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‘Was he? Then he’ll get on well with Dan Parker.’
Tozier jerked his head. ‘And who is Dan Parker?’
Warren grinned. ‘You’ll meet him sometime,’ he promised.
‘I’m coming with you,’ said Ben Bryan when Warren told him of what was happening.
‘And why would we need a psychiatrist?’ asked Warren.
Bryan grinned. ‘To inject a modicum of sanity. This is the craziest thing I’ve heard.’
‘If you join us you’ll be as mad as we are. Still, you might come in useful.’ He looked at Bryan speculatively, then said, ‘I think you’d better be in the main party. Mike Abbot can go with Parker.’
‘What’s he going to do?’
‘He’s our Trojan Horse – if we can find the Delorme woman – and that’s proving to be a hell of a problem. Hellier has a team in Paris going through birth certificates, pulling out all the Jeanette Delormes and running them down. They’ve found eight already. On the off-chance she was born in Switzerland he has another team there.’
‘Supposing she was born in Martinique?’ asked Bryan.
‘We can only try the obvious first,’ said Warren. ‘Hellier’s investigators are good – I know because they did a bang-up job on me. Anyway, he’s spending money as though he has his own printing press. We’re already into him for over £70,000.’ He grinned. ‘Still, that’s only a couple of years’ upkeep on his yacht’
‘I’ve never heard of a rich man really keen to part with his money,’ said Bryan. ‘You must have knocked the props clean from under him. You made him take a look at himself – a good, clear-eyed look – and he didn’t like what he saw. I wish I could do the same to some of my patients. Perhaps you should change your profession.’
‘I have – I’m in the business of raising private armies.’
Everything seemed to happen at once.
It may have been luck or it may have been good investigative practice, but the Delorme woman was traced, not through the patient sifting of birth certificates, but from a pipeline into the French Sûreté. It seemed that Mike Abbot had a friend who had a friend who …
Hellier tossed a file over to Warren. ‘Read that and tell me what you think.’
Warren settled back in his chair and opened the folder.
Jeanette Véronique Delorme: Born April 12, 1937 at Chalons. Parents …
He skipped the vital statistics in order to come to the meat of it.
‘… three months’ imprisonment in 1955 for minor fraud; six months’ imprisonment in 1957 for smuggling over Franco-Spanish border; left France in 1958.’
Then followed what could only be described as a series of hypotheses.
Believed to have been involved in smuggling from Tangier to Spain, 1958-1960; smuggling arms to Algeria, 1961-1963; smuggling drugs into Italy and Switzerland, 1963-1967. Believed to have been implicated in the murders of HenryRowe (American) 1962; Kurt Schlesinger (German), Ahmed ben Bouza (Algerian) and Jean Fouget (French) 1963; Kamer Osman (Lebanese) and Pietro Fuselli (Italian) 1966.
Operational Characteristics: Subject is good organizer and capable of controlling large groups; is ruthless and intolerant of errors; is careful not to become personally involved in smuggling activities, but may have been director of large-scale jewel thefts, south of France, 1967. This, however, may be considered doubtful.
Present Whereabouts: Beirut, Lebanon.
Present Status: Not wanted for crime in Metropolitan France.
There were a couple of smudgy photographs which had not survived the copying process at all well, but which showed a blonde of indeterminate age.
Warren blew out his cheeks. ‘What a hell-cat she must be.’ He tapped the folder. ‘I think this is the one – everything fits.’
‘I think so, too,’ said Hellier. ‘I’ve stopped everything else and narrowed it down to her. A man has already flown out to Beirut to pinpoint her.’
‘I hope someone has told him to be careful,’ said Warren.
‘He just has to find out where she lives and … er … her standing in the community. That shouldn’t be too risky. Then he pulls out and you take over.’
‘I’ll get Dan Parker out there as soon as we know something definite. Mike Abbot will support him – I’m not sure Dan could pull it off on his own. This might need the sophisticated touch. Oh, and we have a volunteer – Ben Bryan will be joining the Iran group.’
‘I’m glad to hear that Mr Bryan is going to earn his manor house,’ said Hellier, a shade acidly. ‘There’s still nothing on your man, Speering.’
‘He’ll make a move soon,’ said Warren with certainty. His confidence had risen because the dossier on Jeanette Delorme fitted in so tidily.
‘Well, the same thing applies. There’ll be an investigator with him all the way – probably on the same plane if he flies. Then you’ll take over.’
Speering moved two days later, and within twelve hours Warren, Tozier, Follet and Bryan were in the air in a chartered aircraft which also carried the two Land-Rovers. Parker and Abbot were already on their way to the Lebanon.
III
It was snowing in Tehran.
