The Looking Glass War Part 13

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"Still young enough. Is that what you mean?"

"I suppose so. It would have to be an old hand. We haven't the time to train a new man, nor the facilities. We'd better ask the Circus. They'll have someone."

"We can't do that," Avery said.

"What kind of man was he?" LeClerc persisted, reluctant to abandon hope.

"Common, in a Slav way. Small. He plays the Rittmeister. It's most unattractive." He was looking in his pockets for the bill. "He dresses like a bookie, but I suppose they all do that. Do I give this to you or Accounts?"

"Secure?"

"I don't see why not."

"And you spoke about the urgency? New loyalties and that kind of thing?"

"He found the old loyalties more attractive." He put the bill on the table.

"And politics . . . some of these exiles are very . . ."

"We spoke about politics. He's not that sort of exile. He considers himself integrated, naturalized British. What do you expect him to do? Swear allegiance to the Polish royal house?" Again he looked at his watch.

"You never wanted to recruit him!" LeClerc cried, angered by Haldane's indifference. "You're pleased, Adrian, I can see it in your face! Good G.o.d, what about the Department! Didn't that mean anything to him? You don't believe in it any more, you don't care! You're sneering at me!"

"Who of us does believe?" asked Haldane with contempt. "You said yourself: we do the job."

"I believe," Avery declared.

Haldane was about to speak when the green telephone rang. "That will be the Ministry," LeClerc said. "Now what do I tell them?" Haldane was watching him.

He picked up the receiver, put it to his ear then handed it across the table. "It's the exchange. Why on earth did they come through on green? Somebody asking for Captain Hawkins. That's you, isn't it?"

Haldane listened, his thin face expressionless. Finally he said, "I imagine so. We'll find someone. There should be no difficulty. Tomorrow at eleven. Kindly be punctual," and rang off. The light in LeClerc's room seemed to ebb toward the thinly curtained window. The rain fell ceaselessly outside.

"That was Leiser. He's decided he'll do the job. He wants to know whether we can find someone to take care of his garage while he's away."

LeClerc looked at him in astonishment. Pleasure spread comically over his face. "You expected it!" he cried. He stretched out his small hand. "I'm sorry, Adrian. I misjudged you. I congratulate you warmly."

"Why did he accept?" Avery asked excitedly. "What made him change his mind?"

"Why do agents ever do anything? Why, do any of us?" Haldane sat down. He looked old but inviolate, like a man whose friends had already died. "Why do they consent or refuse, why do they lie or tell the truth? Why do any of us?" He began coughing again. "Perhaps he's underemployed. It's the Germans: he hates them. That's what he says. I place no value on that. Then he said he couldn't let us down. I a.s.sume he means himself."

To LeClerc he added, "The war rules: that was right, wasn't it?"

But LeClerc was dialling the Ministry.

Avery went into the Private Office. Carol was standing up.

"What's going on?" she said quickly. "What's the excitement?"

"It's Leiser." Avery closed the door behind him. "He's agreed to go." He stretched out his arms to embrace her. It would be the first time.

"Why?"

"Hatred of the Germans, he says. My guess is money."

"Is that a good thing?"

Avery grinned knowingly. "As long as we pay him more than the other side."

"Shouldn't you go back to your wife?" she said sharply. "I can't believe you need to sleep here."

"It's operational." Avery went to his room. She did not say good night.

Leiser put down the telephone. It was suddenly very quiet. The lights on the roof went out, leaving the room in darkness. He went quickly downstairs. He was frowning, as if his entire mental force were concentrated on the prospect of eating a second dinner.

Eleven.

They chose Oxford as they had done in the war. The variety of nationalities and occupations, the constant coming and going of visiting academics and the resultant anonymity, the proximity of open country, all perfectly suited their needs. Besides, it was a place they could understand. The morning after Leiser had rung, Avery went ahead to find a house. The following day he telephoned Haldane to say he had taken one for a month in the north of the town, a large Victorian affair with four bedrooms and a garden. It was very expensive. It was known in the Department as the Mayfly house and carded under Live Amenities.

As soon as Haldane heard, he told Leiser. At Leiser's suggestion it was agreed that he should put it about that he was attending a course in the Midlands.

"Don't give any details," Haldane had said. "Have your mail sent poste restante to Coventry. We'll get it picked up from there." Leiser was pleased when he heard it was Oxford.

LeClerc and Woodford had searched desperately for someone to run the garage in Leiser's absence; suddenly they thought of McCulloch. Leiser gave him power of attorney and spent a hasty morning showing him the ropes. "We'll offer you some kind of guarantee in return," Haldane said.

"I don't need it," Leiser replied, explaining quite seriously. "I'm working for English gentlemen."

On Friday night, Leiser had telephoned his consent; by Wednesday, preparations were sufficiently advanced for LeClerc to convene a meeting of Special Section and outline his plans. Avery and Haldane were to be with Leiser in Oxford; the two of them would leave the following evening by which time he understood that Haldane would be ready with his syllabus. Leiser would arrive in Oxford a day or two later, as soon as his own arrangements were complete. Haldane was to supervise his training, Avery to act as Haldane's a.s.sistant. Woodford would remain in London. Among his tasks was that of consulting with the Ministry (and Sandford of Research) in order to a.s.semble instructional material on the external specifications of short- and medium-range rockets, and thus provided come himself to Oxford.

