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Authors: Anthony Price

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BOOK: Sion Crossing
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There was a hint of unwillingness there. “Go on, David.”

“We didn’t hit it off—I told you last night … Chalk and cheese … damn Yankee and effing arrogant Limey … The cards were stacked against us, Paul: he’d ridden one of Patton’s Shermans—the tank, not the general—out into the wide blue yonder while I was slugging it out in the Normandy
bocage
… I thought he’d had it
easy
… and
he
thought I didn’t measure up—he thought my heart wasn’t in the job … Maybe he was right at that—I don’t know …”

It had been a bad scene, certainly. For Audley to mention
tanks
was something out of the ordinary: the massacre which had been Audley’s war was pretty much a closed book, unmentionable.

But tanks had nothing to do with Debreczen. “But you worked together on Debreczen?”

“Yes. We didn’t hit it off on that, either … This was after Burgess and Maclean and Co—and the ones we don’t mention, of course. But … I suppose I understood them better than he did—I hated them, but I was also sorry for them, maybe—like,
there, but for the grace of God goes David Audley
… If I’d been at Cambridge ten years—fifteen years—earlier, in the wrong place at the wrong time—
who knows
?” He gave Mitchell an anguished look. “Christ! If I’d commanded a tank in Spain—would it have been an Italian tank or a Russian one? You tell me, Paul—?”

The pub door opened. There was a pretty blonde framed in it, who seemed to be surprised that the bar was so empty, and whose mother hadn’t been born when the tanks of that other long-forgotten civil war had tested each other on the Ebro and the Jarama.

The little blonde was propelled into the bar from behind, by a brunette—

“David—”

“Okay.” Audley glanced up at the girls and their followers. “Bill was different—I used to argue with him—I accused him of having the same attitude as the orthodox clergy had towards heretics in medieval times—during the Albigensian Wars.” He gave the group a friendly nod. “In fact, I said he was like Arnald-Amalric of Cîteaux at the siege of Bèziers in 1209—when the soldiers asked him what they should do with any good Christians captured in the storming of the town he’s supposed to have said, ‘Kill all: God will know His own’.” He turned back to Mitchell. “Arnald-Amalric became Archbishop of Narbonne in 1212—or maybe it was 1211 … He was Papal Legate in 1209.”

The group’s curiosity wilted under the onslaught of medieval history and it took sanctuary at the bar.

“To which Bill instantly replied, ‘Well, that was one guy who knew his business, then’. Which really just about sums him up. All you have to do is substitute patriotism for religion—he didn’t hate Russians nearly so much, because they were only doing their job and they were fair game … But
American traitors
… and to a lesser extent the British too—they profoundly offended him. That was
heresy
—” The door opened again “—that would have rated the thumb-screw and the stake, in his book, if he’d been allowed to use ’em, Paul.”

“But he got the sack, David.”

“Yes.” Audley stood up and started towards the door. “It’s getting too crowded here.”

It was getting dark outside.

“Why did he get the sack?” persisted Mitchell, following him.

Audley looked up and down the empty street. “If I’m going to call Jack we’d better get our skates on.”

“When’s your plane to Rome?”

“Never mind the bloody plane.” Audley started to walk. If Rome could be avoided, it would be, thought Mitchell. But knowing Colonel Butler—and knowing that Macallan was dead, but Cookridge was alive—that was a faint hope.

“Why did Macallan really get the sack?” He measured his stride against Audley’s.

“It was inevitable, really. For one reason or another.”

“What reasons?”

“He wouldn’t give up. We gave up—but he wouldn’t … When he put a name on his list—a possible name, mark you … not a probable—he got his teeth into it … It wasn’t ‘Guilty until proved innocent’, it was ‘The-more-innocent probably the-more-guilty’—Arnald-Amalric would have loved him in the siege-lines at Bèziers and Carcassonne and Montségur!”

Audley’s stride was three inches longer than his. “That was a reason?”

“Too right it was! He started to offend people—and some of them were people with influence … apart from being innocent … this was after McCarthy, remember—Debreczen broke after him: that was one reason why it was kept so firmly under wraps … So he made a lot of enemies.”

One reason …

“Yes?”

“Yes—” Audley nearly cannoned into him as they turned a corner “—and some of his enemies really were his enemies—”

“What?”