Follet shivered as the sharp wind cut through his jacket. ‘I thought this place was supposed to be hot.’ He looked out across the airport at the sheer wall of the Elburz Mountains and then up at the cold grey sky from which scudded a minor blizzard. ‘This is the Middle East?’ he asked doubtfully.
‘About as Middle as you can get,’ said Tozier. ‘Still, it’s March and we’re nearly five thousand feet above sea level.’
Follet turned up his collar and pulled the lapels close about his throat. ‘Where the hell is Warren?’
‘He’s clearing the vehicles and the gear through customs.’ He smiled grimly. The modifications he had made to the Land-Rovers were such that if they were discovered then all hell would break loose in the customs shed, and Warren and Bryan would find themselves tossed into jail without a quibble. But he had not told Warren what the modifications were, which was all to the good. True innocence is better than bluff when faced with the X-ray eye of the experienced customs official.
All the same he breathed more easily when Follet touched him on the shoulder and pointed. ‘Here they come,’ he said, and Tozier saw with relief a Land-Rover bearing down upon them. On its side it bore the neat legend: Regent Film Company. Advance Unit. The tension left him.
Warren poked his head through the side window. ‘Ben’s just behind me,’ he said. ‘One of you jump in.’
‘Did you have any trouble?’ asked Tozier.
Warren looked surprised. ‘No trouble at all.’
Tozier smiled and said nothing. He walked around to the back of the vehicle and stroked one of the metal struts which held up the canopy. Follet said, ‘Let me get in and out of this goddam wind. Where are we going?’
‘We’re booked in at the Royal Tehran Hilton. I don’t know where it is but it shouldn’t be too difficult to find.’ He pointed to a minibus filling up with passengers, which had the name of the hotel on its side. ‘We just follow that.’
Follet got in and slammed the door. He looked broodingly at the alien scene, and said abruptly, ‘Just what in hell are we doing here, Warren?’
Warren glanced at the rear view mirror and saw that the other Land-Rover had arrived. ‘Following a man.’
‘Jeeze, you’re as close-mouthed as that strongarm man of yours. Or are you keeping him in the dark, too?’
‘You just do as you’re told, Johnny, and you’ll be all right,’ advised Warren.
‘I’d feel a hell of a lot better if I knew what I was supposed to do,’ grumbled Follet.
‘Your turn will come.’
Follet laughed unexpectedly. ‘You’re a funny one, Warren. Let me tell you something; I like you – I really do. You had me over a barrel; you offered me a thousand when you knew I’d take peanuts. Then you raised the bonus to five thousand when you didn’t have to. Why did you do that?’
Warren smiled. ‘The labourer is worthy of his hire. You’ll earn it.’
‘Maybe I will, but I don’t see how right now. Anyway, I just wanted to say I appreciated the gesture. You can depend on me – for anything reasonable, that is,’ he added hastily. ‘Tozier was talking about unreasonable things – like being shot at.’
‘You ought to have got used to that in Korea.’
‘You know,’ said Follet. ‘I never did. Funny the things a man can never get used to, isn’t it?’
The Royal Tehran Hilton was on the outskirts of the city, a caravanserai designed specifically for the oilmen and businessmen flocking into Iran under the impetus of the booming economy underwritten by the reforming regime of Mohammad Rezi Pahlevi, King of Kings and Light of the Aryans. It had not been an easy drive from the airport because of the propensity of the local inhabitants to regard a road as a race track. Several times Warren had been within an ace of serious trouble and when they reached the hotel he was sweating in spite of the cold.
They registered, and Warren found a message awaiting him. He waited until he was in his room before ripping open the envelope, and found but a single inscrutable line of writing: Your room – 7.30 p.m. Lane. He looked at his watch and decided he had just time to unpack.
At 7.29 there was a discreet knock. He opened the door and a man said, ‘Mr Warren? I believe you’re expecting me. My name is Lane.’
‘Come in, Mr Lane,’ said Warren, and held open the door wider. He studied Lane as he took off his coat; there was not much to the man – he could have been anybody – a virtue in a private detective.
Lane sat down. ‘Your man is staying here at the Hilton – his reservation is for a week. He’s here right now, if you want him.’
‘Not alone, I trust,’ said Warren.
‘That’s all right, Mr Warren; there are two of us on the job. He’s being watched.’ Lane shrugged. ‘But he won’t move – he likes to stay close to where the bottles are.’
‘He drinks a lot?’
‘He may not be an alcoholic, but he’s pushing it. He lives in the bar until it closes, then has a bottle sent to his room.’
Warren nodded. ‘What else can you tell me about Mr Speering?’
