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    Storm Island

    Page 9
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      again.

      There was only one door at the top of the second flight of stairs.

      Faber tried it gently. It was locked.

      He took another tool from the pocket of his jacket. The noise of the

      cistern filling covered the sound of Faber picking the lock. He opened

      the door and listened.

      He could hear deep, regular breathing. He stepped inside. The sound

      came from the opposite corner of the room. He could see nothing. He

      crossed the pitch-black room very slowly, feeling the air in front of

      him at each step, until he was beside the bed.

      He had the torch in his left hand, the stiletto loose in his sleeve,

      and his right hand free. He switched on the torch and grabbed the

      sleeping man's throat in a strangling grip.

      The agent's eyes snapped open, full of fear, but he could make no

      sound. Faber straddled the bed and sat on him.

      6?

      Then he whispered: "One Kings thirteen and relaxed his grip' You the

      agent said. He peered into the torchlight, trying to see Faber's face.

      He rubbed his neck where Faber's hand had squeezed.

      Faber hissed: "Be still!" He shone the torch into the agent's eyes,

      and with his right hand drew the stiletto.

      "Aren't you going to let me get up?"

      "I prefer you in bed where you can do no more damage."

      "Damage? More damage?"

      "You were watched in Leicester Square, you let me follow you here, and

      they are observing this house. Should I trust you to do anything?"

      "My God, I'm sorry."

      "Why did they send you?"

      "The message had to be delivered personally. The orders come from the

      Fuhrer himself." The agent stopped.

      "Well? What orders?"

      "I... have to be sure it is you."

      "How can you be sure?"

      "I must see your face."

      Faber hesitated, then shone the torch at himself briefly.

      "Satisfied?"

      "Die Nadel," the man breathed.

      "And who are you?"

      "Major Friedrich Kaldor, at your service, sir."

      "Then I should call you Sir."

      "Oh, no, sir. You've been promoted twice in your absence. You are now

      a lieutenant-colonel."

      "Have they nothing better to do in Hamburg?"

      "Aren't you pleased?"

      "I should be pleased to go back and put Major von Braun on latrine

      duty."

      "May I get up, sir?"

      "Certainly not. What if Major Kaldor is languishing in Wandsworth

      Jail, and you are a substitute, just waiting to give some kind of

      signal to your watching friends in the house opposite?"

      "Very well."

      "So what are these orders from Hitler himself?"

      "Well, sir, the Reich believes there will be an invasion of France this

      year."

      "Brilliant, brilliant. Go on."

      "They believe that General Patton is massing the First United States

      Army Group in the part of England known as East Anglia. If that army

      is the invasion force, then it follows that they will attack via the

      Pas de Calais."

      "That makes sense. But I have seen no sign of this army of

      Patton's."

      "There is some doubt in the highest circles in Berlin. The Fuhrer's

      astrologer ' "What?"

      "Yes, sir, he has an astrologer, who tells him to defend Normandy."

      "My God. Are things that bad there?"

      "He gets plenty of earthbound advice, too. I personally believe he

      uses the astrologer as an excuse when he thinks the generals are wrong

      but he cannot fault their arguments."

      Faber sighed. He had been afraid of news like this.

      "Go on."

      "Your assignment is to assess the strength of FUSAG: numbers of troops,

      artillery, air support ' "I know how to measure armies, thank you."

      "Of course." He paused.

      "I am instructed to emphasize the importance of the mission, sir."

      "And you have done so. Tell me: are things that bad in Berlin?"

      The agent hesitated, and said: "No, sir. Morale is high, output of

      munitions increases every month, the people spit at the bombers of the

      R.A.F ' "Never mind," Faber interrupted him.

      "I can get the propaganda from my radio."

      The younger man was silent.

      Faber said: "Do you have anything else to tell me? Officially, I

      mean."

      "Yes. For the duration of the assignment you have a special bolt

      hole

      "They do think it's important," Faber said.

      "You rendezvous with a U-boat in the North Sea, ten miles due east of

      a town called Aberdeen. Just call them in on your normal radio

      frequency and they will surface. As soon as you or I have told Hamburg

      that the orders have been passed from me to you, the route will be

      open. The boat will be there every Friday and Monday at six p.m. and

      will wait until six a.m."

