Nine
“WERE YOU FOLLOWED?” THE OLD BITCH SAT DRINKING
coffee, glaring at Hawker.
She wasn’t just any old bitch. She was Carruthers,
Head of the British Service for France. She could order him killed
just as easy as stirring sugar in her cup. Easier, because she
liked sugar and she didn’t like him.
A fellow might as well talk to a pillar of iron
spikes when it came to reasonable discussion. He said, “People
don’t follow me.”
“Really?” Just a well of skepticism, Carruthers.
You had to wonder if she trusted her own earwax.
“I switched back on my trail a dozen times. Crossed
the Seine twice. Went all the way down to the Sorbonne. It took me
an hour. I didn’t lead anybody here.”
“He has the skill.” Doyle had all the parts of his
gun laid out on the table where he’d pushed his plate away. “It’s
his neck, too, if the French stumble in here.”
“If he’s left a trail here, the French won’t get a
chance to kill him.” The Old Bitch picked up her cup and looked
over the top. “Tell me what the girl said.”
He could do that. He started at the
beginning—meeting Owl in La Place de la Révolution. “First off, she
asked me if I’d seen Robespierre die. Called him the ‘great man.’
But sarcastic-like. I said . . .”
He knew how to report. He used to do this when he
worked for Lazarus, back when the King of Thieves owned his soul,
such as it was. When Lazarus wanted information, a fellow gave it
to him fast, not wasting words and not making mistakes.
Working for Carruthers wasn’t all that different
from working for the cold-blooded bastard who ran the London
underworld, except now he lied and stole for England, and he was
likely to get killed by the French instead of dancing in the air on
the nubbing cheat.
He went back over his encounter with Owl, word for
word, as near as he could remember. Doyle cleaned his gun. Two more
agents came in, took chairs, and listened. Althea—she was the other
old lady spy, but fifty times more reasonable than the lead-plated
bitch—brought out eggs and toasted bread and laid it down in front
of him.
Maggie sat on a stool to the side of the kitchen
under the window. She was five days married. Married to Doyle over
there. They were generally within sight of each other when they
could manage it. She was spending her honeymoon busy as a cat with
two tails, but not the way you’d think. Or not only that. She had
maybe two hundred gold louis piled up on a barrel top in front of
her. She was counting them into bags and writing out notes, giving
orders for La Flèche business she wouldn’t be here to see to,
personal. She’d be leaving France tomorrow.
Maggie was another one who wouldn’t let Bitch
Carruthers get peevish and slit his throat.
He finished up his report with, “. . . said she’d
expect me at sunset and I should wear something unobtrusive.”
They all sat, considering him.
Doyle fingered the crop of bristle that was
establishing itself on his cheek. He hadn’t shaved, since he might
need to go out and look scruffy on the streets. “So she says
they’re about to close this Coach House operation. You have to go
in tonight. That’s not much warning.”
“I doubt the timing is accidental.” Carruthers had
a way of looking at you so you almost doubted yourself. “You saw a
dozen children, learning to fight.”
“Thirteen. They’re doing a good job of it. If Owl
is right—”
“Justine DuMotier,” the Old Bitch corrected.
“Her. If they learn English as well as they’re
learning to fight, they’ll pass for English kids. No
problem.”
A long stare from Carruthers. She turned to Doyle.
“Do you believe this?”
“It’s an elaborate lie, if it’s a lie. Why
bother?”
Carruthers came back with, “The boy’s not worth the
trouble of arresting. You are. Are they after you?”
When Althea went around pouring coffee, she poured
some for him too. The cup was thin as paper and the color of blue
jewels, with curly gold leaves painted on it. The only time he
touched something like this was to steal it. It didn’t feel right,
drinking out of it.
They started talking back and forth, all of them
arguing, and left him to eat in peace.
“If the girl belongs to the Pomme d’Or, then
Soulier’s behind this.”
“. . . and the very wily Madame Lucille. They’re
both old enemies of the Jacobin faction, particularly Patelin. This
could be aimed at discrediting him.”
“. . . internal politics of the Police Secrète. The
DuMotier girl’s being used by them, at the very least. Probably
she’s an agent herself.”
“If the boy gets caught, it looks like a British
operation. That undermines Patelin without pointing the finger at .
. .”
“Which is what they have in mind. Blaming
us.”
“. . . a chance to find out which side Soulier’s
supporting in the next . . .”
The air’s so thick with intrigue nobody’s going
to be able to breathe. He put jam on bread and piled the eggs
on and rolled it up tight to eat. He had most of that inside him
before he noticed he wasn’t doing it right. The Old Bitch had that
kind of look on her face.
No eating with your hands. Just no end to the
things you weren’t supposed to do. He started to lick his fingers.
And stopped. You weren’t supposed to do that either, apparently. He
was damned if he’d wipe jam on his togs.
“The napkin,” Doyle said.
He’d laid it on his lap, like you was supposed to,
and forgot about it. So now he used it and stashed it away
again.
He said, “I know what we have to do.”
That stopped the talking.
“We stop trying to guess what everybody’s up to. I
meet Owl tonight, and then we know. I go find out.”
Althea sat down comfortably in the cushioned chair
at the end of the table. “The problem with that, Hawker, is that
this smells remarkably like a trap.”
“And I have no intention of losing my rat to a
French trap,” the Old Bitch said. “I’ll send a man to watch the
DuMotier girl and see what she does. You,” she looked directly at
him, “will stay home.”
“You’re wrong.” It was out of his mouth before he
knew he was going to say it. Stupid.
Nobody said anything just immediately. Doyle put
the cork back in a little bottle of gun oil, tamping it down hard
with his thumb. He didn’t seem concerned one way or the other.
Noncommittal, if you went searching for the exact word.
“Explain yourself.” Lots of spiked and rusty edges
in Carruthers’s voice.
“You’re going to have to root out a whole platoon
of these Cachés they’ve planted in England. It’ll take you months
and you’ll probably miss some. In one night, I can give you
thirteen you won’t have to track down.” He glanced around. No
expression on any face. “I won’t do anything stupid. If it’s not
going to work, I’ll back away.”
They lounged around, waiting for him to say some
damn thing or other. He didn’t know what.
He said, “You’re not risking much. Just me.”
Nothing.
So he said, “They’re kids.”
Doyle stopped scraping cinder out of the frizzen
and set it down. “He should go. I would.”
“Fine then. We’ll send him into the middle of a
Police Secrète power struggle,” Carruthers sounded irritated,
“where he’ll be just about useless to me. He won’t see what’s going
on under his nose, and there’s no time to teach him.”
That simple, that easy—he’d won his point. With the
British Service he was out of his depth most of the time.
“Send someone with him,” Althea said.
“Who’d frighten her off. And I take the chance of
losing two agents.”
Two agents. Carruthers said two agents. Meaning one
of them was him. He missed some of what they said next while he was
trying to decide how he felt about being an agent.
“. . . and more experienced,” one of the men
said.
“We’ll send Paxton.” That was Althea. “He’s young
enough to look unthreatening.”
Paxton. Everybody’s pet. The perfect agent. Paxton
wouldn’t forget to use his damned napkin. Paxton probably didn’t
slurp his tea. Probably he was no use at all on a job.
But the Old Bitch thought it was a glorious idea.
“Pax will keep him out of trouble. You,” she turned to Hawker, “are
walking a fine line. An agent gets to contradict me three times in
his career. You’ve used one of them. You will now write a report of
everything you saw and heard this morning.”
“I can’t—”
“The ink and paper are in the cupboard. Work at
this table. Make two copies.”
Great. Just bloody great.