Read Honourable Intentions Online
Authors: Gavin Lyall
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Historical, #Spies & Politics, #Espionage, #Thrillers
A grimy light began to shine on Ranklin’s thoughts. “This café in La Villette – do you know what sort of place it is?”
Quinton smiled but retained his legal caution. “I understand that it is said to be a haunt of anarchists.”
The Commander growled: “If this damned American is an
anarchist
then all that stuff about royal scandal is probably just trouble-making.”
Quinton said: “Nothing in the depositions offers any proof that he is an anarchist.”
“But if he was working as a waiter there—”
“Would you assume that every waiter at a poets’ café is a poet?”
Corinna said: “But Mr Tippett the vice-consul said the boy—”
“That is not evidence.”
With Corinna and the Commander both rebuffed, that left Ranklin to steer the conversation into a more soothing, general channel. “You were going to explain to us laymen the normal progress of an extradition case . . .”
“‘Hearing’ is the proper term. Yes. It starts with a request through diplomatic channels for us to arrest the chap. When we’ve done that, he makes a brief appearance at Bow Street police court to be remanded to Brixton. Then the foreign government sends over depositions and perhaps witnesses themselves – there are two in this matter – for the magistrate to decide whether they have made a
prima facie
case of an extraditable crime for the prisoner to answer. We’ve reached that point now, with the hearing due tomorrow.”
“Tomorrow?” the Commander and Ranklin said simultaneously.
“I came a little late to this matter—”
“I was slow off the mark myself,” Corinna confessed. “And the consulate didn’t—”
“It seems,” Quinton said firmly, “that the lad didn’t take the matter very seriously until someone else read the French depositions and explained how strong a case there was.”
“Is it strong, then?” the Commander asked.
“I think . . .” Quinton sounded a little reluctant but now he was embroiled in the real case and couldn’t turn back – which was roughly what Ranklin had hoped. “I think it might be torn to pieces by a good, well-prepared advocate at a full trial – in France. Whether I can do as much tomorrow, I wouldn’t care to say.”
He looked pensive and Ranklin prayed for the Commander to stay quiet. And for once, he did.
Quinton went on: “The prosecution only has to show there is a case to answer – the defence doesn’t have to answer it. But the boy wants me to: he wants above all not to be sent back to France. He’s convinced the police are fabricating evidence against him.”
“And are they?” the Commander asked, brightening up at this hint of illegality.
“There’s one witness in particular whom I’d like to see cross-examined within an inch of his life. But to do that properly, I need more preparation. If I do a half-cock job and the boy gets extradited anyway, I’ll just have shown the prosecution the holes in their case so they can patch them up for the full trial. But my client seems ready to risk that.”
Corinna said: “What about it being a political crime anyhow?”
“I shall argue that as well. But I can’t see a Bow Street magistrate ruling on that. I think he’ll leave that to a higher court.”
The Commander asked: “Can you appeal the magistrate’s decision, then?”
“In effect. It’ll be a
habeus corpus
hearing in the King’s Bench. When,” he turned to Corinna, “your fund will have to stump up for
Counsel.
But I think I can find one who’ll say what he’s told and not have ideas of his own.”
Mr Quinton, one suspected, did not share the high opinion that barristers had of themselves.
The Commander said: “I think we’re getting bogged down in legalities. Frankly, it’s no skin off our nose whatever happens to the lad – that is, I’m sure he’s safe in Mr Quinton’s capable hands. What concerns me is whether he’s going to say anything in open court. Is he?”
“If he listens to me, he’ll say nothing bar his name,” Quinton said very firmly.
“Good. And meanwhile, if he tells you anything more about this – alleged – royal scandal, you’ll be sure to let us know?”
Quinton frowned. “Whatever a client tells his solicitor is in the strictest confidence.”
“Good Lord, man, this is a question of your duty to the
King
!”
Quinton stiffened. “I agreed to come to this meeting on the understanding that you would take this aspect out of my hands. It isn’t germane to the boy’s case and is the sort of thing I prefer not to be told. And if told, not to hear.”
“I would have hoped your patriotic—” the Commander began, but Ranklin cut in:
“I’d better come and hear what happens at Bow Street myself tomorrow. Will I get in?”
