Authors: Stephen Leather
‘Groaned?’
‘That’s what it sounded like.’ He shook his head. ‘Like I said, it feels wrong. Anyway, there’s definitely someone in there but I’m not sure that knocking’s the right thing to do.’
Shepherd looked at his watch. ‘We don’t have time for anything fancy,’ he said.
‘You don’t think we need back-up?’
‘In a perfect world, yes, but this is a far from perfect situation,’ said Shepherd. He reached into his jacket and slid the Glock from its holster.
‘Spider, I’m not trained for this. I’m an equipment geek.’
‘You’re an MI5 officer, Amar. And a bloody good one.’
‘Wearing a fifteen-hundred-pound suit,’ he said. ‘Don’t suppose you’l let me go home and change?’
‘This is what we do,’ said Shepherd. ‘You knock and give them your best smile and ask for Harvey. See how they play it. They might wel not open the door. Was there a viewer, a peephole thing?’
Singh shook his head. ‘No.’
‘That’s something,’ said Shepherd. ‘They’l have to open the door to check you out.’
‘Okay. And if they open the door, what then?’
‘If there’s a problem in there there’s every chance they’l just close the door in your face. I’l step in.’
‘And do what?’
‘Stop them closing the door, for a start. Then we’l play it by ear.’
‘And what do I do?’ asked Singh.
‘Which side were the hinges on?’
Singh frowned. ‘The left, I think. The door handle’s on the right.’
‘Then I’l stand on the right. When you see me move, you move to the left.’ He patted Singh on the shoulder. ‘You’l be fine, Amar.’
They went back down the corridor, walking on tiptoe.
Nadia looked at her watch, then back at Malik. ‘Why are you making this so difficult, Harvey?’ she asked. ‘Do you know how long you’ve been sitting in that chair? Almost twelve hours. Just tel me who you’ve told and the pain wil stop. We’re not hurting you for the fun of it. We just want the information, that’s al .’
Malik closed his eyes and shook his head slowly. They had used a dishcloth to gag him when he’d started screaming and his hands were tied behind the chair. He’d lost al sense of time. She’d said twelve hours but she could just as easily have said twelve days. They’d started with threats, then they’d beaten him, then they’d broken two of his fingers and then they’d gone to work on his right foot with a pair of pliers. She knew that he was hiding something from her. Malik didn’t know how she knew but she knew. It was as if she was able to look into his very soul.
She bent down and softly stroked his cheek. ‘We don’t want to hurt you like this, Harvey. No one wants to hurt you. But you have to tel us who you told about The Sheik. You did tel someone, didn’t you, Harvey? Just nod. You don’t have to say anything. Just nod.’
Malik’s cheeks were wet from crying but his tears had finished hours ago. He was exhausted, mental y and physical y, but he knew that the moment he admitted anything it would al be over. They would kil him, he knew that for sure. He and Raj had been taken to meet Bin Laden and they had told MI5 and MI5 had told the Americans. They were directly responsible for the death of Bin Laden and if he admitted that then he was sure they would kil him. The one chance he had was to just keep denying that he’d done anything wrong.
His instructors at the al-Qaeda camp in Pakistan had taught him the basics of interrogation. Real secrets had to be buried deep and it helped to visualise them locked away in a safe or a vault. Then the safe was to be put in a deep dark place. That’s what Malik had done. The truth was in an old-fashioned safe with a rotary dial and each time they tortured him he focused on the safe. And he kept repeating to himself that so long as the safe stayed locked they wouldn’t kil him.
What the instructors hadn’t done was prepare him for the pain. In Pakistan he’d been slapped and punched and been made to stand for hours with a sack over his head, but that was nothing compared to what Nadia and her two companions had done to him.
The one with the gun had hit him on the knees with so much force that he was sure the left one had cracked. Later he’d brought the butt of the gun down on Malik’s right hand, breaking his fingers. Then he’d used the pliers. And al the time he’d been smiling as if he enjoyed every second of the torture.
The other man, the one with the knife, had been more precise with the pain that he’d inflicted. He had worked the knife into Malik’s hands with the precision of a surgeon. That was when they’d gagged him. The man would torture him for a few minutes then they would wait for him to stop crying before removing the gag and asking him if he was ready to talk.
