Read Daughters Of Eden: The Eden Series Book 1 Online
Authors: Charlotte Bingham
âI don't honestly think you have the ability to carry out what you're hinting at,' she said, blowing a thin plume of smoke upwards. âI think the trouble with half the people I have met with you is that they are â as the saying has it â full of wind and a certain amount of fury and signifying damn' all.'
âYou would be surprised, madame,' Henry replied, a flicker of anger appearing in his cold eyes. âWe are really rather well organised, as it happens. If our
coup
succeeds, we have people in
place to step into certain shoes. As you may imagine, there would be a certain amount of chaos if the Fat Man goes. Ally this to the somewhat parlous state of our present defences, and the well-known depletion of our armed forces â the air force particularly needing to recoup â and you will soon see that, with the sudden loss of its head, this country will be running around like the famous headless chicken.'
âI understood we had plenty of reserves left after the last air battle,' Poppy said casually. âThat the air force repulsed the so-called enemy with plenty to spare.'
âNot what our spies told us, madame. The Fat Man was actually at Uxbridge at 11 Group's HQ during what turned out to be the last day of the battle â and when he asked at a very crucial stage how many reserves there were, Vice-Marshal Park had to tell him none.'
âThat's how close it was?'
âLast gasp stuff. The Germans have plenty of air strength left when they care to use it. We have sweet Fanny. So it is time to strike, wouldn't you agree?'
âIt would seem so.'
âIt will be no cakewalk, madame, most certainly not, but it will be successful, believe me. Now I'm bored. I want a little entertainment. Are you in the mood for a little entertainment?'
âLater.' Poppy handed him her cigarette to extinguish for her. âIf it is of any interest, it is well known that the Fat Man travels everywhere in a bullet-proof car with a Tommy gun on the seat beside him.'
Henry Lypton opened his eyes wider than normal, generally a sign of slight amusement. To underwrite this the corners of his thin-lipped mouth curled upwards almost into a smile while he clapped his long-fingered, lilywhite hands slowly twice.
âThat is well known. But we have other plans. Once inside the houses of friends he is notoriously careless. Sits up drinking at dinner for hours on end, starts work late in the night, when everyone else has retired. Quite a soft target for us, really, when you think of it.'
Poppy nodded. All this was well noted in patrician circles. More than that it was all too true. The Fat Man could be said to be quite an easy target, if, that is, they had infiltrated his inner circle, which judging from Lypton's expression would seem to be the case.
âYour suite or mine?' Henry Lypton wondered aloud after he had paid the cab off and they were strolling towards their hotel entrance.
âNeither, Henry,' Poppy replied with a tired sigh. âYou really haven't been anywhere near bad enough for me to allow you to visit, and I certainly am not going to call on you.'
âOh, but madame?' Henry wheedled, taking one of Poppy's arms just above the elbow. Had he been directly wired to the mains Poppy reckoned she could not have felt a more uncomfortable and unpleasant
frisson
. âI have been
very
bad, I assure you. If the Lizard and the others â if they knew how dreadfully indiscreet I have been, I shudder to think what they would do to me.'
âThen surely your greatest final pleasure, Henry
Lypton, would be for me to tell them what a bad boy you really are?'
Poppy shook herself free and turned to stare at him as they stood in the hotel foyer.
âI think â that is one doubtful pleasure I would rather forgo, madame,' Henry replied smoothly.
âSo long as we understand each other.'
Lypton swallowed and nodded.
Poppy gave him one last look of contempt, turned on her high heels and took the elevator to her floor, shutting the lift door over on him and refusing to let him accompany her as his final humiliation. Lypton turned away looking strangely satisfied.
After making sure she was alone, Poppy sat down at her desk and wrote the all-important information she had on a note to her Head of Section. She then transcribed it into code and folded it into as small a note as she could, sliding it in the bottom of a specially prepared matchbox that she then placed not in her gas mask case with her gun, as she had been taught, but in a pocket of the coat and skirt she intended to wear the following day.
