His weariness descended again as Marisa poured out the coffees and talked of the wolfhounds. They usually met in St James’s Park when she was out walking the dogs. No doubt Legister had her shadowed for security reasons. No doubt he knew of their liaison. This hadn’t concerned him unduly while they met in public places. But now she was here, in his private domain.
He took his coffee from her, holding it to his nose, inhaling its fragrance. A sip, its delicious sugared warmth spreading through him.
“Look at you,” Marisa said. “You are a mess.”
She said it affectionately. I would have smiled and even winked at her; but not Owain.
“It must be late,” he remarked.
“Soon I will go, and you can sleep.”
“I should ride home with you. In case you’re stopped.”
“Ridiculous! It is no distance. I have my identification, and they will see who I am. Besides, you are like the cat has dragged you home. You need someone to look after you, Owain.”
“Are you volunteering?”
She laughed out loud, as though he had told a vulgar joke. Owain blushed, mortified by his own boldness, though it had in fact been prompted by me. I sensed him stiffening his control.
Outside a night patrol helicopter went by. Owain idly wondered if it was the same one that had sent him fleeing like a subversive less than an hour before. He swallowed a yawn. The coffee had done nothing to drown his exhaustion.
“Lay your head on my lap,” Marisa said. “I will stroke it until you fall asleep. Then I will go.”
Somewhat self-consciously he did so. He felt the warmth of her slender thighs across the back of his head, her splayed fingers tracing slow paths across his scalp. Sensing an opportunity to escape, I willed him to relax.
Despite himself he began to bathe in sensation; it was years since anyone had touched him in this way. Marisa was humming again, the same elusive melody.
Rain on the window. It was night and I was alone in my room. Slowly I rolled over. Tanya was long gone, a folded newspaper on her chair.
I couldn’t gauge how long it had been since I had departed from Owain. It might have been a matter of seconds or hours. Everything was jumbled, fragmented.
Determinedly I resisted the impulse to ponder Owain’s situation, to dwell on his encounter with Marisa. It was too seductive, in more ways than one. Instead I managed to reach out and grab the newspaper.
It was the
Laboriously I worked my way through the newspaper, inspecting every story. There was nothing, no mention of it anywhere.
By the time I’d reached the sports section my head was pounding but my spirits had begun to soar. An explosion in the middle of the capital? Even weeks later there would have been some reference to it, had it occurred. Which meant that it couldn’t have done.
I slumped back on the pillow, grinning with a giddy sense of relief. Though I still couldn’t explain Lyneth’s absence, at least I knew she was still alive. The girls too. I could survive the wrenching dislocations to my counterpart’s world in this knowledge. Let them come. Let them come. Nothing could daunt me as long as my family was safe.
I might have dozed: I might simply have been drifting in the shallows of sleep. But at some point I experienced a great surge of arousal which brought me to full alertness. As I lay there, sharing with Owain the same confused feeling of having been capsized from sleep, I was sway the tidal surges of a nightmare in which he had relived an episode from his recent past.
Though it came as a torrent of images and incidents, fraught with all sorts of threatening emotions, in the aftermath I could only make sense of it by reassembling it as a narrative.
SEVEN
An engine roar, a bumpy ride. Owain driving along a frozen mud track that meandered across a pockmarked wasteland. Four other men in the Spectre, including his commander, Major van Oost, who sat in the co-driver’s seat and kept yelling at him to slow down.
Dropped by Fishtail at dawn, they were deep within the No-Go Zone that stretched from the Baltic to the Black Sea. They’d been sent in to check out satellite evidence of heavy vehicle movements near Minsk. The city itself was just a name on a map: it had been obliterated during the limited nuclear exchanges of the nineteen fifties.
An abrasive babble over the satellite link as the major received the latest update from CommandCom in Leipzig. A remote-imaging satellite had picked up possible exhaust heat signatures in their target area. They were to proceed with extreme caution.