He’d pretended to be confused, that he didn’t understand what they were asking. That was the first line of defence, the instructors had said. Play dumb. And if that didn’t work, say nothing. Then, if the pain became unbearable, lie. Lies had to be checked, which meant that the interrogation would have to stop.
The problem for Malik was there was no lie he could tel Nadia that would stop the punishment. She had only one question for him. Who did he tel ?
At first he’d denied that he’d gone to Pakistan, but Nadia knew which camp he’d been in and who had trained him. Then he’d denied that he’d been taken to see The Sheik, but Nadia knew when he’d been and who had taken him to the compound in Abbottabad. She knew everything, Malik realised. And that meant she had been sent by al-Qaeda.
At just after midnight the man had stopped using the knife; he had produced a pair of pliers and gone to work on his toes. Malik kept passing out, and each time that happened they would wait until he woke up. The waking up was the worst time, because for a few seconds he’d imagine that it was al a dream and then the horror would pour over him like a cold shower, the realisation that the torture was real and that there was nothing he could do to stop it. Wel , there was one thing he could do, of course. He could tel the truth. He could tel them that he was an MI5 informer, that he’d told MI5 where Bin Laden was hiding. If he told her that then the torture would stop. Everything would stop.
The more the men had tortured him, the gentler Nadia had become. She would stroke his cheek, cal him sweetheart, tel him that she hated seeing him in pain. ‘Just tel me the truth,’ she’d said to him a hundred times or more. ‘Tel me the truth and I’l make them stop.’ But Malik couldn’t tel her the truth because he knew without a shadow of a doubt that if he did they would kil him.
As dawn broke he was unconscious most of the time and the carpet around his feet was wet with his blood. That was when Nadia had started asking him about Chaudhry. She knew that he had been in Pakistan with him. She knew that Chaudhry had gone with him to the compound in Abbottabad. She began to ask more questions about Chaudhry. Who his friends were. Where he went, who he spent time with. How often he went to see his parents. Malik began to hope that Nadia was starting to believe that he hadn’t betrayed The Sheik and was looking for someone else to blame. Chaudhry. Malik tried to concentrate, tried to work out some sort of strategy that might result in him staying alive. If he could make them think that Chaudhry was the traitor maybe they would let him live. And if he could get away he would be able to get help; he would cal MI5 and they would pul both of them out and keep them safe. As the minutes went by and they continued to hurt him and make him bleed he clung to the hope that he might somehow be able to fool them.
‘How long have you known Raj?’ she asked.
‘Since we were kids.’
‘Do you trust him?’
‘Yes.’
‘Do you think he would betray The Sheik?’
‘No. I don’t know. Maybe.’
‘What about you, Harvey? Did you betray The Sheik?’
‘No. I swear. As Al ah is my judge.’
‘Al ah is not your judge today, Harvey. I am. And I do not believe you.’
Then the gag was pushed into his mouth and the man with the pliers began to work on his toes again and he screamed into the dishcloth.
When Malik came to, the man with the pliers was standing in front of him. There was blood on the serrated tips and what looked like pieces of flesh. The man was looking at Nadia and Nadia was staring at the door. Then there was a ringing sound. A doorbel .
Nadia waved at the man with the pliers to go into the kitchen. He knelt down and picked up his knife, then hurried over to the kitchen door. The doorbel rang again. The man in the Chelsea shirt aimed his gun at the door and whispered something at Nadia. She shook her head and pointed at the bedroom.
There was a knock on the door, three rapid taps.
The man in the Chelsea shirt disappeared into the bedroom and closed the door.
Nadia bent down and put her mouth next to Malik’s ear. ‘Make a sound, any sound at al , and I wil slit your throat myself,’ she said. She patted him gently on the cheek, then walked slowly over to the door. ‘Who is it?’ she asked.
Malik heard a man’s voice but it was muffled and he couldn’t hear what was said. The doorbel rang again, three short rings fol owed by a longer one.
Nadia slipped the chain lock on and opened the door a fraction. ‘Who is it?’ she asked. ‘What do you want?’
‘I’m here to get Harvey,’ said a voice.
Singh hadn’t expected the girl to be so pretty, but he could see that she was nervous.
‘This is my apartment. There’s no Harvey here,’ she said. ‘You must have the wrong address.’
She tried to close the door but Singh put up his hand and held it open. ‘Harvey said he was coming here. You’re Nadia, right?’
She frowned. ‘Who told you that?’
