"You wouldn't have let me go."
The CIO was hunched forward in his chair, elbows on his desk. "There's another way of looking at it, Bill. We are stretched so damn thin that in effect we are a fraud. We intercept a minute proportion of what's brought in. I know that, you know that… When you are losing the battle, as we are, then we need friends where friends matter… "
"You have to go for the throats of the bastards and hang on."
"It's a great world that you live in, Bill, and it's not a world I see much of across this desk."
"So, who are the friends we need?"
"They're the high and the mighty… and right now they're peeved with you."
"I just gave the nest a little shake."
"Very self-indulgent of you, Bill, and no help to me, because I am summoned to a meeting this afternoon with the faceless wonders at Century House. What do I tell them, Bill?"
"To get fucked."
"But my world isn't your world, more's the pity, and I'm looking for friends… I have one man in Karachi, one DLO on his ownsome, and when he goes up to the North-West Frontier, who escorts him? The spook escorts him, and drives the Landrover. Why does my D L O ride in the spook's Landrover? He rides in it because I don't have the funds to provide a Landrover of our own. I have one DLO in Cyprus, and how does one man get to know what's coming out of Jounieh, how does he know what's sailing from any Lebanese port? Cyprus is awash with spooks… I am trying to cultivate friends, Bill, not shake the nest and telling them to get fucked."
"I promised Park, and he's the best I have, that I wouldn't let your friends the faceless wonders stand in our way,"
"Then you opened your big mouth too wide. Tell us about your Keeper, Bill. We begin to hear quite a lot about Master Park. Is he ready for a move upwards, do you think?"
"We're going to have a celebrity on our hands," the Director General mused.
"How so?"
"I anticipate great mileage out of Furniss. They'll want him at Langley. The Germans'll want him, and I dare say even the French will recognize that they could learn a thing or two."
The Deputy Director General said coolly, "I'd put that out of your mind for a start. If I were in this office, I would make double damn certain that no one outside this building gets to know that we allowed a Desk Head to plod about on a hostile frontier without a semblance of security. It'll get out sooner or later, of course. As like as not Tehran will be drafting a press release even as we sit here: Why We Let British Spy Go, and, by the way, not a few people will be wondering already."
The Director General scowled. "I don't mind telling you that I told Furniss that the whole Service was proud of him."
"Not clever… I'm going to run a fine toothcomb over Terence Snow. The report on how Mattie came to get himself kidnapped is pretty conclusive. Indeed, I doubt that he has any sort of future here. He'll have to go back to Ankara in the short term. There may just be a way he can be useful to us in the short term."
"You're a hard man."
"I am what the job requires."
The snort of the Director General, "And Furniss, has he a future?"
"Very probably not, I am afraid."
The Deputy Director General reported that a man had been sent down to Bibury with the instruction to break the bones of any Customs Investigation creature who came within a hundred yards of the Furniss cottage, and he said that he would be at the Director General's side at the meeting with the Customs hierarchy.
"What sort of people will they be?"
"I expect you'll be able to charm them, Director General.
Think of them as glorified traffic wardens."
He had no doubt that his life depended upon the success with which he stood his ground against the inquisition of the clerics.
Ranged on the far side of the table to him were four of them. They were the power and the glory of the Revolution of today, and once he would have called them fanatics and bigots. They were the ones who had been to maktab where the Mullahs taught the Qur'an to boys aged four, and then they had become the talabeh who were the seekers after truth as handed down from the wisdom of the Ayatollahs. They had taken child brides because it stated in the book that a girl should not experience her first bleeding at her parents' home.
They had spent time in the holy city of Qom. It was the failure of the S A V A K that these creatures still existed. They were his masters. He claimed that he had already bled the British spymaster dry before his escape. He told them of the young Eshraq, and they were quiet as he explained the mission of Eshraq, heading back towards Iran, and they heard of the precautions that were in hand to prevent the traitor crossing over the frontier with armour-piercing missiles. He said that Eshraq's first target was the Mullah who sat immediately in front of him. He saw the way that the others turned sharply to the one amongst them who had been singled for attack, and he told them that he, himself, was the target that would follow.
For more than an hour and a half he defended himself, and at the end he told them of his arrangements to prevent Eshraq crosssing the border.
It was implicit in his argument that if he were removed, if he were sent to Evin, then the shield in front of his masters would have been dismantled.
The life of Charlie Eshraq would safeguard the investigator's life. Nothing more, nothing less.
He had flown back to Tehran from the Gulf that morning to resume work at the new power station to the west of the city.
He browsed in the bazaar. He was on the Bazar e Abbas Abad, amongst the carpet shops.
He paused. He could not linger for more than a few seconds.
In front of him were the heavy steel shutters, and fastening them to the concrete paving was a powerful padlock. His eye caught that of the man who stood in front of the next cavern of carpets, open – and the man ducked back into his shop.
There was no sign, no explanation of why this one business should be shut. If there had been illness, if there had been bereavement, then he would have expected an explanation from the merchant's neighbour.
He walked on. He walked into the warmth of the sunlight beyond the bazaar's alleys. He took a taxi back to his hotel, and in his basin he burned the message that he had been paid to carry.
Henry was late getting down to Albury.
Everyone who knew Henry Carter, which wasn't many, had told him that he should dump the Morris 1000 Estate on the nearest Corporation tip and failing that at the side of any road, and buy something reliable. Trouble again with the carburettor.
He was late getting down to Albury, and Mattie had already arrived, and the men who had brought him from Brize Norton were fretting to be on their way. He ignored the show of annoyance as he struggled through the front door with his bag and his Wellington boots and two weatherproof coats, binoculars, camera with a long lens, and tape-recorder. Typical of the sort of youngster they recruited into the Service now, neither of them offered to help, and they scarcely bothered to report that Mattie was in one piece, sound asleep now, before they were off.
There weren't many of them, the old brigade, left at Century these days, and it was obvious that the Director General would have wanted one of the long servers to be down at Albury to take Mattie's debrief. He would not have called himself a friend of Mattie Furniss, rather a colleague.
He looked back through the front door. He had heard the call. He was festooned with his gear. He saw the bird. Picus Viridis. The Green Woodpecker was halfway up a dead elm across the lawn. There would be gaps in the debrief for him to set his camera on a tripod, and to rig his microphone. He went inside. It would be something of a reunion for him, coming back to the country house in the woodland of the Surrey hills. Mrs Ferguson greeted him. She was rather a dear woman, the housekeeper, and there had been a time when he had actually thought of making a proposal of marriage to her, but that was quite a long time ago and he had been at the house for weeks on end. It was her cooking that had settled it. It was awful. She pecked his cheek. He saw George behind her, hovering at the kitchen door. George touched his cap.