The first two happened rapidly, within three minutes of each other. The man in the brown raincoat was adhering to lm tight schedule with precision and subtle execution. Not once as he maneuvered his way swiftly into Trafalgar Square was he stopped by a member of British Intelligence. Across his chest were strapped two cameras and a light meter, all dangling precariously as this “tourist” tried to find the best vantage points from which to record his moment in history.

  Alarm One. An arm was grabbed; an arm whose hand held a radio.

  “That scaffold! Up there!”

  “Where?”

  The entire side of a building opposite Charing Cross Station was in the middle of reconstruction. People had scaled the pipes; they were cheering and whistling as the international motorcade came into view.

  “Up on the right. He went behind the plywood!”

  “Who, sir?”

  “The man in the hotel, on those steps in the doorway! The briefcase!”

  “Security check. Sector Seven. Man on construction scaffold. With a briefcase.”

  Static. An eruption of voices.

  “We’re all over the scaffolds, mate.”

  “No one here with a briefcase!”

  “Dozens of cameras. No briefcases, or luggage of any sort.”

  “The plywood on the second level!”

  “Man was changing film, mate. He’s climbing down. No bird.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  “You gave us a start, sir.”

  “My apologies.”

  Alarm Two. Tennyson showed a policeman his temporary MI-Five identification and rushed across the intersection into a packed Trafalgar Square.

  “The lions! My God, the lions!”

  The agent—one of those Tennyson had spoken to during the morning’s briefing—stared at the base of the Lord Nelson monument. Scores of onlookers were perched on the lions surrounding the towering symbol of Nelson’s victory at Trafalgar.

  “What, sir?”

  “He’s there again! The man on the scaffold!”

  “I heard that report just moments ago,” said the agent. “Where is he?”

  “He went behind the lion on the right. It’s not a briefcase. It’s a leather bag, but it’s too large for a camera! Can’t you see? It’s too large for a camera!”

  The agent did not hesitate; the radio was at his lips. “Security check. Sector Nine. North cat. Man with large leather bag.”

  The static crackled; two voices rode over each other.

  “Man with two cameras, larger one at his feet.…”

  “Man checking light meter, corresponds.… See no danger; no bird here.”

  “Man descending, setting camera focus. No bird.”

  The MI-Five agent glanced at Tennyson, then looked away, his eyes scanning the crowds.

  The moment had come. The start of the final alarm, the beginning of the end of the Nachrichtendienst.

  “You’re wrong!” shouted Tennyson furiously. “You’re all wrong! Every one of you!”

  “What?”

  The blond man ran as best he could, threading his way through the packed square toward the curbside, the radio next to his ear. He could hear excited voices commenting upon his outburst.

  “He’s mad as hell!”

  “He says we’re wrong.”

  “About what?”

  “Have no idea.”

  “He ran.”

  “Where?”

  “I don’t know. I can’t see him.”

  Tennyson reached the iron fence that bordered the monmument. He could see his colleague—the Tinamou’s apprentice—dashing across the street, toward the arch. The man in the raincoat held a small black plastic case in his hand. The identification card inside was an exact replica of the one in Tennyson’s pocket, except that the photograph was different.

  Now!

  The blond man pressed the button and shouted into the radio.

  “It’s him! I know it!”

  “Who’s that?”

  “Respond.”

  “It’s from Sector Ten.”

  “I understand now! I see what it was that didn’t fit.”

  “Is that you, Tennyson?” Payton-Jones’s voice.

  “Yes!”

  “Where are you?”

  “That’s it! Now I see it.”

  “See what? Tennyson, is that you? What’s the matter! Respond.”

  “It’s so clear now! That’s where we made our mistake! It’s not going to happen when we thought it would—where we thought it would.”

  “What are you talking about? Where are you?”

  “We were wrong; don’t you see? The weapons. The seven locations. They were meant to be found! That’s what didn’t fit!”

  “What?… Push the red button, Tennyson. Clear all channels.… What didn’t fit?”

  “The hiding of the weapons. It wasn’t good enough. We found them too easily.”

