Eye of the Needle(86)
“There’s no land in that area.”
“Have we got a bigger map?”
Terry pulled open a drawer and got out a large-scale map of Scotland. He spread it on top of the chest. Godliman copied the pencil marks from the smaller map onto the larger.
There was still no land within the area.
“But look,” Godliman said. Just to the east of the ten-mile limit was a long, narrow island.
Terry peered closer. “Storm Island,” he read. “How apt.”
Godliman snapped his fingers. “Could be…”
“Can you send someone there?”
“When the storm clears. Bloggs is up there. I’ll get a plane laid on for him. He can take off the minute the weather improves.” He went to the door.
“Good luck,” Terry called after him.
Godliman took the stairs two at a time to the next floor and entered his office. He picked up the phone. “Get Mr. Bloggs in Aberdeen, please.”
While he waited he doodled on his blotter, drawing the island. It was shaped like the top half of a walking stick, with the crook at the western end. It must have been about ten miles long and perhaps a mile wide. He wondered what sort of place it was: a barren lump of rock, or a thriving community of farmers? If Faber was there he might still be alive to contact his U-boat; Bloggs would have to get to the island before the submarine.
“I have Mr. Bloggs,” the switchboard girl said.
“Fred?”
“Hello, Percy.”
“I think he’s on an island called Storm Island.”
“No, he’s not,” Bloggs said. “We’ve just arrested him.” (He hoped.)
THE STILETTO was nine inches long, with an engraved handle and a stubby little crosspiece. Its needlelike point was extremely sharp. Bloggs thought it looked like a highly efficient killing instrument. It had recently been polished.
Bloggs and Detective-Chief-Inspector Kincaid stood looking at it, neither man wanting to touch it.
“He was trying to catch a bus to Edinburgh,” Kincaid said. “A P.C. spotted him at the ticket office and asked for his identification. He dropped his suitcase and ran. A woman bus conductor hit him over the head with her ticket machine. He took ten minutes to come around.”
“Let’s have a look at him,” Bloggs said.
They went down the corridor to the cells. “This one,” Kincaid said.
Bloggs looked through the judas. The man sat on a stool in the far corner of the cell with his back against the wall. His legs were crossed, his eyes closed, his hands in his pockets. “He’s been in cells before,” Bloggs remarked. The man was tall, with a long, handsome face and dark hair. It could have been the man in the photograph, but it was hard to be certain.
“Want to go in?” Kincaid asked.
“In a minute. What was in his suitcase, apart from the stiletto?”
“The tools of a burglar’s trade. Quite a lot of money in small notes. A pistol and some ammunition. Black clothes and crepe-soled shoes. Two hundred Lucky Strike cigarettes.”
“No photographs or film negatives?”
Kincaid shook his head.
“Balls,” Bloggs said with feeling.
“Papers identify him as Peter Fredericks, of Wembley, Middlesex. Says he’s an unemployed toolmaker looking for work.”
“Toolmaker?” Bloggs said skeptically. “There hasn’t been an unemployed toolmaker in Britain in the last four years. You’d think a spy would know that. Still…”
Kincaid asked, “Shall I start the questioning, or will you?”
“You.”
Kincaid opened the door and Bloggs followed him in. The man in the corner opened his eyes incuriously. He did not alter his position.
Kincaid sat at a small, plain table. Bloggs leaned against the wall.
Kincaid said, “What’s your real name?”
“Peter Fredericks.”
“What are you doing so far from home?”
“Looking for work.”
“Why aren’t you in the army?”
“Weak heart.”
“Where have you been for the last few days?”
“Here, in Aberdeen. Before that Dundee, before that Perth.”
“When did you arrive in Aberdeen?”
“The day before yesterday.”
Kincaid glanced at Bloggs, who nodded. “Your story is silly,” Kincaid said. “Toolmakers don’t need to look for work. The country hasn’t got enough of them. You’d better start telling the truth.”
“I’m telling the truth.”
Bloggs took all the loose change out of his pocket and tied it up in his handkerchief. He stood watching, saying nothing, swinging the little bundle in his right hand.
“Where is the film?” Kincaid said, having been briefed to this extent by Bloggs, though not to the extent of knowing what the film was about.
The man’s expression did not change. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
Kincaid shrugged, and looked at Bloggs.
Bloggs said, “On your feet.”
“Pardon?”
“On your FEET!”
The man stood up casually.
“Step forward.”
He took two steps up to the table.