by Simon Conway
THE AGENT
RUNNER
SIMON CONWAY
Pembury House Publishing
Published by Pembury House Publishing
5 Henwoods Mount, Pembury, Kent TN2 4BH
First published in Great Britain 2014
Copyright © Simon Conway 2014
The moral right of the author has been asserted
All rights reserved
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 9 780992 995638
For Sarah
About the Author
Simon Conway is a former British Army officer and international aid worker who has cleared landmines and unexploded bombs in the aftermath of war in Africa, Asia and the Middle East. As Co-Chair of the Cluster Munition Coalition he successfully campaigned for an international ban on cluster bombs. He currently serves on the Board of Directors of the mine clearance charity The HALO Trust and travels regularly overseas He is the author of five novels including the 2010 Ian Fleming Steel Dagger winner A Loyal Spy.
‘Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.'
Percy Bysshe Shelley, Ozymandias
CONTENTS
1. Old Misgivings
2. Turning Nightingale
3. The surveillance operation
4. Apache Commando
5. The House of War
6. The one-legged mullah
7. Fear and loathing in the brandy shop
8. Good vibrations
9. The Abbottabad raid
10. Waiting for Nightingale
11. A knock on the door
12. Kabul by night
13. Seducing the widow
14. No motto please, we’re British
15. Going underground
16. The List
17. On tenterhooks
18. Tell me how this ends?
19. Comprehensive logistic solutions
20. Knight in shining armour
21. Tikka and naan
22. Combustible City
23. Nadifa’s story
24. An impulsive act
25. Rolling with the punches
26. Hugging a hoodie on Petticoat Lane
27. Bomb-boy
28. The father of smoke
29. The Grapes
30. Non-compliant subject removal
31. Janissaries
32. Schedule 7 detention
33. The Toca
34. Cui Bono
35. The sociopath’s address book and other disappointments
36. Under the Bo tree
37. With the Lahore party crowd
38. Truth serum
39. 500g
40. Intimacy
41. Sodom-Sur-Mer
42. Noman’s choice
43. Ed kills
44. The KSM Suite
45. #TheHiddenHand
46. The pit
47. Kill-and-dump
48. The patriot’s way
49. The road west
50. The devil you know
51. Into the tribal areas
52. Crossing the Durand Line
53. The code of life
54. The finger of God
Acknowledgements
1. Old Misgivings
April 2011
It was mid-afternoon when Ed Malik arrived in Jalalabad to catch the Sabre Express back to Kabul. Transport was an American Black Hawk with dark green camouflage. As it fuelled, he sheltered from the wind at the edge of the landing site, squatting in the dirt in flip-flops and tatty shalwar kameez, with the tail of his black turban drawn across the bridge of his nose.
He’d been summoned to the British Embassy for what the Ambassador chose to refer to as a “fireside chat”, and as usual it provoked in him a mixture of resentment and unease. Waiting with him, and similarly disguised, was his bodyguard, Dai Llewellyn. Built like a prop-forward, Dai was a fair-haired, soft-voiced Welshman with a way of moving that never seemed hurried and a core of gentleness that a life of violence seemed to have left untouched. Ed and Dai had known each other since Iraq in 2003, when they shared a billet in the Big Brother House, the SAS villa in downtown Baghdad, and they had been together in Afghanistan since 2006. There were several occasions that Ed could point to when Dai’s actions had, in all likelihood, saved his life and Ed was careful to treat him with the utmost courtesy.
The Black Hawk lifted off ten minutes later. Strapped into a bucket seat, Ed stared through the cabin doors at the patchwork of green fields and plantations in the broad valley below. On the starboard side he could see the snow-capped mountains of the Hindu Kush in the distance. It was too noisy to speak or be heard and, lulled by the vibration, he soon fell asleep.
When he woke up the sun was hot in his eyes and looking down through the open door he could see the helicopter’s shadow running over crumpled brown ridgelines. It was said that you could still find the bleached bones of British soldiers scattered in the gullies and barren washes. Every time Ed flew over he couldn’t help but reflect on the fate of his fellow countrymen there during the disastrous retreat from Kabul in 1842. Eighteen thousand soldiers and civilians slaughtered in the winter snow by Pashtun tribesmen.
Dai nudged him, offering a paper bag full of dates. He took one, its flesh like sweet chewable leather.
At Sarobi, they dipped down into the gorge briefly before climbing again. He could see the churning serpentine of the Kabul River and beside it, on the narrow and winding road, trucks ablaze with reflected light, trucks full of ammunition and other supplies to maintain the NATO presence. It was difficult to imagine the current military adventure in Afghanistan ending as badly as the First Afghan War, but ten years on from the most recent invasion it was becoming clear that Britain’s fourth war in Afghanistan would end with as few political gains as the first three.
The Black Hawk came in to Kabul abruptly, swooping down from the ring of grey mountains that trapped a layer of smog over the city. They landed on an earth strip at the edge of the airport and the helicopter taxied on its road-wheels to a hard-standing in a storm of white dust.
Ed jumped out into a hot wind laced with sand.
