wherever and have a chat with them when they wanted to pick his brains?”
Banks heard Burgess chuckle down the line. “That’s not the way they do things, Banksy. They like games and codes and passwords and A L L T H E C O L O R S O F D A R K N E S S
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things like that. Basically, they’re like little kids at heart. When he was ready for a meeting, Silbert would ring a phone number they gave him, an untraceable number, as I’m sure you discovered, and all he’d get would be a line- disconnected message, but they’d know he was ready. They’d also know if anyone else phoned the number, too, which I assume is one of the things that tipped them off to your med-dlesome presence in the first place.”
“Maybe,” said Banks. “Julian Fenner, Import-Export. I certainly wasn’t trying to hide anything.”
“It may have been better if you had. Anyway,” Burgess went on,
“they clearly didn’t want anyone to know that they were using him because the other side, of course, also knew exactly what and who Silbert knew, and they would be able to change any plans or routines or personnel accordingly.”
“Is that all?”
“I can’t think of anything else. Can you? And don’t forget what I said about the phone. Dump it. You owe me, Banksy. I must get back to bugging Muslim MPs now. Bye-bye.”
The phone went dead. Banks switched it off and put it in his pocket.
He’d dispose of it later, in the Thames, perhaps, with all the other secrets that had been dumped there over the years.
18
IT WAS A MUGGY EVENING ON THE LONDON STREETS.
The rain had stopped by the time Banks was walking down King’s Road at about half past eight, but a kind of heavy mist hung in the air, enveloping everything in its warm humid haze. The street still maintained its usual aura of busy-ness, of constant motion and activity. It was one of the things Banks loved so much about London, and one of the things he loved to escape from by going back to Gratly.
The street lamps made blurred halos in the mist, and even the sounds of the main street were muff led. Banks had sensed an odd mood as he made his way on the tube and by foot. London was still in shock from Friday’s bombing, but at the same time people were determined to get on with life as usual, to show that they weren’t going to be intimidated. There were probably even more people out and about than you would normally find on a humid Monday night. They needed to stand up and be counted. Banks felt a part of that, too. But most of all he wanted to find Sophia.
He turned into her street, which was considerably quieter, and felt his chest tighten as he rang her doorbell. No answer. He had a key, but there was no way he was going to use it. Besides, he had no reason to go in if she was out. He had deliberately not phoned her to say he was coming, too, in case she reacted badly and tried to avoid him.
She was probably working. Often her job demanded that she attend A L L T H E C O L O R S O F D A R K N E S S
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evening events—readings, openings, premieres—so he decided to pass the time in their local wine bar, just around the corner. Like other cafes and bars he had passed on his way, it was crowded. Not many establishments had tables out on the pavement along King’s Road—
there simply wasn’t that much room—so the inside tables were all taken, and knots of people stood around where they could find a bit of space, leaned on pillars, held their glasses and talked.
Banks went to the closest section of the bar, where he was able to wedge himself between a couple of noisy, animated groups who had probably come for a drink after work and stayed too long. Nobody paid him any attention, including the bar staff. Angie, the blond Australian barmaid, was engaging in her favorite pastime—f lirting with the customers.
Then, through the crowd, Banks saw a profile he recognized sitting at one of the tables.
Opposite her sat a young man with lank longish fair hair and the kind of scruffy beard you get after not shaving for four or five days.
He was wearing a light green corduroy jacket over a black T-shirt.
Banks hadn’t seen him before, but that didn’t mean much. He knew that Sophia had many friends in the arts he hadn’t met. He was just about to walk over when he noticed Sophia leaning in toward the man, the way women do when they’re interested. Banks froze. Now more than ever anxious not to be seen, he edged away from the bar toward the exit, without even having ordered a drink. The next moment he was wandering down the street, heart pounding, not quite sure what to do.
There was a pub just down King’s Road called the Chelsea Potter, and in a daze Banks wandered inside and bought a pint. There were no seats left, but there was a shelf running below the front windows, where he could rest his drink. From there, he could see the end of Sophia’s street. He decided that if she went home alone, he would ap-3 3 2 P E T E R
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proach her, but if she went with the man from the wine bar, he would head back to Eastvale.
Someone had left an