And he had done none of it.
And he could never prove his innocence.
He could never tell the truth, not about December 1946, not about Castleford.
Impatiently, leadenly, he paced the room.
He could never tell the truth. There was a crime, but he could never reveal it. He would not be believed. He would never be believed innocent. He would only compound his guilt if he told the truth, because he
In a grey tin box, in the safe keeping of one of the few people who had never lost his trust, his motives lay bound in leather, inside a buff envelope. He had written the account immediately in the wake of Castleford's murder. After the war, it had lain in a deposit box in his bank. His secret, his bane. His leather-bound guilt and conscience. Then, in 1949, when he had met Clara Elsenreith once again, in Vienna during his service there with the Allied Control Commission, he had surrendered the journal — confession? — into her safekeeping. She still possessed it. All the reasons were there, he had fully explained them; but now those reasons would never excuse the crime. The truth would finish him as effectively as the KGB's lies. He had killed Robert Castleford.
He banged his fists against his thighs as he paced back and forth across the length of the lounge. The icing on the cake was to make him appear to have been activated as a Soviet agent; it clinched the guilt they had suggested for him in 1946.
The KGB had him.
Crystal, jade, silver; presents for the nativity of his promotion. The emperor's clothes. Unreal, like the new flat overlooking Regent's Park, like the new housekeeper, like the new office at Century House, overlooking the river; like his knighthood, which he had been so long in taking. He had been moated with fulfilled ambitions, but now they had him, inescapably, finally. For he had killed Castleford, and they evidently knew that, and upon their knowledge the whole strategy turned. He had killed him and had hidden the crime for thirty-five… for so
His heart pumped and his head throbbed. His body felt too frail to support his emotions and their physical manifestations. The doorbell rang, startling him. He heard his old, weary breathing in the silence that followed, and surrendered to hopelessness. Mrs Grey answered the door as he experienced dread at the possible return of Babbingtpn and Eldon with all the virulence of an aging woman unprepared by make-up and rest for the arrival of visitors.
Into Aubrey's mind a clear, high, pure treble voice floated, an almost unearthly sound; a boy's voice. The words of the hymn or anthem, whichever it was, were indistinguishable in the echoing innocence of the voice. Perhaps
Aubrey was frightened of the memory; not because of its potency, but because it seemed to herald an incontinence of mind that endangered him. It was an involuntary retreat from the present when he needed all his energies, all his concentration, simply to survive.
He looked up, visibly shaken, as Paul Massinger appeared at the door, unannounced. Aubrey's eyes narrowed in calculation and surprise — Castleford's face as they struggled was vivid and unnerving in his mind. He saw Massinger's handsome face register shock and he recalled Massinger's wife; Castleford's daughter. Then Aubrey pushed himself firmly to his feet.
'Paul, my dear fellow! How good of you to come…'
'Kenneth — you're all right? You look—'
'Yes, yes,' Aubrey replied testily. 'A little tired. Sit down, sit down.'
Massinger chose Eldon's place on the sofa, opposite Aubrey.
Aubrey noticed the walking stick and the moment of discomfort as Massinger lowered himself into the cushions. The man's breath escaped in a sigh.
'I—' Massinger began.
'A drink?' Aubrey suggested, almost involuntarily beginning to control the situation.
'Thank you. Scotch and soda.' When Aubrey had poured the drinks and reseated himself, Massinger blurted: 'I — came to offer my help. I don't know how — it seems almost crazy now — but I wanted you to know—'
Aubrey leaned forward and patted Massinger's knee. 'I know, my dear fellow. And — thank you.' Then the past two days welled up in him uncontrollably, and he said: 'They've abandoned me, Paul. The Cabinet Office, JIC — abandoned me.'
'The ingratitude of princes?' Massinger's Bostonian accent had almost been eroded by his twenty years' domicile in London.
'Perhaps. They want to get rid of me, of course — they'd like to see the reins in Babbington's hands.'
'I — see…' Aubrey saw in Massinger's face a keen hunger. His expression wore a sheen of excitement. Good. Massinger, despite having resigned from the CIA more than twenty years ago, was being drawn back into the secret world. The alcoholic who, years after his cure, takes the first drink. Massinger was eager once more for the gossip of the secret world, its machinations, perhaps even for its power. He saw help, too, of course. Massinger intended to help him if he could. There was in him an erect and certain loyalty to friends, and an almost priggish sense of right and wrong. In his desperation, Aubrey would take and use Massinger's help if he could. He prepared himself for another interrogation. Massinger said, his face gloomy, wrought-up: 'There's nothing to all this nonsense, I suppose?' As Aubrey began emphatically shaking his head, he added: 'You know why I'm asking, of course?'
'Yes. I give you my word on it. I did not betray Robert Castleford to the NKVD. That is a complete fabrication.' Aubrey moulded his features to an expression of honesty, to an intimate gravity suiting his words and the friendship between himself and the American scholar. Massinger studied his face, and then nodded.
'Thank God,' he whispered. 'But what about the rest of it?'
In Massinger's face, he saw a reflection of the past; signals of debt. Massinger was perfectly well aware that Aubrey had once saved his career after an operation had gone seriously wrong. Massinger had been blamed for the exposure and arrest of a whole network he had run. Aubrey had proven treachery by another rather than Massinger's incompetence, and the debt had never been repaid. Now, perhaps, it would be. Aubrey suppressed the eagerness he felt, rose and crossed to the sideboard, bringing the whisky decanter when he returned. He began speaking urgently even as he poured. Also, the man's wife would not wish him here; Massinger had come despite her disapprobation, even hatred if she believed the media. Therefore, he might prove a staunch ally.
'… and the original
He sipped at his sherry, watching Massinger's clouded face as he examined what he had been told. The whisky went unregarded in his hands. Then he looked up.
'Why should the KGB want you so thoroughly disgraced?'
'To sow confusion—? I really don't know. Mischief, I presume. If the witch-hunts of the past few years have