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Authors: Desmond Bagley

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BOOK: The Tightrope Men / The Enemy
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‘What’s the point of all this?’ asked Denison.

Carey straightened. ‘From my reading of Meyrick’s dossier and from what I know of his character he never did take an interest in natural history. Is that correct, Miss Meyrick?’

‘He was a pure technologist,’ she said. ‘If he ever thought of natural history—which I doubt—it would be with contempt.’

‘As I thought,’ said Carey. ‘So if Meyrick becomes interested now it will be out of character. The people who are watching him—as I am certain they are—will be mystified and will suspect an ulterior motive, which I will be careful to provide.’ He tapped Denison’s arm. ‘You’ll take some simple instruments—a theodolite and so on—and you’ll act out a charade as though you’re looking for something. Got the idea?’

‘A red herring,’ said Denison.

‘Right. You’ll spend three days at Kevo and then you’ll move south to another Nature Park at Sompio. There you will put on the same act until you’re recalled.’

‘How will that be done?’ asked McCready.

‘There’s a little village called Vuotso just outside. I’ll send you a telegram to
poste restante
—“Come home, all is forgiven.” It would be useful to have webbed feet at Sompio—it’s very marshy.’

‘Then there’ll be wildfowl,’ said Harding with sudden enthusiasm.

‘Very likely,’ said Carey uninterestedly.

‘Let me get this straight,’ said Denison. ‘Meyrick is supposed to be looking for something—let’s say buried—in a Nature Park, but he doesn’t know which one. And all he has to go on are landmarks, hence the theodolite for measuring angles.’

‘Just like in a treasure hunt,’ said Lyn.

‘Precisely,’ said Carey. ‘But the treasure doesn’t exist—at least, not up there. I’ve even got a map for you. It’s as phoney as hell but very impressive.’

Denison said, ‘And what will you be doing while we’re wandering all over the Arctic?’

Carey grinned. ‘Young Ian and I will nip into Svetogorsk to dig up the loot while, hopefully, all eyes are on you.’ He turned to Mrs Hansen. ‘You’re very quiet.’

She shrugged. ‘What’s there to say?’

‘You’ll be bodyguarding this lot from the inside. I had hoped you’d have but one person to worry about but, as you see, there are now three. Can you manage?’

‘If they’ll do as they’re told.’

‘They’d better,’ said Carey. ‘I’ll give you something a bit bigger than the popgun you so incautiously let Denison see.’ He looked about. ‘Can anyone else here shoot?’

‘I’m not bad with a shotgun,’ said Harding.

‘I doubt if a shotgun in a Nature Preserve would be appreciated,’ said Carey ironically. ‘But at least you’ll know one end of a gun from the other. I’ll let you have a pistol. What about you, Giles?’

Denison shrugged. ‘I suppose I can pull the trigger and make the thing go bang.’

‘That might be all that’s needed.’ Carey looked at Lyn, appeared to be about to say something, and changed his mind.

‘Are you expecting shooting?’ asked Harding. He looked worried.

‘Let me put it this way,’ said Carey. ‘I don’t know if there’ll be shooting or not, but if there is, I hope you’ll be on the receiving end and not me, because that’s the object of this bloody exercise.’ He put the map back into his briefcase. That’s all. Early start tomorrow. George, I’d like a word with you before you go.’

The group at the table broke up. Denison went across to Lyn. ‘Harding told me about your father. I’m sorry.’

‘No need,’ she said. ‘I ought to feel sorry, too, but I can’t.’ She looked up at him. ‘Carey said you are a stranger, but it’s my father who was the stranger. I hadn’t seen him for two years and when I thought I’d found him again, and he was different and nicer, I hadn’t found him at all. So then I lost him again and it made no difference, after all. Don’t you see what I mean?’

Denison followed this incoherent speech, and said, ‘I think so.’ He took her by the shoulders. ‘I don’t think you should come on this jaunt, Lyn.’

Her chin came up. ‘I’m coming.’

He sighed. ‘I hope you know what you’ve got yourself into.’

Carey filled his pipe. ‘What do you think, George?’

‘The girl’s a bit of a handful.’

‘Yes. Look after them as best you can.’

McCready leaned forward. ‘It’s you I’m worried about. I’ve been thinking about Meyrick. If the people who snatched him were the Russkies, and if he talked, you’re in
dead trouble. You’re likely to find a reception committee awaiting you in Svetogorsk.’