LeClerc had been tireless, now at the Ministry to report on progress, now at the Treasury to argue the case for Taylor's widow, now, with Woodford's aid, engaging former instructors in wireless transmission, photography and unarmed combat.

Such time as remained to LeClerc he devoted to Mayfly Zero: the moment at which Leiser was to be infiltrated into eastern Germany. At first he seemed to have no firm idea of how this was to be done. He talked vaguely of a sea operation from Denmark; small fis.h.i.+ng craft and a rubber dinghy to evade radar detection. He discussed illegal frontier crossing with Sandford and telegraphed Gorton for information on the border area round Lubeck. In veiled terms he even consulted the Circus. Control was remarkably helpful.

All this took place in that atmosphere of heightened activity and optimism which Avery had observed on his return. Even those who were kept, supposedly, in ignorance of the operation were infected by the air of crisis. The little lunch group that gathered at a corner table of the Cadena cafe was alive with rumours and speculation. It was said, for instance, that a man named Johnson, known in the war as Jack Johnson, a wireless instructor, had been taken on to the strength of the Department. Accounts had paid him subsistence and-most intriguing of all-they had been asked to draft a three-month contract for submission to the Treasury. Who ever heard, they asked, of a three-month contract? Johnson had been concerned with the French drops during the war; a senior girl remembered him. Berry, the cipher clerk, had asked Mr. Woodford what Johnson was up to (Berry was always the cheeky one) and Mr. Woodford had grinned and told him to mind his own business, but it was for an operation, he'd said, a very secret one they were running in Europe... Northern Europe, as a matter of fact, and it might interest Berry to know that poor Taylor had not died in vain.

There was now a ceaseless traffic of cars and Ministry messengers in the front drive; Pine requested and received from another Government establishment a junior whom he treated with sovereign brutality. In some oblique way he had learned that Germany was the target, and the knowledge made him diligent.

It was even rumoured among the local tradesmen that the Ministry House was changing hands; private buyers were named and great hopes placed upon their custom. Meals were sent for at all hours, lights burned day and night; the front door, hitherto permanently sealed for reasons of security, was opened; and the sight of LeClerc with bowler hat and briefcase entering his black Humber became a familiar one in Blackfriars Road.

And Avery, like an injured man who would not look at his own wound, slept within the walls of his little office, so that they became the boundary of his life. Once he sent Carol out to buy Anthony a present. She came back with a toy milk lorry with plastic bottles. You could lift the caps off and fill the bottles with water. They tried it out one evening, then sent it round to Battersea in the Humber.

When all was ready, Haldane and Avery travelled to Oxford first cla.s.s on a Ministry Warrant. At dinner on the train they had a table to themselves. Haldane ordered half a bottle of wine and drank it while he completed the Times crossword. They sat in silence, Haldane occupied, Avery too diffident to interrupt him.

Suddenly Avery noticed Haldane's tie; before he had time to think, he said, "Good Lord, I never knew you were a cricketer."

"Did you expect me to tell you?" Haldane snapped. "I could hardly wear it in the Office."

"I'm sorry."

Haldane looked at him closely. "You shouldn't apologize so much," he observed. "You both do it." He helped himself to some coffee and ordered a brandy. Waiters noticed Haldane.

"Both?"

"You and Leiser. He does it by implication."

"It's going to be different with Leiser, isn't it?" Avery said quickly. "Leiser's a professional."

"Leiser is not one of us. Never make that mistake. We touched him long ago, that's all."

"What's he like? What sort of man is he?"

"He's an agent. He's a man to be handled, not known."

He returned to his crossword.

"He must be loyal," Avery said. "Why else would he accept?" "You heard what the Director said: the two vows. The first is often quite frivolously taken."

"And the second?"

"Ah, that is different. We shall be there to help him take it."

"But why did he accept the first time?"

"I mistrust reasons. I mistrust words like loyalty. And above all," Haldane declared, "I mistrust motive. We're running an agent; the arithmetic is over. You read German, didn't you? In the beginning was the deed."

Shortly before they arrived, Avery ventured one more question.

"Why was that pa.s.sport out of date?"

Haldane had a way of inclining his head when addressed.

"The Foreign Office used to allocate a series of pa.s.sport numbers to the Department for operational purposes. The arrangement ran from year to year. Six months ago the Office said they wouldn't issue any more without reference to the Circus. It seems LeClerc had been making insufficient claims on the facility and Control cut him out of the market. Taylor's pa.s.sport was one of the old series. They revoked the whole lot three days before he left. There was no time to do anything about it. It might never have been noticed. The Circus has been very devious." A pause. "Indeed, I find it hard to understand what Control is up to."