Preparing for bed she recapped what was required of her over the next week. She had managed to sidestep lunch the following day with Henry Lypton, pleading a previous lunch engagement with a non-existent relative whom she was relying on Jack Ward to conjure up, since she knew she would as always be shadowed everywhere she went.
In the evening she had a dinner engagement with Elizabeth Dunedin, who was throwing a party
especially for Ambeline Melford, freshly returned from Germany where she had been the Führer's house guest in his mountain retreat. Finally on Friday morning Henry had arranged to pick her up in his Bentley and drive them both to what he had promised would be a mighty celebration â rumour being that there would even be a firework display.
Poppy had protested lightly that she understood fireworks were now proscribed, to which Henry had winked and said she was to think beyond just ordinary fireworks. Now, having dined with the hateful man and learned what was more than possibly afoot, Poppy had a very good idea exactly what Henry Lypton had meant by his remark.
That left Poppy enough time to make her drop in the morning. But remembering Jack Ward's instructions, and mindful of quite how vigilant the most dedicated of her set of newfound friends were, Poppy knew she had to stick to the protocol, or risk failure.
She had changed for bed when there was a knock on the outer door of her suite.
âHotel security, madam,' a voice called. âWould you please be kind enough to open this door?'
âI don't wish to.'
âI don't know why you shouldn't.'
âBecause it's ten to midnight and I don't know who the devil you are.'
âI understand perfectly, madam. But all you have to do is ring down to the desk and check that the manager has instructed a Mr George Bulstrode to call on you.'
âAt this hour of the night?'
âThis is an emergency, madam. I would not be
troubling you otherwise.' The man on the other side of the door paused, then lowered his voice. âYou are in a little bit of danger, madam. You really must open the door.'
âAnd if I refuse?' Poppy said in her haughtiest tones.
âI shall have to use my master key.'
Poppy hesitated, and then, pulling her silk wrap around her, she opened the door and admitted her visitor.
He looked every inch a hotel private detective, with his clean but shabby dark suit, his large cheap shoes, his somewhat sad drooping moustache and his reddened nose.
âSit down, Mr Bulstrode,' Poppy said brusquely, indicating a straight-backed chair. âI just want to put on some clothes. I really am not in the habit of receiving callers at this time of night. I must cover myself.'
Bulstrode acknowledged his thanks with a brief nod of his head and moved towards the chair while Poppy, keeping an eye on him, headed for her bedroom to pull a sweater and pair of slacks over her silk pyjamas. When she returned to the sitting room, Scott was sitting on the sofa smoking a Black Russian cigarette.
âScott,' Poppy said, factually, determined not to give him the pleasure of hearing her surprise.
Scott grinned.
âHeil Hitler.'
âScott!' Poppy said, dropping her voice. â
There could be microphones
.'
âThere are no microphones,' Scott assured her. âI should know. I was there at the discussion as to
whether or not you should be bugged. I was all for it â but they decided against it, purely because they didn't know anyone who could do it. Honestly. That lot. When they're not being vile they're being stupid.'
âThat lot, as you call them,' Poppy remarked tersely, âare about to try to assassinate the Prime Minister.'
Scott stared at Poppy, then lit a fresh cigarette.
âWe knew they had a VIP target,' he nodded. âBut the money was on this American billionaire staying just up the road. One of Roosevelt's top buddies â and more important one of his top investors. He's all for America coming into the war and the word was that if they could take him out of the equation, Roosevelt would feel less sympathetic to Britain.'
âIt's not him,' Poppy replied. âI have it from the â I was about to say the horse's mouth but that would demean the horse. I have it from the Reptile. The Fat Man, as they call Churchill, is an easy target once inside one of these country house parties. Loves to sit up and drink, stays awake all night with minimum security dictating to hapless secretaries, that sort of thing.'
âYou're certain?'
âQuite.'
âHave you informed the office?'
âCan't. Not until tomorrow.'
âAny idea of the date for this?'
