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They came to Baghdad - Agatha Christie [87]

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all the private bookings. There’s a passage booked by BOAC in the name of Grete Harden. We’ve traced Grete Harden back and there’s no such person. It’s an assumed name. The address given is a phony one. It’s our idea that Grete Harden is Anna Scheele.’

He added:

‘Her plane will touch down at Damascus the day after tomorrow.’

‘And then?’

Edward’s eyes looked suddenly into hers.

‘That’s up to you, Victoria.’

‘To me?’

‘You’ll take her place.’

Victoria said slowly:

‘Like Rupert Crofton Lee?’

It was almost a whisper. In the course of that substitution Rupert Crofton Lee had died. And when Victoria took her place, presumably Anna Scheele, or Grete Harden, would die.

And Edward was waiting – and if for one moment Edward doubted her loyalty, then she, Victoria, would die – and die without the possibility of warning any one.

No, she must agree and seize a chance to report to Mr Dakin.

She drew a deep breath and said:

‘I – I – oh, but Edward, I couldn’t do it. I’d be found out. I can’t do an American voice.’

‘Anna Scheele has practically no accent. In any case you will be suffering from laryngitis. One of the best doctors in this part of the world will say so.’

‘They’ve got people everywhere,’ thought Victoria.

‘What would I have to do?’ she asked.

‘Fly from Damascus to Baghdad as Grete Harden. Take to your bed immediately. Be allowed up by our reputable doctor just in time to go to the Conference. There you will lay before them the documents which you have brought with you.’

Victoria asked: ‘The real documents?’

‘Of course not. We shall substitute our version.’

‘What will the documents show?’

Edward smiled.

‘Convincing details of the most stupendous Communist plot in America.’

Victoria thought: ‘How well they’ve got it planned.’

Aloud she said:

‘Do you really think I can get away with it, Edward?’

Now that she was playing a part, it was quite easy for Victoria to ask it with every appearance of anxious sincerity.

‘I’m sure you can. I’ve noticed that your playing of a part affords you such enjoyment that it’s practically impossible to disbelieve you.’

Victoria said meditatively:

‘I still feel an awful fool when I think of the Hamilton Clipps.’

He laughed in a superior way.

Victoria, her face still a mask of adoration, thought to herself viciously. ‘But you were an awful fool, too, to let slip that about the Bishop at Basrah. If you hadn’t I’d never have seen through you.’

She said suddenly: ‘What about Dr Rathbone?’

‘What do you mean “What about him?”’

‘Is he just a figurehead?’

Edward’s lips curved in cruel amusement.

‘Rathbone has got to toe the line. Do you know what he’s been doing all these years? Cleverly appropriating about three-quarters of the subscriptions which pour in from all over the world to his own use. It’s the cleverest swindle since the time of Horatio Bottomley. Oh yes, Rathbone’s completely in our hands – we can expose him at any time and he knows it.’

Victoria felt a sudden gratitude to the old man with the noble domed head, and the mean acquisitive soul. He might be a swindler – but he had known pity – he had tried to get her to escape in time.

‘All things work towards our New Order,’ said Edward.

She thought to herself, ‘Edward, who looks so sane, is really mad! You get mad, perhaps, if you try and act the part of God. They always say humility is a Christian virtue – now I see why. Humility is what keeps you sane and a human being…’

Edward got up.

‘Time to be moving,’ he said. ‘We’ve got to get you to Damascus and our plans there worked out by the day after tomorrow.’

Victoria rose with alacrity. Once she was away from Devonshire, back in Baghdad with its crowds, in the Tio Hotel with Marcus shouting and beaming and offering her a drink, the near persistent menace of Edward would be removed. Her part was to play a double game – continue to fool Edward by a sickly dog-like devotion, and counter his plans secretly.

She said: ‘You think that Mr Dakin knows where Anna Scheele is? Perhaps

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