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Authors: Robert Wilson

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BOOK: The Hidden Assassins
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‘The slow route would be via Mérida and Salamanca,’ said Gregorio. ‘The fast route via Cordoba, Valdepeñas and Madrid.’

‘We should call the Paradors de España central office and find out where they made their bookings,’ said Pablo. ‘We can have a bomb squad waiting for them. They can disable the devices overnight and the tourists can continue on their way without knowing a thing.’

‘That should give us their route, too,’ said Gregorio.

‘OK, we’ll start with that,’ said Juan. ‘Any news from Yacoub?’

‘Not yet,’ said Gregorio.

‘Am I needed for this?’ asked Falcón.

‘There’s a military plane waiting for the two of you at Seville airport to bring you to Madrid,’ said Juan. ‘We’ll meet in Barrajas in two hours’ time.’

‘I’ve still got a lot to do here,’ said Falcón.

‘I’ve spoken to Comisario Elvira.’

‘Have you put anybody on Yacoub in Paris?’ asked Gregorio.

‘We’ve decided against it,’ said Juan.

‘And what about the three activated cells heading for Paris?’ asked Falcón.

‘They’re looking more like decoys now,’ said Pablo. ‘The DGSE, French intelligence, have been alerted and they’re following their progress.’

They closed down the conference call. Gregorio and Falcón drove straight to the airport.

‘I don’t understand why you’re involving me in this,’ said Falcón.

‘It’s the way Juan works. This was your idea. You follow it through to the end,’ said Gregorio. ‘He’s annoyed that one of us didn’t pick up on the piece of information that unlocked the scenario, but he always performs better when he has something to prove.’

‘But it was pure luck that I picked up on an inconsequential bit of information.’

‘That’s what intelligence is all about,’ said Gregorio. ‘You put someone like Yacoub into a dangerous situation. Nobody has any idea what he’s supposed to be looking for. We have a vision of a developing scenario, which he cannot see. He tells us what he can. It’s up to us to translate it into something meaningful. You managed to do that. Juan is annoyed because he was left looking at the decoy but, then again, he couldn’t afford to ignore it.’

‘Are you worried about Yacoub being sent to Paris?’ said Falcón. ‘If he was part of the diversion, that would
mean the GICM know, or at least suspect, he’s spying for us.’

‘That’s why Juan is leaving him alone. He won’t even tell the DGSE about him,’ said Gregorio. ‘If the GICM are looking at him they’ll see someone completely clean. That’s the beauty of what’s happened.
They
put Yacoub into the position where he found the information, even though he didn’t know what those car manuals represented. It means he hasn’t had to expose himself in any way. When their operation breaks down, they won’t be able to point the finger at him. Yacoub is in a perfect position for the next time.’

‘Am I being stupid in asking why, if you know so much about the GICM, you don’t just take it out?’ asked Falcón.

‘Because we need to take out the whole network with it,’ said Gregorio.

They landed at Barrajas airport in Madrid at 1.15 on a hot afternoon, with the air crinkling above the tarmac. A car met the plane and took them to an office at one end of the terminal building where Juan and Pablo were waiting for them.

‘We’ve had some developments here,’ said Juan. ‘The Parador central office has records of bookings in Zamora for tonight and Santillana del Mar for tomorrow night. Pablo called both hotels and found that the British cancelled their bookings four hours ago.’

‘MI5 are trying to work out why they’ve changed their plans,’ said Pablo. ‘It could be a family matter. Two of the women are sisters. Or it could be work. The only problem is that they don’t have anybody vetted
on the inside of the hedge fund company. There hasn’t been any seismic movement in the Far East markets. They’re talking to City people now to see if there’s talk of a buy-out, or a take-over.’

‘Have you found the cars yet?’ asked Falcón.

‘If they cancelled four hours ago they were already well on their way, so we still have no idea whether they’re heading north via Madrid or Salamanca.’

‘What about the ferries?’ asked Gregorio.

‘We’ve checked both Bilbao/Portsmouth and Santander/Plymouth and they’ve made no bookings. Their Channel Tunnel booking still stands, with no alteration to the date,’ said Pablo. ‘That’s the Interior Minster’s line, Juan.’

Juan took the call, making notes. He slammed down the phone.