They took a taxi to North Oxford and got out at the corner of the road. As they walked along the pavement Avery looked at the houses in the half-darkness, glimpsed grey-haired figures moving across lighted windows, velvet-covered chairs trimmed with lace, Chinese screens, music stands and a bridge-four sitting like bewitched courtiers in a castle. It was a world he had known about once; for a time he had almost fancied he was part of it; but that was long ago.

They spent the evening preparing the house. Haldane said Leiser should have the rear bedroom overlooking the garden, they themselves would take the rooms on the street side. He had sent some academic books in advance, a typewriter and some imposing files. These he unpacked and arranged on the dining room table for the benefit of the landlord's housekeeper who would come each day. "We shall call this room the study," he said. In the drawing room he installed a tape recorder.

He had some tapes which he locked in a cupboard, meticulously adding the key to his key ring. Other luggage was still waiting in the hall: a projector, Air Force issue; a screen; and a suitcase of green canvas securely fastened, with leather corners.

The house was s.p.a.cious and well kept; the furniture was of mahogany, with bra.s.s inlay. The walls were filled with pictures of some unknown family: sketches in sepia, miniatures, photographs faded with age. There was a bowl of potpourri on the sideboard and a palm cross pinned to the mirror; chandeliers hung from the ceiling, clumsy, but inoffensive; in one corner, a Bible table; in another a small cupid, very ugly, its face turned to the dark. The whole house gently a.s.serted the air of old age; it had a quality, like incense, of courteous but inconsolable sadness.

By midnight they had finished unpacking. They sat down in the drawing room. The marble fireplace was supported by blackamoors of ebony; the light of the gas fire played over the gilded rose-chains which linked their thick ankles. The fireplace came from an age, it might have been the seventeenth century, it might have been the nineteenth, when blackamoors had briefly replaced Borzois as the decorative beasts of society; they were quite naked, as a dog might be, and chained with golden roses. Avery gave himself a whisky, then went to bed, leaving Haldane sunk in his own thoughts.

His room was large and dark. Above the bed hung a light shade of blue china; there were embroidered covers on the bedside tables and a small enamelled notice saying, G.o.d's Blessing on This House; beside the window hung a picture of a child saying its prayers while her sister ate breakfast in bed.

He lay awake, wondering about Leiser; it was like waiting for a girl. From across the pa.s.sage he could hear Haldane's solitary cough, on and on. It had not ended when he fell asleep.

LeClerc thought Smiley's club a very strange place; not at all the kind of thing he had expected. Two half-bas.e.m.e.nt rooms and a dozen people dining at separate tables before a large fire. Some of them were vaguely familiar. He suspected they were connected with the Circus.

"This is a rather good spot. How do you join?"

"Oh, you don't," said Smiley apologetically, then blushed and continued, "I mean they don't have new members. Just one generation . . . several went in the war, you know, some have died or gone abroad. What was it you had in mind, I wonder?"

"You were good enough to help young Avery out."

"Yes. . . yes of course. How did that go, by the way? I never heard."

"It was just a training run. There was no film in the end."

"I'm sorry." Smiley spoke hastily, covering up, as if someone were dead and he had not known.

"We didn't really expect there would be. It was just a precaution. How much did Avery tell you, I wonder? We're training up one or two of the old hands ... and some of the new boys too. It's something to do," LeClerc explained, "during the slack season . . . Christmas, you know. People on leave."

"I know."

LeClerc noticed that the claret was very good. He wished he had joined a smaller club; his own had gone off terribly. They had such difficulty with staff.

"You have probably heard," LeClerc added, officially as it were, "that Control has offered me full a.s.sistance for training purposes."

"Yes, yes, of course."

"My Minister was the moving spirit. He likes the idea of a pool of trained agents. When the plan was first mooted I went and spoke to Control myself. Later, Control called on me. You knew that, perhaps?"

"Yes. Control wondered..."

"He has been most helpful. Don't think I am unappreciative. It has been agreed-I think I should give you the background, your own office will confirm it-that if the training is to be effective, we must create as nearly as possible an operational atmosphere. What we used to call battle conditions." An indulgent smile. "We've chosen an area in western Germany. It's bleak and unfamiliar ground, ideal for frontier crossing exercises and that kind of thing. We can ask for the Army's cooperation if we need it."

"Yes indeed. What a good idea."

"For elementary reasons of security, we all accept that your office should only be briefed in the aspects of this exercise in which you are good enough to help."

"Control told me," said Smiley. "He wants to do whatever he can. He didn't know you touched this kind of thing anymore. He was pleased."

"Good," LeClerc said shortly. He moved his elbows forward a little across the polished table. "I thought I might pick your brains . . . quite informally. Rather as you people from time to time have made use of Adrian Haldane."

"Of course."

"The first thing is false doc.u.ments. I looked up our old forgers in the index. I see Hyde and Fellowby went over to the Circus some years ago."

"Yes. It was the change in emphasis."

"I've written down a personal description of a man in our employment; he is supposedly resident at Magdeburg for the purposes of the scheme. One of the men under training. Do you think they could prepare doc.u.ments, Ident.i.ty Card, Party Members.h.i.+p and that kind of thing? Whatever is necessary."

The Looking Glass War Part 13

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The Looking Glass War Part 13 summary

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