Carey nodded. ‘It’s a calculated risk. There were no signs of physical coercion on Meyrick’s body—burn marks or anything like that—and I doubt if he’d talk voluntarily. I don’t think they had time to make him talk; they were too busy smuggling him around the Baltic. In any case, we don’t know who snatched him.’

He struck a match. ‘It’s my back I’m worried about right now. I had a talk to Lyng last night on the Embassy scrambler. I told him that Thornton was nosing about. He said he’d do something about it.’

‘What?’

Carey shrugged. ‘They don’t use guns in Whitehall but I believe they have weapons that are equally effective. It’s no concern of yours, George; you won’t have to worry about the Whitehall War until you get up to my level.’

‘I’m not so worried about Whitehall as I am about Svetogorsk,’ said McCready. ‘I think it ought to be swapped around. Armstrong can go north and I’ll come with you acioss the border.’

‘He doesn’t have the experience for what might happen up there. He’s yet to be blooded, but he’ll be all right with an old dog like me.’

‘He’d be all right with me,’ said McCready. ‘He and I could cross the border and you could go north.’

‘Sorry,’ said Carey regretfully. ‘But I’m pushing sixty and I don’t have the puff for that wilderness lark. And I don’t have the reflexes for the fast action you might get. The plan stands, George.’ His voice took on a meditative note. ‘This is likely to be my last field operation. I’d like it to be a good one.’

TWENTY-THREE

The car slowed as it came to the corner. Harding, who was driving, said, ‘This might be the turn-off. Check it on the map, will you?’

Denison, in the back of the car, lifted the map from his knee. ‘That’s it; we’ve just passed Kaamanen. The Kevo Camp is eighty kilometres up this side road and there’s damn-all else.’ He checked his watch. ‘We ought to arrive before eleven.’

Harding turned on to the side road and the car lurched and bumped. After a few minutes he said, ‘Make that midnight. We’re not going to move fast on this road.’

Diana laughed. ‘The Finns are the only people who could coin a word like
kelirikko.
It’s a word Humpty-Dumpty would be proud of.’

Harding notched down a gear. ‘What does it mean?’

‘It means, “the bad state of the roads after the spring thaw”.’

‘Much in little,’ said Harding. ‘There’s one thing I’m glad of.’

‘What’s that?’

‘This midnight sun. I’d hate to drive along here in the dark.’

Denison glanced at Lyn who sat by his side. She was apparently asleep. It had been two days of hard driving,
very tiring, and he was looking forward to his bed. He wound the window down to clear the dust from the outside surface, then looked at the countryside covered with scrub birch. Something suddenly caught him in the pit of the stomach.
What the hell am I doing here? Hundreds of miles north of the Arctic Circle in the Finnish wilderness?
It seemed preposterously improbable.

They had left Helsinki very early the previous morning and headed north out of the heavily populated southern coastal rim. Then they had left the rich farmlands very quickly and entered a region of forests and lakes, of towering pine and spruce, of white-trunked, green-leaved birch and the ever-present blue waters.

They took it in turns driving in two-hour shifts and made good time, sleeping that night in Oulu. After Oulu the land changed. There were fewer lakes and the trees were not as tall. A birch that in the south towered a hundred feet now had hardly the strength to grow to twenty, and the lakes gave way to marshes. As they passed through Ivalo, where there was the northernmost airstrip, they encountered their first Lapps, garish in red and blue, but there were really very few people of any kind in this country. Denison, under the prodding of Carey, had done his homework on Finland and he knew that in this most remote area of the country, Inari Commune, there were fewer than 8,000 people in a province the size of Yorkshire.

And there would be fewer still around Kevo.

Diana stretched, and said, ‘Stop at the top of the next rise, Doctor; I’ll spell you.’

‘I’m all right,’ said Harding.

‘Stop anyway.’

He drove up the hill and was about to pull up when Diana said, ‘Just a few yards more—over the crest.’ Harding obligingly let the car roll and then braked to a halt. ‘That’s fine,’ she said, taking binoculars from a case. ‘I won’t be a minute.’

Denison watched her leave the car and then opened his own door. He followed her back along the road and then into a growth of stunted birches. When he caught up with her she was looking back the way they had come through the glasses. ‘Anything in sight?’

‘No,’ she said curtly.

‘You’ve done this every hour,’ he said. ‘And you’ve still seen nothing. Nobody’s following us.’

‘They might be ahead,’ she said without taking the glasses from her eyes.

‘How would anyone know where we were going?’

‘There are ways and means.’ She lowered the glasses and looked at him. ‘You don’t know much about this business.’

‘No, I don’t,’ Denison said reflectively. ‘What’s a nice girl like you doing in it? You’re American, aren’t you?’

