Switch. Charlie Brooks

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Switch - Charlie Brooks


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scruffy brown raincoat and battered green trilby he had worn a week before. The same rustic tie and heavy cotton shirt. But today he looked tired, something employees of the Racket spent years cultivating the ability to hide.

      ‘Jacques seemed happy with the canvas I took him. And Cornelissen’s had sent the paint they asked for. All good.’

      ‘Gemma enjoy herself ?’ Tryon asked flippantly, as if to pass the time while he fiddled with his pipe again.

      ‘I think so. No hassle in her jet. Nice hotel.’

      ‘Ask much? About what you were up to?’

      ‘Not really. Told her I had a wee mission. Chance to get my feet out from under the desk. She didn’t seem that interested.’

      ‘Did she mention anything she might have been up to herself ?’

      ‘No. Up to what? Forget about her. Look, we’re dealing with a bloody traitor. A murderer. And I have to walk into an office every day and pretend he’s a valued colleague. It’s pretty pathetic that all we’re going to do is nail him for some sort of art theft.’

      ‘It goes a bit deeper than that – quite a lot deeper, in fact.’ Tryon lit his pipe. ‘While you were having lunch with Jacques in Monaco, do you know who Gemma was meeting?’

      Max could literally feel his blood defying gravity and flowing to his head. ‘What are you talking about? She didn’t meet anyone.’

      ‘I know people down there, Ward. It’s how Jacques found me in the first place. Through them,’ Tryon said evenly. ‘Gemma met someone behind your back. Someone we’re really not sure about.’

      ‘She probably just ran into them. She knows people everywhere.’

      ‘She ran into him on his yacht in the harbour.’

      Max had learnt to appreciate the old hand’s desert-dry wit, though not so much when he was the intended target.

      ‘She did say she was going down to the harbour for a walk. Who did she meet?’ asked Max, conceding defeat.

      ‘Alessandro Marchant.’

      ‘Rich?’

      ‘Rich! Either Marchant has psychic powers that enable him to see how currencies and stock are going to move – or he’s one of the biggest financial insider dealers in the world. And guess who he deals through?’

      ‘Go on.’

      ‘Casper Rankin. Whose wife you happen to be sleeping with. We’ve been intercepting their emails, and listening to their phone conversations. But we can’t nail them. They’re careful how they pass information around.’

      ‘Are you suggesting …?’

      ‘I’m not suggesting anything, Ward.’

      ‘Look,’ Max said intensely, ‘if I can’t trust Gemma, I can’t trust anyone. Not even you. Gemma is—’

      ‘I know,’ Tryon interrupted. ‘You told me. It’s just that I’m not entirely sure whether I sign up to your version.’

      Tryon had made it plain that he suspected Max might have been targeted by Gemma. Which amused Max no end – or at least it had until now – as it couldn’t have been further from the truth.

      Max had first clocked Gemma at the opening of some dull art exhibition at a gallery in St James’s. He’d then persuaded a mate of his, who also happened to know her husband, to have her to stay in the country for the weekend. Thankfully, her husband had been away.

      It was a typical, wild Gloucestershire weekend party. Everyone drank far too much and a few people ended up doing things they shouldn’t. Max remembered flirting with her and having no idea whether she was responding to him. One minute she seemed to be fascinated by him – the next, totally oblivious. Max had followed her upstairs to bed. By the time he knocked on her door, she was wearing the skimpiest of nighties. She’d let him in, and then resisted – to start with. But then she’d cracked. Once she had, Max remembered being taken aback by her urgency. She’d literally ripped the buttons off his shirt. His back had scratch marks for days.

      ‘Well, if we’re lucky, this relationship of yours could be very useful to us. Or you’re being set up. Because guess who Casper Rankin’s best mucker was at Cambridge?’

      ‘Go on.’

      ‘Surprise, surprise. Your old pal, Pallesson. Gemma tell you that?’

      ‘This is all a bit tenuous. She might not know.’

      ‘So she hasn’t told you.’

      ‘No. How do you—’

      ‘You can be certain that Casper Rankin has laundered the proceeds of Pallesson’s Russian enterprises. By now the money’s probably found its way to Montenegro. Rankin has been investing in property down there. He seems to have second sight as to what the Montenegrin government is about to do. Gemma mention anything about that?’

      Max didn’t answer. He pushed himself off the workbench and landed on both feet. They were numb now.

      ‘She has no idea what her husband does. And less interest. They’ve drifted apart. He works and works. Never in the same place for that long. She goes where she likes. Does up rich people’s houses for them.’

      ‘Pallesson is up to a lot more than art theft,’ Tryon interrupted, as if he suddenly wasn’t interested in Gemma any more.

      ‘I’m not fucking stupid, Tryon. ‘Of course he is.’

      ‘We have a mole inside the operation of a nasty piece of work called Wevers van Ossen, based in Amsterdam. He’s into trafficking, prostitution, protection.’

      ‘What do we care?’

      ‘We didn’t – until now. He’s moving into drugs in a pretty spectacular way.’

      ‘So?’

      ‘The source of his drugs is using the proceeds to fund operations in Somalia, which we care about a lot. More to the point, guess who’s lined up with van Ossen to move the gear over here.’

      ‘Our old friend?’

      ‘Exactly. He’s brought his unpleasant habits with him from Moscow. And you’re going to nail him. All on your own.’

      ‘Why all on my own?’

      Tryon didn’t reply. He appeared to be studying the boats, and his pipe had gone out again.

      ‘By the way, how was Jacques?’

      ‘His sight’s gone,’ Max replied, happy to let his question hang. ‘Had to get his daughter to help him copy paintings for Pallesson. The cunning little shit worked that out – that’s how he blackmailed both of them.’ Max walked over to one of the larger boats and stroked its sleek side.

      ‘This is probably my favourite place in the world,’ Tryon said, watching him. ‘I still row a couple of times a week. There’s no better feeling than being on the water in an eight. Going full tilt. I rowed in the Boat Race one year, you know.’

      ‘Oxford?’

      Tryon nodded.

      ‘Did you win?’

      Tryon nodded again.

      ‘Of course you did. This would hardly be the best place in the world if you lost, would it? I never went near the river at Eton. Apart from crossing it to get to Windsor Racecourse.’ He swung round to face Tryon. ‘So why on my own?’

      Tryon paused as if he was confirming in his own mind what the plan should be. After a few seconds spent hunched over his pipe, he had clearly decided.

      ‘He’ll use this painting to get into a drug deal – as he did in Moscow. You saw him holding something by the lake where he liquidated Corbett. He’ll be using the painting as collateral to cut


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