So if the past had taught the modern soldier anything, then it was that blitzkrieg-like “shock and awe” was the key to victory in battle, and I had every intention of creating some shock and awe in the life of one Alex Reece.
15
B
ush Close in Greenham was full of those ubiquitous modern little box houses, and number sixteen, Alex Reece’s home, was one at the far end of the cul-de-sac.
It was late Saturday afternoon, and I had left Julie Yorke in a state of near collapse. I had merely suggested to her that to have any contact whatsoever with Alex Reece in the next thirty-six hours, in person, by e-mail or by phone, would be reason enough for me to send the explicit photographs to her husband, in addition to posting them on my new Facebook page on the Internet.
She had begged me to delete the pictures from my camera, but as I had pointed out, it was she and Alex who had started this blackmail business, and they really couldn’t now complain if they were receiving a bit of their own medicine.
I had parked Ian Norland’s car out on Water Lane in Greenham and had walked around the corner into Bush Close. I was carrying a pile of free newspapers that I had picked up at a petrol station, and I walked down the road, pushing one of them through every letter box. The houses were not identical, but they were similar, and number sixteen had the same style of plastic-framed front door as all the others.
“What time does Alex get back?” I had asked Julie.
“His plane lands at Heathrow at six-twenty tomorrow evening.”
“And how does he get home to Greenham?”
“I’ve no idea.”
I lingered for a moment outside the front door of number sixteen and adjusted the pile of remaining newspapers. I glanced around, looking for suitable hiding places, but the short driveway was bordered by nothing but grass. I looked to see which of the other houses had a direct line of sight to the front door of number sixteen, set back as it was beside the single garage.
Only number fifteen, opposite, had an unobstructed view.
I walked away from number sixteen and pushed newspapers through the front doors of a few more houses, including the one opposite, before moving off down the road, back towards Ian’s car. However, instead of immediately driving away, I walked through a gateway and into the adjacent field. Alex Reece’s house, together with all the other even-numbered houses in Bush Close, backed onto farmland, and I spent some time carefully reconnoitering the whole area.
I looked at my watch. It was just after five-thirty, and the light was beginning to fade rapidly.
Alex Reece couldn’t possibly be back here the following evening until eight o’clock at the earliest, and it would probably be nearer to nine if he had to collect luggage at the airport. And that was assuming his flight landed on time. By eight o’clock, of course, it would have been fully dark for hours.
Keeping in the shadows of some trees, I skirted around the backs of the gardens in Bush Close until I arrived at number sixteen. There were lights on in the kitchen of number fourteen next door, and I could see a man and a woman in there talking. That was good, I thought. No one can see outside at dusk when they have the lights on inside, due to the reflection in the window glass, and especially when they are busy talking. There was little or no chance that they could see me watching them.
I quickly rolled my body over the low back fence and into Alex Reece’s garden. It was mostly simply laid to grass, with no tangly flower beds or thorny rosebushes to worry about.
I moved silently to the back of the garage and looked in. Even in the fast disappearing light I could see the shiny shape of a car in there. So Mr. Reece would probably arrive home by taxi, either direct from the airport or from the railway station in Newbury.
And I’d be waiting for him.
D
id we win?” I asked Ian, as I walked in through his door at seven o’clock.
“Win what?” he said, without taking his eyes off the television screen.
“Oregon,” I said, “in the race at Haydock.”
“Trotted up,” he said, still not turning around. “Won by six lengths. Reckon he’ll be hard to beat in the Triumph.”
“Good,” I said to the back of his head. “What are you watching?”
“Just some TV talent show.”
“Have you eaten?” I asked.
“Had a pizza for lunch,” he said. “From the freezer. One of them you bought yesterday. But I didn’t have that until after the race. I was too nervous to eat before.”
“So are you hungry?”
“Not really. Not yet. Maybe I’ll have Chinese later.”
“Great idea,” I said. “I’ll buy.”
