The Innocent - Part 10
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Part 10

He was righting it, blocking the way, when a lady with her dog stepped around him and made a disapproving clucking noise. Perhaps she was speaking for the whole street. The dog, a game-looking mongrel, was interested in the case that Leonard had pulled upright. It sniffed along the length of the case, wagging its tail, and then came round the other side, avid all of a sudden and muzzling hard against the fabric. It was on a leash, but the woman was one of those owners who do not like to cross their pets. She stood patiently, with the leash slack in her hand, waiting for the animal to lose interest. She was less than two feet away, but she did not look at Leonard. She spoke only to the dog, whose sniffing was now frenetic. It knew.

"Komm schon, mein kleiner Liebling. Ist doch nur ein Koffer." It's only a suitcase. It's only a suitcase.

Leonard also indulged the dog. He needed an excuse not to pick up the cases. But now it was growling and whining by turns. It was attempting to close its jaws round a corner of the case.

"Gnadige Frau," Leonard said, "please control your dog." Leonard said, "please control your dog."

But rather than pull on the leash, the woman merely increased the torrent of endearments. "Little silly one, who do you think you are? This luggage belongs to the gentleman, not to you. Come on now, little sausage ..."

A becalmed and abstracted version of himself was speculating that if one had something to dispose of, one could do worse than consider a hungry dog. One would need a pack. The dog had found a purchase. It had its teeth into the corner of the case. It was biting, growling and wagging its tail.

At last the woman spoke to Leonard. "You must have food in there. Wurst, perhaps!" There was a touch of accusation in this. She thought he was a smuggler bringing cheap food over from the East.

"It's an expensive case," he said. "If your dog damages it, you, gnadige Frau gnadige Frau, will be responsible." He looked around, as if to summon a policeman.

The woman was affronted. She gave the leash a savage jerk and moved on. Her dog yelped and came to heel, and then seemed to regret its compliance. As its owner walked away, the dog was straining to get back. Through the fogs of species memory it recognized a chance of a lifetime, to devour a human with impunity and avenge the wolf ancestors for ten thousand years of subjugation. A minute later it was still looking back and giving token tugs on its leash. The woman sailed on, refusing any compromise.

There were teethmarks and saliva on the case, but the fabric was not torn. Leonard positioned himself between his burdens and lifted. He walked fifteen steps and had to stop. The woman's disapproval lingered, it was infecting the glances of other pa.s.sersby. What could he possibly have in those cases that could be so heavy? Why didn't he have a friend to help him? It must be illegal, it could only be contraband. Why did he look so haggard, that man with the heavy cases? Why hadn't he shaved? It was only a matter of time now before a green Polizist Polizist caught sight of him. They were always on the lookout for trouble. That was the kind of city it was. They had limitless powers, these German police. He would not be able to refuse them if they wanted him to open up his luggage. He could not afford to be seen standing around. He settled for frantic effort, for little dashes of ten or twelve steps. He attempted to transform the trembling rictus of effort into the smile of a respectable traveler fresh from the railway station, who needed neither surveillance nor help. In between, he took the briefest possible rests. Whenever he stopped he glanced around him, for the benefit of the pa.s.sing traffic, as if lost, or looking for the right house. caught sight of him. They were always on the lookout for trouble. That was the kind of city it was. They had limitless powers, these German police. He would not be able to refuse them if they wanted him to open up his luggage. He could not afford to be seen standing around. He settled for frantic effort, for little dashes of ten or twelve steps. He attempted to transform the trembling rictus of effort into the smile of a respectable traveler fresh from the railway station, who needed neither surveillance nor help. In between, he took the briefest possible rests. Whenever he stopped he glanced around him, for the benefit of the pa.s.sing traffic, as if lost, or looking for the right house.

By the Kottbusser Tor U-Bahn he set the cases down on the curb and sat on them. He wanted to give attention to the pain in his foot. He needed to get his shoe off. But the cases sagged unpleasantly under his weight, and he stood up immediately. If he could get ten, even five minutes' sleep, he thought, he could manage the luggage with less fuss.

He was close to the Eckladen Eckladen where they sometimes shopped for their daily needs. The owner, who was bringing in his vegetable and fruit racks, saw Leonard and waved. where they sometimes shopped for their daily needs. The owner, who was bringing in his vegetable and fruit racks, saw Leonard and waved.

"Holidays?"

Leonard nodded and at the same time said, "No, no, not yet," and then in his confusion added in English. "It's business, really," a statement he instantly wished to retract. How would he be, answering routine questions from a curious Polizist? Polizist?

