Dark Justice Read online

Page 4


  “Of course I have,” Greta said. “He runs that special intelligence outfit for the Prime Minister.”

  “Gold star for you, Greta.” Ashimov pointed to the last picture on the screen. “That’s Detective Superintendent Hannah Bernstein, Ferguson ’s assistant.”

  “Good God,” Greta said.

  Ashimov flicked to Dillon. “And this gentleman – this one really is special. Sean Dillon, Ferguson ’s strong right hand, and once the Provisional IRA’s top enforcer. For twenty years or more, the British Army and the RUC couldn’t lay a hand on him.”

  “And now he works for the Prime Minister? That’s unbelievable.”

  “Well, it’s typically British. They’ll turn their hands to anything if it suits.”

  “So where does this leave us?”

  “With Ferguson ’s outfit checking Mrs. Morgan, whose son was supposed to have a go at President Jake Cazalet in New York and has now disappeared, or so it would seem. Would you say the appearance of Dillon and Bernstein at her front door was a coincidence?”

  “Not for a moment. What do you intend to do?”

  “I’ll alert Dr. Ali Selim, naturally. We’ll take it from there. I’ll show them the photos.”

  “And Belov?”

  “He left this sort of thing in my hands, but I keep him informed.” He smiled. “He’s not involved, Greta my love, you must understand. He’s too important. As regards operations at what you might call the coal face, I’m in charge.” He smiled and kissed her on the cheek. “Trust me.”

  Soon after, he was standing by an old jetty around the corner from the Queen Street Mosque, overlooking the river. He leaned on a rail smoking a cigarette, enjoying the landscape, the views, the boats passing. Selim appeared after a while, a handsome bearded man wearing a Burberry raincoat, an umbrella guarding him from the rain.

  “Yuri, my friend.” He smiled. “You said it was urgent. Why not call at my office at the mosque?”

  “Not again,” Ashimov told him. “I’ve got news for you. Our friend Morgan’s trip to New York would seem to have disappeared into a black hole.”

  “How unfortunate,” Selim said calmly.

  “Listen.” Ashimov went through everything.

  Afterward, Selim said, “We can’t be certain he met a bad end. That’s supposition, surely?”

  “Ali, my friend, if Ferguson ’s lot are involved, particularly this Dillon, then the end is as certain as the coffin lid closing.”

  “You consider the man exceptional, it would seem.”

  “And for good reason. He’s a man of many skills. An experienced pilot, for instance, and linguist. Russian and Arabic, for example.”

  “I’ll remember that.”

  “Besides his years with the IRA, he worked for the PLO as a mercenary, and for the Israelis in Lebanon in the old days.” Ashimov lit a cigarette. “He kills at the drop of a hat, this one.”

  “Oh, in a dark street on a rainy night, I’m sure he’s as susceptible to a knife under the ribs as anyone.”

  “My dear Ali.” Ashimov smiled. “If you believe that, you’ll be making the worst mistake of your life.”

  Selim said, “So what about Mrs. Morgan? If they’re sniffing around there, she could be saying the wrong things.”

  “I don’t know. She’s an aging cripple in a wheelchair. She can’t speak in much more than a whisper. And what could she tell him? That she’s a woman who returned to Islam after her husband’s death, whose son also discovered the faith and lightened her grief. Wouldn’t you, as her imam, agree with all this?”

  “Of course.”

  “Exactly, and you are a man of impeccable background and highly respected. Whatever has happened to the son has no connection with you. You’re too important, Ali, that’s why we keep you out of it. You even sat on a committee at the House of Commons last week. Nothing could be more respectable. No, my friend, you’re a real asset.”

  “And too valuable to lose,” Selim said. “And loose ends are loose ends. If Mrs. Morgan should happen to mention you and me in the same breath, they’ll discover who you are. The man who is Belov’s security.”

  Ashimov sighed. “All right, leave it to me. Now we better split up. I’ll be in touch.”

  Selim hesitated. “Morgan was a soldier of God. If worse has come to the worst, he is also a true martyr.”

