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Authors: Roger Pearce

Agent of the State (27 page)

BOOK: Agent of the State
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Kerr waited for the crew to cast off before joining him in the open by the small deck on the stern, separated from the saloon by toilets and a storage cabin, where the engines would camouflage their voices. The boat was empty, apart from a German family in waterproofs being blown about on the foredeck and a scattering of French retirees in the saloon buying drinks and crisps from the female deckhand. Without any prospect of tips, the coxswain had abandoned his running commentary on famous sights.

Kerr had originally phoned Kestrel early on Friday morning because he needed the inside story on Ahmed Jibril. But things had moved on in the intervening four days: right now he was preoccupied with the heat coming from Philippa Harrington about his illicit search in Knightsbridge. Complaints from MI5’s lower orders were routine: why should Kerr’s misbehaviour be attracting the anger of the DG herself?

Kestrel looked gloomy as Kerr gave his account, fixing his eyes on their soapy wake as they sailed downstream towards Waterloo. When he had finished, Kerr tapped him on the shoulder. ‘So how did they get to me, Jerry?’ At their very first meeting Kestrel had told Kerr he hated any shortening of his name; Kerr used it the whole time. ‘Must have been from an OP or remote camera.’

‘Or cell site on your mobile,’ said Kestrel, looking away to the riverbank.

‘No chance,’ said Kerr. ‘So why would they keep CCTV on an empty house? And, more to the point, why didn’t you tell me?’

‘I’m in vetting, for Christ’s sake,’ said Kestrel, in exasperation, ‘not in the loop any more.’

This was true, to an extent. When they had first met, Kestrel had been working as a liaison officer. But he was being disingenuous, for Kerr knew that his current job was in the policy secretariat, with access to the director-general’s private office, and chapter and verse on MI5’s strategic planning. In some respects Kerr judged him to be better placed than before.

‘Don’t try that “need to know” crap on me again. I’m telling you, Jerry, I believe they took away a body that night. Possibly a fourteen-year-old girl’s. I’ll know for sure very soon. The place was deep cleaned like you never saw in your life but I still found traces of blood on the floor. And brackets inside for some kind of video loop. What’s that all about? And why would your engineers want to cover it outside by remote cameras? That’s even weirder. I need to see the paperwork on this, and I know you guys don’t fart without creating a record, so have another think.’

Jeremy Thompson was forty-two, married with three children. Kerr had recruited him four years earlier after a fundamentalist-Christian PC had arrested him with another man on Hampstead Heath for committing what he insisted on describing as a ‘lewd act’, then becoming involved in a brawl. The moment they found Thompson’s government pass, the local uniform boss had called John Kerr, his contact in SO15. Kerr had made the deal with the duty inspector in three minutes; his pitch to Thompson in the stinking police cell had taken four hours.

Over the years, Kestrel had veered between co-operation and resentment. On dark days, when he was fractious after a risky cruising adventure the night before, Kerr would calmly remind him he had saved his job and his marriage, but Kestrel often responded badly. ‘What you do to me is straightforward fucking blackmail,’ he had once shouted into the mobile Kerr had given him, ‘and all for sticking my cock in a chartered accountant’s gob.’ Kestrel’s offence, of course, lay not in the bisexuality but the subterfuge. Both men knew Kerr’s leverage would evaporate the day Kestrel came out to his wife and put his hands up to his vetting officer.

‘I can’t call up the file,’ he said eventually, ‘because there almost certainly isn’t one.’ The two German kids ran through the saloon onto their deck, caught Kestrel’s grim look and retreated. As she turned, the little girl tripped on his shoe and burst into tears.

‘Wrong answer. And do you know what, Jerry? I might have let this go if Philippa hadn’t been so enthusiastic about slagging me off to my boss,’ Kerr yelled, above the child’s screams. They watched her run back past the wheelhouse to her parents. ‘We’re talking a life here, Jerry, so don’t blank me.’

Kestrel sighed heavily and his body actually seemed to deflate. ‘Look, this all goes back a long way. It started overseas. A small circle in MI6. Totally in-house. No one outside the family. Queen and country offered exotic postings in those days, alternative lifestyles. Boys, girls, discretion assured, especially if you were married. Anything to keep the pecker up and all totally unofficial.’

