âThank God I have done my duty,' he gasped, his words melting into the strains of âRule Britannia' and shouts of victory from those Englishmen who had survived.
In the glow of the firelight, Pamela could see tears streaming down the old man's face. They were still there when the last foot of film had passed through the gate and was clattering around its reel.
âThat is how I should like to die,' Churchill whispered. âSuch a fine ending.'
She knew he was being completely sincere.
He disappeared into the folds of a huge silk handkerchief. Pamela decided it would be ungracious to point out that he'd noticed only the Boy's-Own bits of the film and that the final moments had concerned themselves not with the glories of
Nelson's death but with the demise many years later of Emma as an ageing alcoholic sprawled piteously on the wet cobbles of some foreign port. It wasn't just the men who paid a price in war.
The clocks had long since chimed two. Sawyers damped down the fire. The filmgoers were stretching their legs and preparing to depart for bed when, from somewhere in the distance, the sound of a motor-car engine carried on the frozen night air. Churchill suddenly grew still. A change came over him, like a dog sensing danger that he couldn't yet identify. But a motor car meant a new message, and on this day and at this time of night, the message could mean only one thing.
Disaster.
âCouldn't it wait?' the old man enquired, his voice beginning to rasp with fatigue and anxiety. But he already knew the answer. Sir Stewart Menzies, known simply as âC' in the corridors of power, was the head of Churchill's Secret Intelligence Service. It made him one of the most powerful men in the country; he hadn't dropped by at two in the morning simply for the large whisky and cold grate that greeted him in the Hawtrey Room.
âI'm sorry, Prime Minister.' Churchill's spymaster unlocked a briefcase and extracted a slim manila folder, which he placed on the table and smoothed
open. âYou won't have heard of the
Automedon
, I suspect. No reason why you should. But it's been sunk by the Nazis.'
Churchill glared defiantly, waiting for the bullet to strike him.
âIt happened last month, on her way to Singapore. Small cargo of car bits, cigarettes, whisky, that sort of thing.'
âI suspect the distilleries will be able to resupply them,' Churchill responded slowly, hoping words might quell the sense of unease that was rising up his gullet.
âShe was boarded before she was sunk, several of her crew killed, including the captain, and the rest captured and taken to the Japanese port of Kobe. They were disembarked in Kobe while waiting to be loaded onto another German ship. That's when one of our agents managed to speak briefly to members of the crew. We've been able to confirm their identity andâ¦'âhe paused, steadying himselfââwe have no reason to disbelieve their story.'
âWhich is?'
âWhile the German boarding party was on board the
Automedon
, they discovered the ship's safe in the strong room. They blew it open. Got everything inside it. Decoding tables, maps of harbour defences, minefields, intelligence reports, the lot.'
âSuch material is the currency of war. This surely amounts to little more than loose change.'
But Menzies was shaking his head. âThat's not it, I'm afraid. While they were making their tour of the ship, they also found the body of an Admiralty courier. Beside him was one of our security bags. It seems he was in the process of throwing it overboard whenâ¦Well, he didn't make it. Neither did the bag.'
Churchill knew of these bags. Green canvas, with brass eyelets to allow the water in and lead weights sewn inside to ensure that the bag and its contents sank quickly to the bottom of the ocean. The couriers were instructed to defend these bags with their lives. The courier on the
Automedon
appeared to have done precisely that.
âIt seems,' Menzies said slowly, as if every word had suddenly become a burden, âthat inside the pouch was a letter addressed to Brooke-Popham.' The name needed no elaboration. Air Chief Marshal Sir Robert Brooke-Popham was the British Commander-in-Chief, Far East, based in Singapore. His was one of the most sensitive and difficult commands anywhere in the Empire.
âUsual routine for top secret material,' Menzies continued. âInstructions that it be opened by no other hand et cetera et cetera.' He sipped at his whisky, but appeared to find no enjoyment in it. His lips were tightly pursed. âWhen the German ship reached Japan, the letter apparently found its way to the German Ambassador in Tokyoâwe have that
from interceptsâand he in turn handed it on to Kondo.'
âKondo?'
âThe Vice Chairman of the Japanese Imperial Naval General Staff.'
Churchill stared into the cold, empty hearth. âAnd what did the letter contain?'
âIt wasâ¦dear God, I think you'll remember it, Prime Minister.' Menzies sighed, his shoulders falling in discouragement. âA copy of the analysis drawn up by our Chiefs of Staff on our ability to defend ourselves in the Far East in the event that the Japanese declare war on us.'
Churchill froze. He did not stir for many moments, but the glass in his hand tilted as his fingers seemed to lose all sensation. The only sound in the room was the slow dripping of whisky onto the carpet.
