CHAPTER 15

Despite her attire, or lack of it, Magda evidently took her business seriously. All aspects of it, Rutherford suspected. He realised she had stopped speaking. She had been explaining how to write a hidden letter in invisible ink between the lines of a real letter. How she would pass the letter on, and give him instructions written in the same way.

But now she was silent – watching Rutherford watching her. He had been staring. It was hard not to. She was sitting at the small desk, facing him as he stood watching.

‘Eye contact,’ she said, ‘is usually made above the neck.’

‘Sorry.’ Rutherford was used to seeing women literally in the flesh. But something about her unnerved him. Her easy confidence and business-like manner, perhaps.

‘Business before pleasure.’ She leaned back in the chair, running her hands down the front of the corset. ‘If you’re a good studier, perhaps I’ll teach you some other tricks. But afterwards.’

Then she was straight back to explaining how Rutherford should contact her in an emergency. She spent several minutes cross-questioning him on what she had covered. He made an effort to concentrate. After that she wanted to know why he was working for the Germans. It seemed easiest to say it was for money.

‘There’s just one other thing you need to know,’ she said at last, standing up. She stood in front of him, looking him up and down in much the same way he had examined her. ‘Yes, I think you’ll do nicely. If it’s money you’re after, then we can help you there.’

‘You and the Nazis?’ He meant it as a joke. But his mouth was dry and it came out more as a flat statement.

Magda gave a short laugh. ‘I don’t work for the Nazis,’ she said.

She must mean she worked for money too, Rutherford thought as he watched her cross to the door beside the bed. The view of her from behind was as impressive as from the front. A deep warmth stirred inside him.

And froze to an icy chill as she opened the door and a man stepped into the room.

A man he recognised, though he didn’t remember his name – if he had ever known it. A round, freckled face that looked younger than the thinning red hair above it.

‘You!’ Rutherford gasped. ‘But – you were with Brinkman.’

The man stared back at him. ‘I’m as surprised as you are,’ he admitted. ‘Magda told me she had a new client. I never expected “Thor” to be you, Mr Rutherford.’

‘You’re a German spy?’ Rutherford said. It seemed incredible. But his surge in confidence in the reach of the Reich was dashed by the answer.

‘Oh, please,’ the man said. ‘I’m here to persuade you to work for us. To feed back what we ask to your German masters, and to answer their questions exactly as we want you to.’

‘They pay well,’ Magda said. She was leaning back against the wall, smoking again.

Rutherford’s mind was in a whirl. ‘But – they’ll know. If I lie to them, the real German spies…’

The red-haired man was shaking his head sadly.

Magda pushed herself away from the wall and blew out a stream of smoke. ‘I’m the only German spy you’ll meet,’ she told him.

‘Give it some thought,’ the man said. ‘It’s either a generous salary or it’s execution. I can’t imagine it’s that difficult a choice.’

Rutherford’s head was throbbing. It felt like it was about to explode. He needed to think. What if he didn’t agree? But if he did, then what if the Germans found out? What if Crowley found out? He thrust his hand into his jacket pocket, feeling the cold metal of the gun he’d brought.

‘So what do you think?’ the man was saying through the fog that filled his mind. ‘Obviously you’ll have to come with me while you decide.’

But Rutherford wasn’t going anywhere with this man. If he did, he might never see the light of day again. He pulled the revolver out of his pocket. It snagged on the way out, and he had to disentangle it. But despite the fumble, the man looked surprised as Rutherford aimed at him.

‘There’s no way out for you,’ the man said. ‘Except to work for us.’

Magda moved away from the man, putting distance between them so that it was hard for Rutherford to cover them both with the gun. There was a hardness in her eyes now as she watched him. No one else knew he was here, Rutherford thought. He could shoot them both and just walk out.

Except – there was the woman downstairs who had let him in. Probably others too. They would hear the shot. And he didn’t know if the man was alone. He backed away to the door, moving the gun from Magda to the man and back again.

‘Don’t try to follow me,’ Rutherford ordered as he reached the door. Then he spun round and pulled open the door.

He slammed it shut behind him. There was no way to lock it, so he ran – clattering down the stairs, stuffing the gun back into his pocket. Hoping no one would see him or try to stop him.

Outside, he gulped in huge lungfuls of fresh air before hurrying off down the drive. A quick glance down the street assured Rutherford it was deserted before he set off back the way he had come.

Behind him, a dark shape detached itself from the shadow of a driveway. A man in a raincoat, with his hat pulled down low over the eyes, followed Ralph Rutherford.

*   *   *

David Alban closed the curtains again.

‘Thompson’s following him.’

Magda stubbed out her cigarette in an ashtray on the desk. ‘What if Thompson loses him?’

