The Darkest Day

Free The Darkest Day by Tom Wood

Book: The Darkest Day by Tom Wood Read Free Book Online
Authors: Tom Wood
Tags: thriller
want to meet him in person?’
    ‘Same reason I met you in person.’
    The breeze blew her hair across her face. She pushed it back behind her ears. ‘So you could tell if I’m lying?’
    ‘That and, if you were, so I could kill you.’
    She inhaled and swallowed. ‘I can’t allow you to kill the client.’
    ‘That’s for me to decide.’
    ‘I’ll have to tell him you said that.’
    ‘Do so. If he has nothing to hide, there’s nothing for him to be worried about.’
    ‘Okay,’ Muir said. ‘I understand, but I guarantee he’ll feel the same way. Why Dublin?’
    ‘I like Guinness.’
    She looked at him like she didn’t know if he was joking or not. Which was the point.
    Victor said, ‘Please stress to the client the importance of punctuality.’
    ‘Right. And I suppose I should tell him to come alone?’
    ‘He can bring as many guys with him as he likes. Tell him it won’t make any difference.’

FOURTEEN
     
    Victor had never been in Ireland on a cloudless day, but the sky above the city was as blue as he had ever seen it. The temperature was pleasant enough. Sunglasses and T-shirts were plentiful, even if shorts were not. He was on the south bank of the River Liffey, enjoying the sun on his face and the wind in his hair. As capital cities went, Dublin was as clean as any he had visited. On a roof five storeys up, the air smelled as fresh as countryside.
    He liked Ireland. He liked that of all the countries of Europe, Ireland was one of the handful he had never worked within as a professional. That made it as safe to operate in now as anywhere could be for him.
    Victor had a great view of the O’Connell Bridge and the streets that fed into it. The bridge was greater in width than the river it spanned. It had six lanes for traffic, separated by a central reservation on which stood wooden and metal boxes of flowering plants. Ornate lamp posts were spaced along at regular intervals. Connecting Dublin’s main thoroughfares, the bridge was often busy with traffic, but not today. It had been closed to vehicles.
    Thanks to Victor’s view, he could see every one of the team. He counted eleven threats in all. They had spread themselves out – four were positioned on the south side of the river to watch each of the four roads that fed on to the bridge; three were doing the same job on the north side of the river; the other four were spaced out along the bridge itself with two on the west side and two on the east.
    The client had yet to arrive.
    Either the client had listened to what Muir had to say and deduced that Victor was going to kill him – which was a distinct possibility – or he had decided Victor was the kind of problem he didn’t need in his life. At that moment, it was hard to know which of the two explanations formed the justification for the presence of an eleven-strong team.
    They were watchers right now, but he could tell they were more than mere pavement artists. They were all men, which he hadn’t expected. Multi-sex teams made far better shadows. It was easier to hide in plain sight as part of a couple than as an individual.
    Over half were not Caucasian and those that were had tans from time spent in sunny climes. These facts led Victor to believe they weren’t locals but ex-US military, which had a disproportionate percentage of minority representation – which suggested that the client was as well. The client knew who he was dealing with. He wouldn’t trust his life to outsiders. Military men tended to put more faith in their own kind than intelligence operatives. Likewise, spies trusted other spies more than they did grunts or jarheads. The watchers were easy to spot because they arrived early to settle into their spots and they didn’t leave them again. They did their best to act inconspicuous, but there were only so many ways one could hang around doing nothing. They would have vehicles nearby, but there were few places to park in the vicinity, and none provided a good view of

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