A Small Town In Germany

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by A Small Town in Germany [lit]


  'And he took his files down there, did he?' Turner asked, very quiet.

  'Then there was Chapel: that took up a part of Sunday, of course. Playing the organ.'

  'How long's he been doing that, by the way?'

  'Oh, years and years. It was reinsurance,' Meadowes said with a little laugh. 'Just to keep himself indispensable.'

  'So Monday he was happy.'

  'Serene. There's no other word for it. "I like it here, Arthur," he said. "I want you to know that." Sat down and got on with his work.'

  'And he stayed that way till he left?'

  'More or less.'

  'What do you mean, "More or less"?'

  "Well, we had a bit of a row. That was Wednesday. He'd been all right Tuesday, happy as a sandboy, then Wednesday I caught him at it.' He had folded his hands before him on his lap and he was looking at them, head bowed.

  'He was trying to look at the Green File. The Maximum Limit.' He touched the top of his head in a small gesture of nervousness. 'He was always quizzy, I told you. Some people are like that, they can't help it. Didn't matter what it was; I could leave a letter from my own mother on the desk: I'm damn sure that if Leo had half a chance he'd have read it. Always thought people were conspiring against him. It drove us mad to begin with; look into anything, he would. Files, cupboards, anywhere. He hadn't been here a week before he was signing for the mail. The whole lot, down in the bag room. I didn't care for that at all at first, but he got all huffy when I told him to stop and in the end I let it go.' He opened his hands, seeking an answer. 'Then in March we had some Trade Contingency papers from London - special guidance for Econ on new alignments and forward planning, and I caught him with the whole bundle on his desk. "Here," I said. "Can't you read? They're subscription only, they're not for you." He didn't turn a hair. In fact he was really angry. "I thought I could handle anything!" he says. He'd have hit me for two pins. "Well, you thought wrong," I told him. That was March. It took us both a couple of days to cool down.'

  'God save us,' said Turner softly.

  'Then we had this Green. A Green's rare. I don't know what's in it; Johnny doesn't, Valerie doesn't. It lives in its own despatch box. H.E.'s got one key, Bradfield's got the other and he shares it with de Lisle. The box has to come back here to the strong-room every night. It's signed in and signed out, and only I handle it. So anyway: lunchtime Wednesday it was. Leo was up here on his own; Johnny and me went down to the canteen.'

  'Often here on his own lunchtimes, was he?'

  'He liked to be, yes. He liked the quiet.'

  'All right.'

  'There was a big queue at the canteen and I can't stand queuing, so I said to Johnny, "You stay here, I'll go back and do a spot of work and try again in half an hour." So I came in unexpectedly. Just walked in. No Leo, and the strong-room was open. And there he was; standing there, with the Green despatch box.'

  'What do you mean, with it?'

  'Just holding it. Looking at the lock as far as I could make out. Just curious. He smiled when he saw me, cool as anything. He's sharp, I've told you that. "Arthur," he says, "you've caught me at it, you've discovered my guilty secret." I said, "What the hell are you up to? Look what you've got there in your hands!" Like that. "You know me," he says, very dis­arming. "I just can't help it." He puts down the box. "I was actually looking for some seven-o-sevens, you don't happen to have seen them anywhere, do you? For March and February fifty-eight." Something like that.'

  'So then what?'

  'I read him the Riot Act. What else could I do? I said I'd report him to Bradfield, the lot. I was furious.'

  'But you didn't?'

  'No.'

  'Why not?'

  'You wouldn't understand,' Meadowes said at last. 'You think I'm soft in the head, I know. It was Myra's birthday Friday; we were having a special do at the Exiles. Leo had choir practice and a dinner party.'

  'Dinner party? Where?'

  'He didn't say.'

  'There's nothing in his diary.'

  'That's not my concern.'

  'Go on.'

  'He'd promised to drop in sometime during the evening and give her her present. It was going to be a hair-dryer; we'd chosen it together.' He shook his head again. 'How can I explain it? I've told you: I felt responsible for him. He was that kind of bloke. You and I could blow him over with one puff if we wanted.'

  Turner gazed at him incredulously.

