aspects and for its out of the way location in the backstreets of an area colloquially referred to as âWorldâs End.â The plain brick building in its heyday had been a modest factory warehouse, then offices and now served as the headquarters of Omega Unit, the ultra-secret âoff the booksâ arm of the British Secret Intelligence Service.
Ryder entered into a narrow corridor leading to a flight of stairs up to a first-floor reception area. Here he was met by a plump, fiftyish woman with greying hair tied back in a neat bun, wearing a dark blue trouser suit and frameless spectacles.
âHello, Frank,â said the bossâs PA. âHeâs waiting for you.â She led him along a short corridor to be shown into a tidy, rectangular office, sparsely furnished, with only a large flat- screen TV on one wall and a few landscape paintings adorning the rest. The room was devoid of windows and said much about the man who occupied it.
George Conway rose from his desk and came to meet Ryder. âGood to see you, old boy,â he said, thrusting out a hand. âTake a seat.â
They shook hands and Ryder took the only other available seat in the room. Looking relaxed, brown eyes rested intently on his boss as he waited for him to lead out.
âTea?â Conway asked, reaching for the white china pot on a silver tray.
Ryder nodded. âWhy not? Always good to sip tea before business. Biscuits too, I see.â Biscuits only came out when things were serious.
Conway smiled dryly, lifted the pot and poured the contents into two white bone china cups, handing one to Ryder and indicated towards the plate. âDo have one.â
George Conway was a thin, bespectacled man, middle-aged with a shock of white hair. He could easily have been taken for a professor rather than a high-ranking officer of the SIS. However, he had not risen to be deputy head of the SISâs Special Operations Directorate by using the old school tie network, but by sheer hard work in the field and a shrewd understanding of those who operated in the murky and often nefarious world of espionage. The byzantine nature of his calling demanded insight into the threat of evil and the courage to face it when necessary. He had been given the unenviable task of running the Omega Unit and the several agents operating within its tenet. To academia, Omega referred to the last letter of the Greek alphabet, but to the Establishment, the last resort. Only the Chief of SIS and a handful of others were aware of its very existence.
Omega had evolved within the folds of the Secret Intelligence Service more from necessity than from design to primarily combat the ever increasing terrorist threat without the constraints of the law. Conway believed, as did his boss, âCâ, the Chief of the British Secret Intelligence Service commonly referred to as MI6, that killing was the only way and the only thing understood by fanatical terrorism and wayward government-sponsored criminal activities. Quasi-international justice and legal niceties could not be allowed to stand in the way when protecting the Realm. It was considered by the Establishment too difficult to have regular Special Forces carrying out assassinations and other unpalatable activities likely to involve media attention and prison time. Ryder knew the risks and fully understood the legal consequences of his role. Should he get caught, the Establishment would deny all knowledge of his existence.
âI suppose youâre wondering what we have for you, O-Three?â
When the boss called him by his official designation (Omega Three) instead of Frank, he knew something heavy was about to be delivered â hence the biscuits.
âYou could say that, George,â he grinned, softening the rugged, high cheekbones that were topped with a mop of thick, dark hair. ââOurs is to do or die,â so they say. The âQueenâs shillingâ, mind you, is hard to