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There was an insurance policy, some letters from the local planning office giving permission for building new chicken houses. There were Wever’s permits and a West German passport stamped only twice for visits to Berlin. He had lied about never going back-what other lies had he told?

With this bundle there was another one, wrapped in the black plastic from which fertilizer bags are made, held tight with two rubber bands. Stuart snapped the fastenings off and unwrapped the packet. There was Wever’s old German army pay book, some souvenirs of foreign paper money dating from the war, and a medical form dated September 18, 1944, certifying him fit for infantry duties. Nothing of importance, thought Stuart, and looked at his watch. The police would surely be here any moment. There were houses and farms nearer than the Red Fox, and even there the sound had come like a thunderclap.

It was as he was about to rewrap the pay book that he saw the envelope tucked in amongst the ancient paper money. He ripped the flap open. There it was-Führerkopie, a page from one of the Lagebesprechungen, Hitler’s daily military conferences, with the names of Jodl, Göring and Hitler down the left-hand side. A script of some demented screenplay which played to packed audiences for six long nightmare years. So it had not been Breslow who was so obsessed by the contents of the tin boxes that he had to steal a souvenir, but Wever himself, the arch cynic to whom Hitler meant nothing.

There were other things too: a GPO receipt for a registered letter addressed to ‘General Delivery, Terminal Annex, Post Office, Los Angeles, California 90054 ’, dated almost one week earlier; a battered Reich Chancellery pass, stamped each month and signed up to the end of 1944. It was a good souvenir. There was a sepia, postcard-size photo, taken in some provincial studio by the look of it, the photographer’s name and an Austrian address in flamboyant script on the back. A young child posed stiffly in front of a painted backdrop of snow-covered mountains. One could almost hear the anxious father calling to the child to hold still.

The other photo was unmistakably amateur: a grubby snapshot from a cheap camera, the print now cracked and dog-eared. Three men were standing self-consciously in what looked like a factory yard. Behind them posts or perhaps factory chimneys and, beyond those, low rolling hills. The reproduction was too grainy to see any detail but one jackbooted young man in leather overcoat and mountain cap looked like Max Breslow. Alongside him, Wever stood in an awkward jokey pose, his elbow resting on Breslow’s shoulder, the other hand on his gun holster which was worn over a mottled camouflage jacket. The third man was in civilian clothes: a long black overcoat and, in his hand, a wide-brimmed felt hat. On the back of the photo ‘Max’, ‘Franz’ and ‘Rb. Dir. Dr Frank’ were written in pencil.

Stuart put the passes, the Führerkopie of the sheet of minutes and the photographs into his pocket before putting the rest of it back into the broken safe. Then he clambered over the debris and ran back to his car. Even before he started the engine, he could hear the wail of the police and ambulance sirens. By the time his car was at the main road he could see the flashing blue lights twinkling through the haze of rain as the police cars bumped along the track that marked the end of Wever’s few acres.

14

‘And all this happened yesterday evening?’ said Sir Sydney Ryden. They were in the SIS Ziggurat building. The Prime Minister’s visit to Tokyo had provided him with a respite from her continual questions. The DG had hardly moved from a position alongside his desk while Boyd Stuart had been telling him about the visit to Franz Wever. It was disconcerting to talk to a man who stood with his eyes lowered to his drink and his feet planted firmly apart, scarcely moving except when he occasionally raised a hand to flick back his long hair or touch his ear.

‘That’s right, Sir Sydney,’ He glanced at the newspapers scattered on the armchair. It had been too late for the morning papers-except for some of the late London editions-to use the story, but the evening papers were all giving it the front page. ‘IRA Bomb Factory Blast-Man Dies’ ‘Bomb Squad Arrests in London Follow Explosion at Farmhouse.’

‘There were no arrests by the Bomb Squad,’ said Sir Sydney.

‘I guess it is just the newspapers’ way of linking the explosion to terrorism. It sells more newspapers, I suppose.’

‘Don’t be too hard on Fleet Street, Stuart. We have some good friends there.’

Stuart looked up sharply. So that was it. It was the DG’s doing; the cunning old devil had manufactured the terrorist story to put everyone off the scent.

‘Better that way,’ said the DG. ‘And, with Wever being a rather taciturn German, his neighbours out there in Suffolk were only too ready to invent all kinds of evil doings.’

‘ Norfolk actually, sir,’ said Stuart. ‘He said he worked for us.’

The DG pursed his lips in distaste. ‘For one of the departments in Whitehall,’ he said icily. The correction left Stuart in little doubt that Wever was some sort of employee of MI5, an organization for which Sir Sydney showed little admiration. ‘And you found a photo of this fellow Max Breslow in the ruins of his farmhouse?’

‘It’s been down to the archives, Sir Sydney,’ said Stuart, reaching for his wallet to show him the photo. ‘There is still one German unidentified.’

The DG waved him away. ‘No point in my looking at it, Stuart. It’s not likely to turn out that he’s on the committee of my golf club or anything.’ It was as near as the DG ever went to making a joke. The DG picked up a cactus plant and held it in the palm of his hand as if trying to estimate its weight. ‘So what do you make of it, Stuart?’

‘At first, I thought Wever was lying about Breslow stealing the document. Later, when I’d had time to think about it, I was less sure. I think Breslow sent that sheet of Hitler’s daily conference through the post to Wever, together with the photograph of Wever and himself. I think it was a way of reminding Wever who Breslow was… ’

‘Renewing an old acquaintance, you mean?’ said the DG with a trace of condescending amusement.

‘Or of putting pressure upon him.’

‘Pressing him in what direction?’ The DG was looking at the cactus, but his thoughts were entirely upon the subject discussed.

‘Not to tell us the story he told us,’ Stuart suggested.

‘Or indeed, to tell us the story he told us, rather than tell us the truth,’ said the DG.

‘Yes, sir.’

‘But you believe him?’

‘Wever claimed that our people were harassing him, sir. He said he’d told the same story over and over.’

‘Nonsense,’ said the DG. ‘No one else has talked to him on this matter.’

‘Shall I let you have my written report in person?’ Stuart asked him.

The DG wrinkled his nose and swallowed a little of his whisky as if it were nasty medicine. ‘No written reports, for the time being, Stuart. We’ll keep this strictly between you and me.’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘I know it’s unusual, but this one is rather touchy. The PM is taking a personal interest and I’d like to keep the paperwork to a minimum.’

‘I see, sir,’ said Stuart. It was going to be one of those operations for which all the reports were going to be written with the advantage of twenty-twenty vision-hindsight. Well, Stuart knew what happened to field men who made any sort of mistake in that situation: the desk men buried them.