‘British intelligence have now been in touch with French intelligence,’ said Juan. ‘Amanda Turner has just changed the Channel Tunnel bookings to Monday afternoon—tomorrow—so it looks as if they’re driving to northern France non-stop. Neither the French Ministry of the Interior nor the British Home Office want those cars going through the Channel Tunnel. The French have said that they don’t want those cars going through France. Their route north will take them close to nuclear reactors and through densely populated areas. The cars are on Spanish soil. We have areas of low population density. We’re going to have to deal with it here. He’s given us direct access to special forces.’

‘It’s about 550 kilometres from Seville to Madrid,’ said Gregorio. ‘It’s 200 kilometres from Seville to Mérida. If they changed their plans four hours ago they
could have still switched to the quicker route north, via Madrid.’

‘So if they went to Madrid directly they should already be past us, but if they changed their route they should be around Madrid now.’

Pablo called the Guardia Civil and told them to watch the NI/E5 heading north to Burgos and the NII/E90 heading northeast to Zaragoza, emphasizing that they only wanted a report on the cars; there was to be no pursuit and definitely no general alert.

Juan and Gregorio went to the map of Spain and studied the two possible routes. Pablo contacted special forces and asked them to have two cars ready, a driver and two armed men in each unmarked vehicle.

At 14.00 the Guardia Civil called back with a sighting of the convoy on the Madrid/Zaragoza road, just outside Guadalajara. Pablo asked them to put motorbike police in all the service stations along the route and to report if the convoy left the road. He went back to special forces, gave them the route information and told them to watch out for the convoy’s shepherd. Their two cars left Madrid at 14.05.

At 14.25 the Guardia Civil called to say the convoy had left the road at a service station at Kilometre 103. They had also noticed a silver VW Golf GTI, whose registration number had shown it to be a hire car from Seville, which had come off at the same time as the convoy. Two men had got out. Neither of them had gone into the service station. They were both leaning on the back of the Golf, one of them was making a phone call on a mobile.

While Pablo relayed that information to the special forces vehicles, Gregorio called the car-hire company
in Seville. It was closed. Falcón called Ramírez and told him to get it open as soon as possible. Juan ordered a helicopter to be ready for immediate take-off. He gave the Interior Minister an update on the situation and told him that at some point they would have to close the mobile phone network down for an hour on the Madrid/Zaragoza road between Calatayud and Zaragoza.

‘Special forces are going to have to take out the shepherd vehicle over one of the mountain passes,’ he said. ‘That way, if they’re using mobile phone technology to detonate the devices, the network will be down and if they’re using a direct signal there’s less chance of a good connection.’

At 15.00 Ramírez called back from the car-hire company. Gregorio gave the registration number of the silver Golf GTI. The car-hire company gave them the ID card of the driver. Gregorio checked it on the computer. Stolen last week in Granada.

The helicopter tilted and rose up into the cloudless sky above Barrajas airport. Falcón hadn’t wanted the privileged seat next to the pilot. It had been ten years since he’d been in a helicopter. He felt exposed to the elements and had an unnerving sensation of lightness of being.

They tracked the NII/E90 autopista from Madrid to Zaragoza and in less than an hour they were up above the mountains around Calatayud.

‘We don’t often get to see this,’ said Juan, over the headphones. ‘The denouement of an intelligence operation, I mean.’

Even now, as they raced towards the culmination
of months of work and days of intensity, it hardly felt real. Spain tore past under his feet and men somewhere below made their final preparations as the convoy of four-wheel-drive vehicles, full of real, live people, sped north unknowing and unconcerned at this vast and complicated mechanism moving into action behind them.

The pilot gave him binoculars and pointed down at the section of road where he watched as a silver Golf GTI was overtaken by a dark blue BMW. The BMW braked so sharply that puffs of smoke came out of the wheel arches. The Golf GTI slammed into the back of it, but the soldiers were out, their guns ready, arms jerking with the recoil. The helicopter swooped down on the scene. Two men were being dragged from the car; its windscreen was shattered, the front crumpled, steam pouring out from under the bonnet.

The helicopter hopped over to the other side of the mountain pass where the tourists’ convoy had been pulled over on to the hard shoulder by other armed special forces travelling in a forward car. The helicopter turned and hovered as the four couples got out and ran away from their cars.

