"Suppose he changes his appearance?"

  "It's a bit difficult in his case."

  Thomson was interrupted by the waiter. Both men refused the Black Forest gateau and chose ices instead. Walden ordered half a bottle of champagne.

  Thomson went on: "He can't hide his height, nor his Russian accent. And he has distinctive features. He hasn't had time to grow a beard. He may wear different clothes, shave himself bald or wear a wig. If I were he I should go about in a uniform of some kind--as a sailor, or a footman, or a priest. But policemen are alert to that sort of thing."

  After their ices they had Stilton cheese and sweet biscuits with some of the club's vintage port.

  It was all too vague, Walden felt. Feliks was loose, and Walden would not feel safe until the fellow was locked up and chained to the wall.

  Thomson said: "Feliks is clearly one of the top killers of the international revolutionist conspiracy. He is very well informed: for example, he knew that Prince Orlov was going to be here in England. He is also clever, and formidably determined. However, we have hidden Orlov away."

  Walden wondered what Thomson was getting at.

  "By contrast," Thomson went on, "you are still walking about the streets of London as large as life."

  "Why should I not?"

  "If I were Feliks, I would now concentrate on you. I would follow you in the hope that you might lead me to Orlov; or I would kidnap you and torture you until you told me where he was."

  Walden lowered his eyes to hide his fear. "How could he do that alone?"

  "He may have help. I want you to have a bodyguard."

  Walden shook his head. "I've got my man Pritchard. He would risk his life for me--he has done, in the past."

  "Is he armed?"

  "No."

  "Can he shoot?"

  "Very well. He used to come with me to Africa in my big-game hunting days. That's when he risked his life for me."

  "Then let him carry a pistol."

  "All right," Walden assented. "I'll be going to the country tomorrow. I've got a revolver there which he can have."

  To finish the meal Walden had a peach and Thomson took a melba pear. Afterward they went into the smoking room for coffee and biscuits. Walden lit a cigar. "I think I shall walk home, for my digestion's sake." He tried to say it calmly, but his voice sounded oddly high-pitched.

  "I'd rather you didn't," Thomson said. "Haven't you brought your carriage?"

  "No--"

  "I should be happier about your safety if you were to go everywhere in your own vehicles from now on."

  "Very well," Walden sighed. "I shall have to eat less."

  "For today, take a cab. Perhaps I'll accompany you."

  "Do you really think that's necessary?"

  "He might be waiting for you outside this club."

  "How would he find out which club I belong to?"

  "By looking you up in Who's Who."

  "Yes, of course." Walden shook his head. "One just doesn't think of these things."

  Thomson looked at his watch. "I should get back to the Yard . . . if you're ready."

  "Certainly."

  They left the club. Feliks was not lying in wait outside. They took a cab to Walden's house; then Thomson took the cab on to Scotland Yard. Walden went into the house. It felt empty. He decided to go to his room. He sat at the window and finished his cigar.

  He felt the need to talk to someone. He looked at his watch: Lydia would have had her siesta, and would now be putting on a gown ready to have tea and receive callers. He went through to her room.

  She was sitting at her mirror in a robe. She looks strained, he thought; it's all this trouble. He put his hands on her shoulders, looking at her reflection in the mirror, then bent to kiss the top of her head. "Feliks Kschessinsky."

  "What?" She seemed frightened.

  "That's the name of our assassin. Does it mean something to you?"

  "No."

  "I thought you seemed to recognize it."

  "It . . . it rings a bell."

  "Basil Thomson has found out all about the fellow. He's a killer, a thoroughly evil type. It's not impossible that you might have come across him in St. Petersburg--that would explain why he seemed vaguely familiar when he called here, and why his name rings a bell."

  "Yes--that must be it."

  Walden went to the window and looked out over the park. It was the time of day when nannies took their charges for a walk. The paths were crowded with perambulators, and every bench was occupied by gossiping women in unfashionable clothes. It occurred to Walden that Lydia might have had some connection with Feliks, back in St. Petersburg--some connection which she did not want to admit. The thought was shaming, and he pushed it out of his mind. He said: "Thomson believes that when Feliks realizes Aleks is hidden away, he will try to kidnap me."

