Nine
If I had deliberately wanted to flush out the people following us, and eventually lose them, I would never have thought of renting a car at a suburban shop. I had to wonder what James Bond would have done in similar circumstances.
But it worked.
Driving out of the carpark onto the main street, it wasn’t difficult to see several people caught unawares. And on their cell phones making calls.
And it was Emily’s last-minute brainwave to cover the car’s registration plates so if they were to take a photo, they would not be able to track it. Well, not straight away. It was she who said London had a lot of CCTV cameras, but on the way to the carpark, she had checked out where they were, those that she could readily identify, and we could avoid.
Something I learned about Emily that I didn’t know; she was a computer nerd, and a hacker of sorts, not one of those dark web experts, but she knew enough to dig around in places most people wouldn’t go looking.
That skill might just come in useful.
And, for a few minutes, maybe an hour, we revelled in the thought we may have outwitted them, whoever ‘them’ was.
It was late afternoon when we finally found a hotel with a carpark, a long way from Cecile’s flat in Earl’s Court, and on the other side of the Greater London region in Mile End Road, not very far from the Stepney Green underground station, the result of Emily searching the web for a hotel with a carpark, and near public transport.
She also had our luggage delivered from the airport a little less than two hours from the moment she made the call. I think I may have remarked that I might just employ her as my travel agent when I started my European odyssey, but she had fallen asleep, way past exhausted.
I wasn’t far behind her. We had a long day tomorrow, if today was anything to go by.
I woke to the smell of coffee and that more interesting aroma of burnt toast.
There were shopping bags on the table, and it looked as though Emily had been up and around for a while.
I looked at my watch, it was not much past seven, and not an hour I found myself up back home. I had an apartment in the city, and it was a ten-minute walk to the office, so early rising was not a necessity. My parents lived in the suburbs, and more than an hour by public transport, and two by car. It was the reason I moved. I didn’t want to spend quarter of my life travelling to and from work.
Of course, London was so much larger than where I came from, and definitely not a place I would want to live, or work, despite the advantages that Cecile had tried to impress upon me. And don’t get me get started on driving around London. Yesterday had been harrowing, and left me, at times, shaken.
“Good morning, sleepyhead.”
Emily put a coffee plunger on the table, two cups, a plate of toast, bowls, and the cereal that was my favourite, though how she knew was anyone’s guess.
“You’ve been busy.”
“I like to get some exercise every morning, so I combined it with a shopping expedition
I had not attended this type of domesticity in a long time, at least not since I left home. I had grown accustomed to being on my own, and that might have contributed to Cecile and I drifting apart. It probably also had a lot to do with my awkwardness with girls, and rather than try to get over it, I just avoided them.
But, somehow, Emily was different, perhaps because she was younger and hadn’t been blunted by the vicissitudes of life. She had finished school, and as far as I was aware, didn’t have a real job, preferring to spend her time pottering in her father’s office.
I had thought, much like in an 18th century romance novel, she was waiting for the right man to marry, but there were not too many of those running around these days.
Something else I just realised; how well I seemed to like being at ease in her company, much more so than when I was with Cecile, always on my guard not to say or do the wrong thing.
“I find going to a grocery store a trial, which is why I eat out a lot.”
She shook her head. “You’re just lazy, like everyone else your age. Convenience over practicality. And you should think about doing some exercise.”
I could feel the eyes of the appraiser upon me and shivered. It was good that I could not read her thoughts, but if I could, perhaps some might be considering those extra pounds that had found their way onto my frame after I stopped playing tennis and squash.
“I promise I’ll think about it.”
“Better still, I don’t think it’s all that safe to be jogging the streets in this neighbourhood early in the morning, so you can come with me as my protector.”
She saw my look of disdain, or was it the thought of having to exercise.
“Cheer up, I don’t go very fast.”
The sound of the phone vibrating on the table interrupted that thought, and conversation.
It was a private number, so I assumed it was the man from the day before.
“Yes?”
“Trafalgar Square, by the column, 12:30 pm today.”
It was the man’s voice.
“We’ll see you there.”
The call was disconnected. Short and to the point.
“We have a lunch date.”
Before I could reach out to pick up my cup of coffee, the phone rang again.
Also a private number, I assumed it was the man ringing back with a change of plans.
“Yes?”
“We need to talk.”
A woman’s voice this time, not one that was familiar.
“About what?” I was surprised, and didn’t have time to work on a better comeback.
“Your Cecile. She is over her head.”
Aside from stating the obvious, who was this woman, how did she know about Cecile, and more important, how did she know my cell number?
“Who the hell are you?”
“The London end of the team that recruited her. Time is of the essence, so we’ll come to you. We’ll be there in half an hour.”
That line went dead before I could ask another pertinent question, how did she know where we were?
“Who was that?” Emily had been oblivious to the turmoil I was feeling.
“Someone else who wants to talk about Cecile.”
“Who?”
“No idea, but the word recruited popped up, whatever that might mean.”
“Here? No one knows we’re here.”
“Exactly.”
“Perhaps we should leave, like, right now.”
“No. I have a feeling that we might find out what Cecile is up to.”
And, in the back of my mind, several small, associated details clicked into place. At the time they didn’t make any sense, but now, in a bigger context, and given the circumstances, I think I knew now why she had come.
And, more importantly, I realised she had been dropping breadcrumbs for me to follow long before she had left.
…
© Charles Heath 2024