There was an armoured Land Cruiser waiting for them in Car Park B and an Afghan police pick-up joined them as they passed the old Mig-21 on a concrete plinth at the entrance to the airport.
‘Straight there?’ Dai asked.
Ed nodded.
The Kabul traffic was the usual slow-motion free-for-all. It was sunset before they arrived at the British Embassy and Ed began the laborious process of negotiating his way through the blast-wall chicane and the air-lock entry system.
Inside the control room he found a sleepy watch-keeper as pale as a cavern-dwelling fish, and a water-cooler dispensing chilled Malvern water. He drank several cups. The watch-keeper informed him that the ambassador was running late.
Ed kicked off his flip-flops and sat down on bright blue modular seating to read a long out-of-date Economist magazine. The control room smelled of floor wax and toner, odours of the NATO presence.
Within half-an-hour the Ambassador arrived. He looked Ed up and down.
‘Christ man, you’re not Kim astride the gun Zam-Zammeh.’
‘It’s good to see you too, sir.’
Ambassador Chetwynd-Marr was a vain man of patrician bearing with a grey widow’s peak and lousy teeth. He was a Classics scholar and an Arabist with a working knowledge of Pashto.
‘I know that something significant is
underway,’ he told Ed, ‘and if it’s going to turn into a disaster, like these things often do, I don’t want to be the one to say: if only you’d told me I could have warned you.’
‘Thanks for your concern, sir.’
The Ambassador was well-known for his deft command of hindsight. He was invariably wise after the fact, though rarely before it. Known to his staff as “Old Misgivings”, the younger diplomats mocked him behind his back, shaking their heads and imitating his ponderous voice: “Of course, I always had misgivings…”
‘I want to be part of a winning strategy here, Edward, not a losing one.’
‘We all want that, sir.’
‘Look, I don’t want to have to ask for you to be sent home,’ he said in a sympathetic tone. ‘I’m a reasonable person. It’s just that things are volatile right now and I think I need to know what’s going on over on the other side. Pakistan, I mean. I need to know the identity of your agent.’
Unlike many of his fellow MI6 officers, Ed Malik did not regard spying as a profession of cold betrayal. He saw it as one of careful trust-building. He believed that you couldn’t run an agent without trust on both sides. Of course it was limited and of course there were things you kept from each other. There were necessary lies. That was understandable. But if you were considering whether or not the information being passed to you was of vital national interest you needed to know that your agent had been trustworthy in other matters. And the agent, for his or her part, needed to know that you weren’t going to chat about what they’d just told you. What was said was protected and – above all else – the agent’s identity was protected. That was the code he lived by and he didn’t like to have it challenged. It was one of the reasons he avoided Kabul whenever possible.
‘I can’t do that,’ Ed replied.
‘Why not?’
‘You know why not. We have an agreement when we recruit people. We don’t talk about them to anybody.’
‘Don’t you think I’m trustworthy?’
‘No actually, I don’t.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘You wouldn’t be able to resist bragging about it.’
The Ambassador’s memoir was the worst-kept secret in Kabul. In a year or two he’d be strutting his stuff at every literary festival in Britain and spouting off on the Today programme first thing in the morning.
Chetwynd-Marr spluttered. ‘With one phone call I could have you on the next plane back.’
‘No,’ said Ed. ‘By all means make the call, though.’
The Ambassador’s eyes narrowed. ‘I knew something was going on. You’re hiding something from me.’
‘I can’t discuss it.’
‘At least let me see the intelligence reports first.’
‘You see all my intelligence reports. They don’t get circulated in London without it saying whether the Ambassador agrees or disagrees.’
‘You’re sure about that?’
‘Absolutely.’
It wasn’t true, of course. The intelligence that Ed was “sitting on” was known to only two people outside of the top floor at Vauxhall Cross: the Prime Minister and his Foreign Affairs Adviser, who’d had it stove-piped directly to them in a “red-jacket” folder. He could imagine the consternation on the Ambassador’s face if he told him the truth.
2. Turning Nightingale
Edward Henry Malik was thirty-five years old, a former British Naval Intelligence Officer and, by profession, an MI6 agent-runner. Like his predecessors in The Great Game, the “tournament of shadows” fought between the Russians and the British in Afghanistan in the nineteenth century, he preferred to use guile rather than weapons to achieve his aims. But there was an impulsive and at times violent streak in him too, times when his voice lowered and his fists became his means of exclamation.
He was tall and slim with broad shoulders and his chest tapered to a narrow waist. He had curly black hair and dark, knowing eyes with long lashes. His smile was tight-lipped – half courteous and half suspicious. A career in intelligence had taught him to play his cards close to his chest, to look and listen. As a result, he had few friends. His colleagues hardly knew him at all.
For four years he had been isolated by an operational firewall, running an agent codenamed Nightingale inside the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Pakistan’s nefarious Hydra-headed spying agency. It was the ISI that was credited with driving the Soviets out of Afghanistan and creating the Taliban to fill the void. It was the ISI that had provided shelter to remnants of Al Qaeda since their defeat in the aftermath of 9/11. And it was the ISI that had picked the Taliban up off their knees in 2006, pressed fresh weapons in their hands and sent them back into Afghanistan to battle with the Crusaders.
