The head stayed cocked. ‘Don’t you, major?’
Fred thought about David Audley as he had never quite done before, not as someone too young for this sort of work, but as someone whom they’d caught young and could train for it before he was set in his ways. ‘There is a driver who is ... attached to him. But we can’t promote him.’
‘Yes – Hewitt is unpromotable, I agree.’ Stocker nodded thoughtfully.
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He looked down the runway, towards the nearest Dakota, which was already surrounded by the RAF’s turn- round vehicles and their crews. ‘We’re going back to Germany . . . immediately?’
‘Of course.’ The wind blew Driver Hewitt and Captain Audley away. ‘What did you expect, Major Fattorini?
We’ve got a great deal of work to do.’ A hint of that deceptive smile, which Major McCorquodale would undoubtedly misinterpret, returned. ‘In fact, our work is only just begining . . . now that we’re free of treachery.’
Infinitely far down the runway, close to the end Nissen hut, Fred caught a last glimpse of Number 16: ‘Sweet- Sixteen’ who had survived the kiss of death, and was now about to be kissed by two boffins from Cambridge, to encourage him to do for England what he had refused to do for his own country.
But Number 16 was no longer his problem. ‘What I expect, if I’m coming back with you, are answers to questions, sir. And straight answers.’ He switched to Clinton. ‘Like, who gives Otto Schild his orders?’
The Brigadier gave him a little nod. ‘I am not very pleased with Otto Schild right now.’ The blank eyes dummy4
bored into him. ‘Was it you, or the Crocodile, who put him under close arrest, Fred?’
Fred decided to repay his debt to Otto Schild. ‘It was his own suggestion, actually.’
‘It was?’ Still no emotion. ‘He didn’t try to run, then?’
But the debt wasn’t fully repaid. ‘He didn’t try to run.
And I rather think he saved my life and Audley’s, as well as Number 16’s, as it happens.’ He felt a twinge of anger as he spoke. ‘Or is that the reason why you aren’t pleased with him? Were we all expendable, if you could get your traitor in exchange for us?’
‘Major – ’ Stocker started to speak.
‘It’s all right, Tommy.’ The Brigadier raised his hand.
This is interesting . . . What do you
Obviously, you’ve been doing some hard thinking.‘
That was true. ‘I think you had a plan, and it went badly wrong – because of Amos de Souza. Because you didn’t trust him.’
‘I didn’t trust anyone. Except you and young Audley.’
Clinton nodded. ‘All I knew was that our traitor – and dummy4
the Russians – wanted Number 16 very badly. And alive, too. So I made it very easy for them to get him.
But they wouldn’t have got away with him.’ He stared at Fred for a moment. ‘But . . . you’re right about de Souza.’ He shook his head slowly. ‘I judged that the enemy wouldn’t want a noisy massacre. A quiet kidnapping, with you two as hostages, was more likely.
But Amos . . . Amos blundered in. So now I have him on my conscience for my stupidity – is that what you want me to say, Fred?’
Clinton was always full of surprises. ‘On your conscience?’
‘Oh yes.’ The old blank stare was back. ‘Schild was there to see that everything went according to plan.
But . . . you’re probably right: once de Souza was dead . . . Levin probably would have shot you, too.’
‘Schild was your man.’ Fred frowned. ‘But it was Colbourne who took him on, surely.’
‘He thought he did, yes.’
‘So . . . where did Schild come from?’
Stocker stirred again. ‘I really don’t see how that is important to you, major.’
‘No.’ Clinton raised his hand. ‘In the circumstances, it’s a fair question. And poor Amos de Souza put two and two together, and made them five because he didn’t know enough . . . which is a burden I must bear, dummy4
because of my incompetence. So we’ll start right now, anyway.’ He nodded at Fred. ‘My man – yes: Schild
‘Acting on your orders?’
‘Not to kill. I wanted our traitor alive. Though . . .
perhaps Schild has saved us more trouble than he’s caused, at that.’
Now another instalment of the debt could be paid. So he shrugged. ‘He said he went for a head-shot because the RSM was wearing ammunition pouches, so he couldn’t be sure his bullet wouldn’t be deflected. It was almost