Something moved in the darkness. She felt an arm encircling her throat. She choked, and found she couldn’t scream.
Or breathe.
Chapter 21
After five years, Peggy Kinsolving felt so much a part of Thames House that she often forgot she had begun her career in the other Service. She had applied for a transfer after being seconded to MI5 to work with Liz Carlyle on an investigation into a mole in one of the intelligence services. Peggy admired Liz; she liked her straightforward manner, which was such a contrast to the deviousness of some of the people she had worked with in the other Service. She’d felt from the start of working with Liz that they were a team: that Liz would take Peggy into her confidence, and give her credit for what she did.
And Peggy enjoyed her work. She was never happier than when she was following a paper trail, supporting Liz as she made her investigations. Peggy had started her working life as a librarian and loved the cataloguing, classification and retrieval of facts. That was her métier. She could sniff out information and make sense of what others saw as a meaningless jumble of unrelated facts.
Every three months or so, she was reminded of her original employers when she had lunch with her one remaining link to Vauxhall Cross, Millie Warmington. After Peggy’s secondment to MI5 and subsequent decision to join for good, the two women had kept in touch. They had been young trainees together and had got along from the start. Millie had a sweet nature and was a loyal friend. But she was also one of life’s complainers; Peggy privately called her ‘Millie the Moaner’. Today Peggy could have done without their long-standing lunch date, because she was busy trying to find out more about the Aristides and her crew while also investigating Amir Khan’s past in Birmingham. There was the further drawback that Millie liked to take her time over lunch. However simple the meal – they usually met in an Italian pasta place on the South Bank – she always managed to spin it out for at least an hour. Peggy’s efforts to move things along were never successful.
Today proved no exception. At first, they chatted for a while about their social lives. Millie had no steady boyfriend but seemed genuinely pleased that Peggy’s Tim, a lecturer in English, was still very much in the picture. Then the conversation moved on to work and their respective jobs. Peggy was always fairly discreet since she knew that Millie was a bit of a gossip. She also knew that her boss, Liz Carlyle, was the object of much interest on the other side of the river, and that plenty of MI6 officers would love to know more about her – both what she was working on and, in particular, her private life. Peggy was fiercely loyal to Liz and so diverted Millie’s probing remarks by asking her about her own work.
This gave Millie just the opening she wanted and there followed the usual litany of complaint, especially about her boss. When they had joined up, both Peggy and Millie had worked under Henry Boswell, an old-fashioned but thoroughly decent man. Then Millie had switched departments and now worked for a female tyrant she called The Dragon. After ten minutes ranting about The Dragon’s latest misdemeanours, Millie had barely hit her stride, but by then Peggy had tuned out, her thoughts turning to the work she needed to do that afternoon.
It was only when they finally left the restaurant and walked towards Vauxhall Bridge for Millie to go back to Vauxhall Cross and Peggy to cross the river to Thames House, that something her friend was saying caused Peggy to tune in again. Afterwards, she was very glad that she had.
‘Good lunch?’ asked Liz. She was in her office, the remains of a salad from the canteen in a take-out container on her desk.
‘I saw my friend from Six.’
‘“Moaning Millie?”’ asked Liz with a laugh. Peggy had described her friend’s habitual complaining often enough
‘The same,’ said Peggy. ‘And still moaning. But she did tell me one thing I thought you’d want to know. Bruno Mackay’s been moved from Paris.’
‘Fane mentioned it but he didn’t say where.’
‘Athens. He’s been made Head of Station there.’
‘Golly. Good for old Bruno,’ said Liz, which seemed a generous thing for her to say. Peggy knew there was no love lost there.
‘Yes, but he’s come a bit of a cropper, I’m afraid. One of his agents has been killed. Murdered actually – she was strangled.’
Liz’s face showed her astonishment. ‘How dreadful. What happened?’
‘They’re not sure. She was found dead in her flat.’
‘Do they know who did it?’
‘I don’t think so.’
‘Was it connected with work?’