The ISI treated Afghanistan, and in particular its Pashto speaking lands, as its own personal fiefdom and if you wanted insight into the current insurgency you needed an asset inside the ISI.
#
It had been almost impossible to establish a decent network of reliable informants in Afghanistan. Just as in Iraq there were too many local agencies, most of them penetrated by the enemy, too few sources and not enough secure locations to meet.
When the break came it was a result of unforeseen events that required a swift response, and not in Afghanistan. It was March 2006 and Ed got a call on the secure phone at the Kabul Embassy telling him to get on the next available flight home. He rode back in the cargo hold of an RAF Boeing C-17 alongside coffins carrying the bodies of two infantrymen killed by a roadside bomb in Helmand. At Brize Norton he side-stepped the cortege and strode across the tarmac to a waiting police car. He was driven north on the motorway, hurtling up the fast lane with lights and siren.
Ed spent the journey studying the contents of the MI5 file he’d been handed. A surveillance operation initiated by one of their people in an Oldham mosque had uncovered the existence of a small cell of ISI officers, who were up to the same things as MI5, monitoring the activities of Jihadi talent scouts in Oldham and Manchester who were recruiting local kids for specialised training in madrassas in Pakistan’s tribal areas. The ISI cell had been under surveillance for several months now. The file included detailed biographies of the cell members as well as a summary of their activities. It was the first time he saw a picture of Nightingale: a grainy black and white photocopy of the passport photo on his visa application. But you could tell he was good-looking, with a square jaw and chiselled cheeks, and a curved bow of a mouth. You’re a spoiled young man, was Ed’s first thought. There were other photos of course, of clandestine meetings, of pick-ups and casual encounters, with Nightingale at the centre of attention and everybody around him smiling as if they felt some kind of gravitational pull. They must have fallen over themselves to confide in him. What a carefree life it must be this spying lark, Ed thought, followed by a sharp retort. Now it’s all going to be very different.
At the back of the file was the transcript of a phone intercept. A panicked call made by Nightingale from an address in Oldham to a number in Islamabad just over fifteen hours ago. According to GCHQ, the calm and unhurried voice on the end of the line in Islamabad belonged to the “Hidden Hand” – Pakistan’s legendary spy of spies – Major-General Javid Aslam Khan.
#
The lights and siren were switched off as they approached Oldham.
Ed was dropped off on the Lees Road, half a mile short of his destination, and walked in. He was the right skin tone for the neighbourhood. He turned into Gibraltar Street. The carcass of a Victorian mill dominated the skyline.
The single storey redbrick bungalow was at the end of a shabby cul-de-sac. Frosty blades of grass were pushing up through the cracked tarmac of the carport and the curtains were drawn. He knocked on the door.
A white woman opened it. She was not tall, about five-four he estimated, late twenties with auburn hair cut in a sensible bob and a determined look on her face. She was wearing practical clothes: black jeans, canvas trainers and a fleece.
&nbs
p; ‘Come in.’
He stepped inside. It was chilly. She handed him a pair of latex gloves, which he snapped on. ‘How is he?’
‘Like a sulky child,’ she replied. He registered her Yorkshire accent. ‘What do you want to do first?’
‘Show me the body.’
He followed her down the hall to the bedroom.
The body on the bed was cold and rigid. His back and buttocks had the blue-cheese-mould patina of stagnant blood, liver mortis. Ed realised why it was so cold. They must have turned off the heating in an attempt to preserve the body for as long as possible.
‘Cause of death?’
‘By the looks of it he choked on his own vomit. They were smoking heroin.’ There was a fold of discoloured aluminium foil beside the bed and a lighter. ‘I’m told it’s almost impossible to kill yourself smoking heroin.’
‘Bad luck then. A nasty surprise.’
She nodded. ‘He says he woke up alongside him.’
‘That’s when he made the call?’
‘That’s right. He woke, found the body and called Islamabad. He was told to sit tight until midnight tonight when a clean-up crew would arrive and he would be given a fresh set of instructions.’
Ed looked at his watch. They had three hours.
‘What about the other members of the cell?’
‘They’ve gone quiet. No calls, no web traffic and no movement.’
Nightingale had made the call and, subsequently, word had gone out to the rest of the cell to stop whatever they were doing and wait. Khan was known for caution. He didn’t want to waste a clean-up crew on a trap. Nightingale hadn’t liked that of course, he’d objected in the strongest terms. You can’t leave me here with a dead body. But he’d been told to put a sock in it. Sit tight and wait.
‘Where is he?’
‘He’s in the kitchen. We’ve been moving him back and forth between the kitchen and the living room all day.’
Nightingale was sitting at the kitchen table with a blanket around his shoulders and a cup of sweet tea in his hands. He’d had fifteen hours to work his way through the full gamut of emotions – despair, anger, outrage, bitterness and resignation.