      "Aberdeen is a big town. Do you have an exact map reference?"

      "Yes." The agent recited the numbers, and Faber memorized them.

      "Is that everything, Major?"

      "Yes, sir."

      What do you plan to do about the gentlemen from Ml5 in the house across

      the road?"

      The agent shrugged.

      "I shall have to give them the slip."

      Faber thought: It's no good.

      "What are your orders for action after you have seen me? Do you have a

      bolt hole

      "No. I am to go to a place called Weymouth and steal a boat in which

      to return to France."

      That was no plan at all. So, Faber thought: Canaris knew how it would

      be. Very well.

      He said: "And if you are caught by the British, and tortured?"

      "I have a suicide pill."

      "And you will use it?"

      "Most certainly."

      Faber looked at him.

      "I think you might," he said. He placed his left hand on the agent's

      chest and put his weight on it, as if he were about to get off the bed.

      That way he was able to feel exactly where the rib cage ended and the

      soft belly began. He thrust the point of the stiletto in just under

      the ribs and stabbed upward to the heart.

      The agent's eyes widened for a terror-stricken instant. A cry came to

      his throat but did not escape. His body convulsed. Faber pushed the

      stiletto an inch farther in. The eyes closed and the body went Limp.

      Faber said: "You saw my face."

      EIGHT

      "I think we've lost control of it," said Percival Godliman.

      Frederick Bloggs nodded agreement, and added: "It's my fault."

      The boy looked weary, Godliman thought. He had had that look for

      almost a year, ever since the night they dragged the crushed remains of

      his wife from underneath the rubble of their bombed house in Hoxton.

      Tin not interested in apportioning blame," Godliman said briskly.

      "The fact is that something happened in Leicester Square those few

      seconds when you lost sight of Blondie."

      "Do you think the contact was made?"

      "Possibly."

      "When we picked him up again back in Stockwell, I thought he had simply

      given up for the day."

      "If that were the case he would have made the rendezvous again

      yesterday and today." Godliman was making patterns with matchsticks on

      his desk, an aid to thinking he had developed into a ha
    bit.

      "Still no movement at the house?"

      "Nothing. He's been in there for forty-eight hours." Bloggs repeated:

      "It's my fault."

      "Don't be a bore, old chap," Godliman said.

      "It was my decision to let him run, so that he would lead us to someone

      else; and I still think it was the right move."

      Bloggs sat motionless, his expression blank, his hands in the pockets

      of his raincoat.

      "If the contact has been made, we shouldn't delay picking Blondie up

      and finding out what his mission was."

      "That way we lose whatever chance we have of following Blondie to

      somebody really dangerous."

      "Your decision."

      Godliman had made a church with his matches. He stared at it for a

      moment, then took a halfpenny from his pocket and tossed it.

      "Tails," he observed.

      "Give him another twenty-four hours."

      The landlord was a middle-aged Irish Republican from Lis-doonvarna,

      County Clare, who harboured a secret hope that the Germans would win

      the war and thus free the Emerald Isle from English oppression forever.

      He limped arthritically around the old house, collecting his weekly

      rents, thinking how much he would be worth if those rents were allowed

      to rise to their true market value. He was not a rich man he owned

      only two houses, this and the smaller one in which he lived. He was

      permanently bad-tempered.

      On the first floor he tapped on the door of the old man. This tenant

      was always pleased to see him. He was probably pleased to see anybody.

      He said: "Hello, Mr. Riley, would you like a cup of tea ?"

      "No time today."

      "Oh, well." The old man handed over the money.

      "I expect you've seen the kitchen window."

      "No, I didn't go in there."

      "Oh! Well, there's a pane of glass out. I patched it over with

      blackout curtain, but of course there is a draught."

      "Who smashed it?" the landlord asked.

      "Funny thing, it ain't broke. Just lying there on the grass. I expect

      the old putty just gave way. I'll mend it myself, if you can get hold

      of a bit of putty."

      You old fool, the landlord thought. Aloud he said: "I don't suppose it

      occurred to you that you might have been burgled ?"

      The old man looked astonished.

      "I never thought of that."

      "Nobody's missing any valuables?"

      "Nobody's said so to me."

      The landlord went to the door.

      "All right, I'll have a look when I go down."

      The old man followed him out.

