The Old Enemy by Henry Porter (read with me .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Henry Porter
Read book online ยซThe Old Enemy by Henry Porter (read with me .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Henry Porter
He had no contact with her at GreenState โ his was a lowly volunteerโs job replying to questions on the campaign website with a set of standard responses that were designed to elicit money โ but he was in a position to observe her most of the day, and he was pretty certain that she had not yet noticed him. She was self-contained and never involved herself with office politics. Her colleagues were wary of her because of her sharp tongue and she was no respecter of status or the conventional NGO politesse where everyoneโs opinion is indulged, however empty or lacking in evidence. He heard her murmur to GreenStateโs director of campaigns, a man named Desmond who Samson heartily disliked, โWeโre doing good work, but that doesnโt mean Iโm not going to call you out when youโre talking crap.โ
Her behaviour was tolerated because she was good at what she did. She had fluent French and German and often appeared in the morning having completed, overnight, the work that would take others a couple of days. She wrote video scripts, advertising briefs and focused on GreenStateโs messaging, for which reason she often took meetings outside the office with agencies providing their services free. No one asked where she was going, or why. Not even the ridiculous busybody Desmond.
Samson resigned himself to a fruitless wait and let his gaze travel the breadth of the five-street intersection. The regulars on the street were beginning to be familiar to him โ addicts, with sleeping bags round their necks, scrambling for deals beneath the rail bridge, north of the Edgar Building; an abandoned young man handing out religious leaflets on the traffic island; two glacially moving homeless men; and the team of Roma beggars who looked as though they might all be related. The Junction was a twenty-minute walk from the vast wealth of the City of London, but a different universe. No one made much money here: the buildings were tired, rubbish was piled everywhere, and people struggled. But for all that, it had a palpable life force that Samson admired. It reminded him of the Middle East โ his native Lebanon.
The thin drizzle outside turned into rain, but it was lunch hour and the streets werenโt any less busy. His phone went. It was one of Macyโs assistants, asking him for a meeting, or conference call, at 7 p.m. Samson opted for the meeting. He wanted to be in the room for the call with the States.
โWhatโs going on, Imogen?โ
She ignored him. โSeven p.m. prompt, Paul, so if you have any concern about not being here, Iโll send you the dial-in.โ
Samson glanced at his watch โ it was 1.30 p.m. โ and he assured her heโd make it. โAnd you can tell Macy that weโll need to review the current job,โ he added.
As he hung up, a big, freakish fellow wearing a black leather kilt, panel leggings and a filthy American sports blouson, appeared outside the cafรฉ and looked through the window, trying to see past his reflection. His face was broad โ vaguely Slavic. Samson noted a missing upper-left tooth and a pierced nose. The man turned away and, with a kind of jig, began thrusting a crumpled cup at passers-by, who had absolutely no problem ignoring him.
โThe state of that!โ said a woman behind the counter. โHe was someoneโs sweet little baby once. Imagine!โ
Samson wasnโt interested. Something had made him straighten in his chair.
No conscious process in him asked: am I watching a surveillance operation here? But the conviction that he was arrived fully formed in his mind. Two men, across the street, one with his hand in an empty knapsack, kept glancing at the Edgar Building then looking away. An Asian couple on his side of the street pretended to talk but were surely communicating with others โ both wore microphone earbuds. A fourth and maybe a fifth were separately threading their way through the stalled traffic towards the gates of Moโs Tyre and Body Shop, which lay between the Edgar Building and a rail bridge to the north. The whole thing could be accidental, but the choreography looked right, and the operation seemed to be focused on the Edgar Building. He paid up without removing his eyes from the street then walked to the door. Still inside the cafรฉ, he craned to see north and south of the Junction, wondered if either of the illegally parked vans was part of the surveillance team and whether the operation had been mounted by the police, MI5, or was a joint endeavour. There were at least eight watchers around the Junction and he even considered the beggar capering a few paces away might be part of the team.
The thought that he didnโt want Zoe walking into this situation arrived a few moments before a cab pulled up awkwardly at the mouth of Cooperโs Court, by which time he had taken out two phones, copied the number for Zoe that he had acquired at campaign headquarters from his personal phone into the field of a new text message on a burner phone and written, โDo NOT enter the Edgar. Leave the area now!โ As he looked up, the cab came to a halt and he saw someone paying. A flash of the suede coat inside the cab โ it was Zoe. He sent the
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