  He figured that anyone in pursuit would expect him to head north and get lost in the side streets of Covent Garden. But there was a little shortcut he knew – some steps that headed south off the Strand towards the river. He stopped at the top of them and looked back again. No sign of the man. With a limp and a walking stick he wouldn’t be moving fast – unless he was good at hopping. Ricky descended two steps at a time. At the bottom, he stopped to regain his breath and tie his shoelaces, his back against a brick wall.

  – Relax!

  – I’m trying . . .

  His hands were trembling. He’d come so close to being caught, and he knew what that would mean. A march down to the police station, and before he knew it he’d be back in care. The do-gooders would have him in their clutches, good and proper.

  – What’s in the wallet?

  Still crouching down after tying his laces, Ricky removed the wallet from his sleeve and opened it up. He grinned. It was stuffed full of notes. He reckoned there were several hundred pounds in there. There were also nine or ten credit cards. Ricky pulled a couple of cards out and immediately saw that they had different names on them: R. F. E. Martin and Mr Jim Daniels. He flicked through some more of the cards. Dr H. Newland. Mr Godfrey S. Davies. There was a driving licence and a library card, both with a photo of the man – the black skin, the bald head – but each with a different name.

  – What is he? Some sort of criminal? A fraudster?

  – You’ve messed with the wrong guy.

  Ricky tucked the cards back into the wallet. He wouldn’t try to use any of them. If the police were after this guy, they’d be monitoring his cards and that would be a great way to lead them to Ricky. The cash, though, was a different matter – completely untraceable. Ricky tucked the wallet into his pocket. He was already imagining the food he’d buy with it. A burger, maybe. Extra fries. Large milkshake . . .

  ‘Are you sure you won’t have a sweet, Coco?’

  Ricky’s blood froze as a shadow fell over him. A metre away he saw two feet and the bottom of a walking stick. He looked up.

  The man still had a slight smile. But there was a hint of steel in his eyes.

 

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