He stood by his cases watching the traffic. He was seeing objects drifting on the periphery of vision: an English letter box, a stag with high antlers, a table lamp. When he turned to them, they dissolved. His dreams were starting without him. He had to turn his head to dispel each phantom. There was nothing sinister. Bananas rotated end over end; a tin of biscuits with a thatched cottage on the lid opened by itself. How was he to concentrate when he had to keep turning aside to keep these things at bay? Did he dare leave them where they were?

There was a plan formulated, so long ago that he doubted whether it could still be valid. But there was no other; he had to stay with this one. And yet a kind soft thought was pulling at him. It was getting dark, the cars already had their headlights on, the shops were closing up, people were heading home. Above him a streetlight, screwed wonkily to a crumbling wall, came on with a crackle. Some kids went by, pushing a pram. The taxi he had been looking for was pulling up by the curb. He had not even hailed it. The driver had seen his cases. Even in the dusk he had guessed at their improbable weight. He got out and opened the trunk.

It was an old diesel Mercedes. Leonard thought he would be able to swing one of the cases in before the driver touched it. But it turned out that they heaved it in together.

"Books," Leonard explained. The driver shrugged. It was not his business. They shoved the other case onto the backseat. Leonard got into the front and asked for the Zoo station. The heater was on; the seat was huge and shiny. The soft thought was tugging again. He only had to speak the words and he would be there.

But he did not even remember the taxi pulling away. When he woke, it had stopped and the cases were already on the sidewalk, side by side, and his own door was open. The driver must have shaken him. In his confusion, Leonard overtipped. The man touched the peak of his cap and strolled over to stand with the other drivers who collected by the station rank. Leonard had his back to them and knew they were watching him. It was for their benefit that he made the effort to carry the cases smoothly across the ten yards of pavement to the high double doors that opened onto the station concourse.

As soon as he was inside he set them down. He felt safer. Only a few feet away a dozen British soldiers were lining up with their own regulation suitcases. All the shops and restaurants were open, and there was residual rush-hour bustle for the Stadtbahn trains upstairs. Beyond a lingerie shop and a bookstall was a sign pointing the way to the luggage lockers. Everywhere was the cigar-and-strong-coffee smell of German well-being. The floor was smooth and he could drag the cases across it. He pa.s.sed fruit stalls, a restaurant, a souvenir shop. It was all so cheerful, it was all such a success! He was a legitimate traveler at last, utterly inconspicuous, a traveler moreover who would not have to drag his luggage upstairs to the trains.

The place to check luggage was a little way down one of the tunnels that led off the main concourse. There was a circular area with newly installed lockers set around the walls facing a counter where two men in uniform stood ready to receive bags and stow them on the racks behind them. Two or three people were waiting to collect or deposit luggage when Leonard arrived. He dragged his cases as far as possible from the counter and found two vacant lockers at floor level. He moved deliberately, lining up the cases, straightening to search his pockets for the change he had brought with him. There was no hurry. He had a fistful of ten pfennig coins. He opened a locker and pushed a case with his knee. Nothing happened. He pocketed the change and pushed harder. He glanced over his shoulder. There was no one at the counter now. The two men there were talking and looking in his direction. He bent down to find the obstruction. The s.p.a.ce was an inch or so too narrow. He made a halfhearted attempt to squeeze the case, and then he gave up. If he had not been so tired, he might now have done the right thing. As he stood up he saw that one of the luggage officials, a man with a graying beard, was waving him over. It was logical: if your luggage did not fit in the lockers, you took it to the counter. But he had not prepared for this, it was not in the plan. Was it the right thing? Would they want to know why his cases were so heavy? What powers did their uniforms grant them? Would they remember his face?

The bearded man was resting his knuckles on the tin-plate counter, waiting for Leonard. It was not right that an employee who was really no more than a porter should be dressed like an admiral. It was important not to be intimidated. Leonard made a show of looking at his watch and picked up his cases. He tried to walk away briskly. He took the only route that would not take him closer to the counter. He was waiting for a shout, for the sound of running. He was in a narrowing corridor at the end of which was a set of double doors. He made it all the way without stopping. He went through the doors backward and found himself in a quiet side street. He put the cases against a wall and sat down on the pavement.