  “Save that tripe for the young fools at the mosque, your Wrath of Allah fanatics. Go on, get going.”

  Selim went, and Ashimov stayed there thinking about it. Perhaps Selim had a point. After all, why would Bernstein and Dillon be calling on the old lady at all? Better to be safe than sorry. He looked over at the incoming tide, then pulled up his collar against the rain, walked around to Chandler Street and rang the bell at number thirteen.

  She answered it after a while and peered out over the chain. “It’s me. Mr. Ashimov,” he said. “Dr. Selim’s friend. He asked me to call and see if you wanted to go to the mosque.”

  “That is kind,” she said. “I was going to go a little later.”

  “Since I’m here, why don’t you go now? It’s much easier if I push you,” he said. “Bring an umbrella. It’s raining.”

  She closed the door, undid the chain and opened it again and Ashimov stepped in. “Let me help you.” He reached for a raincoat and a beret hanging on a hall stand and helped her. “There you are, and here’s an umbrella.” He took one down and gave it to her.

  “So kind,” she said.

  “Not at all. Have you got your key?”

  “Yes.”

  “You had a visit this afternoon, I believe. A lady from the Welfare Department?”

  “Did I?” She frowned. “I can’t remember.”

  “Yes, with a gentleman. What did they ask you? About your son in New York?”

  She was confused and bewildered. Few things seemed real to her anymore, and her memory was fading fast these days.

  “I can’t remember. I can’t remember anyone calling.”

  Which was true, for she was in the early stages of Alzheimer’s. It was obvious to Ashimov that he was wasting his time.

  “Never mind. Let’s be on our way, then.”

  The rain was driving down, no one around as they went along the street, the fog drifting up from the river. They went past the shop, which now showed a closed sign inside the door.

  “It’s going to be a dirty night later,” he said.

  “I think you’re right.”

  “But still a nice view of the Thames.” He turned in at the old wooden jetty, the wheels of her chair trembling over the warped wooden boarding.

  “There you are.” He paused at the top of the steps going down to the river.

  “I like it at night with the lights on the boats.”

  Her voice was like a small wind through the trees on a dark evening, as he looked at the river high with water lapping at the bottom of the steps. Then he shoved the chair forward. Strangely enough, she didn’t call out, but gripped the arms of her chair tightly, and when she hit the water, she went under instantly as the chair emptied her out.

  It was only four or five feet deep, a mud bank when the tide was out. Someone would find her soon enough. He’d done her a favor, really. He lit a cigarette and walked away.

  A few minutes later, standing in a doorway, he phoned Ali Selim. “You can relax. Mrs. Morgan has met with an unfortunate accident.”

  “What are you talking about?” Ashimov told him. Selim sounded horrified. “Was that necessary?”

  “Come on, Selim, you were the one talking about loose ends. Now, don’t forget, if the police inquire, you were unhappy about her habit of going to the mosque alone in her wheelchair, which is why you often sent young men to fetch her.”

  Selim took a deep breath. “Of course.”

  “She was prematurely aging, confused a great deal of the time.”

  “She had Alzheimer’s.”

  “Well, there you are. I’ll leave it with you,” and Ashimov hung up.

&
nbsp; 4

  It was at ten the following morning that Patel, exercising his small terrier, found the body and the wheelchair on the beach. He called the Wapping police, and since Hannah had put a tracer on Mrs. Morgan, she was notified at once at the Ministry of Defence.

  Ferguson was in a Defence Committee meeting, but Dillon was in the office and she quickly filled him in.

  “So what do we do?” he demanded.

  “Get down to Chandler Street fast and I’ll put a red flag on the case and take command. You come with me. You might be useful.”

  They used a department limousine with a civilian driver, retired police. Hannah said, “It’s one hell of a coincidence.”

  “And you know how much I believe in those.”

  Just then, Dillon’s mobile rang. “Sean? It’s Roper. I’ve got something interesting for you on Ashimov and also on the Wrath of Allah thing.”

  “Hold on to it for just a bit. Mrs. Morgan’s turned up on a mudflat at the end of her street, and Hannah and I are on our way. We’re just about there. I’ll call you later.”

