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Eye of the Needle - Ken Follett [65]

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been a virgin until he met Eleanor, who was not one of the debutantes but a brilliant graduate mathematician with grace and warmth and a father dying of lung disease after forty years as a coal mine worker. He had taken her to meet his people. His father was Lord Lieutenant of the county, and the house had seemed a mansion to Eleanor, but she had been natural and charming and not in the least awestruck; and when Percy’s mother had been disgracefully condescending to her at one point she had reacted with merciless wit, for which he loved her all the more.

He had taken his master’s degree, then after the Great War he taught in a public school and stood in three by-elections. They were both disappointed when they discovered they could not have children; but they loved each other totally and they were happy, and her death was the most appalling tragedy Godliman ever knew. It had ended his interest in the real world, and he had retreated into the Middle Ages.

It had drawn him and Bloggs together, this common bereavement. And the war had brought him back to life; revived in him those characteristics of dash and aggression and fervor that had made him a fine speaker and teacher and the hope of the Liberal Party. He wished very much for something in Bloggs’s life to rescue him from an existence of bitterness and introspection.

At the moment he was in Godliman’s thoughts, Bloggs phoned from Liverpool to say that Die Nadel had slipped through the net, and Parkin had been killed.

Godliman, sitting on the edge of the camp bed to speak on the phone, closed his eyes. “I should have put you on the train…”

“Thanks!” Bloggs said.

“Only because he doesn’t know your face.”

“I think he may,” Bloggs said. “We suspect he spotted the trap, and mine was the only face visible to him as he got off the train.”

“But where could he have seen you—oh, Leicester Square.”

“I don’t see how, but then…we seem to underestimate him.”

Godliman asked impatiently, “Have you got the ferry covered?”

“Yes.”

“He won’t use it, of course—too obvious. He’s more likely to steal a boat. On the other hand, he may still be heading for Inverness.”

“I’ve alerted the police up there.”

“Good. But look, I don’t think we can make any assumptions about his destination. Let’s keep an open mind.”

“Yes.”

Godliman stood, picked up the phone, and began to pace the carpet. “Also, don’t assume it was he who got off the train on the wrong side. Work on the premise that he got off before, at, or after Liverpool.” Godliman’s brain was in gear again, sorting permutations and possibilities. “Let me talk to the Chief Superintendent.”

“He’s here.”

There was a pause, then a new voice said, “Chief Superintendent Anthony speaking.”

Godliman said, “Do you agree with me that our man got off this train somewhere in your area?”

“That seems likely, yes.”

“All right. Now the first thing he needs is transport—so I want you to get details of every car, boat, bicycle, or donkey stolen within a hundred miles of Liverpool during the next twenty-four hours. Keep me informed, but give the information to Bloggs and work closely with him following up the leads.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Keep an eye on other crimes that might be committed by a fugitive—theft of food or clothing, unexplained assaults, identity card irregularities, and so on.”

“Right.”

“Now, Mr. Anthony, you realize this man is more than just a conventional murderer?”

“I assume so, sir, from the fact of your involvement. However, I don’t know the details.”

“It’s a matter of national security, important enough to keep the Prime Minister in hourly contact with this office.”

“Yes…uh, Mr. Bloggs would like a word, sir.”

Bloggs came back on. “Have you remembered how you know his face? You said you thought you did—”

“Oh, yes—and it’s of no value, as I predicted. I met him by chance at Canterbury Cathedral and we had a conversation about the architecture. All it tells us is that he’s clever—he made some perceptive remarks, as I recall.”

“We knew he was clever.”

“As I said, it does us no good.”

Chief Superintendent Anthony, a determined

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