“You can’t talk of one nation as if it didn’t exist. That implies there are two nations, two classes, a divide which runs between us, top dogs and the downtrodden. The term reeks of unfairness and injustice. It’s not on, sir!”

  “Prime Minister, you exaggerate. I’m simply drawing attention to the principle—exactly the same principle as your Government has just endorsed in my Christmas address to the Commonwealth. North and South, First World and Third, the need to secure advancement for the poor, to bring the different parts of the world community closer together.”

  “That’s different.”

  “How?”

  “Because…”

  “Because they’re black? Live in distant corners of the world? Don’t have votes, Prime Minister?”

  “You underestimate the power of your words. It’s not what the words mean; it’s how others will interpret them.” He waved his arms in exasperation and sought to pummel life back into his frozen limbs. “Your words would be used to attack the Government in every marginal constituency in the country.”

  “To read criticism of the Government into a few generalized Christmastime sentiments would be ridiculous. Christmas isn’t just for those with bank accounts. Every church in the country will be ringing to the stories of Good King Wenceslas. Would you have him banned as politically contentious? Anyway, marginal seats, indeed…We’ve only just had an election. It’s not as if we have to worry about another just yet.”

  Urquhart knew it was time to back down. He couldn’t reveal his election plans—Palace officials were notoriously gossipy—and he had no taste for a personal dispute with the Monarch. He sensed that danger lay therein. “Forgive me, sir. Perhaps the cold has made me a little too sensitive. Just let me say there are potential dangers with any subject as emotive and complex as this. Perhaps I could suggest you allow us to see a draft of the speech so that we can check the detail for you? Make sure the statistics are accurate, that the language is unlikely to be misinterpreted? I believe it is the custom.”

  “Check my speech? Censorship, Mr. Urquhart?”

  “Heavens, no. I’m sure you would find our advice entirely helpful. We would take a positive attitude, I can guarantee.” His politician’s smile was back, trying to thaw the atmosphere, but he knew it would take more than flattery. The King was a man of rigid principles; he’d worked hard for many years developing them, and he wasn’t going to see them smothered by a smile and a politician’s promise.

  “Let me put it another way,” Urquhart continued, his leg once more going into spasm. “Very soon, within the next few weeks, the House of Commons must vote on the new Civil List. You know how in recent years the amount of money provided for the Royal Family has become increasingly a subject of dispute. It would help neither you nor me if you were engaged in a matter of political controversy at a time when the House wanted to review your finances in a cool, constructive manner.”

  “You’re trying to buy my silence!” the King snapped. Neither man was renowned for his patience, and they were goading each other on.

  “If you want a semantic debate then I put it to you that the whole concept of a constitutional monarchy and the Civil List is precisely that—we buy your silence and active cooperation. That’s part of the job. But really…” The Prime Ministerial exasperation was undisguised. “All I’m offering is a sensible means for us both to avoid a potential problem. You know it makes sense.”

  The King turned away to gaze across the bedraggled lawns. His hands were behind his back, his fingers toying irritably with the signet ring on his little finger. “What has happened to us, Mr. Urquhart? Just a few moments ago we were talking of a bright new future, now we haggle over money and the meaning of words.” He looked back toward Urquhart, who could see the anguish in his eyes. “I am a man of strong passion, and sometimes my passion runs ahead of what I know is sensible.” It was as close to an apology as Urquhart was going to get. “Of course you shall see the speech, as Governments have always seen the Monarch’s speeches. And of course I shall accept any suggestion you feel you must make. I suppose I have no choice. I would simply ask that you allow me to play some role, however small and discreet, in pushing forward those ideals I hold so deeply. Within the conventions. I hope that is not too much to ask.”

  “Sir, I would hope that in many years to come you and I, as Monarch and Prime Minister, will be able to look back on today’s misunderstanding and laugh.”

  “Spoken like a true politician.”

  Urquhart was uncertain whether the words implied compliment or rebuke. “We have our principles, too.”

  “And so do I. You may silence me, Prime Minister; that is your right. But you will not get me to deny my principles.”

  “Every man, even a monarch, is allowed his principles.”

  The King smiled thinly. “Sounds like an interesting new constitutional concept. I look forward to discussing it with you further.” The audience was over.

  Urquhart sat in the back of his armored Jaguar, trying vainly to scrape mud from his shoes. He remembered that George III, finished with the oak tree, had also made a general of his horse. His mind filled with visions of a countryside turned over once again to the yoke and plow and city streets smothered in decaying horse manure, By Royal Appointment. His feet were frozen, he thought he was developing a cold, his Environment Secretary was a complete dolt, and it was scarcely nine weeks before he wanted to call an election. He could take no chances; there was no time for cock-ups. There could be no suggestion of a Two Nation debate with the Government inevitably on the receiving end. It was impossible; he couldn’t take the risk. The King would have to be stopped.

  Ten

  Political principles are like the women of a harem. You need to dress them up, put them on display frequently, and occasionally pick one out for special attention. But never spend too much time or money on them; otherwise, they may come to possess you.

