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    Passenger to Frankfurt

    Page 2
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    coloured seats, too full of plastic, too full of human

      beings, too full of crying children. ?He tried to remember who

      had said:

      I wish I loved the Human Race;

      I wish I loved its silly face

      Chesterton perhaps? It was undoubtedly true. Put enough

      people together and they looked so painfully alike that

      one could hardly bear it. An interesting face now, thought

      Sir Stafford. What a difference it would make. He looked

      15

      disparagingly at two young women, splendidly made up.

      dressed in the national uniform of their country�England

      he presumed�of shorter and shorter miniskirts, and another

      young woman, even better made up�in fact quite goodlooking�who

      was wearing what he believed to be called a

      culotte suit. She had gone a little further along the road of

      fashion.

      He wasn't very interested in nice-looking girls who looked

      like all the other nice-looking girls. He would like someone

      to be different. Someone sat down beside him on the plasticcovered

      artificial leather settee on which he was sitting. Her

      face attracted his attention at once. Not precisely because

      it was different, in fact he almost seemed to recognize it as

      a face he knew. Here was someone he had seen before.

      He couldn't remember where or when but it was certainly

      familiar. Twenty-five or six, he thought, possibly, as to age. A

      delicate high-bridged aquiline nose, a black heavy bush of

      hair reaching to her shoulders. She had a magazine in front

      of her but she was not paying attention to it. She was, in fact,

      looking with something that was almost eagerness at him.

      Quite suddenly she spoke. It was a deep contralto voice, almost

      as deep as a man's. It had a very faint foreign accent. She

      said,

      �Can I speak to you?'

      He studied her for a moment before replying. No�not

      what one might have thought�this wasn't a pick-up. This

      was something else.

      'I see no reason,' he said, "why you should not do so.

      We have time to waste here, it seems.'

      'Fog,' said the woman, 'fog in Geneva, fog in London,

      perhaps. Fog everywhere. I don't know what to do.'

      'Oh, you mustn't worry,' he said reassuringly, 'they'll

      land you somewhere all right. They're quite efficient, you

      know. Where are you going?'

      'I was going to Geneva.'

      'Well, I expect you'll get there in the end.'

      'I have to get there now. If I can get to Geneva, it will

      be all right. There is someone who will meet me there. I

      can be safe.'

      'Safe?' He smiled a little.

      She said, 'Safe is a four-letter word but not the kind of

      four-letter word that people are interested in nowadays.

      And yet it can mean a lot. It means a lot to me.' Then she

      said, 'You see, if I can't get to Geneva, if I have to leave

      this plane here, or go on in this plane to London with no

      16

      arrangements made, I shall be killed.' She looked at him

      sharply. 'I suppose you don't believe that.'

      'I'm afraid I don't.'

      'It's quite true. People can be. They are, every day.'

      'Who wants to kill you?'

      'Does it matter?'

      'Not to me.'

      'You can believe me if you wish to believe me. I am speaking the truth. I want help. Help to get to London

      safely.'

      'And why should you select me to help you?'

      'Because I think that you know something about death.

      You have known of death, perhaps seen death happen.'

      He looked sharply at her and then away again.

      'Any other reason?' he said,

      'Yes. This.' She stretched out her narrow olive-skinned

      hand and touched the folds of the voluminous cloak. This,'

      she said.

      For the first time his interest was aroused.

      'Now what do you mean by that?'

      'It's unusual--characteristic. It's not what everyone wears.'

      'True enough. It's one of my affectations, shall we say?'

      'It's an affectation that could be useful to me.'

      'What do you mean?'

      'I am asking you something. Probably yon 'will refuse

      but you might not refuse because I think you are a man

      who is ready to take risks. Just as I am a woman who takes

      risks.'

      'I'll listen to your project,' he said, with a faint smile.

      'I want your cloak to wear. I want your passport. I want

      your boarding ticket for the plane. Presently, in twenty

      minutes or so, say, the flight for London will be called. I

      shall have your passport, I shall wear your cloak. And so I

      shall travel to London and arrive safely.'

      'You mean you'll pass yourself off as me? My dear girl.'

      She opened a handbag. From it she took a small square

      mirror.

      'Look there,' she said. 'Look at me and then look at

      your own face.'

