a speculative curiosity in those eyes that he couldn't hide. The sort of look he'd give a man who'd just put a foot wrong. I said to Cliveden, 'The guards at the plant? Any word?'
'They're all right. So it can't have been botulinus that got Clandon. The central laboratories are completely sealed up.'
'And Dr. Baxter?'
'Still no signs of him. He—'
'Still no signs? That makes two of them now. Coincidence General. If that's the word I want.'
'I don't know what you're talking about,' he said irritably.
'Easton Deny. My predecessor in Mordon. He vanished a couple of months ago — just six days after he was the best man at my wedding and
'How the hell should I?' A very testy little man indeed, I was glad he wasn't a civilian doctor and myself one of his patients. 'I've only been able to get down there twice since my appointment… Anyway, Baxter. He left the laboratories all right, checking out slightly later than usual. He didn't return. He lives with a widowed sister in a bungalow near Alfringham, five miles away. He didn't come home at all last night, she says.' He turned to Hardanger. 'We must get down there immediately, Superintendent.'
'Right away, sir. Cavell is going to come with us.'
'Glad to hear it.' Cliveden said. He didn't look it and I couldn't blame him. You don't make major-general without developing an army mind in the process and the army mind sees the world as a neat, orderly and regimented place with no place at all in it for private detectives. But he was trying to be courteous and making the best of a bad job for he went on, 'We'll need all the assistance we can get. Shall we go?'
'Just as soon as I've phoned my wife to let her know what's happening — if her phone's been reconnected.' Hardanger nodded. I reached for the receiver but Cliveden's hand was on it first, pressing it firmly down on its cradle.
'No phoning, Cavell. Sorry. Must have absolute security on this. It's imperative that no one—
I lifted his wrist, the phone came up in his hand and I took it from him. I said, 'Tell him, Superintendent.'
Hardanger looked uncomfortable. As I dialled he said apologetically, 'I'm afraid Cavell is no longer in the Army sir. Not under the jurisdiction of the Special Branch. He is — um — allergic to authority.'
'Under the Official Secrets Act we could demand—'
'Sorry, sir.' Hardanger shook his head heavily. 'Classified information voluntarily disclosed to a civilian out with a government department is no longer an official secret. No one made us tell Cavell anything and he never asked us to. He's under no obligation. And we want his cooperation.'
I made my call, told Mary that no, I wasn't under arrest, that I was going down to Mordon and would call her later in the day. After I hung up I took off my jacket, strapped on a felt shoulder holster and stuck the Hanyatti into it. It was a big gun, but it was a big jacket with plenty of room in it, unlike Inspector Martin I didn't go in much for the Italian line. Hardanger watched me expressionlessly, Cliveden disapprovingly: twice he made to say something, twice he thought better of it. It was all very irregular indeed. But so was murder.
CHAPTER TWO
The Army had a helicopter waiting for us, but the fog was too heavy. Instead we went down to Wiltshire in a big Jaguar saloon driven by a plain-clothes policeman who took far too much satisfaction in leaning with all his weight on both accelerator and siren button. But the fog lifted as we cleared Middlesex, the roads were fairly clear and we made it intact to Mordon by just after midday.
Mordon is an architectural monstrosity, a guaranteed blot on any landscape. Had the designer — if it had a designer— based it on an early nineteenth-century prison, which it exactly resembles he couldn't have achieved an uglier or more repulsive structure. But Mordon is only ten years old.
Grim, grey and gaunt under the darkly lowering October skies of that day, Mordon consisted of four parellel rows of squat, flat-topped concrete buildings, three stories high, each row, in its repellent forbidding lifelessness, for all the world like condemned and abandoned Victorian tenements in the worst slums of a great city. But a fitting enough facade for the work that went on behind the walls.
Each row of buildings was about a quarter of a mile in length, with about two hundred yards separating the rows. The space between buildings and boundary fence, five hundred yards at the nearest approach, was completely open, completely clear. No trees, no bushes, no shrubs, not even a clump of flowers. A man can hide behind a bush. He might even be able to hide behind a clump of flowers. But he can't hide behind a blade of grass two inches high — and nothing higher grew in the bleak desolation of the grounds of Mordon. The term boundary fence — not a wall, people can hide behind walls — was a misnomer. Any World War 2 concentration camp commandant would have sold his soul for Mordon: with fences like those a man could sleep soundly at nights.
The outer barbed-wire fence was fifteen feet high and sloped outwards at so sharp an angle that the top was four feet out of line with the foot. A similar fence, only sloping the other way, paralleled the outer for its entire perimeter at a distance of about twenty feet. The space between those fences was patrolled at night by alsatians and dobermann-pinschers, trained man-hunters — and if need be, man-killers — answerable only to their own Army handlers. Three feet inside the second fence and actually below its overhang, was a two-strand trip-wire fence, of so fine a metal as to be normally almost invisible — and certainly would be invisible to anyone climbing down at night-time from the top of that second fence. And then, another ten feet away, was the last fence, each of its five strands running through insulators mounted on concrete posts. The electric current passing through those wires was supposed to be less than lethal if, that is, you were in good health.
To make sure that everyone got the general idea the Army had put up notice-boards at ten-yard intervals round the entire perimeter of the outer fence. There were five different types of notices. Four of them, black on white, read, 'DANGER KEEP OUT BY ORDER': 'WARNING GUARD DOGS IN USE': 'PROHIBITED PLACE' and 'ELECTRIFIED FENCES': the fifth, a violent red on yellow, said simply: 'W.D. PROPERTY: TRESPASSERS WILL BE SHOT.' Only a madman or complete illiterate would have attempted to break his way into Mordon. We came on the public ring road that completely surrounded the camp, bore right by the gorse-covered fields and after a quarter of a mile turned into the main entrance. The police driver stopped just short of the lowered boom and wound down his window as a sergeant approached. The sergeant had a machine-pistol slung over his shoulder and it wasn't pointing at the ground either.
Then he caught sight of Cliveden, lowered his gun, gave a signal to a man we couldn't see. The boom rose, the car moved on, halted before heavy steel crash-gates. We left the car, passed through a steel side door and made our way into a one-storey block marked 'Reception.'
Three men waited for us there. Two I knew — Colonel Weybridge, deputy commandant of Mordon, and Dr. Oregon, Dr. Baxter's chief assistant in 'E' block. Weybridge, though technically under Cliveden's command, was the real boss of Mordon: a tall, fresh-faced man with black hair and an incongruously iron-grey moustache, he was reputed to be an outstanding doctor. Mordon was his life: he was one of the few with his own living accommodation on the premises and it was said that he never passed outside the gates twice a year. Gregori was a tall, heavy, swarthy, dark-eyed man, an Italian and ex-professor of medicine from Turin, and a brilliant microbiologist greatly respected by his fellow scientists. The third man was a bulky, shapeless character in a bulky shapeless tweed suit who looked so much like a farmer that he had to be what he turned out to be — a policeman in plain clothes. Inspector Wylie, of the Wiltshire Constabulary.
Cliveden and Weybridge made the introductions, then Hardanger took over. Generals and Colonels or not, Army establishment or not, there was no question from the word 'go' as to who was in complete charge. Hardanger made it clear from the start.
He said bluntly, 'Inspector Wylie, you shouldn't be here. No member of any county constabulary has any right to be inside those gates. But I doubt if you knew that and I'm sure you're not responsible for your presence here. Who is?'
'I am.' Colonel Weybridge's voice was steady, but he was on the defensive. 'The circumstances are unusual, to say the least.'