PART TWO
CHAPTER I
1
A
N
old-young man with hair which dangled over his shoulders and the heaven-preoccupied gaze of some eighteenth-century
abbé
was sweeping out a discotheque at the corner of Little Compton Street as Castle went by.
Castle had taken an earlier train than usual, and he was not due at the office for another three-quarters of an hour. Soho at this hour had still some of the glamour and innocence he remembered from his youth. It was at this corner he had listened for the first time to a foreign tongue, at the small cheap restaurant next door he had drunk his first glass of wine; crossing Old Compton Street in those days had been the nearest he had ever come to crossing the Channel. At nine in the morning the strip-tease clubs were all closed and only the delicatessens of his memory were open. The names against the flat-bells â Lulu, Mimi and the like â were all that indicated the afternoon and evening activities of Old Compton Street. The drains ran with fresh water, and the early housewives passed him under the pale hazy sky, carrying bulging sacks of salami and liverwurst with an air of happy triumph. There was not a policeman in sight, though after dark they would be seen walking in pairs. Castle crossed the peaceful street and entered a bookshop he had frequented for several years now.
It was an unusually respectable bookshop for this area of Soho, quite unlike the bookshop which faced it across the street and bore the simple sign âBooks' in scarlet letters. The window below the scarlet sign displayed girlie magazines which nobody was ever seen to buy â they were like a signal in an easy code long broken; they indicated the nature of private wares and interests inside. But the shop of Halliday & Son confronted the scarlet âBooks' with a window full of Penguins and Everyman and second-hand copies of World's Classics. The son was never seen there, only old Mr Halliday himself, bent and white-haired, wearing an air of courtesy like an old suit in which he would probably like to be buried. He wrote all his business letters in long-hand: he was busy on one of them now.
âA fine autumn morning, Mr Castle,' Mr Halliday remarked, as he traced with great care the phrase âYour obedient servant'.
âThere was a touch of frost this morning in the country.'
âA bit early yet,' Mr Halliday said.
âI wonder if you've got a copy of
War and Peace
? I've never read it. It seems about time for me to begin.'
âFinished
Clarissa
already, sir?'
âNo, but I'm afraid I'm stuck. The thought of all those volumes to come . . . I need a change.'
âThe Macmillan edition is out of print, but I think I have a clean second-hand copy in the World's Classics in one volume. The Aylmer Maude translation. You can't beat Aylmer Maude for Tolstoy. He wasn't a mere translator, he knew the author as a friend.' He put down his pen and looked regretfully at âYour obedient servant'. The penmanship was obviously not up to the mark.
âThat's the translation I want. Two copies of course.'
âHow are things with you, if I may ask, sir?'
âMy boy's sick. Measles. Oh, nothing to worry about. No complications.'
âI'm very glad to hear that, Mr Castle. Measles in these days can cause a lot of anxiety. All well at the office, I hope? No crises in international affairs?'
âNone I've been told about. Everything very quiet. I'm seriously thinking of retiring.'
âI'm sorry to hear that, sir. We need travelled gentlemen like you to deal with foreign affairs. They will give you a good pension, I trust?'
âI doubt it. How's your business?'
âQuiet, sir, very quiet. Fashions change. I remember the 1940s, how people would queue for a new World's Classic. There's little demand today for the great writers. The old grow old, and the young â well, they seem to stay young a long time, and their tastes differ from ours . . . My son's doing better than I am â in that shop over the road.'
âHe must get some queer types.'
âI prefer not to dwell on it, Mr Castle. The two businesses remain distinct â I've always insisted on that. No policeman will ever come in here for what I would call, between you and me, a bribe. Not that any real harm can be done by the things the boy sells. It's like preaching to the converted I say. You can't corrupt the corrupt, sir.'
âOne day I must meet your son.'
