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  TERROR’S REACH

  by

  TOM BALE

  Terror’s Reach: an exclusive island on the south coast of England, home to rival business tycoons Valentin Nasenko and Robert Felton. On a sweltering weekend

  in May, the island is targeted by a team of ruthless killers. Its residents are facing annihilation, and only one man stands a chance of saving them. Four

  years ago, after an undercover police operation went disastrously wrong, Joe Clayton lost his career and his family. Forced to adopt a new identity, he

  drifted from job to job and ended up on the Reach, working as a bodyguard to Nasenko’s wife, Cassie, and her children. Now he must draw upon all his experience

  and reserves of strength to bring them out alive. But the situation is far more complex than anyone realises, and soon Joe is caught up in an explosive

  feud between two immensely powerful forces. What gradually becomes clear is that the fortune hidden away on Terror’s Reach is not a prize at all. It’s

  a trap.

  Published by Preface Publishing 2010

  Copyright Š Tom Bale 2010

  Tom Bale has asserted his right to be identified as the author of this work under the

  Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

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  subsequent purchaser

  First published in Great Britain in 2010 by Preface Publishing

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  ISBN Hardback 978 1 84809 074 3

  ISBN Trade Paperback 978 1 84809 075 0

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  For Ann and John Harrison

  One They sent the first man in at midday. His job couldn’t have been more

  straightforward. All he had to do was sit on the beach. Watch, listen,

  wait, and not be too obvious about it.

  The target was Terror’s Reach, a stunning accident of geography

  nestled within the dazzling surroundings of Chichester Harbour. One

  small island: five homes, nine residents and combined assets that ran

  into billions. It was a gold mine, practically begging to be plundered.

  But the remote location posed its own challenges. The options

  for reconnaissance were limited, long-term surveillance all but

  impossible. There was no passing traffic, no way to go unnoticed.

  Here amongst the super-rich, anyone seen loitering was liable to

  be challenged or reported to the police.

  The solution, on the day, involved a gamble, but the good weather

  helped to minimise the risk. It was an easy enough gig, and Gough

  was pleased to be assigned the role. He could sit on his arse as well

  as the next guy.

  But it also carried serious responsibility. As first man in, his actions

  had a direct bearing on the whole operation. Get it wrong and he was

  in big trouble.

  He was under no illusions about the kind of people he was working

  for. If he screwed up, they would probably kill him. Simple as that.

  Two in the afternoon: siesta time. With the temperature pushing ninety

  any sensible person would be glad to lie in the shade and have a doze.

  But Jaden, at six years old, didn’t see it in those terms. Bursting with

  restless energy, he had no intention of taking a nap, and he was making

  his feelings known to his mother.

  Joe Clayton was aware of the protests coming from the other end

  of the garden, but he wasn’t really listening to them. He was sitting

  on the broad stone terrace, finishing a lunch of cold meats and salad.

  'I want to go to the beach.’

  'Not now, Jaden. Sofia has to sleep, and so should you.’

  “I’m not tired. Sofia’s a baby. I’m six.’

  'Well, go in the pool, then. But only for a few minutes.’

  'I don’t want to go in the pool. I want to go to the beach.’

  'It’s too hot. And I have to stay here and watch Sofia.’

  'I can go on my own.’

  'No, Jaden.’

  'It’s not fair. You don’t let me do anything.’

  There was a thud, followed by a loud crack. Joe looked up and saw

  something skidding across the grass. The boy had thrown one of his

  cars to the ground. It must have ricocheted, hit another toy and broken.

  Jaden glowered at the tiny die-cast models, furious with his mother,

  and himself, and the whole world. It was a state Joe keenly remembered: the terrible aching frustration of childhood.

  'I hate it here,’ Jaden shouted. 'I wish we still lived with Nanny and

  Grandad.’

  Joe winced. He had already decided to intervene when a first-floor

  window was thrown open and a voice above him roared: 'Cassie! Do

  something about that boy!’

  The window slammed shut. On the lawn, Jaden scooped up the

  broken car and fled to his refuge: a sun-proof beach tent that was

  variously a cave, a fire station and an enemy camp. His mother called

  him back, but Jaden ignored her.

  Maybe it was the heat making everyone so fractious, Joe thought.

  Not that Valentin Nasenko ever had much patience with his stepson.

  It was little wonder the boy missed life with his grandparents.

  Joe drained his glass of water, tipping the remnants of several ice

  cubes into his mouth. As he stood up his chair scraped on the stone

  and he almost expected another tirade from above. When Valentin

  was preoccupied with something, he demanded absolute peace and

  quiet. And what Valentin Nasenko wanted . . .

