"There was a ship or submarine or something lying offshore."
"It has been taken care of, sir. There you are. A little rest and you'll be good as new, sir."
"Sure. Thanks."
I sat up and looked shorewards over the ship's low rail. Under the gray clouds, the shore had a different shape from what I remembered. Where there had been a headland of sorts, crowned by the remnants of Brossach Castle, there was now only a scar on the face of the cliff. I thought of Les Crowe-Barham, and of Vadya. Then I thought, for some reason, of the big Highland ox. I hoped he, at least, had escaped.
Footsteps came briskly along the deck, and I turned to see a stocky, gray-haired man in tweeds, with a fierce gray moustache. I had no doubt this was Colonel Stark, and I had a pretty good idea, having been through similar situations before, of the kind of elaborate official routine he'd put me through now. The only consolation was that I was going to have the fun of telling him that he'd have to quarantine this whole ship, himself included, until it was determined just how contagious I was.
It was two weeks before I was pronounced safe to associate with the human race again, after having so many samples taken of me that for a while it seemed likely there'd be nothing left. I was glad to see that an American doctor had been invited to participate in the experiments. Otherwise, I'd have had to rush to offer my unique plague-proof blood to my own country after the British got through analyzing it. As it was, I felt justified in getting off by myself for a day, to sort out a few uncomfortable thoughts I hadn't been able to deal with while serving as a scientific specimen.
They'd given me back the little red car, which they'd found somewhere and had tuned and filled with gas- excuse me, petrol. I thought that was pretty nice of them. I drove away from Glasgow through the usual Scottish drizzle and, after getting lost a couple of times, managed to locate a small village named Daibright. I parked outside the churchyard and went in through the iron gate.
The rain had stopped, but the place was dripping wet. There seemed to be nobody around. The little white church was shut up tight. I walked around slowly, examining the gravestones. Every fourth one, approximately, was a Glenmore. Back in the corner stood a large memorial monument dedicated, apparently, to family members who'd once been buried elsewhere and then dug up and re-interred here by someone who felt the family spirits should spend eternity together. Here I found the gentleman of whom I'd been told, who'd been beheaded for spying for the wrong side, or for being caught at it; I also found one who'd died in a duel. I couldn't help thinking that, while we don't have many dealings nowadays with the dueling sword or pistol, or the headsman's axe, we still seem to find interesting ways of getting ourselves killed.
It gave me a guilty, regretful feeling to stand there alone. I remembered a girl who'd died in London who'd have liked very much to see this. Then I heard the gate creak, and I looked around and thought a ghost had come alive. I mean, it was a girl, and she was wearing a sweater and the blue-and-green hunting tartan: a kilt-skirt closed by a big safety pin.
I stood quite still, watching her close the gate carefully, a little awkward because of the flowers she carried. Then she turned toward me. It was not Nancy Glenmore, of course. This was another girl, not quite as pretty, but with that fresh look they have up there. She gave me a questioning glance, and went on to a new grave near the church, and began to arrange her flowers carefully before
I hesitated. I mean, it would not have been difficult to strike up a conversation. A question about the family would have done it. She was obviously a distant relative, or she would not have been wearing the plaid. And I was certified safe by the doctors of two countries; I was definitely not contagious, plague-wise. Nor was anybody, to the best of my knowledge, interested in shooting at me at the moment; there should be no risk from stray bullets.
Still, she looked like a nice kid, and I did seem to leave a lot of dead people behind me, one way or another.
I walked quickly back out to the roadster and drove to an inn for breakfast, having passed up the ship's food that had been offered me. I bought a paper from a machine in the doorway. I had not, of course, been informed of what had happened up north after I'd left, or what measures had been taken. Security had been very tight, and I was, after all, a foreigner. Besides, Colonel Stark hadn't like me very much. He'd made it quite clear that while, officially, he was aware that I'd made a valuable contribution by escaping alive, personally he'd have thought more of me if I'd died fighting bravely at Crowe-Barham's side. Well, he was entitled to his opinion.
Waiting for my food, I read the paper carefully. It mentioned no strange diseases. There was, however, one small item about a question being asked in the House of Commons or wherever they ask those questions, concerning the accident that had totally destroyed a secret atomic installation, previously unheard of, on the northwest coast of Scotland, near the tiny village of Kinnochrue. I closed the paper thoughtfully. Apparently they'd used a low-yield nuclear device for extermination purposes, maybe one of the tactical gizmos. It could have done the work. Maybe I could stop feeling guilty about not being able to swim well enough to keep afloat Basil's body and the burden attached to it…
Six hours later I was in London. My instructions, transmitted through international channels, were to check back into Claridge's, where the room was still being held for me. A code word slipped into the text told me that the room and phone were now safe for conversation. This meant, I figured, that our own people wanted the answers to a few questions they had not been able to ask while I was in British hands. I didn't particularly look forward to another interrogation, so it wasn't with any great eagerness that I turned the Spitfire over to the doorman, got the key from the desk, and went upstairs, limping a little. Ironically, after all the exotic things that had happened to me, the wrenched knee I'd got stepping into a hole in the ground was the only thing that still bothered me, physically speaking.
I climbed the stairs, unlocked the door, and went into the big room and started to throw my coat on the bed and stopped. There were some clothes on the bed. I picked up one item: a very simple little white shift of a dress, rather wrinkled and grimy, as if it had been worn longer than it should have been. I looked around. There were some suitcases parked beyond the bed that I recognized. I went into the bathroom and looked at the small blonde girl in the enormous tub.
"Some people knock," Winnie said. "Even husbands have been known to, not to mention people impersonating husbands. My God, it's nice to be clean again. I've been locked up in an attic for three weeks. One pitcher of water a day. You'd think they had rationing or something. Hand me that big towel, will you?"
I held it for her, as she stepped out of the tub. She wrapped it around her, and used another, smaller towel to dry her dripping hair.
"They turned you loose?" I said.
"She turned me loose," Winnie said, rubbing hard. "Do you make a habit of shooting holes in your girl friends? If so, remember I'm no friend of yours. I'm just your wife, and it's strictly a temporary arrangement, at that."
I cleared my throat and said, "What about Vadya?"
"She'll live. She sent you a message."
"Give."
"She says she bears no hard feelings for the interrogation you put her through, since you owed her something for a similar scene in the past. She says you once let a girl go whom you should probably have killed, and now she's doing the same. She says that makes the two of you even except for a bullet in the guts. She says she'll be looking forward to paying off that score, some day."
Well, that sounded like Vadya. How she'd got out of the place before it blew, in her condition, and made her way back south, I'd probably never know. How, after being in the place for hours, she'd escaped getting infected with McRow's plague, nobody'd ever know. She was a durable girl. I drew a long breath. Suddenly I felt much better, even though I was going to have to change part of my report to read failure instead of success. After all, I'd been more or less instructed to kill her.