Eventually a tremor came to his lips. âWhat on earth was it doing on a tramp steamer like the
Automedon
?'
âIt's a tangled little tale,' Menzies said, finding comfort now that he would be able to offload the burdenâand, with it, much of the blameâonto other shoulders. âApparently the War Office didn't want the paper to get to Singapore too quicklyânot in the middle of the difficult negotiations with the Australiansâyou know what's been happening. They've been pestering us with demands for more and more British reinforcements to be sent to the
Far East, while we've been insisting that there is no real need. So apparently it was felt that the paper would onlyâ¦How can I put it?'
âComplicate the situation.'
âPrecisely.'
âThey decided to cover their arses,' Churchill growled. âThey would send it, but so slowly that by the time it arrived it might be buried in obsolescence. Of no use toâand no blame uponâanyone.'
âI think that's a reasonably accurate summary, yes. They also wanted to get it to Singapore in a manner that would arouse no suspicion. So theyâ¦'
âPut it on a rust bucket.'
âThat seems to be about the measure of it, Prime Minister. I'm so very sorry.'
But Churchill was no longer listening. His face was flushed with both anger and anguish as his mind cast back to the contents of the paper that he himself had commissioned. It ran to seventy-eight closely argued paragraphs and came to one damning conclusionâa conclusion so devastating that he had refused to allow it to be discussed even by his War Cabinet.
Churchill leant forward, as though wanting to spring at the other man, fixing him in the eye. âThe Japanese have it? You are sure?'
His stare was returned.
âOn the basis of what we know, it seems all but certain.'
âThen may God preserve us.'
The Chiefs of Staff had concluded that the British couldn't beat the Japanese. Not a chance, not on their own. Hong Kong, Malaya, Singapore, all the territories and possessions of the British in the Far East, the jewels of their Empire, were virtually defenceless. Waiting to be plundered.
And the Japanese knew it.
A little later, as Churchill climbed the stairs to bed, he found himself accompanied by an unfamiliar and deeply troubling sensation. Only in the middle of the night, when he was still struggling to sleep, did he finally recognize the ruffian.
It was fear.
Anthony Eden, the Foreign Secretary, was a man of both power and charm; some even said that he would be the next Prime Minister. Yet beneath his suave and immaculately groomed exterior there were occasions when he betrayed the inner tension that left him thin and always anxious.
âTry hanging it on the other wall, will you?' he instructed tersely.
The two workmen cast a disdainful eye at the politician. âNot the only thing that could do with a little hanging,' one of them muttered darkly, but out of earshot. âThis wall, that wall, whichever wall he wants, it's still only a ruddy painting.'
Eden turned from his examination of the panelling. âYou have a problem?'
âNot really.'
âSpeak up, man. Better in than out.'
âWell, sir, I don't understand why we have to move the blessed thing at all. Been there long enough.
Why do we have to move it just âcos some Americans are coming?'
âBecause it's George the Third.'
The explanation was met with a blank stare.
âHe was mad,' Eden continued.
âBut still a king,' the workman countered doggedly. â
Our
king.'
âI take your point. But kings aren't particularly popular with Americans. Particularly this one.'
The towering portrait of George III with its ornate gilt frame had dominated the meeting room of the Foreign Office since, well, ever since anyone could remember, but now it was to be moved. Eden had instructed that all appropriate arrangements were to be made for welcoming the forthcoming American delegation and had clearly come to the conclusion that a portrait of the mad king who had helped ignite the American Revolution would cast an inappropriate shadow over proceedings. It had to be moved somewhere less prominent.
âLet's try it on the other wall,' he suggested, waving an elegant cuff but without much sign of conviction.
The workman and his partner didn't move a muscle.
âWhat?'
âNot going to work. Not there. Not anywhere,' the workman said.
âWhy on earth not?' Eden enquired, stuffing his thumbs deep into the pockets of his waistcoat.
âLook at it, sir.' The workman took a step forward. âIt's just too big. Turn his face to the wall and you're still going to see his ermine slippers sticking out underneath. It's enormous.' Then, less loudly: âAnd we should know. Been moving it all morning.'
Eden cast a dark eye at the workman. He had thought him a monarchist, but now he suspected him of being simply a troublemaker. âAre you a Communist?'
âWhat?'
âOh, never mind.'
The Foreign Secretary went back to examining his dilemma while the workman picked at the fragment of his cigarette with a broken orange fingernail. âWhy the hell we have to be so nice to the bloody Yanks is beyond me,' he said, turning to his colleague. âLate for the last war, they was. Run away from this war. Doing nothing but sitting on their backsides in Wall Street and soaking us dry.'