He had no clear intentions. He needed to rest his sore foot. If the admiral had come after him, he would gladly have given himself up. What was clear, now that he was sitting down, was that he ought to be making a plan. His thoughts were oozing thickly. They were the secretion of an organ that was not under his control. He could judge the product, but he could not initiate it. He could make another attempt to squeeze the cases into the luggage lockers. He could surrender them to the admiral. He could leave them here, on the street. Just walk away from them. Did they really need the whole week's grace that the luggage lockers allowed? It was now that the pleasant soft thought returned. He could go home. He could lock the door, take a bath, be safe among his own things, sleep for hours in his own bed, and then, once refreshed, make a new plan and implement it-shaved, invigorated, with a clean set of clothes, beyond suspicion.

He thought about home. The rooms as big as meadows, the excellent plumbing, the solitude. He fantasized and dozed, and at last stood up. The quickest way to a taxi was back through the station, past the admiral. But he set off to walk around the outside. His groin was hurting more than his foot. A layer of skin was coming off his hands. It took twenty minutes to get around. He took long pauses, unwatched. He found his taxi in the rank, another big old Mercedes, and this time made no attempt to help lift the cases in, nor did he offer any explanations. It was surely a sign of guilt to be apologizing for their weight.

He left one case on the pavement outside No. 26, and carried the other with both hands all the way to the lift shaft. When he went back outside, the case was still there, which surprised him no less than if it had gone. How was he to know any longer what const.i.tuted a surprise? The lift bore the weight easily. He opened his front door and set the cases down just inside the hallway. From where he stood he could see that the lights were on in the living room, and there was music playing. He went toward it. He pushed the living room door open and walked into a party. There were drinks, peanuts in bowls, full ashtrays, crumpled cushions and the AFN on the wireless. All the guests had gone. He turned the wireless off, and the silence was abrupt. He sat in the nearest chair. He had been left behind. The friends, the old Leonard and his fiancee in her rustling white skirt, they had all gone, and the cases were too heavy, the lockers too small, the admiral hostile, and his hands, ear, shoulder, t.e.s.t.i.c.l.es and foot throbbed in unison.

He went to the bathroom and drank from the tap for a long time. Then he was in the bedroom, lying on his back under the covers, staring at the ceiling. With the hall light on and the bedroom door half open, it was as dark as he wanted it. When he closed his eyes a sickening fatigue smothered him. He had to save himself as though from drowning by struggling to see the ceiling again. His eyes were not heavy. As long as they were open he could stay awake. He was trying not to think. He was hurting everywhere. There was no one to look after him. He kept his thoughts empty by concentrating on his breathing. Perhaps an hour pa.s.sed this way, in a light trance, almost a doze.

Then the phone rang and he was on his way to it before he had come to fully. He crossed the hallway, glancing to his left to see the cases there by the door, and entered the living room without turning on the light. The phone was on the window ledge. He s.n.a.t.c.hed it up, expecting Maria, or possibly Gla.s.s. It was a man whose soft-spoken introductory phrase eluded him. Something about a paper pay packet. Then the voice said, "I'm phoning about the arrangements for May the tenth, sir."

It was a wrong number, but Leonard did not want to send the voice away. It was pleasantly accented, and sounded competent and gentle. He said, "Ah yes."

"I've been told to phone and see what it was you wanted, sir."

It was the sir, the unforced, manly respect, that Leonard warmed to. Whoever this man was, he might be able to help. He sounded the sort who might carry the cases and not ask questions. It was important to keep him talking. Leonard said, "Er, what do you suggest?"

The voice said, "Well, sir, I could start from some way off, right out of the building, when everyone is sitting down, and approach slowly. You get the picture, sir. They're all talking and drinking, and then one or two with good ears hear me faintly, and then they all hear me, coming closer all the time. Then I come right into the room."

"I see," Leonard said. He thought he might take this man into his confidence. It was a matter of waiting for an opening.

"And if you're happy to leave the tunes to me, sir.... Some reels, some laments. When they've had a few drinks-if you'll excuse me, sir-there's nothing quite like a lament."

"That's true," Leonard said, seeing his chance. "I sometimes get very sad."

"I beg your pardon, sir?"

If the kind voice would only ask why. Leonard said, "Things get on top of me sometimes."

The voice hesitated, and then it said, "Berlin's a long way from home, sir, for us all." There was another pause, and then, "CSM Steele said you'd need me for an hour, sir. Is that correct?"

It was in this way that the Scots Greys piper, Piper McTaggart, was identified. Leonard concluded the business as rapidly as possible. He left the phone off the hook and returned to bed. He turned the hall light out on the way. The conversation had revived him. The edge of his tiredness was dulled, and it was easier to sleep.

