Authors: Bill James
âText? Voicemail?' Belinda said.
âBoth regarded as totally insecure for undercover,' Iles said.
âIt's alarmist speculation,' Belinda said. âYour analysis is full of what-ifs â “possibly”, “perhaps”, “probably”, “likely”, “might”, “maybe”.'
âThere are no certainties in undercover,' Iles replied. âWe have to deal with the possiblies, the perhapses, the probablies, the likelies, the mights, the maybes. It's known as foresight. It's known as preparedness. It's labelled “worst case scenario”. Hardly anything's secure in undercover. It relies on good luck, and good luck's no twenty-four/seven ally. Even when it seems to be going OK, undercover is always only a metre ahead of peril.'
âYou're saying I helped bring the peril nearer in Tom's case by following up the van lead?' she asked.
âNo, it was you who said that,' Iles replied.
âI found myself driven by a logical imperative,' Belinda replied.
âYou did, did you?' Iles said.
âThe operation at Wilton Road left some questions, as Mr Harpur has said. How, then, to deal with these? I decided we must put Claud Norman Rice under continuous watch. This would help us discover whether he had been acting on his own behalf at Emblem Court or in concert with someone else. As far as ITAR and Customs generally were concerned this would be crucial data. If a someone else existed, the surveillance would probably reveal who. These are the chief uncertainties listed by Mr Harpur. Of course, we know the answers now, but at the time we still had plenty to learn.
âBecause our case remained very incomplete, I felt ITAR should proceed alone for a spell, without looking for police help in our activities. I wanted a fully documented report on the circs before I made that move, particularly the names of associates, and super-particularly the identity of who might be overlording this satellite firm. To invite earlier participation by the police would have been sloppy, in my view.'
âYes?' Iles replied. âYou wanted the glory, the collar.'
âIn any case, I realized Tom would probably report to his handler about Rice at Emblem Court, but that meeting might not happen for a while. We would concentrate on Rice, at least until then.'
âAnd, as you pointed out, we know the result now,' Iles said.
âI did not feel I had a choice,' Belinda said.
âYou'd created conditions where you didn't, in the best traditions of the Light Brigade at Balaclava, now spelt with a c not a k,' Iles replied. But he spoke almost sympathetically. That didn't faze Harpur. He had seen and heard Iles become almost kindly once or twice before within the last few years. Quite possibly twice.
BEFORE
T
hey had a singalong while driving towards Claud Norman Rice's place at twenty-seven Delbert Avenue to bring him some censure on behalf of Leo, following that A-hole-observed Emblem Court commerce. Mainly, the intention was fists and boots/shoes only, though Ivor Wolsey had a short piece of rubber-coated lead piping in his right sock. Leo had stressed he'd like Norm to survive, not necessarily unmarked but breathing independently. The object was merely to offer a sort of serious reproof, which could be interpreted by Justin Scray for what it was â a last oblique but plain warning. Leo had got hold of the word âproportionality' from somewhere. He wanted Norm's punishment to be in proportion to his fairly measly status and the degree of offence.
Empathy Abidan liked German lieder, especially some by Robert Schumann and by Anton Webern. Obviously, he had to do these more or less totally solo because the others in the car didn't really know the pieces, although they might have heard Abidan giving them a belt elsewhere previously, perhaps more than once. At the wheel, Tom did try to hum a few passages as accompaniment, but he felt that, though lieder certainly had definite traces of a tune to them here and there, they were not the sort of tunes that stayed in your head, unless you were Empathy, and most probably even he'd had to work at it. You never knew which way the compositions would go, again unless you were Empathy. He did trill each number with terrific confidence, daft energy and enthusiasm, as if there could not be any doubt at all about what came next as to the notes. The words were German, but this didn't give Empathy trouble. He must have decided that if you fancied lieder you had to make an effort and learn some of the lingo: Empathy liked to be reasonable and positive, although he could sometimes get non-reasonable, anti-reasonable, funk-led.
