Authors: Jon Stock
âThe Wariness of Women gene. I'm not sure he passed it on.' She smiled at him and he knew she was right, standing there in the evening light. He had never felt less wary of anyone in his life.
It was a long-held custom that the first half of the Joint Intelligence Committee's weekly meeting in the Cabinet Room at Downing Street was attended by senior officers from the American, Australian and Canadian intelligence services. The second half was only for the British. Marcus Fielding could barely wait for the foreign contingent to be shown the door, but for the next few minutes he would have to listen to James Spiro, the CIA's London chief, who had announced, with his usual hard-man hyperbole, that he had some âweapons-grade HUMINT to bring to the party'. Fielding had already got the gist of it earlier that morning, thanks to one of several new listening devices installed at the recently opened American Embassy in Vauxhall (near Legoland), but he sat there, ramrod-straight, as if he was hearing it all for the first time.
âWe are now certain that Stephen Marchant travelled to Kerala and met up with Salim Dhar in jail,' Spiro began, as ever liking the sound of his own voice. âI appreciate Dhar's role in last year's UK bombings is far from clear, but there is absolutely no doubt that he tried to bomb the hell out of our embassies in New Delhi and Islamabad. Ask the families of the fifteen dead US Marines.'
So far, nothing new, Fielding thought, looking around the coffin-shaped oak table. The usual mix of Whitehall suspects were in attendance, including the heads of MI5 and Cheltenham, as well as mandarins from various departments, all presided over by the chairman of the JIC, Sir David Chadwick, who was sitting at the far end, in front of the double windows which had buckled when the IRA lobbed a mortar bomb into the Downing Street rosebeds. Everyone had flung themselves on the floor that day, the Cabinet Secretary lying next to the Prime Minister.
If it happened again this morning, Fielding idly thought, Harriet Armstrong, Director General of MI5, would do her best to prostrate herself next to Spiro. She glanced tersely at Fielding, as if reading his mind. They had never liked each other, their relationship chilling even further when she had enlisted Spiro's support to remove Stephen Marchant.
âWhat we do now know, however, thanks to Harriet here, is that Dhar was behind Sunday's foiled bombing of the London Marathon, an attack that I don't need to remind you was targeted at our Ambassador to London.'
Fielding looked up. This had not been in the transcript he had read in the car coming over from Vauxhall. He glanced across at Armstrong, who was studiously avoiding his eye. It was a stitch-up. Until now, any connection between Dhar and the London Marathon had been purely circumstantial, based on the nature of the target and Dhar's historical predilection for attacking Americans. If his involvement could now be proved, as Spiro claimed, it would cast Stephen Marchant and his son in a new and far more compromising light.
âI'll leave the domestic implications of this to the second half of your meeting, but clearly Dhar has just become a priority one target, and I'd be grateful if, on this occasion, the Service leaves him to us.'
âMarcus?' asked Chadwick, sounding as if Spiro had raised a mere technicality, rather than made it considerably more likely that the former Chief of MI6 had betrayed Queen and country. His clandestine meeting with Dhar had taken place two weeks before the attack on the American Embassy in Delhi.
âDhar is of great interest to the UK, too,' Fielding said, buying time. âGiven his â apparent â role in the attempted London Marathon attack, I would expect a joint operation at the very least.'
âI'm sorry, Marcus, but this one just got personal,' Spiro said. âDhar's problem is clearly with us: the embassy attacks last year, now our Ambassador to London.'
âAn attack which was foiled by one of our agents,' Fielding replied.
âWith a little help from Colorado Springs, I gather,' Spiro continued, turning to Chadwick. âWhich brings me to my next point. Can we have a little chat with your suspended superhero?'
âDaniel Marchant? That shouldn't be a problem,' Chadwick said. âHarriet?'
âMarcus?' Armstrong deflected the question.
âIs he not with you?' Chadwick asked.
âRight now, we're taking care of him,' Fielding interrupted. âGiven he's still on our payroll.'
âWell, Marcus, I'll repeat my question to you,' said Spiro. âCan we have a talk with Marchant Junior? Preferably when he's not been on the sauce.'
âIf we're working together on Dhar, I'm sure we can cooperate on Daniel Marchant,' Fielding replied coolly.
Spiro turned towards Armstrong for support.
âWe'd clearly like to talk to Marchant again, too, in the light of Dhar's role in the marathon,' Armstrong obliged. âPerhaps we could take care of him?'
âOur own debrief is still ongoing,' Fielding said.
âShouldn't that read “detox”?' Spiro said, smiling around the table. Only Armstrong smiled back.
