Sir Basil nodded and put on a slight smile. “There is, in fact, other evidence that he did.”
Everybody looked at him, puzzled. Then Ranklin said: “Money. I bet he had a lot of money on him.”
“Over ?200 in gold and bank notes. How big a secret does that suggest to you gentlemen?”
“Then,” the Home Office said, “surely all you have to do is ask around the ministries to find out which-”
“We have already asked the most likely – and they say they will, reluctantly, check. Whether anyone will admit they spent tax-payers’ money on such people . . . Would you?”
There was a silence. Then Ranklin asked: “Are you letting the newspapers know any of this?”
“We haven’t done so, not yet.”
Feigning hesitancy about telling Sir Basil how to run the Yard, Ranklin said: “Publishing the fact that he’d sold us a secret might nullify that secret’s value.”
The Commander nodded firmly. “Quite right. If – as a nation – we’ve gained something from his visit, let’s for God’s sake keep it, whatever it is.” He looked around, collecting agreement. “But does this mean he was killed for revenge?”
“Not necessarily,” Kell said. “It could still have been prevention – if he was killed by a foreign power. They needn’t know he’d already passed the secret on.”
There was another silence – a rather uneasy one on Sir Basil’s part, Ranklin thought. Perhaps he was torn between wishing it were a foreign power – what could he be expected to do against that? – and fearing public outrage that foreigners could do such things in London.
Rather too casually, Kell asked the Commander: “Will you know eventually who it was?”
“Oh yes. In a few weeks or months it’ll seep out on the grapevine. No proof, of course, but we’ll know.” But they were just showing off in front of the young Home Office. Gratifyingly, he gazed at them with horrified awe.
A slight wind had worked up around tea-time, thinning the fog. And although the wind had gone and there were now millions of coal fires adding their mite to the air, you could now see for ten or fifteen yards. The Commander paused on the steps of the club, perhaps calculating whether it was bad enough to excuse not going home. He could, rumour had it, always find somewhere to spend the night.
“Any private theories about Brock?” he grunted.
Ranklin, who had spent half the day trying to have a theory, shook his head. “None, sir.”
“Well, as I say, it’ll come out in the end.”
“I could do with it being a bit sooner. The Standard quoted the waiter as hearing me called ‘Captain’ and quite a good description of me.”
“We don’t have to be invisible in this business.”
“I’m thinking of Gunther’s own firm. They’ll be reading every last comma for hints as to what happened, they might recognise me and then think I was leading Gunther into a trap.”
“Aren’t you being overly imaginative?”
“They’re competent,” Ranklin said, “and they’re widespread. That’s why we have dealings with them.”
“What d’you want to do about it, then?”
But Ranklin, rashly, hadn’t thought that far. “Er. . . nothing dramatic, I suppose . . . But if we do come across any answer, I’d like approval to pass it on to Gunther’s partners.”
“You aren’t developing a sense of justice, are you?” The Commander eyed him closely. “It would be entirely inappropriate in your work. Now, for me, it would be rather suitable. They could say ‘He’s a swine, but a just swine.’ I’d like that. But I’m Chief of this Bureau and you’re not, and my sense of justice is all we need.”
“As evidence of our good faith?” Ranklin suggested. “For good future relations?”
The Commander was still looking at him. “Umm. Well, perhaps. . . Did you like this van der Brock?” he asked casually.
“Like him? I don’t think so, particularly . . . He was more like . . . family. One of us.”
That was just the sort of answer the Commander’s temper had been waiting for. “No he bloody well wasn’t! Only we are us.”
5
The fog cleared the next day and more typical March winds blew in. The railway companies found out where their trains were and began moving them to where they ought to be. Scotland Yard made no visible progress on the Gunther case and wished the popular papers would shut up about it. Ranklin surreptitiously opened a file on the case and kept it in the Registry – a single, albeit locked, bookcase – misleadingly labelled “Historical/Biblical Espionage”. The Commander believed he’d invented spying and wasn’t interested in history.
So Ranklin wasn’t worried that he’d found the file when he was called into the inner office. The Commander fluttered a message at him. “They want you at a meeting at the Admiralty – or rather, they want me or our Turkish expert.”
“Who’s ‘they’, sir?”
“It sounds like a conference of the powers: the Foreign Office and the India Office, as well. That’s why I’m not going myself.” He grinned. “They may have wheeled out the big guns to bully me into something and they can’t if I’m not there. So just say what an interesting idea and you’re sorry you can’t take a final decision yourself.”
“The India Office?” That Office handled, as one would expect, Indian affairs, and Ranklin hadn’t thought of it as being interested in Turkey. But, old-maidishly, India could imagine enemies at very long range. Until now, it had usually been Russia, but with her more-or-less an ally, perhaps the Turkish Empire – stretching to the Gulf of Persia – had been promoted to bogeyman.
“Yes, them. The only other clue is that they expect you to be au fait with the Baghdad Railway. What d’you know about it?”
Ranklin shuffled his thoughts. “It adds on to the existing line from Constantinople into central Turkey. They’re building an extension through the mountains on the south coast and down across Syria to Baghdad. And probably further, to Basra and perhaps the Persian Gulf-”
“‘They’ being?” the Commander prompted, smiling.
“Some German company-”
“Right. Hold those two thoughts in mind: a German company and the Persian Gulf, and you’ll see what’s exercising minds at the Foreign Office. Sir Aylmer Corbin’s going to be at the meeting.”
“Ah.” Corbin headed the anti-German faction in the Foreign Office, seeing the shadow of a Pickelhaube helmet darkening the map of Europe. Asia Minor too, it now seemed. “Do you know who else will be there?”
The Commander consulted the message. “Hapgood from the India Office. You don’t know him? He’s a very. . . worthy chap. Most able.”
Or, decoded, Hapgood did not come from one of the great landed families. Presumably not even from one of the great university families, who made up in brains what they lacked in acres. Well, bully for Hapgood making it to the India Office. Poor isolated sod.
“I believe he’s one of a select few who understand the rupee.”
To Ranklin the rupee was just currency. “Understands it?”
“Perhaps he can make it do tricks. Climb a rope and disappear.”
“I’d think anyone in the City can do that with mere pounds,” Ranklin said with some feeling.
“I don’t know who else. The meeting’s at three o’clock so you’ve time to swot up the latest on the Railway.” The Commander struck a match, lit the message, and moved the match to his loaded pipe as he watched the paper burn out in an ashtray. He disliked paperwork, which was a good thing in espionage; on the other hand, he set fire to a lot of wasterpaper baskets.
* * *
The alcove in the Admiralty entrance hall hadn’t been built for a life-size statue, so a rather small version of Nelson watched Ranklin hand over his hat and coat. Then he was led up a stone staircase, along a corridor with a vaulted roof like a tunnel, and into a room that seemed more like a study than an office.