Running Blind by Desmond Bagley

Scotland he told me of the way I had wounded Kennikin, and made the

crack that Kennikin would rather operate on me with a sharp knife than

offer to split a bottle of Calvados. How in hel would Slade know about

the Calvados? He’s never been within a hundred miles of Kennikin and the

fact isn’t on file in the Department. It’s been niggling at me for a

long time, but the penny only dropped this afternoon.’

Elin sighed. ‘It’s a very smal point.’

‘Have you ever witnessed a murder trial? The point which can hang a man

can be very smal . But add this to it – the Russians took a package

which they presumably discovered to be a fake. You’d expect them to come

after the real thing, wouldn’t you? But who did come after it, and with

blood in his eye? None other than friend Slade.’

‘You’re trying to make out a case that Slade is a Russian agent,’ said

Elin. ‘But it won’t work. Who was real y responsible for the destruction

of Kennikin’s network in Sweden?’

‘Slade master-minded it,’ I said. ‘He pointed me in the right direction

and pulled the trigger.’

Elin shrugged. ‘Wel , then? Would a Russian agent do that to his own side?’

‘Slade’s a big boy now,’ I said. ‘Right next to Taggart in a very

important area of British Intel igence. He even lunches with the Prime

Minister – he told me so. How important would it be to the Russians to

get a man into that position?’

Elin looked at me as though I’d gone crazy. I said quietly, ‘Whoever

planned this has a mind like a pretzel, but it’s al of a piece. Slade

is in a top slot in British Intel igence – but how did he get there?

Answer – by wrecking the Russian organization in Sweden. Which is more

important to the Russians? To retain their Swedish network ? which could

be replaced if necessary? Or to put Slade where he is now?’

I tapped the table with the handle of my knife. ‘You can see the same

twisted thinking throughout. Slade put me next to Kennikin by

sacrificing Birkby; the Russkies put Slade next to Taggart by

sacrificing Kennikin and his outfit.’

‘But this is sil y!’ burst out Elin. ‘Why would Slade have ?to go to al

that trouble with Birkby and you when the Russians would be co-operating

with him, anyway?’

‘Because it had to look good,’ I said. ‘The operation would be examined

by men with very hard eyes and there had to be real blood, not tomato

ketchup – no fakery at al . The blood was provided by poor Birkby – and

Kennikin added some to it.’ A sudden thought struck me. ‘I wonder if

Kennikin knew what was going on? I’l bet his organization was blasted

from under him – the poor bastard wouldn’t know his masters were sel ing

him out just to bring Slade up a notch.’ I rubbed my chin. ‘I wonder if

he’s stil ignorant of that?’

‘This is al theory,’ said Elin. ‘Things don’t happen that way.’

‘Don’t they? My God, you only have to read /the published/ accounts of

some of the spy trials to realize that bloody funny things happen. Do

you know why Blake got a sentence of forty-two years in jail?’

She shook her head. ‘I didn’t read about it.’

‘You won’t find it in print, but the rumour around the Department was

that forty-two was the number of our agents who came to a sticky end

because he’d betrayed them. I wouldn’t know the truth of it because he

was in a different outfit – but think of what Slade could do!’

‘So you can’t trust anyone,’ said Elin. ‘What a life to ‘lead!’

‘It’s not as bad as that. I trust Taggart to a point – and I trust Jack

Case, the man I’m meeting at Geysir. But Slade is different; he’s become

careless and made two mistakes -one about the Calvados, and the other in

coming after the package himself.’

Elin laughed derisively. ‘And the only reason you trust Taggart and Case

is because they’ve made no mistakes, as you cal them?’

‘Let me put it this way,’ I said. ‘I’ve kil ed Graham, a British

Intel igence agent, and so I’m in a hot spot. The only way I can get out

of it is to prove that Slade is a Russian agent. If I can do that I’l

be a bloody hero and the record wil be wiped clean. And it helps a lot

that I hate Slade’s guts.’

‘But what if you’re wrong?’

I put as much finality into my voice as I could. ‘I’m not wrong,’ I

said, and hoped it was true. ‘We’ve had a long hard day, Elin; but we

can rest tomorrow. Let me put a dressing on your shoulder.’

As I smoothed down the last piece of surgical tape, she said, ‘What did

you make of what Taggart said just before the storm came?’

I didn’t like to think of that. ‘I think,’ I said careful y, ‘that he

was tel ing me that Kennikin is in Iceland.’

*II*

Tired though I was after a hard day’s driving I slept badly. The wind

howled from the west across the crater of Askja, buffeting the

Land-Rover until it rocked on its springs, and the heavy rain drummed

against the side. Once I heard a clatter as though something metal ic

had moved and I got up to investigate only to find nothing of

consequence and got drenched to the skin for my pains. At last I fel

into a heavy sleep, shot through with bad dreams.

Stil , I felt better in the morning when I got up and looked out. The

sun was shining and the lake was a deep blue reflecting the cloudless

sky, and in the clear, rain-washed air the far side of the crater seemed

a mere kilometre away instead of the ten kilometres it real y was. I put

water to boil for coffee and when it was ready I leaned over and dug

Elin gently in the ribs.

‘Umph!’ she said indistinctly, and snuggled deeper into the sleeping

bag. I prodded her again and one blue eye opened and looked at me

malignantly through tumbled blonde hair. ‘Stop it!’

‘Coffee,’ I said, and waved the cup under her nose.

She came to life and clutched the cup with both hands. I took my coffee

and a jug of hot water and went outside where I laid my shaving kit on

the bonnet and began to whisk up a lather. After shaving, I thought, it

would be nice to go down to the lake and clean up. I was beginning to

feel grubby – the /Odadahraun/ is a dusty place – and the thought of

clean water was good.

I finished scraping my face and, as I rinsed the lather away, I ran

through in my mind the things I had to do, the most important of which

was to contact Taggart as soon as it was a reasonable hour to find him

in his office. I wanted to give him the detailed case against Slade.

Elin came up with the coffee pot. ‘More?’

‘Thanks,’ I said, holding out my cup. ‘We’l have a lazy day.’ I nodded

towards the lake at the bottom of the crater. ‘Fancy a swim?’

She pulled a face and moved her wounded shoulder. ‘I can’t do the crawl,

but perhaps I can paddle with one arm.’ She looked up at the sky, and

said, ‘It’s a lovely day.’

I watched her face change. ‘What’s the matter?’

‘The radio antenna,’ she said. ‘It’s not there.’

I whirled around. ‘Damn!’ That was very bad. I climbed up and looked at

the damage. It was easy to see what had happened. The rough ground in

Central Iceland is enough ‘ to shake anything loose that isn’t welded

down; nuts you couldn’t shift with a wrench somehow loosen themselves

and wind off the bolts; split-pins jump out, even rivets pop. A whip

antenna with its swaying motion is particularly vulnerable; I know one

geologist who lost three in a month. The question here was when did we

lose it?

It was certainly after I had spoken to Taggart, so it might have gone

during the mad dash for Askja when we raced the storm. But I remembered

the metal ic clatter I had heard during the night; the antenna might

have been loosened enough by the bumping to have been swept away by the

strong wind. I said, ‘It may be around here – quite close. Let’s look.’

But we didn’t get that far because I heard a familiar sound – the drone

of a smal aircraft. ‘Get down!’ I said quickly. ‘Keep stil and don’t

look up.’

We dropped flat next to the Land-Rover as the light plane came over the

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