Only it wasn’t Manfred.
It was Camilla, disguised as a man. She sank beside Rigby, slammed the door and said to the driver, “Start up, for God’s sake! The Gestapo are on their way.” To Rigby she said, “Manfred’s safe.”
“What happened? Where is he?”
“Rigby — I’m sorry to tell you this. His wife collected him.”
“His wife? Manfred is married?” The world caved in on Rigby.
“I know. It was a complete shock. There were two young children. Absolute sweeties. He doesn’t deserve them. She arrived in a car twenty minutes ago. One of Manfred’s colleagues had tipped her off that Hitler had ordered a raid on the school. I think they’ll make it to the border. I dressed up like this in case the place is being watched. To put them off, you see.”
Rigby was numb.
Even when the plane took off she felt no sense of relief at escaping. She would never trust a man again.
Fifty years on, that flight home is still a void in her memory. She does have some recollection of the landing at Croydon, when Chamberlain stepped off the plane to make his famous announcement to the press. In some of the photographs Rigby can be seen in the background, standing beside Camilla, who is wearing a trilby. She remembers the moment of horror when Chamberlain produced his famous piece of paper and waved it triumphantly. She recalls opening her handbag and checking that it still contained the agreement Hitler had signed.
Chamberlain was holding up a piece of paper with the words Presented by the Führer for Good Posture.
How was it, then, that shortly after, he appeared to read out the text of the agreement? As Rigby had observed, you could say one thing for Neville Chamberlain — his memory was phenomenal.
The Best Suit
She was a talkative redhead and he couldn’t hear a thing she was saying. Night clubs aren’t places for conversation. Her mouth moved, sometimes making words, sometimes smiling. But it didn’t matter. She’d moved in so close as she danced that her breasts kept touching him. Herbie tried to look cooler than he felt. He wasn’t used to women coming onto him. He was forty-three, paunchy and five foot four. He wasn’t even a regular clubber. He was there with about sixty other friends of Paddy, one of the regulars at his local. Paddy had decided to celebrate his fortieth in style.
After twenty minutes the strain got too much, and Herbie gestured that it might be time for a drink. The woman nodded and reached for his hand and they threaded a route to the bar. Even there it was difficult to talk without shouting, so he suggested finding a pub outside. But when they were in the street she said, “You’re coming to my place. It’s only a short walk.”
Herbie didn’t argue.
Her place was a two-storey house on Richmond Hill with a spectacular view of the lights reflected in the river. This was one classy lady. She handed him a bottle and told him to open it while she changed into something more relaxing. “I hope you’re not a connoisseur,” she said.
“What do you mean?” he said. “This is vintage bubbly.”
“It isn’t chilled.”
“No problem.” He popped the cork and filled two tall glasses.
“Tell me about yourself,” she said when she came back in a red silk kimono. “What do you do for a living?”
“This and that.” He didn’t want to say he was unemployed. He’d been made redundant in April. “How about you?”
“I’m an entrepreneur.”
Herbie wished he’d said he was an entrepreneur. It sounded better than this and that. “Cheers.”
They touched glasses and drank.
“You’re not married?” she asked.
“Divorced.”
“Want to come to bed with me?”
“Try and stop me,” Herbie said, and it seemed a smart answer.
But she said, “Yes, I will.”
He wasn’t sure if he’d heard right. “What — stop me?”
“I’m not ready yet.”
“So why did you mention it?”
“I wanted to make sure you fancy me. Relax. It’s not a total no-no.”
“Why invite me back and open a bottle if you’re not in the mood?”
“I said relax.” She reached for a remote and switched on Billie Holliday. “I don’t even know your name yet.”
He told her.
She said, “I’m Chloe. What’s your taste in music?”
They talked jazz for a while, but Herbie’s mind was about ten per cent involved. He was trying to understand why she’d invited him back and gone cold on him.
Then he had his answer. The door behind him opened and a man in a dark suit strolled in, as calm as the manager in a shoe shop except that he looked like a state executioner. Chloe wasn’t fazed. She said, “What do you think?” And it was obvious she was speaking to the man, not Herbie.
The man took a long look at Herbie and said, “Turn your head.”
This was so unexpected that Herbie did as he was told.
The man said, “He’ll do.”
Chloe said, “I knew you’d agree.” Turning back to Herbie, she said, “I told him you were amazing.”
Herbie had been called many things in his time. Amazing wasn’t one of them. “What’s going on?” he asked, not liking this at all.
The man said to Chloe, “You tell him. I’m off.” He crossed the room to the main door and let himself out.
“Did I dream that?” Herbie asked.
“Brady’s all right. He was giving me a second opinion.”
“What for?”
“Don’t worry. You passed. Want to make five grand and get an Armani suit for nothing?”
“I don’t get you.”
“You might... if you play your cards right.” She widened her eyes a fraction.
“I don’t follow any of this.”
“That’s the beauty, Herbie. You don’t need to. If you’re bright — and I know you are — you take what’s on offer and ask no questions.”
“Is it legal?”
“There you go — another question.”
“I need to know what I’m getting into.”
“No one’s asking you to hold up a bank.”
“What am I supposed to do?”
“Nothing, except be yourself.”
“For five grand?”
“And a designer suit. And a date with me.”
“Tonight, you mean?”
“You don’t give up, do you? Tomorrow, you go for a fitting at the Armani shop in Knightsbridge. It’s important you look right. Did I say you also get a shirt and tie and shoes? A dark shirt and a white tie.”
“Who’s paying for all this?”
“Not you. I’ll meet you in Sloane Street. You get the first payment of a thousand pounds just for turning up. Would two-thirty do?”
“I suppose.”
“Do you want me to call a taxi?”
“Now?”
She nodded. He’d already concluded he wouldn’t get lucky tonight. No bad thing. He’d lost most of his confidence when the man called Brady appeared from nowhere.
“I’ll walk.”
On the way home, he went over everything in his mind. Five grand and all the clothes. There had to be a catch. She’d said he wouldn’t be asked to rob a bank, but what other scam could she be planning? In the club he’d got the impression she fancied him. What had happened later suggested another scenario. It seemed as if he’d been earmarked for a job. Chloe had brought him to the house to be vetted by Brady. Maybe she, or others, had been watching him before he ever set foot in the club.
She hadn’t asked him to do anything illegal. What could he lose by going along to Knightsbridge tomorrow?
She stepped out of a silver Porsche the minute he arrived in Sloane Street. He couldn’t see who was driving before it moved off.