A young man sat moodily in the comfortable depths of an easy chair of dark green leather, and gazed round him, from time to time, with an air of complete boredom. A newspaper and a couple of magazines lay on the floor at his feet, a tankard half-full of beer was on a table at his elbow. The large room, of which he was the only occupant, had the appearance of a flat in a West End Club. Sporting prints and pictures adorned the walls, which were distempered dark green, a colour which predominated, for the carpet, as well as the numerous armchairs, were also of that shade. At one end was a great bookcase packed tight with volumes; at the other a buffet. Several writing tables were placed at various intervals against the two remaining walls, in one of which was a large fireplace, now hidden by a screen, while each easy chair possessed as companion a small round table complete with ashtrays and matches. Undeniably a man’s room, it was snug and restful. There was one peculiarity about it, however; it possessed no windows, being lighted day and night by several powerful though softly shaded electric globes. It was in fact underground, the basement of the drab building in Whitehall which, although so uninteresting to look at, is the home and headquarters of the British Secret Service. The rest room, generally known as the messroom, is reserved, as a rule, for the senior members of the department, but no objection is raised to its use by the half-dozen or so young fellows eager to make good in the exacting profession to which they have been appointed. Their selection, after the most exhaustive investigation into their antecedents and accomplishments, was considered all that was necessary to permit them the entry by the men whom Sir Leonard Wallace called his experts. They possessed their own room, but it was a small, not over-comfortable flat at the top of the building, and refreshments could not be obtained there.
Bernard Foster was one of the juniors engaged in the process of winning his spurs. The son of a famous soldier, he had passed from Shrewsbury School to Sandhurst, thence to the Guards. An extraordinary aptitude for languages, a daredevil temperament, and a spirit of adventure, however, had gained the interest of the Chief of the Secret Service, who had served under Foster’s father while in the Army, and knew the son well. Bernard was presented with an opportunity of which he eagerly availed himself. Yet for eighteen months now he had been occupied in minor and routine matters. He knew he was being carefully observed all the time, his ability and disposition judged from a fresh angle – Sir Leonard Wallace took no chances with his assistants; he did not put them in charge of any important undertakings until he was certain that mentally, physically and morally they were suitable for the big things. So much depends on the Secret Service man. He must learn absolutely that his own honour, his life, count for nothing. He must be prepared to face desperate odds, danger, death, with the realisation that there is no reward except the abstract one which goes with success in the service of the country he loves. Failure and exposure invariably mean complete obliteration; he can expect no help from the authorities; no help can be accorded him. Governments cannot recognise secret agents. A little carelessness, a lack of forethought, an impulsive word or action, may cause disaster. Where the welfare and honour of Great Britain is likely to be intimately concerned, Sir Leonard, of necessity, is extremely careful in his choice of the man or men to act. In consequence there is bound to be a hard and uninteresting period of probation before a young officer can expect to be delegated to the important roles with their difficult, perilous but highly adventurous aura.
Foster realised this; nevertheless, he longed for the time to come when he would be adjudged fit to take his place in the great game with men like Shannon, Cousins, Carter, Cartwright, and Hill, who, with Maddison and, of course, Major Brien, the deputy chief, formed Sir Leonard Wallace’s little band of cracks. He had begun to fear that he was somehow not quite fulfilling expectations of him. Only that morning Willingdon, who had been appointed to the Intelligence Department at practically the same time as he, had been chosen for a mission of great importance. It was true that Willingdon had graduated to the Secret Service from the special Branch of New Scotland Yard, and had proved his capabilities on more than one occasion, but there were others. Downing, Cunningham and Reynolds had all been entrusted with work of a more exacting nature than any Foster had been instructed to undertake. It was no wonder he felt a trifle moody, therefore, when the thought would persist that he had failed in some manner to win the entire confidence of his chief.
He drained his tankard, and, rising to his feet, stood stretching himself. Bernard Foster was about the last person a casual observer would have imagined to be connected with the Intelligence Service. A little over six feet in height, he was lean with the healthy leanness of the physically fit athlete. A perfectly cut grey lounge suit rather suggested than hid the rippling muscles beneath. He had been a brilliant hurdler at school and Sandhurst had broken the records at the Royal Military College for the hundred yards and pole-vault and had equalled that of the two-twenty. In addition he was a very fine cricketer. Fair-haired and pale, he possessed a pair of sleepy blue eyes that gave him an air of bland innocence, an almost priceless asset in a man of his calling. A small, fair moustache adorning his upper lip helped to add to his ingenuous appearance, while a monocle which he frequently wore caused him to look thoroughly and completely guileless.
