with Moscow over what had happened. ‘How are we going to believe you in the future? Like now, for instance. Now I don’t believe you.’
‘Listen!’ pleaded Blackstone. ‘Please listen! I got a quick look at some blueprint material and I honestly thought I had everything. I wasn’t trying to cheat.’
‘That’s exactly what we think you tried to do,’ said Losev. ‘Either that or set up some trap for me to fall into. Do you know what we had to do today: we had to bring a lot of men down here to make sure I was safe. Huge expenditure of manpower. All very inconvenient.’
‘I’m sorry,’ said Blackstone. ‘I’m really very, very sorry.’
‘That’s what we are: very, very sorry. We thought we had an arrangement and it seems we don’t have anything.’
‘There’s nothing missing from what you’ve got today,’ said Blackstone, which was the truth. ‘It’s all there.’
‘I hope so, Henry. You’ve no idea how much I hope so,’ impressed Losev. Exaggerating, he said: ‘If this one isn’t right we’re going to get very angry. We’re going to think that our arrangement is over. You know what that means, don’t you?’
‘Don’t do it!’ said Blackstone, pleading again. ‘Just wait and see.’ Why had he taken such a chance: been so foolish!
‘It’ll need a lot now to convince me.’
And how in God’s name was he going to get it! thought Blackstone desperately. He said hurriedly: ‘I’ve got temporary access, into the secure section.’
‘Where the work is actually being done!’ seized Losev instantly. This was better, if it were true.
Blackstone nodded. ‘And I’ve re-applied, like you told me. I haven’t had a reply yet.’
‘How long is this access going to last?’
‘I don’t know,’ admitted Blackstone.
‘So we’ve got to use it,’ decided Losev, recognizing the chance to recover in Dzerzhinsky Square. ‘I want the missing details for that first drawing. And whatever else you can lay your hands on. Don’t forget what I said. I want a lot.’
Blackstone realized at once that the demand was impossible, but knew it would be foolish to say so. ‘Sure,’ he said, instead. ‘I’ll do it. You’ll see.’
The aerospace worker looked pointedly between the just delivered envelope and Losev, who stared back, aware of the expectation. The Russian thought: You stupid, greedy bastard. He said: ‘You can go now. Ruth will be home soon, won’t she?’
‘I thought…’ started Blackstone, then stopped.
‘What?’
Blackstone shook his head, understanding. ‘Nothing,’ he said.
‘That’s right, Henry. There is nothing: no more money, no more bonuses. Not until I’m sure. You please me, I’ll please you. That clear?’
‘I’ll call you,’ promised Blackstone, moving from the car.
‘Make it soon,’ urged Losev. ‘I want it to be very soon.’
So did Blackstone. He wasn’t broke, not by a long way yet, but he’d become accustomed to having money around and he wanted the security to go on, just knowing that it was
Blackstone calculated his entry into the restricted work area the following evening around the same time as before, but on this occasion there was the benefit of his having the layout established in his mind. Unable to use the direction-seeking excuse again, he had to avoid the small office from which he’d stolen the original backing paper. He went along a corridor diametrically opposite from his first entry, which took him to the far side of the communal work room. As he walked Blackstone saw the end-of-the-day men shuffling from their separate sections to stow their blueprints in the same main drawing locker. But, more confident of his surroundings, Blackstone became aware of something else, too. The outer, bordering cubicles appeared to be where the prototype drawings were checked and refined, from their creation in the larger room. Which meant that the larger room was likely to contain a bigger selection of material, impressed upon backing paper or maybe discarded sketches in waste-paper baskets in advance of security collection.
Blackstone found the lavatory he was seeking halfway down the corridor and hurried in, tensed against there already being people inside. There weren’t. He concealed himself in the furthest cubicle but did not turn the lock, to prevent the Engaged sign registering. Instead he sat on the pedestal with his legs stretched out in front of himself, keeping the door closed with his feet. The position also kept his feet and lower legs from being visible from outside. He reckoned at least four people came in and out: a far-away cubicle was used once. The conversations at the urinals covered the improbability of a previous night’s soap opera on television, Italian food being better than French, and house prices going up on the island as fast as those on the mainland. Blackstone thought he recognized the voice of one of the men to be someone called Morton who’d joined the firm after him and without half as much experience, which just went to show how bloody unfair the whole selection for the secret project had been. His legs began to ache at the back, just behind his knees.
He let half an hour elapse before cautiously emerging. The building seemed quiet around him, some of the corridor and office lights already extinguished by their timeswitch. Blackstone remained stationary in the corridor, alert for movement or noise of people but hearing nothing.
The security drill was strictly adhered to, which meant the preliminary inquiry was immediate but it actually gave Blackstone an opportunity to compose himself and arrange his story because Springley had to be recalled, fortunately only from his usual early evening visit to the nearby sports and social club. Blackstone’s own section chief was summoned back as well, along with the most senior director still on the premises and the head of security.
By the time the questioning began Blackstone was, incredibly, in one of his upswing moods, relaxed and relatively unworried. As he spoke he thought it was just like telling the truth. He produced his temporary security access authorization, which was agreed by them all to be valid. Blackstone’s instruction to deliver the Ariane fin design was confirmed by his superior and Blackstone insisted his return that evening had been the action of a conscientious employee attempting to retrieve documents non-classified and therefore insufficiently important to require a positive collection directive: if he were wrong about that then he was sorry. He’d only been trying to do his job. And here Blackstone introduced a further explanation he had mentally rehearsed while he waited for the examination to begin. He’d also hoped, he conceded in apparent admission, that he might personally encounter Robert Springley, from whom he still awaited a reply to his renewed application to be part of the project team. Again, Blackstone asserted, the action of a perhaps overly keen, conscientious worker. The absentminded, white- haired project leader at once confirmed such a reply was outstanding.
The drawings tubes he had been carrying were examined and found only to contain additional Ariane material, and a thorough check of the room in which he had been detained showed nothing interfered with and nothing missing.
Throughout Blackstone became increasingly aware that the examination was being conducted internally, without any outside police involvement, which had to be a good sign. And he didn’t regard as ominous being told to hold himself in readiness for a fuller inquiry, pending which he would be formally upon suspension, because if they’d really believed him to be doing something wrong they wouldn’t have allowed him off the premises in the first place. The most encouraging thing of all was the smiling farewell from Springley himself, who said when the inquiry had