  They took a turn, and then there they were. There was a police paramedic’s ambulance, the usual team, and a sergeant in charge who jumped to attention when Hannah showed him her warrant card and assumed command.

  “Not much of a scene of crime, ma’am,” he said. “Plenty of mud.” She and Dillon looked over the rail. “It’s obvious what happened. The gent who found her said she was always pushing herself in her wheelchair up and down the street to the Queen Street Mosque. Come off the pavement twice before in the past and ended up in the gutter.”

  Hannah said, “Right. Get her up out of there and deliver her to Peel Street Morgue. I’m going to call in Professor George Langley. He’ll handle it.”

  She walked away with her mobile and stood in a doorway. Dillon saw Patel lurking outside his shop and went over.

  “This must have been a shock for you?”

  “A terrible shock. It was a higher tide than usual last night. It’s amazing she wasn’t swept away.”

  “Are you surprised by what happened?”

  “Not really. She’d had a few close calls in that wheelchair and she was worse these days.”

  “What do you mean, worse?”

  “Couldn’t handle herself, confused, no memory worth speaking of. She didn’t know which way she was pointing. She was very upset when Henry went off to the States.” Patel hesitated. “What was it all about before, you and the Superintendent and those inquiries?”

  Dillon lied glibly. “Her son was only on a special tourist visa, but seems to have gone missing, and we had a request to check it out. A lot of people do that. Go as tourists and fade into the landscape.”

  “A lot of people do that here, too,” Patel said.

  “The way of the world.”

  Dillon went over to Hannah as she finished her call. “What next?”

  “I’ve spoken to Langley, and he’s going straight to the morgue.” A couple of paramedics carried Mrs. Morgan past them in a body bag. “Poor old lady,” Hannah said.

  “And nothing we can do. But speaking of doing things, Roper seems to have come up with some stuff about Ashimov and the Wrath of Allah thing.”

  “Good. I’ll speak to the General,” which she did briefly and turned to Dillon. “He suggests we all meet up at Roper’s apartment, get filled in together.”

  “Sounds good to me.” He shook his head. “I accept everything Patel says about Mrs. Morgan and her wheelchair, about her incompetence and so on, her minor accidents – but it doesn’t explain what she was doing on the jetty in the first place.”

  “Exactly what I was thinking.”

  Roper’s apartment was on the ground floor, with a ramp entrance to facilitate his wheelchair. The entire place was designed for not only a handicapped person, but one determined to look after himself. His equipment was state-of-the-art, some of it top secret and supplied by Ferguson.

  Dillon and Hannah had been with him for perhaps ten minutes when Ferguson arrived and joined them.

  “So where are we?” he asked Hannah. “With Mrs. Morgan, I mean.”

  “I’ve pulled in Professor Langley, sir. He’s working on her now.”

  “He won’t find much, not in my opinion.” Dillon told Ferguson all Patel had said. “So there you are. It’s highly suspicious, but I doubt we can prove it’s any more than an accident.”

  Ferguson looked gloomy. “One thing’s certain. We can’t throw the fact that Henry Morgan is dead into the pot, because we’re not supposed to know. So where does that leave us?”

  “With Yuri Ashimov, for one thing,” Roper said. “Formerly the pride of the KGB.” He punched his computer keys and Ashimov’s photo emerged. One or two in uniform, others in a more social situation.

  “What’s he up to now?”

  “Head of security for Josef Belov and his outfit.”

  “The oil billionaire?” Dillon asked.

  “That’s the man,” Roper said. “Man of mystery, that’s his front. A billionaire many times over, and friend of Putin.”

  “So what on earth would Ashimov be doing around Mrs. Morgan?”

  “It must have been something to do with the son,” Hannah said. “Has to be.”

  “And the interesting question is Who sent Henry Morgan to New York with the intention of shooting the President?” Dillon turned to Hannah. “You said Dr. Ali Selim was clean as a whistle.”

  It was Roper who broke in. “He is, as far as my researches show.”