  Joe had been working for the Nasenkos for just over nine months.

  He’d met them the previous September on the Greek island of Naxos.

  Having concluded a summer-long stint as a deckhand on a chartered

  yacht, he’d picked up some casual bar work in Naxos Town.

  Valentin’s principal adviser, Gary McWhirter, had been in the bar

  when a fight broke out between rival football fans during a televised

  Champions League game. Impressed by Joe’s adroit handling of the

  mini-riot that ensued, McWhirter had invited Joe to meet Nasenko.

  One of his security team had resig
ned at short notice, and Valentin

  wanted an extra body to watch over his wife and newborn daughter

  during a three-week cruise around the Aegean.

  At first Joe had been reluctant. The thought of babysitting a young

  mother and her child didn’t hold much appeal, but inevitably the

  money on offer made the decision for him. One thousand euros a

  week, available in cash if he wanted it.

  Cassie Nasenko had seemed equally unhappy with the arrangement.

  She rarely made eye contact with Joe, and was constantly ill

  at ease in his company. The situation didn’t improve when Joe

  overheard her singing some cheesy ballad and quipped that, with a

  bit more practice, she could make a decent karaoke singer. He later

  discovered that at the age of seventeen Cassie had reached the final

  stages of a TV talent competition and had gone on to enjoy a brief

  career as a pop singer.

  It wasn’t until the third week that she grew accustomed to his

  presence, and he came to see that what he’d perceived as arrogance

  was actually shyness. She was from an ordinary lower-middle-class

  background, very similar to his own, and she was still coming to

  terms with the idea of having staff at her beck and call.

  When the cruise ended it was Cassie, rather than Valentin, who

  suggested that Joe should stay on the team. Joe suspected it was largely

  because of Jaden, Cassie’s son from a short-lived relationship with an

  actor in a TV soap. Jaden was often quiet and withdrawn, but Joe

  seemed to have struck up a rapport with him in a way that few others

  had.

  Returning to the UK posed another dilemma. In many ways he was

  in no hurry to go back, and yet he couldn’t deny his fascination with

  the idea. It was there constantly in his dreams, when the past could

  be effortlessly unrolled and reworked.

  Joe had often agonised over the if and how and when of his return,

  always careful not to dwell on the resultant question: What then?

  The answer, as it turned out, was simple. Just go to work and get

  through the day. Go to work and never think about where you might

  be instead.

  Joe descended the half-dozen steps from the terrace. The middle

  section of the garden was effectively a large playpen, a neat square of

  lawn fenced off for safety from the swimming pool and the jetty beyond.

  It was littered with trikes and footballs, and Jaden’s current favourite

  diversion: a giant game of Connect 4 that was taller than he was.

  Cassie Nasenko was sitting on a picnic blanket, staring pensively

  in the direction of Jaden’s hideaway. Next to her, ten-month-old Sofia

  was stripped to her nappy and lay fast asleep beneath a large parasol,

  her pudgy white limbs contrasting with her mother’s deep tan.

  Cassie was a small, slight woman with an almost boyish figure:

  narrow hips, bony shoulders and thin arms. At first glance you could

  mistake her for a teenager, rather than a woman of twenty-five, a wife

  and mother of two children.

  Throughout the present heatwave, unseasonable even for June, she’d

  maintained a uniform of flip-flops, denim shorts and cotton shirts,

  with a bikini in place of underwear. Her sun-bleached brown hair was

  tied up in a ponytail, her green eyes clear and bright against the tan.

  A sprinkle of freckles over her nose gave her a pretty, tomboyish look.

  At Joe’s approach she put on a brave smile. Close up, he was struck

  by the weariness in her face. Sofia was teething at the moment, and

  having a bad time of it. Despite the sleepless nights, and contrary to

  her husband’s wishes, Cassie remained determined to bring up her

  children without the help of a nanny. Joe admired her for that.

  He said, “I’ll take him to the beach if you want.’

  'We shouldn’t give in to him when he’s had a strop.’

  'I know. But for a quiet life.’ Joe nodded towards the house. 'Just

  this once.’

  'All right. Only for ten minutes or so. Then he really must get out

  of the sun.’

  'You okay if I have a swim while I’m there?’

  'Fine,’ said Cassie. 'But keep an eye on him. He’s being a little

  monster at the moment.’

  'Jaden’s a good kid at heart. I’m sure he didn’t mean what he said

  about living here.’