âMention of fireworks makes me think it just might be on Saturday night.'
Scott looked at his watch.
âCan't get to a public phone box now, not
without rousing suspicion, and can't use a telephone from here, so I dare say it'll have to wait until dawn.'
âI'd say.'
Scott smiled at her and began to tidy up his disguise.
âThis wasn't just fun and games,' he told her. âThis was
très
necessary, my friend. You have no idea how much trouble I went to just to call on you.'
Poppy shook her head at that, not believing him.
âYour fun and games will land you in trouble one day.'
âThen I'll be perfectly poised to say it was fun while it lasted. Anyway â I'd go to even more trouble than this to see you.'
Now Poppy stopped, momentarily thrown off balance.
âMe?' she echoed. âWhy on earth?'
âBecause I admire you.'
âYou don't know anything about me.'
âSo tell me.' Scott sat back in his chair and smiled at her, flicking his long hair back from his bright eyes.
âI'm not anything. I mean â not anything very much, truly I am not. The real me is not at all interesting.'
âOh yes you are.
Oh yes you are
.'
âI'm not. I'm really dreadfully ordinary, really quite plain â I wear glasses most of the time â and I read an awful lot. And I only really like dogs.'
âI don't believe a word of it.'
âIt's entirely true.'
âWhat I see is a beautiful, elegant and poised young womanâ'
âThat's just makeup.'
âYou wear elegant and poised makeup?'
âI meant the beautiful bit. I really am quite dreadfully plain. I've been told so from birth.'
âAnd now I'm telling you differently,' Scott replied. âYou are one of the most beautiful women I've met.'
âWhat are you trying to do?' Poppy asked him. âAre you trying to do what I think you're trying to do?'
âI wouldn't know how to answer that.' Scott looked quizzical. âI really wouldn't.'
âAre you trying toâ' Poppy tried again, before frowning and running aground. âAre you â er â flirting with me?'
â
Flirting
with you? I hope not. I really hate flirts.'
âSo then what are you doing?'
âTelling you the truth. I think you're perfectly beautiful â perfectly gorgeous, extremely clever â and above all remarkably brave.'
âNo more than you, Scott.'
âThat goes without saying,' Scott replied, pokerfaced. âIncluding the extremely clever bit. Everyone knows I am Jack Ward's favourite boy. I am H Section's perfect master of disguise, will o' the wisp, not to mention Secret Weapon.'
âI don't think you're ever serious,' Poppy said, sinking down into the chair opposite. âNot ever. So please, don't joke. It can be a little tiring.'
âI'm being perfectly serious now, Poppy. I've never been more serious. I think you're what my grandfather would call a “stunner”. In fact if you
really must know I wish to God you weren't on this shoot. I wish to God you were safe home in some lovely bed in some lovely big comfortable house somewhere out of bombing range and with nothing to do with this wretched business you've got yourself involved in.'
âAny particular reason?'
âA very good reason. I have fallen madly, head over heels, in love with you.'
There was a small, stunned silence while Poppy looked at Scott as though he were mad.
âNo you haven't,' she said. âOf course you haven't.'
âCome on.' Scott laughed. âLet me be the best judge of that.'
âYou are flirting. I knew it.'
âI am
not
flirting. I am telling you the truth. I. Am. Crazy. About. You.'
âI think you ought to go to bed.'
âI think you ought to as well.'
âI was just about to. Why did you come here anyway? Just to tell me what you've just told me?'
It was Scott's turn to stare, which he did, for quite a while. Then he burst out laughing.
âWhat I've just told you â Poppy â people would cross continents, frozen seas, universes to tell someone they were in love with them.'
âSome people might.'
âI'm one of them.'
âThank you â but you can't be serious. Now go to bed.'
âOn one condition.'
âNo.'
âOn one condition.'
âOh very well.' Poppy looked at him, trying her best to appear glum.
âYou at least let me kiss you.'
âYou want to
kiss
me?'
Poppy managed to make it sound as if what Scott was requesting was supernatural.