He turned around and smiled, and I guessed that was what he was hoping I’d say.
“How long are you staying?” he asked, turning back to the screen.
“I’ll find somewhere else if you want,” I said. “You know the houseguests and the three-day-smell rule, and my time is up tonight.”
“Stay as long as you like,” he said. “I’m enjoying the company.”
And the free food, I thought, perhaps ungraciously.
“I’ll stay another day or two, if that’s all right.”
“As I said, stay as long as you want, if you don’t mind the couch.”
I didn’t. It was a lot more comfortable than some of the places I’d slept, and warmer too.
“Can I borrow your car again tomorrow?” I asked.
“Sorry, mate. I need it,” he said. “I’m going to Sunday lunch with my folks.”
“Where do they live?”
“Near Banbury,” he said.
“So what time will you be back?” I asked.
“It’ll be before five,” he said. “Evening stables are at five on Sundays.”
“Can I borrow the car after that?”
“Sure,” he said. “But it might need more petrol by then.”
“OK,” I said. “I’ll fill it up.”
I could tell he was smiling, even though he didn’t turn around. Why didn’t he just ask me to pay for the use of his car? I suppose it was a little game.
I could have gone to fetch my Jaguar, but it was a very distinctive car, and I wasn’t particularly keen to advertise my whereabouts to anyone. Ian’s little Corsa was far more anonymous. I just hoped my Jaguar was still sitting in the parking lot in Oxford, awaiting my return.
I
spent Sunday morning making my plans and sorting my kit. I had been back into Kauri House on Saturday afternoon after leaving Julie Yorke, and before my excursion to Greenham.
The house had been empty, save for the dogs, who had watched me idly and unconcerned as I’d passed through the kitchen, stepping over their beds in front of the Aga. My mother and stepfather had been safely away at Haydock races, but nevertheless, I had remained in the house for only fifteen or twenty minutes, just time enough to have a quick shower and collect a few things from my room.
I did not really want my mother coming back unexpectedly and finding me there. It was not because I didn’t trust her not to give away my presence, even unwittingly, it was more that I didn’t want to have to explain to her what I was going to do. She probably wouldn’t have approved, so it was much better that she didn’t know beforehand, if ever.
Ian left for his Sunday lunch trip at eleven, promising that he would be back in time to start work at five.
After I was sure Ian wasn’t going to come back, I sorted the equipment I would need for my mission. Bits of it I had owned previously, but some things I’d driven into Newbury to buy specifically the previous afternoon on my way to Greenham.
I laid out my black roll-necked pullover, a pair of old, dark navy blue jeans, some dark socks, a black knitted ski hat and some matching gloves that I’d bought from the sports shop in Market Street, where I’d also obtained a pair of all-black Converse basketball boots.
Next to the clothes I placed the rest of my kit: a small dark blue rucksack, some black heavy-duty garden ties similar to those that had been used to bind my wrists in the stables, a small red first-aid kit, three six-by-four-inch prints of the mailbox-shop photos, a certain metal ring with a piece of galvanized steel chain attached to it by a padlock, my camera and, finally, a roll of gray duct tape.
There is a saying in every organization of the world, either military or civilian, that if something doesn’t move when it should, use WD-40, and if it moves when it shouldn’t, use duct tape. Originally designed during the Second World War to keep gun magazines and ammunition boxes watertight in jungle conditions, duct tape has since become the must-have item for each and every mission. It was even used to fix a fender on the
Apollo 17
Lunar Rover when it was broken on the moon, as well as making the circular CO
2
scrubbers “fit” square holes to save the lives of the crew of the stricken
Apollo 13.
I had decided against taking my sword. I would have loved to have had a weapon of some kind, if only for the shock value, but the sword was impractical and cumbersome. A regulation-issue Browning nine-millimeter sidearm would have been my weapon of choice, but I could hardly run around the English countryside brandishing an illegal firearm, even if I’d had one. In the end, I also elected not to borrow one of Ian’s kitchen knives.
