Eagle Strike

Eagle Strike by Anthony Horowitz Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Eagle Strike by Anthony Horowitz Read Free Book Online
Authors: Anthony Horowitz
I see I was wrong. I‟ll tell you what‟s stupid. Listening to you in the first place was stupid. Coming to see you was stupid. Ever getting to know you … that was the most stupid thing of all.”
    She turned and walked away in the direction of the station. In seconds she had gone, disappearing into the crowd.
    “Alex…” a voice said behind him. It was a voice that he knew.
    Mrs Jones was standing on the pavement. She had seen and heard everything that had taken place. “Let her go,” she said. “I think we need to talk.”

SAINT OR SINGER?

    The office was the same as it had always been. The same ordinary, modern furniture, the same view, the same man behind the same desk. Not for the first time, Alex found himself wondering about Alan Blunt, head of MI6 Special Operations. What had his journey to work been like today? Was there a suburban house with a nice, smiling wife and two children waving goodbye as he left to catch the tube? Did his family know the truth about him? Had he ever told them that he wasn‟t working for a bank or an insurance company or anything like that, and that he carried with him—perhaps in a smart leather case, given to him for his birthday—files and documents full of death? Alex tried to see the teenager in the man in the grey suit. Blunt must have been his own age once. He would have gone to school, sweated over exams, played football, tried his first cigarette and got bored at weekends like anybody else. But there was no sign of any child in the empty grey eyes, the colourless hair, the mottled, tightly drawn skin. So when had it happened?
    What had turned him into a civil servant, a spy-master, an adult with no obvious emotions and no remorse?
    And then Alex wondered if the same thing would one day happen to him. Was that what MI6
    were preparing him for? First they had turned him into a spy; next they would turn him into one of them. Perhaps they already had an office waiting with his name on the door. The windows were closed and it was warm in the room, but he shuddered. He had been wrong to come here with Sabina. The office on Liverpool Street was poisonous, and one way or another it would destroy him if he didn‟t stay away.
    “We couldn‟t allow you to bring that girl here, Alex,” Blunt was saying. “You know perfectly well that you can‟t just show off to your friends whenever—”
    “I wasn‟t showing off,” Alex cut in. “Her dad was almost killed by a bomb in the South of France.”
    “We know all about the business in Saint-Pierre,” Blunt murmured.
    “Do you know that it was Yassen Gregorovich who planted it?”

    Blunt sighed irritably. “That doesn‟t make any difference. It‟s none of your business. And it‟s certainly nothing to do with us!”
    Alex stared at him in disbelief. “Sabina‟s father is a journalist,” he exclaimed. “He was writing about Damian Cray. If Cray wanted him dead, there must be a reason. Isn‟t it your job to find out?”
    Blunt held up a hand for silence. His eyes, as always, showed nothing at all. Alex was struck by the thought that if this man were to die, sitting here at his desk, nobody would notice any difference.
    “I have received a report from the police in Montpellier, and also from the British consulate,”
    Blunt said. “This is standard practice when one of our people is involved.”
    “I‟m not one of your people,” Alex muttered.
    “I am sorry that the father of your … friend was hurt. But you might as well know that the French police have investigated—and you‟re right. It wasn‟t a gas leak.” “That‟s what I was trying to tell you.”
    “It turns out that a local terrorist organization—the CST—have claimed responsibility.”
    “The CST?” Alex‟s head spun. “Who are they?”
    “They‟re very new,” Mrs Jones explained. “CST stands for Camargue Sans Touristes.
    Essentially they‟re French nationalists who want to stop local houses in the Camargue being sold off for

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