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    Storm Island

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      He led them downstairs to the kitchen. They looked at the window-frame

      and the unbroken pane of glass lying on the lawn.

      Canter said: "Also, the lock on the bedroom door had been picked."

      They sat down at the kitchen table, and Canter made tea. Bloggs said:

      "It happened the night after I lost him in Leicester Square. I fouled

      it all up."

      Harris said: "Nobody's perfect."

      They drank their tea in silence for a while. Harris said: "How are

      things with you, anyway? You don't drop in at the Yard."

      "Busy."

      "How's Christine?"

      "Killed in the bombing."

      Harris's eyes widened.

      "You poor bastard."

      "You all right?"

      "Lost my brother in North Africa. Did you ever meet Johnny?"

      "No."

      "He was a lad. Drink? You've never seen anything like it. Spent so

      much on booze, he could never afford to get married which is just as

      well, the way things turned out."

      "Most people have lost somebody."

      "If you're on your own, come round our place for dinner on Sunday."

      "Thanks, I work Sundays now."

      Harris nodded.

      "Well, whenever you feel like it."

      A detective-constable poked his head around the door and addressed

      Harris.

      "Can we start bagging-up the evidence, guy?"

      Harris looked at Bloggs.

      "I've finished," Bloggs said.

      "All right, son, carry on," Harris told him.

      Bloggs said: "Suppose he made contact after I lost him, and arranged

      for the resident agent to come here. The resident may have suspected a

      trap that would explain why he came in through the window and picked

      the lock."

      "It makes him a devilish suspicious bastard," Harris observed.

      "That might be why we've never caught him. Anyway, he gets into

      Blondie's room and wakes him up. Now he knows it isn't a trap,

      right?"

      "Right."

      "So why does he kill Blondie?"

      "Maybe they quarrelled."

      "There were no signs of a struggle."

      Harris frowned into his empty cup.

      "Perhaps he twigged that Blondie was being watched, and he was afraid

      we'd pick the boy up and make him spill the beans."

      Bloggs said: "That makes him a ruthless bastard."

      "That might be why we've never caught him."

      "Come in. Sit down. I've just had a call from MI6. Canaris has been

      fired."

      Bloggs went in, sat down, and said: "Is that good news or bad?"

      "Very bad," said Godliman.

      "It's happened at the worst possible moment."

      "Do I get told why?"

      Godliman looked at him through narrow eyes, then said: "I think you

      need to know. At this moment we have forty double-agents broadcasting

      to Hamburg false information about Allied plans for the invasion of

      France."

      Bloggs whistled.

      "I didn't know it was quite that big. Isuppose the doubles say we're

      going in at Cherbourg, but really it will be Calais, or vice versa."

      "Something like that. Apparently I don't need to know the details.

      Anyway they haven't told me. However, the whole thing is in danger. We

      knew Canaris; we knew we had him fooled; we could have gone on fooling

      him. A new broom may mistrust his predecessor's agents. There's more:

      we've had some defections from the other side, people who could have

      betrayed the Abwehr's people over here if they hadn't been betrayed

      already. It's another reason for the Germans to begin to suspect our

      doubles.

      "Then there's the possibility of a leak. Literally thousands of people

      now know about die double-cross system. There are doubles in Iceland,

      Canada, and Ceylon. We ran a double-cross in the Middle East.

      "And we made a bad mistake last year by repatriating a German called

      Erich Carl. We later learned he was an Abwehr agent a real one and

      that while he was in internment on the Isle of Man he may have learned

      about two doubles called Mutt and Jeff, and possibly a third called

      Tate.

      "So we're skating on thin ice. If one decent Abwehr agent in Britain

      gets to know about Fortitude that's the code-name for the deception

      plan the whole strategy will be endangered. Not to mince words, we

      could lose the fucking war."

      Bloggs suppressed a smile: he could remember a time when Professor

      Godliman did not know the meaning of such words.

      The professor went on: "The Twenty Committee has made it quite clear

      that they expect me to make sure there aren't any decent Abwehr agents

      in Britain."

      "Last week we would have been quite confident that there weren't,"

      Bloggs said.

      "Now we know there's at least one."

      "And we let him slip through our fingers."

      "So now we have to find him again."

      "I don't know," Bloggs said gloomily. We don't know what part of the

      country he's operating from, we haven't the faintest idea what he

      looks like. He's too crafty to be pinpointed by triangulation while

      he's transmitting otherwise we would have nabbed him long ago. We

      don't even know his code name. So where do we start?"

