A Perfect Spy (54 page)

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Authors: John le Carre

BOOK: A Perfect Spy
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Pym is too mad, too dead to care.
“You'd have been super,” he says.
“I'd have said: ‘Son, you're grown up now. You take your own decisions. All your old man can do is play wicket-keeper while Magnus here bats and God does the bowling.'” He grasps Pym's hand, nearly breaking the fingers. “Don't shrink away from me like that, old son. I'm not angry with you. We're pals, remember? We don't have to tiptoe round each other looking in one another's pockets, poking in drawers, talking to misguided women in hotel cellars. We come out with it straight. On the table. Now dry those old peepers of yours and give your old pal a hug.”
With his monogrammed silk handkerchief the great statesman magnanimously wipes away the tears of Pym's rage and impotence.
“Want a good English steak tonight, son?”
“Not much.”
“Old Mattie's cooking us one with onions. You can invite Judy if you like. We'll all have a game of chemmy afterwards. She'd like that.”
Raising his head, Pym recovered his marker pen and went back to work.
Extract of Branch minutes of Oxford University Communist Party regretting departure of Comrade M. Pym, tireless worker on behalf of cause. Fraternal thanks for his tremendous efforts. Entered at 24a.
Pained letter from Bursar of Pym's college enclosing his cheque for his last term's battles, marked “Refer to Drawer.” Similar letters and cheques from Messrs. Blackwell, Parker (Booksellers), and Hall Brothers (Tailors), entered at 24c.
Pained letter from Pym's bank manager regretting that following return of cheque drawn in Pym's favour by the Magnus Dynamic & Astral Company (Bahamas) Ltd., in the sum of two hundred and fifty pounds, he has had no alternative but to refer to drawer the cheques as at 24c.
Extract from London
Gazette
dated March 29, 1951, appointing official receiver in yet another petition for bankruptcy of R.T.P. and eighty-three associated companies.
Letter from Director of Public Prosecutions inviting Pym to present himself for interview on named date in order to explain his relationship with above companies. Entered at 36a.
Military call-up papers offering Pym sanctuary. Grabbed with both hands.
 
“If I could just sit with you for a bit, Miss D,” said Pym, softly pushing open her kitchen door.
But her chair was empty and the fire out. It was not evening as he had thought, but dawn.
12
I
t was the same dawn. It was time minus ten minutes. It was the moment Brotherhood had lain wakeful and alone for in his rotten flat that was becoming a solitary cell for him, staring at the images of his past in the restless London sky. It was an outdoor game being played by indoor people who didn't know they were awake. How many times had he sat like this, in rubber boats, on arctic hillsides, pressing the headphones into his ears with kapok mittens to catch the whisper that meant life was not extinct? Here in the communications room on the top floor of the Head Office there were no headphones, no subzero winds to rip through sodden clothing and freeze the operator's fingers off, no bicycle generator that some poor bastard had to pump at till his legs failed. No aerial that collapsed on you when you most needed it. No two-ton suitcase to be cached in iron-hard soil while the Huns were breathing down your neck. Up here we have dimpled grey-green boxes freshly dusted, with pretty pin-lights and shiny switches. And tuners and amplifiers. And dials to cut out atmospherics. And comfortable chairs for the barons here assembled to rest their candy arses on. And a mysterious compression of the air that clenches your scalp while you watch the green numerals sliding through their prison window as quickly as the later years of life: now I am forty, now I am forty-five, now I am seventy, now I am ten minutes to being dead.
On the raised platform two boys in headphones were patrolling the dials. They'll never know what it was like, thought Brotherhood. They'll go to their graves thinking life came out of a packet. Bo Brammel and Nigel sat below them like producers at a preview. Behind them a dozen shadows that Brotherhood had barely bothered with. He noticed Lorimer, Head of Operations. He saw Kate and thought thank heaven she's alive. At the edge of the stage, Frankel was lugubriously reporting a string of failures. His mid-European accent has thickened.
