on all sides. There had been nothing overt about them to suggest any dangerous presence, such as armed guards, but the metal shutters on the windows, the fresher paint compared with their neighbours and the heavy four-by-four vehicles parked in the alleyways alongside, indicated they were not your average residential premises.
The last stop was outside a three-storey building in a quiet back street.
âHome sweet home,â Rik said cheerfully. He handed Harry a key on a plastic tag. âTop floor, so you can make as much noise as you like, hold wild parties and stuff like that. Make sure you invite me, though. The only other tenant is a press photographer on the ground floor, named Mario. Comes from Rome. Nice bloke.â He frowned. âActually, I havenât seen him around for a couple of days. Must have found a story to cover. Iâve stocked up your kitchen with the basics, so you wonât need to shop for a few days. Not,â he added, âthat youâll find shopping much fun around here.â
âThanks. Where do you call home?â asked Harry. He hadnât had much opportunity to talk to the younger man yet. If he was a communications specialist, he couldnât exactly be rushed off his feet, and Harry hadnât seen much in the way of communications hardware in the office.
âAbout quarter of a mile away.â Rik pointed out to the suburbs. âItâs on Novroni. Number twenty-four. Old and scabby, but Iâm doing it up to keep myself from going stir-crazy. Clare lives a few blocks that way.â He indicated north. âThe other two live on the outskirts.â He hesitated. âDid Mace tell you about the no-comms rule?â
âYes. Everything goes through him. Is it set in stone?â
âYou bet. I have access to a server in London, but thatâs purely for messages. Itâs monitored closely and as bombproof as my grannyâs knickers. Mace has a secure terminal in his office, but nobody else gets to touch it. Itâs level-Alpha password-protected.â
âIâll pretend I know what that means. What about my mobile?â
Rik held out his hand. âHere â Iâll show you.â
Harry passed him his Nokia, which he hadnât used since leaving London. Rik switched it on. He held it up so Harry could see the screen. It was blank.
âThey wiped it before you left. It wonât pick up a signal here, so you might as well dump it. Iâll give you a new one in the morning. Itâll be OK for the local network, but no further.â He handed the phone back and put the car in gear. âItâs not too bad here. Youâll get used to it.â
âThatâs what Mace said.â Harry wondered when theyâd managed to wipe his mobile. At the time of the debriefing, probably, when heâd handed it in at security.
âHeâs right. Welcome to paradise.â
Harry watched him drive away before making his way inside and up three flights of narrow, concrete stairs inlaid with coarse tiles. They were worn down in the middle from the passage of feet over the years, and crackled with grit underfoot. The air was cold and damp, a depressing contrast to the conditions at the airport.
He shivered, wondering if this was a taste of the winter to come.
The interior of the flat was spacious but minimally furnished, like a studentâs lodging circa 1968. Most of the items looked as if they had been sourced from a bric-a-brac salesroom. The living room, bedroom and kitchen held the basics, and carried a faint aroma of mildew and cleaning fluid. A wood-burner stood in the living room, black and cold and squat as a beetle, and the bathroom was ancient and damp, echoing to the plunk of water dripping from a furred-up shower-head the size of a soup tureen.
He sat down on the bed and contemplated his future. So far, heâd been a man in motion, one foot in front of the other like an automaton, following
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