Malone listened to the boy’s story.
“So you were there stealing.”
“I lifted a few things. Then I took the drive off the bloke, just before the bugger pushed him into the train.”
“You saw the guy pushed?”
Ian nodded. “I wasn’t expecting that, so I ran, but ended up getting caught by the man who pushed him, then shoved into a Bentley.”
He held up the plastic bag and asked again, “Where’s the flash drive?”
“I kept it, after I left the car. I thought it could be worth something.”
“And thieves like you don’t throw away things that are worth something.”
“I’m not a thief.”
His patience was running out. “Where’s the damn drive?”
“In my special place. Where I keep my stuff.”
His phone rang.
Which startled him.
Then he realized it could be Gary. He shoved Ian into the mews and dared the boy to make a run for it.
He found the phone and clicked it on. “Gary?”
“We have your son,” the voice said, which he recognized.
Devene.
“You know what we want.”
And he was staring straight at it. “I have Dunne.”
“Then we can trade.”
He was fed up, so he said, “When and where?”
Nine
Antrim yanked up the collar of his coat and braced himself for the chilly rain. The man he was following into the lousy night had just killed an American intelligence operative. He had to know who was behind this and why.
Everything could depend on it.
The pace of the hurrying masses on the sidewalk matched the bustle of traffic. Evening rush hour in a city of eight million people was unfolding. Below he knew trains roared in every direction, people headed down to them where the red circle crossed by a blue bar marked an Underground station. All of this was familiar, as he’d lived in London for the first fourteen years of his life. His father had worked for the State Department, a career employee with the diplomatic service who lasted thirty years until retirement. His parents had rented a flat near Chelsea and he’d roamed London.
To hear his father talk, he’d laid the entire groundwork for the end of the Cold War. Reality was far different. His father was an unimportant man, in an unimportant job, a tiny cog in a massive diplomatic wheel. He died fifteen years ago in the States, living off one-half of his government pension. His mother received the other half, courtesy of an Illinois divorce she’d obtained after thirty-six years of marriage. Neither one of them had the courtesy to even tell him before they split, which summed up their life as a family.
Three strangers.
In every way.
His mother spent her life trying to please her husband, scared of the world, unsure of anything. That’s why she took his father’s shouts, insults, and punches. Which left marks not only on her, but in their son’s memory.
To this day he hated having his face touched.
It started with his father, who’d smack him on the cheek for little or no reason. Which his mother allowed. And why wouldn’t she?
She thought little of herself and even less of her son.
He’d walked Fleet Street many times. The first was nearly forty years ago, as a twelve-year-old, his way of escaping both parents. Named after one of the city’s ghost rivers that flow belowground, this was once home to London’s press. The newspapers left in the 1980s, moving to the outskirts of town. But the courts and lawyers remained, their chambers occupying the warren of buildings and quadrangles surrounding him. He’d once thought about law school, but opted for government service. Only instead of the State Department, he’d managed to be hired by the CIA. His father lived long enough to know that, but never offered a single word of praise. His mother had long since lost touch with reality and languished in a fog. He’d visited her once in the nursing home, the entire experience too depressing to recall. He liked to think that his fears came from her, his audacity from his father, but there were times when he believed the reverse may well be true.
His target was a hundred feet ahead, moving at a steady pace.
He was panicked.
Somebody was finally into the business of Operation King’s Deception.
He scanned the surroundings.