recognized diplomatic department of the embassy,â he said. âNo one likes that. Why didnât you bring one from London?â
Because it didnât occur to me until I was on the plane and thinking of all the possible ways of getting her out, thought Charlie. âCouldnât do it for me as a favour, I suppose?â
Precisely the sort of thing Harkness had alerted him to report, realized Cartright. He didnât like spying on his own side. He said: âNot without London finding out. Have to be Foreign Office clearance. You know what theyâre like about official documents.â
âDonât I just!â said Charlie. He wondered if that security complaint had been squashed or merely postponed.
âSorry,â said the Tokyo Resident.
âNot your fault,â accepted Charlie. It was actually unfair to ask the man.
âSensitive?â asked Cartright.
âWhat?â replied Charlie, intentionally misunderstanding.
âWhoever youâre getting out?â Harknessâs instructions were to test the other man. Dislike it as he might, Cartright saw himself as someone trying to establish a career, and if he were going to do that it required a ruthlessness beyond his upbringing scruples.
Nosey bugger or primed? wondered Charlie. In fairness, he supposed the passport request made it obvious. Still wrong; wrong to ask and wrong to respond at any length. He said: âCould be.â
Cartright noted the reservation and felt embarrassed. Trying to cover the awkwardness, he said: âI could ask London about a passport issue. Ambassador wonât like it, I should warn you. He doesnât believe decent chaps read other chapsâ mail and actually uses words like rotter. Heâd have to be consulted, of course.â If he did it that way he would have complied with the orders from London and still not betrayed a colleague.
âDo you know the American head of station?â
âArt Fredericks,â identified Cartright, at once. âMet him a few times at embassy things ⦠receptions, stuff like that.â
âWhatâs he like?â
âHuge man â¦â began Cartright, but Charlie said: âI meant as a person.â
âCame here six months after me,â started Cartright again, pausing momentarily for the calculation. âJust over three years then. Takes part in most of the sports events the US embassy puts on. Word is that heâs ambitious.â
âWhatâs the full CIA complement here?â asked Charlie.
âThree, including him,â said Cartright, at once.
âSure?â
âPositive. I like to know the competition, even if itâs friendly.â
â Is it friendly?â demanded Charlie.
âAmicable,â said Cartright, in qualification. âDepends if theyâre asking or telling.â
Charlie realized he was lucky that Cartright was so certain of the CIA staffing: it gave him a figure to work from, when it came to calculating the opposition he was facing. âWhat if theyâre telling?â pressed Charlie.
âNot easy,â said Cartright, quickly again.
Which made the Kozlov operation like he imagined it to be, bloody difficult. He said: âAny other names, apart from Fredericks?â
âHarry Fish and Winslow Elliott,â said Cartright. âFish is a nice enough guy but Elliott seems upset he was too late to wear a six gun and ride off into the Wild West sunset.â
âSo the Agency is the next best thing?â said Charlie. Like Cartright, Charlie liked knowing as much as he could about competition, friendly or otherwise.
âSomething like that,â said Cartright. âThey going to be with you or against you?â
It was another intelligent if rather obvious question, after the passport request, but Charlie had the impression it was more than a surface query. He said: âAt the moment, Iâm not quite
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