      He saw then, saw what had bee'tt vaguely nagging at his

      mind. His sister, Pamela, who had died about twenty years

      ago. They had always been very alike, he and Pamela.

      A strong family, resemblance. She had had a slightly masculine

      type of face. His face, perhaps, had been, certainly

      in early life, of a slightly effeminate type. They had both

      17

      had the high-bridged nose, the tilt of eyebrows, the sligh

      sideways smile of the lips. Pamela had been tall, five foci

      eight, he himself five foot ten. He looked at the woma^ who had tendered him the mirror.

      There is a facial likeness between us, that's what you

      mean, isn't it? But my dear girl, it wouldn't deceive anyone

      who knew me or knew you.'

      'Of course it wouldn't. Don't you understand? It doesn;

      need to. I am travelling wearing slacks. You have bee;.

      travelling with the hood of your cloak drawn up roun,.

      your face. All I have to do is to cut off my hair, wrap it u;

      in a twist of newspaper, throw it in one of the litter-baske^ here. Then I put on your burnous, I have your boards card, ticket, and passport. Unless there is someone who

      knows you well on this plane, and I presume there is not

      or they would have spoken to you already, then I cac safely travel as you. Showing your passport when it's necessary,

      keeping the burnous and cloak drawn up so that my

      nose and eyes and mouth are about all that are seen. i

      can walk out safely when the plane reaches its destination because no one will know I have travelled by it. Walk out

      safely and disappear into the crowds of the city of London.'

      'And what do I do?' asked Sir Stafford, with a slight

      smile.

      'I can make a suggestion if you have the nerve to face

      it'

      'Suggest,' he said. 'I always like to hear suggestions.'

      'You get up from here, you go away and buy a magazine

      or a newspaper, or a gift at the gift counter. You leave your

      cloak hanging here on the seat. When you come back with whatever it is, you sit down somewhere else--say at the

      end of that bench opposite here. There will be a glass in front of you, this glass still. In it there will be something

      that will send you to sleep. Sleep in a quiet corner.'

      'What happens next?'

      'You will have been presumab
    ly the victim of a robbery,'

      she said. 'Somebody will have added a few knock-out drops to your drink, and will have stolen your wallet from you.

      Something of that kind. You declare your identity, say that

      your passport and things are stolen. You can easily establish

      your identity.'

      'You know who I am? My name, I mean?'

      'Not yet,' she said. 'I haven't seen your passport yet. I've

      no idea who you are.'

      'And yet you say I can establish my identity easily.'

      18

      'I am a good judge of people. I know who is important

      or who isn't. You are an important person.'

      And why should I do all this?'

      Perhaps to save the life of a fellow human being.*

      'Isn't that rather a highly coloured story?'

      'Oh yes. Quite easily not believed. Do you believe it?'

      He looked at her thoughtfully. 'You know what you're

      talking like? A beautiful spy in a thriller.'

      'Yes, perhaps. But I am not beautiful.'

      'And you're not a spy?'

      'I might be so described, perhaps. I have certain information.

      Information I .want to preserve. You will have to

      take my word for it, it is information that would be valuable

      to your country.'

      'Don't you think you're being rather absurd?'

      'Yes I do. If this was written down it would look absurd,

      But so many absurd things are true, aren't they?'

      He looked at her again. She was very like Pamela. Her

      voice, although foreign in intonation, was like Pamela's.

      What she proposed was ridiculous, absurd, quite impossible,

      and probably dangerous. Dangerous to him. Unfortunately, though, that was what attracted him. To have the nerve to

      Jggest such a thing to him! What would come of it all? It

      mid be interesting, certainly, to find out.

      What do I get out of it?' he said. That's what I'd like

      to know.'

      She looked at him consideringly. 'Diversion,' she said.

      'Something out of the everyday happenings? An antidote

      to boredom; perhaps. We've not got very long. It's up to

      you.'

      'And what happens to your passport? Do I have to buy

      myself a wig, if they sell such a thing, at the counter? Do I

      have to impersonate a female?'

      'No. There's no question of exchanging places. You have

      been robbed and drugged but you remain yourself. Make

      up your mind. There isn't long. Time is passing very quickly. I have got to do my own transformation.'

      'You win,' he said. 'One mustn't refuse the unusual, if it

      is offered to one.'

