Authors: Brian Freemantle
He'd got away with it! decided Blackstone exultantly. And Springley
was
considering him. There certainly wasn't any cause to ring the emergency number in London and alert the man he knew as Mr Stranger, which he further knew wasn't the man's real name at all.
There were other prescribed routines which automatically followed such a preliminary inquiry. One was that a report be sent to London, and because it involved the security of such a highly classified overseas project it was channelled to Westminster Bridge Road. The level of classification also required it to be personally studied by the acting Director General.
Richard Harkness decided at once it was an innocent, completely explained event of no importance whatsoever, which was already the conclusion of the inquiry group that had convened the night of the occurrence. But procedure dictated their own investigation be conducted, pointless though it would be in this case.
Harkness knew just the officer for pointless investigations.
The meeting that day was in Berkeley, near the university campus, the sort of crowded and jostled place that Petrin seemed to favour. Emil Krogh arrived on schedule and waited impatiently, moving from foot to foot and gazing up and down the pavement near the designated drug store, wishing the rendezvous were more secluded. The openness worried him and he said so when Petrin finally arrived.
âI like it this way,' said the Russian dismissively. He did not, of course, add that such locations made their every meeting and every handover that much easier for the positioned KGB officers to photograph.
19
The head of security at the aerospace factory was named Harry Slade. He had served in the British Army for twenty-five years, honourably retiring with the rank of sergeant major and a regimental photograph signed by all the officers. He wore two lines of campaign ribbons on an immaculate, rigidly pressed black uniform with a profusion of brightly shined buttons, and regarded Charlie Muffin with the distasteful regret of a missed parade-ground challenge. It was an effort, but he managed to avoid automatically calling Charlie âsir'. The effort, like the attitude, was obvious but Charlie decided not to confront it: he was working away from Westminster Bridge Road for the first time in months, there would be expenses, the sun was shining and he was feeling generous. Slade confirmed that afternoon's appointment with Blackstone and showed Charlie the office that had been made available for him, the waiting room to a conference chamber. There were easy chairs as well as a more formal arrangement at a desk and there were fresh flowers in a proper vase and a view of the Medina river from the window. Charlie guessed the place to be three times the size of where he was accustomed to working at Westminster Bridge Road. At Charlie's insistence the security chief reviewed everything discussed at the inquiry and produced Blackstone's personnel record and then took Charlie on a tour of the fenced-off, secure section. There Charlie met the project manager, and Springley said he was sure it was all a fuss about nothing and Charlie truthfully said he didn't mind at all coming down from London to check it out. Under Springley's guidance he was shown around the workrooms and the communal drawing area and saw how all the blueprints and drawing material were secured at the end of each evening.
âPersonally checked every night by myself,' chipped in the escorting Slade. âThere's no danger of any classified information getting into the wrong hands from this building.'
âGlad to hear it,' said Charlie.
âI think the whole episode comes down to Blackstone's dedication to the job,' said the project manager. âHe's applied twice to join the team.'
âAre you taking him on?'
Springley shrugged. âI might, if a vacancy occurs. There's no room at the moment, but I think there might be in a few weeks.'
Slade appeared surprised when Charlie asked to see where Blackstone normally worked, in the main building, but showed him anyway. Slade seemed affronted when Charlie said he didn't want the man to sit in on the afternoon's interview.
âI expected that you would,' said the security chief.
Charlie guessed the man would have kept Blackstone standing to attention throughout. He said: âI prefer to be on my own.'
âI need to make a proper report to the company,' protested Slade. âIt's my job.'
âI'll tell you what happens,' promised Charlie. He'd never got on with sergeant majors and certainly didn't want the intrusion of this one with his judgement already made.
Blackstone was early. The tracer came inquiringly into the room after politely knocking, stopping in the doorway when he saw only Charlie there. He said: âI was told to come here?'
âThat's right,' said Charlie.
âJust you?'
âWhat did you expect?'
âI didn'tâ¦I don't know.' Which was true and the reason for Blackstone's vague confusion. He'd prepared himself to be confronted by a group of officials from London, maybe even some sort of panel but not just one person. And most certainly not by this tramp of a man who didn't look like an official of anything. Blackstone did not now have the confidence of the night he was caught â his feelings were actually on a downturn â but he was sure he didn't have anything to fear here.
Blackstone was a plump, quick-blinking man. He wore a well-pressed blue suit that Charlie guessed to be his Sunday best, with a crisp white shirt and with his hair combed carefully to cover the place where it was thinning, near his forehead. Charlie nodded across the desk at which he was already sitting and said: âWhy not take that chair there?'
Blackstone sat as he was told, his hands crossed in front of him in his lap. He said: âThis is all a silly misunderstanding.'
âIs it?' said Charlie mildly. âTell me about it.'
âI was just trying to be helpful.'
âWhy don't you tell me about it?' invited Charlie.
âFrom when?' queried Blackstone.
âFrom whenever you like,' said Charlie.
Charlie listened, not looking fully at the other man but with his chair slightly turned, at times even gazing as if something had caught his attention on the river or further out, on the sea. Blackstone initially found the attitude unsettling. Then he decided there was nothing to be unsettled about: the man just wasn't very good, that was all. His self-assurance began its ascent.
âDrawing tubes?' stopped Charlie abruptly, swinging back from the window.
âWhat?' said Blackstone, off-balanced.
âWhen you went into the secure section on the second occasion you carried drawing tubes?'
âYes.'
âWhy?'
âIt's the way blueprints are sometimes handled. Makes them easy to carry.'
âSurely the blueprints you'd delivered earlier were already in their own containers?'
Blackstone swallowed. âI wasn't sure whether they still would be. Sometimes they get mislaid: I just decided to be sure.'
âSo those you carried when you were challenged were empty?'
