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Subject: Hide in Plain Sight


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 19:56:11 09/21/02 Sat
In reply to: ~delle 's message, "Oh, I'm a bad bad girl" on 19:41:33 09/21/02 Sat

The walk back to the shelter was a silent one, both men deep in their thoughts. As they rounded the last corner, the flashing police and ambulance lights ahead of him wrenched Graeme from his reverie.

Michael had seen the same thing and stopped immediately. Graeme took his arm, feeling the taut muscles beneath the shabby coat.

“My car, now,” Graeme hissed. It was only a few steps to the grimy Fiesta and both men slipped quickly inside. They sat silently, observing the movement of uniformed police and several dark-suited official-looking types around the exterior of the shelter.

“I need to check it out,” Graeme decided. “You,” he poked Michael in the arm, “need to stay here and not do a bloody disappearing act on me.”

Michael turned shrouded eyes on Graeme. For the second time that evening, Martin found himself confronting a total lack of expression.

“Michael, I mean it. Give me a minute to go find out what the hell is going on in there before you do your Houdini routine. I have a nasty suspicion those suits belong to MI6 and they’re the last people you want to be running into right now. Stay here; just give me a few minutes. I swear to you Michael,” he added when no response was forthcoming, “that if you go now I’ll dig so deeply and so loudly into L’Heure Sanguine that whomever you’re protecting will be sitting smack in the center of someone’s crosshairs.”

Michael eyed him. Graeme had the same feeling as before, the sensation of being evaluated, options weighed and considered. Finally he nodded. “I’ll wait.”

As he exited the car, Graeme tucked his badge into the outer breast pocket of his overcoat, the shield shimmering in the flickering red and blue lights. The perimeter bobby was a local man, the younger brother of a school classmate, and Graeme greeted him easily.

“Hey, Tommy, what’s all the fuss about?”

“Evening, Martin. Some transient got stuck with a knife. Quite the fuss. Weapons aren’t supposed to be taken into the shelter and no one’s really sure how it happened or even who did it.”

“Huh. Looks like more than just Surrey PD got called in here.”

“That’s the weirdest thing. Got suits, but they won’t say who they are. Top secret. Pretty bizarre, you ask me. Why would Her Majesty’s spooks be interested in some knifing at the local shelter?”

“Dunno. That is odd, though. The Major around?”

“From the shelter? Yeah, she’s over there, by the building somewhere.”

Graeme walked casually, glancing around from the corners of his eyes rather than taking the risk of appearing too interested by turning his head. The Major stood by the doorway where he had met her, arms crossed on her chest, hands tucked in tight, hugging herself close. The streetlights winked on her shoulder epaulets as he approached.

“Major? You remember meeting me earlier tonight?”

She nodded. “Martin. You came to take one of the men to dinner. Where is he? Is he all right?”

Graeme winced and barely stopped himself from scanning around for eavesdroppers. “He’s fine, ma’am, we finished dinner a good hour ago.” He stared meaningfully into the Major’s eyes. Don’t question the timeframe, Major, just let it go. She matched him stare for stare for several long seconds before nodding almost imperceptibly.

“You know I’m Surrey PD, Ma’am. Would you please tell me what happened here tonight?”

“A man was killed here tonight, Constable. I – we – that is,” her voice trembled as she paused and visibly brought herself back under control. “After dinner and before the prayer service, one of our gentlemen decided to lie down. When I went to rouse him for the service,” she displayed her hands, palms up. Graeme could see the scarlet smears of blood that had not yet been washed off. “When I went to get him, he was dead. Someone had stabbed him, right here, in the middle of my shelter. In the house of God.” She tucked her hands back in, shuddering.

“I’m very sorry for that, Ma’am. What can you tell me about the man that died?”

“He’s not been here often. Lenny, the other men called him. Quiet man, never any trouble to us.”

“Did he have friends, regulars, anyone he interacted with here at the shelter?”

“I… Constable, I don’t know. There are so many men that come to us in need, some that stay, some that go…” Her voice trailed off and even in the uncertainty of the streetlight and flashing strobes of the emergency vehicles he could see how pale she had become.

“Major, are you all right? Would you like to sit down?”

“No… yes. I think I’d like to sit down inside.” Graeme offered her an arm for support as they entered the shelter. To his surprise, her grip was firm as she tugged him closer to whisper. “I need to speak to you, alone.”

The dining tables had been folded up and cots laid out neatly for the men. Off to one side, the forensic team was huddled over the shrouded corpse. Graeme glanced around, both to find a chair for the Major and to determine their privacy. He led her toward the kitchen door where a lone folding chair still stood sentry.

“Are you all right, Ma’am? Can I get you a glass of water?” Martin spoke slightly louder than usual, assuring his voice would carry to the men at the other end of the room.

“No, thank you Constable. I just needed to sit down.” Following his lead, the Major had also raised her voice. At her gesture, Graeme crouched down. She lowered her head to a whisper to him. “You need to know, Constable, that Lenny had taken your gentleman’s bed.”

