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Authors: Daniel Silva

BOOK: The Unlikely Spy
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She let go of the bag and said, "You're a brave man to die for a radio."
Then she turned and disappeared into the darkness.
Harry lay on the wet ground. When she was gone, he reached up to touch his face and was sickened when he felt the warm bone of his own jaw. He was losing consciousness; the pain was fading. He heard the wounded Special Branch men groaning nearby. He felt the rain beating against his face. He closed his eyes. He felt someone pressing something against his face. When he opened his eyes he saw Alfred Vicary leaning over him.
"I told you to be careful, Harry."
"Did she get the radio?"
"No. You kept her from taking the radio."
"Did they get away?"
"Yes. But we're chasing them."
The pain raced up on Harry very suddenly. He started to tremble and felt as though he was going to throw up. Then Vicary's face turned to water, and Harry blacked out.
50
LONDON
Within one hour of the disaster in Earl's Court, Alfred Vicary had orchestrated the biggest manhunt in the history of the United Kingdom. Every police station in the country--from Penzance to Dover, from Portsmouth to Inverness--was given a description of Vicary's fugitive spies. Vicary dispatched photographs by motorcycle couriers to the cities, towns, and villages close to London. Most officers involved in the search were told the fugitives were suspects in four murders dating back to 1938. A handful of very senior officers were discreetly informed it was a security matter of the utmost importance--so important the prime minister was personally monitoring the progress of the hunt.
London's Metropolitan Police responded with extraordinary speed, and within fifteen minutes of Vicary's first call roadblocks had been thrown up along all major arteries leading from the city. Vicary tried to cover every possible route of escape. MI5 and railway police prowled the main stations. The operators of the Irish ferries were given a description of the suspects as well.
Next he contacted the BBC and asked for the senior man on duty. On the main nine o'clock evening news the BBC led with the story of a shoot-out in Earl's Court that had left two police officers dead and three others wounded. The story contained a description of Catherine Blake and Rudolf and concluded with a telephone number citizens could call with information. Within five minutes the telephones started ringing. The typists transcribed each well-meaning call and passed them on to Vicary. Most he tossed straight into the wastepaper basket. A few he followed up. None produced a single lead.
Then he turned his attention to the escape routes only a spy would use. He contacted the RAF and asked them to be on the lookout for light aircraft. He contacted the Admiralty and asked them to keep a careful watch for U-boats approaching the coastline. He contacted the coastguard service and asked them to keep a watch out for small craft heading out to sea. He telephoned the Y Service radio monitors and asked them to listen for suspect wireless transmissions.
Vicary stood up from his desk and stepped outside his office for the first time in two hours. The command post in West Halkin Street had been deserted, and his team had slowly streamed back to St. James's Street. They sat in the common area outside his office like dazed survivors of a natural disaster--wet, exhausted, defeated. Clive Roach sat alone, head down, hands folded. Every few moments one of the watchers would lay a hand on his shoulder, murmur encouragement into his ear, and move quietly on. Peter Jordan was pacing. Tony Blair had fixed a homicidal glare on him. The only sound was the rattle of the teleprinters and the chatter of the girls on the telephone.
The silence was broken for a few minutes at nine o'clock, when Harry Dalton walked into the room, his face and arm bandaged. Everyone stood and crowded around him--
Well done, Harry, old boy . . . deserve a medal . . . you kept us in the game, Harry . . . be all over if not for you. . . .
Vicary pulled him into his office. "Shouldn't you be lying down resting?"
"Yeah, but I wanted to be here instead."
"How's the pain?"
"Not too bad. They gave me something for it."
"You still have any doubts about how you would react under fire on the battlefield?"
Harry managed a half smile, looked down, and shook his head. "Any breaks yet?" he asked, quickly changing the subject.
Vicary shook his head.
"What have you done?"
Vicary brought him up to date.
"Bold move, Rudolf coming back for her like that, snatching her from under our nose. He's got guts, I'll say that for him. How's Boothby taking it?"
"About as well as can be expected. He's upstairs with the director-general now. Probably planning my execution. We have an open line to the Underground War Rooms and the prime minister. The Old Man's getting minute-by-minute updates. I wish I had something to tell him."
"You've covered every possible option. Now you just have to sit and wait for something to break. They have to make a move somewhere. And when they do, we'll be onto them."
"I wish I could share your optimism."
Harry grimaced with pain and appeared suddenly very tired. "I'm going to go and lie down for a while." He walked slowly toward the door.
Vicary said, "Is Grace Clarendon on duty tonight?"
"Yeah, I think so."
The telephone rang. Basil Boothby said, "Come upstairs straightaway, Alfred."
The green light shone over Boothby's door. Vicary went inside and found Sir Basil pacing and chain smoking. He had stripped off his jacket, his waistcoat was unbuttoned, and he had loosened his tie. He angrily waved Vicary toward a chair and said, "Sit down, Alfred. Well, the lights are burning all over London tonight: Grosvenor Square, Eisenhower's personal headquarters at Hayes Lodge, the Underground War Rooms. And they all want to know one thing. Does Hitler know it's Normandy? Is the invasion dead even before we begin?"
"We obviously have no way of knowing yet."
"My God!" Boothby ground out his cigarette and immediately lit another one. "Two Special Branch officers dead, two more wounded. Thank God for Harry."
"He's downstairs now. I'm sure he'd like to hear that from you in person."
"We don't have time for pep talks, Alfred. We need to stop them and stop them quickly. I don't have to explain the stakes to you."