  Lydia got up from her chair and came to him. She put her arms around his waist and laid her head on his chest. She did not speak.

  Walden stroked her hair. "I must go everywhere in my own coach, and Pritchard must carry a pistol."

  She looked up at him, and to his surprise he saw that her gray eyes were full of tears. She said, "Why is this happening to us? First Charlotte gets involved in a riot; then you're threatened--it seems we're all in jeopardy."

  "Nonsense. You're in no danger, and Charlotte is only being a silly girl. And I'll be well protected." He stroked her sides. He could feel the warmth of her body through the thin robe--she was not wearing her corset. He wanted to make love to her, right now. They had never done it in daylight.

  He kissed her mouth. She pressed her body against his, and he realized that she, too, wanted to make love. He could not remember her being like this ever before. He glanced toward the door, thinking to lock it. He looked at her, and she gave a barely perceptible nod. A tear rolled down her nose. Walden went to the door.

  Someone knocked.

  "Damn!" Walden said quietly.

  Lydia turned her face away from the door and dabbed at her eyes with a handkerchief.

  Pritchard came in. "Excuse me, my lord. An urgent telephone communication from Mr. Basil Thomson. They have tracked the man Feliks to his lodging. If you want to be in at the kill, Mr. Thomson will pick you up here in three minutes."

  "Get my hat and coat," Walden told him.

  TEN

  When Feliks went out to get the morning paper he seemed to see children every way he turned. In the courtyard a group of girls played a game involving dancing and chanting. The boys were playing cricket with a wicket chalked on the wall and a piece of rotten planking for a bat. In the street, older boys were pushing handcarts. He bought his newspaper from an adolescent girl. As he went back to his room, his way was blocked by a naked baby crawling up the stairs. As he looked at the child--it was a girl--she stood up unsteadily and slowly toppled backward. Feliks caught her and put her down on the landing. Her mother came out of an open door. She was a pale young woman with greasy hair, already very pregnant with another child. She scooped the baby girl up off the floor and disappeared back into her room with a suspicious look at Feliks.

  Every time he considered exactly how he would bamboozle Charlotte into telling him the whereabouts of Orlov, he seemed to run up against a brick wall in his mind. He visualized getting the information out of her sneakily, without her knowing she was telling him; or by giving her a cock-and-bull story like the one he had given Lydia; or by telling her straight out that he wanted to kill Orlov; and his imagination recoiled at each scene.

  When he thought about what was at stake he found his feelings ridiculous. He had a chance to save millions of lives and possibly spark the Russian Revolution--and he was worried about lying to an upper-class girl! It was not as if he intended to do her any harm--just use her, deceive her and betray her trust, his own daughter, whom he had only just met . . .

  To occupy his hands he began to fashion the homemade dynamite into a primitive bomb. He packed the nitroglycerine-soaked cotton waste into a cr
acked china vase. He considered the problem of detonation. Burning paper alone might not be sufficient. He stuffed half a dozen matches into the cotton so that only their bright red heads showed. It was difficult to get the matches to stand upright because his hands were unsteady.

  My hands never shake.

  What is happening to me?

  He twisted a piece of newspaper into a taper and stuck one end into the middle of the match heads, then tied the heads together with a length of cotton. He found it very difficult to tie the knot.

  He read all the international news in The Times, plowing doggedly through the turgid English sentences. He was more or less sure that there would be a war, but more or less sure no longer seemed enough. He would have been happy to kill a useless idler like Orlov, then find out that it had been to no purpose. But to destroy his relationship with Charlotte to no purpose . . .

  Relationship? What relationship?

  You know what relationship.

  Reading The Times made his head ache. The print was too small and his room was dark. It was a wretchedly conservative newspaper. It ought to be blown up.

  He longed to see Charlotte again.