âWe will, of course, circulate our findings once we're finished with him,' Fielding said. He had always known that there was little he could do about Stephen Marchant, whose reputation was ultimately in other people's hands, but he had hoped he could do something for his son. MI6 had fished Daniel Marchant out of the international pool of inebriated hacks, and turned him into one of the Service's best officers. Fielding wasn't going to let him go lightly, if only for his father's sake. Marchant's presence at the marathon, however, was beginning to look too much of a coincidence. He doubted whether Armstrong had any hard evidence â it was too soon â but the link with Dhar had been made, and would be duly recorded in the JIC's minutes. In the light of his father's meeting with Dhar, Daniel Marchant's role looked less heroic by the minute.
After further curt exchanges and an offer from Chadwick to square Fielding and Spiro's differences, the foreign contingent left the room, leaving the British to assess Spiro's âweapons-grade HUMINT'.
âWell gentlemen, Harriet, do we believe him?' Chadwick began, looking around the room, still sounding unruffled.
âThere's no reason for them to lie about Stephen Marchant,' Armstrong said.
âUnless they want to go after Dhar themselves,' Fielding replied. âUntil we see the evidence, we have no way of knowing whether Stephen Marchant did or did not meet Dhar.'
âLet's be quite clear about this,' Chadwick said. âIf they do hand over the evidence, hard proof that Marchant met Salim Dhar, we would have to pass it on to Bancroft. His report would then become an investigation into whether the former head of MI6 should be posthumously investigated for treason.'
âThe PM wouldn't buy it,' said Bruce Lockhart, the Prime Minister's foreign adviser. Fielding got on with Lockhart, liked his bullish Fife manner. âI thought Bancroft was given this job to quieten things down, not stir them up.'
âThe Americans aren't trying to make trouble,' Armstrong said. âQuite reasonably, they want to stop Dhar attacking their assets and to establish why the Marchant family seem to be helping him.'
âHelping him?' Fielding interjected. âLet's not get carried away here. Bancroft has so far found nothing to substantiate any suspicion that my predecessor was anything other than complacent. For the record, I happen to think the Americans are right: Stephen Marchant probably did meet up with Dhar. I'm just not sure why. Until we find out, it remains idle conjecture, and Bancroft shouldn't touch it.'
âSo we leave Dhar to the Americans?' asked Armstrong.
âWe need to find him, too, given that he was behind the attempted attack on the marathon,' Fielding said, turning to Armstrong and adding quietly, âNice of you to pool that one.'
âI'd forgotten how much you liked to share information,' Armstrong replied.
âI think Marcus is right,' Chadwick said. âWe need to find Dhar.' He had always found that steadfastly ignoring tension between departments seemed to reduce it. âDhar targeted the London Marathon, Tower bloody Bridge, for God's sake. If that's not an attack on the fabric of this country I don't know what is. And it's also the only way we'll ever draw a line under Stephen Marchant. If the two of them did meet, which seems likely, we need to find out why, and what was actually said.'
âWe're sure there's no record anywhere of Stephen Marchant or anyone else recruiting Dhar?' Lockhart asked. âAt this meeting or before? The PM wants specific reassurance on this point.'
âWe've been through all Marchant's files many times,' Fielding said. âCross-referenced every database we have. Nothing. No one else in MI6 or MI5 has ever approached Dhar. We think the Indians once tried a deniable approach, but failed.'
Armstrong nodded her head in agreement, glancing at Fielding.
âAnd what about his son?' asked Chadwick. âDo we let the Americans talk to him? You can see it from their point of view: Stephen Marchant meets Dhar, Dhar bombs US embassies; Daniel Marchant meets Dhar's running friend; Dhar's friend tries to kill US Ambassador.'
âAnd Marchant stops him,' said Marcus. âThat's the point here.'
But he knew the point was lost.
Later that day, Fielding accepted Chadwick's offer of a sharpener at the Travellers on Pall Mall. He was not a natural clubman, but in the past few years, as Stephen Marchant had begun to waver at the top, Fielding had been wined and dined by various senior Whitehall hands, including Chadwick, while his own suitability as Chief was assessed. He knew there was unease amongst the old guard that he was not married, but times were changing, and the general view was that the Vicar was celibate rather than gay. Fielding could live with that.
The Travellers used to double up as MI6's staff bar, in the days when the Service was situated in Century House, its drab premises in Southwark. Since the move to Legoland, with its plush second-floor bar and terrace overlooking the Thames, where people could drink outside in the summer, the Travellers had become less of a draw for junior staff. But old habits died hard for senior officers, and Fielding acknowledged a couple of familiar faces as he took his seat in the panelled library.