He wasn't going to be caught that easily, thought Blackstone. He said: âNo. They held drawings but there would have been room for more.'
âHow far would you say it was, from where you work to the secure area?' asked Charlie, who'd carefully paced it out.
Blackstone shrugged. âAbout a hundred yards; maybe more.'
âA little more, I'd say,' corrected Charlie. âNearer two hundred, in fact. Why walk two hundred yards from one building to another on the off-chance that the Ariane drawings would be ready for return? Why didn't you telephone to ask?'
Blackstone felt himself becoming hot. He gave another uncertain movement and said: âI just didn't think of it. I knew the drawings were there and on the spur of the moment decided to call by.'
âPractically an hour after you should have gone home?'
Perspiration began on Blackstone's upper lip, making it itch and he wanted to wipe it off but it would have made him look nervous. He said: âWe can work flexi-hours here if we choose. Anyway, I didn't really know what the time was. I was trying to see Mr Springley. I've applied for a transfer to the project.'
The reasonable explanation that had been produced before, remembered Charlie. He said: âSo it wasn't such a spur-of-the-moment decision after all?'
Unable to stand the itching any longer Blackstone moved his hand quickly across his face. He said: âIt began that way: it was only when I was at the section that the idea of trying to see Mr Springley occurred to me.'
âSpur of the moment yet you gave it sufficient thought to take along some spare drawing tubes in case the others had been mislaid?'
âI'd kept the unwanted ones by my desk. It was automatic to pick them up. I didn't positively think of it.'
Charlie was finding Blackstone a difficult person to assess. The man's demeanour had changed from the almost aggressive reassurance with which the interview had started to this sweated discomfort, but it would be wrong to read too much into that. He said: âIf you wanted to see the project head, why didn't you go to his office? Why were you in the main communal drawing area?'
âI wasn't sure where his office was.'
âYou'd been in the section before, to deliver the Ariane blueprints.'
âBut not to Mr Springley's office. It wasn't he who'd asked for them.' He'd been very wrong to imagine this was going to be an easy meeting, decided Blackstone. And more mistaken still to think that this unkempt man needn't be taken seriously.
âSo what were you doing?'
âLooking for someone to direct me.'
âYou must have known everyone would have gone home?'
âI told you, there's a flexi-hour system. Only no one was working that evening.'
âCrossing from one building to another, as you did, you must have seen a lot of people leaving?'
Blackstone tried to make a careless gesture. âA few.'
Neither convincing nor unconvincing, thought Charlie. But then people more often than not did things without a completely logical explanation that could be examined later. Deciding to change the direction of the questioning to see if he could further disconcert the man, Charlie said: âYou've gone through security clearance?'
âYes.'
âAnd signed the Official Secrets Act?'
âYes,' agreed Blackstone again. What the hell was the man getting at now!
âI know of cases of people being jailed for twenty, even thirty years for contravening the Act.'
âWhat are you talking about!' Blackstone felt loose-stomached now, plunging into panicked depression and uncaring how he appeared to the other man.
âPenalties, for contravening the Official Secrets Act,' said Charlie quietly. Was Blackstone nervous enough to make a slip?
âI haven't contravened anything!' protested Blackstone. âI told you how it happened! I didn't mean any harm!' Incredibly, for the first time, Blackstone's mind went properly beyond the money he'd been getting, fully to consider what could happen to him if he were found out. He remembered the inquiry the night he'd been caught not as an inquiry at all. Ridiculous though it now was to contemplate, it had all seemed like some sort of game, a contest between himself and men he knew and had worked with. But that's all. Not once had he considered there being a
penalty
, at the end of it. But now he did. He thought about thirty years and didn't regard what was going on here as anything like a game. This was deadly serious: deadly, horrifyingly serious. Thirty years, he thought again.
Charlie's feet began to hurt, which he'd known they would when he'd walked from the ferry terminal to save the three-pound taxi fare. He crossed one leg over the other and slid his fingers inside his sagging shoe, massaging the ache. He said: âWhat time did you enter the secure section?'
The bastard was going to pick on and on, wearing him down, until he made a mistake! Stick to what happened, Blackstone told himself: don't try to invent lies he might forget, under pressure. He said: âI wasn't paying any particular attention to the time. Maybe five thirty. Maybe later.'
âThat's funny,' said Charlie.
âWhat is?'
âAccording to the security report, you were challenged in the main drawing office at six thirty-five. You'd been there for a whole hour!'
Dear God, what was he going to do! The man obviously didn't believe him. He'd say so, soon: make some open accusation. Thirty years! Desperately Blackstone said: âIt could have been later than five thirty.'
âLet's give you the benefit of a lot of doubt,' said Charlie. âLet's say you didn't go in until six. That's still half an hour. What were you doing alone in the building for half an hour?'
âI went to the lavatory.'
âThe lavatory!'
âI had the need to go when I got to the building.'
âSo you hid in the lavatory for thirty minutes?'
âI didn't
hide
!' denied Blackstone. âI
went
to the lavatory.' Deflect him, thought Blackstone: he had to do something, say something, anything, to deflect the man to get the pressure off!
Blackstone was weakening, Charlie decided: on the ropes and weakening. But there still wasn't anything positively incriminating. Charlie said: âAre you keen to get on the secret project?'
Blackstone groped for a handkerchief and made as if to blow his nose, using the pretext to wipe away the build-up of sweat and to delay his answer as long as possible. Stick to the truth as much as possible, he told himself. He said: âI want very much to be part of it.'
âWhy?' demanded Charlie.
âSecret work is always different: exciting. I like working on challenging projects.'
âWhat about the extra money?'
Careful! thought Blackstone. He said: âIt does carry a higher salary scale. And it's always nice to earn extra money.'