'Can't you see? Isn't it possible that we—that you—and Dr Mitchell and Dr Audley—that you've all been following the wrong
He looked at her strangely, no longer bored, but with an expression in which so many emotions conflicted that there was no room for any one of them. 'What do you mean—the
She had to get it right. 'This finding out what really happened in 1812, Mr Aske—you don't really care about that
—you
'The . . .
Only her anger sustained her. 'Paul told me about this thing
—this Project Vengeful—'
'He told you
had absolutely no right to do any such thing! That's quite appalling!'
'But he did, Mr Aske.' She hated Aske then, as irrationally as she loved Paul, so that both emotions were equally painful to her. 'He trusted me.'
'That's what's so appalling!' snarled Aske. 'My God! I'll see him hang for that!'
'You'll see him hang?' Elizabeth's loyalty fixed itself irrevocably on Paul. 'But you'll phone London first, Mr Aske.'
'I'll phone London?'
'That's right.'
'Why?'
Why? But she wasn't going to argue with him. 'Because I want you to do that—that's why.'
Not for Humphrey Aske was Paul's Theory of Contemporaneity— that would only make him laugh at her, and at Paul too!
'That's not a reason, Miss Loftus. I'm not about to make myself a fool for you.'
Then more fool he! But she wasn't, in her turn, about to explain why the timing of the Russians'
dummy3
'Then I'll phone London, Mr Aske. Cathy will give me a number—she's precocious enough for that. Or there'll be a number somewhere—I'll go on phoning until I get it, starting from 999 and working upwards, even if I'm still trying to find it when Faith Audley gets back—and then she'll give it to me.' She looked down at him obstinately. 'And then we'll see who's the fool—you or me.'
'I already know who the fool is.' He tried to stare her down, and she felt his will harden against hers, as it had never hardened before. But that only made it a straight contest, and in a contest she outnumbered him—all the ghosts from the past crowded behind Commander Loftus's daughter: Lieutenant Chipperfield and Midshipman Paget, and Tom Chard and Abraham Timms, who had kept faith and had done their duty after their fashion, even though faith and duty had made fools of them.
His will crumbled against such odds. 'Very well. I give you best, Miss Loftus—I'll telephone for you, if that's what you want. But on your head be it. What do you want me to say?'
'Just remind them that the
'Is that all?' He seemed on the point of refusing again, but then thought better of it. 'All right. But you stay here while I phone—if I have to make a fool of myself I'd prefer to do it by myself. I'll do it on those terms only.'
'Thank you, Mr Aske.'
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He stared at her. 'I think I'd rather you didn't thank me, Miss Loftus.'
Time stood still as she waited: the effort of imposing her will on him seemed to have drained her energy, and she found it impossible to concentrate on anything except the need to wait patiently. The house was very quiet, she thought.
Then the door opened, and Aske was staring at her again.
'I'm sorry, Miss Loftus,' he said.
'Sorry?'
'I owe you an apology.' His lips tightened. 'We have to go to London now—at once.' The skin had tightened on his face too, heightening the cheek-bones and jaw-line with stress; except that such a transformation must be in her own mind, imagined out of the change in his manner.
'We've got to go to London?' she echoed him stupidly.
'
Her mouth opened. 'David Audley?'
He nodded. 'I spoke to him. He's getting a message to Kyle of Lochalsh, to our security people there. They're