‘We can buy any clothes you need.’ It was best to be matter-of-fact, to deal with the small things and avoid discussing the sheer enormity of what was going to happen to this woman. That would all come later; one of Liz’s colleagues was trained to deal with the inevitable emotional crisis that would follow when Jamila realised that her life was about to undergo a complete cataclysm. She would never see her home again; from now on she would have a different place to live, in a different city, and she would even have a different name. But Liz’s first priority was to get her out of danger. Discussing anything else would only upset Jamila and make things even more difficult for them both.
‘Where are you taking us to?’ asked the young woman. Inwardly Liz sighed with relief that at least she’d accepted that she had to leave.
‘We need to get you far away right now. There’s a place in London we’ll take you to, and a private hospital where your husband will stay until he’s discharged. Our priority is to make sure you’re both safe. And that’s not possible for you in Birmingham.’
Jamila nodded, but Liz could see she still hadn’t taken it all in. Suddenly she put her face in her hands, and her shoulders shuddered. Liz said gently, ‘I know it’s hard. Believe me, we wouldn’t be doing this if it weren’t necessary.’
Jamila took her hands from her eyes and slowly lifted her face. Behind her tears she looked bewildered. Liz put one hand on her shoulder as Jamila wiped the tears from her cheeks and said, ‘I am sorry, but you have to understand… five months ago I was in Pakistan, preparing for my wedding. To a man I had never met, about to go and live in a country I had never even visited. But I agreed to do it because… because I had no choice. All through my childhood I did well at school, and I was determined to continue my education. But my parents would not allow me to go to university. I wanted to read law,’ she added, half-proudly, half-hesitantly, as if Liz would not believe her. ‘But it was out of the question if I stayed in Pakistan. So I let my parents arrange my marriage, and it turned out they chose well. Salim is a good man, a thoughtful man. I even had hopes of restarting my education.’
‘That is still possible, Jamila.’
The other woman’s eyes widened, and for the first time Liz saw hope in her them. ‘Really?’
‘Absolutely. But first I need to get you both out of here.’
Forty-five minutes later long strips of the yellow plastic tape used to secure crime scenes were being strung across the entrance to Ward 6, where in room 37B Salim lay half-conscious, his wife in a chair beside his hospital bed, and a ‘friend’ (the armed Special Branch officer) seated close to the door. Once the OK had been given by the hospital administrator, things had moved fast.
But that ‘OK’ had not been immediately forthcoming; the administrator, a fierce-looking woman called Albright, seemed to have a pre-existing low opinion of the police that she extended towards the Security Service also. Liz had listened patiently as the woman explained all the difficulties inherent in doing what they asked. Then, suddenly running out of patience, Liz snapped that if the hospital administrator didn’t co-operate immediately, she would find herself being telephoned by the Home Secretary personally; furthermore, if anything happened to the patient in room 37b, it would be the sole responsibility of Ms Albright. After that, the OK had been forthcoming pretty sharply.
Liz overheard a nurse talking to a prospective visitor on the other side of the tape. ‘I’m sorry but the ward’s closed temporarily. One of the cleaners has spilled some chemicals, and we need to clean them up thoroughly before we can let anyone in.’
‘How long do I have to wait, then?’ asked a woman’s petulant voice, uninterested in the reason for the delay.
‘Won’t be long now,’ said the nurse briskly. ‘No more than half an hour.’
And twenty minutes later Liz watched as a trolley was wheeled out through the rear door of the hospital by two orderlies, with a vigilant Fontana and his Special Branch colleague walking alongside. The ambulance was waiting, with Jamila and Dave Armstrong inside. As Boatman was gently stretchered into the rear of it, Jamila climbed out and ran across to where Liz was standing watching. Her eyes were wide and anxious. She reached out and touched Liz’s arm, as though needing the reassurance of something solid in her rapidly shifting world.
‘Will I see you again?’
Liz hesitated. Ordinarily, the answer would be no. Jamila and Salim would have a designated team to look after them and help them in their choice of new identities and location. Then a handler would be assigned to them, someone whose full-time responsibility it was to look after people like the pair of them. Liz would not normally be part of this equation.