IT WAS TOWARDS THE middle of November that Eva Delectorskaya took the call from Lucas Romer. She was in the Transoceanic offices one morning, working on the spiralling ramifications of her naval-manoeuvres story – every newspaper in South America had picked it up in one way or another – when Romer telephoned himself and suggested meeting on the steps of the Metropolitan Museum. She took the subway to 86th Street and walked down Fifth, crossing the road from the grand apartment buildings to be closer to Central Park. It was a cold breezy day and she tugged her hat down over her ears and knotted her scarf higher round her throat. There was a scatter of autumn leaves on the pavements – or fall leaves on the sidewalks, as she should learn to call them – and the chestnut sellers were out on the street corners, the salty, sweet smoke from their braziers wafting by her from time to time as she sauntered down towards the great edifice of the museum.
She saw Romer standing waiting for her on the steps, hatless and wearing a long dark grey overcoat she hadn't seen before. She smiled instinctively, happily, thinking again of their two days in Long Island. To be in New York in November in 1941, going to meet her lover on the steps of the Metropolitan Museum seemed the most normal and natural of activities in the world – as if her whole life had somehow been steering her in the direction of this particular moment. But the realities massing elsewhere behind this encounter – the war news she'd read in the newspapers this morning, the Germans advancing on Moscow – made her realise that what she and Romer were experiencing was, in actual fact, utterly absurd and surreal. We may be lovers, she reminded herself, but we are also spies: therefore everything is entirely different from what it seems.
He came down the steps to meet her. She saw his frowning, serious face and wanted to kiss him, wanted to go immediately to that hotel across the road and make love all afternoon – but they didn't even touch; they didn't even shake hands. He circled round her and pointed to the park.
'Let's go for a stroll,' he said.
'Nice to see you. I've missed you.'
He looked at her in a manner as if to say: we simply can't talk to each other like this.
'Sorry,' she said, 'Chilly, isn't it?' and walked briskly ahead of him into the park.
He increased his speed and caught up with her. They walked along the pathway in silence for a while and then he said, 'Fancy a bit of winter sunshine?'
They found a bench with a view of a small valley and some craggy rocks. A boy was throwing a stick for a dog that refused to chase it. So the boy would fetch the stick, walk back to the dog and throw it again.
'Winter sunshine?'
'It's a simple BSC courier job,' he said. 'To New Mexico.'
'If it's so simple why don't they do it?'
'Since the Brazil map they want to seem extremely kosher. They're a bit worried that the FBI might be watching them. So they asked me if someone from Transoceanic could do it. I thought of you. You don't have to if you don't want to. I'll ask Morris if you don't fancy it.'
But she did fancy it, as she knew he knew she would.
She shrugged. 'I suppose I could do it.'
'I'm not doing you a favour,' he said. 'I know you'd do a good job. A good secure job. That's what they want. You pick up a package and you give it to someone else and you come home.'
'Who'll run me? Not BSC.'
'Transoceanic will run you.'
'All right.'
He gave her a piece of paper and told her to read it until she'd memorised the details. She studied the words that were written down, remembering Mr Dimarco at Lyne, all his tricks, match colours to words, match memories to numbers. She handed the piece of paper back to Romer.
'Usual telephone code to base?' she asked.
'Yes. All the variations.'
'Where do I go after Albuquerque?'
'The contact there will tell you. It'll be in New Mexico. Possibly Texas.'
'And then what?'
'Come back here and carry on as normal. It should take you three or four days. You'll get some sun, see an interesting part of the country – it's big.'
He moved his hand along the bench and interlinked his little finger with hers.
'When can I see you again?' she said, softly, looking away. 'I loved the Narragansett Inn. Can we go back?'
'Probably not. It's difficult. Things are heating up. London is getting frantic. Everything is rather…' He paused, as if to say the words was distasteful. 'Rather out of control.'
'How's "Gold"?'
"Gold" is our only ray of sunshine. Very helpful, indeed. Which reminds me: this operation you're on is "Cinnamon". You're "Sage".'
'"Sage".'
'You know how they love procedure. They'll have opened a file and written "Cinnamon" on it. "Top Secret".' He reached in his pocket and took out and gave her a bulky, buff envelope.
'What's this?'
'Five thousand dollars. For the man at the end of the line, wherever that is. I would leave tomorrow if I were you.'
'Right.'
'Do you want a gun?'
'Will I need a gun?'
'No. But I always ask.'
'Anyway, I have my nails and my teeth,' she said, making claws with her hands and baring her fangs.
Romer laughed, giving her his wide white smile and she suddenly flashed to Paris and that day when they first met. She had a sudden vision of him crossing the street towards her. She felt weak.
'Bye, Lucas,' she said, then looked at him meaningfully. 'We have to sort something out when I come back.' She paused. 'I don't know if I can carry on like this – it's getting to be a strain. You know what I mean – I think-'
He interrupted her. 'We'll sort something out, don't worry.' He squeezed her hand.
She was going to say it, she didn't care. 'I think I'm in love with you, Lucas, that's why.'
He didn't say anything, just took this in with a slight pursing of the lips. He squeezed her hand again and then let go.
'Bon voyage,' he said. 'Be careful.'
'I'm always careful. You know that.'
He stood up, turned and walked away, striding down the path. Eva watched him go, saying to herself: I command you to turn, I insist you turn and look at me again. And sure enough he did – he turned and walked backwards for a few paces and smiled and gave her his familiar half-wave, half-salute.
The next morning Eva went to Penn Station and bought a ticket to Albuquerque, New Mexico.
9. Don Carlos
'PEOPLE WILL THINK WE'RE having an affair,' Bobbie York said. 'All these impromptu visits. I'm not complaining. I'll be very discreet.'
'Thank you, Bobbie,' I said, refusing to participate in his banter. 'You are my supervisor, after all. I'm supposed to come to you for advice.'
'Yes, yes, yes. Of course you are. But how can I advise someone as capable as you?'
I had postponed Bérangère's tutorial so I could see Bobbie in the morning. I didn't want to sit in his rooms as he plied me with whisky again.
'I need to talk to somebody who can tell me about the British Security Services in World War Two. MI5, MI6 – that sort of thing. SIS, SOE, BSC – you know.'
'Yeeesss,' Bobbie said. 'Not my strong point. I sense Lord Mansfield has bitten.'
Bobbie was no fool, however hard he strove to seem like an amiable one.
'He has,' I said. 'I'm to meet him on Friday – at his club. I just feel I need to be a bit more clued-up.'
'My, what drama. You've got to tell me all about this one day, Ruth, I insist. It seems splendidly cloak-and-dagger.'
'I will,' I said. 'I promise. I'm a bit in the dark myself, to tell the truth. As soon as I know I'll fill you in.'
Bobbie went to his desk and searched through some papers.
'One of the very few advantages of living in Oxford,' he said, 'is that there is an expert on just about every subject in the world, sitting on your doorstep. From medieval astrolabes to particle accelerators – we can usually serve one up. Ah, here's the man. Fellow of All Souls called Timothy Thoms.'