‘Honey traps, you mean?’

‘No way. House parties among consenting adults.’

‘So, a bunch of immoral bastards screwed around to liven up the spying and took it up the arse from time to time. What’s new in the higher gene pool?’

‘MI6 saw no reason to change just because they got transferred back to Century House.’

The German parents were in the saloon now, buying drinks from the bar. The boy was pointing at Kestrel, and the mother, little girl in her arms, glared at him.

‘Then, in the nineties, the management introduced lie-detector tests and some got out PDQ. A few took their chances and winged it, and a handful were protected. After a while they introduced a few key players in my Service. Things sort of carried on as normal, but on a much smaller scale.’

‘So how do you know about this?’ Kerr’s question echoed back at them as they steamed under Waterloo Bridge.

Kestrel looked back through the saloon, then turned to face aft, as if the tourists might read his lips. ‘One of our leavers told me. A regular desk officer, nothing flash.’

‘Which branch?’

‘G. International extremism. Officially she resigned to retrain as a teacher, but that wasn’t the real reason. She knew what was happening.’

‘She was involved in it, you mean,’ said Kerr.

‘Everything changed. They started to introduce girls from outside the circle. Sometimes boys, too.’

‘Hookers, you mean? Rent boys?’

‘Kids. Children were being kidnapped off the street.’

‘Where? Here in London? Don’t go all coy on me, Jerry.’

‘Not London. Abroad. I don’t know. Turkey, I think. She just said it had all gone horribly wrong.’

‘Because they were compromised, you mean? Who found out about it?’

‘No one. It’s a total secret.’

‘So give me some names. Spit it out, Jerry. You’re used to that.’

‘I don’t have any detail. It’s never talked about in the office.’

‘Well, MI5 didn’t follow those two men to Marston Street by accident, so someone in your Service is aware. And if they’re not part of whatever this is, who are they protecting?’

‘I don’t know. I swear.’

‘So I’ll give their boss a pull and ask him.’

‘Jesus Christ.’ Kestrel looked close to tears. ‘Please don’t do that.’

They stood in silence, watching the Houses of Parliament recede as the boat rounded the wide bend towards Southwark. ‘How did your friend find out?’ asked Kerr, eventually.

‘She wasn’t a friend, exactly. I hardly knew her.’ Kerr’s agent moved to the port side of the boat and stood watching HMS
President
, the old naval training ship. ‘She signed the Official Secrets clause promising to keep schtum for life, got pissed, took me home and shagged me. Blurted it out over a post-coital ciggy. Followed by a surprisingly efficient blow-job.’ Kestrel took a deep breath. ‘They were being trafficked to order. I think she said they were being smuggled into the UK for sex and never heard of again.’

Kerr was incredulous. ‘You think?’

‘I’m not sure. Like I said, she was drunk. We were both the worse for wear.’

‘So let me get this straight. HMG employees were actually conniving in the importation of these kids, right? And still are, for all we know.’

‘A tiny circle. A rogue element.’

‘Great. That makes me feel a lot better. Arranging to have them trafficked to order. Kidnapped, abused and murdered. I’d say this is a real show-stopper, Jerry, wouldn’t you? Pushes torturing AQ suspects right to the back of the queue. And what did your friend do about it?’

‘What could she do?’

‘How about blow the fucking whistle?’

‘I dunno, by the time she ’fessed to me she was well out of it. And when you leave the Service the shutters come crashing down.’

‘So why would she tell all to a relative stranger?’

‘It’s what people do under stress, John,’ Kestrel suddenly snapped back, ‘or duress. Christ, you should know.’

‘Or maybe she thought you had the guts to follow it through.’ Kerr watched Kestrel’s eyes slip downstream to his right and knew he was looking out for the City of London School, his old school. ‘But you didn’t, did you? You did sweet FA,’ he said, turning his agent to face him, ‘and now you’re going to tell me who she is, so you won’t feel quite so bloody guilty once I know for certain they removed a young girl’s body that night, with MI5 watching and protecting them.’