He woke some hours later, completely refreshed. From the silence he guessed it to be between two and three o'clock. He sat up. He felt better, he realized, because he had woken with a simple solution. He had let the matter overwhelm him when in fact all that was required was clear thinking and purposeful action. He could get to work while it was all fresh in his mind. Then he could sleep again and wake to a resolved situation.

He stepped out of the bedroom into the hall. He had never known it so quiet. He did not bother with the light. There was just enough of a moon to give a colorless light, although he was not sure quite how moonlight was penetrating here. He went to the kitchen and found a sharp knife. He went back in the hall and knelt by the cases and unfastened the straps on both. Then he opened one of them. The parts were neatly in place, just as Maria had packed them. He lifted out a piece and cut away the waterproof material and laid an arm gently down on the carpet. There was no unpleasant smell; he was not too late. He pushed the wrapping well away to one side, and then he set about freeing a leg, a thigh, and the chest. There was surprisingly little blood, and besides, the carpet was red. He set the pieces down on the hall carpet in their correct positions. The human shape was resuming. He opened the second case and unwrapped the lower body and the limbs. It was there before him, a headless body lying on its back. He had the head in his hands now. He turned it and saw through the material the outline of the nose and the imprecise features of a face.

It was while he was using the point of the knife to prize away the glued seam that he saw something that caught his attention. He was holding the heavy head down on the floor, but he could no longer move the knife. It was not the prospect of seeing Otto's face. Nor was it the completed figure lying on the carpet next to him. What he had seen was the bedroom wall and his bed. He had forced his eyes open a fraction and seen the shape of his own body under the blankets. For two seconds he had heard the traffic in the street outside, still late-night traffic, and he had seen his own immovable body. Then his eyes shut and he was back here, with the knife in his hand, picking away again at the fabric.

It worried him to know that what seemed so real was a dream. It meant that anything could happen. There were no rules. He was putting Otto back together, undoing the day's work. He was peeling away a layer of rubberized cloth, and here was the side of the head, with the top of an ear visible. He ought to stop himself, he thought, he ought to wake before Otto came to life. With an effort he opened his eyes again. He saw a part of his hand and the impression of his feet under the blanket. If he could move just one part of himself, or make a sound, the tiniest of sounds, he could bring himself back. But the body he occupied was inert. He was trying to move his toe. He could hear a motorbike in the street outside. If someone would come into the room and touch him. He was trying to shout. He could not part his lips or fill his lungs. His eyes were weighing down, and he was in the hall once more.

Why was the material sticking to the side of Otto's face? It was the bite, of course; the blood from Otto's cheek had congealed on the cloth. That was only one reason why Otto was going to punish him. He pulled the cloth and it came away with a rasping sound. The rest was easy. It fell away and the bare head was in his hands. The eyes with the drunk's red rims were watching him, waiting. It was simply a matter of lifting the head onto the torn neck; then it could begin again. He should have been kept divided up, but now it was too late. Even before the head was properly in place, the hands were reaching for the knife. Otto was sitting up. He could see the empty cases, and the knife was in his hand. Leonard knelt in front of him and tipped back his head to offer up his throat. Otto would do the job swiftly. He would have to pack the cases himself. He would carry Leonard to the Zoo station. Otto was a Berliner, he was an old drinking friend of the admiral. Here was the bedroom wall again, the blanket, the edge of the sheet, the pillow. His body was lead. Otto would never carry him alone. Piper McTaggart would help. Leonard tried halfheartedly for a scream. It was better that it should happen. He heard the air pa.s.s between his teeth. He tried to bend his leg. His eyes were closing again and he was going to die. His head moved, it turned an inch or so to one side. His cheek touched the pillow, and the touch unlocked all touch and he felt the weight of the blanket on his foot. His eyes were open and he could move his hand. He could shout. He was sitting up and reaching for the light switch.

Even with the light on, the dream was still there, waiting for him to return. He slapped his face and stood. His legs were weak; his eyes still wanted to close. He went into the bathroom and splashed water over his face. When he came out he turned on the hall light. The unopened cases were by the door.

He could not trust himself to sleep. For the rest of the night he sat in bed with his knees drawn up and the overhead light on and smoked a pack of cigarettes. At three-thirty he went to the kitchen and made a pot of coffee. Toward five o'clock he shaved. The water stung the broken skin on his hands. He dressed and went back to the kitchen to drink more coffee. His plan was simple and good. He would lug the cases to the U-Bahn and ride out to the end of the line. He would find a lonely spot, put the cases down and walk away.