She slung the binocular strap over her shoulder. ‘Canadian. And it’s just a job.’

‘Just a civil servant,’ he said ironically. ‘Like any nine-to-five typist in Whitehall.’ He remembered the occupation given in Meyrick’s passport. ‘Or like Dr Meyrick.’

She faced him. ‘Let’s get one thing straight. From now on you do not refer to Meyrick in the third person—not even in private.’ She tapped him on the chest with her forefinger. ‘You are Harry Meyrick.’

‘You’ve made your point, teacher.’

‘I hope so.’ She looked around. ‘This seems a quiet spot. How long is it since you’ve seen anyone?’

He frowned. ‘About an hour. Why?’

‘I want to find out how much you lot know about guns. Target practice time.’ As they went back to the car, she said, ‘Go easy on Lyn Meyrick. She’s a very confused girl.’

‘I know,’ said Denison. ‘She has every reason to be confused.’

Diana looked at him sideways. ‘Yes,’ she agreed. ‘You could call it confusion—of a sort. It’s not easy to fall in love
with a man who looks like the father you hate, but she’s managed it.’

Denison stopped dead. ‘Don’t be idiotic.’

‘Me!’ She laughed. ‘You do a bit of thinking and then figure who’s the idiot around here.’

Harding pulled the car off the road and into the trees. Diana loaded a pistol from a packet of cartridges and set an empty beer can on a fallen tree trunk. ‘All right; let’s see who can do this.’ Almost casually she lifted her arm and fired. The beer can jumped and spun away.

They took it in turns to fire three shots each. Denison missed every time, Harding hit the can once and Lyn, much to her own surprise, hit it twice. Diana said to Denison caustically, ‘You were right; you can make the gun go bang.’

To Lyn she said, ‘Not bad—but what would you be like shooting at a man instead of a beer can?’

‘I…I don’t know,’ said Lyn nervously.

‘What about you, Doctor?’

Harding hefted the gun in his hand. ‘If I was being shot at I think I’d shoot back.’

‘I suppose that’s as much as I could expect,’ said Diana resignedly. ‘Let’s go back to the car.’

She gave them each a pistol and watched them load. ‘Don’t forget to put on the safety catch. More important, don’t forget to release it when you shoot. You’ll put those in your bedrolls now. When we move off on foot tomorrow you’ll need a more accessible place for them. Let’s go.’

TWENTY-FOUR

Carey lit his pipe and said, ‘Slow down.’

Armstrong eased his foot on the accelerator and hastily wound down his side window. He wished Carey would not smoke at all in the car or, at least, change his brand of horse manure.

‘See that tower over there?’ asked Carey. ‘To the right.’

Armstrong looked past him. ‘A water tower?’ he hazarded.

Carey grunted in amusement. ‘A Russian observation tower. That’s Mother Russia.’

‘We’re
that
close to the frontier! It can’t be more than a kilometre away.’

‘That’s right,’ said Carey. ‘You can turn round now; we’ll go back to Imatra and book into the hotel.’

Armstrong came to a wide part of the road and slowed to a halt. As he turned the car, he said, ‘Are there many of those towers around here?’

‘All along the frontier. I suspect they’re linked with electronic detection devices. The boys in those towers can record every footfall.’ He looked at the spindly tower with a critical eye. ‘The Russians have a suspicious nature - always trying to look over other people’s walls. They’re a funny crowd.’

Armstrong was silent, but his mind was busy with speculation. The trouble with Carey was that he was
uncommunicative about his plans until the last moment, an idiosyncrasy apt to unnerve his subordinates. He wondered how they were going to cross the border.

He drove back into Imatra under Carey’s direction and pulled up outside the entrance to the hotel. It was a big, rambling building constructed of stone with turrets and cupolas and towers. He thought it looked like a fairy tale castle as designed by Walt Disney had he been a more controlled artist. ‘Some place!’

‘The Valtionhotelli,’ said Carey. ‘Built at the turn of the century and genuine Art Nouveau. Come on.’

The hotel foyer was elaborately luxurious in an old-fashioned style. The stonework of the entrance was carved with grotesque mythological beasts and was panelled in dark wood. They registered and entered a lift accompanied by a porter carrying the bags.

The porter unlocked a door and stood back deferentially. Carey strode in, followed by Armstrong. He led the way along a wood-panelled corridor into a very large circular bedroom. ‘I’ll take the bed on the left,’ he said as he tipped the porter.

Armstrong looked about him. ‘Not bad. Not bad at all.’

