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Authors: Anthony Eglin

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‘You must let us know how you get on tomorrow.'

‘Yes, I will – I hope with encouraging news. Before I go, though, there's one more thing I wanted to tell you. I took another look at the journals yesterday. I went through them with a fine-tooth comb just to make sure I hadn't overlooked anything. Do you know what I discovered?'

‘What?'

‘I think we're missing one book,' he said.

Chapter Seven

Words fail me to picture dreams of hope, expectations, surprises – yes, disappointment, sometimes despair, that are the lot of the hybridizer…

Dr J. H. Nicolas, rose hybridist

Five thousand miles from Steeple Tarrant in the town of Lakeford, Washington, on the West Coast of the United States, Ira Wolff was finishing his fourth cup of black coffee. It was a quarter to ten on Thursday, 3rd July. The polished mahogany door to his office at Baker-Reynolds was closed. He had instructed his personal assistant to route all calls to his voice mail for the remainder of the morning. Save for a top-of-the-line Hewlett-Packard computer, a white telephone, some neatly stacked folders, a binder, and a tray holding a water carafe and glass, the dark leather desk surface was empty. Clutter was not permissible in Wolff 's life. He'd called the staff meeting for ten o'clock; he had fifteen uninterrupted minutes to prepare for it.

Were it not for Baker-Reynolds, the small community of Lakeford would have long ago withered like those dusty ghost towns of the West that had prospered only as long as there was gold or silver to be mined. Wolff was majority shareholder, President and Chief Executive Officer of the privately owned corporation. In the case of Lakeford, the ‘gold' was in the form of another of nature's gifts – roses. And, barring catastrophe, the roses would survive, as they had for millions of years.

Founded in 1931 as a two-family partnership, B-R – as the townsfolk called it – was among the country's largest rose growers and hybridizers. Over seven million plants were grown each year at Roseland, the forty-three hundred acre rose farm on the floor of a fertile valley close to the Idaho and Oregon borders. In the planting and harvesting seasons the operation demanded a staff of over twelve hundred. Every year, ten billion gallons of water and five hundred million gallons of fertilizer were pumped into the ground to satisfy the voracious appetite of this thorny colony. Ten months of the year, a highly trained, horticulturally-savvy force of over two dozen sales people fanned out across the US, keeping nurseries and garden centres well stocked and well informed. In the peak selling months, daily sales often climbed as high as a million dollars. Twice a year, professional photographers, commanding fees that would make trial lawyers look charitable, were flown to Lakeford from as far afield as San Francisco and New York. With macro lenses on Nikons and Hasselblads, they would capture the quintessential moments in the life of those prized blooms decreed perfect enough to star in B-R's catalogues. Over two million copies of these lavish works of art and salesmanship were mailed out, three times a year, to the swelling ranks of rose-crazed gardeners across the nation.

But B-R wasn't all business. Over the years, it had given much back to the community on which it relied – a notable example being the Lakeford Rose Garden. The three-acre landscaped park was designed to illustrate the evolution of the rose. Starting with ancient species roses, the plantings in the lush park followed the journey of the rose across the globe and through the centuries. Through Asia and China in the years before Christ; thence to the Roman Empire, the Middle Ages and the Crusades; to the celebrated collection at Malmaison, assembled by Napoleon's wife, the Empress Josephine; and on to the modern roses of the present day. The garden's more than one hundred thousand visitors each year helped boost, nicely, the local economy.

The Lakeford Clinic and Health Care Services was another of B-R's community good deeds. A day-care centre, a sport and activities centre for youth, a prenatal clinic, and a number of other charitable works were either fully or partly funded by the county's number one employer. Since Wolff 's acquisition of the company, however, no further acts of social conscience were forthcoming.

