Authors: Catherine Aird
This was how it was that Henry Tyler came to be sitting next to Commander Alan Howkins, a senior policeman with much on his mind. It was a Monday morning and they were so far alone at the communal luncheon table.
âGood weekend?' enquired Henry Tyler politely. He was a little stiff himself from an excess of gardening at his home in the country and he was glad that the week ahead back at his desk at the Foreign Office promised to be less taxingâphysically, at least.
The Commander shook his head. âRather disappointing, actually.'
âSorry about that.'
âCan't expect to win them all, I suppose,' said the policeman.
âTrue,' observed Henry, projecting the proper sympathy due from a member of one of Her Majesty's Offices of State to another. Lessons about not always winning had been learned at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office a long time ago and had been regularly reinforced by international events over the years.
âBut I don't like being beaten,' said Howkins with unexpected savagery.
âWho does?' said Tyler. Not that the Foreign Office ever admitted to being beatenâsomething which, quite typically there, they saw as completely different from ânot winning'. What they did when it happenedâfor instance, in 1776âwas to use another expression altogether. The Foreign Office was great on euphemisms.
âOutwitted,' said Howkins, tearing a bread roll apart with unnecessary vigour. âThat's what we were.'
âAh,' said Tyler. So Scotland Yard, then, didn't go in for euphemisms â¦
âLost Mr Big,' said Howkins briefly, turning to the hovering waiter. âI'll have the whitebait, please, and the beef. Under-done.'
âTough,' said Henry Tyler. âNo, no,' he said hastily to the waiter, âI wasn't talking about the beef. I'll have that, too.'
(The letters between Sir John Mordaunt and his wife had frequently dwelt on game, brawn, pickled bacon and such-like country fare and a tradition of good cooking was maintained at the club.)
âI suppose it's always the big fish that get away,' resumed the policeman, more philosophically.
âNo,' said Henry kindly, âbut you miss them more than the little ones when you do lose them and you remember them for longer.'
âTrue.'
âBetter luck next time, anyway,' said the Foreign Office man.
âThat's what the Assistant Commissioner said after the first time,' said Howkins.
âLike that, is it?'
âAnd after the second time,' murmured the Commander into his drink, âhe said he hoped it would be a case of third time lucky.'
âAnd it wasn't?' divined Henry Tyler without too much difficulty.
âSlipped through our fingers again on Saturday night.'
âBad luck.'
âOh, it can't be luck,' said Howkins at once. âHe must have a system. The only trouble is that we can't break it.'
âHis luck may run out, though.' Henry Tyler felt he ought to make a pitch for Lady Luck, who had come to the aid of the Foreign Office more often than he liked to think about.
âI'd rather ours held,' said Howkins, demonstrating that policemen could play with words too. âI shouldn't think we'll get many more chances with this fellow.'
âSlippery customer, eh?'
âLet me tell you this much, Tyler â¦'
Henry bent his head forward attentively although there were no guests within earshot. The Mordaunt Club members themselves had an unbroken history of total discretion which was implicit and not enjoined upon them. It was in the tradition of the seventeenth-century country gentleman after whom the club was named: and was one of the many points which figured in the thinkingâif not in the Minutesâof the Committee during its deliberations on the ticklish question of the admission of women to the club.
The Commander said, âIt's not every day we get a chance of picking up the real brains behind a drug racket right here in the middle of London, I can tell you.'
âIf criminals have got brains, then they use them,' agreed Henry Tyler.
âLet alone three chances,' said the Commander, lapsing back into melancholy.
It wasn't a question of brains that was making the question of the admission of women to the Mordaunt Club so tricky. Diehards were insisting that the question was academic (since women
per se
were seldom of a sufficiently Mordaunt cast of mind to qualify for membership) and the views of Sir John Mordaunt himself on the subject unknown (but not too difficult to conjecture).
âAh,' said Henry Tyler, himself cast in the mould of Dreier's celebrated dictum of a diplomat being a man who thought twice before saying nothing. âShall you get a fourth chance, do you think?'