  “For God’s sake, what are you trying to say?”

  “I’m not sure yet,” replied Tennyson, walking toward an opening in the gate. “I just know those weapons were meant to be found. It’s in the progression!”

  “What progression? Push the red button. Where are you?”

  “Somewhere between Sector Ten and back toward Nine,” intruded another voice. “West flank. In Trafalgar.”

  “The progression from one weapon to another!” shouted Tennyson. “Going from east to west! As each position is passed, we eliminate it. We shouldn’t! They’re open limousines!”

  “What do you mean?”

  “Stop the motorcade! In the name of all that’s holy, stop it!”

  “Stop the motorcade!… The command’s been relayed. Now, where are you?”

  The blond man crouched; two MI-Five men passed within feet of him. “I think I’ve spotted him! The man on the scaffold! In the doorway. In the hotel window. It’s him! He’s doubling back; he’s running now!”

  “Describe him. For God’s sake, describe the man.”

  “He’s wearing a jacket. A brown checked jacket.”

  “All operatives alert. Pick up man in brown checked jacket. Running north past Sector Nine, Eight, and Seven. West flank.”

  “It has to be another weapon! A weapon we never found. He’s going to fire from behind! Distance is nothing to him. He’ll hit the back of a neck from a thousand yards! Start the motorcade up again! Quickly!”

  “Vehicle One, proceed. Operatives mount trunks of all cars. Protect targets from rear fire.”

  “He’s stopped!”

  “Tennyson, where are you? Give us your location.”

  “Still between Sectors Nine and Ten, sir,” a voice intruded.

  “He’s not wearing the jacket now, but it’s the same man! He’s running across the Strand!”

  “Where?”

  “There’s no one crossing in Sector Eight.”

  “Sector Nine?”

  “No one, sir.”

  “Back farther! Behind the motorcade!”

  “Sector Five reporting. Police have relaxed the lines.…”

  “Tighten them. Get everyone out of the street. Tennyson, what’s he wearing? Describe him.”

  The blond man was silent; he walked through the square for a distance of twenty yards, then brought the radio to his lips again. “He’s in a brown raincoat. He’s heading back toward Trafalgar Square.”

  “Sector Eight, sir. Transmission in Sector Eight.”

  Tennyson switched off the radio, shoved it into his pocket, and ran back to the iron fence. The motorcade had reached Charing Cross, perhaps four hundred yards away. The timing was perfect. The Tinamou’s timing was always perfect.

  The man in the brown raincoat positioned himself in a deserted office of the Government Building beyond Admiralty Park, a room commandeered by the bogus MI-Five identification card. The card was a license; no one argued with it, not today. The line of fire from that room to the motorcade was difficult, but it was no problem for one trained by the Tinamou.

>   Tennyson leaped over the iron fence and raced diagonally across Trafalgar Square toward Admiralty Arch. Two police officers stopped him, their clubs raised in unison; the motorcade was three hundred yards away.

  “This is an emergency!” shouted the blond man, showing his identification. “Check your radios! MI-Five frequency, Savoy operations. I’ve got to get to the Government Building!”

  The police were confused. “Sorry, sir. We don’t have radios.”

  “Then get them!” yelled Tennyson, rushing past.

  At the Arch, he activated his radio. “It’s the Mall! Once the motorcade’s through the Arch, stop all vehicles. He’s in the trees!”

  “Tennyson, where are you?”

  “Sector Twelve, sir. He’s in Sector Twelve. East flank.”

  “Relay his instructions. Quickly, for God’s sake.”

  Tennyson switched off the radio, put it in his pocket, and continued through the crowds. He entered the Mall and turned left, racing across the path to the first doorway of the Government Building. Two uniformed guards blocked him; he produced the MI-Five card.

  “Oh yes, sir,” said the guard on the left “Your team’s on the second floor. I’m not sure which office.”

  “I am,” said the blond man as he ran toward the staircase. The cheers in Trafalgar Square mounted; the motorcade approached Admiralty Arch.

