Authors: Adrian Magson
The answer, it turned out, was almost nothing. In fact, Moresby seemed nearly paralysed by indecision, pushing papers around his desk in a seemingly random manner as if hoping to find an answer buried in their midst.
âHow far away are the frigates?' Vale asked him.
Moresby's eyes flickered. âI don't know â several hours, last I heard.'
Vale picked up Moresby's phone and slid the handset across the desk. âGet on to the MOD and find out their best estimate. We need those Lynx choppers in the air as soon as they get close enough.'
Moresby shook his head. âBut the Somalisâ'
âScrew the Somalis,' Vale barked, cutting him off short. âWe can worry about territorial niceties later. If they had better control of their coastline, none of this would be happening.' He reached for his mobile and punched in the speed dial number for Portman's satellite phone.
It rang but there was no reply.
He let it ring out for a full minute, hoping against hope that Portman was either in a dead zone or unable to answer securely due to outside circumstances.
He cut the connection. Even if the Lynx and their detachments did arrive, it would take time to locate Portman and Tober â if they were still alive. Better to concentrate on Pryce and make sure she could give a full account of what had happened.
He stood up and walked towards the door.
âWhere are you going?' Moresby called after him.
He turned his head but didn't stop. âI'm going to make sure that we at least have one person coming out of this alive.' He wanted to add that he was going to talk to Scheider, but he didn't trust Moresby not to wake up and jump in first and tell the American to keep out of it. Once he recovered his equilibrium, Moresby would be looking to rescue the situation and start the process of clearing up the mess. And that would entail making sure that there were no embarrassing stories circulating afterwards. âDon't wait up,' he added, before closing the door firmly behind him.
He returned to his office and slumped behind his desk, exhaustion beginning to invade every fibre of his body. If he didn't get some proper sleep soon, he'd start to unravel like a badly-spooled ball of wool. And that would suit Moresby just fine.
His phone rang and he picked it up, nearly dropping it in the process. Christ, he felt like an old man. What the hell was he still doing this for? It certainly wasn't for the money or the kicks. Perhaps this call was going to put a stop to it.
âVale.'
There was a slight delay, then a familiar voice floated down the line.
Portman.
He sat up immediately while the American brought him up to date in a few terse sentences stripped to the bare bones.
âWe had a couple of hot contacts, but we're out and away. Tober's taken two. He's mobile for now.'
âBadly?'
âHe's got one in him and I think a busted rib. He's lost some juice but I'll patch him up as best I can. He's tough â he'll make it.'
âHow will you get out?'
âBy sea. We'll aim to head down the coast and make landfall somewhere near where Piet keeps Daisy.'
Vale caught on immediately. Malindi. The town was located on a small bay and easy to spot from the sea. The airport was about a kilometre inland. The two men could get a flight from there to Nairobi. âIt's a long way down.'
âIt'll take a few hours, but any further north and they'll stand a greater chance of picking us up. Once at sea we'll lose ourselves. If not we'll hug the coast as much as we can. I'll call you later.'
âDo that. There are two frigates on the way with marine detachments, but I can't tell how long they'll take.' Vale didn't want to add that policy and politics might actually get in the way and prevent them from getting too close to Somali or Kenyan land; Portman had enough on his plate without negative information putting a dent in his spirits. âThank you, by the way, for getting Pryce out.' It was the least he could say under the circumstances, and he hoped he would be able to enlarge on it at a later date.
âAll part of the service.' Portman sounded almost cheerful, and Vale wondered how the man kept going under the circumstances, with no backup and no guarantees other than his own skills and experience to draw on. But then, he'd been like that himself once, back when nothing seemed impossible and danger was a welcome break from tedium.
âOnce we're out of here,' Portman continued, âyou might have one of your flying robots take a close fix on the coordinates of this place.'
Robots. He meant drones.
âI can do that. But why?' He couldn't â not directly â but he knew a man who could.
âI think they're making it a base for operations in the south. It's filled with supplies. Be good if it fell over, don't you think?'
Vale breathed out. So Musa hadn't moved out yet. It meant he was planning on staying in the area for a while. And while shipping off the Kenyan coast might feel it was safe down there, away from the traditional pirate hunting ground around the Gulf, they would soon find out how wrong they were. He wondered if the government was aware of that. Plainly the Kenyans weren't planning on doing much to tackle the pirates just yet.
He toyed with the possibilities, the rights and wrongs, the moral imperatives of taking the fight to Musa's front door. Whether he could get the UK's own recently set up Remotely Piloted Air Systems drone team to do it, or persuade the Americans to use one of theirs, was a big question. If he could, it would certainly send a very clear message to others like Musa, who might try to do what he had done: You can be reached. Whoever and wherever you are, you can be touched.
âLeave it with me,' he said. âI'll see what I can do.'
âFine. But give us time to get clear first. I'd hate to see one of those Hellfires coming in head-on.'
Vale nearly choked when he realized what Portman was saying. âYou mean you're actually right
there
? How close?'
âClose enough to start a war.'
Then he was gone.
âJ
esus,' Tober muttered, watching as I produced a small green box from my backpack and flipped open the plastic tabs. âYou came ready. Were you a boy scout in a former life?'
âNo. I didn't rate the uniform.' The box contained a basic gunshot trauma kit. I'd hoped I wasn't going to have to use it, but the dice falls the way it does.
We were about a click away from the villa, and I was being ultra-careful with the use of a small LED flashlight to see what I was doing. Tober was sitting propped against the rear wheel of the pickup, which should hopefully shield us from anybody looking out this way. It would also be easier to hear somebody approaching than it would inside the cab.