      "Unsolved crimes," said Godliman.

      "Look: a spy is bound to break the law. He forges papers, he steals

      petrol and ammunition, he evades checkpoints, he enters restricted

      areas, he takes photographs, and when people rumble him he kills them.

      The police are bound to get to know of some of these crimes, if the spy

      has been operating for any length of time. If we go through the

      unsolved crimes files since the war, we'll find traces."

      "Don't you realize that most crimes are unsolved?" Bloggs said

      incredulously.

      "The files would fill the Albert Hall!"

      Godliman shrugged.

      "So, we narrow it down to London, and we start with murders."

      They found what they were looking for on the very first day of their

      search.

      It happened to be Godliman who came across it, and at first he did not

      realize its significance.

      It was the file on the murder of a Mrs. Una Garden in Highgate in

      1940. Her throat had been cut and she had been sexually molested,

      although not raped. She had been found in the bedroom of her lodger,

      with a considerable amount of alcohol in her bloodstream. The picture

      was fairly clear: she had had a tryst with the lodger, he had wanted to

      go farther than she was prepared to let him, they had quarrelled, he

      had killed her, and the murder had neutralized his libido. But the

      police had never found the lodger.

      Godliman had been about to pass over the file: spies did not get

      involved in sexual assaults. But he was a meticulous man with records,

      so he read every word, and consequently discovered that the unfortunate

      Mrs. Garden had received stiletto wounds in her back, as well as the

      fatal wound to her throat.

      Godliman and Bloggs were on opposite sides of a wooden table in the

      records room at Old Scotland Yard. Godlimantossed the file across the

      table and said: "I think this is it."

      Bloggs glanced through it and said: "The stiletto."

      They signed for the file and walked the short distance t
    o the War

      Office. When they returned to Godliman's room, there was a decoded

      signal on his desk. He read it casually, then thumped the table in

      excitement.

      "It's him!"

      Bloggs read: "Orders received. Regards to Willi."

      "Remember him?" Godliman said.

      "Die Nadel?"

      "Yes," Bloggs said hesitantly.

      "The Needle. But there's not much information here."

      "Think, think! A stilletto is like a needle. It's the same man: the

      murder of Mrs. Garden, all those signals in 1940 that we couldn't

      trace, the rendezvous with Blondie ..."

      "Possibly." Bloggs looked thoughtful.

      "I can prove it," Godliman said.

      "Remember the transmission about Finland that you showed me the first

      day I came here? The one which was interrupted?"

      "Yes." Bloggs went to the file to find it.

      "If my memory serves me well, the date of that transmission is the same

      as the date of this murder ... and I'll bet the time of death coincides

      with the interruption."

      Bloggs looked at the signal in the file.

      "Right both times."

      "There!"

      "He's been operating in London for at least five years, and it's taken

      us until now to get on to him," Bloggs reflected.

      "He won't be easy to catch."

      Godliman suddenly looked wolfish.

      "He may be clever, but he's not as clever as me," he said tightly.

      "I'm going to nail him to the fucking wall."

      Bloggs laughed out loud.

      "My God, you've changed, Professor."

      Godliman said: "Do you realize that's the first time you've laughed for

      a year?"

      NINE

      The supply boat rounded the headland and chugged into the bay at Storm

      Island under a blue sky. There were two women in it: one was the

      skipper's wife he had been called up and now she ran the business and

      the other was Lucy's mother.

      Mother got out of the boat, wearing a utility suit a mannish jacket and

      an above-the-knee skirt. Lucy hugged her mightily.

      "Mother! What a surprise!"

      "But I wrote to you."

      The letter was with the mail on the boat Mother had forgotten that the

      post only came once a fortnight on Storm Island.

      "Is this my grandson? Isn't he a big boy?"

      Little Jo, almost three years old, turned bashful and hid behind Lucy's

      skirt. He was dark-haired, pretty, and tall for his age.

      Mother said: "Isn't he like his father!"

      "Yes," Lucy said. Her assent held a note of disapproval.

      "You must be freezing come up to the house. Where did you get that

      skirt?"

      They picked up the groceries and began to walk up the ramp to the cliff

      top. Mother chattered as they went.

