Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy by John le Carré

‘Wouldn’t he have known already from the tickertape?’ Smiley asked, in a small voice. ‘I thought the news was everywhere by then: Ellis shot. That was the lead story, wasn’t it?’

‘Depends which news bulletin he saw, I suppose.’ Sam shrugged it off. ‘Anyway, he took over the switchboard and by morning he’d picked up what few pieces there were and introduced something pretty close to calm. He told the Foreign Office to sit tight and hold its water, he got hold of Toby Esterhase and sent him off to pull in a brace of Czech agents, students at the London School of Economics. Bill had been letting them hatch till then, he was planning to turn them round and play them back into Czecho. Toby’s lamplighters sandbagged the pair of them and locked them up in Sarratt. Then Bill rang the Czech head resident in London and spoke to him like a sergeant major: threatened to strip him so bare he’d be the laughing stock of the profession, if a hair of Jim Prideaux’s head was hurt. He invited him to pass that on to his masters. I felt I was watching a street accident and Bill was the only doctor. He rang a press contact and told him in strict confidence that Ellis was a Czech mercenary with an American contract; he could use the story unattributably. It actually made the late editions. Soon as he could, he slid off to Jim’s rooms to make sure he’d left nothing around that a journalist might pick on if a journalist were clever enough to make the connection, Ellis to Prideaux. I guess he did a thorough cleaning-up job. Dependants, everything.’

‘There weren’t any dependants,’ Smiley said. ‘Apart from Bill, I suppose,’ he added, half under his breath.

Sam wound it up:

‘At eight o’clock Percy Alleline arrived, he’d cadged a special plane off the air force. He was grinning all over. I didn’t think that was very clever of him, considering Bill’s feelings, but there you are. He wanted to know why I was doing duty so I gave him the same story I’d given Mary Masterman: no flat. He used my phone to make a date with the Minister and was still talking when Roy Bland came in, hopping mad and half plastered, wanting to know who the hell had been messing on his patch and practically accusing me. I said “Christ, man, what about old Jim? You could pity him while you were about it,” but Roy’s a hungry boy and likes the living better than the dead, I gave him the switchboard with my love, went down to the Savoy for breakfast and read the Sundays. The most any of them did was run the Prague radio reports and a pooh-pooh denial from the Foreign Office.’

Finally Smiley said: ‘After that you went to the South of France?’

‘For two lovely months.’

‘Did anyone question you again – about Control, for instance?’

‘Not till I got back. You were out on your ear by then, Control was ill in hospital.’ Sam’s voice deepened a little. ‘He didn’t do anything silly, did he?’

‘He just died. What happened?’

‘Percy was acting head-boy. He called for me and wanted to know why I’d done duty for Masterman and what communication I’d had with Control. I stuck to my story and Percy called me a liar.’

‘So that’s what they sacked you for: lying?’

‘Alcoholism. The janitors got a bit of their own back. They’d counted five beer cans in the waste basket in the duty officer’s lair and reported it to the housekeepers. There’s a standing order: no booze on the premises. In the due process of time a disciplinary body found me guilty of setting fire to the Queen’s dockyards so I joined the bookies. What happened to you?’

‘Oh, much the same. I didn’t seem to be able to convince them I wasn’t involved.’

‘Well, if you want anyone’s throat cut,’ said Sam, as he saw him quietly out through a side door into a pretty mews, ‘give me a buzz.’ Smiley was sunk in thought. ‘And if you ever want a flutter,’ Sam went on, ‘bring along some of Ann’s smart friends.’

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