Howkins still looked depressed. âWell, so far we've always known where to find him the weekend after a shipment comes in, which is something that doesn't happen in every case.'
âAnd do you always know when that is going to be?' enquired Tyler pertinently.
âOh, yes, that's no trouble. Thanks to your people, actually. The local Brit-bod in Lasserta usually tips us off in good time.'
Something in Henry's expression caused the Commander to rephrase this. âSorry,' he grinned. âThat's short-speak for Her Britannic Majesty's Ambassador to the Sheikhdom of Lasserta.'
âAnthony Heber Hibbs?'
âThat's him. He's got a pretty good intelligence system going out there where they make the stuff so that's no problem.'
âSo what is?' Identifying the problem was always important. Even if nothing could be done about it. That was part of the working credo in Henry's department.
âEvidence, lack of and need for,' said Howkins cogently. âIt's got to be stone-cold, straight-up and irrefutable evidence before we blow our cover or we've lost everything and then we'll never catch him.'
âYou want him red-handed,' said Henry, falling back on an earlier phrasing. It was one which Sir John Mordaunt would have understood.
âWe do.' The Commander started on his whitebait. âAnd we want him rather badly.'
âI can see you don't want just small fry either,' agreed Henry Tyler, who had opted for
hors-d'oeuvres
rather than whitebait. âSmall fry aren't worth losing your set-up for.'
âLet's face it,' said Howkins. âOur cover can't be all that good or someone wouldn't be giving him the nod every time we close in but for what it's worth we'd like to try to keep our cover and nobble whoever's doing the Sister Ann act.'
âWhat Sherlock Holmes would have called a three-pipe problem â¦'
âMore like half a dozen hookahs,' said Howkins, getting pessimistic again. âI've been racking my brains all weekend.'
âHeâyour chappieâcan't be too worried about walking into a trap, then, can he?'
The Foreign Office man didn't get a direct answer. âHave you ever heard, Tyler, of a famous restaurant in Manlow Street?'
â“Mother Carey's Chickens”? Oh, yes â¦'
âWell, we established first of all that our man has regular meetings at “Les Poulets de la Mère Carey” there the week after a shipment of heroin comes in from the Sheikhdom.'
âThen he is doing well, your drugs baron,' said Henry. âIt must be one of the most expensive eating places in Town.'
âThat's what our auditors say, too,' said Howkins. âThey've even suggested we weren't nobbling our suspect too soon because we liked eating there too.'
âMen without souls, auditors,' observed Henry.
âIf I could only work out how he knows when to walk out of Mère Carey's empty-handed and when not to, then I'd be a happy man.'
âBecause you could then catch him dealing,' agreed Henry.
âWhich he would only do if he didn't know we were there.' The Commander sounded injured. âIt's not only that. It's the cocking a snook aspect that gets me, too.'
âHe's doing a Queen Anne's Fan on you,' said Henry Tyler calmly.
The Commander looked mystified. âI know she's dead, Tyler, but â¦'
âPutting your thumb to your nose with your fingers spread out is pure Queen Anne.'
âQueen Anne?'
âNone other. Her reign was a time of much politicking and snoot-cocking, as our revered namesake Mordaunt found out.'
âReally? Well, as far as I'm concerned the farther police are from politics the better.'
âThere weren't any police then.'
âNo heroin either, though,' said the Commander, still licking his wounds.
The arrival of an ashet of rare beef temporarily put paid to conversation.
âThis man of yours â¦' resumed Henry presently.
âSharp as a barrel-load of monkeys and the mentality of a buccaneer â¦'
Yes, it would be the latter that rankled, thought Tyler to himself.
âCarrying on his business in one of the best restaurants in London before our very eyes.'
âWhich means he has a high-class clientele.'
âThat's part of the problem,' said the Commander. âBefore we know where we are, Tyler, we'll be getting questions asked in the House. And you don't need me to tell you where that can lead to.'