‘Nothing but the best for us civil servants,’ said Carey. ‘Let’s go upstairs and have a drink.’

‘There’s an upstairs?’

They climbed a broad winding staircase leading off the corridor. Carey said, ‘This hotel was built back in 1902 when Finland was still a part of Russia. The Finns will give you arguments that it was never a part of Russia, but facts are facts. Imatra was a playground for the St Petersburg aristocracy. The Czar stayed in the hotel - probably in this apartment.’

They emerged into another large circular room with windows all round. It was furnished with half a dozen easychairs and a long, low table of highly polished wood. A bear
skin decorated the wall. Carey strode over to a built-in refrigerator while Armstrong looked through one of the windows. ‘We must be at the top of the main tower.’

‘That’s right.’ Carey pulled out a bottle. ‘Skâne - that’s Swedish; Linie - it’s funny the Norwegians think that shipping their booze to Australia and back improves it. Koskenkorva - that’s local. Stolichnaya - what the hell is that doing here? I call it damned unpatriotic. Ah, here’s the beer.’

Armstrong turned and looked at the array of
snaps
bottles. ‘Are we expected to be poured into Russia?’

Carey winked. ‘The perquisites of the job. Besides, we might have to do a little entertaining.’

‘Oh!’ He held out field glasses he had found on a window ledge. ‘Someone must have left these behind.’

Carey shook his head as he uncapped a beer bottle. ‘Part of the room fittings. This apartment is where they bring the V.I.P.s to give them a little thrill.’ He picked up a glass and joined Armstrong at the window. ‘See those chimneys?’

Armstrong looked out of the window at the smoking factory chimneys. ‘Yes?’

‘That’s Stalin’s Finger,’ said Carey. ‘Svetogorsk!’

Armstrong put the binoculars to his eyes. The chimneys jumped closer and he could almost distinguish the separate bricks. ‘My God!’ he said. ‘It’s nearly part of Imatra.’ He stared for a long time then slowly lowered the glasses. ‘What did you say about Stalin?’

‘Stalin’s Finger - that’s the local name. After the war the Russians wanted the frontier pushed back so there was the usual conference. Svetogorsk - or Enso, as it was then - is quite a nice little industrial town making paper. One of the Russians was drawing the revised frontier with a pen on the map but when he got to Enso he found that Stalin had put his finger in the way. He looked up at Stalin and Stalin smiled down on him, so he shrugged and drew the line around Stalin’s finger. That put Enso in Russia.’

‘The old bastard!’ said Armstrong.

‘Sit down and have a beer,’ said Carey. ‘I want to talk to you about procedure. I’ll just nip down and get my briefcase.’

Armstrong took a beer from the refrigerator. When Carey came back he indicated the bear skin on the wall. ‘Could that be a Russian bear with its hide nailed to the wall?’

‘It could,’ said Carey with a grim smile. ‘That’s part of what I want to talk to you about.’ He put the briefcase on the table and sat down. ‘As far as I’m concerned Svetogorsk is Svetogorsk - I’m a realist. But we’ll be talking to some Finns and we’ll refer to the town throughout as Enso. They’re a mite sensitive about it.’

‘I can understand that,’ said Armstrong.

‘You don’t know the half of it,’ said Carey flatly. ‘This has been my stamping ground all the time I’ve been in the service, so listen to some words of wisdom from the old man. Back in 1835 a man called Lönnrot gathered together a lot of folk tales and issued them in verse form - that was the Kalevela, the Finnish national epic. It was the first major literary work the Finns ever had of their own, and it formed the basis of the new Finnish culture.’

‘Interesting,’ said Armstrong. ‘But what the hell?’

‘Just listen,’ said Carey sharply. ‘The heartland of the Kalevela is Karelia - which is now in Russia. The village of Kalevela itself is now Russian.’ He rubbed the side of his nose. ‘There’s no exact English parallel, but it’s as though the French had occupied Cornwall and Nottingharnshire and taken over all the King Arthur and Robin Hood legends. Of course, it runs deeper than that here, and some Finns are bitter about it.’

‘They think the Russians pinched their national heritage?’

‘Something like that.’ Carey drained his glass. ‘Now to politics. After the war President Paasikivi adopted a foreign
policy that was new to Finland, and the idea was to remain strictly neutral, rather like Sweden. In actual practice it’s a neutrality in favour of Russia - at all costs no offence must be given to Big Brother in the east. This is known as the Paasikivi Line, and it’s followed by the current President, Kekkonen. It’s like walking a tightrope but it’s difficult to see what else Finland can do. They already have the example of what happened to Estonia and the other Baltic States.’