Peggy shrugged. ‘I don’t think they know that either. She was a long-standing asset of Six, doing some undercover investigation for the Athens Station. I gather Bruno selected her himself.’ Which made it even worse for him, thought Peggy. Hard though it was – because he was so insufferable – you nonetheless had to feel sorry for Bruno Mackay. One month in his new job and an agent dead.
Liz seemed to share her feelings. She asked, almost as an afterthought, ‘What was the undercover investigation?’
Peggy looked expressionlessly at her as she said, ‘Working in some charity, I believe.’
‘Not UCSO?’
Peggy nodded.
Liz was shaking her head angrily. ‘They say a leopard doesn’t change its spots . . . but I thought, just for a moment, Geoffrey Fane might have changed his and gone straight. I see I was wrong.’
Chapter 22
Liz was sitting at her desk, still fuming that Geoffrey Fane had put an agent into UCSO without telling her, when the phone rang. It was Fane’s secretary.
‘Hello, Liz. You wanted to see Geoffrey. He’s suggesting lunch. Can you do tomorrow?’
Liz groaned to herself. She’d originally wanted a short meeting in his office, so they could bring each other up to date. Now she wanted to make a formal complaint about his duplicity. She certainly didn’t want to sit exchanging pleasantries in a public place. But, in typical Fane fashion, he had forestalled her.
She sighed. ‘OK. Where does he want to meet?’
‘The Athenaeum. Twelve-thirty.’
‘The Athenaeum? I thought his club was the Travellers.’
‘It is. But he’s just joined the Athenaeum as well and he’s doing most of his lunching there at present.’
‘How grand,’ said Liz sardonically. Fane’s secretary laughed and rang off.
The following morning Liz dressed with more care than usual for a working day, since she wasn’t going to be outfaced by Geoffrey Fane with his two smart clubs. The idea was to look charming and demure.
There had been a time, several years ago, when Liz had been afflicted by wardrobe chaos. In those days, not long after she’d acquired her first flat in the basement, she’d found it impossible to keep both her domestic life and her busy working life in order. On a morning like this she might well have found all suitable garments either stuck in a non-functioning washing machine or waiting in a pile to go to the cleaner’s.
But, along with her rather larger apartment, she had inherited a helpful lady, who not only cleaned the flat but also took her clothes to the cleaner’s and managed the washing machine. So today when she opened her wardrobe she actually had a choice. It was a lovely sunny day and after a moment’s thought she selected a pretty silk skirt, a pink linen jacket and a pair of kitten-heeled shoes that she’d bought for a friend’s wedding.
That should do, she decided, hoping to lull Geoffrey Fane, so that when she revealed that she knew about the agent he’d put into UCSO without telling her, he’d be caught completely off guard. She was looking forward to seeing his face then.
Not even the prospect of Fane could dampen Liz’s spirits this morning. Martin was coming to London for the long Bank Holiday weekend. He had an early-afternoon meeting, coincidentally with MI6, but they planned to meet up later in a Pimlico wine bar near the headquarters of both Services. Then home to Liz’s flat. If the weather stayed fine on Saturday, they might drive down to Wiltshire where Liz’s mother
still lived in the gatehouse of the former estate where Liz’s father had been estate manager and where Liz had grown up.
By mid-morning the sky was overcast but the cloud looked unthreatening. Liz decided to walk to the Athenaeum. The deckchairs in St James’s Park were occupied by optimistic lunch-hour sunbathers, waiting for the cloud to clear. She crossed the Mall and climbed the long flight of stairs, her light skirt fluttering in the sharp breeze that had sprung up, and emerged on to Waterloo Place, where the Athenaeum Club stood four-square and confident, a pristine white stucco Georgian building with classical columns and a blue and white frieze set high up along its façade.
As she climbed the steps to the entrance, Liz realised with some annoyance that she felt nervous. She was not an habituée of the Pall Mall clubs, which she found dauntingly grand, and this one seemed grander than most. As she pushed open the tall semi-glazed door, Liz combed her hair into some sort of order with her fingers. Inside, was a tall pillared hall leading to a magnificent double staircase. Moonlike, high on the wall, a large round clock dominated the space below. Classical statues loomed to right and left of her.