"No, you don't, Sir Basil."
"The prime minister wants updates every thirty minutes. Is there anything I can tell him?"
"Unfortunately, no. We've covered every possible route of escape. I wish I could say with certainty that we'll catch them, but I think it would be unwise to underestimate them. They have proven that time and time again."
Boothby resumed his pacing. "Two men dead, three wounded, and two spies possessing the knowledge to unravel our entire deception plan running loose. Needless to say, this is the worst disaster in the history of this department."
"Special Branch went in with the force they deemed necessary to arrest her. Obviously, they made a miscalculation."
Boothby stopped pacing and fixed a gunman's gaze on Vicary. "Don't attempt to blame Special Branch for what happened, Alfred. You were the senior man on the scene. That aspect of Kettledrum was your responsibility."
"I realize that, Sir Basil."
"Good, because when this is all over an internal review will be convened and I doubt your performance will be viewed in a favorable light."
Vicary stood up. "Is that all, Sir Basil?"
"Yes."
Vicary turned and walked toward the door.
The distant wail of the air-raid sirens started up while Vicary was taking the stairs down to Registry. The rooms were in half darkness, just a couple of lights burning. Vicary, as always, noticed the smell of the place: rotting paper, dust, damp, the faint residue of Nicholas Jago's vile pipe. He looked at Jago's glass-enclosed office. The light was out and the door was closed tightly. He heard the sharp smack of women's shoes and recognized the angry cadence of Grace Clarendon's brisk parade-ground march. He saw her shock of blond hair flash past the stacks like an apparition, then vanish. He followed her into one of the side rooms and called her name from a long way off so as not to startle her. She turned, stared at him with hostile green eyes, then turned away from him again and resumed her filing.
"Is this official, Professor Vicary?" she said. "If it's not, I'm going to have to ask you to leave. You've caused enough problems for me. If I'm seen talking to you again I'll be lucky to get a job as a bloody blackout warden. Please leave, Professor."
"I need to see a file, Grace."
"You know the procedure, Professor. Fill out a request slip. If your request is approved, you can see the file."
"I won't be given approval to see the file I need to see."
"Then you can't see it." Her voice had taken on the cold efficiency of a headmistress. "Those are the rules."
The first bombs fell, across the river by the feel of it. Then the antiaircraft batteries in the parks opened up. Vicary heard the drone of Heinkel bombers overhead. Grace stopped her filing and looked up. A slick of bombs fell nearby--too damned close, because the whole building shook and files tumbled from the shelves. Grace looked at the mess and said, "Bloody hell."
"I know Boothby is making you do things against your will. I heard you quarreling in his office, and I saw you getting into his car in Northumberland Avenue last night. And don't tell me you're seeing him romantically, because I know you're in love with Harry."
Vicary noticed the shine of tears in her green eyes, and the file in her hand begin to tremble.
"It's your bloody fault!" she snapped. "If you hadn't told him about the Vogel file, I wouldn't be in this mess."
"What is he making you do?"
She hesitated. "Please leave, Professor. Please."
"I'm not leaving until you tell me what Boothby wanted you to do."
"Dammit, Professor Vicary, he wanted me to spy on you! And on Harry!" She forced herself to lower her voice. "Anything Harry told me--in bed or anywhere else--I was supposed to tell him."
"What did you tell him?"
"Anything Harry mentioned to me about the case and the progress of the investigation. I also told him about the Registry search you requested." She pulled a handful of files from her cart and resumed her filing. "I heard Harry was involved in that mess at Earl's Court."
"He was indeed. In fact, he's the man of the hour."
"Was he hurt?"
Vicary nodded. "He's upstairs. The doctors couldn't keep him in bed."
"He probably did something stupid, didn't he? Trying to prove himself. God, he can be such a stupid, stubborn idiot sometimes."
"Grace, I need to see a file. Boothby's going to sack me when this business is over, and I need to know why."
She stared at him, a grave expression on her face. "You're serious, aren't you, Professor?"
"Unfortunately, yes."
She looked at him wordlessly for a moment while the building shuddered with the shock waves of the bombs.
"What's the file?" she asked.
"An operation called Kettledrum."
Grace furrowed her eyebrows in confusion. "Isn't that the code name of the operation you're involved in now?"
"Yes."
"Hold on a minute. You want me to risk my neck to show you the file on your own case?"
"Something like that," Vicary said, "except I want you to cross-reference it with a different case officer."
"Who?"
Vicary looked directly into her green eyes and mouthed the initials
BB.
She came back five minutes later, an empty file folder in her hand.
"Operation Kettledrum," she said. "Terminated."
"Where are the contents?"
"Either destroyed or with the case officer."
"When was the file opened?" Vicary asked.
Grace looked at the tab on the file, then at Vicary.
"That's funny," she said. "According to this, Operation Kettledrum was initiated in October 1943."
51
CAMBRIDGESHIRE, ENGLAND
By the time Scotland Yard responded to Alfred Vicary's demand for roadblocks, Horst Neumann had left London and was racing northward along the A10. The van had obviously been well maintained. It would do at least sixty miles per hour and the motor ran smoothly. The tires still had a decent amount of tread on them, and they gripped the wet road surprisingly well. And it had one other practical feature--a black van did not stand out from the other commercial vehicles on the road. Since petrol rationing made private motoring all but impossible, anyone driving an automobile that time of night might be stopped by the police and questioned.

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