Baker-Reynolds staff and the townspeople would have been outraged to the point of lynch-mob ferocity had they known exactly how Wolff had managed to gain control of what was considered by economists and financial gurus throughout the US as a model company. Wolff had made certain that the unscrupulous and manipulative pressures he had brought to bear on a certain Baker family board member would never surface. There had been rumours at the time of sale, most related to the confiscatory low price he had paid for the company. There had also been letters and phone calls of protest to the Washington State Attorney General's office. But the secrets of his threatening to disclose unspeakable sexual improprieties and trumped-up financial duplicity on Baker's part were as safe and impregnable as a Swiss bank.

The transition – which had received a modest one-column mention on the front page of the
Wall Street Journal
at the time – had been swift and uneventful. In the years since his takeover Wolff had made it his mission to perpetuate – albeit, sometimes by illusion – the company's integrity and reputation. Now, as before, to all intents and purposes, Baker-Reynolds was Lakeford. And, provided Wolff continued to conduct the business as his predecessors had, profitably for sixty years, the company and the town would be around for a long time. Roses would always be in demand. Or so it would appear.

Wolff concluded the phone call to his Chief Financial Officer. He took a quick second look over the papers on his desk. Satisfied that he was fully prepared for the meeting, he shuffled them together and placed them in the nearby leather folder. He glanced at his Breitling watch, a gift from the company. It was 9.52, eight minutes before the meeting was due to start. The memo he had circulated three days before, to all B-R corporate officers and department heads, reflected his taste for brevity. It read:

Please plan to attend a special meeting on Thursday, July 3rd, at 10.00 a.m. in the company boardroom.

Ira M. Wolff

President and Chief Executive Officer

Wolff sat in the chair, locked his hands behind his head, leaned back and stared vacantly at the ceiling. He'd put a lot of years into Baker-Reynolds. The company had been highly profitable when he acquired it and he had managed to keep it so until recently. Now though, with much fiercer domestic and global competition, he was fighting for his life again. The writing was on the wall: it looked as though nothing could forestall the company's collapse. Ironically, he'd played it straight this time, operating the company in an aggressive, yet businesslike fashion, never straying from the path of legitimacy. Despite everything he had done to bolster sales and reduce overhead, profits kept slipping inexorably downward and costs continued to spiral. Red ink was seeping insidiously through the pages of each successive monthly profit-and-loss statement. More loans were out of the question. He couldn't pay those he had. The banks were now getting testy. If the company were to go under, it could be more than just a financial disaster for him. If the State Attorney General or the FBI started to get nosy, or if a cub reporter decided to resurrect the demise of Baker-Reynolds, it would only be a matter of time before Wolff 's past would start popping up all over the media.

In a lifetime of constructing creative contingency plans, this time he had none.

He wondered which part of his past they would dig up first. Probably the five years' incarceration for fraud, he assumed, along with a fine of three million dollars to be used to repay his victims. This was part of the sentence he had received eighteen years ago for an elaborate Ponzi scheme that had bilked over one hundred investors in five eastern states of more than two hundred million dollars. Employing, as one legal mind stated, ‘a brilliantly conceived but legally corrupt and morally diabolical scheme', Bernard Wolfenden – his real name – was found guilty of establishing phony corporations, creating fake deeds of trust, fictitious balance sheets and other documents to give investors the impression of legitimacy. Even a loan officer at a prestigious bank was on his payroll at the time.

Wolff finally took his eyes off the ceiling, glanced at his watch, and got up from the chair. It was two minutes to ten. It was inevitable, he concluded, that once the name Wolfenden was in the nation's computer search engines, other unsavoury episodes of his past would ooze to the surface – the Dallas affair, for one. The media would have a field day with that. So, above all else, he had to keep Baker-Reynolds going. He preferred not to think more about Dallas right now.

 

The meeting started precisely at ten. Wolff insisted on punctuality. Eighteen people were in attendance. The mega-sized boardroom table, more befitting a White House banquet, left little room for anything else in the room. The story was that old man Baker bought it at auction, had it cut in four pieces, and reassembled it in the room. Sundry awards and diplomas – many faded, all with rose motifs – added listless blotches of colour to the beige walls.