He had gone through his tiredness to a new clarity. He drank his coffee and smoked and pa.s.sed the time polishing his shoes and putting adhesive strips on his hands. He whistled and hummed "Heartbreak Hotel." For the moment it was enough to be free of his dream. At seven o'clock he straightened his tie, brushed his hair again and put on his jacket. Before opening the front door he lifted the cases experimentally. It was more than weight. There was a pull, an elemental, purposeful earthward pull. Otto wanted to be buried, he thought. But not yet.

He carried the cases one at a time to the lift shaft. When the lift came, he blocked the door with one case while he shoved the other in with his knee. He pressed E for Etage Etage but he traveled only one floor down before coming to a halt. The door slid open to admit Blake. He was wearing a blue blazer with silver b.u.t.tons and he carried an attache case. The lift compartment filled with the scent of his cologne. The descent continued. but he traveled only one floor down before coming to a halt. The door slid open to admit Blake. He was wearing a blue blazer with silver b.u.t.tons and he carried an attache case. The lift compartment filled with the scent of his cologne. The descent continued.

Blake nodded coolly. "Pleasant party. Thank you."

"We were glad you could come," Leonard said.

The lift stopped and the doors opened. Blake was looking at the cases. "Aren't they Ministry of Defense bags?" Leonard picked one up, but Blake beat him to the other and lifted it out into the lobby. "Good Lord. What have you got in here? It's certainly not a tape recorder."

The question was not rhetorical. They were standing by the open lift and Blake seemed to think he was owed an answer. Leonard fumbled. He had been going to say they were tape recorders.

Blake said, "You're taking them out to Altglienicke. It's all right, you can talk to me. I know Bill Harvey. I'm cleared for Gold."

"It's decoding equipment," Leonard said. And then, because he had an image of Blake coming out to the warehouse to look at it, he added, "It's on loan from Washington. We're using it in the tunnel, then it goes back tomorrow."

Blake was looking at his watch. "Well, I hope you've got secure transport laid on. I've got to dash." And he was off across the lobby without another word, and out to where his car was parked in the street.

Leonard waited for him to drive away before he set about dragging the cases outside. The hardest part of his day, the journey to the Neu-Westend U-Bahn station at the far end of the street, was about to begin, and the encounter with Blake had used up his reserves. He had the cases out on the pavement now. His eyes were stinging in the daylight, and the old pains were starting up. There was a commotion across the road, which he thought it better to ignore. It was a car with a particularly noisy engine, and there was a voice. Then the car engine was cut and he heard the voice alone.

"Hey! Leonard. G.o.dammit, Leonard!"

Gla.s.s was climbing out of his Beetle and was striding across Platanenallee toward him. His beard shone glossy black with early morning energy.

"Where the h.e.l.l have you been? I was trying to reach you all day yesterday. I need to talk about-" Then he saw the cases. "Wait a minute. Those are ours. Leonard, what in G.o.d's name have you got in there?"

"Equipment," Leonard said.

Gla.s.s already had his hand around one of the straps. "What the h.e.l.l are you doing with it here?"

"I've been working on it. All night, in fact."

Gla.s.s grappled the case to his chest. He was preparing to cross the road with it. A car was coming and he had to wait. He shouted over his shoulder, "We've been through all this, Marnham. You know the rules. This is madness. What do you think you're doing?"

He did not wait for an answer. He bounded across the road, put the case down and opened the Beetle's hood. There was just room inside. Leonard had no choice but to follow with the other case. Gla.s.s helped him heave it into the back. They climbed into their seats, and Gla.s.s slammed his door hard. The unsilenced engine started with a roar.

As they juddered forward Gla.s.s shouted again, "G.o.dammit, Leonard! How can you do this to me? I won't feel safe until this stuff is back where it belongs!"

Twenty.

All the way to the warehouse Leonard wanted to think about the sentries, who would be obliged to search the cases, while Gla.s.s, having exhausted his indignation, wanted to talk about the anniversary celebration. There was very little time. Gla.s.s had found a clever route, and they were through Schoneberg within ten minutes and round the edge of the Tempelhof airfield.

"I left a note on your door yesterday," Gla.s.s said. "You weren't answering your phone, and then it was busy all night."

Leonard was staring into the hole in the floor at his feet. The asphalt blur was mesmeric. His cases were about to be opened. He was so tired he could welcome that. A process would begin-arrest, interviews and the rest-and he would abandon himself to it. He would offer no explanations until he had had a decent sleep. That would be his one condition.

He said, "I took it off the hook. I was working."