      'I hoped you might feel that way, but it was a tossup.'

      From his pocket Stafford Nye took out his passport. He slipped it into the outer pocket of the cloak he had been

      Wearing. He rose to his feet, yawned, looked round him,

      Fked at his watch, and strolled over to the counter where

      ious goods were displayed for-sale. He did not even look

      19

      back. He bought a paperback book and fingered some sin;

      woolly animals, a suitable gift for some child. Finally L^ chose a panda. He looked round the lounge, came bac<

      to where he had been sitting. The cloak was gone and sc

      had the girl. A half glass of beer was on the table still

      Here, he thought, is where I take the risk. He picked up

      the glass, moved away a little, and drank it. Not quickly

      Quite slowly. It tasted much the same as it had tasted before

      'Now I wonder,' said Sir Stafford. 'Now I wonder.'

      He walked across the lounge to a far corner. There wa..

      a somewhat noisy family sitting there, laughing and talkir.K

      together. He sat down near them, yawned, let his head fa ;

      back on the edge of the cushion. A flight was announced

      leaving for Teheran. A large number of passengers got u;

      and went to queue by the requisite numbered gate. The lounr,;

      still remained half full. He opened his paperback book. R:

      yawned again. He was really sleepy now, yes, he was ver

      sleepy . . . He must just think out where it was best for him '

      go off to sleep. Somewhere where he could remain . . .

      Trans-European Airways announced the departure o;

      their plane. Flight 309 for London.

      Quite a good sprinkling of passengers rose to their feet t;

      obey the summons. By this time though, more passenger?

      had entered the transit lounge waiting for other planes. Ar

      nouncements followed as to fog at Geneva and other dis

      abilities of travel. A slim man of middle height wearing ;

      dark blue cloak with its red lining showing and with a hoot- drawn up over a close-cropped head, not noticeably more

      untidy than many of the heads of young men nowadays,

      walked across the floor to take his place in the queue toi

      the plane. Showing a boarding ticket, he passed out througu

      gate No. 9.

      More announcements followed. Swissair flying to Zurich

      BEA to Athens and Cyprus--And then a different type of

      announcement.

      'Will Miss Daphne Theodofanous, passenger to Geneva,

      kindly come to the flight desk. Plane to Geneva is delayed

      owing to fog. Passengers will travel by way of Athens. The

      aeroplane is now ready to leave.'

      Other announcements followed dealing with passengers to

      Japan, to Egypt, to South Africa, air lines spanning the world.

      Mr Sidney Cook, passenger to South Africa, was urged if- come to the flight desk where there was a message for hiir;

      Daphne Theodofanous was called for again. 20

      This is the last call before the departure of Flight 309.'

      In a corner of the lounge a little girl was looking up at a

      man in a dark suit who was fast asleep, his head resting

      against the cushion of the red settee. In his hand he held a

      small woolly panda. '

      The little girl's hand stretched out towards the panda,

      Her mother said:

      'Now, Joan, don't touch that. The poor gentleman's asleep.'

      'Where is he going?'

      'Perhaps he's going to Australia too,' said her mother,

      'like we are.'

      'Has he got a little girl like me?'

      'I think he must have,' said her mother.

      The little girl sighed and looked at the panda again. Sir

      Stafford Nye continued to sleep. He was dreaming that he

      was trying to shoot a leopard. A very dangerous animal, he

      was saying to the safari guide who was accompanying him.

      'A very dangerous animal, so I've always heard. You can't

      trust a leopard.'

      The dream switched at that moment, as dreams have a

      habit of doing, and he was having tea with his Great-Aunt

      Matilda, and trying to make her hear. She was deafer than

      ever! He had not heard any of the announcements except the

      first one for Miss Daphne Theodofanous, The little girl's

      mother said:

      'I've always wondered, you know, about a passenger that's

      missing. Nearly always, whenever you go anywhere by air,

      you hear it. Somebody they can't find. Somebody who hasn't

      heard the call or isn't on the plane or something like that.

      I always wonder who it is and what they're doing, and why

      they haven't come. I suppose this Miss What's-a-name or

      whatever it is will just have missed her plane. What will they


      do with her then?'