“Nine-twenty yesterday morning local time, Prague Station has its chief cut-out dial the Watchman household from a callbox, Bo,” he said. “Number engaged. He makes five calls in two hours from round town. Still engaged. He tries Conger. Number out of order. Everybody vanished, everybody out of touch. Midday the Station sends a little girl they own to the canteen where Conger's daughter goes for lunch. Conger's daughter is conscious so maybe she knows where her father is. Our little girl is a sixteen-year-old kid, very small, very hardy. She hangs around two hours, checks both sittings, checks the queue. No daughter. She checks the attendance sheets at the factory gate, tells the guards she is the daughter's room-mate. She's so innocent they let her. Conger's daughter is not reported present, is not reported sicklisted. Vanished.”
In the tension nobody spoke to anybody. Everyone spoke to himself. The room was still filling up. How many people does it take to give a network a decent burial? thought Brotherhood. Eight minutes to go.
Frankel continued his dirge. “Seven o'clock yesterday morning local time, Gdansk Station puts two of their local boys to mend a telegraph pole at the end of the street where Merryman lives. His house is in a cul-de-sac. He's got no other way out. Every day normally he goes to work by car, leaves his house seven-twenty. But yesterday his car is not outside his house. Every other day it is parked outside his house. Not yesterday. From where the boys work they can see his front door. The front door stays closed. No Merryman, nobody at all leaves or enters that house by that door. Downstairs is curtained, no lights, no fresh tracks in the drive. Merryman's good friend is an architect. Merryman likes to take a coffee with him sometimes on his way to work. This architect is not a Joe, he is not whitelisted.”
“Wenzel,” said Brotherhood.
“Wenzel is the architect's name, Jack. One of the boys calls up Mr. Wenzel and tells him Merryman's mother is ill. ‘Where can I get hold of him to give him this bad news?' he says. Mr. Wenzel says try the laboratory, how ill? The boy says she's maybe dying, Merryman ought to get to her fast. ‘Give him this message,' the boy says. ‘Tell him please that Maximilian says he better get to his mother's bedside fast.' Maximilian, that's the codeword for it's all over. Maximilian means abort, means run, means get the hell out by any known means, don't bother with customary procedures, run. The boy is resourceful. When he has ceased to speak to Mr. Wenzel, he calls the laboratory where Merryman works. ‘This is Mr. Maximilian. Where's Merryman? It's urgent. Tell him Maximilian got to speak to him about his mother.' Merryman don't come in today, they tell him. Merryman got a conference in Warsaw.”
Brotherhood was already objecting. “They wouldn't say that,” he growled. “The labs don't give out details of staff movements. They're a top-secret installation, for Christ's sake. Somebody's playing games with us.”
“Sure, Jack. My own reaction entirely. You want I go on?”
A couple of heads turned to locate Brotherhood at the back of the room.
“When the line to Merryman went dead we instructed Warsaw to try to reach Voltaire direct,” Frankel continued. He paused. “Voltaire is sick.”
Brotherhood let out an angry laugh. “Voltaire? He hasn't had a day's sickness in his life.”
“His Ministry says he's sick, Jack, his wife says he's sick, his mistress says he's sick. He ate some bad mushrooms, gone to hospital. He's sick. Official. They all say the same.”
“I'll say it's official.”
“What do you want me to do, Jack? Tell me something I should do that you would do yourself and I have not done. Okay? It's a blackout, Jack. Like a silence everywhere. Like a bomb fell.”
“You said you'd keep filling the letter boxes,” Brotherhood said.
“We filled for Merryman yesterday. Money and instructions. We filled.”
“So what happened?”
“Still there. Money and instructions so much he want. Fresh papers, maps, you name it. For Conger we put up two visuals, one for call us, one for evacuate. One curtain on a first floor, one light in a basement window. Is that correct, Jack? Does that accord with the agreed procedures?”
“It accords.”
“Okay. So he doesn't answer. He doesn't call, he doesn't write, he doesn't run.”
For five minutes there was no sound but the sounds of waiting: the sighing of soft chairs, the striking of lights and matches and the squeaky-soled footsteps of the boys. Kate glanced at Brotherhood and he smiled confidence back. Bo said, “We're thinking of you, Jack,” but Brotherhood did not reply and he was certainly not thinking of Bo. A bell rang. From the platform a boy said, “Conger, sir, on schedule,” and trimmed some dials. A white pin-light winked above his head. The second boy dropped a switch. Nobody clapped, nobody got to his feet or cried, “they're alive!”