Lane took a notebook from his pocket. ‘He’s been getting around. I have a list of all this stuff written up which I’ll let you have, but I can tell it to you in five minutes.’ He flipped open the notebook. ‘He was met at the airport by one of the locals – an Iranian, I think – and brought here to the hotel. I wasn’t able to nail down the Iranian; we’d just arrived and we weren’t equipped,’ he said apologetically.
‘That’s all right.’
‘Anyway, we haven’t seen the Iranian since. Speering went out next day to a place on Mowlavi, near the railway station. I have the address here. He came out of there with a car or, rather, an American jeep. It isn’t a hire car, either – I’ve been trying to check on the registration, but that’s a bit difficult in a strange city like this one.’
‘Yes, it must be,’ said Warren.
‘He went from there to a firm of wholesale pharmaceutical chemists – name and address supplied – where he spent an hour and a half. Then back to the Hilton where he spent the rest of the day. That was yesterday. This morning he had a visitor – an American called John Eastman; that was up in his room. Eastman stayed all morning – three hours – then they had lunch in the Hilton dining-room.’
‘Any line on Eastman?’
Lane shook his head. ‘A full-time check on a man really takes four operatives – there are only two of us. We couldn’t do anything about Eastman without the risk of losing Speering. Our instructions were to stick to Speering.’ Lane consulted his notebook again. ‘Eastman left soon after lunch today, and Speering hasn’t moved since. He’s down in the bar right now. That’s the lot, Mr Warren.’
‘I think you’ve done well under the circumstances,’ said Warren. ‘I have some friends here; I’d like to let them get a look at Speering for future reference. Can that be arranged?’
‘Nothing easier,’ said Lane. ‘All you have to do is have a drink.’ He took out an envelope which he gave to Warren. ‘That’s all we have on Speering; registration number of his jeep, names and addresses of the places he’s been to in Tehran.’ He paused. ‘I understand that finishes our job – after I’ve pointed the man out.’
‘That’s right. That’s all you were asked to do.’
Lane seemed relieved. ‘This one’s been tricky,’ he confided. ‘I don’t have any trouble in London, and I’ve done jobs in Paris and Rome. But a Westerner here stands out like a sore thumb in some parts of the city and that makes following a man difficult. When do you want to see Speering?’
‘Why not now?’ said Warren. ‘I’ll collect my chaps.’
Before going into the bar Warren paused and said, ‘We’re here on business. Mr Lane will indicate unobtrusively the man we’ve come to see – and the operative word is see. Take a good look at him so that you’ll recognize him again anywhere – but don’t make it obvious. The idea is to see and not be seen. I suggest we split up.’
They crossed the foyer and went into the bar. Warren spotted Speering immediately and veered away from him. He had seen Speering on several occasions in London and, although he did not think he was known to Speering, it was best to make sure he was not observed. He turned his back on the room, leaned on the bar counter and ordered a drink.
The man next to him turned. ‘Hi, there!’
Warren nodded politely. ‘Good evening.’
‘You with IMEG?’ The man was American.
‘IMEG?’
The man laughed. ‘I guess not. I saw you were British and I guessed you might be with IMEG.’
‘I don’t even know what IMEG is,’ said Warren. He looked into the mirror at the back of the bar and saw Tozier sitting at a table and ordering a drink.
‘It’s just about the biggest thing to hit this rathole of a country,’ said the American. He was slightly drunk. ‘We’re reaming a forty-inch gas line right up the middle – Abadan right to the Russian border. Over six hundred million bucks’ worth. Money’s flowing like … like money.’ He laughed.
‘Indeed!’ said Warren. He was not very interested.
‘IMEG’s bossing the show – that’s you British. Me – I’m with Williams Brothers, who are doing the goddam work. Call that a fair division of labour?’
‘It sounds like a big job,’ said Warren evasively. He shifted his position and saw Follet at the other end of the bar.
‘The biggest.’ The American swallowed his drink. ‘But the guys who are going to take the cream are the Russkis. Christ, what a set-up! They’ll take Iranian gas at under two cents a therm, and they’ve pushed a line through to Trieste so they can sell Russian gas to the Italians at over three cents a therm. Don’t tell me those Bolshevik bastards aren’t good capitalists.’ He nudged Warren. ‘Have a drink.’
‘No, thanks,’ said Warren. ‘I’m expecting a friend.’
‘Aw, hell!’ The American looked at his watch. ‘I guess I’ve gotta eat, anyway. See you around.’
As he left, Tozier came up to the bar with his drink in his hand. ‘Who’s your friend?’
‘A lonely drunk.’
‘I’ve seen your man,’ said Tozier. ‘He looks like another drunk. What now?’
‘Now we don’t lose him.’
‘And then?’