Chapter Twenty-five

They started drinking in Levy’s hotel but at Charlie’s suggestion moved from the Bristol almost at once for what turned out to be a pub crawl. By the time they reached the bar on the Rue du Port, Charlie had walked off and drunk off most of the anger.

‘You’re wrong, you know. All of you,’ he insisted.

‘So you keep saying,’ reminded Levy. Like its name suggested it was a port workers’ bar, with no service, so the Israeli carried the brandies back from the counter.

‘And me, too,’ said Charlie, almost in private conversation with himself. ‘I’ve got a feeling I’ve done something wrong, too.’

‘Like becoming obsessive?’ suggested Levy.

Charlie came out of his reverie. ‘No,’ he said, ‘not that.’

‘I’ve got to admit it, Charlie, that’s the impression you’re conveying. Certainly that’s what Blom thinks.’

‘I don’t believe Blom is capable of thinking.’

‘Charlie!’ pleaded Levy. ‘It hasn’t just been the Swiss. The CIA have pulled out all the stops and we’ve done the same. And you know what your own people in England have done. If one had missed something, another group would have picked it up.’

‘He’s here!’ insisted Charlie. ‘I can feel he’s here.’

‘An intelligence agent doesn’t work on feeling,’ said Levy.

‘I do.’

‘For two weeks Geneva has been a goldfish bowl with not just one but three intelligence agencies staring into it-four, if you include yourself,’ said Levy. ‘OK, so our man — if there is such a man — is a professional but to stay undiscovered for that long he’d have to be the most professional operator I’ve ever encountered.’

‘The Swiss did not …’ started Charlie and then stopped. ‘Into,’ he said.

Levy looked worriedly across the tiny circular table. ‘What?’ he said.

‘Into,’ repeated Charlie. ‘That’s the mistake. Into.’

‘You’re not making sense,’ complained the Israeli.

‘Wait,’ said Charlie, excitedly. ‘Just wait … in fact, I’ll get more drinks.’ He did, bringing them back from the bar, and said: ‘We picked up the lead in London and we followed it here and we’ve spent all this time behind him, on the outside, looking in … don’t you see!’

‘No,’ refused Levy, shortly.

‘What about inside, looking out? What about someone in one of the delegations?’

Levy shook his head, wearily. ‘We did that: my people. We compared your Primrose Hill photograph with every delegate and every support member and every secretariat. There were a couple of passing likenesses, but checked again they didn’t fit.’

‘Is that all you checked?’ demanded Charlie. ‘Just photographic likenesses? What about backgrounds? Are you telling me, for instance, that you’re letting your government leaders close to a group of Palestinian Liberation people — people you term as terrorists — without knowing everything down to the colour of their knickers! And the Syrians and Jordanians, for that matter!’

‘Of course we’ve got files on as many as possible,’ smiled Levy. ‘All have committed crimes against us, at some stage or other. That’s why we’ve got combined security, Mossad and Shin Bet. I don’t see how it’s going to help find your invisible man.’

Neither did he, conceded Charlie, but he was reluctant to let the idea go. He said: ‘We made the London photograph and the dossier available to you. Novikov, too.’

‘Yes,’ said Levy, doubtfully.

‘Britain is not a participant in the conference, so I’ve got no in-field intelligence back-up.’

‘So what do you want?’

‘Access to your files on the visiting delegations.’

‘I told you, we’ve done that already!’

‘Full co-operation: that was our agreement, wasn’t it?’

‘It would take days!’

‘You know how long it takes a trained assassin to kill someone? I hear an expert can get six shots away in the space of sixty seconds.’

‘You’re wasting your time, Charlie.’

‘It’s my time.’

‘Why not?’ agreed Levy, finally. ‘It’ll take a while to make the copies: I could telephone. While it’s being done we can have another drink.’

‘Why not?’ echoed Charlie. Christ how he hated working with anyone!


Roger Giles picked out his wife as soon as she emerged through the arrival doors but briefly she couldn’t locate him and her face closed at his not getting to the airport to meet her in. And then he called out and she saw him and her face filled with her happiness.

‘I thought …’ she started.

‘I know,’ he said.

‘I was frightened the plane would be delayed.’

‘It wasn’t. Guess we were lucky.’

They stood at arm’s length, each looking shyly and awkwardly at the other, neither knowing what to do. Giles wondered whether to kiss her and decided against it: he didn’t want to rush her.

‘You look great,’ he said.

‘So do you.’

‘I’m glad you came.’

‘I’m glad you asked me.’

There was another silence between them and Giles said: ‘Everything is going to be fine.’

‘I want it to be,’ said Barbara. ‘I want it to be so much.’

‘I’ve got a suite at the hotel. Two bedrooms.’

Barbara paused and said: ‘Yes.’

On the way into Geneva they spoke very little. Barbara said she’d brought three suitcases because he’d made it sound like a long vacation and Giles said that was fine and while he had to hang around at the conference why didn’t she check out the tourist offices and plan an inti-nerary. She asked if he had any preference for the countries they were to visit and he said he’d leave it entirely up to her. It all sounded like the polite conversation of two people who did not know each other particularly well.

The American delegation had taken over an entire floor of the President Hotel and Giles had managed to get a lakeside suite. He had the porter leave her cases in the minute vestibule, avoiding the choice of a bedroom.

Barbara stood at the window of the sitting room and said: ‘It’s absolutely breathtaking.’

‘I wanted everything to be just right.’

‘It is.’

‘I’m going to be tied up while the conference is on but after that we’ll have a month to ourselves.’

‘That’ll be great.’

‘The restaurant here has got a pretty fantastic view, too. Or we could get room service, if you’re tired after the flight.’

Barbara turned away from the window, looking towards the other rooms. She said: ‘I’m not particularly tired but room service sounds good.’

Giles offered her the card but she said: ‘Why don’t you order for me while I freshen up?’

She carried the smallest of the three cases into the bathroom, leaving the other two where they were. The meal had been delivered by the time she came out, wearing a lounging robe he couldn’t remember seeing before: it was made of some filmy material and swept down to the floor.

Giles had the table set up in front of the window: unasked the hotel had provided a single rose in a stem glass.

‘Champagne!’ she said, seeing the ice bucket.

‘French,’ he said. ‘I didn’t order much food; I didn’t think you would be hungry, after eating on the plane.’

‘I’m not.’

’I’m not either.’

Giles poured the wine and handed her the goblet and said: ‘I suppose there should be a toast?’

‘I suppose so.’

‘I can’t think of anything that would sound right.’

‘This isn’t proving easy, is it?’

‘Maybe we’re both trying too hard.’

‘I thought that was what we had to do, try hard?’

‘Me more than you,’ he said.

‘I want to say something,’ she said. ‘Get something straight.’

‘What?’

‘Sleeping apart was stupid: it didn’t prove anything.’

‘No,’ he agreed.

She looked away from him, out over the lake. She said: ‘I want to sleep with you tonight … be in the same bed, I mean. But I don’t want … I just want you to hold me, that’s all. You know …’

‘I know,’ he said again.

‘You angry?’

‘No.’

‘Like you, I want everything to be right. And particularly that.’

‘It will be,’ he said. ‘I promise you it will be.’

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