  'And I suppose there was something else too.' He looked Turner full in the face. 'If I tell Bradfield, that's it. Leo's had it. There's nowhere for him to go, is there? See what I mean. Like now, for instance: I mean I hope he has gone to Moscow, because there's nowhere else going to take him.'

  'You mean you suspected him?'

  'I suppose so, yes. Deep down I suppose I did. Warsaw's done that for me, you know. I'd like Myra to have settled there. With her student. All right, they put him up to it; they made him seduce her. But he did say he'd marry her, didn't he? For the baby. I'd have loved that baby more than I can say. That's what you took away from me. From her as well. That's what it was all about. You shouldn't have done that, you know.'

  He was grateful for the traffic then, for any noise to fill that damned tank and take away the accusing echo of Meadowes' flat voice.

  'And on Thursday the box disappeared?'

  Meadowes shrugged it away. 'Private Office returned it Thursday midday. I signed it in myself and left it in the strong­room. Friday it wasn't there. That was that.'

  He paused.

  'I should have reported it at once. I should have gone run­ning to Bradfield Friday afternoon when I noticed. I didn't. I slept on it. I brooded about it all Saturday. I chewed Cork's head off, went for Johnny Slingo, made their lives hell. It was driving me mad. I didn't want to raise a hare. We'd lost all manner of things in the crisis. People get light-fingered. Some­one's pinched our trolley, I don't know who: one of the Mili­tary Attachés' clerks, that's my guess. Someone else has lifted our swivel chair. There's a long-carriage typewriter from the Pool; diaries, all sorts, cups from the Naafi even. Anyway, those were the excuses. I thought one of the users might have taken it: de Lisle, Private Office...'

  'Did you ask Leo?'

  'He'd gone by then, hadn't he?'

  Once more Turner had slipped into the routine of interro­gation.

  'He carried a briefcase, didn't he?'

  'Yes.'

  'Was he allowed to bring it in here?'

  'He brought in sandwiches and a thermos.'

  'So he was allowed?'

  'Yes.'

  'Did he have the briefcase Thursday?'

  'I think so. Yes, he would have done.'

  'Was it big enough to hold the despatch box?'

  'Yes.'

  'Did he have lunch in here Thursday?'

  'He went out at about twelve.'

  'And came back?'

  'I told you: Thursday's his special day. Conference day. It's a left-over from his old job. He goes to one of the Ministries in Bad Godesberg. Something to do with outstanding claims. Last Thursday he had a lunch date first I suppose. Then went on to the meeting.'

  'Has he always been to that meeting? Every Thursday?'

  'Ever since he came into Registry.'

  'He had a key, didn't he?'

  'What for? Key to where?'

  Turner was on unsure ground. 'To let himself in and out of Registry. Or he knew the combination.'

  Meadowes actually laughed.

  'There's me and Head of Chancery knows how to get in and out of here, and no one else. There's three combinations and half a dozen burglar switches and there's the strong-room as well. Not Slingo, not de Lisle, no one knows. Just us two.'

  Turner was writing fast.

  'Tell me what else is missing,' he said at last.

  Meadowes unlocked a drawer of his desk and drew out a list of references. His movements were brisk and surprisingly confident.

  'Bradfield didn't tell you?'

  'No.'


  Meadowes handed him the list. 'You can keep that. There's forty-three of them. They're all box files, they've all dis­appeared since March.'

  'Since he went on his track.'

  'The security classifications vary from Confidential to Top Secret, but the majority are plain Secret. There's Organisation files, Conference, Personality and two Treaty files. The sub­jects range from the dismantling of chemical concerns in the Ruhr in 1947 to minutes of unofficial Anglo-German exchanges at working level over the last three years. Plus the Green and that's Formal and Informal Conversations-'

  'Bradfield told me.'

  'They're like pieces, believe me, pieces in a puzzle... that's what I thought at first...I've moved them round in my mind. Hour after hour. I haven't slept. Now and then-' he broke off. 'Now and then I thought I had an idea, a sort of picture, a half picture, I'd say...' Stubbornly he concluded:

  'There's no clear pattern to it, and no reason. Some are marked out by Leo to different people; some are marked "certified for destruction" but most are just plain missing. You can't tell, you see. You just can't keep tabs, it's impossible. Until someone asks for the file you don't know you haven't got it.'