They were in fourth gear and traveling well under twenty miles an hour. The speedometer needle was shaking.

Gla.s.s said, "I need to speak to you. I'll be straight with you, Leonard. I'm not happy."

Leonard saw a clean white cell, a single bed with cotton sheets, and silence, and a man outside the door to guard him.

He said, "Oh?"

"On several counts," Gla.s.s said. "One, you had more than a hundred and twenty dollars to spend on entertainment for our evening. I gather you've blown it all on one act. One hour."

Perhaps it would be one of the friendly ones on the gate, Jake, or Lee or Howie. They would lift one of the pieces out. Sir, this isn't electronic equipment, this is a human arm Sir, this isn't electronic equipment, this is a human arm. Someone might be sick. Gla.s.s, perhaps, who was moving to his second point.

"Two. This one-hundred-and-twenty-dollar hour is going to be one lonely dude playing the bagpipes. Leonard, bagpipes is not everyone's idea of a good time. It's not anyone's anyone's, for Chrissakes. Do you mean we're going to have to sit there for one hour and listen to this howling s.h.i.t?"

Sometimes a white line flashed across the hole. Leonard mumbled into it, "We could dance."

In a theatrical gesture, Gla.s.s clamped his hand over his eyes. Leonard did not look up from his hole. The Beetle held its course.

"Third. There are going to be some intelligence bra.s.s there, Leonard, including some of your own guys. D'you know what they're going to say?"

"When everyone's had a few drinks," Leonard said, "there's nothing quite like a lament."

"Lament is right. They're gonna say, Hmm, American food, German wines and Scottish Scottish entertainment. Is it Scotland in Gold? Do we have a special relationship with Scotland? Did Scotland join NATO?" entertainment. Is it Scotland in Gold? Do we have a special relationship with Scotland? Did Scotland join NATO?"

"There was a singing dog," Leonard muttered without lifting his head. "But there again, it was English."

Gla.s.s had not heard. "Leonard, you've screwed up, and I want you to fix it this morning, while there's still time. We'll drop this equipment off, then I'm going to drive you up to the Scots Greys barracks in Spandau. You're going to talk to the sergeant, cancel the piper and get our money back. Okay?"

They were being overtaken by a convoy of trucks, so Gla.s.s did not, notice that his pa.s.senger was giggling.

The antenna cl.u.s.ter on the warehouse roof was visible. Gla.s.s was slowing down further. "These guys are going to need to see what we've got here. They can look, but they don't need to know what it is, okay?"

The giggling fit had pa.s.sed. "Oh G.o.d," Leonard said.

They stopped. Gla.s.s was winding down his window as the sentry came toward them. It was not a face they recognized.

"This one's new," Gla.s.s said. "And his friend. That means it's going to take longer."

The face that filled the window was pink and large; the eyes were eager. "Good morning, sir."

"Morning, soldier." Gla.s.s handed both pa.s.ses to him.

The sentry straightened and spent a minute examining them. Gla.s.s said without lowering his voice, "These guys are trained to be keen. They have to do six months' duty before they ease off some."

It was true. Howie might have recognized them and waved them through.

The eighteen-year-old face was in the window again. The pa.s.ses were handed back. "Sir, I need to look in the trunk, and I have to see inside that bag."

Gla.s.s got out of the car and opened the front. He heaved the case onto the road and knelt by it. From where he sat, Leonard watched Gla.s.s unbuckling the straps. He had ten seconds or so left. He could, after all, just run off down the road. It could hardly make matters worse. He got out of the ear. The second sentry, who looked even younger than the first, had come up behind Gla.s.s and was touching him on the shoulder.

"Sir, we'd like to see it in the guard room."

Gla.s.s was making a great show of arguing with no one. In security matters, his enthusiastic compliance was intended to set an example. One of the straps was already undone. Ignoring it, he hugged the whole case to his chest and staggered with it to the hut by the side of the road. The first soldier had opened Gla.s.s's door, and now he stood back politely to allow Leonard to drag the other case out. The two sentries followed him as he carried the case with two hands to the hut.

There was a small wooden table with a telephone on it. Gla.s.s put the telephone on the floor and with a squeezed-out grunt lifted his case onto the table. There was barely room for four of them in the hut. Leonard knew Gla.s.s well enough to recognize that all the straining and heaving had made him bad-tempered. He stood back, breathing noisily through his nose and stroking his beard. He had carried the case over; now it was up to the sentries to open it. And if they failed in their procedures, they could be sure of being reported.