Inside, a green-suited, brass-buttoned porter looked at Liz with polite enquiry. After a moment’s hesitation, she asked for Geoffrey Fane. The porter nodded and indicated a familiar figure rising from a leather bench to greet her. Somewhere in a room to the right there was a deep masculine hum of conversation – some kind of a bar presumably. But to Liz’s relief Fane pointed a long finger in the opposite direction and said, ‘Shall we go straight in?’
‘Please,’ she said. Lunch would be long enough spent in his company without wasting further time on a drink beforehand.
She followed Fane’s tall lean figure, smart in a dark pin-stripe suit, into the almost empty dining room; most people were evidently still in the bar. The head waiter seated them at a small, highly polished darkwood table, beside one of the huge floor-to-ceiling windows, looking out over a balustrade on to a garden. The room seemed enormous and oddly bare. No pictures hung on its high cream-coloured walls and the only decoration came from the huge pendant ceiling lights.
Liz said, ‘I didn’t know this was one of your clubs.’
Fane looked flattered. ‘I’ve only just become a member,’ he said, with a trace of satisfaction. ‘You’re one of my first guests.’
She watched as he wrote down their choice of food with a pencil on a little pad and handed it to the waitress. She’d seen this routine before when she’d lunched with her mother and her friend Edward at his military club further along Pall Mall. It had struck her as odd then; some sort of hangover from the past, she supposed.
‘Well, Elizabeth,’ said Fane, leaning back comfortably, ‘how goes it? Have you managed to find out anything more about this Khan chap?’
‘A bit. I went to Birmingham and saw his parents. They seemed astonished to learn where their son had been. The father was a traditional head of the household. He didn’t let his wife get a word in, and he certainly didn’t approve of female authority figures – namely me. At first he claimed that the last time they’d heard from Amir, he was in Pakistan. But then one of Amir’s sisters showed up: before he could stop her, she said they’d had a postcard from Amir recently – from Athens.’
‘Athens?’ Fane’s fork stopped in mid-air on its way to his mouth. ‘What on earth was he doing there?’ There was a studied nonchalance to his tone.
‘I was hoping you might be able to tell me that, Geoffrey.’
‘Me?’ Fane’s eyes opened wide in a show of innocence.
‘Yes. I gather you’ve just lost an agent there.’
He put down his knife and fork. ‘You seem to hear the Service’s news almost before I do.’
‘When it concerns my business, I do,’ Liz said crisply. ‘I gather the agent was working in UCSO. I hope you’re not going to tell me it had nothing to do with the Amir Khan investigation.’
‘Of course not, Elizabeth. I was going to tell you this week in fact, only news of this death . . .’ He faltered expertly. ‘It rather knocked me for six.’
‘I don’t know why you didn’t tell me before you put her in. You were the one who suggested there might be a link between UCSO and Amir Khan; you were the one who said, and I quote, “We’ll need to liaise closely.”’ Liz’s voice was rising in anger but the neighbouring tables were unoccupied and no one could overhear their conversation.
Fane’s jaw clenched, his face flushed. For a moment Liz thought he would lose his temper. Then, as she watched, he got a grip of himself and his face returned to its usual pallor. ‘Reproof accepted, Elizabeth,’ he said stonily.
This was as close to an apology as he was ever likely to offer, so Liz sighed pointedly and said, ‘Why was this woman planted in UCSO?’
Fane jumped at the question like a lifeline. ‘When I saw you last, I mentioned Blakey had been in touch – he’s the USCO director in London, you remember. He was concerned someone in the organisation was leaking information about their shipments. I offered to help and had a word with Bruno.’
He added tartly, ‘I imagine with your intelligence network you already know that he’s become Head of Station in Athens.’
Liz nodded. ‘So are you saying this was all Bruno’s doing?’
‘Well, not exactly.’ Fane paused; Liz could see he was caught between a desire to be seen as in charge and a wish to avoid assuming any blame for the disaster. ‘I decided to put someone in, but the selection was left to Bruno. He chose a young woman, half-Greek, with an English mother. Possibly not the wisest selection as it’s turned out.’