There was a procedure for the music. Abidan would never just start crooning one of the lyrics without an introduction. He'd told Tom he wanted to establish a context and always spoke the title first, usually translated, and mentioned the composer â Schumann, Webern, sometimes Mahler. He had the right kind of voice for lieder: tenor, his tone melancholic and deeply inconsolable when a lover's rejection was the theme; but bustling and pert if about silvery fish in limpid Alpine streams. Most folk could stomach Empathy's sodding hullabaloo as long as it didn't go over, say, the ten-minute mark. A knack for snuffing out encores was to have something else poised ready as Empathy brought one of his blares to an end, speed essential. Today, Tom got in with âClementine' and Hugh Fortune with âYellow Submarine'. No matter if not everyone had the words verbatim: la-la-la-ing these old numbers was easy because the melodies had such strength and simplicity.
And, to Martin Abidan's credit, he joined in. Tom thought this willingness to adapt would be one of the reasons he was called Empathy â he valued comradely, two-way mental contact with others. With
some
others. He wouldn't seek it with Norm Rice who'd shown arrant disregard for loyalty to Leo. There'd be a different kind of contact for Norman. Now, alongside Tom in the firm's Audi, Mart used full, soaring volume on âClementine' and got harmonious, good-natured amusement into the lines about her feet size.
It had been Empathy's suggestion to Leo that Hugh Fortune should take the fourth place in the car and help with the Norm setback. Tom hadn't met Fortune before this trip. Apparently, he'd had some training as a boxer when young and knew where to put a punch that would bring pain but not do dangerous damage. He had never unarguably caused a death. One of his most brilliant assets was radiant calmness, regardless of disturbances and threatening outbreaks around him. Leo had been pleased with Abidan's recommendation. âDespite possible rush and some urgency at the end, Hugh's the type who'll remember to inform Norm somehow that, if he's put out of things for a while through injury, I'll look after Cornelius, his partner, at least until he's released and can set about organizing himself again,' Leo said. âI don't want either of them â Cornelius or Norman â fretting about Cornelius's well-being. The attack on Norm is simply a matter of business hygiene. It is confined to him â and, of course, by percolation, to Justin Scray. Most companies have to correct wayward tendencies in their staff now and then. It can be unpleasant but is crucial.' Because Abidan himself would occasionally get a bit overheated and wild, he might have deliberately gone for someone like Hugh as a standby counter-influence.
Leo was away in Wales. Empathy said these days Leo never went on this kind of thump outing. He'd outgrown such operations, outranked them, now. He and Emily loved Pembrokeshire. Gaunt, abandoned old industrial workings on the coast at Porthgain âalways gave Emily a thrill', Leo had told Tom, âthe past being very much her chosen area, and, of course, the past is extensive'. Empathy said that on this kind of jaunt, they'd book in at a hotel and possibly buy a watercolour or two from a gallery in St David's, dithering about which ones so Leo could get himself remembered and alibied, just in case Norm did slip under during the visit, despite moderation. The local drugs squad would be aware that Norm worked for Leo, and this connection might bring difficulties. Empathy said Leo didn't know much about watercolours but he did know about alibis.
His absentee arrangement required exact coordination, and so the call at Delbert Avenue had to be on a particular Thursday; the Thursday, as it happened, when Jamie Meldon-Luce's daughter was Mary Magdalene in the church play. As a result, and because, also, Leo saw a decorum objection to using Jamie for this brand of unholy crusade near the Magdalene date, Tom was asked to do the driving. âEmily's appointments diary is so crowded that there are few weekdays when she can be absent from the museum,' Leo had said.
And Tom knew Norm might not be home on a Saturday or Sunday. That apparently depended on when he visited Cornelius at Long Lartin, often staying over in a B&B near the jail. Leo ruled out dealing with him up there partly out of civilized, almost sentimental, respect for Norm's and Cornelius's affections; also because to get at Rice effectively in such a place would be tough. âOther guests and staff around,' Leo said. âI worry about the party walls in Delbert Avenue carrying sound, but in some of those boarding houses it could be worse. Rooms have been split up to make more accommodation, and it's only plastered breeze block dividing.' Leo considered that sort of risk unnecessary as Norm could be quite effectively done at home, given accurate timetabling and suitable locations in the property. These were very clearly shown on the ring-binder plans.
