Chapter 13
Stratton stood alone in a room on the top floor of
the British Embassy, looking down on the brightly lit city across
the river, the tip of the Eiffel Tower, its silhouette outlined by
thousands of white light bulbs, just visible above the Grand
Palais. Beyond the gardens hundreds of red and white car lights
shunted along the Champs Elysées.
But Stratton could see none of this. All he could
see was the crowded Rue de Rivoli of that afternoon. He thought he
had seen Hank through the crowds, standing and looking about, and
then he was gone. Stratton went to the spot and searched around,
filtering the sea of faces passing him, the countless people moving
in all directions, but there was no sign of Hank or Henri. He
called Clemens and then Brent, whom he knew were in the area, but
when he heard the automated message responses, it was evident they
were out of signal range, which could only mean they had entered
the subway and were underground. He called several other operatives
but no one had anything to report. For the next few minutes he
continued calling Clemens and Brent in the hope they had surfaced
somewhere else around the Place de la Concorde, but after a while
it became apparent they had taken the métro.When Clemens finally
called him from Gare d’Austerlitz, Stratton chastised him for
letting Hank go off on his own. When he had not heard from Hank for
several hours, though it seemed a long shot and perhaps ludicrous
to even contemplate, the word kidnap crossed his mind. It would
have been his immediate concern had they been in Northern Ireland,
but not Paris at eleven in the morning. Now, ten and a half hours
later and still no sign of Hank, he knew in his gut that the
bizarre possibility was true. The rest of the team were still on
the streets checking the likely places he might turn up, searching
hospitals and police stations for their ‘lost American
friend’.
The door opened behind him and Stratton focused on
the reflection in glass; Lieutenant Jardene was standing in the
doorway.
‘Anything?’ Jardene asked, knowing that if there
was Stratton would have said so.
Stratton had his cell-phone in his hand. ‘No,’ he
said.
Jardene let the door close behind him and entered
the spacious office. ‘I can’t fucking believe this,’ he said. It
was the first time Stratton had heard him swear.
‘He’s been lifted,’ Stratton said.
‘I still think it’s too soon to jump to that
conclusion,’ Jardene said.
‘He’s been lifted,’ Stratton said again.
Jardene was not in denial, but it was his
responsibility to remain optimistic.‘We’ll have to tell the French
soon.They’ll have to know . . . We’ll need their help in finding
him.’
Stratton’s phone vibrated and he raised it to his
ear. ‘Yes?’ he said and listened for a moment. Jardene watched
Stratton’s eyes, looking for any sign of good news even though he
knew the man well enough to know his expression would give nothing
away. Stratton would tell him they had found Hank alive and well or
brutally murdered in the same casual manner.
‘Okay,’ Stratton said to the caller. ‘Stay there
until you’re recalled.’ He thumbed the end-call button, pocketed
the phone and said nothing to Jardene.
‘London’s going bloody apeshit,’ Jardene
said.
Stratton could sense something accusatory in his
tone. Or perhaps he was being overly sensitive to the inevitable.
The first question they would ask was who the ground team leader
was. His name would have been the first that they cursed. Screw
them, he thought.They couldn’t be any harder on him than he’d been
on himself.
‘I wouldn’t want to be in the boss’s shoes when the
call is made to Washington,’ Jardene said.‘The Yanks’ll go through
the roof . . . God, it doesn’t even bear thinking about. American
Special Forces operative unofficially working for the Brits
kidnapped while on illegal surveillance operation in France, and
technically against the IRA.’ He couldn’t believe it himself. ‘The
implications just go on and on. We can always tell the French to
sod off and pipe down but the Americans are going to want someone’s
head on a pike.’
And shit rolls downhill, Stratton thought. He knew
where a good part of the British shit would ultimately settle
though. Around Hank himself. He would be buried in the stuff,
especially if he wasn’t able to defend himself. London would
wriggle all it could to focus much of the blame on poor old Hank,
despite the fact he should not have been on the ground in the first
place. The head most likely to roll in the unit itself was
Jardene’s. He was the officer in command. Stratton would get
dragged over the coals at the court of inquiry as the ground
supervisor, but at the end of the day he was a field operative. It
was one of the advantages of being a non-commissioned officer when
commissioned ranks were on the ground. They got the glory that came
with success - and the crap that came with failure. Jardene had
been in the embassy throughout the op and therefore as good as in
the field. He didn’t interfere with the ground op because he
trusted Stratton, not that there was anything he could have done to
help direct the operation anyhow. His experience of foot
surveillance was virtually zero. If an operation came up next week
somewhere in the world and Stratton was available he’d probably be
on it. Life would soon be back to normal for him apart from the
occasional dig from other operatives. It would not be long before
it became an amusing story; such was the sick humour of the
service. But it would be a serious bump in Jardene’s career.
Jardene undoubtedly had dreams of commanding the squadron one day.
He was capable enough. But if there was competition for the post,
what happened today might be the foot to kick the chair out from
under him. The Yanks would not forget and might even be offended if
the officer who lost one of their boys became CO of a unit they
considered a sister.
‘What do you think happened?’ Jardene asked
eventually.
Stratton shrugged. ‘Henri sussed us.’
‘When?’
‘At the café. He wouldn’t have gone there if he’d
twigged before. He would have ran as soon as he smelled us.’
‘Then the café was the rendezvous?’
Stratton nodded; he was certain of that. If you’re
twigged on the walk you don’t stop for a coffee and let the enemy
gather its forces. You take them away from your objective, keep
them strung out, and you fly the first chance you get. Henri flew,
the first chance he got, which was at the café. He went from there
directly to the métro, the best place to screw with communications
and to thin out any followers. If he flew from the café, that meant
he twigged at the café.
