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Knox wasn’t at all surprised to find Manning in one of the Fountain’s larger booths, flanked by Peterson and two younger men he didn’t recognise. They looked like they’d been shipped up from Oxford that morning – they were bright, eager, and were both wearing the same Prince of Wales check suit as Peterson.

The four men were all tucking into the restaurant’s signature welsh rarebit. To Knox’s non-gourmand eyes it looked like pretentious cheese on toast, but people who had actually sampled the dish described it in near-transcendental terms.

‘Enjoying your meal?’ Knox asked the group.

The four heads turned as one, no doubt expecting to see the maître d’ dutifully checking in on them.

‘Ah, Richard, care to join us?’ Manning said, gesturing to the edge of the booth.

Knox didn’t move.

‘Phillips here was just telling us a charming story about Fortnum’s sending hampers to some suffragettes who had been sent to prison for smashing their windows.’ One of the Oxford men smiled, enjoying his moment in Manning’s spotlight. ‘Rather gentlemanly, don’t you think?’ He cut a large slice of the rarebit, then gestured again at the banquette. ‘Please, sit.’

‘No, thank you,’ Knox replied. ‘I hear congratulations are in order.’

‘Yes, well, the PM thought it was for the best.’

‘Of course he did.’

Peterson coughed loudly into his napkin, a less than subtle warning that Knox should check his tone. Knox ignored him.

‘Would you like my report, sir?’ he asked.

‘Report?’

‘Into Bianchi and Moretti.’

‘Oh, yes.’ Manning turned to his two young acolytes. ‘Phillips, Harris, if you could excuse us for a moment.’

‘No need,’ Peterson said, placing his napkin on the table and shuffling out of the booth. ‘You can give it to me, outside.’

‘I really think the director general should hear it,’ Knox replied.

‘He will. Through me.’

Peterson guided Knox quickly out of the restaurant. Then, on the corner of Jermyn Street, asked him what exactly he thought he was playing at.

‘First buggering off to Cambridge and Holloway without approval, and now trying to make a scene in public. What the hell’s got into you?’

‘You sound stressed, Nicholas,’ Knox replied, his voice full of mock concern.

‘We’re in a period of transition,’ he replied. A political, neutral answer. ‘Everyone is feeling the strain.’

‘They look pretty relaxed to me.’ Knox pointed through the window at the three men still enjoying their lunch, Phillips and Harris hanging on to whatever anecdote Manning was telling them.

‘They haven’t spent all morning keeping the Spanish and Portuguese delegations from each other’s throats,’ Peterson said, somewhat less neutrally. ‘That thankless task fell to me.’

‘And I’m sure you put up a fight.’

Peterson let out a long sigh. ‘I don’t have time for this, Richard. What’s going on?’

‘I know why they were killed.’

‘So?’

It wasn’t the response Knox had expected.

‘You think that justifies talking to Manning like that?’ Peterson asked.

‘They weren’t just troublemakers. They’d worked out a way to replicate Pipistrelle.’

Concern suddenly flickered across Peterson’s face. He stepped closer to Knox.

‘You have proof?’ he asked, lowering his voice.

‘I have their equations. Their real equations.’

‘What the hell does that mean?’

‘Another set of papers. Hidden in their apartment, and not very well.’

Peterson glanced through the restaurant’s wide windows at Manning. Knox enjoyed imagining the cogs turning in his mind.

‘Your conclusion?’ he asked, when he turned back to face Knox.

‘Either they were hiding it from the person who killed them. Or they were hidden after they died, by someone who didn’t want me to see them.’

‘That sounds a little like putting the cart in front of the horse.’

‘Not if this whole thing is a set-up. They were behind a bookcase in the study, where Manning was waiting for us.’

Peterson sighed again, and took half a step back. ‘And that sounds more than a touch paranoid.’

‘Everyone’s a suspect,’ Knox replied, throwing Peterson’s line from the previous night back at him.

‘You seriously want me to believe the director general hid evidence in the middle of a crime scene and a whole team of investigators missed it?’

Peterson’s tone was dismissive but he still peered through the Fountain’s windows again, checking that Manning was still distracted by his lunch guests.

Knox shrugged.

‘It’s unlikely,’ he said. ‘But it’s not impossible, is it?’

Peterson paused before he answered. Knox wondered if Manning’s faithful servant was finally starting to have doubts about his master.

‘If Manning was behind all this, why would he have sent for you in the first place?’ Peterson asked. ‘He could have taken whatever he wanted from that flat and no one would have questioned him.’

‘I don’t know,’ Knox conceded. ‘But it’s a bit too much of a coincidence when the city’s about to become the world’s biggest intelligence powder keg.’

‘And we’re doing everything we can to make sure it doesn’t go off. Which includes not jumping to conclusions. For all we know half of these new calculations are gibberish, and they just stumbled onto something that looks like Pipistrelle by dumb luck.’

‘Or,’ Knox countered, ‘this is just a fragment of what they had, and the fuse has already been lit by someone.’

Peterson thought for another long moment. ‘Even if you’re right,’ he said, finally, ‘and the security of the conference is in question, and your conspiracy is real, you still have to follow proper procedures. Give what you’ve got to White for review and we’ll reassess the threat.’

‘Then what?’

‘Then you go home.’

CHAPTER 27

Medev’s Tupolev Tu-104 jet came into land over Lake Onega a few minutes before one o’clock in the afternoon. He’d been lucky that none of the planes kept on standby for the KGB at Chkalovsky airbase north of Moscow had been requisitioned for other emergencies that morning. He’d left the Lubyanka at half past nine, and was in the air an hour later.

He was the only passenger on the plane, and for the last two hours he’d let his mind reach back into his own memories of Karelia.

He’d been to this corner of the Soviet Union once before. In the winter of 1937 he’d been stationed on the Solovetsky Islands, five hundred kilometres north of Petrozavodsk in the middle of the White Sea. The islands were home to the Solovki special prison camp, where the people who had been deemed the greatest threat to Stalin’s authority were sent during the Great Purge. The islands had originally been a single, vast Orthodox Christian monastery before they were taken over by the Party and turned into what would become the model for all the other gulags that would spring up across the country’s more remote areas.

The islands were not hospitable. Living conditions for the NKVD interrogators, their staff, and the prison guards were harsh. For the prisoners, they were wretched. Many of the academics and intellectuals imprisoned at Solovki lost limbs either to frostbite or to forced labour. Others simply died overnight as temperatures, already below zero during the short days, plunged even further in the long nights.

Medev was a promising, young NKVD lieutenant when he was sent to Solovki. It was a formative experience. For five months, he saw first-hand the casual ruthlessness of absolute power, and learned how much ambition could advance your standing in Stalin’s world, and how much could see you ending up in a mass grave. He also saw that doing what was right and doing what was right in the eyes of the Party were not always the same thing, even if they looked like they were.