“I’ll make sure you do. But I can’t promise you’ll hear anything from the public seats. Meet me outside at lunchtime and I’ll explain what’s been happening. Now, if you’ll excuse me . . . Mrs Finn . . .” He bowed over Corinna’s hand, shook hands with the Commander and Ranklin, and walked briskly away.
Watching him go, the Commander said thoughtfully: “D’you think I overdid the duty-to-your-King bit?”
“Perhaps,” Ranklin said.
Corinna said: “He’s supposed to be good.”
“I imagine, madam, that by that you mean ‘effective’.”
“Isn’t that what we all mean?” She was quite unabashed. “Well, I’ve done my
effective
deed for the day.” And she leant back in her chair and looked at them expectantly.
The Commander looked puzzled. Ranklin said: “Not quite. That letter the lad’s mother wrote had a Paris address. When you sent someone from your Paris office to check up on her, was she still there?”
Corinna said dreamily: “If I had three wishes, d’you know what the first would be? To have someone push that terrible little crook Lloyd George under a bus. Having a Chancellor of the Exchequer who—”
“Sorry we can’t oblige you there,” Ranklin interrupted. “What’s the second wish?”
“Are you truly offering to do me a favour?” Her surprised delight was quite false.
“No, ducky, we’re not, but let’s hear it anyway.”
“Well,
since
you mention it . . . at the moment, the Treasury doesn’t place many bonds in the US but it does so exclusively through Morgan Grenfell. Now, if you happened to be speaking to anyone with influence, you might just
mention
that the House of Sherring has its main office on Wall Street and would be only too happy to help out.”
Looking grim again, the Commander came in with a surprising knowledge of financial politics – surprising to Ranklin, anyway. “Madam, I can only see us needing to sell more Treasury bonds abroad in an exceptional circumstance – such as a European war. And a long one.”
“Is that truly so?” Corinna was an innocent little girl again. “Dear me. Still, it helps to be prepared, don’t you think? So you will remember?”
“Are you
blackmailing
us, Mrs Finn?”
“Me, sir? Blackmail? What a terrible thought. No, I’m just doing what is known in my humble trade as a ‘deal’. A
quid —
or dollar –
pro quo.”
She shifted her smile to Ranklin. “Yes, I sent our people to see Mrs Langhorn, but she’d gone, bag and baggage, and no forwarding address. It was just a
pension,
and a pretty lowly one, anyway. But another thing Grover told our vice-consul: she was born English, Miss Bowman.”
“Thank you. And would it now be too much to ask that you leave the rest to us?”
“Delighted. I must get back to the office. Thank you
so
much for the tea, and it was a pleasure meeting you again, Commander . . .
Smith.”
Ranklin walked with her to the hotel lobby. “Thank you again, but . . . may I offer a word of warning?”
This was still her home ground; she nodded cheerfully.
“You held things up for at least a day sending your Paris people to see the lad’s mother because, if I know you, you wanted the
full
story before you came to us. So here’s the warning: don’t try to be clever when it comes to our monarchy. No deals. Just hope for gratitude.”
“I’ve heard you say things about your kings that I’d never dare.”
Ranklin nodded. “We all do. It’s fashionable. But there can be a very sudden closing of ranks, too. I’d hate to see you caught on the outside.”
When he got back to the Commander they sat in silence for a while. Then the Commander said: “Is she usually so . . .” He was obviously trying to think of a (relatively) polite synonym for “mercenary”.
“She has an instinct for doing deals; she’s a banker. But banking is a secretive trade, too.”
“Hm.” The Commander felt in his pocket and took out the violet-paper letter. “The woman’s spelling suggests she’s either daughter of a duke or a dustman. I’d guess the dustman. And obviously she’s in on it: tipping off the American Consul to start the ball rolling, and then vanishing. I presume it’s all to get us to let her son off . . . What else have we got?”
“D’you think we should be taking this seriously, then?”
“That’s the first thing to find out.”
“But we don’t even know what it is that the lad’s threatening.”
“Then
that’s
the first thing to find out.”
“And whether we’re really the right people to tackle—”
“Damn it, it was
your
girl-friend who dumped it in our lap. If we go to the police that’s just spreading it. And they probably wouldn’t do anything because he hasn’t committed any offence
— over here, that is. And I don’t propose to give it to Kell and his people.” Relations with their sister counter-spy service had recently become a little strained.