  As soon as the words were out he knew he’d overstepped the mark,

  but she just gave him a curious, slightly sad smile.

  'Oh, I think he meant every word.’

  Two

  Terror’s Reach had captivated Joe from the moment he’d first set eyes

  on it. He wasn’t familiar with the area, and had imagined Chichester

  Harbour to be a man-made construction, with a sea wall and all the

  accoutrements of a commercial port: quays and cranes and slipways,

  and maybe a yacht marina.

  In fact, it was a vast natural harbour, straddling the counties of

  Hampshire and West Sussex. Eleven square miles of water in a tidal

  basin of mudflats and salt marsh. There were three main channels

  and countless other inlets, creeks and waterways around half a dozen

  peninsulas of varying size and shape.

  The Reach was a small island on the eastern side of the harbour,

  once joined to the mainland by a narrow causeway, accessible on foot

  at low tide. Its name derived from a Victorian working boat, the Terror, which had sailed around Chichester Harbour, transporting oyster

  catches from larger offshore vessels. The Reach marked the furthest

  southerly point on its route.

  Although uninhabited until the 1890s, the island’s sheltered coves

  and woods had been used by smugglers for centuries. When coastal

  erosion finally destroyed the causeway in the mid-1950s, a chain ferry

  was installed, jointly funded by the residents and by the War Office,

  which had acquired two-thirds of the five-hundred-acre island for use

  as a training camp.

  The ferry was superseded in the 1960s by the construction of a road

  bridge, and while the Ministry of Defence still maintained the training

  camp, its lack of use in recent years had led to fevered speculation

  about its future. In the meantime, the only private dwellings were

  spread in a graceful arc on the south-western corner, with views out

  to sea and across the bay towards Hayling Island.

  Originally there had been eleven relatively modest houses on the

  island, but in the past two decades all but one had been demolished

  and replaced by much larger, architect-designed mansions.

  Now there were just five in total, with an average value of four

  million apiece, making property on the Reach almost as expensive

  as that in the more famous resort of Sandbanks, about seventy miles

  to the west.

  Joe had spent every spare moment exploring his new home, and it

  had brought him up short when he first caught himself thinking of it

  in that way. This felt like home – or at least the nearest thing to a

  home that he could hope for.

  Jaden’s whole demeanour was transformed once he stepped through

  the gate at the bottom of the garden. It was as though he’d been granted an unexpected release from prison. His shoulders lifted and
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  he grinned, whooping with pleasure as he broke away from Joe’s grasp

  and tore off along the timber decking. Joe had to jog to keep up.

  The decking was about five feet wide, forming a communal walkway

  that ran for some three hundred yards along the rear of the properties.

  Each home had a private jetty that branched out from the deck

  and extended fifty or sixty feet over the water, though today there were

  only a couple of small craft moored here. For most of its length there

  was no fence or safety rail on the seaward side of the deck, so Joe had

  to watch that Jaden didn’t trip and fall in.

  Nevertheless, he couldn’t help admiring the boy’s daredevil streak,

  perhaps because he recalled a similar quality in himself at that age.

  It meant Jaden was straining for independence at every opportunity

  and, to his mother’s continual despair, angrily protesting whenever

  limits were imposed on him.

  Joe could see both points of view. To a restless, energetic six-year

  old the island must have seemed like a personal adventure playground.

  And in many ways the Reach was the safest place imaginable in which

  to grow up. Only a handful of residents. Minimal traffic. No strangers

  passing through.

  But Cassie, like many parents where their first born was involved,

  saw danger lurking around every corner. That was all the more reasonable,

  given her husband’s wealth: it was why Joe had been employed,

  after all. For weeks Jaden had been pleading to be allowed to go to

  the beach on his own, and Cassie had steadfastly refused.

  Valentin’s property was furthest from the beach, so their route took

  them past the other four homes. Three of the four were imposing

  buildings in vastly different styles: mock-Georgian, ultra-modern and

  faux Gothic. The gardens were a little more uniform in design: all

  terraced, with a mix of lawns and paved areas. Most had swimming

  pools. All were scandalously under-appreciated, in Joe’s opinion.

  It was Friday afternoon, a truly glorious summer’s day, and yet there

  was no one outside to enjoy it. Joe and Jaden didn’t see a single resident

  until they reached the last house, owned by a retired couple:

  Donald and Angela Weaver. Theirs was the only remaining original

  property, and even though it had a substantial ground-floor extension

  it was modest in comparison with its neighbours.

  Donald Weaver was just visible amidst the mass of sweet peppers