Suddenly Eden turned, furious. He'd heard. âWe need them because right now we have no one else.' He strode up to the man who he was now certain was a Bolshevik. âWhere else do you think we'll get the destroyers and other weapons we need to win this war?'
But the workman was not to be cowed. He was no revolutionary, but in his eyes it was Eden and his kind who had got them into this bloody war in
the first place. If he was to be asked for his opinion, he was going to give it.
âI hear we can't afford it. Can't afford the Americans as friends.'
Eden snorted in exasperation. That was the difficulty with men such as this who wandered into every corner and crevice of the Foreign Office. They heard too much, yet understood so little. âOf course we can't afford it, but that's no longer the point. The Americans have suggested they lend us the matériel instead, for the duration of the war. We borrow everythingâthe bombers, fighters, ships, guns, tanks, vehiclesâthen afterwards give them back. It's called Lend-Lease.'
âBut not fightingâ¦'
âNot fighting, exactly. But assisting. Making it possible for us to win the war. A partnership.' He clapped his hands. âBut that's it!' he cried. âWe could get another picture. Put it alongside. Somethingâ¦wellâ¦American. Don't we have something down in the basement?'
âWe've got a George Washington somewhere,' the workman's colleague began.
âSplendid! Fetch it up. Put it alongside. It'll balance the whole thing out.'
The workman was less enthused. âStupid pillock,' he said softly and very slowly to his colleague. âWe'll be shifting pictures all ruddy afternoon.'
Which is precisely what happened. They hauled
and sweated their way up from the basement with the new portrait, a remnant from the State Visit of President Woodrow Wilson in 1918. The basement was three floors down. Which meant three floors back up. But no matter how much they shifted the paintings around the room, still it would not work. The portrait of the first American President was only a fraction the size of the umpteenth English king, and in whatever position they were tried, the result looked more like deliberate insult than diplomatic master stroke. Eden eventually threw up his hands in despair.
âYou'll have to take them
both
down to the basement,' he said.
âWhat? Take down the King?' the workman asked in bewilderment. âTo the basement?'
âWe can't afford to offend the Americans. There's no other way,' the Foreign Secretary announced before examining his pocket watch and rushing from the room. He left the workman squatting on his haunches, trying to manufacture another spindly cigarette.
âTake down the King? To the basement?' he kept saying over and over, as if through repetition he would come to understanding. âMakes you wonder, don't it?'
âWhat's that?' his colleague asked.
âWho the bloody hell's in charge here.'
The bathroom was small, narrow and hopelessly impractical. It had no windows and only the most rudimentary of ventilation systems, and was buried behind several feet of concrete. The planners who had built the fortified Annexe around the corner from Downing Street had wanted to ensure that, whatever else happened to him, Churchill wasn't goingâin his own wordsââto be blown out of his own bloody bath'. It was no idle threat; bath time was one of his set rituals. He would throw himself into the water, submerging completely, then surface once more, blowing like a whale. In between dives he would reflect, dictate, compose and shout orders, all the while cheating outrageously on the maximum level of bath water recommended by his own scrimping Government.
A flustered assistant came stumbling from the room, brow beaded in sweat, his glasses steamed, his notebook crumpled, the ink running down the page, nearly knocking into Randolph as he fled. Another male secretary was hovering, waiting his turn to go in, and Sawyers was fussing away near at hand, but both of them drew back as the Prime Minister's son appeared, clad in the service dress of a captain, No. 8 Commando.
âPapa?' Randolph said, standing in the doorway. He took a step forward and was immediately enveloped in a fog of condensation, through which the outline of his father began to emerge, pink,
perspiring, standing in front of the sink, shaving, completely naked.
âDon't shut that door,' Winston snapped, wiping away at the mirror. âNot unless you want me to cut my own damned throat.'
âWhy don't you bathe in St James's Park,' Randolph said. âIt could scarcely be more public.'
âWhaddya mean?'
âYou think Hitler wanders around the Reichs Chancellery waving his baubles about? It's so bloody undignified.'
They couldn't help arguing. Always had. For them it was like breath, and love, and lightâas natural as the dew following the night.
âI blame myself,' Churchill began testily, âfor sending you to the wrong type of school. Private showers and all that nonsense. It's unhealthy. Encourages misconduct when you're behind locked doors. And lack of candour when you're not.' He resumed scraping away the soap on his chin with a large open-bladed razor. âAt Harrow, we used to be naked all the time, in the swimming pool, in the showers. That's when I first met the men who now occupy some of the highest positions in the landâmen of the cloth and of the law, even some in my own Cabinet. That's why they all trust me. They know I have nothing to hide.' He threw the blade into the sink and began groping for a towel. âNakedness teaches you to look another man directly in the eye.'