He was wondering what he should do to kill the time that was hanging so heavily on his hands, when a voice behind caused him to swing round. Confronting him was a small man with an extraordinarily wrinkled face and the figure of a boy. Everybody at headquarters was exceedingly fond of Gerald Cousins, perhaps Sir Leonard’s most brilliant assistant. Foster almost went to the extent of hero-worship. He had learnt a great deal from the little man, who was always ready to place the benefit of his experience at the disposal of those keen enough to profit from it. The clouds left Foster’s face immediately, a broad, cheerful smile replacing the gloom which had previously reigned there.
‘By Jove! I’m glad to see you,’ he exclaimed involuntarily. ‘I’ve been feeling as blue as Oxford after the boat race.’
‘Ah!’ ejaculated Cousins; ‘a joke methinks.’ He placed his head on one side rather in the manner of a bird, and studied the young man towering above him. ‘What’s making you feel blue?’
‘I’m eating out my heart for a job of work worthwhile. I have an uneasy feeling that the chief doesn’t think I’m good enough or something. It’s eighteen months since I joined the staff, and I’ve only been given jobs that any fool could have done.’
‘There are some things,’ returned Cousins, his eyes twinkling, ‘which only fools could do. But cheer up, my lad. Haven’t you learnt yet that the chief nurses those of whom he expects the most? At any rate, your time has come. I am just down from a conference with Sir Leonard and Major Brien, and my instructions are to send you up in ten minutes’ time.’
Foster’s eyes were no longer sleepy-looking. Open now to their widest extent, they positively blazed with excitement.
‘What is it?’ he demanded. ‘What am I expected to do?’
‘You’ll be told by the chief. What have you been drinking – beer? Something light in the way of wine appeals to me most this sunny June morning. Where is Gibbons?’
‘I don’t know. He went out after drawing my beer for me. But, Jerry, can’t you give me a hint? I’m in a state of – of—’
‘Electrification,’ supplied the other. ‘I can see that. Never mind, you have only seven minutes, thirty-three seconds to wait. Gibbons!’ he shouted.
A deep voice responded and, in a few seconds, a broad-shouldered, grey-haired man, whose luxuriant moustache and bushy eyebrows still remained their natural brown, hurried into the room carrying several bottles in his arms. He was an ex-sergeant of Artillery who, with a retired policeman, both of exemplary characters, looked after the fitful comfort of the men of the Secret Service.
‘I’ve been getting up some wine, sir,’ he explained apologetically.
‘You must have known I was coming,’ commented Cousins. ‘“Come, let us drink the Vintner’s good health. ’Tis the cask, not the coffer, that holds the true wealth.” How about forsaking beer for a glass of Moselle, Foster?’
The ex-guardsman shook his head.
‘I want nothing more just now, thanks,’ he responded. Cousins’ face creased into a broad smile until every wrinkle seemed to contain a happy little grin of its own.
‘“There is a tide in the affairs of man,”’ he quoted, ‘“which taken at the flood leads on to fortune.” Go to it Foster, and good fortune go with you.’
Feeling a sense of thrill throughout his whole being, Foster ascended to the floor whereon was situated the office of Sir Leonard Wallace. He stood for some moments outside the door attempting to gain complete control of himself, for the summons and Cousins’ remark that his time had come had filled him with such exultation that he was rather afraid he might make a fool of himself in his delight. However, nothing was more unlikely. The Secret Service training teaches a man to hide completely his feelings if necessary, and Foster had learnt his lesson very well. There was no sound from within the room, which was hardly to be wondered at, as it was soundproof. He knocked loudly. Almost at once the door was opened by Major Brien, who greeted him with a friendly by smile, and bade him enter. Sir Leonard Wallace sat at his desk, his favourite briar held firmly between his strong white teeth. His steel-grey eyes bored deeply into those of Foster as that young man approached. Apparently satisfied with his scrutiny, Sir Leonard nodded his head slightly, and smiled.
‘Cousins has told you that I have decided to give you a job of very great importance?’ he stated rather than asked.
‘Not exactly, sir,’ was the reply. ‘He told me you wished to see me, and certainly gave me to understand that the time I have been longing for has come at last.’
‘You are keen to show us what you can really do?’
‘Keen sir!’ repeated Foster. ‘I have thought of nothing else since I joined the service.’
‘Very well, your chance has come. Sit down.’
Foster sat in the chair indicated, but declined the cigarette offered him. He was far too interested and inwardly excited to bother about smoking. Brien drew an armchair up to the other side of the great desk; threw himself into it. The manner of the two, particularly that of Sir Leonard, might have greatly disappointed a man who had not had Foster’s opportunities of observing them. There was no indication in the demeanour of Wallace that he was concerned with anything but the most casual and unimportant matter. His unruffled, easy-going, unexcitable temperament, his air of complete nonchalance, had at one time deceived Foster as it had done so many others, but he had learnt, like those who worked with the chief, to recognise the dynamic driving force behind the calm manner, the brilliant brain, the working of which was cloaked by that lazy, attractive smile. Sir Leonard tapped out the ashes of his pipe into a handy ashtray, sat back in his chair, and regarded Foster.