  'Box files?'

  'I told you. All forty-three. They weigh a couple of hundred­weights between them I should think.'

  'And the letters? There are letters missing too.'

  'Yes,' Meadowes said reluctantly. 'We're short of thirty-three incoming letters.'

  'Never entered, were they? Just lying about for anyone to pick up? What were the subjects? You haven't put it down.'

  'We don't know. That's the truth. They're letters from Ger­man Departments. We know the references because the bag room's written them in the log. They never reached Registry.'

  'But you've checked the references?'

  Very stiffly Meadowes said: 'The missing letters belong on the missing files. The references are the same. That's all we can tell. As they're from German Departments, Bradfield has ruled that we do not ask for duplicates until the Brussels decision is through: in case our curiosity alerts them to Hart­ing's absence.'

  Having returned his black notebook to his pocket, Turner rose and went to the barred window, touching the locks, test­ing the strength of the wire mesh.

  'There was something about him. He was special. Some­thing made you watch him.'

  From the carriageway they heard the two-tone wail of an emergency horn approach and fade again.

  'He was special,' Turner repeated. 'All the time you've been talking, I've heard it. Leo this, Leo that. You had your eye on him; you felt him, I know you did. Why?'

  'There was nothing.'

  'What were these rumours? What was it they said about him that frightened you? Was he somebody's fancy-boy, Arthur? Something for Johnny Slingo, was he, in his old age? Working the queers' circuit was he, is that what all the blushing's for?'

  Meadowes shook his head. 'You've lost your sting,' he said. 'You can't frighten me any more. I know you; I know your worst. It's nothing to do with Warsaw. He wasn't that kind. I'm not a child and Johnny's not a homosexual either.'

  Turner continued to stare at him. 'There's something you heard. Something you knew. You watched him, I know you did. You watched him cross a room; how he stood, how he reached for a file. He was doing the silliest bloody job in Registry and you talk about him as if he was the Ambassador. There was chaos in here, you said so yourself. Everyone except Leo chasing files, making up, entering, connecting, all stand­ing on your heads to keep the ball rolling in a crisis. And­what was Leo doing? Leo was on Destruction. He could have been making flax for all his work mattered. You said so, not me. So what was it about him? Why did you watch him?'

  'You're dreaming. You're twisted and you can't see anything straight. But if by any chance you were right, I wouldn't even whisper it to you on my deathbed.'

  A notice outside the cypher room said: 'Back at two fifteen. Phone 333 for emergencies.' He banged on Bradfield's door and tried the handle; it was locked. He went to the banister and looked angrily down into the lobby. At the front desk a young Chancery Guard was reading a learned book on engin­eering. He could see the diagrams on the right-hand page. In the glass-fronted waiting-room, the Ghanaian Chargé in a vel­vet collar was staring thoughtfully at a photograph of Clydeside taken from very high up.

  'All at lunch, old boy,' a voice whispered from behind him.

  'Not a Hun will stir till three. Daily truce. Show must go on.' A hanging, vulpine figure stood among the fire extinguishers. 'Crabbe,' he explained, 'Mickie Crabbe, you see,' as if the name itself were an excuse. 'Peter de Lisle's just back, if you don't mind. Been down at the Ministry of the Interior, saving women and children. Rawley's sent him to feed you.'

  'I want to send a telegram. Where's room three double three?'

  'Proles' rest room, old boy. They're having a bit of a kip after all the hoohah. Troubled times. Give it a break,' he suggested. 'If it's urgent it'll keep, if it's important it's too late, that's what I say.' Saying it, Crabbe led him along the silent corridor like a decrepit courtier lighting him to bed. Passing the lift, Turner paused and stared at it once more. It was firmly padlocked and the notice said 'Out of order.'

  Jobs are separate, he told himself, why worry, for God's sake? Bonn is not Warsaw. Warsaw was a hundred years ago. Bonn is today. We do what we have to do and move on. He saw it again, the Rococo room in the Warsaw Embassy, the chande­lier dark with dust, and Myra Meadowes alone on the daft sofa. 'Another time they post you to an Iron Curtain country,' Turner was shouting, 'you bloody well choose your lovers with more care!'