‘Was her murder linked to her agent work in USCO?’
‘Unlikely, we think. She was just told to keep her eyes open and, as far as we know, hadn’t reported anything at all. No, it seems she was young and fancy-free. Perhaps something of a goer, as we used to say.’ Fane’s lips creased briefly into a smile until he noticed Liz didn’t smile back. ‘A good reason not to choose her, I’d have thought.’ He shrugged as if to imply it had had nothing to do with him, it was all very regrettable, but there you had it.
‘So what happens next?’ asked Liz. She wasn’t going to let Fane wriggle out of this.
‘Well, nothing for the moment. There’s an investigation into her murder underway, and the Greek police are already a little suspicious about why the girl was working for UCSO. It seems she was wildly over-qualified for the job she was doing. Another reason not to have picked her, I’d have thought. Bruno’s keeping his head down.’
Liz said, ‘If we assume Blakey’s suspicions were correct and there is a leak, the question I have is: why? Why would anyone go to so much trouble? I know the UCSO shipments were very valuable, but surely an oil tanker has to be a better bet. If I were a pirate, I’d rather demand a ransom from the likes of Exxon or Shell than from a charity.’
Fane considered this. ‘I agree,’ he said finally, as if conferring a blessing. ‘There must be another agenda being pursued.’
‘And if it turns out that your agent’s death was connected with UCSO, then it’s something important. If it’s worth killing for.’
Fane nodded. ‘The problem is, my hands are tied in Athens right now. At least until the local police are out of the way.’
But I don’t have that difficulty, thought Liz. She said, ‘We have a few leads in Birmingham to follow up. It would be useful to check the UCSO side of things over here as well. If there is a connection between Amir Khan and UCSO, it might not be confined to their Athens office.’
Fane nodded. ‘I’ll ring Blakey and tell him to expect a call from you.’
Honours even, thought Liz.
When Fane suggested having coffee upstairs, she shook her head. She’d got what she’d wanted out of the lunch and had no desire for more of Geoffrey Fane’s company.
‘Oh, come on, Elizabeth,’ he said in his most charming manner. ‘I’ve apologised, so let’s raise a cup of coffee to our further close co-operation.’
Liz relent
ed; it would have been churlish not to. As they climbed the broad staircase up to the library, Fane pointed to the clock. ‘Do you see anything odd about that?’
Liz stared for a moment at the round face with its roman numerals. ‘Yes. There are two sevens and no eight.’
‘Clever girl’, he said approvingly. ‘Not many people notice that.’
‘Why don’t they change it?’
‘It’s been like that since the clock was made. It’s kept that way, perhaps as a reminder that nothing is perfect.’
Was this a further apology? ‘Well,’ Liz said, as she climbed the staircase, ‘perhaps all intelligence services should have a clock like that. To remind us that what we see is not necessarily the truth.’ Their eyes met for an instant and they both smiled. For different reasons, she thought.
Chapter 23
In the library, Liz sat down in a button-backed leather chair while Fane collected coffee from a table by the door. He brought the cups over and sat down next to her, facing the door, stretching out his long legs and leaning back. Given the rather fraught conversation downstairs, he looked surprisingly pleased with himself. He looks like a cat, thought Liz. If he had a tail he’d be swishing it.
One of the porters came in through the open door of the library, followed by another man. The porter pointed to Liz and Fane, and to her astonishment she saw that the newcomer was Martin Seurat. From the expression on his face, Martin seemed as surprised to see Liz as she was to see him.
‘Ah,’ said Fane, ‘Monsieur Seurat is here.’ He looked at Liz archly. ‘I forgot to say that I’d asked him to join us. I thought it could be useful for us to compare notes on Amir Khan.’
As Seurat came across the room towards them, Fane stood up. ‘Martin, how good to see you,’ he said, sounding uncharacteristically warm. ‘You know Elizabeth Carlyle, don’t you?’
Martin had recovered from his initial surprise. ‘Of course – though I know her as Liz. She is Thames House’s liaison with our other Service.’
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