At the head of the table, Ira Wolff studied some papers with Jed Harmon, the company's Chief Financial Officer. There was a stern look on Wolff 's tanned face. He was fastidiously dressed in a navy pinstripe suit with a lot of white cuff showing. His only noticeable mannerism was the constant need to brush aside the strands of grey-streaked hair that flopped continually across his glaucous eyes.

Wolff handed the file he'd been scrutinizing back to Jed Harmon and walked over to the vacant chair at one end of the table. He placed his hands on the back of the chair and surveyed the room.

‘Okay, let's get comfortable. Settle down. Lillian, would you close the door, please.'

There was a jockeying of chairs – the casters gliding silently on the thick, wool carpet – a rustling of papers and the room fell silent. Wolff cleared his throat.

‘Good morning, everybody. Nice to see you back in the saddle, Bill,' he said, glancing across the table at his General Sales Manager, Bill Samuelson, who had recently been on leave of absence. Wolff paused briefly, to make eye contact around the room. ‘These last two weeks I've spent mostly with Jed and our auditors. As a result of those meetings, we've reached some tough conclusions that you should know about. You're not getting any sugar with this pill. These are the facts. Eighteen months ago we started to experience a drop in sales. At first the decline was modest but as we entered our peak season sales started to plunge. In the first quarter of this year they were off over twenty-nine per cent.'

He paused to let the number sink in. ‘Twenty-nine per cent,' he said, slowly. He shook his head from side to side. ‘Twenty-nine per cent,' he whispered, mouthing the words.

The expressions around the table were stone-faced, as Wolff continued. ‘Despite taking corrective measures, the situation has worsened. Now we face two simple choices. Either, by some process, to dramatically hype sales, or –' His lips tightened. ‘To start downsizing.' Brushing a lock of hair from his eyes he waited a moment for the words to sink in.

‘We've analysed our operational and selling costs and are satisfied that there's little or no fat to be cut there. That leaves these options: first, to start immediately on an aggressive effort to sell the products we presently own; second, we must, and I repeat must, bring new products to market now. I'm not talking about in the next year or so – we don't have that luxury. We've got to pull a rabbit out of the hat very soon or pink slips start showing up in the pay envelopes.'

Wolff 's cold eyes came to rest for a moment on Bill Samuelson, who shifted uncomfortably in his chair.

‘And the first casualties will be in the sales department,' Wolff added.

Turning to Steve Weber, B-R's Director of Research and Hybridizing, he continued. ‘Research and Development. We need fresh, new ideas in roses. We can't rely on regurgitating the same tired old hybrid teas and floribundas any more. We're at war with the British again – with David Austin's English roses; the Germans are pounding away at our flank with their Flower Carpet roses; the French with Meilland's Romantica series. Christ! Even the Canadians are in the battle, convincing buyers that they can grow roses around igloos.'

An ominous silence gripped the room as Wolff paused to take a sip of water.

‘Everyone must put on their thinking caps and come up with creative ideas. Within the next five days there'll be another staff meeting, at which time I'll expect all department heads to present their thoughts on turning this thing around. Don't give me any Band-aid ideas. I'll say it one more time. Somehow, between us, we must come up with an earthshaking new horticultural innovation to stop this freefall. I'm not talking six months from now – not even three months from now – we need it right now. I don't care what it costs. If it's a big-time idea, I'll come up with big-time bucks to put behind it. Think hard about it. Have your families and friends think about it. Because if we don't make it happen – and, I mean soon – this company is going to go under. And we're all going with it.'

With that he turned and left the room.

Chapter Eight

Gardeners, I think, dream bigger dreams than emperors.

Mary Cantwell

Thomas Farrow's cottage was in a cul-de-sac at the north end of Little Stanton village. It took Kingston two passes through the hamlet before he found it. The chattering windscreen wipers of the TR4 were no match for the gusting rain that made it difficult to see much up ahead.