“Conger operator's come in and say he's ready to send, Bo,” Frankel said gratuitously. Behind him, the boys were moving automatically, deaf to everything outside their headphones. “Now we make our first transmission. We use all tape, no handwriting. Conger does the same. Accelerated Morse, we unroll it both ends. Transmission takes maybe one and a half minutes, two. Unroll and decode takes maybe five.... See that? . . . ‘We are ready to receive you. Talk.'—this is what we say to him. Now Conger is talking again. Watch the red light left, please. It burns, he's talking—he's finished.”
“Wasn't very long, was it?” Lorimer drawled, not to anyone in particular. Lorimer had buried agents before.
“Now we wait for the decode,” Frankel told his audience a little too brightly. “Three minutes, maybe five. Time to smoke a cigarette, okay? Everybody relax. Conger's alive and well.”
The boys were transferring spools, resetting instruments.
“Let's just be grateful he's alive,” said Kate, and several heads turned sharply, remarking this unaccustomed display of feeling from a Fifth Floor lady.
The grey spools were rolling, one on to the other. For a moment they heard the unrhythmic piping of Morse code. It stopped.
“Hey,” said Lorimer softly.
“Run it through again,” said Brotherhood.
“What's happened?” said Kate.
The boys rewound the spools and switched again to forward. The Morse resumed and stopped as before.
“Could it be a fault the other end?” Lorimer asked.
“Sure,” Frankel said. “Possible his winder's on the blink, possible he hit some bad ionosphere. In a minute he comes through again. No problem.”
The taller of the two boys was pulling off his headphones. “Mind if we decode, Mr. Frankel?” he said. “Sometimes when they've got a hitch they tell us about it in the message.”
On a nod from Frankel he shifted a spool to a machine at the far end of the bank. The printer began chattering immediately. Nigel and Lorimer moved quickly towards the platform. The printer stopped. Nigel magisterially ripped out the sheet and held it for Lorimer and himself to read. Brotherhood was already striding down the aisle. Mounting the platform, he snatched the script from their unresisting hands.
“Jack, don't,” said Kate under her breath.
“Don't what?” Brotherhood said, suddenly out of patience with her. “Don't care about my agents? Don't do what exactly?”
“Tell them to print another copy, will you, Frankel?” Nigel said smoothly. “Then we can all look at it together without shoving.”
Brotherhood was holding the sheet before him. Nigel and Lorimer had meekly arranged themselves to either side of him and were reading it over his shoulder.
“Routine intelligence report, Bo,” Nigel announced reading aloud. “Promised length, three hundred and seven groups. Actual length so far forty-one. Subject, restationing of Soviet missile bases in mountains north of Pilsen. Subsource Mirabeau reporting ten days ago. Mirabeau in turn reporting her Soviet Army boyfriend codename Leo—Leo's done us rather well in the past, I seem to remember. Message reads as follows: Subsource Talleyrand confirms empty low-loaders leaving area—message ends in midsentence. Obviously the winder. Unless, as you say, his signal hit freak conditions.”
Frankel was already giving orders to the taller boy. “Send them ‘Your signal garbled.' Do it immediately. Tell them we want a rerun. Tell them if they can't transmit now we'll remain on standby till they can. Tell them we want a roll-call of all members of the network. You got set phrases for that or you want I draft something?”
“Tell them damn all,” Brotherhood ordered very loud. “And stop crying, everybody. No one's hurt.”
He had thrust his hands into his raincoat pockets. He was halfway down the aisle. Nigel and Lorimer were still on stage, a pair of choirboys clutching their hymn sheet between them. Brammel sat stoically upright in the auditorium. Kate was staring at him, not stoical at all.
“You can tell them you want a roll-call or a rerun, you can tell them to abort, you can tell them to jump in the Vistula. It doesn't make a dime of difference,” said Brotherhood.
“Poor man,” said Nigel to Lorimer. “They're his Joes, you see. It's the strain.”
“They're not my Joes and they never were. You can have them with my blessing.” He looked around him for men with sense. “Frankel. For Christ's sake. Lorimer. When this service catches someone else's Joe, if it ever does these days, what does it do? If he's willing to be played, we play him back. If he's not we send him to the Tower. Is it different now? I wouldn't know.”

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