‘You get on very well with the ladies, don’t you?’ he asked surprisingly.
The young man started. Despite his efforts, his pale face coloured a trifle.
‘I – I suppose I do, sir,’ he returned slowly, ‘but I have never really considered the question.’
‘Well, I have,’ commented the chief dryly. ‘I have noticed that you attract them. Don’t think you have been spied upon for any ulterior purpose. It is all part of the observation it is necessary to make of men who join the service, in order that I shall have full knowledge of them and how they are likely to fit in. You get along very well with young girls. I am wondering if you are likely to appear as attractive to a lady, who, though young and handsome, is also a widow and an experienced woman of the world. But that will be up to you, Foster. You will have to go out of your way to make yourself attractive to her, though that does not matter so much as the necessity for you to appear utterly infatuated with her. Ever been in love?’
‘Several times, sir.’
Wallace and Brien laughed.
‘Then you’ll know how to appear in love again,’ observed the former, ‘but for goodness’ sake don’t let the real thing worm its way in. The lady in question is decidedly handsome, as I have already mentioned; in fact,’ he glanced at Brien, ‘she’s reputed to be beautiful, isn’t she?’
His second-in-command nodded.
‘I believe so,’ he replied. ‘I haven’t seen her, but she is certainly spoken of as one of the most beautiful women in Germany.’
‘Who is she, sir?’ ventured Foster.
‘The Baroness von Reudath,’ Sir Leonard told him. ‘Now listen carefully to me, Foster. I have been watching your work and weighing you up for a long time, and am quite satisfied that you have the making of a very good Secret Service man in you. Quite candidly, though, I did not anticipate starting you off on independent work with an affair of such great importance. It happens, however, that the German secret police are very much on the qui vive these days. Every man who enters Germany is compelled to undergo a rigid scrutiny and investigation into his antecedents. Under the circumstances, Major Brien and I came to the conclusion that we would be taking a greater risk in entrusting the present project to one of the experienced, tried men than to you. Germany’s espionage department is excellent. It is quite likely men like Shannon, Cousins, Carter, and perhaps Hill and Cartwright, who have been forced into the unwanted limelight on occasions, are known. They can all disguise themselves well enough to defy detection, I know, and their credentials can be made entirely fool-proof. Still there is always the unexpected element to contend with, no matter what precautions may be taken. Something unforeseen may arise which would cause betrayal. Once that had happened our plans would be ruined. It would become next to impossible for any of our agents to get a footing in the household with which we are concerned. You know quite well the drastic measures concerning everything and everybody the Gestapo is apt to take once it smells a rat.’
Wallace paused, and Foster smiled slightly. He was quite au fait with events in Germany and the methods of the secret police.
‘Now in your case,’ resumed the chief, ‘no possibility can arise of your connection with us being either suspected or discovered. It was because I anticipated that such a necessity as this might occur that I have kept you wrapped in cotton wool for so long, so to speak. Mind you, as I previously stated, I did not foresee that an affair of such great importance would be your first big job, but there it is. I rely on you, and it is up to you to make good. On my suggestion you resigned your commission in the Guards like many another wealthy young man. You have earned the name of an idle man about Town, go to all the functions, and generally comport yourself as hundreds of others. No one, I am presuming, suspects your connection with this department?’
His grey eyes bored deeply into those of the man he questioned. Foster shook his head at once.
‘Not a soul, sir,’ he declared firmly, ‘not even my mother and my sister. The guv’nor knew, of course. It was through him, I believe, that I came to your notice.’
‘Not exactly,’ smiled Wallace. ‘I had been observing you for some time before he spoke. However, to resume: Whether His Excellency, The Supreme Marshal of State, von Strom, is himself in love with Baroness von Reudath or is merely very friendly with her, I do not know. It is certain, however, that they are on excellent terms, and that she is very much in his confidence. A report received yesterday from Gottfried in Berlin indicates that the Chancellor himself is also known to place some of his problems before her.’ Sir Leonard smiled slightly. ‘It is not necessary for me to explain how Gottfried obtained his information. I will tell you this much, though; the baroness possesses two companions. One is an English girl who was born and has lived most of her life in Germany – her name is Rosemary Meredith – the other is a German, Dora Reinwald. Miss Meredith happened to be at school with the baroness in Hanover. The war more or less ruined her father, and she was forced to seek her own livelihood when she grew old enough. Gottfried knew her well. It was partially through him and partially through Baroness von Reudath’s own affection for her that she obtained the post she now holds. You will gather that she is one of us. You must have nothing to do with her; that is, if you succeed in becoming on intimate enough calling terms with the baroness. Any communication between you may only cause harm to overtake one or both. You will work entirely separately – she has her orders, you are now receiving yours. Of course I don’t mean ignore her altogether. Simply behave towards her in the casual manner usual when meeting the paid companion of a friend.