It was not as if I intended to kill anyone. Not yet anyway.
A
t ten minutes to eight I was in position alongside Alex Reece’s house, on the dark side, away from the glow from the solitary streetlamp outside number twelve, two houses down.
I had already made a thorough reconnaissance of the area, including a special look at number fifteen, the house opposite, the one with a direct view of Alex Reece’s front door. As far as I could tell, the house was unoccupied, but that might be temporary. Maybe the residents were just out for the afternoon.
Most of the other houses, including number fourteen next door, had people going about their usual Sunday-evening activities. I was actually amazed at how few of the residents of Bush Close pulled their curtains, especially at the back. Not that they would usually expect anyone to be lurking in a field, spying on them as they watched their televisions or read their books.
Eight o’clock came and went, and I continued to wait. A fine drizzle began to fall, but that didn’t worry me. Rain was likely to keep the other residents inside. I had been unable to tell if any of them had a dog to walk.
At eight-eighteen a car pulled into Bush Close and drove down to the end. I was all ready for action with the adrenaline rushing through my system, but the car pulled into the driveway of number fifteen, opposite, and a couple and two young children climbed out. I breathed heavily, calming myself down, and put the surprise “jack” back in his box.
I stood silently in the shadows. I was pretty sure that no one would be able to see
me,
although I could see
them
clearly, the more so when the man turned on an outside light next to their front door. I was close to the wall, and I remained completely still.
It was movement more than anything that gave people away, caught in peripheral vision and attracting immediate attention. My dark clothes would blend into the blackness of the background; only my face might be visible, and that was streaked with homemade mud-based camouflage cream to break up the familiar shape.
There were no shouts of discovery, and presently, the family gathered their things from the car and went inside. The outside light went out again, plunging me back into darkness. I eased myself back and forth, relieving the tension in my muscles, and went on waiting.
Alex Reece arrived home just before nine o’clock, but he didn’t come by taxi.
Isabella’s dark blue Volkswagen Golf pulled into the driveway at high speed and stopped abruptly with a slight squeal of its brakes. I couldn’t exactly see who was at the wheel, but from past experience of her driving on the Bracknell bypass, I was pretty sure it was Isabella herself.
I pressed myself close to the wall and peeked around the corner so I could see.
Alex Reece opened the rear door and stood up next to the car with a flight bag in his hand.
“Thanks for the lift,” he called, before closing the door and removing a small suitcase from the car trunk.
He stood and waved as the Golf was backed out onto the road and then driven away again at high speed. I thought the fact that Alex had been sitting in the back of the car implied that there was at least one other person in there, in addition to Isabella. Maybe it was Jackson.
I watched as Alex fumbled in his flight bag for the key to his front door. In those few seconds, I also scanned the road and the windows of the house opposite. No one was about.
It was time for action.
In the instant after he successfully opened the front door, and before he had time to reach down for his suitcase, I struck him hard midway between his shoulder blades, forcing him through the open doorway and onto the floor in the still-dark hallway. I crashed down on top of him, his flight bag sliding across the polished wood and into the kitchen.
“Scream and I’ll kill you,” I said loudly into his ear.
He didn’t scream, but it wasn’t only because he was frightened of being killed. I had purposely chosen that type of blow because it would have driven the air from his chest, and without air, he couldn’t scream. In fact, he didn’t react in any way. Just as I had hoped, my blitzkrieg attack had rendered him shocked and awestruck.
I pulled both his arms around to the small of his back and used the garden ties from my pocket to secure his wrists. Next, I used another pair of the ties to bind his ankles together.
The whole process had taken no more than a few seconds.
I stood up and went outside. I picked up Alex’s suitcase from the step, glanced casually all around to check that nothing had stirred, then stepped back inside again, closing the front door. Alex hadn’t moved a muscle.