Harder than a paw of the Sphinx, he thought. The Colonel, happily banging around in the corner, interrupted his humming to call out over his shoulder.
Piece of cheese to go with your muffin, Harry?
No thank you, sir.
The Colonel came ambling over and cups and saucers clattered down on the table. He wandered off once more and the Major just had time to pluck the wing of a fly out of his cup before the Colonel came ambling back with the teapot, still merrily humming to himself and doing a sort of bearish dance as he slowly shuffled up and down the narrow room on his false leg.
One step forward and a feint to the side, two steps backward and a feint to the side. Feint and shuffle and one and two, the Colonel turning around to make some backward headway and sidling up to the table more or less rumpside first. One step forward and two steps backward.
The Colonel's Bolshie Trot, as it was called, after Lenin's famous description of the backward advance of historical necessity in a world that seemed to care nothing at all about necessity, historical or otherwise, and preferred to do its advancing hindside first, as the Colonel said, both for protection and in order to keep its eye on the past. A dance indulged in by the Colonel only before breakfast and late at night, rarely, when he had drunk too much brandy.
In his hand the Colonel was carrying a chunk of hard white decaying matter, greasy and crumbling. A vague smile drifted across his face as he popped a piece of it into his mouth and stood beside the table, swaying on his false leg, gazing down at his hand.
Cheese, he muttered, chewing thoughtfully. Do you realize that's what we all must have looked like once upon a time, back when the protein molecules were getting started on this bit of stray matter we call the earth? Makes you think all right, doesn't it. Did you say you wanted a piece, Harry?
I think not.
No? Well the truth is breakfast has always been my best meal. Any old thing in the cupboard tastes delicious and the first pipe tastes delicious and I'm ready to take on the world. But then a half-hour later I begin to creak and wheeze and feel as if I weighed a thousand pounds, and that's it for me for the day.
Cheese to cheese. Makes you think all right.
The Colonel hadn't gotten around to dressing yet. He was wearing huge baggy underdrawers that hung down to his knees and one khaki sock, on his real foot, with a large hole in the toe. His undershirt was so poorly darned in so many places it gave his upper torso the appearance of a mass of poorly healed wounds. A faded old yachting cap was perched on the side of his head, and even though most of his body was covered, he looked far more naked than any unmutilated man ever could.
Feint and shuffle, one and two. Humming happily, the Colonel sat down at the table.
Nice out, Harry?
Clear, cool, no wind.
Lovely, yes. Best time of the day really. People haven't had time to muck up the camp and the air's sweet and everything tastes delicious. Later it's all just one stale pipe. No cheese for you?
Not at the moment, thank you.
No? Well the tea's almost ready. Been out for an early turn in the desert, have you?
The Major nodded, waiting. The Colonel maneuvered his false leg into a more comfortable position and poured tea. After they had added sugar and stirred, and sipped, the Colonel fell to studying the plate of muffins on the table. He pinched one.
Hm. I thought I'd picked those up this week, but it must have been last week.
The Colonel glanced at one of the open books on the table and raised his eyes.
Well now. You've been to consult the Sphinx?
He's Colly's brother, the Major blurted out.
What?
Colly's brother, repeated the Major. Our Colly's younger brother.
The Colonel's eyes lit up.
Is that true?
Yes.
What's his name?
Joe. Joe O'Sullivan Beare. He still uses the full family name. From the Aran Islands by way of a dozen years in Palestine and more recently a tour in America as the shaman of an Indian tribe in the Southwest.
He seems to know everyone from his days in Palestine. Stern and Maud and all kinds of people Stern used to work with years ago. I haven't heard of most of them but you probably have.
The Colonel's eyes flickered brightly.
Well well well, and here's more than a chapter or two from the past turning up unexpectedly. . . Colly's brother, of all people. What's he like?
Nimble, speaks quickly sometimes, seems to have an odd way of expressing himself. It's hard to describe.
The Colonel beamed.
As if things were a bit off-balance, perhaps? As if you were in a small boat at sea and the sky and the land and the water were all moving around? Up, down, sideways, never quite still?
The Major nodded eagerly.
That's it exactly. As if nothing were ever able to find a safe place for itself.
The Colonel laughed.
Colly, on the nose. His brother must be just like him.
And there's also something strange about the way he views time, continued the Major. It seems to be all of a piece to him with no past and present and future particularly, just one big sea with us upon it. The dead, for example. No one seems to be really dead to him. But it's not as if they were still out there somewhere, or off somewhere, it's very different from that. It's much more concrete and seems to do with thinking of them as being within us, a part of us, not dead in that sense. Alive because we've known them and therefore they're a part of us.
Hm. You had that feeling with Colly sometimes, but not as much as with his brother, apparently.
The Colonel smiled.
You were taken with him, weren't you?
I suppose I was.
Yes, well, it's not surprising. Colly was a man of great charm. There was something out of the ordinary to him, another dimension. And if his brother is like him only more so, and meeting him for the first time at the Sphinx as you did, under a full moon . . .
The Colonel broke off, humming happily to himself.
Colly's brother, he murmured. How astonishing.
He gazed down at the crumbling piece of cheese in his hand.
Yes, curious. What does he want?
A meeting with Bletchley.
That's all?
Yes, that's all. He says Bletchley has a standing order out to kill him, so he can't arrange a meeting by himself.
Bletchley? A standing order to kill Colly's brother?
Yes, and Liffy's already dead. Killed because he was mistaken for Joe.
The Colonel was shocked.
What?
Yes.
But that's not right. That's not right at all.
It certainly isn't. And Ahmad is also dead. The desk clerk at the Hotel Babylon.
Ahmad? But he was a delightful fellow, perfectly harmless. What's going on here?
And a young man named Cohen, said the Major. David Cohen.
Of the Cairo Cohens? Cohen's Optiks?
Yes. He was a Zionist agent apparently, and a close friend of Stern.
Well of course he was a friend of Stern, all the Cohens were. That goes way back to Stern's father's time. But what in God's name is going on here? Has Bletchley lost his mind? How could his men have mistaken Liffy for Joe?
It seems Liffy was passing himself off as Joe. On purpose.
Why?
To give Joe time to recover after the hand-grenade explosion and Stern's death. To give Joe time, a chance, to save himself.