To see it all played out with no sound—or rather, too much sound from the thumping blades thrashing the air—added to the unreality. Falcón felt faint at the thought that this final operation had all happened as a result of his hunch. What if reality yielded no bombs in the vehicles and a Golf GTI with two injured innocent men? He must have been looking bewildered and lost, because Juan’s voice came on in his head.

‘We quite often think that,’ he said. ‘Did this really happen?’

The helicopter banked away from the distant city of Zaragoza, which bristled under the heat and a stagnant smog. The pilot muttered his position and direction as the brown, hard-baked mountains settled back into the late afternoon.

Coda

Seville—Monday, 10th July 2006

Falcón was sitting in the restaurant at the back of the bar in Casa Ricardo. It was almost four years to the day that he’d last been in this place and it had been no accident. He took a sip of his beer and ate an olive. He was just cooling off after the walk in the atrocious heat from his house.

There had been no time for anything in the last month. The paperwork had achieved surreal dimensions, from which he broke away to re-enter a world he’d expected to find changed. But the bomb had been like an epileptic fit. The city had suffered a terrible convulsion and there had been much concern for its future health, but as the days passed and there were no further outbreaks, life reverted to normal. It left a lesion. There were families with an unfillable space at the table. And others, who regularly summoned their courage to face another day at waist height to people they’d always looked in the eye. There were the forgotten hundreds who looked in the mirror every morning to shave around a scar, or smooth foundation on to a new blemish. But the one force greater than
the terrorist’s power to disrupt was humanity’s need to get back into a routine.

The debrief on the intelligence operation had lasted four days. Falcón had been relieved when four explosive devices had been found in the British four-wheel-drive vehicles. Each device was a small marvel of engineering, as each bomb’s aluminium casing had been built to fit in the car as if it was an integral piece of the structure. Falcón couldn’t help but think that the bombs were like terrorism itself, fitting so perfectly into society, its sinister element indistinguishable. His relief had been that they existed. They weren’t a figment of his, or the intelligence world’s, imagination. And there had been no ‘dirty’ element in the core as the British had feared.

Since returning from Madrid, Falcón had been working with Juez del Rey to bring the case against Rivero, Cárdenas and Zarrías to court although, since Rivero had suffered a stroke and been left unable to speak, it was really against the last two. The case was being prepared in another surreal dimension. Del Rey had decided to prosecute the two men for the murder of Tateb Hassani first because he wanted to proceed step by step towards proving their involvement in the greater conspiracy. What the public knew about Hassani was that he had written the horrific instructions attached to the plans of the schools and biology faculty. Somehow, through a collective blindness, these instructions had been separated from the fiction that the conspiracy had attempted to establish. The result was that large sections of the public thought of Cárdenas and Zarrías as folk heroes.

Yacoub had made contact on his return from Paris.
The GICM high command had given him no instructions. He thought that they suspected him and had therefore made no attempt to contact the CNI. He had wandered about in public places, afraid to stay in his hotel room in case there was a knock he couldn’t bear to answer. He returned to Rabat. He attended the group’s meetings in the house in the medina. There was no mention of the failed mission.

Calderón’s case was due to be tried in September. Inspector Jefe Luis Zorrita and the instructing judge, Juan Romero, were convinced of his guilt. Their case was rock-solid. Falcón had not seen Calderón again, but had heard that he was resigned to his fate, which was to spend fifteen years in prison for the murder of his wife.

Manuela had been a worry to Falcón. He’d thought that the vacancy left by Angel’s removal would leave her lonely and depressed, but he’d underestimated her. Once the horror, rage and despair at his crime had burnt out, she found a renewed vitality. All those lessons on positive energy from Angel had paid off. She did not sell the villa in Puerto de Santa María; the German buyer came back to her and she found a Swede to take the other Seville property. She also didn’t lack for dinner invitations. People wanted to know everything about her life with Angel Zarrías.

There had been other positive developments in the aftermath to the bomb. Last Sunday, while sitting on a park bench in the shade of some trees in the Parque María Luisa, Falcón had found his eye drawn to a family group. The man was pushing a wheelchair occupied by a young girl and he was talking to a
small blonde woman in a turquoise top and white skirt. Only when two kids sprinted up to join them did Falcón recognize that the children belonged to Cristina Ferrera, who put her arm around her son while her daughter reached over and helped the man push the wheelchair. It was only then that he realized that he was looking at Fernando Alanis.

BOOK: The Hidden Assassins
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