âBetter still, not to trust him behind your back.'
Churchill turned. âLet's not argue, Randolph. Not on your last day. Not before you leave for the warrior's life in the desert.'
âCairo is scarcely the desert, Papa. Must you romanticize everything?'
âThere will be nothing romantic in what is about to take place in the Middle East. Where you are going could yet prove to be the fulcrum of the whole war.'
âIs that why we've been sent by those weevils in the War Office to train amongst the ice floes of the Clyde? So we can serve in the Middle East?'
âFrom what I've heard, the officers of your regiment appear to have undertaken most of their training in the bar rooms and fleshpots of Glasgow.'
âWhat else is there to do on a winter's night in such a God-awful place?'
They were at it again. Bristling. Born to fight. And Randolph carried with him the appalling burden for a fighting man of being the son of a Prime Minister. No one took him seriously. He wanted to be part of this war and was desperate to be sent overseas in search of action, for whatever else they might say about him, he was no coward. He'd joined his father's old regiment, the 4th Hussars, in the hope it would get him sent to a battlefront, but they made it no further than Hullâheld back, it was said, because he was his father's son. So he had
transferred to a commando unitâsurely there would be action there. But only brawls on the street with Scotsmen. So the bathroom became a battleground, too.
Suddenly the moment was broken by a familiar voice.
âIf you'll excuse me, Mr Randolph.'
Sawyers, damn the man. When he issued a request it carried all the authority of high command, even with his lisp. Reluctantly Randolph made way as the valet placed a set of carefully laundered silk underwear over the wooden towel rail, but his real purpose was to scold them both, reminding them that this might prove to be their last moment together on earth and they might never have the opportunity of forgiving or forgetting what was said between them. The servant managed to convey all this with no more than a raised eyebrow.
Churchill took his valet's cue. âMy darling boy,' he said, and instantly a truce was declared. âYou are about to embark upon the greatest adventure of your lifetime, and I know that whatever it is you are about to do will be done with honour and with formidable distinction.'
He finished climbing into his underwear and dressing gown, and was decent once again. âYou know, Randolph, nine months ago when I became Prime Minister, I promised the people victory. Victory whatever the cost; that's what I told them.
They have borne the terrible cost yet seen precious little of the victory. So I beg youâbe brave, fight boldly. The Middle East may not be the place where the final triumph is decided, but let it at least be where it is begun.'
âI'll do my best, Papa.'
âBrighter days lie ahead, of that I am certain. So in everything you do, be a Churchill!'
And they embraced.
âBut how shall we win, Papaâfinally?'
âNot alone. With others.'
âWhat others?'
âThe Americans, of course.'
âThe Americans?'
âThey have already taken the first step. President Roosevelt has declared that his country will become the great arsenal of democracy.'
âHah! He got that almost right,' Randolph said, his tone mocking.
âHe's agreed to lease and lend us all the materials we need,' his father responded forcefully.
âSo that we can scrabble around as her mercenaries?'
âIt is an act of unprecedented generosity.'
âOr unprincipled calculation! The Americans sit back and make their profits while we fight their war. The only time they ever come into a war is when it's all but bloody over. Then they'll crawl out from their bunkers in time to pick the pockets of the wounded.'
âThe Americans will join us! Not just as supporters and suppliers but as combatants, too. They
will
join with us. That I promise you.'
âPapa, what strange world are you living in? You know what Roosevelt has said, time and again. Fight to the last Briton!'
âOh, but you are cruel. The President has had to act cautiously.'
âWhat? You mean he's had to keep his clothes on! He won't step into the showers with us and he daren't look the American voters in the eye.'
Their voices were rising once again.
âStatesmen practise the art of the possible, Randolph.'
âRoosevelt has the moral compass of a piece of driftwood!'
âSuch things take time.'
âAnd precisely how much time do you think we have, Papa?'
âThat may well depend upon what you and your brother officers achieve in the Middle East.'
âThen I'd better get out there,' Randolph snapped, turning away, carried along relentlessly by his addiction to argument.
âMy boy!' Winston called, despairing. âNotâlike this. Not to war.' Tears began to puddle in his eyes. âYou know I love you.'
The words stopped Randolph in mid-stride. Slowly he turned back, and his father rushed to embrace him.
âI'm sorry, Papa,' Randolph sighed. âI fear I'm not good company at the moment. Been trying to sort out my affairs before I go, butâ¦You know these things. So silly when you set them against war and what's happening.'