‘Baroness von Reudath arrives in London tomorrow. She will be entertained a great deal by the many friends she has here during her stay of a week or ten days. The day after tomorrow Lady Ashington gives a reception at which she will be present. You will receive a card, and Mrs Manvers-Buller, who has known the baroness almost as long as she has known you, will present you to her. With you it will be a case of love at first sight. For the rest of the baroness’ stay in this country you will never be very far from her, but don’t overdo it. If you gain her interest in you, then go wherever she goes until you have succeeded in becoming thoroughly intimate with her and – in her confidence. If she will have nothing to do with you, we must try other means of finding out what I want to know or else rely entirely on Rosemary Meredith. Presuming that you will succeed in becoming very friendly with the baroness, you will eventually go with her or follow her to Berlin. There you will get in touch with Gottfried, who will convey any future orders to you. As he is the Berlin manager of Lalére et Cie, what more natural than that you should go to him to purchase perfumes for your inamorata? Whatever you learn from the baroness concerning the three things I shall presently enumerate, no matter how trivial it may seem, and even though reported as a rumour, don’t fail to inform Gottfried. But be very careful how you obtain your information. Sophie von Reudath is an exceedingly clever as well as a beautiful woman, and, if you once raise her suspicions against you, you will be done. If she speaks to you of these things, show little or no interest, appear to have one thought in your mind only and that your infatuation for her. Circumstances must guide you in your method of obtaining your facts without causing distrust. She may possibly talk of them to you, though it’s most unlikely; you may overhear or see something, however, that will tell you a lot. In any case your job will require infinite patience, tact, and ingenuity. I recognise that I am staking a lot on giving a young, inexperienced man like you such a task, but you are the right type for the part I have cast you to play. It is certain your connection with the Secret Service is unknown and unsuspected; above all, I fancy I have discovered in you certain qualities which should prove of great value under the present circumstances. You have your chance, Foster; take it!’
The young man swallowed convulsively. He had never anticipated anything like this, and for a moment he found himself bereft of words. Eventually, however, he succeeded in murmuring huskily:
‘Thank you, sir. I won’t let you down.’ His blue eyes met the grey ones of his chief with a look full of confidence.
‘I am sure you won’t,’ smiled Wallace. ‘Remember: if you are in any difficulties in Berlin, go and purchase perfume at the Lalére agency in the Unter den Linden and consult Gottfried. But never, under any circumstances, go to him if you feel you are in danger or suspected. No doubt of the bona fides of Gottfried or Lalére and Company must be raised. To all seeming, throughout the world, Lalére’s is merely a famous and popular perfume firm. In Berlin Gottfried is one of the Prussians of the old school – a strong, fanatical devotee of the cult of Deutschland über alles. Nothing must occur to weaken or endanger his position in Germany. You must lose your life rather than imperil Lalére’s. Understand that perfectly?’
‘Yes, sir,’ replied Foster firmly and at once.
‘You will not be entirely alone. Once you are established in your friendship with the baroness, I will take steps to see that someone is nearby to help you in the event of trouble. But that someone will not be Gottfried. Now all that remains is to tell you what it is I hope you will succeed in learning from or through the baroness. The Marshal has formed and carefully drawn up secret military plans. It is believed that the final scheme was discussed and agreed upon at a private meeting in the residence of the baroness. The Chancellor and the Minister for Propaganda were the only others present. It is not known if the baroness actually took part in the discussion. I am anxious – very anxious – to know what those secret military plans are. The second item concerns a very deadly gas which is reported to have been invented by a German scientist named Hans Mohrenwitz, the third is a wireless ray invented by another scientist named Joachim Bräu, which is said to have the effect of putting aircraft out of action. I want details of the gas and the ray, every item of information concerning them you can gather, in fact. You may think I am setting you a herculean task, Foster, but I am only asking you to find out what the baroness knows. If she knows nothing, we must go elsewhere. That’s all – for the present.’ He held out his hand, which Foster gripped with great warmth. ‘Good luck, Bernard,’ was said in a tone of deep sincerity. Major Brien also shook hands and wished the young man good luck. Foster turned towards the door, with an unaccustomed though very happy lump in his throat. He had almost reached it when Sir Leonard called: ‘You’re twenty-six, aren’t you?’
‘Yes, sir,’ replied the ex-guardsman.
‘So is she,’ murmured Wallace. ‘What a delightful age for a romance!’