Finally he glimpsed the braided cap of the thatched roof peeking out above a tall yew hedge. It was the only part of the cottage visible from the street. Climbing out of his car, Kingston gingerly made his way up a narrow flight of slippery stone steps, keeping a firm grip on his umbrella and his briefcase. He had brought four of Major Cooke's journals with him, just in case. At the top of the steps the garden opened to a wide band of lawn, edged by shrub and perennial borders. On a more agreeable day the view to the south was undoubtedly splendid. Now a menacing parade of dark thunderclouds rolled across the rain-shrouded horizon. Turning away from the dispiriting view, he was cheered at the sight of the brightly painted peacock-blue door.

He lifted the tarnished lion's-head knocker and let it drop loudly. Almost immediately the door was opened by a slender young woman, casually but fashionably dressed.

‘Good afternoon, my name's Lawrence Kingston. Dr Kingston. I'm trying to locate a Mr Thomas Farrow,' he said evenly. ‘I was given this address by a former acquaintance of his. I wondered whether he might still live here?'

‘Oh, I'm so awfully sorry – you obviously don't know,' the young woman stammered. ‘Thomas died several years ago. I'm his niece. Was he a friend of yours?'

‘Not exactly. More like a friend of a friend, really.'

‘Your friend wasn't aware, either, then – that Thomas had died?'

Conscious of her apprehensive expression, as she gripped the edge of the partially open door, Kingston stepped back two paces. ‘No. No, he wasn't,' he said. His next words were lost, as a crack of thunder echoed across the leaden sky. He waited as it rumbled off into the distance. Then it started to bucket down. ‘I'm awfully sorry to learn about your uncle,' he said.

A sudden gust of wind threatened to blow Kingston's umbrella inside out. Rain splattered noisily off the porch behind him. It suddenly occurred to him what a sorry sight he must present to this pleasant young woman.

‘Please…' She opened the door wider and stepped back. ‘Do come in. It's such a wretched day. At least you can dry off a little. I'm sure you could do with a cup of tea. My name's Jennifer, by the way.'

‘Thank you, Jennifer, that's awfully kind of you. It
is
getting a bit nasty out here. Yes, tea would be lovely.'

He set his briefcase down on the tiled floor of the hallway, took off his sopping trench coat, and handed it to her. ‘You're very kind.'

‘I'll put the kettle on. You get yourself warmed up a bit,' she said, leaving Kingston standing with his back to the meagre fire smouldering in the hearth of the low-ceilinged living room.

When Jennifer returned with the tea, they sat down and she talked about her uncle. She said he'd passed away, suddenly, about six or seven years ago. She confirmed that he had, indeed, been passionately interested in roses and, yes, he had belonged to a garden club. She had done her best, she said, to keep up his garden in the back of the cottage but, sadly, it was nowhere near as glorious now as it had been when he was alive.

‘You haven't told me your reason for coming,' she said.

‘I'm trying to establish whether your uncle was a friend or acquaintance of a man named Jeffrey Cooke. Major Jeffrey Cooke. He was also keenly interested in roses. I recently found out that they belonged to the same garden club.'

‘You said, “was”. This Major Cooke – he's no longer alive, then?'

‘I'm afraid not.'

‘You still haven't told me how you think Thomas might have helped you.'

‘You're right, forgive me. Well, some close friends of mine recently purchased a nice old house from Major Cooke's widow. There are lots of roses in the garden – upwards of two hundred – some quite old and rare. The garden's large, of course.'

‘It sounds lovely.'

‘It is. Well, Mrs Cooke lent us some of her husband's journals containing records of his hybridizing roses. We're pretty certain they're Major Cooke's notes but it's also possible that some of the entries could have been made by your uncle, because we're led to believe that from time to time they worked together on the rose breeding. We're trying to find out exactly what information is contained in the journals.'

‘I don't quite understand.'

‘Oh, I'm sorry,' said Kingston, placing a hand on his brow. ‘I forgot to tell you, they're written in some kind of code.'

She raised her eyebrows. ‘That's a bit queer, isn't it?'

‘It is.'

She shook her head. ‘I don't think I can be of any help, I'm afraid. I inherited all of Thomas's belongings. I know there were no notebooks or journals, anything like that, among his effects. But there are quite a lot of regular gardening-related books in the guest room. That's about all in the way of reading matter.'

