Read The Madness of July Online

Authors: James Naughtie

The Madness of July (35 page)

He turned to face her. ‘Something has happened there that’s causing troubles. I feel them all around, but I don’t know how they began. I want an inkling of the kind of trouble it might be. The other problem is that Paul wants me to stop the convulsions – but he can’t tell me what he knows. Just as I can’t tell him everything.’

‘Why not?’ she asked.

‘Because I know there’s personal stuff going on in the government that could rip us all apart. Politics, I mean, not you and me. And I’m scared to tell him what I’ve found out. He’s got enough to worry about without me dumping another crisis on his doormat.’

‘And why doesn’t he level with you?’

‘Because he’s as scared as I am, for a different reason.’

‘Give me a clue.’

‘Survival.’

‘There’s something else, isn’t there?’ she said.

‘Things I can’t say. A death. Troubles with Washington that feed on themselves. But there is something that’ll make you happy. I should have told you sooner. Abel’s here.’

She didn’t smile. ‘Why?’

‘He’s in the middle of it, with me. And I can’t work out how, or why. We love each other, but there are limits we’ve set for each other, I suppose. Things we can’t say.’

They lay quiet for a while, and she realized that she could hardly hear him breathing. Eventually, she said, ‘You’re worried because you think all this stuff is connected and you can’t understand how. But you know it is. That’s what’s stirring you up. It’s obvious.’

‘Of course.’

‘You said you were lifted up by the Mungo business. Why?’

‘Because he was right about something he said about Mother. That this other side of her life was what made her what she was to us. So we should be glad, and even grateful. A generous observation.’

‘Will, I think that tells you something.’

He got out of bed to pour two glasses of water. ‘Go on.’

‘That when you talk about politics, events, deals and all the rest of the stuff, you and the gang forget that emotion drives your world too. It’s not a machine that sometimes gets out of kilter, it’s run by people. They’re moved by feelings, deep ones, mostly hidden. The most interesting ones are. Mungo’s letting you understand your family better, painful though it is. That’s because he’s discovered what made it function. An accident, but he’s got to the core.’

Flemyng said, ‘The heart of things.’ He stopped talking for a while, then said, ‘I’m going to ask you a favour, darling. Let’s leave it there. I want to think for a while. Let me go into the garden on my own, before Lawrence picks me up. OK?’

‘Of course.’

‘Thank you.’

*

An hour later, Flemyng’s office day began with a silent acknowledgement between him and Lucy that nothing had happened at their midnight encounter. Nothing. She knew that he was relieved that her advance had been declined. Declined. And although she was sorry it had been made – she’d hardly slept afterwards – she had decided that an apology would make it worse. He was determined that office business should proceed briskly, and she accepted it as the least awkward solution. They went about their morning with a surface amiability, and in a way that carried no hint of difficulty. It helped that his night-time phone call was preoccupying him, and he knew that was a story he couldn’t share. As for Lucy, they’d simply try to forget what might have happened. There would be no gossip, no oily trace of trouble for the office to sniff and savour. She compared it in her mind to the placid political landscape that had become the happy talk of government, at least among those outside Flemyng’s circle – an end of term drawing to its close with fewer alarms than usual, Sorley’s coming climbdown so exquisitely leaked to the Monday papers that its sting was already drawn. She marvelled because they knew the truth: that the calm was one of the greatest illusions they’d known.

He had a pile of papers to get through and four meetings that consumed three hours. Just before noon he crossed the street to Paul’s office, leaving Lucy behind.

Gwilym was managing the coffee cups. Paul picked up a file. ‘This is a summary of the post-mortem report that has come from Osterley. Naturally, I haven’t seen the original.’ He managed a smile. ‘After all, it has nothing to do with any of us.’

Nonetheless, his hand shook as he read the report. Post-mortems on dead spooks should have nothing to do with him.

However, he said that they could be sure that, despite every tribulation, one blessing had come their way. This was a death whose cause was known, beyond doubt. He gathered strength from that fact. ‘Let’s remember, just because an event is odd and shocking, it doesn’t mean that we have to fall apart. There is every reason not to.’