“Ma’am?”

She nodded toward the forensic team. “That’s where your gentleman had been sleeping the past few nights. I don’t know if it means anything, but I thought you should know. And perhaps it would be best if he doesn’t return here for a few more days?”

“Major, I think you missed your calling. You’d have made one hell of a cop.” Rising, Graeme brushed off his jeans and extended his hand, lifting his voice again. “Ma’am, thank you for your time. I’m sorry this happened in your shelter and I’ll be sure to get back to you as soon as possible with any progress we’ve made.”

Lifting his hand to acknowledge Tommy as he passed, Graeme thoughtfully headed back to his car. Obviously the Major thought there was more here than a simple murder. He’d have to tread carefully on this; it wasn’t his case and if the Major was right and the intended target was Michael, too much interest on Martin’s part might direct the Spooks’ attention in the wrong direction. His direction.

As if his thoughts had conjured him up, a Suit was hovering around his Fiesta as Martin approached. “Good evening, sir,” the Suit said in a precise Oxbridge accent, “may I see some identification please?”

Martin flicked a finger to the badge hanging on his breast pocket. “Graeme Martin, Surrey Police. And you are?”

The Suit ignored his question. “And what brought you here tonight, Constable Martin?”

“It’s a small town. Call like this gets every cop’s attention. You didn’t tell me who you’re with.”

The Suit smiled thinly. “No, I didn’t. Good night sir.”

“Bastard.” Martin opened the car door after the Suit had walked away, not wanting the dome light to illuminate Michael. An unnecessary precaution, as the car was completely empty.

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[> Subject: Hide in Plain Sight 5


Author:
No name
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Date Posted: 19:59:09 09/21/02 Sat

“Bugger!” Graeme slapped the steering wheel in exasperation.

Martin’s bad temper had not dissipated in the two hours he had spent in the precinct office. Crickter’s files had concentrated on active members of L’Heure Sanguine, not shadowy confederates in already in custody. The best he had been able to find was a vague reference to “several terrorists” arrested after a particularly nasty bombing left dozens of civilians dead and injured. No names, though, and another search of Interpol had been equally fruitless: by the mid 90’s, L’Heure Sanguine was considered dormant and very little information had been uploaded when Interpol entered the computer age.

“Bugger!” It took several exasperating minutes circling his block before he found a parking place. Then to add insult to injury, he dropped his apartment keys in the dark grass and spent more frustrating time on his hands and knees before he located them. Slamming his front door behind him was a mild release, although he was quite certain of hearing complaints from his elderly next-door neighbour in the morning

The flat was dark; as usual he had neglected to leave a light on when he left that morning. He reached unerringly for the lamp next to the couch and instead found his arm seized in a strong grip.

“Jesus Christ!” Martin’s left hand was on the butt of his service revolver before he recognized the voice that answered him.

“Don’t turn on the light yet.”

“Son of a bitch, Michael, I’m a fucking cop!” He wrenched his hand free. “I’ve got a goddamn gun waiting to blow your fucking head off!”

“You wouldn’t have shot me.” Michael’s answer was infuriatingly calm. “Close your blinds.”

“Fucking hell – how do you know that? You took a hell of a chance on that!”

"Cops don't shoot first. It's a weakness. Terrorists don't wait for an I.D." He paused. "Close your blinds."

Martin did as he was instructed, crossing the darkened room to pull the curtains shut. “Motherfucking bastard… you got a death wish, Michael, don’t use me to do it, OK? Shoot your own fucking ass.”

“What did you find at the shelter?”

Martin turned as the light flickered on. Michael sat on his couch, completely at ease as if they were having high tea, rather than discussing the brutal murder of an innocent transient. ”Goddamn it, does anything get through that thick skull of yours?”

His face devoid of emotion, Michael waited silently. Martin stalked across the room and snatched a beer out of his refrigerator. Keeping his back defiantly turned, Graeme wrenched off the cap and guzzled half the bottle in one long gulp. It took several minutes to slow his pounding heart; leaning against the kitchen counter he continued to sip his beer as he composed himself.

Taking a deep breath he finally submitted to the inevitable and returned to the living space, flopping down on the nearest chair and belching loudly. “For Christ’s sake, Michael, don’t do that again. I could have blasted your brains out. That’s a relatively new couch and I really hate to paint. So don’t scare the shit out of me like that.” He sighed and rolled the nearly empty bottle between his hands. “Major from the shelter reports that our stiff had decided to make free with your usual sleeping place. Got himself stuck for his trouble.” He glanced over to gauge Michael’s reaction. Nothing. “Shit, I’m getting accustomed to your stoic look. Remind me never to play poker against you.” Still nothing. “You know, Michael, it’s generally easier to have a conversation when the other person bothers to react now and then.”

“Who were the Suits?”

“Hmph? The spooks? MI6, I suppose. Don’t know for certain.”