âHe comes across in the evening to help me go over my books. He has a better head for figures than I ever had. We often speak of you, sir. It interests him to hear what you've been buying. I think he sometimes envies me the kind of clients I have, few though they are. He gets the furtive types, sir. They are not the ones to discuss a book like you and I do.'
âYou might tell him I have an edition of
Monsieur Nicolas
which I want to sell. Not quite your cup of tea, I think.'
âI'm not so sure, sir, that it's quite his either. It's a sort of classic you must admit â the title is not suggestive enough for
his
customers, and it's expensive. It would be described in a catalogue as
erotica
rather than
curiosa
. Of course he might find a borrower. Most of his books are on loan, you understand. They buy a book one day and change it the next. His books are not for keeps â like a good set of Sir Walter Scott used to be.'
âYou won't forget to tell him?
Monsieur Nicolas
.'
âOh no, sir. Restif de la Bretonne. Limited edition. Published by Rodker. I have a memory like an encyclopaedia, so far as the older books are concerned. Will you take
War and Peace
with you? If you'll allow me a five-minute search in the cellar.'
âYou can post it to Berkhamsted. I shan't have time for reading today. Only do remember to tell your son . . .'
âI've never forgotten a message yet, sir, have I?'
After Castle left the shop he crossed the street and peered for a moment into the other establishment. All he saw was one young spotty man making his way sadly down a rack of
Men Only
and
Penthouse
 . . . A green rep curtain hung at the end of the shop. It probably held more erudite and expensive items as well as shyer customers, and perhaps young Halliday too whom Castle had never yet had the good fortune to meet â if good fortune were the right term, he thought, to employ.
2
Davis for once had arrived at the office ahead of him. He told Castle apologetically, âI came in early today. I said to myself â the new broom may still be sweeping around. And so I thought . . . an appearance of zeal . . . It does no harm.'
âDaintry won't be here on a Monday morning. He went off somewhere for a shooting week-end. Anything in from Zaire yet?'
âNothing at all. The Yanks are asking for more information about the Chinese mission in Zanzibar.'
âWe've nothing new to give them. It's up to MI5.'
âYou'd think from the fuss they make that Zanzibar was as close to them as Cuba.'
âIt almost is â in the jet age.'
Cynthia, the major-general's daughter, came in with two cups of coffee and a telegram. She wore brown trousers and a turtle-neck sweater. She had something in common with Davis, for she played a comedy too. If faithful Davis looked as untrustworthy as a bookie, Cynthia, the domestic minded, looked as dashing as a young commando. It was a pity that her spelling was so bad, but perhaps there was something Elizabethan about her spelling as well as about her name. She was probably looking for a Philip Sidney, and so far she had only found a Davis.
âFrom Lourenço Marques,' Cynthia told Castle.
âYour pigeon, Davis.'
âOf absorbing interest,' Davis said. â“Your 253 of September 10 mutilated. Please repeat.” That's
your
pigeon, Cynthia. Run along and code it again like a good girl and get the spelling right this time. It helps. You know, Castle, when I joined this outfit, I was a romantic. I thought of atom secrets. They only took me on because I was a good mathematician, and my physics were not too bad either.'
âAtom secrets belong to Section 8.'
âI thought I'd at least learn some interesting gadgets, like using secret ink. I'm sure you know all about secret ink.'
âI did once â even to the use of bird shit. I had a course in it before they sent me on a mission at the end of the war. They gave me a handsome little wooden box, full of bottles like one of those chemistry cabinets for children. And an electric kettle â with a supply of plastic knitting needles.'
âWhat on earth for?'
âFor opening letters.'
âAnd did you ever? Open one, I mean?'
âNo, though I did once try. I was taught not to open an envelope at the flap, but at the side, and then when I closed it again I was supposed to use the same gum. The trouble was I hadn't got the right gum, so I had to burn the letter after reading it. It wasn't important anyway. Just a love letter.'
âWhat about a Luger? I suppose you had a Luger. Or an explosive fountain-pen?'
