I'd been thinking of it but certainly not expecting it. 'I'll start organising things when we get to the hotel. Incidentally, you've probably got company waiting there: a certain Spohr, plus daughter.'
'Professor Spohr?' He seemed impressed. 'That's quick.'
'Professor? Where did you meet him? – not in Beit Oren?'
'Yep. He did a year. Came out about six weeks ago.'
'You're getting a better class of jailbird these days. He's ordered champagne and caviar to be waiting for you; what did you do? – save him from drowning in the cell bucket?"
'No, just that most of the time we were the only English-speaking Christians in the place.'
'And you spent a year talking about Christianity? You don't know anything except the churches have pointed tops.'
'Very interesting bloke. He's a mediaeval archaeologist.'
'So what did he go down for?'
'Well, he was excavating a site without permission-'
'They don't give you a year for that.'
They do if you pull a gun on the cops who've come to arrest you.' He was twisting uneasily to look over his shoulder.
'Ah. So this is just an old boys' reunion.'
'Could be.' He was still glancing back.
I said: 'What's the trouble?'
'There's a car…' he said softly.
"The white 1100? It was in the park with us, but this is still the normal route into town.'
'Yes…" He studied the road ahead, trying to remember. We were coming up to a big roundabout. 'If you go right here, you come in over the river on George Grivas Street, is that right?'
'I think so.' He looked at me and I shrugged and then nodded and leant forward to tell the driver to make the turn. 'I know it isn't the quickest way, but my friend wants to see something of the Engomi area.'
So we turned right. So did the 1100.
Ken said: 'Would they have told Cyprus I was coming in?'
'Sure to have done.' After all, you don't pay the airline fare to deport somebody unless you've made sure you won't have to double it by bringing him back when the other place won't take him either. 'But the authorities here wouldn't bother to tail you. All they have to do is check the hotel registers."
'Yees… I'm not going back to jail, you know.' He said it quietly, as much to himself as to me.
I looked across, a bit surprised. 'No reason why you should. Specially if you don't go back to Israel.'
He just nodded, and looked back. The white 1100 was staying about fifty yards back on a fairly empty road. If hewas tailing us, it was quite an efficient job. But just his hard luck that he was behind two pathologically suspicious characters.
We came over the river Pedieos – a steep green gorge but with only a flabby brown trickle at the bottom – and the town began to thicken up. The 1100 closed in, casually.
Our driver slowed to make a left turn that would have brought us along Evagoras Avenue to Metaxas Square, Nicosia 's busiest junction and the closest entrance to the walled city. I tapped him on the shoulder hastily. 'Keep going, keep going. Go down Makarios instead.'
'But it's stupid-'
'It's our money on the clock.'
The big shoulders shrugged but we kept going. And it way stupid, an unnecessary loop, doubling back. And if the 1100 was just as stupid…
He was. Makarios Avenue also brings you down to the Metaxas Square traffic-lights, and from a hundred yards away we could see we'd be caught by a red.
Ken looked at me. 'Shall we dance?'
'If you like. But don't hit him before I do; my record can stand it better.'
We stopped and the 1100 stopped immediately behind and we were out. I heard the taxi-driver's surprised shout dwindle away and then we had both doors of the 1100 open.
I said: 'It's a nice day for a drive, but what makes you think we know the only good route on the island?'
He was maybe my age but more solidly built, with a softedged square face, brown hair that was thinning back from a high forehead, fluffy side-whiskers and very calm blue eyes behind rimless glasses. He just rested his forearms on the wheel and looked coolly from Ken to me, and finally asked: 'What are you doing?' A slightly clipped accent.
'Louder,' Ken suggested, 'and more worried. You're an innocent citizen out for an afternoon drive and we couldbe the Hole-in-the-Wall gang for all you know.'
'I do not think you will rob me here.' We had quite a nice little traffic jam building up around us, with innocent bystanders watching curiously. Our own driver was climbing out.
I said: 'It's a hire car. He's not resident.'
'Sure,' Ken said, leaning in and punching the preset buttons on the car radio and watching the wavelength needle jump along the scale. 'But… that's 292 metres, isn't it?' He turned the on-off switch and the car flooded with a fast-talking gabble in… Hebrew.
Ken said reprovingly: 'That's not clever, is it? Staying pre-tuned to the Voice of Israel. Ha Mosad wouldn't like it.'
'Ha Mosad?' I queried.
'The Establishment. Latest name for the Sherut Bitachon.' The Israeli secret service. 'Ask him what he does for a cover job here.'
'What do you do for a cover job?'
'Not that he'll tell you.' Ken added.
'Then why ask him? We know what he looks like, we can find out his name by reporting his car number.'
By now a couple of cars in the rear rank were hooting impatiently, and our own driver was shaking my arm and making imploring noises.
Ken said: 'What do you think, friend?'
The new friend looked at me and his voice was as calm as ever. 'I think you are Roy Case.'
I stepped back and said politely: 'You have the advantage of me.'
'Not yet.' He pulled the doors shut. 'My name is Mihail Ben Iver. I deal in non-ferrous castings." He swerved out past our taxi and on across the square.
'You see?' Ken said. 'All done by kindness.'
4
I overtipped the taxi driver without changing the suspicious stare he was giving us, and Sergeant Papa saluted and swung open the glass doors for us. And gave Ken a rather careful look.
Inside, everything was calm, except Kapotas, of course. I introduced Ken, gave him the register to sign, and asked: 'Did the Spohrs arrive yet?'
'Yes. Father and daughter.'
I raised an eyebrow and he said: 'Austrian. They are upstairs, in 323 and 321, the best rooms.'
That niggled me a bit. So why wasn't / in a best room, instead of tripping over holes in the carpet of 208? 'Did you send up the champagne?'
There was a peculiar neutral look on his neat accountant's face. 'Not yet. They said they would wait for Mr Cavitt.'
Ken said: 'Well, they can wait a bit longer; I'm having a bath first.' He rubbed his palms together as if he could still fee] the prison grime – and maybe he could; he probably hadn't come out more than a couple of hours before they stuck him on to the airliner.
I said: Til tell them you're here.'
Kapotas gave him a key. 'I have put you in 206, near to Mr Case.'
Ken took it and picked up his bag. Thanks. Drop in and take a glass with the Professor, Roy. You'll like him. I haven't met the daughter.' He ignored the lift and bounced lightly up the stairs.
Kapotas said in his most blank voice: 'I would welcome your opinion of the champagne.'
I looked at him, but he turned away. So I followed through the service door and down the corridor to the wine cellar. He unlocked it, and we went in. It was a small square rough-plastered room with no window and just a single unshaded bulb glaring down on the near-empty wine racks, the heavy scarred old table in the middle, and in the middle of that the opened box of Kroeger Royale '66. Behind me, Kapotas carefully locked the door again. What the hell…?
When he turned around, his face and voice weren't neutral any more.
'Will you tell me,' he hissed, 'exactly how you take the cork out of a sub-machine gun? '
Five of them, actually. Partly dismantled to fit into the box, and wrapped in newspaper to stop them rattling, with other twists of newspaper holding a few cartridges each.