just below the castle. Paris is only about seventy miles down the road, as the shell flies ... I could take you to see the gun position in the wood, it's still there. But it's rather overgrown dummy3
and depressing, so I won't.'
'So it's another of your 1914-18 places, where they've got to remember us—just in case?' If it hadn't been for Vendresse she would have spoken more sharply.
'It can be.' He nodded thoughtfully, then stopped nodding.
'But as a matter of fact it isn't.'
Elizabeth couldn't add up this reply to make a sensible answer of it, and Paul appeared to be in no mood to elaborate on it, but withdrew into himself. It was as though their passage across one of his old battlefields, on which every fold and feature had its significance for him, was inhibiting him.
Finally Humphrey Aske roused himself behind the wheel.
'You said . . . the tower—the Frenchman's tower—was still there in 1812. Was that meant to mean something, or could it have been 1912, or 1712?'
'No.' Paul shook his head. 'No.'
'No . . . what?'
'You'll be coming to the Laon Soissons road in a moment.
You turn left, towards Soissons, and then almost immediately right, down a side-road.' Paul stirred. 'I meant 1812.'
Aske peered ahead. 'What have medieval towers got to do with 1812?'
Mitchell twisted in his seat, pulling his safety-belt away from his shoulder, and stared past Elizabeth out of the rear window, as though to get a last look at his old battlefield on dummy3
the ridge.
Then he caught Elizabeth's eye. 'Your father came this way, our people think, from his rough notes.'
'My father?' She frowned at him.
'Or, if he didn't, Tom Chard certainly did—'along the high road above the river to the greatest tower I ever saw'—he must have seen a few great towers along the road from the Lautenbourg, but this was the greatest. . . size and time and distance, that's how they worked it out . . . with a few other clues beside, from Miss Irene Cookridge's book, Elizabeth.'
'To—?' But she had forgotten the name of the place.
'Coucy-le-Chateau.' He nodded. 'Because Coucy-le-Chateau is where Lieutenant Chipperfield died, they reckon.'
IX
'You SEE, ELIZABETH, this is a research project with a difference— or a whole lot of differences . . . like
'You mean, we don't have much of it?'
'Maybe we don't have any of it. I don't know. I only know that I've taken years to reconstruct days . . . and your father, Elizabeth—he bumbled along after the
about time, anyway.'
That was Father to the life in his later days, thought Elizabeth: in spite of the doctor's advice he had been convinced that the whisper of his heart in his ear was only a false rumour.
'But we have other things that he didn't have.' Paul half-smilfcd at her. 'Because, when you think about it, an intelligence department is well-equipped for this sort of enterprise: we have the manpower— trained researchers, who know how to ask questions, and how to interpret the answers—and we have the resources—'
'Huh!' Aske snuffled to himself. 'If the tax-payers could see us now! Or are we going to publish this time? A
'And the contacts—manpower, and resources,
—'
'Professor
'Aske—'
'Sorry, old boy! A moment's weakness . . . But Wilder
Looking from one to the other, Elizabeth almost smiled; because they were Lucan and Cardigan at Balaclava, re-enacting history, with the one hating the other so much that he'd never let himself be stung into admitting that he too dummy3
didn't know why he was doing what he was doing. But since she was in this particular Light Brigade charge it was no real smiling matter.
'So you're not interested in the
He nodded. 'That's what your father was concerned with, Elizabeth. You were right.'
'After Miss . . . Miss Cookridge's letter?' Here, coming down off the Chemin des Dames ridge,