Ranklin nodded unenthusiastically. “Well, I’ll go along to Bow Street tomorrow; I don’t know if I’ll learn anything, but . . . Should we ask O’Gilroy to have a look at back numbers of the Paris papers?”
“Good idea. Send him a telegram – but don’t let him know why we want to know.”
Ranklin let that slur pass; anyway, the Commander was still thoroughly irritated by Corinna and didn’t care about Ranklin’s feelings. “I know you’ve usually worked with him and trust him, but we want to keep this as small as possible. Anyway, as an Irishman he probably thinks royal scandals are a good thing.”
“Don’t we all – as newspaper readers? But do we want to get in touch with the lad himself?”
“How?” the Commander growled. “We can’t go along to Brixton and demand to see him, we’d have to go through Quinton or the American consulate—”
“–
or
we could try slipping O’Gilroy into his cell on a fake dynamiting charge, and let them swap grievances and brigandry techniques. There, O’Gilroy can be as republican as he likes.”
As Ranklin expected, the prospect of behaving dishonestly cheered the Commander up immediately. “Ye-es . . . All right: get him here by tomorrow night, bringing whatever he’s got about the arson, and if the whole thing hasn’t fizzled out by then . . . we’ll see.”
Ranklin nodded, hiding the uplift he got from prospectively having the Irishman back. O’Gilroy was, unofficially, their Man in Paris. He was there mainly because he had to be somewhere, and London was too full of other Irishmen who wanted to cut his throat. He wasn’t much good at French politics, but there was no shortage of self-styled experts on that; what O’Gilroy now knew was the Paris streets. Ranklin felt he himself belonged there, too: the Bureau’s job was abroad, and
Paris was eight hours closer to anything happening on the Continent.
The Commander may have suspected how he’d been led to his decision, because he went on looking at Ranklin. “You know, you’re not a
bad
second-in-command.” Then added explosively: “But by God – you’ve got a bloody funny taste in girl-friends.”
3
“My name is Detective Inspector Thomas Hector McDaniel of Bow Street Police Station.” Ranklin was particularly glad to hear those words, the point being that he
could
hear them, after three-quarters of an hour of straining and guessing.
Popular myth has it that court-rooms provide scenes of natural drama. Not this one: most of that morning would have been upstaged by a public reading of the London Street Directory. He couldn’t even study Grover Langhorn. Jammed among the spectators at the back, Ranklin was facing the magistrates’ bench, but so was Langhorn, standing in the raised dock in front of him. By the end of the morning, Ranklin knew he would recognise that slight and shabby back view of baggy check trousers and dark blue donkey jacket for the rest of his life, but he had yet to glimpse the face.
Moreover, once Langhorn had agreed he was who he was supposed to be, he apparently became irrelevant to the routine going on around him. Documents were passed, mulled over and agreed upon, men in old-fashioned frock coats, one being Noah Quinton, bobbed up, murmured things, and sat down when the magistrate had murmured back.
Then came Inspector McDaniel (it was odd how many London policemen had obviously been born elsewhere; were native Londoners too finicky or too corrupt?). He was bald-headed, walrus-moustached, as well fed as any lawyer, and probably as familiar with court-rooms. He gave his evidence loudly and confidently, pausing after each sentence so that the clerk could write it down. “Acting on information received”
he had proceeded to 29 Great Garden Street . . . He there saw a man who admitted he was Grover Langhorn . . . Yes, he is the man standing in the dock there . . . He then arrested said man on a warrant issued by the Bow Street magistrate on the second of April . . .
The slow delivery let Ranklin’s attention wander to the others crammed beside him in the public seats. He had thought carefully about how he should dress that day, but after dismissing the idea of posing as a Cockney as impossible, and a farmer-in-town-for-the-day from his native Gloucestershire as improbable, he had just dressed as himself. He knew he would look vaguely official – just how, he wasn’t sure, but he had to accept it – but hoped the case would attract vaguely official attention anyway. And so it had: those around and altogether too close to him were definitely official-looking; he thought he recognised at least one face from the Foreign Office. Indeed, the one man who stood out was wearing a non-London check suit. He was taking assiduous notes.