If I had the luck to see London again I'd have Egerton out on his neck: the least we expect of Control is that they don't recruit an agent already recruited by Moscow and then tell us to hold his hand.
I couldn't do it by signals. My only communications were through Merrick and the Embassy because direct contact had been banned since Coleman had used a phone in Amsterdam and didn't hear the bugs.
The saloon gave a lurch and Foster hung on to his strap: a fire-service vehicle had been klaxoning for gangway and its amber rotating lamp went past as we tucked in to let it through. I think we hit the kerb with a rear wheel before we pulled straight again, the kerb or a drift of packed ice.
Foster was looking at me rather sharply.
'We'd have heard it,' I said, 'from this distance.'
'Are you sure?'
'The basement's crammed with the stuff.'
He looked away.
Nervous and physical courage don't always come in the same package. For twenty years this man had run the most sensitive type of operation known to the trade, watching his words and weighing them whenever he spoke, wherever he was, cold sober in his Whitehall office or half-drunk in a woman's flat, fabricating his lies and testing them, detecting flaws and repairing them and listening all the time for, a false note in the speech of others that would tell him of danger, carrying for twenty years a bomb that ticked in his pocket.
But he'd no stomach for the real thing, for trinitrotoluene.
'There are other places?'
'According to the Czyn people I spoke to.’
'Which places?'
'You're not thinking straight, Foster. If I knew which places I'd tell you. The only one I'm certain about is the Praga Commissariat and I told you as soon as I could. My orders are to help you keep the peace in this fair city, try getting it into your head.'
'The Records Office,' he said reflectively, 'would be another place.'
'I'd say so. What price an amnesty when you can blow up the evidence?' The Records Office stocked secret information on every single citizen. 'It's your own fault there's not much time left: you've wiped out most of Czyn and the die-hard survivors are going to make sure there's some action before they join the rest. Praga was rigged for midnight originally, the same as Tamka. You'd have had more time.'
He shut up for a bit. I think he was working out the odds: he was still a top-line professional and he had a big operation running and he could only save it by going into his base and pulling the documentation out in time. On the other hand, he didn't like thinking about his skin plastered all over what was left of the ceiling.
Voskarev hadn't spoken since we'd got into the car. I watched his reflection on the glass of the division between the dark shapes of the driver and escort.
In a moment Foster said: 'If they find the explosive and defuse it we'd better have Ludwiczak brought along to talk to us.'
'He'll talk to me. He won't talk to you.'
Gently: 'The same thing, surely, since your instructions are to help me prevent disorder?'
'I just mean don't scare him off.'
'We don't want to scare anybody, old boy. The thing is that we'll need to put some calls out as soon as we know which are the other places. Evacuate the night staffs and so on.'
'You're not worried about the night staffs. You don't want one and a half million dossiers to go up in smoke because you can't run a slave state without Big Brother.'
There was another lurch and he steadied himself on the tip-up seat. Through the clear patch he'd made on the window I could see the arc of lamps in the distance, the Slasko-Dabrowski Bridge.
Then we began a nasty wobble and I could see the wheel jerking in the driver's hands. Foster held on to his strap. The wobble got worse and we slowed, pulling alongside the kerb.
'What's happening?'
'It looks like a flat.'
The car stopped and the driver got out and tapped at the window, calling something we couldn't hear. Voskarev opened the door, asking in Polish what the matter was.
'I regret that we have a puncture.'
'You must get us a taxi,' Foster told him quickly.
The driver pulled the door wide open and chopped for Voskarev's wrist to paralyse it in case there was a gun. Apparently there was, because the left hand went for the pocket of the coat, but the driver got there first so it was all right.
I told Foster: 'Don't do anything silly.' I didn't bother to look for a gun on him, he wasn't the type to carry one, the only thing you could say for the bloody man.
20: DOCUMENT
I told Voskarev I wanted his keys and his papers.
He stared around him as if looking for a street number through the clouded glass, as if lost in a place he'd thought familiar. I said
'I'll get them, otherwise. Don't embarrass yourself.' He opened his astrakhan coat, fumbling like an old man.
'Fast,' I said, 'very fast indeed.'
The driver said he'd get them for me and I told him to shut up. The driver wanted to kill him, I knew that.
Six, all cylinder-type, two on a separate ring, series numbers in sequence.
'Papers.'
The engine was still running. Exhaust gas came through the open door. Yellow light flooded the snow and went out.
'Oh come on,' I said.
Sweat was on his white face, glazing it like a toffee-apple.
Foster spoke to him quietly in Russian telling him not to worry, he would retrieve the situation. Such a windy phrase, that.
N. K. N. Voskarev, Deputy Chief Controller, Co-ordinated Information Services Foreign Division, seals and frankings U.B. liaison, all facilities requested up to ministerial privilege level.
Big fish.
I kept the passport and gave the identity card to the driver. 'There's a man under escort arriving at the Cracow within the next half an hour. Show this to his guards and tell them you're taking him over, Voskarev's orders. Get him to base.'
'Understood.'
A red card had dropped out of the folder and I picked it up and looked at it.
'Where's your insulin?'
'Here.' Voskarev tapped his case.
'Get it.'
The air came in, freezing against our legs. The driver stood impatiently, his breath clouding. The escort had shifted behind the wheel in case we had to take off suddenly.
'Look, you want that insulin? Give you five seconds.'
Stuff was flashing us, no parking here, only wanted a patrol. Red, very red sector. I looked at the driver.
'Right'
The briefcase was still open and Voskarev was trying to zip it. He clutched the hypodermic kit in one hand.
'The case stays here.'
He tried to take it with him and the driver did the wrist thing and papers hit the floor. Then he was pulled out.
'Bloody well calm down will you? He can keep the insulin and use it when he wants to, he's no good to us in a coma. You beat him up and I'll have you kicked into the camps, I can do that, now get moving.'
I dragged the door shut.
The man at the wheel got into gear and I slapped the division and told him to wait.
'It doesn't,' Foster said, 'look too well organised.’
'Best you can do with hired labour.'
I wound the division down. The handle was loose and took a bit more off the veneered panel.
Foster sat with his hand still in the looped strap. His eyes were almost closed, two slits glinting in the baggy flesh.
'You're making it worse for yourself,' he said.
Police klaxons were piping a see-saw note somewhere on the far side of the river.
Doors slammed much closer, behind us.
'Don't do that.'
I had to kick upwards before he could reach the handle. He'd seen it done on the telly or somewhere: this wasn't his type of field at all; he was political-intellectual, the big moves over a glass of bubbly.