Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy by John le Carré

PART TWO

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

The Hotel Islay in Sussex Gardens – where, on the day after his visit to Ascot, George Smiley under the name of Barraclough had set up his operational headquarters – was a very quiet place considering its position, and perfectly suited to his needs. It lay a hundred yards south of Paddington Station, one of a terrace of elderly mansions cut off from the main avenue by a line of plane trees and a parking patch. The traffic roared past it all night. But the inside, though it was a firebowl of clashing wallpapers and copper lampshades, was a place of extraordinary calm. Not only was there nothing going on in the hotel: there was nothing going on in the world either, and this impression was strengthened by Mrs Pope Graham, the proprietor, a major’s widow with a terribly languorous voice which imparted a sense of deep fatigue to Mr Barraclough or anyone else who sought her hospitality. Inspector Mendel, whose informant she had been for many years, insisted that her name was common Graham. The Pope had been added for grandeur or out of deference to Rome.

‘Your father wasn’t a Greenjacket, was he, dear?’ she enquired, with a yawn, as she read Barraclough in the register. Smiley paid her fifty pounds’ advance for a two-week stay and she gave him room eight because he wanted to work. He asked for a desk and she gave him a rickety card table, Norman the boy brought it. ‘It’s Georgian,’ she sighed, supervising its delivery. ‘So you will love it for me, won’t you, dear? I shouldn’t lend it to you really, it was the major’s.’

To the fifty, Mendel privately had added a further twenty on account from his own wallet, dirty oncers as he called them, which he later recovered from Smiley. ‘No smell to nothing, is there?’ he told her.

‘You could say so,’ Mrs Pope Graham agreed, demurely stowing the notes among her nether garments.

‘I’ll want every scrap,’ Mendel warned, seated in her basement apartment over a bottle of the one she liked. ‘Times of entry and exit, contacts, life-style, and most of all’ – he liked an emphatic finger – ‘most of all, more important than you can possibly know, this is, I’ll want suspicious persons taking an interest or putting questions to your staff under a pretext.’ He gave her his state-of-the-nation look. ‘Even if they say they’re the Guards Armoured and Sherlock Holmes rolled into one.’

‘There’s only me and Norman,’ said Mrs Pope Graham, indicating a shivery boy in a black overcoat to which Mrs Pope Graham had stitched a velvet collar of beige. ‘And they’ll not get far with Norman, will they, dear, you’re too sensitive.’

‘Same with his incoming letters,’ said the Inspector. ‘I’ll want postmarks and times posted where legible, but not tampering or holding back. Same with his objects.’ He allowed a hush to fall as he eyed the substantial safe which formed such a feature of the furnishings. ‘Now and then, he’s going to ask for objects to be lodged. Mainly they’ll be papers, sometimes books. There’s only one person allowed to look at those objects apart from him’ – he pulled a sudden, piratical grin – ‘Me. Understand? No one else can even know you’ve got them. And don’t fiddle with them or he’ll know because he’s sharp. It’s got to be expert fiddling. I’m not saying any more,’ Mendel concluded; though he did remark to Smiley, soon after returning from Somerset, that if twenty quid was all it cost them, Norman and his protectress were the cheapest babysitting service in the business.

In which boast he was pardonably mistaken, for he could hardly be expected to know of Jim’s recruitment of the entire car club; nor the means by which Jim was able subsequently to trace the path of Mendel’s wary investigations. Nor could Mendel, or anyone else, have guessed the state of electric alertness to which anger, and the strain of waiting, and perhaps a little madness, had seemingly brought him.

Room eight was on the top floor. Its window looked on to the parapet. Beyond the parapet lay a side street with a shady bookshop and a travel agency called the Wide World. The hand towel was embroidered ‘Swan Hotel Marlow’. Lacon stalked in the same evening carrying a fat briefcase containing the first consignment of papers from his office. To talk they sat side by side on the bed while Smiley played a transistor wireless to drown the sound of their voices. Lacon took this mawkishly; he seemed somehow too old for the picnic. Next morning on his way to work Lacon reclaimed the papers and returned the books which Smiley had given him to pad out his briefcase. In this role Lacon was at his worst. His manner was offended and off-hand; he made it clear he detested the irregularity. In the cold weather, he seemed to have developed a permanent blush. But Smiley could not have read the files by day because they were on call to Lacon’s staff and their absence would have caused an uproar. Nor did he want to. He knew better than anyone that he was desperately short of time. Over the next three days this procedure varied very little. Each evening on his way to take the train from Paddington, Lacon dropped in his papers and each night Mrs Pope Graham furtively reported to Mendel that the sour gangly one had called again, the one who looked down his nose at Norman. Each morning, after three hours’ sleep and a disgusting breakfast of undercooked sausage and overcooked tomato – there was no other menu – Smiley waited for Lacon to arrive, then slipped gratefully into the cold winter’s day to take his place among his fellow men.

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