Whiteout - Ken Follett [75]
She got back into her car. “Don’t call me, please.” She put the stick into first.
“You’re a hard woman,” he said as she pulled away.
For some reason, that jibe got to her. I’m not hard, she thought. Unexpected tears came to her eyes. I’ve had to deal with the death of Michael Ross, and a rabid pack of reporters, and I’ve been called a bitch by Kit Oxenford, and my sister has let me down, and I’ve canceled the holiday I was looking forward to. I take responsibility for myself and for Mother and for the Kremlin, and I can’t manage a puppy as well, and that’s flat.
Then she remembered Stanley, and she realized she did not care a hoot what Carl Osborne said.
She rubbed her eyes with the back of her hand and peered ahead into the swirling snowflakes. Turning out of her Victorian street, she headed for the main road out of town.
Mother said, “Carl seems nice.”
“He’s not very nice, actually, Mother. In fact he’s shallow and dishonest.”
“Nobody’s perfect. There can’t be many eligible men of your age.”
“Almost none.”
“You don’t want to end up alone.”
Toni smiled to herself. “Somehow I don’t think I will.”
The traffic thinned out as she left the town center, and the snow lay thick on the road. Maneuvering carefully through a series of roundabouts, she noticed a car close on her tail. Looking in the rearview mirror, she identified it as a light-colored Jaguar sedan.
Carl Osborne was following her.
She pulled over, and he stopped right behind her.
She got out and went to his window. “What now?”
“I’m a reporter, Toni,” he said. “It’s almost midnight on Christmas Eve, and you’re looking after your elderly mother, yet you’re in your car and you seem to be heading for the Kremlin. This has to be a story.”
“Oh, shit,” said Toni.
CHRISTMAS DAY
MIDNIGHT
THE Kremlin looked like something from a fairy tale, with snow falling thickly around its floodlit roofs and towers. As the van with “Hibernian Telecom” on its side approached the main gate, Kit had a momentary fancy that he was the Black Knight riding up to besiege the place.
He felt relieved to get here. The storm was turning into a full-scale blizzard, contrary to the forecast, and the journey from the airfield had taken longer than expected. The delay made him fearful. Every minute that passed made it more likely that snags would threaten his elaborate plan.
The phone call from Toni Gallo worried him. He had put her through to Steve Tremlett, fearing that if he played her a fault message she might drive to the Kremlin to find out what was going on. But, having listened in to the conversation, Kit thought she might do that anyway. It was lousy bad luck that she was in Inverburn, instead of at a spa fifty miles away.
The first of the two barriers lifted, and Elton moved the van forward and drew level with the gatehouse. There were two guards in the booth, as Kit expected. Elton wound down the window. A guard leaned out and said, “We’re glad to see you laddies.”
Kit did not know the man but, recalling his conversation with Hamish, he realized it must be Willie Crawford. Looking past him, Kit saw Hamish himself.
Willie said, “It’s good of you to come out at Christmas.”
“All part of the job,” Elton said.
“Three of you, is it?”
“Plus Goldilocks in the back.”
A low snarl came from behind. “Watch your mouth, shitface.”
Kit suppressed a groan. How could they squabble at such a crucial moment?
Nigel murmured, “Knock it off, you two.”
Willie did not appear to have heard the exchange. He said, “I need to see identification for everyone, please.”
They all took out their faked cards. Elton had based them on Kit’s recollection of what the Hibernian Telecom pass looked like. The phone system rarely broke down, so Kit had figured no guard was likely to remember what a genuine pass looked like. Now, with a security guard scrutinizing the cards as if they were dubious fifty-pound notes, Kit held his breath.
Willie wrote down the name from each card. Then he handed them all back without