Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy by John le Carré

It was a war party.

Alleline sat at the head of the table in the megalomaniac’s carving chair, reading a two-page document, and he didn’t stir when Guillam came in. He just growled: ‘Down there with you. By Paul. Below the salt,’ and went on reading with heavy concentration.

The chair to Alleline’s right was empty and Guillam knew it was Haydon’s by the posture-curve cushion tied to it with string. To Alleline’s left sat Roy Bland, also reading, but he looked up as Guillam passed and said ‘Wotcher, Peter’ then followed him all the way down the table with his bulging pale eyes. Next to Bill’s empty chair sat Mo Delaware, London Station’s token woman, in bobbed hair and a brown tweed suit. Across from her, Phil Porteous, the head housekeeper, a rich servile man with a big house in suburbia. When he saw Guillam he stopped his reading altogether, ostentatiously closed the folder, laid his sleek hands over it and smirked.

‘Below the salt means next to Paul Skordeno,’ said Phil, still smirking.

‘Thanks. I can see it.’

Across from Porteous came Bill’s Russians, last seen in the fourth-floor men’s room, Nick de Silsky and his boyfriend Kaspar. They couldn’t smile and for all Guillam knew they couldn’t read either because they had no papers in front of them; they were the only ones who hadn’t. They sat with their four thick hands on the table as if somebody was holding a gun behind them, and they just watched him with their four brown eyes.

Downhill from Porteous sat Paul Skordeno, now reputedly Roy Bland’s fieldman on the satellite networks, though others said he ran between wickets for Bill. Paul was thin and mean and forty with a pitted brown face and long arms. Guillam had once paired with him on a tough-guy course at the Nursery and they had all but killed each other.

Guillam moved the chair away from him and sat down, so Toby sat next along like the other half of a bodyguard. What the hell do they expect me to do? thought Guillam: make a dash for freedom? Everyone was watching Alleline fill his pipe when Bill Haydon upstaged him. The door opened and at first no one came in. Then a slow shuffle and Bill appeared, clutching a cup of coffee in both hands, the saucer on top. He had a striped folder jammed under his arm and his glasses were over his nose for a change, so he must have done his reading elsewhere. They’ve all been reading it except me, thought Guillam, and I don’t know what it is. He wondered whether it was the same document that Esterhase and Roy were reading yesterday and decided on no evidence at all that it was; that yesterday it had just come in; that Toby had brought it to Roy and that he had disturbed them in their first excitement; if excitement was the word.

Alleline had still not looked up. Down the table Guillam had only his rich black hair to look at, and a pair of broad tweedy shoulders. Mo Delaware was pulling at her forelock while she read. Percy had two wives, Guillam remembered, as Camilla once more flitted through his teeming mind, and both were alcoholics, which must mean something. He had met only the London edition. Percy was forming his supporters’ club and gave a drinks party at his sprawling panelled flat in Buckingham Palace Mansions. Guillam arrived late and he was taking off his coat in the lobby when a pale blonde woman loomed timidly towards him holding out her hands. He took her for the maid wanting his coat.

‘I’m Joy,’ she said in a theatrical voice, like ‘I’m Virtue’ or ‘I’m Continence’. It wasn’t his coat she wanted but a kiss. Yielding to it, Guillam inhaled the joint pleasures of ‘Je Reviens’ and a high concentration of inexpensive sherry.

‘Well now, young Peter Guillam’ – Alleline speaking – ‘are you ready for me finally or have you other calls to make about my house?’ He half looked up and Guillam noticed two tiny triangles of fur on each weathered cheek. ‘What are you getting up to out there in the sticks these days?’ – turning a page – ‘apart from chasing the local virgins, if there are any in Brixton which I severely doubt – if you’ll pardon my freedom, Mo – and wasting public money on expensive lunches?’

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