  He took the steps three at a time, crashing the corridor door open on the second floor, pausing in the hallway to shift his gun from his pocket to his belt. He walked swiftly to the second door on the left. There was no point in trying to open it; it was locked. Yet to break it down without warning was to ask for a bullet in his head.

  “Es ist Von Tiebolt!” he shouted. “Bleib beim Fenster!”

  “Herein!” was the reply.

  Tennyson angled his shoulder, rushed forward, and slammed his body against the fragile door; the door flew open, revealing the man in the raincoat, crouched in front of the window, a long-barreled rifle in his hands. His hands were encased in sheer, flesh-colored gloves.

  “Johann?”

  “They found everything,” said the blond man. “Every weapon, every location!”

  “Impossible!” yelled the man in the raincoat. “One or two, perhaps. Not all!”

  “Every one,” said Tennyson, kneeling behind the man in front of the window. The advance-security car had passed through Admiralty Arch; they would see the first limousine in seconds. The cheers from the crowds lining the Mall swelled like a mammoth chorus. “Give me the rifle!” Tennyson said. “Is the sight calibrated?”

  “Of course,” said the man, handing over the weapon.

  Tennyson thrust his left hand through the strap, lashing it taut, then raised the rifle to his shoulder, the telescopic sight to his eye. The first limousine moved into the light-green circle, the prime minister of Great Britain in the cross hairs. Tennyson moved the rifle slightly; the smiling face of the president of the United States was now in the gunsight, the cross hairs bisecting the American’s left temple. Tennyson shifted the weapon back and forth. It was important for him to know that with two squeezes of the trigger he could eliminate them both.

  A third limousine came slowly into the green circle. The chairman of the People’s Republic of China was in the gunsight, the cross hairs centered below the visor of his peasant’s cap. A slight pressure against the trigger would blow the man’s head apart

  “What are you waiting for?” asked the Tinamou’s apprentice.

  “I’m making my decision,” replied Tennyson. “Time is relative. Half seconds become half hours.” The fourth limousine was there now, the premier of the Soviet Union in the lethal green circle.

  The exercise was over. In his mind he had done it. The transition between desire and the reality was minor. It would have been so simple to pull the trigger.

  But this was not the way to destroy the Nachrichtendienst. The killing would come later; it would commence in a matter of weeks and continue for a matter of weeks. It was part of the Wolfsschanze covenant, an intrinsic part. So many of the leaders would die. But not now, not this afternoon.

  The motorcade stopped; Payton-Jones had relayed Tennyson’s instructions. No limousine entered the Mall. Dozens of agents began fanning out over the grass, guns drawn but held unobtrusively as they raced through the foliage, their eyes on the trees.

  Tennyson held the rifle in the grip of his left hand, the strap taut from barrel to shoulder. He removed his finger from the trigger housing and lowered his right hand to his wrist, pulling the revolver from his belt.

  “Now, Johann! They’ve stopped,” whispered the apprentice. “Now, or they’ll start up again. You’ll lose them!”

  “Yes, now,” said Tennyson softly, turning to the man crouched beside him. “And I lose nothing.”

  He fired the gun, the explosion echoing through the deserted office. The man spun wildly off his feet, blood erupting from his forehead. He fell to the floor, his eyes wide and staring.

  It was doubtful that the gunshot was heard for any distance over the noise of the outside crowds, but it didn’t really matter. In seconds there’d be gunfire no one would miss. Tennyson sprang to his feet, removed the rifle from his arm, and took a folded slip of paper from his pocket. He knelt beside the dead man and shoved the paper into the bloodied, lifeless mouth, pushing it as far as he could down the throat.

  Strapping the weapon back on its owner’s arm, he dragged the body over to the window. Pulling out a handkerchief, he wiped the rifle clean and forced the dead fingers into the trigger housing, tearing the fabric of the right-hand glove so he could see the tattoo.

  Now.

  He took out the radio and leaned out the window.

  “I think I’ve spotted him! It’s the same as Madrid. That’s it! Madrid!”

  “Madrid? Tennyson, where—”

  “Sector Thirteen, sir. East flank.”

