'Meadowes of Registry. He works for me.' Meadowes tried to look over the sergeant's shoulder, but the sergeant drew back the list against his tunic. 'He's been off sick, you see. I wanted to enquire.'
'Then why's he under Ground Floor?'
'He has a room there. He has two functions. Two different jobs. One with me, one on the ground floor.'
'Zero,' said the sergeant, looking at the list again. A bunch of typists, their skirts as short as the Ambassadress permitted, came fluttering up the steps behind them.
Meadowes lingered, still unconvinced. 'You me an he's not come in?' he asked with tenderness which longs for contradiction.
'That's what I do me an. Zero. He's not come in. He's not here. Right?'
They followed the girls in to the lobby. Cork took his arm and drew him back in to the shadow of the basement grille. 'What's going on, Arthur? What's your problem? It's not just the missing files, is it? What's eating you up?'
'Nothing's eating me.'
'Then what's all that about Leo being ill? He hasn't had a day's illness in his life.'
Meadowes did not reply.
'What's Leo been up to?' Cork demanded with deep suspicion. 'Nothing.'
'Then why did you ask about him? You can't have lost him as well! Blimey, they've been trying to lose Leo for twenty years.'
Cork felt the decent hesitation in Meadowes, the proximity of revelation and the reluctant drawing back.
'You can't be responsible for Leo. Nobody can. You can't be everyone's father, Arthur. He's probably out flogging a few petrol coupons.'
The words were barely spoken before Meadowes rounded on him, very angry indeed.
'Don't you talk like that, d'you hear? Don't you dare! Leo's not like that; it's a shocking thing to say of anyone; flogging petrol coupons. Just because he's - a temporary.'
Cork's expression, as he followed Meadowes at a safe distance up the open-tread staircase to the first floor, spoke for itself. If that was what age did for you, retirement at sixty didn't come a day too early. Cork's own retirement would be from it to a Greek island. Crete, he thought; Spetsai. I could swing it at forty if those ball-bearings come home. Well, forty-five anyway.
A step a long the corridor from Registry lay the cypher room and a step beyond that, the small, bright office occupied by Peter de Lisle. Chancery means no more than political section; its young men are the elite. It is here, if anywhere, that the popular dream of the brilliant English diplomat may be realised; and in no one more nearly than Peter de Lisle. He was an elegant, willowy, almost beautiful person, whose youth had persisted obstinately in to his early forties, and his manner was languid to the point of lethargy. This lethargy was not affected, but simply deceptive. De Lisle's family tree had been disastrously pruned by two wars, and further depleted by a succession of small but violent catastrophes. A brother had died in a car accident; an uncle had committed suicide; a second brother was drowned on holiday in Penzance. Thus by degrees de Lisle himself had acquired both the energies and the duties of an improbable survivor. He had much rather not been called at all, his manner implied; but since that was the way of things, he had no alternative but to wear the mantle. As Meadowes and Cork entered their separate estates, de Lisle was on the point of gathering together the sheets of blue draft paper which lay scattered in artistic confusion on his desk. Having shuffled them casually in to order, he buttoned his waistcoat, stretched, cast a wistful look at the picture of Lake Windermere, issued by the Ministry of Works with the kind permission of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway, and drifted contentedly on to the landing to greet the new day. Lingering at the long window, he peered downward for a moment at the spines of the farmers' black cars and the small islands of blue where the police lights flashed.
'They have this passion for steel,' he observed to Mickie Crabbe, a ragged, leaky-eyed man permanently crippled by a hangover. Crabbe was slowly ascending the stairs, one hand reassuringly upon the banister, his thin shoulders hunched protectively. 'I'd quite forgotten. I'd remembered the blood, but forgotten the steel.'
'Rather,' Crabbe muttered. 'Rather,' and his voice trailed after him like the shreds of his own life. Only his hair had not aged; it grew dark and luxuriant on his little head, as if fertilised by alcohol.
'Sports,' Crabbe cried, making an unscheduled halt. 'Bloody marquee isn't up.'
'It'll come,' de Lisle assured him kindly. 'It's been held up by the Peasants' Revolt.'
'Back way empty as a church on the other road; bloody Huns,' Crabbe added vaguely as if it were a greeting, and continued painfully down his appointed track.
Slowly following him a long the passage, de Lisle pushed open door after door, peering inside to call a name or a greeting, until he arrived by degrees at the Head of Chancery's room; and here he knocked hard, and leaned in.
'All present, Rawley,' he said. 'Ready when you are.'
'I'm ready now.'
'I say, you haven't pinched my electric fan by any chance, have you? It's absolutely vanished.'
'Fortunately I am not a kleptomaniac.'
'Ludwig Siebkron's asking for a meeting at four o'clock,' de Lisle added quietly, 'at the Ministry of the Interior. He won't say why. I pressed him and he got shirty. He just said he wanted to discuss our security arrangements.'
'Our arrangements are perfectly adequate as they stand. We discussed them with him last week; he is dining with me on Tuesday. I cannot imagine we need to do any more. The place is crawling with police as it is. I refuse to let him make a fortress of us.'
The voice was austere and self-sufficient, an academic voice, yet military; a voice which held much in reserve; a voice which guarded its secrets and its sovereignty, drawled out but bitten short.
Taking a step in to the room, de Lisle closed the door and dropped the latch.
'How did it go last night?'
'Adequately. You may read the minute if you wish. Meadowes is taking it to the Ambassador.'
'I imagined that was what Siebkron was ringing about.'
'I am not obliged to report to Siebkron; nor do I intend to. And I have no idea why he telephoned at this hour, nor why he should call a meeting. Your imagination is a head of my own.'
'All the same, I accepted for you. It seemed wise.'
'At what time are we bidden?'
'Four o'clock. He's sending transport.'
Bradfield frowned in disapproval.
'He's worried about the traffic. He thinks an escort would make things easier,' de Lisle explained.
'I see. I thought for a moment he was saving us the expense.' It was a joke they shared in silence.
CHAPTER TWO 'I Could Hear their Screaming on the Telephone...'
The daily Chancery meeting in Bonn takes place in the ordinary way at ten o'clock, a time which allows everyone to open his mail, glance at his telegrams and his German newspapers and perhaps recover from the wearisome social round of the night before. As a ritual, de Lisle often likened it to morning prayers in an agnostic community: though contributing little in the way of inspiration or instruction, it set a tone for the day, served as a roll-call and imparted a sense of corporate activity. Once upon a time, Saturdays had been tweedy, voluntary, semi-retired affairs which restored one's lost detachment and one's sense of leisure. All that was gone now. Saturdays had been assumed in to the general condition of alarm, and subjected to the discipline of weekdays.
They entered singly, de Lisle at their head. Those whose habit was to greet one another did so; the rest took their places silently in the half circle of chairs, either glancing through their bundles of coloured telegrams or staring blankly out of the big window at the remnants of their weekend. The morning fog was dispersing; black clouds had collected over the concrete rear wing of the Embassy; the aerials on the flat roof hung like surrealist trees against the new dark.