He got himself another beer. ‘We’re going to meet some Finns tonight who don’t agree with the Paasikivi Line. They’re Right Wingers and, personally, I’d call them bloody reactionaries, but they’re the boys who are going to get us into Enso. If Kekkonen knew what we were doing here, what little hair he has left would turn white. He’s getting on with the Russians reasonably well and he wants it to stay that way. He doesn’t want any incident on the frontier that could cause a diplomatic breach and give Moscow an excuse for making demands. Neither do we - so to the Finns we meet tonight we talk softly, and when we’re in Enso we walk softly.’

He fixed Armstrong with a firm eye. ‘And if we’re caught over there we’ve done it on our own hook - no Finns were involved. That’s bloody important, so keep it in mind.’ ‘I understand,’ said Armstrong soberly.

‘Of course, the whole idea is
not
to get caught’ Carey unzipped his briefcase. ‘Here is a street plan of Enso, dated 1939.’ He unfolded it and spread it on the table. His finger wandered over the surface and then went down. ‘This is the house in which Hannu Merikken lived. He buried his box full of papers in the garden which is something under half an acre - but not much under,’

Armstrong bent his head over the plan. ‘That’s quite an area. How big is the box?’

‘Meyrick described it as two feet by one-and-a-half by one.’

Armstrong did some mental, arithmetic. ‘If we dug a hole at random the chances against hitting it would be over eight hundred to one.’

‘We can do better than that,’ said Carey. ‘The original idea was to have Meyrick point out the spot - he was present when the box was buried. But after all these years his memory had slipped a few cogs.’ He dipped into the briefcase again. ‘All he could come up with was this.’

Armstrong examined the large scale plan which was drawn meticulously in Indian ink. Carey said, ‘There are four trees and the box is buried under one of them but he couldn’t remember which one.’

‘At least that’s cutting it down to a maximum of four holes.’

‘1944 is a long time ago,’ said Carey. ‘Three of the trees are no longer there. Look at these.’ He produced some photographs. ‘These were taken by our Finnish friends about three weeks ago.’ As Armstrong looked at them, Carey said, ‘I had hoped that taking Meyrick back would jog his memory, but we don’t have Meyrick any more, so what we’re left with is half an acre of ground and one tree.’ He peered over Armstrong’s shoulder and pointed, ‘I think that’s the one, but I’m not sure.’

‘So we dig,’ said Armstrong. ‘It will have to be done under cover of darkness.’

Carey stared at him. ‘What darkness? I know we’re not in the Arctic Circle, but even so, there’s precious little darkness at this time of year. The most we’ll get is a deep twilight.’

‘Do we have to jump in now?’ asked Armstrong. ‘Why not wait until later in the year?’

Carey sighed. ‘Apart from the fact that these papers are of overwhelming importance, there’s one very good reason why we have to go in now.’ He tapped the street plan. ‘When Merikken was living in this house it was in a good
class suburb. But Enso has been expanding, the area has become run-down, and it’s due for redevelopment. The bulldozers will be moving in before the autumn. We’ve got to get in first.’

‘A pity Meyrick didn’t make his great discovery a year earlier,’ commented Armstrong. ‘Anyone living in the house?’

‘Yes; a Russian called Kunayev - he’s a foreman in one of the paper mills. A wife and three children; one cat - no dogs.’

‘So we just go along and start to dig holes all over his garden in broad daylight. He’s going to like that!’ Armstrong tossed down the photograph. ‘It’s impossible!’

Carey was unperturbed. ‘Nothing is impossible, my lad. To begin with, the papers are in a tin trunk. That’s a misnomer - a tin trunk is made of sheet steel and I have a natty metal detector, small but efficient.’

‘Like a mine detector?’

‘Something like that, but smaller. Small enough for us to take over the border without much risk. I had it specially made up. According to Meyrick’s dicey memory there’s not much more than two feet of earth on top of the box. I’ve tested this gadget with a smaller box and even three feet under it gives a signal that blasts your eardrums.’

‘So we get the signal and start to dig. What’s Kunayev going to be doing while this is happening?’

Carey grinned. ‘With a bit of luck he won’t be there. The comrade will be toiling like a Stakhanovite in his bloody mill, reeling up the toilet paper, or whatever it is he does.’

‘His wife will be there,’ objected Armstrong. ‘And his kids - and probably the next-door neighbours.’

‘It won’t matter. We’ll take them all by the hand and lead them right up that bloody garden path.’

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