Provo. Gordon Stevens
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Provo - Gordon Stevens страница 9

Название: Provo

Автор: Gordon Stevens

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Приключения: прочее

Серия:

isbn: 9780008219376

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ knew about the operation? Who knew enough to direct the security forces to Beechwood Street and to the Crum? Who knew about Tommy Reardon?’

      The only people who knew the overall military details were the planners on the Northern Command. Therefore the leak must have come from one of them or their staff. With the implications for the Movement which followed from this.

      ‘Gentlemen.’ Conlan’s voice was quiet, calming. Laying the groundwork for his move. That was the difference between the two men, Doherty understood. Quin would make his move, upfront and immediate. Conlan would lay the ground then withdraw, come back for the kill later. A come-on, just as the bombers sometimes left a small device by the roadside or in a car, but the main device in a second car or where they knew the security forces would wait while the Bomb Disposal dealt with the first. ‘There may or may not be a leak. If there is we must find it. If there isn’t, we mustn’t let the British con us into thinking there was and wrecking the Movement with a witch-hunt.’

      The trap now, the execution later, Doherty knew for certain.

      ‘I would only like to say one other thing. We all approved the operation.’ Therefore we must all share the guilt – it was unspoken, but clearly meant and equally clearly understood. ‘And that decision was a correct one. The political and military value of the operation had it come off would have been incalculable.’ He turned to the officer commanding the North Belfast Brigade. ‘Now perhaps you could tell us of any progress on the part of the security section.’

      ‘So where was the leak in the organization?’ Quin returned to his original theme. ‘How does it affect future operations? What about operations on the mainland?’

      What are you playing at? Doherty glanced at Conlan. Where are you taking us? He saw the way the other man was looking at him. You know, he thought again. You know what the doctor has told me to expect, you know the question growing in my mind.

      ‘So what do we do?’ The discussion continued for another forty minutes before Doherty gave Conlan and Quin their chance. Quin would move first, he supposed; Conlan would allow that, then checkmate him.

      ‘A spectacular.’ Instead it was Conlan, speaking first and more forcefully, though his voice was still quiet. ‘One the bastards will remember for ever.’ Conlan rarely swore, they all knew.

      ‘Why?’

      ‘For the morale of the Movement after Orange Day.’

      A come-on, Doherty remembered, waiting for the moment.

      ‘How?’ Quin walked into the trap. ‘We’ve already agreed that until we know otherwise we must assume that the units in the North and the ASUs on the mainland and in Europe might be compromised.’

      Conlan paused. ‘There’s a sleeper.’

      They would all remember the moment and the silence which hung round it.

      ‘Where?’

      ‘On the other side of the water.’

      ‘Who?’

      Conlan shook his head.

      ‘Details?’

      He shook his head again. Some disciplines in life were easy to maintain, others more difficult. Yet none compared with the discipline which he imposed upon himself when he thought about the individual they were now discussing.

      ‘Who recruited him?’ It was Quin.

      ‘I did.’

      ‘How long’s he been in place?’

      ‘Five, six years.’ The answer was necessarily vague. ‘Perhaps more, perhaps less.’

      ‘But he’s done nothing in that time?’ Quin looked for the way out.

      ‘A few jobs for the French and Germans, a couple for the Libyans and Palestinians. Occasionally for us as well, though it was always camouflaged, made to look as if it was somebody else’s job.’

      Doherty sensed the excitement round the table.

      ‘So why haven’t you told us about Sleeper?’

      It was ironic, Doherty thought later, that it was Quin who gave the man his codename. Who stopped referring to him as simply a sleeper. Who provided the name which would immortalize him.

      Conlan shrugged, did not reply.

      ‘So what do we do?’ Doherty moved them round the impasse, asked the question again.

      ‘A spectacular.’ Conlan repeated his previous answer. ‘Something no one will ever forget.’

      He’s giving me my epitaph, Doherty thought, and in doing so he’s staking his claim for my place when I go. But he’s doing more than that. He’s planning ahead, setting up an agenda for five, ten years’ time. He’s giving us what we have always lacked in the past. He’s giving us the power. Not just the gun or the bomb, something much more.

      Perhaps it was then that he began to see. The last option, he began to think, the one they had occasionally considered but always rejected.

      ‘Where?’

      ‘The mainland.’

      ‘Where exactly on the mainland?’

      ‘London.’

      Doherty tasted the excitement, smelt it, savoured it, eating into the fibres of his body and the marrow of his bones. There had always been four options for campaigns on the mainland: the first three – the soft option, the military option and the political option – they had planned for, sent the teams to the mainland for. Had hit the soft targets; then the military, a barracks or a recruiting office; had gone against the politicians, even mortared Downing Street. But the fourth option was different. The fourth option was untouchable. And now Conlan was about to propose it.

      ‘Who?’

      Even now Conlan could remember the street where he had been born and in which he had been brought up. Could remember the excitement which rippled through it when the pedlar came selling, the bright colours of the ribbons and the glint in the boxes on the wooden tray. Could remember what they called the pedlar, even though it was a woman.

      ‘Codename PinMan.’

      ‘And who is PinMan?’

      Doherty sensed the moment the others realized.

      ‘The British royal family.’

      The evening was warm, the first dusk lost in the lights of London, the dome of St Paul’s behind and the Thames in front.

      Major R.E.F. Fairfax – Marlborough, Sandhurst, the First Battalion the Grenadier Guards – stood straight-backed at the window in the officers’ quarters of the Waterloo Barracks of the Tower of London and looked across the wasteland which was the City of London at this time of night. He was dressed in full uniform, his bearskin СКАЧАТЬ