  The taxi picked her up from home seven minutes late, which made her furious. She decided it would be for the last time; they’d been late three times this week. Sally Quine didn’t want to be mistaken for other women, the kind who arrive for client meetings habitually late, flash a leg in excuse, and laugh a lot. She didn’t mind showing off a leg but she hated having to offer excuses and always ensured she arrived anywhere five minutes before the rest so she would be fully prepared and in charge of proceedings. The early bird always hijacks the agenda. She would fire the taxi firm first thing in the morning.

  She closed the door to her home behind her. It was a terraced house in a highly fashionable part of Islington with small rooms and reasonable overheads. It represented all that she’d been able to squeeze out of the wreckage she had left behind in Boston, but in the banks’ view it was good collateral for the loans on her business, and at the moment that was more important than running the sort of gin palace and entertainment lounge preferred by most of her larger competitors. It had two bedrooms, one of which had come set up as a nursery. It had been the first room to be ripped apart; she couldn’t bear the sight of any more bears bouncing across the wallpaper and the memories they brought with them. The room was now covered in impersonal filing cabinets and shelves carrying thick piles of computer printout rather than talcum powder and tubs of Vaseline. She didn’t think of her baby too often, she couldn’t afford to. It hadn’t been her fault, no one’s fault really, but that hadn’t dammed the flood of guilt. She had sat and watched the tiny hand clutching her little finger, the only part of her body small enough for him to cling to, his eyes closed, struggling for each breath, all but submerged beneath the impersonal tubes and anonymous surgical paraphernalia. She had sat and sat and watched, and watched, as the struggle was gradually lost and the strength and spirit of the tiny bundle had faded away, to nothing. Not her fault, everyone had said so. Everyone, that is, except that slimehound of a husband.

  “Downing Street, you say,” comment
ed the cab driver, ignoring a barbed rejoinder about his timing. “You work there, do you?” He seemed relieved to discover she was simply another ordinary sufferer and began a steady monologue composed of complaints and observations about their political masters. It was not that he was ill-disposed toward the Government, which seemed one stage removed from his daily life since he took all his fares in cash and therefore paid practically no income tax. “It’s just the streets are looking grim, luv. A week before Christmas and it’s not really happening. Shops half empty, fewer people needing cabs and those what do are skimping on the tips. Dunno what your pals in Downing Street are saying, but tell ’em from me the tough times are right around the corner. Old Francis Urquhart better pull his socks up or he won’t be long in following what’s-his-name…er, Collingridge.”

  Less than a month out of office and already the memory was beginning to slip inexorably from the mind.

  She ignored his chatter as they meandered through the dark, drizzly streets of Covent Garden, past the restored monument of Seven Dials that marked what had been some of the worst slums of Dickensian London with its typhoid and footpads and that now presided over the heart of London’s Theatreland. They passed a theater that stood dark and empty; the show had closed, in what should have been the busiest time of year. Straws in the wind, she thought, remembering Landless’s warning, or maybe great armfuls of hay.

  The taxi dropped her off at the top of Downing Street and in spite of his blunt hints she refused to sign for a tip. The policeman at the wrought-iron gate consulted the personal radio tucked away beneath his rain cape, there was a crackle in response and he let her through. A hundred yards away loomed the black door, which swung open even before she had put her foot on the step. She signed a visitors’ book in the entrance hall, which was deserted except for a couple of policemen. There was none of the bustle and activity she had expected and none of the crowds of the evening she had met Urquhart. It seemed as if Christmas had arrived early.

  Within three minutes she had passed through as many sets of hands, each civil servant contriving to appear more important than the last, as she was led upstairs, through corridors, past display cases full of porcelain until she was shown into an inner office and the door closed behind her. They were on their own.

  “Miss Quine. So good of you to come.” Francis Urquhart stubbed out a cigarette and held out his hand, guiding her toward the comfortable leather chairs placed in the corner of his first-floor study. The room was dark, book-lined, and very masculine, with no overhead light and the sole illumination coming from a desk lamp and two side lights. It was reminiscent of the timeless, smoky atmosphere of the gentlemen’s club on Pall Mall she had visited one ladies’ night.

  As he offered her a drink she studied him carefully. The prominent temples, the tired but defiant eyes that never seemed to rest. He was thirty years older than she. Why had he brought her here? What sort of research was he truly interested in? As he busied himself with two glasses of whiskey she noted he had soft hands, perfectly formed, with slender fingers and nails that were carefully manicured. So unlike those of her former husband. She couldn’t imagine those hands clenched and balled, thrusting into her face or pounding her belly into miscarriage, the final act of their matrimonial madness. Damn all men!

  Her memories bothered her as she took the proffered crystal tumbler and sipped the whiskey. She spat in distaste. “Do you have any ice and soda?”

  “It’s a single malt,” he protested.

  “And I’m a single girl. My mother always told me never to take it neat.”

  He seemed amused by her outspokenness. “Of course. But let me ask you to persevere, just for a little. It really is a very special whiskey distilled near my birthplace in the Highlands, and would be ruined by anything other than a little water. Try a few sips to acquire the taste and, if not, I’ll drown you in as many club sodas and ice cubes as I can find.”