âI'm offering you a deal,' Chadwick said, swirling his Talisker around the glass. He was one of the safest pairs of hands in Whitehall, brought in at the end of a successful but unstartling career to steady the intelligence ship after the fiasco of Marchant's departure. Evidence, Fielding concluded, that mediocrity can take you surprisingly far in big organisations like the Civil Service.
âThe Americans have agreed to drop their investigation of any meeting between Dhar and Stephen, providing they can have access to Daniel Marchant and we leave Dhar to them.'
âAccess?'
âThey want to sweat him.'
âWhy?'
âCome on, Marcus. I know he was one of your best, but it's bloody odd he was there at the marathon. They think he might be able to tell them something about Dhar. And, to be honest, the idea of someone taking Marchant off our hands is quite appealing. We all know he's been drinking too much. The last thing the PM needs right now is another renegade spy on the loose.'
Fielding thought about defending Daniel Marchant again. Perhaps it was the effect of his gin and lime, but he was no longer as troubled by Chadwick's proposal as he might have been. A part of him resented having to protect Marchant any longer, given the headache his suspension had caused. Chadwick was right: Marchant had been the most promising case officer of his generation, just the sort of young blood the Service was trying to attract. But Fielding knew, too, that his suspension was entirely because of the accusations swirling around his father. And he needed those accusations to go away: they were continuing to cause too much damage to the Service. The sooner the Americans forgot about any meeting between the former Chief and Dhar, the better for everyone.
There was only one concern, and that was the âenhanced' interrogation techniques favoured by the CIA. The new President might have banned torture, but old habits die hard in Langley. Despite everything, Marchant was still one of his own, and right now he was fragile.
âHe mustn't leave the country,' Fielding said, finishing his gin. âAnd I want him back alive.'
Leila headed back to London that night, leaving Marchant to dwell on Fielding's visit over a bottle of malt she had smuggled in with her. He knew he was drinking too much. The training runs with Leila, the impulsive decision to run the marathon, had been an attempt to impose some routine on his life, which had lost all shape since his father's death. He had never been fitter than when he was working for MI6. The drinking dulled the pain of loss, but it also dragged him back to another life, to dissolute, carefree days at the Nairobi Press Club.
The first weeks of his suspension had been the toughest. In his sober hours, Marchant had thought only of the mole who had supposedly penetrated MI6. It was his way of grieving, channelling his anger. Rising at dawn, head bursting, he had paced the empty streets of Pimlico, holding the rumours about his father up to the early-morning light, looking at them from every possible angle. He would stand on Vauxhall Bridge, watching the barges pass below before turning to look up at Legoland and the buttressed windows of the Chief's office. Had the whole thing been cooked up as a Machiavellian way of removing his father, or was there a genuine possibility that Al Qaeda had infiltrated MI6?
The terms of his suspension meant that he wasn't allowed to step inside Legoland, or to talk with colleagues about work, or to travel overseas. All his cover passports had been seized. His mornings had been spent in internet cafés around Victoria station (he didn't trust the computer at his flat on Denbigh Street), going over each of the attacks again and again, looking for something that might link a cell based in South India to anyone in MI6, a Legoland colleague with connections to the subcontinent.
Now, at last, he had that link, but it was between his own father and Salim Dhar. Never once had it crossed Marchant's mind that his father had brought suspicion upon himself. Fielding was right: meeting Dhar privately was an irregular thing to have done. And Marchant knew, as Leila's whisky burnt his throat, that he too would have to meet him, wherever he was. It was the only way to clear his father's name. He needed to ask Dhar why the Chief of MI6 had run the risk of meeting with him. The consequences of such an encounter could prove equally disastrous for him, but the reality was that he didn't have much to lose.
As he gazed out across the Wiltshire countryside towards the woods beyond the canal, a grey heron lifted itself heavily from the water and rose into the air. His father used to say that they were like B-52s, but then he had always had a thing about bombers. During the Cuban Missile Crisis he had driven down to Fairford and watched them standing on the end of the runway, engines running, waiting for the order.
Marchant remembered the morning his father had called him with the news that he was to step down as Chief. The power and authority had gone from his voice, as if he had been using a mega-phone all his life and someone had suddenly switched it off. Marchant had taken the call at Heathrow airport, on his way back from Mogadishu to London for Christmas.
âHave you cleared immigration?' his father had asked, almost absent-mindedly.
âI'm waiting for a taxi. Why? Is everything all right, Dad?'
âTake the Underground as far as Hammersmith, then a minicab from that place on Fulham Palace Road we used to use. Ask for Tarlton. They'll know.'
âDad, what is this? Is everything OK?'
âI've been put out to pasture. Watch yourself.'