      "I don't think the new bloke is in, upstairs," he said.

      "I haven't heard a sound for a couple of days."

      The landlord was sniffing.

      "Has he been cooking in his room?"

      "I wouldn't know, Mr. Riley."

      The two of them went up the stairs. The old man said: "He's very

      quiet, if he is in there."

      "Whatever he's cooking, hell have to stop. It smells bloody awful."

      The landlord knocked on the door. There was no answer. He opened it

      and went in, and the old man followed him.

      "Well, well, well," the old sergeant said heartily.

      "I think you've got a dead one."

      He stood in the doorway, surveying the room.

      "You touched anything, Paddy?"

      "No," the landlord replied.

      "And the name's Mr. Riley."

      The policeman ignored this.

      "Not long dead, though. I've smelled worse." His survey took in the

      old chest of drawers, the suitcase on the low table, the faded square

      of carpet, the dirty curtains on the dormer window, and the rumpled bed

      in the corner. There were no signs of a struggle.

      He went over to the bed. The young man's face was peaceful, his hands

      clasped over his chest.

      "I'd say heart attack, if he wasn't so young." There was no empty

      sleeping-pill bottle to indicate suicide. He picked up the leather

      wallet on top of the chest and looked through its contents. There was

      an identity card and a ration book, and a fairly thick wad of notes.

      "Papers in order and he ain't been robbed."

      "He's only been here a week or so," the landlord ventured.

      "I don't know much about him at all. He came from North Wales to work

      in a factory."

      The sergeant observed: "If he was as healthy as he looked he'd be in

      the Army." He opened the suitcase on the table.

      "Bloody hell, what's this lot?"

      The landlord and the old man had edged their way into the room now. The

      landlord said: "It's a radio' at the same time as the old man said:

      "He's bleeding."

      "Don't touch that body!" the sergeant said.

      "He's had a knife in the guts," the old man persisted.

      The sergeant gingerly lifted one of the dead hands from the chest to

      reveal a small patch of dried blood.

      "He was bleeding," he said.

      "Where's the nearest phone?"

      "Five doors down," the landlord told him.

      "Lock this room and stay out until I get back."

      The sergeant left the house and knocked at the door of the neighbour

      with the phone. A woman opened it.

      "Good morning, madam. May I use your telephone?"

      "Come in." She showed him the phone, on a stand in the hall.

      "What's happened anything exciting?"

      "A tenant died in a lodging-house just up the road," he told her as he

      dialled.

      "Murdered?" she asked, wide-eyed.

      "I leave that to the experts. Hello? Superintendent Jones, please.

      This is Canter." He looked at the woman.

      "Might I ask you just to pop in the kitchen while I talk to my

      governor?"

      She went, disappointed.

      "Hello, Super. This body's got a knife wound and a suitcase radio."

      "What's the address again, Sarge?"

      Sergeant Canter told him.

      "Yes, that's the one they've been watching. This is an MI5 job, Sarge.

      Go to number forty-two and tell the surveillance team what you've

      found. I'll get on to their chief. Off you go."

      Canter thanked the woman and crossed the road. He was quite thrilled:

      this was only his second murder in 31 years as a Metropolitan

      Policeman, and it turned out to involve espionage ! He might make

      Inspector yet.

      He knocked on the door of number forty-two. It opened, and two men

      stood there.

      Sergeant Canter said: "Are you the secret agents from Mis?"

      Bloggs arrived at the same time as a Special Branch man,

      Detective-Inspector Harris, whom he had known in his Scotland Yard

      days. Canter showed them the body.

      They stood still for a moment, looking at the peaceful young face with

      its blond moustache.

      Harris said: "Who is he?"

      "Codename Blondie," Bloggs told him.

      "We think he came in by parachute a couple of weeks ago. We picked up

      a radio message to another agent arranging a rendezvous. We knew the

      code, so we were able to watch the rendezvous. We hoped Blondie would

      lead us to the resident agent, who would be a much more dangerous

      specimen."

      "So what happened here?"

      "Buggered if I know."

      Harris looked at the wound in the agent's chest.

      "Stiletto?"

      "Something like
    that. A very neat job. Under the ribs and straight up

      into the heart. Quick."

      "There are worse ways to die."

      Sergeant Canter said: "Would you like to see the method of entry?"

     


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