Michael nodded. “Probably.”

“Who knows you’re here?”

“No one.”

“You’re sure you weren’t followed?”

“Positive.”

“So the question becomes which of you was the target? You specifically, or you, the witness to Mrs. Stapleton’s mugging?”

“The witness.”

“Yeah?”

“They wouldn’t have bothered to kill someone else if they were looking for me. They’re not sure who they’re looking for. They didn’t identify me.”

“Well, neither did I. You’re remarkably hard to pin down.”

“I know.”

“So, if the target was the mugging witness, how did they track you to the shelter?”

“Why was the Stapleton woman killed?”

Martin blinked and focused on Michael’s pale eyes. “Killed? She was mugged… wasn’t she?”

“Why else would anyone bother to track and kill the witness to a mugging?”

“Hmph. So you’re proposing she was the ultimate target. You just happened to interrupt their mission.”

“The wrong place at the wrong time.”

“Hell, yeah.” Martin let his gaze wander and sank deeper into his chair as the beer began to buzz through his tired system. “So who the hell was Mrs. Stapleton and how the hell do we find out?” He closed his eyes and began to run through several different scenarios in his mind. None of which ended with achieving his goal of the Stapleton file.

It took him a moment to realize Michael had spoken. “Hmph?”

“I said, do you have a laptop at home?”

***

A policeman’s salary didn’t go very far, even in small-town England, but Graeme did have a simple PC in his home. Michael sat at the rickety dining room table, carefully hacking his way through the Internet. Long fingers flew over the keyboard, circumvented a firewall, and slipped through another barrier.

“You’re very good.” Martin leaned over his shoulder, eyeing the flow of information on the screen. How’d you learn to do that?”

“I had a very good teacher.”

“Hmph. You should introduce me sometime. Hacking is a useful skill.”

The lines around Michael’s eyes deepened, making him look suddenly older than his years. “He’s dead.”

“A lot of that going around.”

A few more keystokes. “You’re in.”

“In? In where?”

“CIA.”

“Why CIA?”

“Safer than MI6.”

“True.”

“We can’t stay in long and we’ll need to use other computers in other locations later.” Michael shifted in the chair, preparing to rise.

“Stay. You’re obviously much better at this than I am.”

Michael gave a tiny nod as he typed rapidly, sliding into another section of CIA files. “Name?”

“Stapleton, Maureen. Age 62. Height...” Martin rummaged through the pockets of his overcoat to find his notebook, flipped through the pages to find the information. “Height 1.6 metres, weight 69.4 kilograms. Brown eyes, graying brown hair.”

“Associated with MI6,” Michael added.

“Yeah, let’s assume that,” Graeme agreed, leaning over as Michael hit the “enter” key.

The computer churned briefly, the ubiquitous hourglass wait sign blinking every few seconds, before the screen filled with thumbnail pictures. Michael sat back, folded his hands in his lap and studied the faces.

“Try that one.” Graeme pointed to a thumbnail.

Michael clicked and enlarged the picture. “No, the cheeks aren’t right.”

“How good of a look did you get?”

“Good enough. I checked her pulse. You?”

“Didn’t see her at all. She was in hospital, then at the coroner’s. Paperwork hasn’t finished processing yet, so I don’t even have a copy of her driver’s license yet.”

A long finger [is it clear this is Michael’s?] slid over the computer screen, touching each face briefly. Michael’s eyes crinkled slightly in the corners, lids slightly drooped as he stared in concentration.

“There.” He tapped the screen before clicking the mouse. “This one.”

Rosalind Jane Meath-Baker read the screen. The enlarged photograph showed a quintessential British matron, complete with upswept graying hair and the requisite brooch on her wool-clad shoulder.

“And who the hell were you, Rosalind?” Graeme murmured.

“Now we’re going to have to get into MI6,” Michael said. “Not from your home, though.”

Graeme straightened up and fatigue rocked him from head to toe. “I’ll call the library in the morning; reserve a time on the public access computers. Can you get in there from one of their units?”

Michael leaned back, looking as exhausted as Graeme felt. “I can get what we need.”

“What we need now, mate, is sleep.” Graeme stifled a yawn. “You can bunk on my couch, provided you don’t pull another damn vanishing act on me.”

“Not tonight.” Graeme could have sworn there was a hint of black humour in the glance Michael shot him.

“Yeah? How do I trust you?”

Michael paused, thinking [POV?]. “You don’t. But I’ll give you my word that I’ll not – how did you put it? – do a Houdini on you until we’ve figured out exactly what happened to Rosalind Meath-Baker and why.”

“Fine. I’m a bleeding idiot, but I’ll take your word.” Graeme shuffled toward the hallway that led to his bedroom, then turned around. “Michael? Do me a favour. Take a shower in the morning. You stink like the shelter.”

This time there was no question; Graeme definitely saw the glint of amusement in Michael’s eyes. “Good night, Graeme.”

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