      Nobody was able to answer her question because nobody

      had the proper information. /

      Chapter 2

      LONDON

      Sir Stafford Nye's flat was a very pleasant one. It looked

      out upon Green Park. He switched on the coffee percolator

      and went to see what the post had left him this morning.

      21

      It did not appear to have left him anything very inte

      ing. He sorted through the letters, a bill or two, a re< and letters with rather uninteresting postmarks. He shu

      them together and placed them on the table where s

      mail was already lying, accumulating from the last

      days. He'd have to get down to things soon, he suppo^ His secretary would be coming in some time or other ;

      afternoon.

      He went back to the kitchen, poured coffee into a cup

      and brought it to the table. He picked up the two or three

      letters that he had opened late last night when he arrived. One of them he referred to, and smiled a little as he read it.

      'Eleven-thirty,' he said. 'Quite a suitable time. I woncer

      now. I expect I'd better just think things over, and get ; re- pared for Chetwynd.'

      Somebody pushed something through the letter-box. Ha went out into the hall and got the morning paper. Thera was very little news in the paper. A political crisis, an ite;i;i

      of foreign news- which might have been disquieting, but

      he didn't think it was. It was merely a journalist letting .':;! steam and trying to make things rather more import a :'ii than they were. Must give the people something to re^d.

      A girl had been strangled in the park. Girls were alw--:,s

      being strangled. One a day, he thought callously. No cr^id

      had been kidnapped or raped this morning. That was a ^'x surprise. He made himself a piece of toast and drank .-'s

      coffee.

      Later, he went out of the building, down into the street,

      and walked through the park in the direction of Whiteh; i

      He was smiling to himself. Life, he felt, was rather go J

      this morning. He began to think about Chetwynd. Ci. :

      wynd was a silly fool if there ever was one. A good fa9a :'.

      important-seeming, and a nicely suspicious mind. He'd ra; "

      enjoy talking to Chetwynd.

      He reached Whitehall a comfortable seven minutes '. That was only due to his own importance compared v a

      that of Chetwynd, he thought. He walked into the roi

      Chetwynd was sitting behind his desk and had a lot i

      papers on it and a secretary there. He was looking prop ^ important, as he always did when he could make it.

      'Hullo, Nye,' said Chetwynd, smiling all over his

      pressively handsome face. 'Glad to be back? How - ^ Malaya?'

      'Hot,' said Stafford Nye.

      'Yes. Well, I suppose it always is. You meant atmospherically.

      I suppose, not politically?'

      'Oh, purely atmospherically,' said Stafford Nyei

      He accepted a cigarette and sat down.

      Get any results to speak of?'

      'Oh, hardly. Not what you'd call results. I've sent in my

      report. All a lot of talky-talky as usual. How's Lazenby?'

      'Oh, a nuisance as he always is. He'll never change,' said

      Chetwynd.

      'No, that would seem too much to hope for. I haven't

      served on anything with Bascombe before. He can be quite

      fun when he likes.'

      'Can he? I don't know him very well Yes. I suppose he

      can.'

      'Well, well, well. No other news, I suppose?'

      'No, nothing. Nothing I think that would interest you.*

      'You didn't mention in your letter quite why you wanted

      to see me.'

      'Oh, just to go over a few things, that's all. You know,

      in case you'd brought any special dope home with you.

      Anything we ought to be prepared for, you know. Questions

      in the House. Anything like that'

      'Yes, of course.'

      'Came home by air, didn't you? Had a bit of trouble, I

      gather.'

      Stafford Nye put on the face he had been determined to

      put on beforehand. It was slightly rueful, with a faint tinge

      of annoyance.

      *0h, so you heard about that, did you?' he said. 'Silly

      business.'

      'Yes. Yes, must have been.'

      'Extraordinary,' said Stafford Nye, 'how things always get

      into the press. There was a paragraph in the stop press this

      morning.'

      'You'd rather they wouldn't have, I suppose?' ''Well, makes me look a bit of an ass, doesn't it?' said

      Stafford Nye. 'Got to admit it. At my age too!'

      'What happened exactly? I wondered if the report in the

      paper had been exaggerating.'

      'Well, I suppose they made the most of it, that's all. You

      know what these journeys are. Damn boring. There was

      fog at Geneva so they had to re-route the plane. Then

      there was two hours' delay at Frankfurt.'

      'Is that when it happened?'

     


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