Kestrel stood silently by the rail, looking out at St Paul’s. ‘She’s a teacher at a girls’ private school near Windsor,’ he said, watching the happy part of his life drift away. ‘But I’m telling you she won’t want to get involved. She’ll deny everything.’

‘I need to speak with her anyway. Name, Jerry.’

‘Pamela Masters.’

‘That wasn’t so difficult, was it?’ said Kerr, squeezing his agent’s arm. ‘Doing the right thing at last?’

‘What? Betraying the Service to you?’

‘Thought we were on the same side.’

‘Don’t kid yourself,’ said Kestrel, with a harsh laugh. ‘This is blatant fucking coercion, not patriotism.’

They paused, both looking up at Tower Bridge. ‘So while you’re on a roll, Jerry, what’s happening with Ahmed Jibril over at your place?’ said Kerr, evenly.

Kestrel immediately looked away. ‘John, let’s not go there.’

‘I’m already too far down the track. And don’t tell me you haven’t got a file on him.’

They were almost at their destination, slowing on the approach to St Katharine’s Dock in front of the Tower Hotel. ‘There is, but it’s under double cover. Never leaves Philippa’s office.’

‘What does it say? Tell me, Jerry.’

The crewman had come aft to take charge of disembarkation now, followed by the German family. On the pontoon, another hand waited with the gangway on wheels. Releasing the guardrail, the crewman held the mooring line ready to cast to his mate on the dock.

‘I don’t know.’

‘So why the nervous breakdown all of a sudden?’ Kerr could see his agent growing increasingly agitated with talk of Ahmed Jibril. He was like a trapped animal, eyes flitting everywhere, looking desperately for an escape. ‘Philippa tells my boss to do nothing more on Jibril and everyone’s even more pissed off with me than usual. Where did I go wrong, Jerry? What makes this target so special?’

‘That’s all I can tell you.’

‘Is MI5 protecting him?’ Kerr silently regarded his agent for a few moments. ‘Did I screw up an agent operation or something, Jerry? What the hell’s going on here?’

‘I swear,’ said Kestrel, close to tears.

‘Because if Mr Jibril is a good guy on a nice little earner, that’s absolutely fine. I’ll say sorry, buy you lunch and back off. But I’ve been lifting a lot of stones these past few days. And the vermin underneath all tell me he’s a
jihadi
working for Al Qaeda.’

‘What stones?’

‘Now, if that’s true, and I find you people are shielding a bad bastard who’s not under control, then we’re in a completely new ball game and I’m going to be coming to you with a lot more questions. Day or night.’

‘You didn’t answer.’

‘So you need to get your sticky fingers inside that double cover for me. And if I find you’re bullshitting, I’ll do your fucking legs.’

‘What stones?’ said Kestrel, turning to face Kerr.

Kerr laughed. ‘You don’t seriously think I’m going to show my hand to you?’

‘Perhaps you’re the one who’s bluffing,’ said Kestrel. He was trying to be combative, but his voice had risen a pitch. ‘Could you really burn me to Philippa now, after all I’ve been through? I don’t think so.’

Kerr was already walking through into the saloon, ready to disembark. ‘Try me,’ he said, over his shoulder.

They were six or seven feet from the dock when Kestrel made his move, suddenly swinging back to the stern deck. By the time Kerr became aware, the agent was already clambering over the port rail and balancing on the gunwale. The boat was still a couple of metres from the dock but closing fast against a strong tide.

‘Jerry, stop!’ As Kerr yelled, Kestrel bent his knees and launched himself into the air, scrabbling for the ropes on the dockside. But he lost height so quickly that he only managed to grab one of the protective tyres lining the pontoon. He hung, suspended with his feet and lower legs beneath the water just as the boat was being sucked against the dock. Everyone was shouting now as the crewman on the pontoon rushed to save him. Before they could reach him, Kestrel hauled himself, with a show of strength that surprised Kerr, onto the pontoon. A split second later the boat would have come alongside and crushed him.

The crewman and a couple of astonished passengers waiting to embark tried to hold onto him, but Kestrel shoved them away, ran up the ramp and escaped onto the Embankment. Kerr was already speed-dialling Melanie as Kestrel sprinted towards the street.

BOOK: Agent of the State
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