  She sipped again; it was a little less fiery. She nodded. “That’s something I’ve learned this evening.”

  “One of the many benefits of getting older is that I have learned a lot about men and whiskey. About women, however, it seems I am still quite ignorant. According to you.”

  “I’ve brought some figures…” She stretched down for her bag.

  “Before we look at that, I have another topic.” He settled back in his chair, a reflective mood on his face as he held his glass in both hands, like a don quizzing one of his charges. “Tell me, how much respect do you have for the Royal Family?”

  Her nose wrinkled as she savored the unexpected question. “Professionally, I’m completely uncommitted. I’m not paid to respect anything, only to analyze it. And personally…?” She shrugged her shoulders. “I’m American, from Paul Revere country. Used to be when we saw one of the King’s men, we shot him. Now it’s just another kind of show business. Does that upset you?”

  He ducked the question. “The King is keen to make a speech about One Nation, about pulling together the divisions in the country. A popular theme, do you think?”

  “Of course. It’s a sentiment expected of a nation’s leaders.”

  “A powerful theme, too, then?”

  “That depends. If you’re running for Archbishop of Canterbury then it’s bound to help. The nation’s moral conscience and all that.” She paused, waiting for some sign that she was moving in the right direction. All she got was the arched eyebrow of a professor in his lair; she would have to fly this one entirely on instinct. “But politics, that’s a different matter. It’s expected of politicians, but rather like background music is expected in a lift. What matters to the voters is not the music but whether the lift they’re traveling in is going up or down—or more accurately, whether they perceive the lift to be going up or down.”

  “Tell me about perceptions.” He studied her with more than academic interest. He liked what he heard, and what he saw. As she talked and particularly when she became animated, the point of her nose bobbed up and down as if she were conducting an orchestra of thoughts. He found it fascinating, almost hypnotic.

  “If you were brought up on a street where no one could afford shoes, yet now you’ve got a sackful of shoes but are the only family in the street without a car and a continental holiday, you feel as if you’ve gotten poorer. You look back on your childhood as the good old days, the fun of running to school in bare feet, while you resent not being able to drive to work like all the rest.”

  “And the Government gets the blame.”

  “Certainly. But what matters politically is how many others in the street feel the same way. Once they’re locked behind their front doors, or in a polling booth come to that, their conscience about their neighbor down the street matters much less than whether their own car is the latest model. You can’t feed a family or fill up a gas tank on moral conscience.”

  “I’ve never tried,” he mused. “So what about the other divisions? Celtic fringe versus prosperous South. Homeowners versus homeless.”

  “Bluntly, you’re down to less than twenty percent support in Scotland anyway, you don’t have many seats there left to lose. And as for the homeless, it’s difficult to get onto the electoral register with an address like Box Three, Row D, Cardboard City. They’re not a logical priority.”

  “Some would say that’s a little cynical.”

  “If you want moral judgments, call a priest. I analyze, I don’t judge. There are divisions in every society. You can’t be all things to all men and it’s a waste of time trying.” The nose wobbled aggressively. “What’s important is to be something to the majority, to make them believe that they, at least, are on the right side of the divide.”

  “So, right now, and over the next few weeks, which side will the majority perceive themselves to be?”

  She pondered, remembering her conversations with Landless and the taxi driver, the closed theater. “You’re gaining a small lead
in the polls, but it’s finely balanced. Volatile. They don’t really know you yet. The debate could go either way.”

  He was staring at her directly across the rim of his glass. “Forget debate. Let’s talk about open warfare. Could your opinion polls tell who would win such a war?”

  She leaned forward in her chair, as if to get closer to him in order to share a confidence. “Opinion polls are like a cloudy crystal ball. They can help you look into the future, but it depends what questions you ask. And on how good a gypsy you are.”

  His eyes fired with appreciation.

  “I couldn’t tell you who would win such a war. But I could help wage it. Opinion polls are weapons, mighty powerful weapons at times. Ask the right question at the right time, get the right answer, leak it to the press…If you plan a campaign with expertise, you can have your opponent pronounced dead before he realizes there’s a war on.”

  “Tell me, O Gypsy, why is it that I don’t hear this from other opinion pollsters?”

  “First, because most pollsters are concerned with what people are thinking right now, at this moment in time. What we are talking about is moving opinion from where it is now to where you want it to be in the future. That’s called political leadership, and it’s a rare quality.”

  He knew he was being flattered, and liked it. “And the second reason?”

  She took a sip from her glass, recrossed her legs and took off her glasses, shaking her dark hair as she did so. “Because I’m better than the rest.”

  He smiled in return. He liked dealing with her, both as a professional and as a woman. Downing Street could be a lonely place. He had a Cabinet full of supposedly expert Ministers whose duty it was to take most of the decisions, leaving him only to pull the strings and carry the can if the rest of them got it horribly wrong. Few Government papers came to him unless he asked for them. He was protected from the outside world by a highly professional staff, a posse of security men, mortarproof windows and huge iron gates. And Mortima was always off taking those damned evening classes…He needed someone to confide in, to gather his ideas and sort them into coherent order, who had self-confidence, who didn’t owe their job to him, who looked good. Who believed she was the best.