Of course. Tom wondered whether all these special timing conditions were a sham, concocted so Jamie wouldn't be available as Wheels and Tom could be drafted as replacement. It might be Leo's polite way of getting new boy Tom gradually involved in the rough end of the firm's work. Leo did believe in careful, subtle management. That was why he wanted Norm only gravely knocked about, not killed. In the same sort of way, Leo might intend to bring Tom by nicely graded stages into violence situations. A Wheels did not leave the vehicle during an operation. On the reconnoitre with Leo they had discussed parking for the Norm project, not the details of what would happen inside the house.
If there'd been a manual for Wheels it would state the driver should bring the personnel to the right spot â a house, a bank, a building society â and then wait for them to return. The front line people would probably aim to quit the scene very fast. It could complicate things if one of them had to get into the front, start the vehicle and cope with traffic. Injuries might make that difficult or even impossible, anyway. But a Wheels would be there already, prepared and eager behind the wheel â that's one reason he or she was called Wheels, after all! â three doors possibly open for quick access, most likely with the engine running from the moment he first glimpsed one of the attack party coming back. Or perhaps the Wheels had, in fact, kept the engine idling from the moment he put the action group down. That was definitely how some Wheels operated, scared the ignition might pick a crisis moment to fail. Answer? Make ignition â re-ignition â unnecessary.
Tom wouldn't be at the actual meeting with Norman, but, of course, he realized he could be regarded as an accessory to what went on â an accessory before the events as well as after. If any of it ever came to court, he knew the judge would not think much of an undercover operation where a police sergeant assisted a grievous bodily harm assault, or worse, because he had to maintain his disguise as a fully committed member of the gang. Judges saw crook gangs as the enemy, and anyone who helped them, even in an allegedly fine and ultimately non-criminal cause, was also an enemy, and might get a bollocking in the summing up, his evidence ruled inadmissible, and told the Bench would be recommending prosecution. Ultimately was too ultimate and too uncertain. Thank you, My Lord. Tom had thought quite a bit about the shady morality of undercover and during these recital minutes as the Audi approached Delbert Avenue the shadiness grew shadier. A quiet couple of seconds occurred. Empathy jumped in smartish with what he announced as an R.M. Rilke poem brilliantly liederized by Webern. So, now, all together in the chorus!
Hugh Fortune spoke over the lilt. âDon't like it.'
Maybe bluntness came with his flair for calm. âThat's bloody rude,' Ivor Wolsey said.
âSomething not right,' Hugh replied.
âWith which?' Ivor Wolsey said. âRilke or Weber or Mart?'
They had turned into Delbert Avenue.
âThe silver Renault Laguna,' Hugh said.
âWhat's wrong with it?' Ivor said.
âBlacked rear windows,' Hugh said.
âSo? Plenty of cars have them,' Ivor said.
âBut
they're
not parked near twenty-seven Delbert Avenue,' Hugh replied.
Empathy shut down the Webern. The silver Renault stood pretty well opposite number twenty-seven and would have a fine view of it.
âWhat did you mean “not right”, Hugh?' Empathy asked.
âI thought I saw movement in the rear,' Hugh said.
âSo?' Ivor said. âThis is a car with people in the back? Is that important?'
âKeep going, Tom,' Empathy said.
âWho'd watch Norm?' Ivor Wolsey said. âWhat for?'
âPolice?' Empathy said. âCustoms?'
âBut why Norm?' Ivor said. âHe's a next-to-nothing.'
âHe can lead to someone who isn't,' Empathy said.
âJustin Scray?' Ivor said.
âJamie got the supplier's address from somewhere, didn't he?' Abidan replied. âAnd Tom watched and confirmed Norm's call there, for a purchase, we assume.'
âAnd you're saying someone else with similar info but from a different source was also outside the dealer's place, on the watch?' Ivor asked.
âHow it seems,' Empathy replied. âCustoms, most likely,' Empathy said. âYou had a squint around this area with Leo, didn't you, Tom? Is there a rear entrance, a rear exit?'
âYes,' Tom said.
âLet's look,' Empathy said.
They turned out of the Avenue. A man in his thirties, baseball cap, jeans, dark anorak was on his feet beside a parked small Fiat gazing along the full length of the lane. âAnd keep going again, Tom,' Empathy said.