Was it just another surveillance job - Episode 35
The trouble is, there are also other stories to write, and I'm not very good at prioritizing.
But, here we are, a few minutes opened up and it didn't take long to get back into the groove.
Chasing leads, maybe
She
gave me a minute to think about the situation, and then said what I was
thinking, “So he could be anywhere?”
“He
was dead. I felt for a pulse. There wasn’t one.”
I
could interpret that expression on her face, ‘you’re not a doctor’.
She
turned another page, read a few lines, then made a note at the bottom.
It
read, if my deciphering was up to scratch, ‘doesn’t know if subject dead or not’.
She
looked up again. “It appears these
documents are out there,” she waved her hand in the air, “somewhere. Fortunately, they have not turned up, not has
someone tried to sell them back or to the newspapers, so we’re lucky. So far.
That isn’t going to last for much longer. Every extra day out there is another chance
for the government to be embarrassed.”
“You
know what the contents are?”
“Don’t
be silly. That’s above my pay grade, and
besides, you and I are better off not knowing.
So, what you need to do is find O’Connell and/or find the documents on
this USB drive.”
She
slid a card across the table. It had a
name and a telephone number. Monica
Sherive. A mobile number, a burner no
doubt that couldn’t be traced back to her.
“You
find either, you tell me first.”
“Nobbin?”
“Second,
and when I tell you.”
“So
you don’t trust him either?”
“At
the moment, for both you and I have to be careful who we trust.”
I
added her to the list of people I couldn’t trust, not that she had told me I
could trust her. Yet.
“And
if I get contacted by Severin again?”
“Have
you?”
I
had thought about not telling her about that brief meeting where he told me
about the USB drive, but it couldn’t do any harm. At least she hadn’t asked me if I knew about
the USB, which was something, I suppose.
“Yes. Once.
Told me to keep my head down. And
asked me if O’Connell had time to talk to me.
It was the same answer I gave him back in the alley. No. I’d
just managed to corner him when he was shot.”
“By
Severin, or this other fellow,” she shuffled back several pages, then said, “Maury?”
“No. That was what was odd about it. The shot came from somewhere else. A sniper I would have thought.”
And,
my brain suddenly moving into overdrive, piecing together what might be a coincidence,
but in our business, they were rarely coincidences. A sniper shot him., say Nobbin or one of his
people, he looks dead, waits for a call to the cleaners, intercepts it, and
collects the so-called dead O’Connell.
It was a good conspiracy theory.
And
as far-fetched as one.
Severin
had to have the body somewhere, trying to figure out how to bring O’Connell back
to life so he could torture the USB location out of him.
Hell,
that was as twisted as the conspiracy theory.
Time
to change the subject. “Do you have any
idea who Severin and Maury are?”
She
went to the back of the file and pulled out some photographs, mug shots perhaps
of staff members. She put five faces in
front of me and asked me if the two were there.
They
were. The first, with the name of David
Westcott, and the fourth with the name of Bernie Salvin.
“Who
are they?”
“They
used to work in the training department ten or so years ago. Westcott was also a handler for several
years. They both requested a transfer to
operations, and we give a mission. Six
agents were assigned, and all six were killed, an investigation after the fact found
that their identities had been leaked to the enemy before they reached the
target.”
“They
gave them up?”
“Nobody
knows for sure. There were others in
that group, but in the end, the department retired them all. All their years in training served them
well. We found the place where you were
trained.”
Another
photograph of the main building. I
nodded.
“It
was an old training facility closed down five years ago. It was just sitting there waiting for an
enterprising crew. It won’t happen
again. Needless to say, we haven’t been
able to find either of them, only the people they employed, who believed it was
in good faith. A mess in other words. Now, go.
Find me answers.”
She
stood. The meeting was over.
© Charles Heath 2020
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