‘Would it be terribly rude of me to ask to see them – the books?'

Jennifer shrugged. ‘I don't see why not.' She got up from her chair. ‘They're in here,' she said, gesturing to a partially open door to her right.

Kingston followed her into a small bedroom. It was light and airy and smelled of freshly ironed sheets. Built into each side of the leaded casement window were two symmetrical tiers of white-painted shelves, each filled with orderly rows of tightly packed books. As Kingston walked over to examine the small library, an oval framed photo standing on the marble-topped bedside table caught his eye. ‘May I look at this picture?' he asked.

‘Of course,' she answered.

He walked over, picked it up and studied it.

‘That's Thomas, when he was in the army,' Jennifer said. ‘That one, over there on the chest, is of him and his wife, Cathy. She died several years before Thomas.'

Kingston examined the grainy black and white army photograph. It was of an unsmiling slim-faced man with a dark bushy moustache. He was in a jaunty pose, holding a pipe to his mouth. The three pips on each epaulette of his uniform indicated the rank of captain. Kingston couldn't quite make out the regimental badge in the centre of his peaked cap. ‘What regiment was he in?' he asked, casually.

‘You know, I'm not really sure. That was a long time ago. I don't recall Thomas ever saying much about his army days – or the war. Probably, like a lot of servicemen, he preferred to forget about those terrible times.'

Kingston placed the photograph back on the table.

‘There's some more pictures in here,' she said, opening the lid of a pine blanket chest at the foot of the bed. She handed him two leather-bound photo albums. Placing one of them on the bed, he started to leaf through the other. Most of the black and white photos were typical family snapshots. Two boys, pictured at different ages, appeared in a number of the photos. ‘One of these little boys is your uncle, I take it?'

‘Yes, Thomas, the smaller one. His brother Adrian was two years older. He was in the RAF.'

‘Handsome lads,' said Kingston, closing the first album.

Four pages into the second album, which was more up-to-date than the first, his eyes came to rest on a large sepia photo. It was an informal group photo depicting a dozen smiling men, a few in military uniform but most in civilian clothes. With Captain Farrow's bushy moustache, Kingston had no difficulty identifying him. Glancing down to the caption below, he saw Farrow's name. Kingston scanned the photo, his index finger tracing the row of names. His finger stopped. There he was, fifth from the right, Major Jeffrey Cooke. Printed under the caption were the words:
Bletchley Park, Hut 8. 1943
.

‘Bletchley Park,' he murmured. He held the album in both hands and stood staring at the rivulets of rain dribbling down the windowpane in front of him. ‘I was right,' he said under his breath.

‘Did you find something?' Jennifer asked.

‘Yes, I think so,' he said, closing the album and handing it back to Jennifer. ‘Something most interesting.'

 

When Kingston arrived at The Parsonage later that afternoon, Kate greeted him at the front door wearing a flour-dusted apron.

‘You're in luck, Lawrence,' she announced, ‘I'm testing a new recipe for osso buco.'

His blue eyes opened wide. ‘Splendid,' he said.

Kate was surprised to see that he was gripping a small holdall. Surely she'd made it clear that the invitation was just for dinner? It certainly wouldn't have been like Alex to suggest an overnight stay. She shrugged it off – there had to be an explanation. ‘Come on in,' she said with a smile. ‘You'll find Alex on the terrace. I'll come out in a minute and fix you both a drink.'

A couple of hours later at the dining table, Kate and Alex sat listening to Kingston's long-winded discourse. For the most part, they ate in silence, occasionally stealing a knowing glance or smile at each other as Kingston described every detail of his afternoon with Jennifer Farrow.

Now, over strawberries and clotted cream, he was explaining the significance of the
Bletchley Park, Hut 8
caption.