âNo.' Howkins was talking to a man to whom the phrase struck home hard. Tyler glanced up at a portrait of Sir John hanging on the wall. Politics had been simpler in Mordaunt's day. In the words of his biographer, âAs a country squire, John must automatically have supported the one Established Church, agricultural rather than commercial interests, and peace rather than war.' Parliamentary life wasn't as uncomplicated as that any more.
âWe just can't fathom who tips Chummie the wink,' said Howkins, pushing his plate away.
âThe head waiter?' suggested Henry, sometimesâbut not alwaysâa believer in going straight to the top.
âBelieve you me, Caesar's wife is nothing in comparison,' responded Howkins. âHippolyte Chatout's been with Mother Carey's man and boy, and as far as we can make out he's as honest as they come. Well,' the Commander amended this thoughtfully, âas far as head waiters come.'
âOne of the other waiters, then â¦'
Howkins sighed. âWe've had a couple of those fancy microphones under the tablecloth of our laddie's reserved table and never once picked up anything in the way of a warning.'
âA message in the menu?'
âNot that our cipher people can find,' said the policeman wearily.
âA message in a bottle, then?' suggested Tyler. âBy the way, will you have a spot more yourself?'
The Commander shook his head. âThank you, no. The sommelier's French, too, and as clean as a whistle.'
Henry Tyler, though a Foreign Office man through and through, let that pass. âHe could have brought wine
a
when wine
b
had been ordered,' he said.
âWe know it isn't him,' said Howkins, âbecause our chappie got away twice while the sommelier was off sick so he's in the clear anyway.'
âThe hat-check girl?'
âOur villain's always already on his way before he gets near Monique.'
âMadame herself?'
Commander Howkins looked properly shocked. âMadame Therese de l'Aubigny-Febeaux feels very strongly the pleasures of the table to be superior to those of any drugs and in any case she insists that she has first of all her reputation to think of.'
âQuite so,' murmured Henry.
âShe has been most accommodating,' said Howkins warmly, âand very co-operative with the Force â¦'
âI'm glad to hear it,' said Henry, whose whole training was to prefer
âentente'
to
âdétente'
.
âMost accommodatingâexcept, naturally, in the matter of expenses.'
âNaturally,' agreed Henry Tyler, who in his day, had served time on the Paris desk in the Foreign Office. âWell, Howkins, then in my view that only leaves us, too, going the way of all flesh â¦'
âWhat was that, Tyler?'
âThe way of all flesh,' quoted Henry in a manner very similar to Sir John Mordaunt, âis to the kitchen.'
âPudding, gentlemen?' The waiter at the Mordaunt had appeared at their elbows. The terms âsweet' and âdessert' were not used at the club. âThere's plum duff, raisin sponge and a very good blackberry and apple tart â¦'
As soon as important decisions in this matter had been taken, the Commander returned to worry at his own private bone. âWe've been over the kitchen staff, of course, but we just can't see how they could get a message to Chummie anyway. They never go into the restaurant.'
âBut they know when you're there?'
The Commander nodded as he leaned a little to one side to allow a plate of raisin sponge to be placed before him. âBound to. It's the only place from which we can watch him without him seeing us. We have a couple of our people dining at the next table to him, too, but the kitchen's a line of escape we just have to keep covered.'
Henry Tyler's choice of pudding was an old-fashioned plum duff. âTell me about the food at Mother Carey's â¦'
âVery good, unless you go in for the fancy stuff. You know what I meanâhalf an ounce of fish in a pretty sauce, five shavings of carrot, three peas and a tomato all looking more like a painting than a proper meal.'
âCuisine nouvelle.' His dining companion, no lightweight, nodded sadly.
âAnd what you might call “afters” is a slurp of syrup with three strawberries on a plate the size of your hand.' The Commander was tucking into his raisin sponge with purpose.
âSo your man has a watcher in the kitchen, then?'
âSeems like it,' said the Commander, âbut we can't arrest the lot and anyway we need to know how the message is got across to catch our quarry. It's him we want, don't forget, and before he sees the writing on the wall.'
âAnd who's doing the cooking out there at the back?'