âNo. We've never been very James Bond minded here. I wasn't allowed to carry a gun, and my only car was a second-hand Morris Minor.'
âWe might at least have been given one Luger between us. It's the age of terrorism.'
âBut we've got a scrambler,' Castle said in the hope of soothing Davis. He recognized the kind of embittered dialogue which was always apt to crop up when Davis was out of sorts. A glass of port too many, a disappointment with Cynthia . . .
âHave you ever handled a microdot, Castle?'
âNever.'
âNot even an old wartime hand like you? What was the most secret information you ever possessed, Castle?'
âI once knew the approximate date of an invasion.'
âNormandy?'
âNo, no. Only the Azores.'
â
Were
they invaded? I'd forgotten â or perhaps I never knew. Oh well, old man, I suppose we've got to set our teeth and go through the bloody Zaire bag. Can you tell me why the Yanks are interested in our forecast for the copper crop?'
âI suppose it affects the budget. And that could affect aid programmes. Perhaps the Zaire Government might be tempted to supplement its aid from elsewhere. You see, here we are â Report 397 â someone with a rather Slavic name had lunch on the 24th with the President.'
âDo we have to pass even that on to the CIA?'
âOf course.'
âAnd do you suppose they will give us one little guided missile secret in return?'
It was certainly one of Davis's worst days. His eyes had a yellow tint. God only knew what mixture he had drunk the night before in his bachelor pad in Davies Street. He said glumly, âJames Bond would have had Cynthia a long while ago. On a sandy beach under a hot sun. Pass me Philip Dibba's card, would you?'
âWhat's his number?'
â59800/3'.
âWhat's he been up to?'
âThere's a rumour that his retirement as director of the Post Office in Kinshasa was compulsory. He had too many stamps misprinted for his private collection. There goes our most high-powered agent in Zaire.' Davis put his head in his hands and gave a doglike howl of genuine distress.
Castle said, âI know how you feel, Davis. Sometimes I would like to retire myself . . . or change my job.'
âIt's too late for that.'
âI wonder. Sarah always tells me I could write a book.'
âOfficial Secrets.'
âNot about us. About apartheid.'
âIt's not what you'd call a best-selling subject.'
Davis stopped writing Dibba's card. He said, âJoking apart, old man, please don't think of it. I couldn't stand this job without you. I'd crack up if there wasn't someone here with whom I could laugh at things. I'm afraid to smile with any of the others. Even Cynthia. I love her, but she's so damned loyal, she might report me as a security risk. To Colonel Daintry. Like James Bond killing the girl he slept with. Only she hasn't even slept with me.'
âI wasn't really serious,' Castle said. âHow
could
I leave? Where would I go from here? Except retire. I'm sixty-two, Davis. Past the official age. I sometimes think they've forgotten me, or perhaps they've lost my file.'
âHere they are asking for traces of a fellow called Agbo, an employee in Radio Zaire. 59800 proposes him as a sub-agent.'
âWhat for?'
âHe has a contact in Radio Ghana.'
âThat doesn't sound very valuable. Anyway Ghana's not our territory. Pass it on to 6B and see if they can use him.'
âDon't be rash, Castle, we don't want to give away a treasure. Who knows what might spring from agent Agbo? From Ghana we might even penetrate Radio Guinea. That would put Penkovsky in the shade. What a triumph. The CIA have never penetrated as far as that into darkest Africa.'
It was one of Davis's worst days.
âPerhaps we only see the dullest side of things in 6A,' Castle said.
Cynthia returned with an envelope for Davis. âYou have to sign here and acknowledge receipt.'
âWhat's in it?'
âHow would I know? It's administration.' She collected a single piece of paper from the out-tray. âIs this all?'
âWe are not exactly overworked at the moment, Cynthia. Are you free for lunch?'
âNo, I have things to get for dinner tonight.' She closed the door firmly.
âOh well, another time. Always another time.' Davis opened the envelope. He said, âWhat will they think up next?'