Marchant had immediately gone on his guard again, as if in a foreign airport. He moved swiftly down to the Underground, trying to work out the implications of their conversation, for his father, for him. He knew pressure had been building in recent weeks. There had been questions in the House about the incompetence of Britain's intelligence services, aggressive newspaper leaders about the wave of attacks and what more should have been done to prevent them.
His father paid off the minicab in cash, and insisted on taking his son's two bags. It was a cold December day, and the apple and cherry trees at the front of the house were laced with frozen cobwebs. A thin twist of smoke rose from the chimney. The house was in effect two Cotswold cottages knocked together, surrounded by lawns and a meandering drystone wall. It was a private location, half a mile out of Tarlton, a small hamlet near Cirencester. Marchant always felt strange when he was here. The house had been the only constant in his shifting childhood, a place where they came for brief respites from foreign postings, a home he had once shared with his brother. Its Englishness was overwhelming, not just because of its Cotswold prettiness, but because it had come to represent all that he missed about home: new-mown grass, autumn bonfires, orchards. And, of course, it had always disappointed, unable to live up to childhood dreams of Albion.
âGood of you to come,' his father said, walking through the back door in front of Marchant. âMind if we go for a drive?'
Ten minutes later, they were speeding through the cold open countryside in his 1931 Lagonda, barely able to hear each other above the roar of the two-litre engine. Frost had sharpened the hedgerows, and the road was black with hidden ice. But Stephen Marchant didn't seem to mind, wrapped up in a thick woollen scarf and gloves. Daniel sat next to him. He had forgotten how cold a car could feel.
âCan't trust the house,' his father said, changing down the gears as they approached a junction. Home, Marchant knew, had been wired to a level of protection befitting the Chief's weekend retreat. Now that security was working against him.
âMI5?' Marchant asked, the smell of musty canvas and hot oil taking him back to another distant part of his childhood. He and his father had always been close, both of them at ease in each other's company, seldom needing to explain or open up. Even when Marchant had been expelled from school, his father hadn't been angry, just annoyed that he had been caught.
âI'm becoming a threat to national security,' he shouted, releasing the brake lever on the side of the car and accelerating away towards Avening. Marchant hoped he would age as well as his father, whose silver hair was blowing about in the strong breeze. He had thick, fair eyebrows and a compact, square face, like a barn owl, Marchant always thought. And then there were those famous family ears, which had only got longer, more distinguished, with age. Tribal lobes, his father had once called them.
After twenty minutes, Stephen Marchant pulled the Lagonda up in a lay-by at the top of Minchinhampton Common, on the brow of a hill looking west towards Bristol. He switched off the engine and they sat there for a few minutes in silence, absorbing the timeless landscape as steam rose off the bonnet. Below them the Cotswolds stretched out in a necklace of icy hamlets, threaded with quiet country lanes, each with its handsome manor house, enduring church, frosted green. Thin drifts of snow covered the shaded corners of fields.
âI look at this and wonder out of which pore of our beautiful country it's seeping from,' Stephen Marchant began. A bead of moisture had gathered on the end of his cold nose. âDo you know what they said?'
âTell me,' Marchant replied, noticing the emotion that had slipped into his father's voice.
âThat they can no longer be sure my interests coincide with the country's.' He paused, struggling to keep control. âThirty years' service and I have to listen to a group of jumped-up pricks in shorts telling me that.'
âAnd it's all coming from the DG?' Daniel asked.
âOf course. Apparently I'm obsessed with the enemy within, and have taken my eye off the greater threat.'
âDinner at the Travellers didn't do the trick, then.'
âGod, no. Total disaster. She's not like the women you and I know, Daniel. This one's got balls, and I've been shafted, well and truly. They don't want me back in the office after Christmas. I'm afraid they're also talking about suspending you. Sins of the father. I'm so sorry.' Marchant turned away, his mind racing instinctively to calculate the threat, assess the damage. He hadn't expected it to affect him. Then he stopped, guilty that he had thought of himself rather than his father, whose career was in tatters after half a lifetime of service.
âDon't worry about me. You know I've never asked for help. I can look after myself.'
âThe Service can't. If MI5 gets its way, Legoland will be sold off to the Japanese tomorrow and turned into a Thameside hotel. Come on, the idiots have arrived.'
Marchant looked behind them, and saw a white saloon car driving slowly up the hill.
âDo you know the best way to shake off a tail?' his father asked, firing up the Lagonda again in a plume of blue smoke. âBetter than anything they might have taught you at the Fort?'
âWhat?' Marchant said, watching the car in the mirror as it slowed to a crawl four hundred yards behind them, its exhaust loitering in the cold air.
âDrive faster than them.'