The Key to Rebecca - Ken Follett [145]
“Okay, okay!” He was delighted.
Vandam took out a pound note and tore it in half. The young policeman’s eyes widened. Vandam gave him half the note. “You get the other half when you meet me.”
“Okay!”
The train was almost in the station. Vandam ran across the square. The older policeman met him. “The stationmaster is stopping the train.”
Vandam shook his hand. “Thank you. What’s your name?”
“Sergeant Nesbah.”
“I’ll tell them about you in Cairo. Good-bye.” Vandam hurried into the station. He ran south along the platform, away from the train, so that he could board it at the front end without any of the passengers seeing him through the windows.
The train came in, billowing smoke. The stationmaster came along the platform to where Vandam was standing. When the train stopped the stationmaster spoke to the engine driver and the foot plateman. Vandam gave all three of them baksheesh and boarded the train.
He found himself in an economy carriage. Wolff would surely travel first class. He began to walk along the train, picking his way over the people sitting on the floor with their boxes and crates and animals. He noticed that it was mainly women and children on the floor: the slatted wooden seats were occupied by the men with their bottles of beer and their cigarettes. The carriages were unbearably hot and smelly. Some of the women were cooking on makeshift stoves: surely that was dangerous! Vandam almost trod on a tiny baby crawling on the filthy floor. He had a feeling that if he had not avoided the child in the nick of time they would have lynched him.
He passed through three economy carriages, then he was at the door to a first-class coach. He found a guard just outside, sitting on a little wooden stool, drinking tea from a glass. The guard stood up. “Some tea, General?”
“No, thank you.” Vandam had to shout to make himself heard over the noise of the wheels beneath them. “I have to check the papers of all first-class passengers.”
“All in order, all very good,” said the guard, trying to be helpful.
“How many first-class carriages are there?”
“All in order—”
Vandam bent to shout in the man’s ear. “How many first-class coaches?”
The guard held up two fingers.
Vandam nodded and unbent. He looked at the door. Suddenly he was not sure that he had the nerve to go through with this. He thought that Wolff had never got a good look at him—they had fought in the dark, in the alley—but he could not be absolutely sure. The gash on his cheek might have given him away, but it was almost completely covered now by his beard; still he should try to keep that side of his face away from Wolff. Billy was the real problem. Vandam had to warn his son, somehow, to keep quiet and pretend not to recognize his father. There was no way to plan it, that was the trouble. He just had to go in there and think on his feet.
He took a deep breath and opened the door.
Stepping through, he glanced quickly and nervously at the first few seats and did not recognize anyone. He turned his back to the carriage as he closed the door, then turned around again. His gaze swept the rows of seats quickly: no Billy.
He spoke to the passengers nearest him. “Your papers, please, gentlemen.”
“What’s this, Major?” said an Egyptian Army officer, a colonel.
“Routine check, sir,” Vandam replied.
He moved slowly along the aisle, checking people’s papers. By the time he was halfway down the carriage he had studied the passengers well enough to be sure that Wolff, Elene and Billy were not here. He felt he had to finish the pantomime of checking papers before going on to the next coach. He began to wonder whether his guesswork might have gone wrong. Perhaps they weren’t on the train at all; perhaps they weren’t even heading for Assyut; perhaps the atlas clue had been a trick ...
He reached the end of the carriage and passed through the door into the space between the coaches. If Wolff is on the train, I’ll see him now, he thought. If Billy is here—if Billy is here—
He opened the door.
He saw Billy immediately. He felt a pang of distress like a