  He heard shuffling footsteps on the landing outside; then there was a knock at the door.

  "Come in," he called carelessly.

  The caretaker came in, coughing. "Morning."

  "Good morning, Mr. Price." What did the old fool want now?

  "What's that?" said Price, nodding to the bomb on the table.

  "Homemade candle," Feliks said. "Lasts months. What do you want?"

  "I wondered if you needed a spare pair of sheets. I can get them at a very low price--"

  "No, thank you," Feliks said. "Good-bye."

  "Good-bye, then." Price went out.

  I should have hidden that bomb, Feliks thought.

  What is happening to me?

  "Yes, he's in there," Price said to Basil Thomson.

  Tension knotted in Walden's stomach.

  They sat in the back of a police car parked around the corner from Canada Buildings, where Feliks was. With them was an inspector from the Special Branch and a uniformed superintendent from Southwark police station.

  If they could catch Feliks now, then Aleks would be safe: what a relief that will be, Walden thought.

  Thomson said: "Mr. Price went to the police station to report that he had rented a room to a suspicious character with a foreign accent who had very little money and was growing a beard as if to change his appearance. He identified Feliks from our artist's drawing. Well done, Price."

  "Thank you, sir."

  The uniformed superintendent unfolded a large-scale map. He was maddeningly slow and deliberate. "Canada Buildings consists of three five-story tenements around a courtyard. Each building has three stairwells. As you stand at the entrance to the courtyard, Toronto House is on your right. Feliks is on the middle staircase and the top floor. Behind Toronto House is the yard of a builder's merchant."

  Walden contained his impatience.

  "On your left is Vancouver House, and behind Vancouver House is another street. The third building, straight ahead of you as you stand at the courtyard entrance, is Montreal House, which backs on to the railway line."

  Thomson pointed to the map. "What's that, in the middle of the courtyard?"

  "The privy," replied the superintendent. "And a real stinker, too, with all those people using it."

  Walden thought: Get on with it!

  Thomson said: "It seems to me that Feliks has three ways out of the courtyard. First, the entrance: obviously we'll block that. Second, at the opposite end of the courtyard on the left, the alley between Vancouver House and Montreal House. It leads to the next street. Put three men in the alley, superintendent."

  "Very good, sir."

  "Third, the alley between Montreal House and Toronto House. This alley leads to the builder's yard. Another three men in there."

  The superintendent nodded.

  "Now, do these tenements have back windows?"

  "Yes, sir."

  "So Feliks has a fourth escape route from Toronto House: out of the back window and across the builder's yard. Better put six men in the builder's yard. Finally, let's have a nice show of strength right here in the middle of the courtyard, to encourage him to come along quietly. Does all that meet with your approval, Superintendent?"

  "More than adequate, I'd say, sir."

  He doesn't know what kind of man we're dealing with, Walden thought.

  Thomson said: "You and Inspector Sutton here can make the arrest. Got your gun, Sutton?"

  Sutton pulled aside his coat to show a small revolver strapped under his arm. Walden was surprised: He had thought that no British policeman ever carried a firearm. Obviously the Special Branch was different. He was glad.

  Thomson said to Sutton: "Take my advice--have it in your hand when you knock on his door." He turned to the uniformed superintendent. "You'd better take my gun."

  The superintendent was mildly offended. "I've been twenty-five years in the force and never felt the lack of a firearm, sir, so if it's all the same to you I shan't begin now."

  "Policemen have died trying to arrest this man."

  "I'm afraid I've never been taught to shoot, sir."

  Good God, Walden thought despairingly, how can people like us deal with people like Feliks?

  Thomson said: "Lord Walden and I will be at the courtyard entrance."

  "You'll stay in the car, sir?"

  "We'll stay in the car."

  Let's go, thought Walden.

  "Let's go," said Thomson.

  Feliks realized he was hungry. He had not eaten for more than twenty-four hours. He wondered what to do. Now that he had stubble on his chin and working-class clothes, he would be watched by shopkeepers, so it would be more difficult for him to steal.

