‘Easily,’ agreed Charlie. ‘Or be caught.’
Charlie paused, remembering Berenkov. ‘I’m not sure of which I’m more frightened, death or a long imprisonment,’ he added.
Sir Archibald gazed around the room. ‘No, Charlie,’ he agreed. ‘I don’t know, either. But the risk isn’t new: it’s been there on every job upon which you’ve ever been engaged.’
‘This one is different,’ insisted Charlie.
The decanter was empty and Sir Archibald took another bottle from beneath the cabinet. They were regimented in lines, Charlie saw, before the door was closed. The former Director fumbled with the bottle, finally giving it to Charlie to open for him.
‘Have the department handled it right?’ demanded Sir Archibald, defiantly. He was getting very drunk, Charlie saw.
‘Competently,’ he said.
‘But I’d have done better?’ prompted the old man, eager for the compliment.
‘I think you’d have had more answers by now,’ said Charlie. It wasn’t an exaggeration, he thought. Sir Archibald could always pick his way through deceit with the care of a tightrope-walker performing without a net.
Sir Archibald smiled, head dropped forward on to his chest.
‘Thank you, Charlie,’ he said, gratefully. It was becoming difficult to understand him.
‘For coming,’ the old man added. ‘And for the compliment.’
‘I meant it,’ insisted Charlie.
Sir Archibald nodded. The glass was lopsided in his hand, spilling occasionally on to his already smeared trousers.
‘Be very careful, Charlie,’ he said.
‘I will, sir.’
‘Remember the first rule – always secure an escape route,’ cautioned Sir Archibald.
The training that got me back alive from East Germany, recollected Charlie.
‘Of course.’
Sir Archibald hadn’t heard him, Charlie realised. His head had gone fully forward against his chest and he had begun to snore in noisy, bubbling sounds. Carefully Charlie reached forward and extracted the goblet from the slack fingers and put it carefully on to a side table.
He stood for several minutes, gazing down at the collapsed figure. Every day would end like this, he realised; it was another form of imprisonment, like that of Berenkov.
‘Goodbye, sir,’ said Charlie, quietly, not wanting to rouse the man. He snored on, oblivious.
Wilkins was standing outside the room, waiting for him to leave.
‘He’s gone to sleep,’ said Charlie.
Wilkins nodded.
‘He’s not been well, sir,’ reminded the chauffeur.
‘No,’ accepted Charlie.
‘He misses the department … misses it terribly,’ said Wilkins in what Charlie accepted was the nearest the man had ever come to an indiscretion.
‘And we miss him,’ assured Charlie. ‘Tell him that, will you?’
‘Yes, sir,’ promised Wilkins. ‘It would please him to be told that.’
The man turned to the hall table.
‘He wanted you to have these, sir,’ said Wilkins, offering him a huge bunch of Queen Elizabeth roses. ‘He’s very proud of them.’
‘Tell him I was very grateful.’
‘Perhaps we’ll see you again, sir,’ said Wilkins, knowing it was unlikely.
‘I hope so,’ said Charlie, politely, knowing he would not make a return visit.
‘What lovely flowers,’ enthused Janet, as Charlie handed her the roses three hours later.
‘I got them from Sir Archibald Willoughby,’ reported Charlie.
The girl looked sharply at him.
‘The Director wouldn’t like it if he knew you’d seen him,’ said Janet, formally.
‘Fuck the Director, he’ll know anyway because his watchers followed me, all the time. They were so bloody obvious they should have worn signs around their necks.’
‘It’s still improper,’ insisted the girl.
‘If he doesn’t like it, he can go to Prague tomorrow and put his head in the noose, instead of staying behind in a comfortable office sticking pins in maps.’
The First Secretary, Vladimir Zemskov, was being cautious, judged Kalenin, unwilling to be openly critical before the full Praesidium.
‘It is distasteful to us to have to demand an explanation from such an experienced officer as yourself, Comrade General,’ he said.
Kalenin nodded, appreciatively.
‘But Comrade Kastanazy has made the complaint about the progress so far,’ hardened the Soviet leader. He waited, pointedly. ‘And the consensus of opinion,’ he continued, ‘is that insufficient thought and planning has been put into proposals to repatriate General Berenkov …’
‘I refute that,’ said Kalenin, bravely.
Several members of the Praesidium frowned at the apparent impertinence.
‘… I asked to be given a certain period of time,’ reminded Kalenin. ‘I understood from Comrade Kastanazy that I was being allowed that time. To my reckoning, it has yet to expire …’
‘… There are only a few more days,’ reminded Zemskov. The man was offended, Kalenin saw, and the ambivalent attitude was disappearing in favour of Kastanazy. They’d all follow Zemskov’s lead, he knew.
‘Allow me those days,’ pleaded Kalenin.
‘But no more,’ said Zemskov, curtly.
I won’t need any more, thought Kalenin.
(15)
Charlie invariably grew nostalgic about the East European capitals he visited, trying to envisage the life of centuries before and those years free of concerted oppression when the people delighted in grandiose architecture and extravagant monuments to their own conceit.
‘Prague would have been a women’s city,’ he told himself, in the taxi negotiating its way over the Manesuv Bridge. He stared along the Vlatva river towards the Charles Bridge upon which he was scheduled to meet Kalenin the following day.
‘Please God, make it be all right,’ he mumbled. He became aware of the driver’s attention in the rear-view mirror and stopped the personal conversation. A psychiatrist would find a worrying reason for the habit, Charlie knew.
The car began to go along Letenska and Charlie gazed up at Hradany Castle on the hill. The remains of King Wenceslaus were reported to be there, he remembered. He should try to visit the cathedral before he left.
The reception at the embassy was stiffly formal, which Charlie had expected. It was an embassy unlike most others, in which he had no friends, and he guessed no one there would make it easy. The high-priority message from Downing Street to the ambassador would have indicated the importance of Charlie’s mission, but equally it would have alerted the diplomat to the risk of having his embassy and himself exposed in an international incident that could retard for years the man’s progress through the Foreign Office. It was right they should resent his intrusion, he accepted.
‘I hope to leave within days,’ Charlie assured the First Secretary, who gave him dinner. Charlie’s cover came from the Treasury, checking internal embassy accounts. It was the easiest way for quick entry and exit.
‘Good,’ said the diplomat, whose name was Collins. He was a balding, precise man who cut his food with the delicacy of a surgeon. His attitude reflected that of the ambassador, Charlie guessed.
‘There really shouldn’t be any trouble,’ tried Charlie.
‘We sincerely hope not,’ said Collins immediately.
He was regarded with the distaste of a sewage worker come to clear blocked drains with his bare hands, decided Charlie. Sod them.
‘There is one thing,’ said Charlie, remembering the threat made when the C.I.A. presence had been forced upon the department. It seemed rather theatrical now, but it was a precaution he would have to take.
‘What’s that?’
‘I shall want a gun.’