“I told you—he wouldn’t give up … so he got a real Debreczen graduate in the end—dead to rights … Whisked him out of his posh Wall Street office before you could say ‘Jack Robinson’—or ‘Kim Philby’ … A genuine Ivy League blue-blooded bastard—over there—” Audley pointed to a gap in the badly-lit street.

It was where they had parked the car. “Yes?”

“Got him in a safe house near Washington, just south of the Mason-and-Dixon line—way down South in Dixie—” Audley faced him across the car “—let’s go.”

“What happened?”

“Some safe house!” Audley placed both hands on the roof of the car. “They were softening him up gently, when some idiot let him walk in the garden to get a breath of air … Wide open countryside—I know the place, and they measured the distance afterwards. It was seven hundred yards … They say some buffalo hunter hit an Indian with a long rifle at eleven hundred … Well, the KGB got this chap at seven-hundred, right through the heart. Let’s go, Paul.”

“No.” Mitchell had the keys in his pocket, so at last he had the whiphand. “That should have established his credit, David.”

“Oh … it did—it did.” Audley took his hands off the car. “Open up.”

“Not until I know why Macallan was sacked. We had a deal.”

Audley looked at him for a moment, then smiled. “So we did. But I don’t have much time. So … open up, and I’ll tell you.”

He had to leave the man something, decided Mitchell as he inserted the key. “You want a phone?” There probably wasn’t an unvandalized public phone for a mile.

“No. Take me back. Jack will be worshipping the Beast—I’ll try him face to face. Bugger the plane!”

Mitchell manoeuvred the car into the empty street, and then put his foot down. Audley intended to win by cheating—by missing the plane and chancing his luck with Colonel Butler.

“If I miss it I won’t blame you.” Audley read his mind with disconcerting accuracy. “No need to kill us both on the way to Armageddon. Just take it easy and drop me by the Cenotaph.”

“Why did they sack him, David?”

“It was a combined operation, really.”

“Combined?” He slowed down.

“Yes. Anglo-Russian-American. That’s about as combined as you can get, wouldn’t you say?”

“How did they combine?”

“We didn’t actually combine, in a formal sense … but we worked towards the same end independently … And God blessed our consensus in His own inscrutable way.”

There were the flashing lights of an accident ahead, blue and red.

“Get in the other lane—we’ll cross the bridge,” said Audley.

“That’s a fair old blasphemy—” Mitchell swung the car outwards “—even by your standards, David.”

“Maybe.” Audley refused to take offence. “But it didn’t seem like that at the time. But … maybe you’re right.”

Suddenly Mitchell remembered his own past—
the thin Yorkshire drizzle misting the green-and-grey landscape, when Frances had died for him

He swung the wheel again, regardless of all the lights, and an angry car-horn protested behind him—

“Steady on!” Audley sat up beside him.

“Sorry—” Mitchell addressed the car behind and Audley together quite uselessly “—sorry!”

Audley settled back. “We do get things wrong, you know, Paul. In fact, we very rarely get them all right. And we just have to trust in our luck, and let the dead bury the dead.”

He couldn’t possibly be thinking of Frances—he wouldn’t have said that if he was, for God’s sake!

Audley sat up again. “What I meant was … Bill got sick for the first time about then—it was the first twinge of this disease he had, you see—Paul?”

Maybe he
had
remembered—but belatedly—?

“Okay.” Sympathy was something Mitchell didn’t need. “So that was God. So what about the rest of you?”

They had reached the other side of the bridge: he turned carefully, watching everything behind him as well as ahead.

“The Russians set him up—at least, that’s what I think now … They wanted him out, after that … after he’d shown that he was dangerous.” Audley was eager to explain now. “There was some money in a bank which he couldn’t account for—somebody who looked like him had deposited it, and he couldn’t disprove it, and he had no money of his own … It wasn’t
proved
—” Audley sat back, and stared ahead “—but the people he’d offended applied his own rules to him—they implied he was taking back-handers to put names on his list … And that wasn’t
proved
, either, but there was this implication that the Russians were trying to use him to discredit good up-and-coming red-blooded Americans—the very thing I’d suggested to Fred, when I was trying to get out of the Debreczen operation, in fact.”

The Mother of Parliaments reared up dark and empty—the lawgivers were away holidaying with their wives and families and mistresses, while Colonel Butler was minding the shop for them, with the help of the Beast, high up ahead.

