Chapter 27: London Stalling at the Top of the Dial
Alan paused at the door before entering the room, so unused was he to seeing Michiko fully dressed and upright, not to mention outside of Jack's townhouse. She'd just returned from three months in Japan, and the last time he'd seen her she was being wheeled down a jetway for her flight out. She looked amazingly fit, poised for battle.
The chill given off by the conference room's air conditioning caused the sweat on the back of his neck to quickly evaporate. Months had passed since he and Jack had agreed to combine efforts with the Japanese order, and to their collective frustration, neither hide nor hair had been seen of their target.
Karick tapped a few keys on the laptop, and after a scant second his presentation started. He narrated as the subsequent images filled the screen.
"The London apartment is a bad choice for this operation, for the following reasons," he began
Karick's presentation went on a good hour, with plenty of discussion and debate, breaking up just before five o'clock. Jack wanted Alan to hang around for a private discussion, but Alan begged off.
"Between summer school and coming here every day, with the commute time from the 'burbs tacked on, I'm stretched a little," he explained to his mentor, apologetically. "I pretty much promised my folks I'd be home for dinner five nights a week this summer."
Since the next day was Friday, the only weekday on which Alan didn't have classes he would be able to come in for most of the day. He rode the train home with his dad, talking about the Mets game they were planning on watching on the tube that night.
* * *
It was just a day short of a week later that Lord Thornbow was first spotted. Well, spotted was not quite the right verb. Alistair Thornbow had been playing in a casino in Monte Carlo. Credit for the catch was shared equally by Jack and his assistant Anne-Marie. Jack had told her of his stepbrother's propensity for the occasional flutter, and Anne-Marie had used her contacts in the gaming industry to have any activity on Lord Thornbow's line of credit captured, and the information forwarded to New York. Within an hour of receipt Karick and three of his team were on route to Monaco.
The next morning Alan, Jack, Anne-Marie, Stanley Wilkins (their attorney, and fellow board member), and Peter Gant (Karick's number two, a former Army Ranger) huddled in the conference room around the speakerphone listening to Karick's report.
Monte Carlo, they agreed, was far too urban for the operation the had planned. They had already discarded London as a battleground due to its density, and Monaco was even less suited for this reason.
"So we're still on the same page?" Karick asked near the end of the call. "We wait until he returns to Bankington Hall, his country estate."
"Agreed," Jack concurred, Alan nodding beside him. "We will stick to the plan you already detailed. An urban confrontation is to be avoided."
"Why don't we double the watch on his country estate?" Alan suggested.
"That will be difficult," Karick answered, "He seems to have upped security there, with roving patrols every hour in the day, and every two hours in dark."
"Well," Jack noted, "That is good news!"
"How so?" Alan asked.
"Simple, dear boy. He would not increase security unless he was planning to return. His London flat is hard to reconnoiter because it is so proximate to various embassies and whatnot. With these constant changes in terror alerts that neighborhood is too secure for us to keep close tabs on him there. We are lucky in that he probably doesn't realize he is safer in the hurly-burly of London, than in what he believes is his much-more-secure country retreat. The time to move against him will soon be at hand."
Karick thought about what Jack had to offer for a moment, and then agreed fully. "Right then, I'll put Peter in charge of the mobile team, and I'll go on to England to lead the static team in at Bankington Hall. Peter will call me at the first sign of movement in this direction, and I'll get in touch with you."
"We'll have a jet fueled and standing by at Teterboro."
Another week went by, and still Thornbow hadn't returned to England. Peter's team was trailing him, now in Spain, and Michiko and the abbot had gone ahead to case the country estate. She liked to be very familiar with the terrain before any operation, and the satellite pictures Jack had secured for her study only revealed so much. Cyaxares had just opened a London branch office with two employees transferred from Rome, and Jack was able to pre-ship their swords and other weapons to it.
* * *
When he spoke to Kate that night she seemed a little bummed when he told her he was probably going to have to go off again to Europe, but he had assured her that it was only going to be for a very short while. Either way, if just for an inspection visit, or a confrontation with Thornbow, he wouldn't be away for more than seven days. It wasn't even that she was around to miss him. This summer she was supervising her troubled teen program again, though not actually going on the canoe trips as she had last year. The foundation had rented her a small office in Portland for the summer, and her dad had rented a small apartment there. Most of her days were filled with the logistics of shuffling over two hundred teens and ten counselors through five week-long sessions. Alan had come up every other weekend to visit.
As he was watching the Met game with his dad that night something Kate had said during their past weekend together came back to him. Just as he was about to board his flight to Boston to catch the shuttle she had made him promise something, something he hadn't yet done for her.
"Promise me you'll call Pauline, and meet her for lunch in the city. She's having a miserable summer, with Brian dumping her and my dad insisting on her working for Uncle Edward instead of doing what she wants."
He had agreed, and then almost instantly it had slipped his mind.
Pauline had figured that she would end up working in town, at the foundation's summer camp. However, she had gotten a prized summer internship with the new NFL network, which sadly she had to refuse when her dad had informed her that she would be working this summer at the bank. Her Uncle Edward was head of the family concern, Van Devanter & Sons, one of the largest privately-held investment banks in the world. She had protested vigorously, but to no avail. With Calvin headed to med school, and her sister ensconced securely with her foundation work, Edward had been quite firm that their branch of the family had been remiss at supplying VDS with new blood. It was Helen Van Devanter who had convinced her in the end. "Just do it for this summer," Pauline's mom had counseled. "If you really hate it I'll lean on your dad, and you'll never have to go back again."
On top of all that, the day before she came home from Harvard, she and Brian had split. She had complained to him that he never seemed to make time for them to be together, and they had fought. The argument ended when Brian said she was taking their relationship too seriously, and suggested that perhaps they weren't right for each other. It was a good thing she didn't have to drive home, that her parents had come for the move back, because she spent the three days following her falling out with Brian either crying or brooding.
At a commercial break Alan keyed Pauline's cell number into his own.