The Persona Protocol - By Andy McDermott Page 0,6

It was still raining, but only lightly. The street was much busier than before. On the far side was an anonymous blue Mercedes van, dirty and dented. He ignored it and headed right. ‘The tracer’s on Syed,’ he whispered.

‘Testing . . . okay, we have it.’

‘Good work,’ said Tony. ‘You had us worried when that other guy showed up.’

‘Well bluffed. Remind me never to play poker against you,’ added Albion.

On the pretext of checking for traffic as he crossed the street, Adam looked back. All the terrorists had now left the building, splitting up. Standard practice for such a cell; dispersing individually made it harder for observers to track everybody.

Except . . . not everyone was going their own way. Khattak was the last to leave, and he had called back Umar and Marwat.

The gazes of all three followed Adam.

‘I think I’m going to have company,’ he said. A few seconds later, he was proved right as the trio started after him. ‘Khattak and two other guys.’

‘We can’t give you eyes,’ Holly Jo warned. ‘The UAV’s tracking Syed.’ The terrorist leader had disappeared down a narrow alley.

‘You need to lose them,’ Tony warned. ‘You can’t lead them to the rendezvous.’

‘I’ll do what I can,’ Adam replied. ‘Just make sure you get Syed.’

‘We’ll bag him. See you soon.’

The Mercedes grumbled past as Adam reached a junction. He rounded the corner on to a side street.

A surreptitious glance back as he turned. The three men were still moving purposefully after him.

Tony stared at a high-resolution satellite photograph of Peshawar on the screen. The tiny tracer Adam had stuck to Syed’s sleeve while shaking his hand now revealed its position as a red diamond; the van was a green circle. Directing the latter to intercept the former should be a simple task.

In theory.

He knew from experience, however, that no satellite overview could beat personal knowledge. ‘Imran,’ he said into his headset, ‘he’s going east. Do you know that part of town?’

‘I know the whole town.’ The van’s driver was Imran Lak, a Peshawar native – and also a CIA asset. ‘I’ll catch him.’

‘He’s just come out of the alley,’ reported Kyle. The view from the drone’s camera slowly but constantly shifted as he followed the terrorist from above. ‘Crossing the street . . . now going north.’

The green circle had only just turned east. A tag floated above the symbol, showing the distance in metres between the two subjects. It was gradually increasing. ‘He’s getting away from you,’ said Tony into the mike. A statement of fact, not reproach – yet. ‘Turn north as soon as you can. We can’t lose this guy.’

Lak looked ahead, trying to see past the overloaded truck in front of the van. There were alleys between the buildings, but none was wide enough for the Mercedes. The nearest road he could take was at least two hundred metres away.

He sounded an impatient blast on the horn, pulling out to overtake but finding a couple of cars coming the other way. Frustrated, he swung back behind the truck.

‘You’re losing him,’ said an American voice behind him. ‘Come on, get this thing moving!’

Lak flicked a look over his shoulder. The darkened rear cabin was lit by the pale glow of laptop screens, four burly men huddled over them. ‘I can’t drive through walls,’ he complained.

John Baxter was in no mood for excuses. ‘If we miss this guy, we might as well have spent the day playing with our dicks,’ he said, Alabama accent strong. ‘Catch up with him!’

Lak frowned, but said nothing. The cars passed. He pulled out again, dropping down through the gears and accelerating past the truck.

‘He’s turning again,’ Kyle warned. ‘Heading east.’

The street Syed had entered was crowded, pedestrians milling about as vehicles slowly bullied their way through the throng. ‘What’s this?’ Tony asked. ‘Kyle, show me the street ahead. Careful, though – don’t lose sight of him. And switch on the auto-tracking.’

‘He’s still got the tracer on him.’

‘Yeah, but it might get brushed off if he bumps into someone, and we’d end up following the wrong guy.’

Kyle entered commands. A pulsating blue outline appeared around the red diamond. The computer had locked on to Syed’s figure, identifying it by colour and shape; as long as the terrorist leader was partially visible to the drone, even in a crowd, the system would track him – and predict his movements and reacquire him if contact were briefly lost.

The camera tilted upwards to show the busy street ahead. In

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