“They thought he was in with the Russians? Although you say he was a super-patriot?”

“Yes … well, there was a certain irony there. Because one of the fellows he’d been hounding was also an extremely patriotic type, and Bill had argued that this was a cover—the best cover of all, he suggested, so … what was sauce for the goose became sauce to cook the gander in.”

Mitchell looked for Boadicea in her chariot: only the British would celebrate the destroyer of their capital with a statue in its heart.

“But you didn’t think that, David.”

Audley caught sight of Boadicea. “Aren’t you going the wrong way?”

“James is digging Cookridge contacts for me. He may have someone by now.” And, of course, Elizabeth would be in for her night-shift, with any luck. It was no good dwelling on the guilty memory of Frances. Life had to go on. “I said I’d come back—”

He took his eyes off the red tail-lights ahead for an instant. “But you scuppered him all the same, didn’t you, David?”

Audley said nothing.

“Didn’t you?” He almost missed his turning.

“We didn’t exactly scupper him. But we might have been able to do something
for
him … and we didn’t.” Audley paused. “We let him cook.”

“We …” Mitchell waited for the steel door to obey his signal “… meaning
you
, in this instance?”

“Fred took the decision.”

The door lifted.

“Fred took the decision.” Audley tried the statement again, as though he wanted to be convinced by it. “Bill Macallan wasn’t any friend of ours. We didn’t owe him anything—he hadn’t done us any good turns, and he likely wouldn’t in the future. If he came out smelling of roses … the fact that we’d helped him wouldn’t have influenced his judgement … and he might have gone to the top.”

“He was an honest man, in fact.” Mitchell found a parking space near the lift.

“So was Arnald-Amalric of Cîteaux.” Audley turned to face Mitchell. “But you’re right:
I
let him cook—
I
advised Fred that he might harm us … that he was probably innocent, but certainly dangerous—dangerous to innocent people in the present and dangerous to Anglo-American relations in the future. Yes.” He raised his chin. “Is that what you want?”

“Not quite.” He was a little sorry for Audley, but not very sorry. Everyone had to live with the guilt of their decisions. If they couldn’t they should try to live on a desert island. “You think you were wrong now—do you?”

The chin went up half an inch. “About not helping Bill Macallan? No—not altogether …”

“He wasn’t innocent?”

“Oh—he was innocent—” The chin came down “—but he would have done us a mischief sooner or later. And it’s the Anglo-American accord which underpins NATO. And it’s NATO which allows people to have tender consciences, and to slag America off to make them feel good.” He shrugged suddenly. “Sorry to teach you to suck eggs. But Bill Macallan was a casualty in that war—and rightly so … And, of course, he was quite the wrong man to handle the Debreczen thing—I wasn’t wrong there, either.”

“Why was he wrong?”

“He enjoyed his work too much. By the time he’d put the fire out he would have burnt the house down.”

The logic of that was surprising. “So you were the right man for Debreczen, David.”

“Yes.” Audley looked away from him, and the unnatural light in the underground car park caught the lines on his face and beginning of stubble on his cheek, making him look a hundred years old. “That was the worst decision I ever made—that was where Bill Macallan was right:
I didn’t measure up
…” Audley came back to him. “I’ve thought a lot about Debreczen since we got a sniff of it again, last year, Paul. And I botched that one, too …”

Mitchell felt like a boy who’d turned over a stone to find creepy-crawlies, and had found a hole full of rattlesnakes.

“I should have stuck to it, when we still had a chance. And Fred should have kept me at it—he should have given me the resources the job needed … Stopping secrets getting out—pre-empting Soviet operations—that’s peanuts compared with what we might have achieved if we’d nipped off the Debreczen graduates in the bud … the long-term investments—that was where Bill Macallan’s instinct was dead-right, you see—” He blinked at Mitchell. “Time’s up, Paul:
This bar’s public
, as Tom would say—”

Mitchell got out of the car. “Cookridge, David?”

“Maybe.” Audley slammed the door. “But we won’t find out that by asking him to his face. If Cookridge is a Debreczen man we’ve got to take it slow.”

He had done Audley an injustice in thinking he merely didn’t want to fly to Rome in August, thought Mitchell.

BOOK: Sion Crossing
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