      "It's the fashion, dear. It saves on material. But it isn't as cold

      as this on the mainland. Such a wind! I suppose it's all right to

      leave my case on the jetty nobody to steal it! Jane is engaged to an

      American soldier a white one, thank God. He comes from a place called

      Milwaukee, and he doesn't chew gum. Isn't that nice? I've only got

      four more daughters to marry off now. Your father is a Captain in the

      Home Guard, did I tell you? He's up half the night patrolling the

      common waiting for German parachutists. Uncle Stephen's warehouse was

      bombed I don't know what he'll do, it's an Act of War or something '

      "Don't rush, Mother, you've got fourteen days to tell me the news,"

      Lucy laughed.

      They reached the cottage. Mother said: "Isn't this lovely'?" They

      went in.

      "I think this is just lovely."

      Lucy parked Mother at the kitchen table and made tea.

      "Tom will get your case up. He'll be here for his lunch shortly."

      "The shepherd?"

      "Yes."

      "Does he find things for David to do, then?"

      Lucy laughed.

      "It's the other way around. I'm sure he'll tell you all about it

      himself. You haven't told me why you're here."

      "My dear, it's about time I saw you. I know we're not supposed to make

      unnecessary journeys, but once in four years isn't extravagant, is

      it?"

      They heard the jeep outside, and a moment later David wheeled himself

      in. He kissed his mother-in-law and introduced Tom.

      Lucy said: "Tom, you can earn your lunch today by bringing Mother's

      case up, as she carried your groceries."

      David was warming his hands at the stove.

      "It's raw today."

      Mother said: "You're really taking sheep-farming seriously, then?"

      "The flock is double what it was three years ago," David told her.

      "My father never farmed this island seriously. I've fenced six miles

      of the cliff top, improved the grazing, and introduced modern breeding

      methods. Not only do we have more sheep, but each animal gives us more

      meat and wool."

      Mother said tentatively: "I suppose Tom does the physical work and you

      give the orders."

      David laughed.

      "Equal partners, Mother."

      They had hearts for lunch, and both men ate mountains of potatoes.

      Mother commented favourably on Jo's table manners. Afterwards David

      lit a cigarette and Tom stuffed his pipe.

      Mother said: "What I really want to know is when you're going to give

      me more grandchildren." She smiled brightly.

      There was a long silence.

      "Well, I think it's wonderful, the way David copes," said Mother.

      Lucy said: "Yes," and again there was that note of disapproval.

      They were walking along the cliff top. The wind had dropped on the

      third day of Mother's visit, and it was mild enough to go out. They

      took Jo, dressed in a fisherman's sweater and a fur coat. They had

      stopped at the top of a rise to watch David, Tom and the dog herding

      sheep. Lucy could see in Mother's face an internal struggle as concern

      vied with discretion. She decided to save her mother the effort of

      asking.

      "He doesn't love me," she said.

      Mother looked quickly to make sure Jo was out of earshot.

      "I'm sure it's not that bad, dear. Different men show their love in

      diff-" "Mother, we haven't been man and wife properly since we were

      married."

      "But... ?" She indicated Jo with a nod.

      "That was a week before the wedding."

      "Oh! Oh, dear." She was shocked.

      "Is it, you know, the accident?"

      "Yes, but not in the way you mean. It's nothing physical. He just ...

      wpn't." Lucy was crying quietly, the tears trickling down her

      wind-browned cheeks.

      "Have you talked about it ?"

      "I've tried. Mother, what shall I do?"

      "Perhaps with time ' "It's been almost four years!"

      There was a pause. They began to walk on across the heather, into the

      weak afternoon sun. Jo chased gulls. Mother said: "I almost left your

      father, once."

      It was Lucy's turn to be shocked.

      "When?"

      "It was soon after Jane was born. We weren't so well-off in those

      days, you know Father was still working for his father, and there was a

      slump. I was expecting for the third time in three years, and it

      seemed that a life of having babies and making ends meet stretched out

      in front
    of me with nothing to relieve the monotony. Then I discovered

      he was seeing an old flame of his Brenda Simmonds, you never knew her,

      she went to Basingstoke. Suddenly I asked myself what I was doing it

      for, and I couldn't think of a sensible answer."

      Lucy had dim, patchy memories of those days: her grandfather with a

      white moustache; her father, a more slender edition; extended-family

      meals in the great farmhouse kitchen; a lot of laughter and sunshine

      and animals. Even then her parents' marriage had seemed to represent

     


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