Page 126 of A Death in Cornwall


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Gabriel spat a mouthful of blood onto the luxurious carpet before reciting the fourteen digits in the correct sequence. Robinson, his hand shaking with rage, managed to enter them correctly. The phone vibrated as he stared at the screen.

“Is that my wife, by any chance?”

“Samantha Cooke of the Telegraph.”

The phone ceased vibrating, then, a few seconds later, pulsed with a text message.

“What does it say?”

“It says you have one hour to accept Harris Weber & Company’s generous settlement offer.” Robinson slid the phone into the Faraday pouch and sealed the Velcro flap. “Otherwise, you and the pretty Danish girl die.”

***

They returned the hood to Gabriel’s head and, after a rain-drenched journey over paving stones and gravel, hurled him onto the concrete floor of his holding cell and locked the door. He soon realized that this time he was not alone; someone was lying next to him. The faint aroma of female scent and fear told him it was Ingrid.

“Did they hit you?” she asked.

“I can’t remember. You?”

“Once or twice. And then I made a deal with them.”

“Good girl. What were the terms?”

“I promised to tell them everything if they would agree to let a doctor examine you.”

“In case you were wondering, they didn’t live up to their end of the bargain. In fact, they gave me quite a going-over in there.”

“The passcode for your phone?”

“Yes.”

“I had a feeling.”

“Do you really not know it?”

She sighed and then recited it perfectly.

“I could have used your help earlier,” said Gabriel. “I had a devil of a time remembering the damn thing.”

“How long was the phone out of the Faraday bag?”

“Long enough.”

52

Petton Cross

On the western fringes of the Gloucestershire town of Cheltenham stands an enormous circular structure that resembles a stranded alien spacecraft. Known to those who work there as the Doughnut, the building is the home of the Government Communications Headquarters, or GCHQ, Britain’s signals intelligence service. Twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, its officers eavesdrop on sensitive communications around the world. Occasionally, however, they are assigned more mundane tasks, such as determining the approximate location of a mobile phone. This they can accomplish quite easily, provided the device is switched on and transmitting a signal.

Three veteran GCHQ officers were engaged in just such a search that evening. They were well acquainted with the phone in question. It was a secure device carried by the retired chief of Israeli intelligence, a man who over the years had worked closely with his counterparts at Millbank and Vauxhall Cross. As a matter of course, and despite assurances to the contrary, GCHQ tracked his device whenever it popped onto one of the British networks, though all attempts to penetrate its formidable defenses had proven fruitless.

In short order the officers were able to determine that the phone had returned to the United Kingdom two days earlier, that it had ventured as far afield as Land’s End in Cornwall, that it had spent a night in the ancient Roman city of Bath, and that it had gone dark at 1:37 that afternoon near Greenwich Park in southeast London. But finally, at 11:42 p.m., the phone awakened from its hours-long slumber and reattached itself to the network. Its stay was brief, slightly less than five minutes, but more than sufficient for the three officers to identify the location of the nearest cellular mast.

It was this small but vital piece of data that the overnight duty officer in Cheltenham, at 11:54 p.m., personally relayed to SIS chief Graham Seymour. Graham, who was still at his home in Belgravia, in turn delivered the news to Amanda Wallace of MI5. The two senior spymasters were in agreement that, for the time being, at least, they should continue to withhold the information from both their prime minister and the man who would soon succeed her, Home Secretary Hugh Graves.

They likewise agreed that this was an intelligence matter and not something that could be left solely in the hands of the police. Still, they could not possibly mount a rescue attempt without first alerting the chief constable of the local territorial force. It was Graham Seymour, shortly after midnight, who placed the call, waking the chief constable from a sound sleep. Their conversation was two minutes in length, unpleasant in tone, and characterized by a distinct lack of candor on Graham’s part. He refused to divulge even the barest details about the nature of the emergency and insisted on maintaining full control of the response. He required no assistance, he said, other than an unmarked car and a driver. Much to the chief constable’s surprise, he requested a specific officer for the job.

“But he’s a junior detective with absolutely no experience in this sort of thing.”

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