He didn't know them. She knew, didn't she, that he loathed going to parties where he didn't know anyone.
"They're nice people, really nice, and it'll do you good to get out. You won't get any hassle, they're all solid Tory. They won't be like those bitches I had to field on the doorstep."
She'd told him about the women from P. A. R. E. Little made him overtly angry. That sort of woman did, but it was one of the reasons why he avoided casual contacts outside the Establishment, that he hated being backed into corners and hectored by the nuclear danger lobby.
"I want to go, Frederick, and you are coming with m e. "
He could think of no further excuse. His paper was in, typed up, and would now be in Boll's safe. Would probably be there for months before it was read.
"What would I have to wear?" he said.
"God, I don't know. Is everyone in that bloody place like you, can anyone make a decision? How do you get anything done?"
"Well, as long as we're not back too late."
They were already there when Colt drove into the car park on Wimbledon Common.
He sat in their car. Faud talked, Namir was silent in the back.
They explained what was required of him. Bloody hell…
Surprise spilling on his face in the darkened car.
" Y o u want me to do that…?"
Those were the instructions. He was not given the opportunity to argue, or to back off. He assumed that either Faud or Namir would have a handgun. If he had refused, then he wouldn't have made more than a dozen paces from the car. The car park was empty. And where was there for him to run to? His only refuge was Baghdad, when they were good and ready to give him the means to get home to the apartment on the sixth floor of the Haifa Street Housing Project. Home, was that, after all, home?
And if he failed, sure as fate, they would disown him. He had recognised that he was already distanced from his immediate past in Iraq. When the Colonel had identified Colt's potential usefulness he had, at the same time, removed Colt from contact with his family, with his sons. He missed the boys, who had been arrogant, aimless brats when they had first come under Colt's care, who were now toughened from hard hiking into the desert and foothill wilderness around the military compound. He thought they would run to fat again in no time. ..
The instructions were repeated again. A new contact procedure was arranged.
"I want a gun. I shall have to have my Ruger again," he told them.
From the window Rutherford could see the stream of cars and buses edging out through the Falcon Gate. He had been in the office alongside the Security Officer's room since early afternoon.
He had been given the Personnel file on Bissett to read, which was as thin as a wafer, and speaking of wafers, he'd been given nothing else at all, not even a cup of tea. The Security Officer was pleading pressure of work. Well, obviously, panic stations the previous evening, a wild splatter of backside-protecting telephone calls, and nothing but an embarrassing calm the morning after.
He wasn't welcome. Simple as that. His rank did not flatter the Security Officer.
L
He could understand, too, why he had been called into Hobbes's office and told that he was not required at lunch at the Reform Club, and that he should get himself down to Aldermaston. Dickie Barker was taking over. Barker wanting to be in the dogfight as referee, to see that no harm came to the famous old war hero from Buffalo Bill Erlich.
He heard the rolling stamped footsteps.
"All right, Rutherford?"
God, the man had an unpleasant voice.
"All right, as far as it goes."
"I think it's gone far enough."
If he had been offered one solitary cup of tea, leave aside a biscuit, a sandwich, or two fingers of Famous Grouse, then he might not have been so bloody-minded. Or been allowed to be at the lunch at the Reform where he should have been… He swivelled in his chair. "We'll just have to poke about a bit and see, won't we?" he said.
"I am satisfied that Bissett was just an ass."
"When I've talked to him, I dare say I will share your satisfaction."
"I don't think that will be necessary."
"You called us in, sir, so we're here. When we start, then we finish."
"I don't need you to run my department, Rutherford."
"You know better than me, sir, with your long experience, that Curzon Street has a sticky touch… I'm not paid to be easy to get rid of, and this," he picked up and dropped Bissett's file, "which it took all of four minutes out of the four hours I have been here to read, would satisfy no one in Curzon Street of anything."
"It was a one-off. I've discussed it with his department head.
The man's behind with his work, he was just extremely stupid…
"
"And when I've talked to him, then I'm sure I will be able to endorse that."
"It'll have to wait until the morning."
Rutherford smiled, sweetly. " N o problem, sir, I've all the time in the world, all the time it takes."
And he kept smiling. The Security Officer out-ranked him, of course. Equally, he understood that the Counter-intelligence division of Curzon Street had access wherever it wanted to go, whenever. So here he was, his feet were under the table, and here he would be staying until he was damn well finished… and if the Security Officer didn't like it, he could go suck peppermints.
"And I'll want to sec his Superintendent, and perhaps some of his colleagues."
"I'll not have a hand grenade thrown in here. You don't have my authority to disturb the work of very able and very dedicated men."
" N o, indeed, sir, and nor would I need it."
" Y o u got my phone burning," Ruane said.
" T h e British, Dan, they're a race apart. What did that asshole Barker say?"
" H e said he could use a tough operator like you in his department – mind you, he didn't say what for – and he said to watch my ass, you'd be after my job first chance I gave you."
"I got him to admit it, Colt was there."
" Y o u got more than that, Bill… "
Ruane slid a fax across his desk. Erlich read. The smile was spreading on his face. The report of the laboratory in Washington.
The analysis of saliva on a cigarillo tip. The D. N. A. print. Great stuff. Getting better. Analysis of a tobacco leaf. Produce of Iraq.
Grown in Iraq. Manufactured in Iraq. Linkage. That was very good indeed.
" Y o u find your Colt, you match that saliva, and you got yourself a case. Meanwhile, and it may be the last thing we wanted, we've a case against those sweet-talkers in Baghdad."
He should never have come. He should have let Sara go on her own. He was out of the range of his pocket, here, out of his class.
The women talked about school fees and holidays and "little places" in the West Country. The men talked about the Market and tax schemes and the hideous price of commercial property.
That was before the champagne got them going. He was welcome, of course, because he was Sara's husband. Poor Sara, married to that nobody. He was asked where his boys went to school, failure.
He was asked where he had been on holiday, failure. He was asked where he lived, failure. After that they made no effort in his direction, that first group. He could see Sara. He'd seen her glass filled twice. He watched her laughing. The man she was laughing with was the man who had answered their ring at the front door. The man wore midnight-blue corduroy trousers, and a green silk shirt. The man had his hand on Sara's arm, and he made his Sara peal in laughter.
He drifted from the group. They didn't seem to notice his going. He forced himself. He penetrated a second group. Across the room he saw that Sara blushed, and that she giggled, and he saw the man's head close to her face, saw that he whispered to her.
He stood his ground in the second conversation. Noise growing all around him. The babble of the voices, and the heavy beat of the music from hidden speakers. The hostess, the one called Debbie, was at his elbow, more champagne. These were the chosen people around him. The ones who were never breathalysed. The ones who knew the back doubles in life. These weren't the people who would have themselves stopped, where everyone could see, at the Falcon Gate. These were the Thames Valley Triangle people. There was the sweep of lights through the window, thrown from another car in the drive. These were the new rich, and he couldn't think for the life of him what he was doing here… There was a ring at the front door. He saw the back of them. Sara's back and the man's back, going out into the hall. A man asked him if he knew that club in Barcelona where the girls stripped in feathers, feathers would you believe it? Bissett said, to general merriment, that he was willing to believe everything he was told of Spanish strippers. Could no longer see Sara, or the man.