  He pulled himself up at that thought. It's never difficult to steal, he told himself. Let's see: I could go to a suburban house--the kind where they are likely to have only one or two servants--and walk in at the tradesmen's entrance. There would be a maid in the kitchen, or perhaps a cook. "I am a madman," I would say with a smile, "but if you make me a sandwich I won't rape you." I would move toward the door to block her escape. She might scream, in which case I should go away and try another house. But, most likely, she would give me the food. "Thank you," I would say. "You are kind." Then I would walk away. It is never difficult to steal.

  Money was a problem. Feliks thought: As if I could afford a pair of sheets! The caretaker was an optimist. Surely he knew that Feliks had no money . . .

  Surely he knows I've no money.

  On reflection, Price's reason for coming to Feliks's room was suspicious. Was he just optimistic? Or was he checking? I seem to be slowing down, Feliks thought. He stood up and went to the window.

  Jesus Christ.

  The courtyard was alive with blue-uniformed policemen.

  Feliks stared down at them in horror.

  The sight made him think of a nest of worms, wriggling and crawling over one another in a hole in the ground.

  His instincts screamed: Run! Run! Run!

  Where?

  They had blocked all exits from the courtyard.

  Feliks remembered the back windows.

  He ran from his room and along the landing to the back of the tenement. There a window looked out on to the builder's yard behind. He peered down into the yard and saw five or six policemen taking up positions among the piles of bricks and stacks of planking. There was no escape that way.

  That left only the roof.

  He ran back to his room and looked out. The policemen were still, all but two men--one in uniform and one in plain clothes--who were walking purposefully across the courtyard toward Feliks's stair.

  He picked up his bomb and the box of matches and ran down to the landing below. A small door with a latch gave access to a cupboard beneath the stairs. Feliks opened the door and placed the bomb inside. He lit the paper fuse and clo
sed the cupboard door. He turned around. He had time to run up the stairs before the fuse burned down--

  The baby girl was crawling up the stairs.

  Shit.

  He picked her up and dashed through the door into her room. Her mother sat on the dirty bed, staring vacantly at the wall. Feliks thrust the baby into her arms and yelled: "Stay here! Don't move!" The woman looked scared.

  He ran out. The two men were one floor below. Feliks raced up the stairs--

  Don't blow now don't blow now don't

  --to his landing. They heard him, and one shouted: "Hey, you!" They broke into a run.

  Feliks dashed into his room, picked up the cheap straight-backed chair, carried it out to the landing and positioned it directly under the trapdoor leading to the loft.

  The bomb had not exploded.

  Perhaps it would not work.

  Feliks stood on the chair.

  The two men hit the stairs.

  Feliks pushed open the trapdoor.

  The uniformed policeman shouted: "You're under arrest!"

  The plainclothes man raised a gun and pointed it at Feliks.

  The bomb went off.

  There was a big dull thud like something very heavy falling and the staircase broke up into matchwood which flew everywhere and the two men were flung backward and the debris burst into flames and Feliks hauled himself up into the loft.

  "Damn, he's exploded a damn bomb!" Thomson shouted.

  Walden thought: It's going wrong--again.

  There was a crash as shards of glass from a fourth-floor window hit the ground.

  Walden and Thomson jumped out of the car and ran across the courtyard.

  Thomson picked two uniformed policemen at random. "You and you--come inside with me." He turned to Walden. "You stay here." They ran inside.

  Walden backed across the courtyard, looking up at the windows of Toronto House.

  Where is Feliks?

  He heard a policeman say: "He've gorn out the back, you mark my words."

  Four or five slates fell off the roof and shattered in the courtyard--loosened, Walden assumed, by the explosion.

  Walden kept feeling the urge to look back over his shoulder, as if Feliks might suddenly appear behind him, from nowhere.

  The residents of the tenements were coming to their doors and windows to see what was going on, and the courtyard began to fill with people. Some of the policemen made halfhearted attempts to send them back inside. A woman ran out of Toronto House screaming: "Fire!"