Was it just another surveillance job - Episode 14
I'm back home and this story has been sitting on a back burner for a few months, waiting for some more to be written.
The trouble is, there are also other stories to write, and I'm not very good at prioritising.
But, here we are, a few minutes opened up and it didn't take long to get back into the groove.
Was I working for a ghost?
The trouble is, there are also other stories to write, and I'm not very good at prioritising.
But, here we are, a few minutes opened up and it didn't take long to get back into the groove.
Was I working for a ghost?
Training
sometimes was one of those things that went in one ear and came out the
other. That accounted for the boring
bits, but our instructors called it tradecraft.
I
guess I should have taken more notice at the time.
Home
was a bedsit in Bloomsbury, Not far from the Russell Square underground
station, on the ground floor overlooking the small park. Sometimes, in summer I would sit there and
watch the world go by, thinking there had to be more to life than waiting for
an opportunity.
To
do what, at the time, I didn’t know.
But, when this opportunity presented itself, oddly as a rather strange
ad in the help wanted pages of the newspaper, I guess the people who put it
there were looking for the curious sort, with a sense of adventure.
My
first impression of the job was that of a courier who would be required to
travel a lot. It said, in part, “must be
prepared to travel to different locations worldwide, understand the requirement
of confidentiality, and must be able to respond to emergencies that might occur
in the carrying out of your duties.”
To
me it spelled courier, though I rather hoped it wasn’t the briefcase handcuffed
to a wrist sort, and no guns.
After
the first interview, I think I had guessed correctly, though in subsequent
training, the word tradecraft put a slightly different slant to the job. That, and the surveillance module, sold to us
as “you need to know if you are being followed, recognise hostiles, and be able
to deal with them.”
But,
it was the notion that we should get out of any habits we had, those that made
us predictable to an enemy, yes, they actually used the word, enemy. Like for instance, if we caught the same
train, or bus, into the city. If we went
to the same cafe for coffee, restaurant for lunch or dinner, met people in a
pub on the same day, same time, each week.
Before
all this I found comfort in a regular schedule.
I hated being late, except when the transport system let me down. I had a regular stop off on the way to the
office for coffee, and usually went to the same cafe for lunch at the same
time.
Inevitably
I would leave home at the same time and quite often return home at the same
time. OK, I was boring and predictable. Now it was a little different, with some
variation in departure and arrival times, as well as the places I stopped for
coffee, and lunch or dinner.
This
day I was very late, after dark in fact, getting back to the flat.
I
went in after checking for mail, not that anyone ever sent letters these days,
unlocked my door, went in and switched on the light.
The
whole of the living space had been trashed.
Well, more to the point, someone had checked everywhere it was possible
to hide anything, which I didn’t, and hadn’t bothered cleaning up after them.
Had
they been interrupted?
If
that had happened the landlady would be down in a flash the moment I walked in
the door, not to commiserate on my bad luck, but to issue me with an eviction
notice. Very little was tolerated in her
establishment.
That
she hadn’t told me that whoever did this had done it very quietly, and without
anyone knowing. We had been taught the
same procedures which is why I recognised the signs. This had to be done by my previous employers. The only question I had was why?
I
had nothing they could possibly want.
I
took a few minutes to clean up the mess so that instead of a thorough trashing,
it just looked like the aftermath of a wild party, then went out to get a
coffee and think about why this had happened.
Not
far up the road was a cafe I went to for dinner if I wasn’t doing something
else, and, lo and behold, the minute I walked in the door, there was Severin,
sitting at the back half disguised by the evening newspaper.
Obviously
he’d been waiting for me.
Yes,
now I understood the implications of being someone who did the same thing over
and over.
There
was no mistaking the invitation, and, after briefly considering ignoring him,
realised that was not going to work.
After seeing what happened to O’Connor at their hand, I didn’t want to
join him.
I
sat down. “I have to say this is an
unexpected surprise.”
He
put the paper down. “For both of us, I
can assure you. I’ll get straight to the
point. I want the USB.”
“What
USB?”
“That
your target was carrying, it wasn’t on him, so by elimination, not being anywhere
at the crime scene, you must have it. He
either gave it to you, or you took it from him.
Where is it?”
I
took a minute to process what he was saying.
I had not seen a USB, not had he given me one, nor was there one
nearby. I would have seen it. No need to pretend to be surprised. I was.
“I
haven’t got it.”
He gave me one of those looks that made me believe he was trying to see if I was lying to him. But, as I said, it was the first time I was hearing of it and my surprise was genuine. Along with my answers to his questions.
He gave me one of those looks that made me believe he was trying to see if I was lying to him. But, as I said, it was the first time I was hearing of it and my surprise was genuine. Along with my answers to his questions.
After a minute he asked, “He
didn’t give you anything?”
“How
could he, you were there just about the same time as I was. And after you shot him, he had nothing on
him. Whatever you’re looking for, it
must still be in the alley, or he hid it somewhere else. And since you shot him, I doubt whether
you’ll ever find out.”
He
shook his head, and folded his paper.
“If you’ve got it we’ll find out. and it will not bode well for
you. And if you accidentally find it, here’s
my card. Call me.”
He
dropped a card on the table as he got up.
It was on the tip of my tongue to tell him I knew he was not working in the best interests of the service, that, in fact, I knew he was a sham, but took a second to consider the ramifications. That wouldn't bode well for me either; he had O'Connor shot without any forethought, I would not put it past him to shoot me here and now if he had to.
It was on the tip of my tongue to tell him I knew he was not working in the best interests of the service, that, in fact, I knew he was a sham, but took a second to consider the ramifications. That wouldn't bode well for me either; he had O'Connor shot without any forethought, I would not put it past him to shoot me here and now if he had to.
I
picked the card up just as he stopped and turned to give me a last look before
walking out the door. There was no
mistaking the intent, if they thought I had it, I’d be dead now.”
And
it meant that the evidence O’Conner was referring to was on a USB. All I had to do was find it. For that matter before Nobbin did too, because I now wanted to know just what it was both men were after.
©
Charles Heath 2019
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