Alban smiled. ‘He’s good. And I doubt Rutherford is capable of losing an elephant in a maze. Anyway, I’m pretty sure I know where he’s heading.’

Magda walked over to Alban, standing so close her body brushed against his. ‘Then I assume you’re in no hurry to get after him.’

She turned round so that he could undo the laces down the back of the corset.

‘I suppose not,’ he said.

*   *   *

The ‘Twenty Committee’ took its name from the Roman number – XX. Double cross. Closely affiliated with MI5, it was the group responsible for running all the German agents in Britain – identifying them, interrogating them, then imprisoning or executing or ‘turning’ them. To say it was an efficient operation was an understatement. During the course of the war, the only German spy to elude them did so by committing suicide. Despite what the Abwehr and other German intelligence organisations believed, there was not a single spy in Britain who wasn’t actually working for the British and sending back a stream of disinformation. Many of the spies the Germans thought they had in play didn’t exist at all.

As soon as he knew for sure where Rutherford was headed, Alban phoned the head of the Twenty Committee to report events. John Masterman listened carefully, as he always did, before asking Alban for his own recommendations.

‘The only information Rutherford can provide to us concerns Crowley’s activities,’ Alban said. ‘And Crowley, so far as we can tell, is cooperating anyway. I don’t trust him, but I doubt Rutherford knows any more about what he’s up to than we do.’

‘Any value in turning him?’ Masterman asked.

‘Not a lot to be honest, sir. From what he told Magda, the Germans didn’t seem terribly interested in what he had to offer, and as I say he has rather a limited field of operation. It just wouldn’t be credible if he suddenly stumbled across the sort of information we’d really like to pass on. And we’re not exactly short of other German agents.’

Masterman’s chuckle echoed in the receiver against Alban’s ear. ‘Normally, I suppose we’d send him to Camp 020 for interrogation, find out all about him. But as he’s British, we probably know all we need to already. And from what you say he’s a pretty volatile character. We certainly can’t have him wandering about knowing that you and Magda are involved in counter espionage.’ There was a hint of rebuke in his voice as he added: ‘It’s a shame he got away from you.’

‘I know where he is, sir. I can have him dealt with by a third party with no comebacks to us.’

‘You’re sure?’

‘Positive.’

Masterman sighed. ‘Well, there’s no need to involve the whole committee for something as relatively insignificant as this. I’ll mention it at next week’s meeting. Since this Rutherford fellow’s not left us a lot of leeway, I’ll leave it with you.’

As soon as he had hung up, Alban redialled. The phone at the other end rang for a while before it was answered.

‘Mr Crowley? You may remember me – my name is Alban, and I work with Colonel Brinkman. I have a small problem which I think, when I explain what’s on my mind, you’ll be happy to help with.’

*   *   *

There was no sound from inside the study. Rutherford listened at the door for as long as he dared. There was no sign of light from under the door, but that didn’t mean the room was empty. He had to be fast – MI5 would be after him, and Crowley might return at any moment. His only way out of the situation was to find something he could use to bargain with.

He was angry – with himself for getting into this mess, but mostly with Crowley and even more with Jane Roylston. It was her fault, the bitch – talking to the Manners woman, poisoning Crowley against him. If there was time, he’d find her before he left. But time was something he was short of.

So Rutherford took the chance, and eased open the study door. The room was in darkness. He closed the door behind him, calling softly, just in case: ‘Mr Crowley? Aleister – are you there? I need to speak to you…’

No answer.

He felt his way across the room to the desk and fumbled for the lamp. It cast a pale glow across the blotter and he waited for a moment until his eyes were used to the gloom. Then he examined the bookcase behind the desk. It took a few moments, but eventually he found the catch, and eased the heavy bookcase away from the wall.

Crowley had been annoyed that he had seen the hidden doorway open. Whatever was concealed inside must be valuable. Valuable enough for him either to sell and get enough money to disappear for ever, or valuable enough for him to trade with the MI5 man for his freedom.

Behind the bookcase was a rectangle of darkness. He moved the light on the desk, pulling it across and angling it into the doorway. It revealed a small room, lined with shelves. Papers and ancient books were arranged along one shelf, a metal strong box on another. Something at the back of the small room glinted like metal …

He peered closer, moving into the room, but careful not to block the light. Yes, it was metal – strips of metal, or narrow bars. A cage, he realised. A metal cage on a low shelf at the back of the room. Inside the cage, the darkness itself seemed to move, to stir, to wake.

As he approached he made out the shape of the thing inside, dark and malevolent. A single eye snapped open, staring back at him.

Rutherford’s hand went to his mouth as he stifled a cry of horror, tasted the bile at the back of his throat, and flung himself backwards out of the room.

‘Why Ralph,’ a voice said from the darkness behind him. ‘Whatever is the matter?’ And the main lights came on.