  Tell her I'm leaving the country, he thought; I've gone to find a traitor. A full-grown, four-square, red-toothed, paid-up traitor.

  Come on, Leo, we're of one blood, you and I: underground men, that's us. I'll chase you through the sewers, Leo; that's why I smell so lovely. We've got the earth 's dirt on us, you and I. I'll chase you, you chase me and each of us will chase ourselves.

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  De Lisle

  The American club was not as heavily guarded as the Embassy. 'It's no one's gastronomic dream,' de Lisle explained, as he showed his papers to the GI at the door, 'but it does have a gorgeous swimming-pool.' He had booked a window table overlooking the Rhine. Fresh from their bathe, they drank Martinis and watched the giant brown helicopters wavering past them towards the landing-strip up river. Some were marked with red crosses, others had no markings at all. Now and then white passenger ships, sliding through the mist, bore huddled groups of tourists towards the land of the Nibelungs; the boom of their own loudspeakers followed them like small thunder. Once a crowd of schoolchildren passed, and they heard the strains of the Lorelei banged out on an accordion; and the devoted accompaniment of a heavenly, if imperfect, choir. The seven hills of Königswinter were much nearer now, though the mist confused their outline.

  With elaborate diffidence de Lisle pointed out the Petersberg, a regular wooded cone capped by a rectangular hotel. Neville Chamberlain had stayed there in the thirties, he explained: 'That was when he gave away Czechoslovakia, of course. The first time, I mean.' After the war it had been the seat of the Allied High Commission; more recently the Queen had used it for her State Visit. To the right of it was the Drachenfels, where Siegfried had slain the dragon and bathed in its magic blood.

  'Where's Harting's house?'

  'You can't quite see it,' de Lisle said quietly, not pointing any more. 'It's at the foot of the Petersberg. He lives, so to speak, in Chamberlain's shadow.' And with that he led the conversation into more general fields.

  'I suppose the trouble with being a visiting fireman is that you so often arrive on the scene after the fire's gone out. Is that it?'

  'Did he come here often?'

  'The smaller Embassies hold receptions here if their draw­ing-rooms aren't big enough. That was rather his mark, of course.'

  Once again his tone became reticent, though the dining-­room was empty. Only in the corner n
ear the entrance, seated in their glass-walled bar, the inevitable group of foreign corre­spondents mimed, drank and mouthed like sea horses in sol­emn ritual.

  'Is all America like this?' de Lisle enquired. 'Or worse?' He looked slowly round. 'Though it does give a sense of dimension, I suppose. And optimism. That's the trouble with Americans, isn't it, really? All that emphasis on the future. So dangerous. It makes them destructive of the present. Much kinder to look back, I always think. I see no hope at all for the future, and it gives me a great sense of freedom. And of caring: we're much nicer to one another in the condemned cell, aren't we? Don't take me too seriously, will you?'

  'If you wanted Chancery files late at night, what would you do?'

  'Dig out Meadowes.'

  'Or Bradfield?'

  'Oh, that would be really going it. Rawley has the combi­nations, but only as a long stop. If Meadowes goes under a bus, Rawley can still get at the papers. You really have had a morning of it, haven't you,' he added solicitously. 'I can see you're still under the ether.'

  'What would you do?'

  'Oh, I'd draw the files in the afternoon.'

  'Now; with all this working at night?'

  'If Registry's open on a crisis schedule there's no problem. If it's closed, well, most of us have safes and strong-boxes, and they're cleared for overnight storage.'

  'Harting didn't have one.'

  'Shall we just say he from now on?'

  'So where would he work? If he drew files in the evening, classified files, and worked late: what would he do?'

  'He'd take them to his room I suppose, and hand in the files to the Chancery Guard when he left. If he's not working in Registry. The Guard has a safe.'

  'And the Guard would sign for them?'

  'Oh Lordy, yes. We're not that irresponsible.'

  'So I could tell from the Guard's night book?'

  'You could.'

  'He left without saying good-night to the Guard.'

  'Oh my,' said de Lisle, clearly very puzzled. 'You mean he took them home?'

 

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