  “Thirteen? Specify. Madrid?…”

  Tennyson pushed himself off the sill and back into the deserted office. It would be only seconds now. Seconds until the connection was made by Payton-Jones.

  Tennyson placed the radio on the floor and knelt by the dead man. He edged the dead arm and weapon up into the open window. He listened to the excited voices over the radio.

  “Sector Thirteen. East flank. Beyond the Arch to the left, heading south.”

  “All agents concentrate on Sector Thirteen. East flank. Converge.”

  “All personnel converging, sir. Sector—”

  “Madrid!… The Government Building. It’s the Government Building.”

  Now.

  The blond man yanked at the dead finger four times, firing indiscriminately into the crowds near the motorcade. He could hear the screams, see the bodies fall.

  “Get out. All vehicles move out. Alert One. Move out.”

  The engines of the limousines roared; the cars lurched forward. The sounds of sirens filled Saint James’s Park.

  Tennyson let the dead man fall back to the floor and sprang toward the doorway, the pistol in his hand. He pulled the trigger repeatedly until there were no more shells left in the chamber. The body of the dead man jerked as each new bullet hit.

  The voices on the radio were now indistinguishable, He could hear the sounds of racing footsteps in the corridor.

  Johann von Tiebolt walked to the wall and sank to the floor, his face drawn in exhaustion. It was the end of his performance. The Tinamou had been caught.

  By the Tinamou.

  33

  Their final meeting took place twenty-seven and a half hours after the death of the unknown man presumed to be the Tinamou.

  Since the first account of the momentous event—initially reported by the Guardian and subsequently con-finned by Downing Street—the news had electrified the world. And British Intelligence, which refused all comment on the operation other than to express gratitude to sources it would not reveal, regained the supremacy it has lost through years of defections and ineptitude.
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  Payton-Jones took two envelopes from his pocket and handed them to Tennyson. “These seem such inadequate compensation. The British government owes you a debt it can never repay.”

  “I never sought payment,” said Tennyson, accepting the envelopes. “It’s enough that the Tinamou is gone. I assume one of these is the letter from MI Five, and the other the names pulled from the Nachrichtendienst file?”

  “They are.”

  “And my name has been removed from the operation?”

  “It was never there. In the reports you are referred to as ‘Source Able.’ The letter, a copy of which remains in the files, states that your dossier is unblemished.”

  “What about those who heard my name used over the radios?”

  “Indictable under the Official Secrets Act should they reveal it. Not that it makes much difference; they heard only the name ‘Tennyson.’ There must be a dozen Tennysons under deep cover in British Intelligence, tiny one of which can be mocked up in the event it’s necessary.”

  “Then I’d say our business is concluded.”

  “I imagine so,” agreed Payton-Jones. “What will you do now?”

  “Do? My job, of course. I’m a newspaperman. I might request a short leave of absence, however. My older sister’s effects, sadly, must be taken care of, and then I’d like a brief holiday. Switzerland, perhaps. I like to ski.”

  “It’s the season for it.”

  “Yes.” Tennyson paused. “I hope it won’t be necessary to have me followed any longer.”

  “Of course not. Only if you request it.”

  “Request it?”

  “For protection.” Payton-Jones gave Tennyson a photocopy of a note. “The Tinamou was professional to the end; he tried to get rid of this, tried to swallow it. And you were right. It’s the Nachrichtendienst.”

  Tennyson picked up the copy. The words were blurred but legible.

  NACHRICHT. 1360.78K. AU 23°.22°.

  “What does it mean?” he asked.

  “Actually, it’s rather simple,” replied the agent “The Nachncht is obviously the Nachrichtendienst. The figure ‘1360.78K’ is the metric equivalent of three thousand pounds, or one and a half tons. ‘Au’ is the chemical symbol for gold. The ‘23°.22°’ we believe are the map coordinates of Johannesburg. The Tinamou was being paid out of Johannesburg in gold for his work yesterday. Something in the neighborhood of three million, six hundred thousand pounds sterling, or more than seven million American dollars.”