‘Early in World War II, a top-secret team of British code breakers set up shop at an old Victorian manor in Buckinghamshire called Bletchley Park. Station X, it was dubbed. Their objective was to break seemingly unbreakable German military codes. If they could crack them, they would be able to target German supply shipments, eavesdrop on Luftwaffe activities, and most important, locate and destroy the U-boats that were playing havoc with Allied convoys.'

‘Somebody wrote a novel about it, I believe,' Kate remarked.

Kingston nodded. ‘
Enigma
. Damned good one, too.' He polished off the last strawberry and took a sip of the dessert wine. ‘The coded messages were transmitted daily on a code-making machine the Germans called Enigma,' he said. ‘It was a devilishly clever contraption capable of scrambling messages in an astronomical number of ways. To make things even more difficult, the Jerries changed the wiring set-up for their transmitters and receivers daily. So the messages intercepted by our lads were utter gibberish.'

‘The odds against anyone breaking the code must have been staggering,' said Kate.

‘I'm told that, for anyone who didn't know the machine settings, the odds were a hundred and fifty million million million to one,' Kingston replied.

Kate whistled.

‘I read somewhere that it supposedly pioneered the age of the computer,' said Alex.

‘That was actually the contraption our chaps developed to decipher the codes sent on the Enigma. It was called Colossus. And you're right, Alex, it's believed to be the world's first programmable electronic computer.'

‘Those chaps must have been awfully clever,' said Kate.

‘Sheer genius is more like it. Helped by counter-espionage and a bit of luck here and there.'

‘How did they find all these geniuses at such short notice?' asked Alex.

‘At the beginning it was quite a motley group. A lot of them were cryptic crossword puzzle whizzes – mostly
The Times
and the
Telegraph
, I believe. There were chess masters, mathematicians, all kinds of intellectuals. One was a rare book dealer, apparently. People with eidetic minds,' Kingston added.

Kate had never heard of the word. She reminded herself to look it up later.

‘What was amazing,' Kingston continued, ‘was that they were all sworn to absolute secrecy – not only at the time but for some thirty years after the end of the war. Churchill described it as “his goose that laid the golden egg but never cackled”.'

‘Where on earth did you learn all this, Lawrence?' asked Alex.

‘At Bletchley Park. After seeing Jennifer, I stopped off there. It's a museum now, run by a charitable trust – the grounds are lovely. You should go up there sometime.'

‘I think we will, when this rose business is over,' said Kate.

There was a pause in the conversation while she stacked the dessert plates and placed them to one side. She smoothed the tablecloth in front of her and looked at Kingston. ‘So, Lawrence, your theory is that since we now know that Major Cooke and Captain Farrow were part of the secret team at Bletchley, it's almost certain that, one way or another, they were familiar with cryptography. Is that the right word?'

‘Yes, it is. And yes, that's right, Kate,' Kingston replied. ‘It's quite plausible that they would have known of the Enigma programme. Which means,' he said, picking up his glass and gently swirling the last drops of wine, ‘that instead of
inventing
a code for their horticultural experiments, they simply used an existing code. Perhaps one of the more fundamental ones. Impossible for most people to decipher, but a piece of cake for any former Bletchley cryptographer.'

‘Why use a code for hybridizing roses in the first place?' asked Alex. ‘It all seems a bit pointless. Aren't we over-reaching just a wee bit? All this cloak and dagger stuff?'

‘Not necessarily,' Kingston retorted. ‘Not if Cooke and Farrow sensed they were close to a breakthrough as earthshaking as a blue rose.'

Kate thought Alex's question reasonable but it was clear by Kingston's frown that he didn't agree one bit.

‘Under the circumstances,' he said, straightening up in his chair and looking down his nose at Alex, ‘some kind of coded entries of their cross-pollinating would be logical – even advisable, I would say. It's not at all far-fetched. Besides, they were old army chums. It was fun. Brought back memories of their old days.'

‘You know something,' said Kate. ‘Maybe we should quit while we're ahead. It seems to me that if we continue digging into this code business we might well end up establishing that Cooke and Farrow did, indeed, create the rose. This seems counterproductive to what Adell is doing – trying to establish us as the rightful owners.'

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