Manson’s death seemed straightforward enough, despite the circumstances. A heavy overdose, a mixture of unmentionable things that were familiar to the medics, and had guaranteed that some day, it just happened to be last Thursday, he’d come to a horrible end. ‘There is evidence of prolonged abuse. He’s almost certainly had previous seizures, probably a while back. Interestingly enough, they don’t think he’d used needles before. They’re surprised, but apparently that’s often how it goes. You can’t tell when they’ll try something new. He’s been on and off the stuff for years – every cocktail you can imagine. From our point of view, that’s good news, if you see what I mean. It may have been an unnatural death in one sense, but it will not warrant, in official minds, a criminal investigation. As far as we can tell at this stage.’

Paul would be cautious to the end, Flemyng thought, until the last trump sounded.

‘Where he got it, and when, we don’t know. In the depths of Wednesday night, it’s assumed. They always know the places to go. In the little envelopes found in his room there was enough for our people to know what he’d taken. With some extra ingredients in the syringe, they say, for luck. Not good at all, obviously.’

They all leaned back. Flemyng noticed that Paul was tensing up again.

‘That, I suppose, counts as the good news.’

Now for the rest. Paul first.

‘You will remember that we had some bits and pieces here, produced by our friend Osterley. The notebook and the papers. This is considerably trickier, and not good news at all, I’m afraid.’

Flemyng was stiffening, absorbing the alarm that he could see had settled in Paul so that it had become something like a permanent state. He watched as Paul picked up a blue file, the one that had remained unopened the night before.

‘Think about the message,
Friend Flemying knows
. I imagine you’ve been trying to work it out.’

‘You could say that,’ Flemyng said.

‘Any thoughts?’

‘I wonder if “knows” is a more important word than “friend”.’ He left it there.

‘Our people have been quite busy, and productive,’ Paul said. There were some American numbers listed in Manson’s notebook, and they had been traced. ‘I may say more about those later,’ he said. But first there was one page of the notebook in which Manson had used a crude code to conceal four numbers, jumbling them up with a formula that various clever people – Paul’s phrase – had been able to crack easily.

‘If I were in a flippant mood I would ask you to guess those numbers,’ he said. ‘They are in addition to Brieve’s, which was written without a code on another page.’

‘Here we go again,’ said Flemyng. ‘Forbes, Ruskin, Sorley, and me.’

Paul spread his hands in a gesture of congratulation. Not difficult to win the prize. He said, ‘Back to our questions. Whose friend am I supposed to be? And what am I supposed to know?’

Paul made a small gesture of understanding. He said he could not have given an answer to that question the night before, which was why he had decided to keep the blue file’s contents to himself, but light was beginning to dawn. ‘Not that it will help us. At least, not if we want this to get easier.’

He waved an arm as if to settle them down for a long story. His listeners saw a change in him. Flemyng thought his voice took on a distant quality; and he noticed that Gwilym, for the first time since the start of the crisis, appeared expectant. His political senses had quickened again, aware that the game was approaching a climax. ‘I have a very strange tale to tell,’ Paul began.

Flemyng was in the wide chair by the window, with Gwilym on the other side of the room. He had one hand on his scar, massaging it through his light blue shirt. Anyone might have thought it an absent-minded gesture; but in the last few moments he had felt his concentration kick in, the old gear change he loved. He knew for a certainty that the end game was beginning.

And Paul delivered.

A couple of hours before they arrived in his office, he said, he’d had a visit in that very room from one of their colleagues. ‘Out of the blue.’

‘A colleague?’ said Flemyng.

‘That is an accurate description,’ said Paul, giving no more.

He said he had been surprised by his visitor, because the person concerned had no troublesome business that might bring him to the cabinet office at that hour, let alone into Paul’s sanctum. Usual end-of-term arguments flying around Whitehall, but nothing out of the ordinary. There had been no trouble in the air, no warning of an urgent meeting. He had simply arrived.

Unusually, his visitor had used the underground passage in Whitehall that was a useful back way into the office for avoiding prying eyes, or cameras. They had been alone in his room and, said Paul, he had been told an extraordinary story.

