given him. The idea of no longer being Browne's deputy, of being exiled to a distant outpost away from the centre of operations didn't suit him at all.
He had been summoned urgently to Ryder Street and it was close to midnight. So far as he knew the only two occupants of the building now were himself and Browne. And the caretaker downstairs who unlocked the front door and locked it again after he entered the building.
'Cairo,' said the Colonel.
Browne was worried about something. He kept pacing round the office, hands clasped behind his back, shooting glances at his visitor as though trying to make up his mind.
'A permanent posting, sir?' ventured Whelby.
'No. A flying visit. I sense an atmosphere of lethargy out there. Place has become a backwater since Monty cleared Rommel out of North Africa and invaded Sicily and Italy with the Yanks. Their signals reflect that inertia. I need information. Bloody soon.'
'The subject being?'
Again the hesitation, the quick, darting glances. Whelby was, in contrast, imperturbable. Browne, he knew, disliked his deputy being absent. Whelby had made himself indispensable for the day-to-day running of the department.
'It's Lindsay,' Browne said abruptly. 'You don't get on with him too well, the word is.'
'I've only met him on two or three occasions. He struck me as an able enough chap…'
'I want you to go out there and raise Cain, find out just what's happened to him. They simply must have some word about Lindsay – good or bad. If not, they'd better get it…' Browne paused and then decided to go ahead. 'This comes down from God – who smokes cigars…'
It had indeed, which was what had thrown Browne into turmoil. Where is Lindsay? I want him back. Expense no object. Action this day …
Christ Almighty, Browne thought.. this day. He'd be lucky to get news next month. And Whelby, sitting relaxed, was careful not to show the triumph he felt at being selected for this mission as the Colonel continued.
'Your father's an Arabist,' Browne recalled. 'Knows the Middle East. Some of it must have rubbed off on you. Your plane leaves tomorrow night from Lyneham, Wiltshire. And this never happened – your trip to Cairo. Sign attendance sheets before you go – showing you were in London…'
'I travel under my own name?' Whelby enquired.
Impassive on the surface, underneath his mental turbulence was as great as Browne's. Departure in twenty- four hours – somehow he had to contact Savitsky before he left.
'Like hell you do,' Browne replied. 'You're Peter Standish for the duration – of this mission…'
He extracted something from his breast pocket. A British passport landed on the desk together with an envelope. Whelby picked up the passport and examined it, his manner still diffident.
Mr Peter Standish. National Status: British Subject by birth. The usual appalling photograph of himself. They had even weathered the gold seal so it had a well- worn look, a document carried and used for ages.
'Standish is a bit John Buchanish, wouldn't you say?' Whelby remarked as he pocketed his passport.
'Rather suits your personality, we thought,' Browne said and he smiled. 'That envelope contains the name of the chap you contact, Egyptian currency and a letter of introduction. What more could you wish for?'
The American Liberator bomber, Glenn Miller, approached Cairo West airfield one hour after dawn. Tim Whelby stretched his aching arms and legs as the huge machine banked prior to landing on Egyptian soil.
It had been a swine of a journey and he hadn't slept a wink. There were no seats inside the great fuselage; each passenger had been provided with a sleeping-bag which rolled and slithered about with the aircraft's movements. Alongside Whelby lay a British major-general with red tabs.
'You're a boffin they've sent out, I suppose?' the general enquired.
Whelby merely smiled, stifling a yawn. His suit was crumpled, he was in need of a shave and he had lain awake all night thinking how paradoxical it would be if they were shot down by a German fighter. Had the Nazis known who was aboard they'd certainly have mustered every fighter available to locate and destroy the plane.
`Shouldn't have asked, should I?' the general remarked. 'Do you realize there are a dozen men aboard this machine and not one of us has a clue as to the identity of his fellow-passengers? You'd think there was a spy aboard…'
The Liberator was descending rapidly. The hard ochre of the bleached desert came up to meet them, the wheels touched down, there was a nasty bump, then they slowed into a smooth glide and stopped. The endless engine sound, the vibration ceased.
Whelby looked round at the other passengers whose faces wore a blank, washed-out expression.
The exit door was opened from the outside. Fresh air flooded in, displacing the foetid atmosphere of too much carbon dioxide, too little oxygen. The passengers disengaged themselves from their sleeping-bags like insects emerging from cocoons.
'Mr Peter Standish! Sir! You're the first to disembark, if you please…'
A brilliant way of covering up my arrival, Whelby thought cynically and avoided curious eyes as he walked stiff-legged along the aircraft, holding his small suitcase.
A metal ladder had been placed below the open doorway. It was the desert's silence which first struck Whelby as he descended. The idiot who had bellowed out his name was standing at the base of the ladder.
'Major Harrington at your service, sir. I'm Security. Care to follow me to that building over there? Oh, and welcome to Egypt! Your first visit? Whoops! Shouldn't have asked that.'
Whelby could hardly believe his eyes. Harrington was faultlessly turned out in khaki drill, neatly- buttoned shirt, well-creased shorts, mahogany-tanned knees and arms to match his face. The moustache! Whelby had seen pictures, caricatures brought back in magazines from the Mid-East, of Flying Officer Kite with his flowing, handle-bar moustache. Harrington actually sported such a moustache.
'Was it wise to broadcast my name to all and sundry?' Whelby enquired as they walked side by side over the hard, arid ground.
'Better than creeping up to you confidential-like. Do it parade-ground style and how many of them back there will even be able to recall your face, let alone the name, by the time they reach Cairo?'
Whelby realized his night's ordeal had loosened the iron grip he normally maintained over his reactions. And Harrington was by no means the chinless wonder he looked. Inside the building his escort checked his passport and then told him the news.
'We're sending in a Dakota to airlift Lindsay out of Yugoslavia. Your arrival could be said to be timely…'
'How do you know where he is? He reached the Allied Military Mission, then? You've established radio contact…'
Whelby was breaking all his rules, asking a series of direct questions, but he spaced them out, speaking in a sleepy drawl.
'You'll have to let me keep my little secrets, too, sir. No offence meant. Here we are. A very private room. Feel the temperature rising? We have KD outfits in various sizes here for you to change into. You'll fry in that suit – besides looking as conspicuous as a scorpion on a chupatti…'
Whelby had to admit this deceptive-looking buffoon was pretty well organized. Left alone in a sparsely furnished room with a cement floor, he chose from an array of suits in varying sizes spread out across a trestle table. He had just finished changing when someone knocked on the door.
'Do come in,' Whelby called out.
'I say, you look pretty chipper – as to the manner born…'
'I noticed the other passengers leave by a bus – taking a shufti out of that window. What transport do I get?'
'Shufti! Sounds as though you're picking up the lingo out here fast.'
For the first time Whelby studied Harrington more closely as he finished doing up the breast-pocket buttons on his tunic. The foppish moustache was misleading – it drew your attention away from the shrewd grey eyes which seemed to record every tiny movement you made. A dozen years from now, Whelby reflected, you'll know me if I'm dressed up as an Arab.
'Now transport, you said.' Harrington twirled his moustaches like a music-hall comedian 'One jeep. I drive. You admire the scenery. Monty got rid of all the staff cars before Alamein. He had them dropped into the Med, I