I lifted the lid and took out shears, rubber gloves, bandages and some vacuum-packed wipes, and did my best to gently clean the area around the wounds with the addition of iodine for good measure. I slapped on gauze packs and trauma wound dressings and wrapped a bandage as tightly as I dared around his torso and tied it off, then did the same for his leg.
He didn't say much, didn't even grunt at what was surely painful, but nodded when I'd finished. He looked pale but game to go on. I handed him some cephalexin tablets to ward off infection, and he swallowed them without question. It wasn't certifiable medical treatment, but if I could stop him bleeding out and keep any bacteria at bay until we got some proper help, he stood a good chance of making it.
âHow does it look?' he queried, touching his side and hissing in protest as the movement stretched his ribcage.
âIt could have been worse,' I told him.
âHow?'
âIt could have been me.'
He smiled through the pain and mimed a weak punch at my head. Battlefield humour; it works every time.
âSo who was the one you left behind?' he queried. He was talking to keep himself alert. âThe one you're cut up about?'
I didn't want to answer but I needed him awake, too. âI was leading a four-man unit in a mountainous region. We'd been given bad intel and got ambushed and split up. One man went the wrong way and got shot, but we only found out later.'
âThat wasn't your fault.'
That was true, but it felt like it. We were all highly trained in escape and evasion, and capable of looking after ourselves. In such situations each of us was expected to make our own split-second decisions. But sometimes training isn't enough. You need luck, too.
Tober didn't pursue it. Maybe he knew what it was like. âYou rang London just now?'
âI did.'
âI take it they're not sending a Chinook to give us a nice comfy ride home, then?'
âNot exactly.' I told him what Vale had said about the frigates being a long way off, and didn't layer it with sugar. He was experienced enough to know what the political situation was, and that if there was going to be a fast pickup, it would have happened by now. We were going to have to make our own way out of here and the sooner we started, the better.
âFair enough,' he murmured. âShit happens, right?' He lay back and was soon breathing evenly, if a little heavy. It didn't sound great but at least he was still alive.
Perspiration was making my ribs itch. I'd almost forgotten about the bullet skimming my side, and checked it out. I found a two-inch burn mark and a faint smear of blood. Not even a flesh wound. But it was going to hurt like a bitch later on, so I dabbed it with iodine and slapped on a plaster to prevent infection, and swallowed a couple of cephalexin tablets just in case.
Next I moved out a short distance and took a few minutes to check our perimeter, using the scope to pick up any light clothing or movement where there shouldn't be any. But everything was quiet and there were no signs of pursuit. I returned to the truck and found Tober awake and wincing with discomfort.
âYou OK?'
He nodded. âYeah. Stings a bit when I laugh, that's all.' He gestured away with his chin. âWe good out there?'
âWe're fine. No signs of a search but we'll need to make a move soon. Can you stay awake for a while? I'm going to check out the boats near the villa.'
âSure thing, boss. Find us a good one, will you?' He told me what to look for: plenty of fuel, all the leads and cables in place and how to find them, and some water. âWe could be out at sea for a while,' he finished, âso don't pick us a dog, right? I don't swim so good with holes in me.'
âI promise.' I handed him the Vektor, which he'd find easier to use than the AK, and left him to it.
V
ale rang the embassy in Nairobi, where Pryce was waiting for a transfer to the airport and a military flight out. He was put through to the military attaché, Colonel Prior, to check security was in place, and asked to speak to Pryce.
âShe's exhausted,' Prior told him. âCan't you leave it?'
âIf I could, I would. Put her on.' Vale's tone was civil, but only just. Having a solicitous army officer get in his way was the last thing he needed.
Angela Pryce came on. She sounded tired but alert.
âI won't keep you long,' he told her. âI know you've been through a lot.'
âThat's OK, sir. How can I help?'
âTell me what happened. This is a recorded briefing, so keep it short and to the point. You know the drill.'
She hesitated, and he sensed the puzzlement in her voice. âSir, shouldn't I wait to speak to Mr Moresby about this?'
She was correct; operationally, she should be reporting to Moresby or one of his nominated de-briefers. The same with Tober, to cross-match the information. Asking her to speak to himself first was a violation of his remit, but since he'd already blown that out of the water from the start, what was another infraction along the way?
âOf course. And you will. But I'd like an outline first â especially about your escape ⦠and how you saw the situation developing.'
When she replied, the tension in her voice was clear. âHaven't you asked Portman that question?'
âI'll come to that later. Tell me what happened, from the time you arrived in Nairobi. It's important.'
âVery well.' She cleared her throat and Vale punched a button on the desk console and sat back to let her talk.
Ten minutes later, her voice tailed off with tiredness and, he guessed, a degree of shock at reliving the experience.
âI'm sorry I put you through that,' he told her. âBut it was necessary.' He didn't need to remind her that she would have to go through it again when she arrived back at Vauxhall Cross â and in more rigorous detail. Debriefing was a necessary evil for all operatives returning from an assignment and she would have gone through the process enough times already to be aware of the format.
âI understand, sir. Is there any news of Doug Tober?'
âHe's still out there, but that's all I can tell you. He's being looked after, I promise.' He had his fingers mentally crossed as he said it. In spite of Portman's assurances, any medical problems could change dramatically within minutes, especially with untreated wounds. Tober was tough, as his job demanded, but he wasn't in the best of locations to be walking around with holes in him.
âWho is Portman?' Pryce's words brought him back. âHe's not one of ours, I know that.'
Vale wondered how much to tell her. Not that it made much difference to himself if the attack dogs came after him following his talk with Moresby. But the less he revealed about Portman the better; he owed the man that much and more.
âHe's someone I sent out to watch your backs,' he said simply. âA professional shadow.'
She was silent for a second, then said, âThank you. I'm glad you did. He sounds American. Is he one of their black ops people?'
âTo be honest,' he said candidly, âI'm not sure what he is. Does it matter?'