Crash Course Derek Fee (interesting books to read txt) đ
- Author: Derek Fee
Book online «Crash Course Derek Fee (interesting books to read txt) đ». Author Derek Fee
The Hague
Kane found himself back in The Hague one week after his initial visit. This time he travelled alone. He had spent the week clearing his desk and was now assigned full-time to the âBell operationâ. De Vries, who he had learned was an inspector in the Dutch police, met him at the entrance and led him directly to the conference room. Watson was already there.
âMr Bell is expected shortly,â de Vries said. âPerhaps you and DS. Watson could get acquainted while I ensure his admittance to the building.â
âI think they expect you and me to do a bit of bonding,â Watson said as soon as de Vries closed the door.
âI donât bond all that well,â Kane sat across the table from Watson. âOr didnât they tell you?â He reckoned Watson to be somewhere in his forties. Mid-forties and still a detective sergeant. There was a story there somewhere. A light brown moustache covered his upper lip. The craggy face was lived in but not one that would be forgotten easily if it had once been undercover. The body resembled the face in that it appeared sinewy and hard. Kane noticed that lines even stood out on the back of Watsonâs hands.
âYour reputation proceeds you,â Watson said. âWeâve even heard about you in Manchester. Some people say that youâre a grandstander. Thereâs a whole load of folk who think that Iâm deranged for agreeing to work with you.â
âDo they now,â Kane smiled. âThey say that forewarned is forearmed. Grandstander or no grandstander. Stay out of my way. Iâm used to running a solo operation and thatâs the way weâll play this one. I donât need back-up. Especially from someone who hasnât worked undercover before.â
âOkay,â Watson said returning Kaneâs smile. âI donât particularly like working in pairs either. Especially with someone people say is more like a raging bull than a police officer. And how the hell did you know that I never worked undercover before?â
âYour face is not one that people would easily forget. The kind of people we deal with are like elephants. They never forget who put them away. Thatâs why youâve got to look like me. I put on a beard or a moustache and I look completely different. That wouldnât work with you. How did you get into this business?â
âThey were looking for a copper with operational experience who could also pass as a first-class mechanic,â Watson said. âI scored high in both areas. When they told me the operationâs objectives, I volunteered?â
âYou donât look like youâre that stupid,â Kane said. âBeing undercover isnât like working around some nick or other. Youâre in the face of the bad guys and if they smell a rat then itâs goodnight. I hope youâre up for this.â
âDonât worry about me. I get the easy job. I work on the engines and ask a few silly questions. And I try to keep an eye on what youâre up to.â He spread his hands on the table palms upwards. âEasy.â
âTell me about it when someone shoves a gun in your face and you loosen your bowels.â
âIt didnât happen in Helmand and it wonât happen here.â
âYou want to bet.â
Watson smiled. âWhy donât we start this bonding shit again. People generally call me âDocâ.â
Kane raised his eyebrows.
âYou know, Doctor Watson, Sherlock Holmesâ friend. My father was considered a bit of a wag. He named me John and in the next breath he stuck the nickname âDocâ on me. Since I canât very well go around calling you DS Kane, what do I call you?â
âMy first name is Mark,â Kane said. âBut not too many people get close enough to me to use it.â
âGood,â Watson said. âMark will do fine. Now, Letâs get one thing clear. This is no lifetime partnership so we donât have to fall in love with each other. However, it would be nice if we didnât manage to get killed by being at each other throats all the time. Letâs agree that for this one time weâll work together and try to bring down the bad guys.â
âUnder different circumstances, Doc. I think I could even get to like you.â
âThatâs a good boy,â Doc smiled broadly.
De Vries returned with Bell in tow before the conversation could resume. Bell shook hands with Kane and Watson and sat beside them. A secretary deposited a tray of coffees on the boardroom table and departed.
âOkay,â de Vries stood in front of an electronic whiteboard and removing his jacket revealing a perfectly ironed blue striped cotton shirt and the matching blue braces.
Kane looked at Watson and nodded in the direction of the young Dutchman. De Vries fashion sense only increased Kaneâs opinion of the employees of Europol as displaced investment bankers.
âLet us begin,â de Vries said.
Kane passed a coffee to his new pal and took one for himself. Bell ignored the tray.
âAnd now to business,â de Vries said. He opened the folder which he had brought from the desk. âFollowing our meeting of last week, we have completed a dossier on all the drivers in the Offshore Championship.â
Kane sipped the black coffee savouring the liquid as it ran down his throat. Europol might not be real coppers but they knew how to brew a decent cup of coffee. âHow can you do that in such a short time?â he asked.
De Vries turned to face Kane. âWe are specialists in the obtaining of information. Although you may not consider us to be policemen in the true sense of the word, I assure you that we are excellent at what we do. We have access to virtually every database in Europe. If you are a criminal, then you deal in money. We can follow every financial transaction made in any one of the Member States of the European Union.â
âI thought most of that stuff was confidential,â Bell said with more than a degree of apprehension.
There speaks the voice of the true capitalist, Kane thought. The poor bastard must be shaking in his boots knowing that these bods in
Comments (0)