“Isn’t it rather a pity you couldn’t have found out about Frankfurt the
“Of course it’s a pity,” Nigel snapped. “But if you had been listening a little more closely, I think you would have heard me say that she took a standby seat. The official flight list bearing her name was therefore not complete until literally the moment when the plane took off.”
“Sounds a bit of a muddle all the same,” said Mountjoy. “What about the unofficial flight list?”
No, thought Brotherhood. It is not a muddle. To make a muddle you must first have order. This is inertia, this is normality. What was once a great service has become an immovable hybrid — half bureaucrat, half freebooter, and using the arguments of the one to negate the other.
“So where is she?” somebody asked.
“We don’t know,” said Nigel with satisfaction. “And short of asking the Germans — and incidentally of course the Americans — to search every hotel in Frankfurt, which seems a long shot to say the least, I fail to see what more we can do. Or could have done. Frankly.”
“Jack?” said Brammel.
Brotherhood heard an older version of his own voice ebb into the darkness. “God knows,” he said. “Probably sitting on her backside in Prague by now.”
Nigel again. “She’s done nothing
Mountjoy voiced a previous worry. “I do think the telephone intercept from the American Embassy
Nigel had his answer pat: “Only long after the event, I’m afraid. Perfectly understandably, the transcribers saw nothing dramatic in the intercept and passed it to us twenty-four hours after the phone call had taken place. The information that
Nobody seemed to know whether they could or couldn’t.
Mountjoy said it was time to take a view. Dorney said they really must decide whether to call in the police and circulate Pym’s photograph, and be damned. At this Brammel came sharply to life.
“If we do that, we may as well put up the shutters,” he said. “We’re so nearly there. We’re so
“I’m afraid we’re not,” said Brotherhood.
“But of course we are!”
“It’s guesswork. Still. We need the furniture van. That won’t be a simple job either. He’ll have used cut-outs, halfway houses. The police know how to do those things. We don’t have a chance. He’s using the name of Canterbury. Or we think he is. That’s because in the past all his worknames have been places — he’s got a tic about that. Colonel Manchester, Mr. Hull, Mr. Gulworth. On the other hand they just may have taken the cabinet to Canterbury and Canterbury is where he is. Or they’ve taken it to Canterbury and Canterbury is where he isn’t. We need a square beside the sea and a house with a woman in it whom he apparently loves. She’s not in Scotland or Wales because that’s where he says she is. We are not in a position to comb every seaside town in the United Kingdom. The police are.”
“He’s mad,” said a ghost.
“Yes, he’s mad. He’s been betraying us for more than thirty years and so far we have failed to certify him. Our error. So we may as well agree that he makes a pretty decent show of being sane when he needs to, and that his tradecraft is damn good. Is anybody nearer to him than I am?”
The door opened and closed. Kate was standing before them with an armful of red striped folders. She was pale and very steady, like a sleepwalker. She laid one folder before each guest.
“These have just come up from Sig. Int.,” she said, to Bo only. “They ran the
* * *