‘Was he playing Russian, do you think?’ Jardene
asked.
Playing Russian referred to the way the Russians
liked to carry out anti-surveillance. Stratton had worked against
them in London more than once. They were the hardest in the
business to follow because they often sent a tag to shadow the
hare. Jardene was suggesting that Henri had a partner experienced
in surveillance who followed him from far enough back with the
specific task of watching to see if anyone was following him. If he
detected any suspicious behaviour his job would have been to warn
Henri off.
‘It’s possible,’ Stratton said.
‘But you don’t think so.’
‘We were so god-awful I thought Henri would twig us
on the first leg to the café. But he didn’t, otherwise he wouldn’t
have gone there and risk exposing his contact. A half-blind tag
would’ve seen the shambles and called him long before he reached
the café.’
‘I see,’ Jardene said.
‘It doesn’t look as if Henri used a tag in the past
since up until now he’s been followed by just two tails. A tag
would’ve seen that.’
‘Right,’ Jardene said, accepting the argument. Then
he voiced a notion. ‘Unless the tag had comms problems and couldn’t
contact Henri until he was at the café.’
Stratton didn’t say anything. Jardene knew he was
reaching. ‘I know it’s far-fetched but it could have been something
like that.’
‘And maybe Henri got a call from his doctor and
found out he had cancer . . . Keep it simple. Save the complicated
hypothesis for your memoirs.’
Jardene flashed him a look, then thought better of
telling him not to be so insubordinate. Stratton was right anyway.
There were a thousand possibilities. It had to be kept to the
basics otherwise the thread might be lost.
‘You don’t think there was a tag, then?’ Jardene
asked.
‘No.’
‘Then Henri became suspicious at the café.
How?’
Stratton would have loved to know the answer to
that. ‘No one did a pass,’ Jardene added. ‘How did he know? . . . ’
he trailed off to himself. He paced the room to help him think but
it wasn’t working. He was feeling the pressure and preparing
himself for what was to come. He checked his watch. ‘Hank wouldn’t
go to the American Embassy if he ran into trouble, would he?’
Jardene asked.
‘He’s not stupid,’ Stratton said. ‘He knew he
shouldn’t have been on the ground with us. He did what he did to
try and save the day and because he was the only one in the right
place who could. It wasn’t his fault. It was mine.’
‘He might still turn up,’ Jardene said, trying once
again to believe in his own optimism. ‘Let’s just pray he does.’ He
headed for the door. ‘I expect London will call us in soon, before
they talk to the French. We’ll get everyone together here first,
then I expect we’ll head back as soon as we can and debrief.’
Stratton continued looking out of the window and
did not acknowledge he’d heard. Jardene left the room.
Stratton went back over the day once again. He
pictured Henri sitting outside the café looking calm and relaxed.
Brent saw the waiter come out and speak to him, then moments later
Henri followed him back into the café. A few minutes after that
Henri flew from the area taking the team with him. Henri must have
learned he was blown when he left the patio and went inside.
Stratton was certain if he questioned the waiter he’d find out that
Henri had received a telephone call. It was the caller who warned
Henri he was being followed. Someone who knew about the meeting was
watching the café and the surrounding streets. That someone in all
probability was the actual contact. Stratton would ask for a trace
on the call, as soon as the French were brought in and had calmed
down enough to co-operate, but he didn’t expect to gain much from
it. Anyone involved at this level of the game would know how to
make a ‘safe’ call. A public phone, or a sterile mobile. Stratton
had been hard on the team and didn’t in truth think they had been
all that bad. They had been bunched and clumsy at times but quick
to react if they felt Henri had glanced at them even once. Stratton
was the one in the street nearest the café. Him and Hank. They were
the ones most likely seen. Whoever it was probably walked straight
past them, became suspicious and watched them. Then after seeing
them hang about the corner they blew the rendezvous. That had to be
it, or something like it.
Stratton felt suddenly drained. But it wasn’t just
the day’s mess that was weighing heavily. It was the feeling that
something was unravelling inside of him. He was tiring of his life
as it was. He felt like bits of him had broken off over the past
few years and he didn’t like what was left. The day rattled him on
more than one front. The one area in his life he remained confident
in was on the ground, on an operation, but today had proved that
there were limitations. Perhaps it was being in a team. Operating
alone had become his work of choice. There were signs that he had
grown much more reclusive. It was only too obvious in the way he
reacted to others and the way they acted towards him. Another
danger sign was he didn’t care about what his colleagues thought.
The work used to have a purpose for him but it had grown blurred
over time. The spirit of team ethos he liked to champion in his
earlier days appeared to be lost to him now.
He could not remember when it all began to go sour.
It wasn’t because of Sally. He had forced that relationship,
thinking it was what he wanted or needed. When she left he felt no
remorse. He didn’t miss her. Perhaps she knew he wouldn’t, which
was why she left. No one knew how he felt, not even Doles who liked
to think he knew Stratton so well.The stubborn Jock know-it-all
would remain unconvinced no matter what Stratton said.
He wondered where it would end. Perhaps when he no
longer had something to aim for. If that was true, what was he
aiming for now? The cracks were already starting to appear. For the
present at least he could concentrate on finding whoever was
responsible for Hank’s abduction. They were tied to those who tried
to kidnap Spinks, and the spy was tied to them all. He was the key.
There was still more to be had from this day than he had found, he
knew that. He had come within inches of the spy and there was a
clue out there as to who it was. But then there was a clue to every
mystery in the world somewhere. Stratton only cared about this
one.