  “Then why is he involved with a man like Ashimov? What’s the purpose?” Dillon shook his head. “There has to be a reason.” He turned to Roper. “What did you find out about the Wrath of Allah?”

  “It was an Arab militant group some years ago during the civil war in Lebanon. With the end of that war, it seemed to disappear from view. Last year, the Israeli Mossad tried to establish if it was an offshoot of Al Qa’eda, but got nowhere.

  “Well, it meant something to Henry Morgan,” Ferguson said. “It may have disappeared, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. One of our greatest security problems is the way a few terrorists can hide themselves in the mass of an ordinary decent Muslim population. How can you tell the difference?”

  “Mao Tse-tung invented that strategy years ago, and it eventually won him China,” Dillon pointed out.

  “I’ve got something else for you, recently pulled out of my printer.” Roper handed three photos across. “Greta Novikova. Supposed to be a secretary at the Russian Embassy, but in reality a major in the GRU. Used to be Ashimov’s girlfriend. Neat coincidence, her being assigned to London, isn’t it?”

  “Quite a lady,” Dillon said admiringly. He slipped a copy into his breast pocket. “Maybe I’ll run into her.”

  Hannah’s mobile went, she answered and listened. “Fine, we’ll be there.” She turned to Ferguson. “Professor Langley, sir. He can give us a preliminary.”

  “Excellent,” Ferguson said. “You hang in there, Major. I’ll keep you informed.”

  They filed into Ferguson ’s Daimler, and as it moved away, Greta Novikova eased out in her Opel and went after them.

  George Langley was a small, gray-haired energetic man whom they had all met in the pursuance of previous cases. Many people considered him the greatest forensic pathologist in London, and not much escaped him.

  The Peel Street Morgue was an old building, some of it Victorian, but the interior was modern enough. A receptionist led them into a white-tiled room with fluorescent lighting and modern steel operating tables. Mrs. Morgan lay on one of them. The wounds from her examination had been stitched up.

  “My God, I never get used to this part,” Hannah said softly.

  Langley came in from the preparation room in shirtsleeves, drying his hands on a towel.

  “Ah, there you are, Charles.”

  “Good of you to be so quick off the mark, George. What have you got for me?”

  “Death by drowning. No suggestion of f
oul play. Strangely enough, no bruising. On the other hand, she was as light as a feather. Very undernourished. Her previous medical history isn’t good. The car accident, which reduced her to the wheelchair, was very grave. I’ve checked the records. I’ve also checked with her GP, and she was being treated for Alzheimer’s.”

  “So that’s it?”

  “I’d say so. It’s interesting that the man who found her, Patel, speaks of these minor accidents she suffered in the wheelchair. I notice a report by the scene-of-crime sergeant who went to see the imam at Queen Street. Sounded most distressed, said he’d implored her many times not to venture out alone, and usually sent someone to escort her.”

  “Which still leaves us wondering what she was doing at the end of the jetty,” Dillon said.

  “I’ve had a quick look. Nothing out of the ordinary. The Alzheimer’s would make her subject to confusion, memory loss, considerable general stress. If she turned right, she’d turn the corner for the Queen Street Mosque; if she turned left, she’d find herself on the jetty and only a few yards to the steps.” He didn’t even frown when he said, “Are you looking for suspicious circumstances here, Charles? You usually are.”

  “No, no. It’s an unrelated matter.”

  “Unrelated, huh? Which brings you hotfoot, plus the Superintendent and Dillon? Highly unlikely, I’d have thought. However, I can’t help you with this one and I’ve other things to do. I’ll be on my way.”

  They left and walked to the Daimler. Ferguson paused, frowning, and said to Dillon, “What’s that you usually say? About making it a we-know-that-they-know-and-they-know-that-we-know situation?”

  “I’d say you mean you want Dr. Ali Selim pushed a little.”

  “Exactly. I’ll leave it to you. Blake’s at the American Embassy at the moment. We’ll all catch up later.”

  “Don’t you think I should provide a police presence for Selim, sir?” Hannah asked.

  “No. Some things require the Dillon touch, Superintendent.”

 

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