‘Harvey did,’ said Singh. ‘He said he was coming to see you. Said he might stay overnight and that if he did I was to pick him up here.’
‘He gave you this address?’
Singh nodded and grinned. ‘How else would I know to come and ring your bel ? Now stop messing about, Nadia. If Harvey’s stil in bed then tel him to get his trousers on, wil you?’
Shepherd listened, his gun pointing up at the ceiling. Singh was ad-libbing bril iantly, making it very difficult for her to close the door in his face. If anything he was doing too good a job because if Nadia did have Harvey captive in the flat there was a strong possibility that she might decide to do something about the man at her door.
‘Nadia, I know what it’s like, family honour and al that, but if Harvey’s there he needs to get out here now, and if he isn’t you need to tel me where he is because his phone’s off.’ He winked. ‘Come on, honey, I don’t care what the two of you got up to.’
Nadia looked over her shoulder, then nodded. ‘He’s in the bedroom,’ she said. She reached for the chain.
Singh looked across at Shepherd and as he did so Nadia’s hand froze. She’d seen the look, Shepherd realised. And now everything had changed.
He pushed Singh to the left, stepped back and kicked out hard with his right leg. His foot hit the door just under the handle and he pushed forward with al his weight. The chain ripped out from its mounting and the door crashed open, banging into the woman. She staggered back into the room as Shepherd stepped across the threshold, bringing his left hand up to support his right as he swung the Glock around. He moved slowly and evenly, any jerking and his shots would be sure to be off target. There were four people in the room. The woman, stil staggering backwards. An Asian man standing by the kitchen, holding a bloody knife. Malik, tied to a chair, a strip of cloth around his mouth, his eyes wide and fearful, his right foot hacked and bleeding, blood on his shirt. The door to the bedroom was open and Shepherd glimpsed another Asian man, this one holding a gun. Four souls, three targets, one gun, one knife. Shepherd’s training kicked in without any conscious effort. The man with the gun was the imminent threat. Shepherd brought the gun to bear on the man’s chest. He was in his twenties, tal and lanky with deep-set eyes, wearing grubby cargo pants and a Chelsea footbal shirt that was flecked with blood. Malik’s blood.
Shepherd didn’t shout a warning. He didn’t have to. Everyone in the room knew exactly what was happening. If the man with the gun had dropped it and raised his hands then Shepherd would have switched his attention to the man with the knife, but that didn’t happen. The man’s finger was tightening on the trigger and even though Shepherd could see that the man’s aim was off he stil fired, just once. The bul et hit the man a couple of inches below the heart. The sound was deafening and instantly the stench of cordite assaulted Shepherd’s nose and made his eyes begin to water.
The man fel back into the bedroom, a look of surprise on his face, his mouth forming a perfect circle. The gun dropped to the man’s side and then slipped from his fingers and fel on the carpet.
Shepherd stepped forward with his left leg as he swung the gun towards the man by the kitchen. He was aware of the woman’s arms flailing as she tried to regain her balance but she had no weapon so she wasn’t a threat.
The man with the knife was overweight, his hair greasy and unkempt. He had taken off his shirt and was wearing a string vest pul ed out over baggy jeans. Clumps of hair sprouted from his armpits and chest hair was poking through the holes in the vest. The man was moving towards Shepherd, the knife raised high, his lips drawn back in a snarl. Again Shepherd said nothing. There was no need. He wasn’t a police officer; no one from Professional Standards was going to be investigating the shooting; there’d be no suspension, no court case, no comebacks. Al the man had to do was drop the knife and raise his hands, but he didn’t. He started to run towards Shepherd, growling like a cornered dog. Shepherd shot him in the face. Blood, brain and skul fragments sprayed over the wal and the man fel forward, slamming on to the floor with such force that Shepherd felt the vibration through the soles of his feet.
Shepherd smoothly turned the gun towards the woman, his finger tightening on the Glock’s trigger. She had regained her balance and was already putting her hands behind her neck. Shepherd stared at her and she met his gaze with no trace of fear in her eyes. She knelt down on the floor, her eyes fixed on his. Shepherd kept the gun pointing at her face as she went down, knowing that the slightest increase in pressure on the trigger would send a bul et into her skul . There was a hint of a smile on her face as if she expected him to shoot her. Shepherd was breathing slowly and evenly, total y relaxed.