‘My problem, as you will learn in a moment, is whether to believe this. I have no reason not to. On the other hand, if I do believe it, I’m aware of the consequences. I have no choice about whether this complicates matters or makes them easier. I can’t pretend I didn’t hear it. The first thing is, I couldn’t send him away. I had to listen. So do you.’

Paul cupped his hands behind his head, and looked upwards.

‘Our colleague has been told – he wouldn’t say how it came to him, but he was determined that I should hear, so I didn’t waste time with questions – that there has been American… concern… about someone in this government. He wasn’t clear whether it was a minister or an official somewhere around here who was the source, but someone of substance, and considerable alarm.

‘He had no name for me, and I wasn’t going to get into a guessing game, for reasons that will become apparent to you – or maybe they are already.’ He looked up at Flemyng. ‘When he began, I realized that I should let him talk. Whether he was speaking the truth or not, he had to get it out.

‘According to him, it would be wrong to say this worry is about security as we usually think of it. More accurate to call it personal. But sadly, we may not be able to separate the two. Given what we have been discussing these last few days, that will not surprise you. I did feel, I should say, as if I was being patronized just a little. But never mind.

‘He has learned, from his own source, or sources, why Manson came to London.’

Gwilym leaned forward at the words. Flemyng was perfectly still.

‘But – and this is very important, and helpful to us I think – he knows nothing about Manson’s demise, unless he is a better actor than I can imagine. I am fairly certain he does not even know Manson’s name. I need hardly say what a relief that is. I was able to play the daft laddie up to a point – thank the good Lord, I didn’t let anything slip too soon – and it was clear that he knew only that there might be someone poking around who was interested in what Manson was interested in, if you follow me. He was also given no indication by me that I had heard anything about such a person. We might have been talking about a ghost.’

The story the visitor brought with him was clear enough, said Paul, and appalling.

There was a sexual accusation, private at the moment, but potentially public and embarrassing, not only to the individual involved, but to the government as a whole. ‘Catastrophic’ had been the colleague’s word.

‘Not to put too fine a point on it, the story is about a rape. Apparently – as with all these stories – the truth would be more or less impossible to establish, but the evidence would be a sensation, and that’s all that matters. The aggressor was someone in this government. There was a child – a young man now – and it all happened about twenty years ago, or a little more. Ancient history, but come back to haunt us.’

Flemyng brought to mind the travel itineraries that Paul had produced the night before, still lying in his beige file. It was a natural connection for him; Gwilym would just have to catch up.

‘I repeat. He has no idea against whom this accusation is being made, or might be made. None. Doesn’t know whether it has already been made, or has yet to happen. He is not working to our timetable, I’m glad to say.

‘But he said he did know that some person of an intelligence kind’ – a strangely touching phrase to Flemyng’s ears – ‘might be dispatched, or perhaps had been sent already, to dig around in London, and that I needed to know, as well as your old friends across the river, Will. I have no doubt that he has passed it in that direction too, as a matter of duty.

‘And that was the sum total of the story. I expressed natural concern, thanked him with some warmth, said I would make my own enquiries, established that he understood the sensitivities, would swear silence, and he left. Whether he will respect that request or not, I’m afraid I can’t say.’

Paul said he had been struck by his visitor’s sobriety, untouched by any skittishness or relish. His mood had been serious, even dark, and there had not been one sardonic note in the conversation.

‘It fits,’ he said. And turning his hands out, palms upward he said, ‘Agreed?’

Flemyng looked out to Horseguards Parade and the park beyond, knowing that he was at the point at which all pretence vanished, the curtains were drawn back and they gazed on the ugly truth that lay before them, the knowledge that there was no escape from a man-to-man confrontation with someone as yet unknown, with consequences that were uncertain but fraught with menace.

‘So, in a way, it’s an affair of the heart,’ he said. ‘The whole business.’

Paul said, ‘I think we are clear where we now stand,’ as if absorbing his thought. ‘Manson had these numbers in his notebook for a purpose. He had taken steps to get them in the hours before he left Washington. He also made a note of your name separately –
Friend Flemyng knows
– and carried your phone number in his pocket.

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