bloody annoyed,' he said.

Control put his head to one side and half closed his eyes. 'Surely you felt more than that? Surely you were upset? That would be more natural.'

'I was upset. Who wouldn't be?'

'Did you like Riemeck—as a man?'

'I suppose so,' said Leamas helplessly. 'There doesn't seem much point in going into it,' he added.

'How did you spend the night, what was left of it, after Riemeck had been shot?'

'Look, what is this?' Leamas asked hotly; 'what are you getting at?'

'Riemeck was the last,' Control reflected, 'the last of a series of deaths. If my memory is right it began with the girl, the one they shot in Wedding, outside the cinema. Then there was the Dresden man, and the arrests at Jena. Like the ten little niggers. Now Paul, Viereck and Ländser—all dead. And finally Riemeck.' He smiled deprecatingly. 'That is quite a heavy rate of expenditure. I wondered if you'd had enough.'

'What do you mean—enough?'

'I wondered whether you were tired. Burned out.' There was a long silence. 'That's up to you,' Leamas said at last.

'We have to live without sympathy, don't we? That's impossible of course. We act it to one another, all this hardness; but we aren't like that really. I mean...one can't be out in the cold all the time; one has to come in from the cold...do you see what I mean?'

Leamas saw. He saw the long road outside Rotterdam, the long straight road beside the dunes, and the stream of refugees moving along it; saw the little airplane miles away, the procession stop and look toward it; and the plane coming in, neatly over the dunes; saw the chaos, the meaningless hell, as the bombs hit the road.

'I can't talk like this, Control,' Leamas said at last. 'What do you want me to do?'

'I want you to stay out in the cold a little longer.' Leamas said nothing, so Control went on: 'The ethic of our work, as I understand it, is based on a single assumption. That is, we are never going to be aggressors. Do you think that's fair?'

Leamas nodded. Anything to avoid talking.

'Thus we do disagreeable things, but we are defensive. That, I think, is still fair. We do disagreeable things so that ordinary people here and elsewhere can sleep safely in their beds at night. Is that too romantic? Of course, we occasionally do very wicked things.' He grinned like a schoolboy. 'And in weighing up the moralities, we rather go in for dishonest comparisons; after all, you can't compare the ideals of one side with the methods of the other, can you now?'

Leamas was lost. He'd heard the man talked a lot of drivel before getting the knife in, but he'd never heard anything like this before.

'I mean, you've got to compare method with method, and ideal with ideal. I would say that since the war, our methods—ours and those of the opposition—have become much the same. I mean you can't be less ruthless than the opposition simply because your government's policy is benevolent, can you now?' He laughed quietly to himself. 'That would never do,' he said.

For God's sake, thought Leamas, it's like working for a bloody clergyman. What is he up to?

'That is why,' Control continued, 'I think we ought to try and get rid of Mundt...Oh really,' he said, turning irritably toward the door, 'where is that damned coffee?'

Control crossed to the door, opened it and talked to some unseen girl in the outer room. As he returned he said: 'I really think we ought to get rid of him if we can manage it.'

'Why? We've got nothing left in East Germany, nothing at all. You just said so—Riemeck was the last. We've nothing left to protect.'

Control sat down and looked at his hands for a while.

'That is not altogether true,' he said finally; 'but I don't think I need to bore you with the details.'

Leamas shrugged.

'Tell me,' Control continued, 'are you tired of spying? Forgive me if I repeat the question. I mean that is a phenomenon we understand here, you know. Like aircraft designers...metal fatigue, I think the term is. Do say if you are.' Leamas remembered the flight home that morning and wondered.

'If you were,' Control added, 'we would have to find some other way of taking care of Mundt. What I have in mind is a little out of the ordinary.'

The girl came in with the coffee. She put the tray on the desk and poured out two cups. Control waited till she had left the room.

'Such a silly girl,' he said, almost to himself. 'It seems extraordinary they can't find good ones any more. I do wish Ginnie wouldn't go on holiday at times like this.' He stirred his coffee disconsolately for a while.

'We really must discredit Mundt,' he said. 'Tell me, do you drink a lot? Whisky and that kind of thing?'

Leamas had thought he was used to Control.

'I drink a bit. More than most, I suppose.'

Control nodded understandingly. 'What do you know about Mundt?'

'He's a killer. He was here a year or two back with the East German Steel Mission. We had an adviser here then: Maston.'

'Quite so.'

'Mundt was running an agent, the wife of an F.O. man. He killed her.'

'He tried to kill George Smiley. And of course he shot the woman's husband. He is a very distasteful man. Ex Hitler-Youth and all that kind of thing. Not at all the intellectual kind of Communist. A practitioner of the cold war.'

'Like us,' Leamas observed drily.

Control didn't smile. 'George Smiley knew the case well. He isn't with us any more, but I think you ought to ferret him out. He's doing things on seventeenth century Germany. He lives in Chelsea, just behind Sloane Square. Bywater Street, do you know it?'

'Yes.'

'And Guillam was on the case as well. He's in Satellites Four, on the first floor. I'm afraid everything's changed since your day.'

'Yes.'

'Spend a day or two with them. They know what I have in mind. Then I wondered if you'd care to stay with me for the weekend. My wife,' he added hastily, 'is looking after her mother, I'm afraid. It will be just you and I.'

'Thanks. I'd like to.'

'We can talk about things in comfort then. It would be very nice. I think you might make a lot of money out of it. You can have whatever you make.'

'Thanks.'

'That is, of course, if you're sure you want to no mental fatigue or anything?'

'If it's a question of killing Mundt, I'm game.'

'Do you really feel that?' Control inquired politely. And then, having looked at Leamas thoughtfully for a moment, he observed, 'Yes, I really think you do. But you mustn't feel you have to say it. I mean in our world we pass so quickly out of the register on hate or love—like certain sounds a dog can't hear. All that's left in the end is a kind of nausea; you never want to cause suffering again. Forgive me, but isn't that rather what you felt when Karl Riemeck was shot? Not hate for Mundt, nor love for Karl, but a sickening jolt like a blow on a numb body...They tell me you walked all night—just walked through the streets of Berlin. Is that right?'

'It's right that I went for a walk.'

'All night?'

'Yes.'

'What happened to Elvira?'

'God knows...I'd like to take a swing at Mundt,' he said.

'Good...good. Incidentally, if you should meet any old friends in the meantime, I don't think there's any point in discussing this with them. In fact,' Control added after a moment, 'I should be rather short with them. Let them

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