Princess Elizabeth's Spy

Home > Other > Princess Elizabeth's Spy > Page 12
Princess Elizabeth's Spy Page 12

by Susan Elia MacNeal


  And why?

  Admiralty Arch was not only a large office building, it was, in fact, an archway, providing road and pedestrian access between The Mall and Trafalgar Square. Nearly undetectable to those who didn’t know it was there, carved in marble, was a nose. Just a nose, not a face—embedded in one of the archways. Legend was that it was Lord Nelson’s nose, and soldiers passing through on horseback would rub it for good luck.

  Just like so many military men before him, Admiral Donald Kirk looked up at the nose and said a short silent prayer to Lord Nelson. Kirk was a trim, smart-looking man with silvery hair and piercing green eyes, wearing a dark blue naval uniform. He leaned heavily on a silver-handled walking stick—a crushed knee in the last war had left him with a stiff, almost mechanical limp. The injury kept him from serving at sea in the current war—which he hated. However, his wife and four daughters, now married and mothers themselves, were grateful he was able to serve his country while staying in London. Sometimes, when they were all together at home and the women were carrying on, he wished for a submarine to command once again.

  At the doorway a Royal Marine saluted. Kirk switched the walking stick to his other hand to return the salute, then switched back and proceeded inside. Slowly, for the stairs weren’t easy to navigate for anyone, let alone someone with a damaged leg, he made his way down narrow staircases until he reached the windowless Submarine Tracking Room.

  Many Londoners were wrapping up work and going home for the evening, but the Submarine Tracking Room buzzed with excitement around the clock. The gray-painted walls were covered with maps studded with different colored pushpins, charts, and photographs of German submarine commanders. Several men in uniform repositioned the colored pins, according to information they received. The centerpiece of the room was a large table, covered with a map of Britain and the Atlantic Ocean and North Sea. Colored pushpins represented every freighter, warship, and submarine in the waters, both British and German.

  A few officers were repositioning some of those pins, to reflect the day’s movement. Kirk limped over to take a closer look.

  “That U-boat there.” He pointed to a red pin just off the Lincolnshire coast. “What’s it been doing?”

  The man, young, with a five-o’clock shadow, shrugged. “It’s been there for a while—not doing much of anything, sir.”

  Donald Kirk hadn’t reached the position he had by being the strongest or the fastest. His injuries early in the last war had seen to that. No, what he was known for was a rigorous intellect, coupled with the ability to think like the enemy. He squinted at the map on the table. Something was not right. The submarine’s movements had been puzzling him for days. It seemed to be on a purposeless patrol of the North Sea. The sub hadn’t surfaced, it hadn’t attacked, it hadn’t seen action of any kind.

  “U-two-forty-six,” Kirk said, reaching out to run his index finger over the tip of the metal pin. It was cold and hard. “What are you doing there?”

  Chapter Twelve

  Maggie had another nightmare.

  This time, she was out walking the grounds hand in hand with Lilibet, the sky a greenish gray that threatened thunderstorms. A large falcon flew overhead, almost a pterodactyl, huge, with skeletal wings. He swooped down and grabbed the Princess by the back of her coat.

  Maggie felt the girl’s small hand ripped from hers and began crying as the bird flew higher and higher, taking her away to what Maggie knew was a horrible fate.

  Her own screaming woke her up. It was still dark. She was trembling, drenched in cold sweat, heart thumping, limbs cramping. She lay there for a few minutes, gasping for breath, blinking away the images of the dream.

  Finally, her heart slowed and she was able to see the shadows in her room for what they were—just shadows, and not terrible birds of prey with sharp talons and beaks. She rubbed her eyes, hard, pinpoints of light breaking through. Pull yourself together, Hope.

  She was able to go back to sleep, but woke up tired and disoriented. At least it was her day off. After completing her daily morning exercise regime, learned at Camp Spook—push-ups, sit-ups, leg lifts, and jumping jacks—preparing her lesson plans for the Princess, and lunch, Maggie put on her wool coat and hat and went to the police station.

  It was raining, a cold, damp drizzle that showed no sign of letting up, and a stiff wind blew her large black umbrella inside out, showing its inner spine like a skeleton for a brief moment before she was able to right it. Finally, she reached the red-brick station. “I’d like to speak with Detective Wilson, please,” she said to the older sandy-haired man in uniform behind the wooden counter as she began to feel the warmth from the coal heater in the corner. “It’s in regard to the Lily Howell case.”

  “Just a moment, Miss.”

  Maggie looked around the station. There were the usual posters in primary colors: National Service Needs You, ARP Auxiliary Firemen Needed, and Dig for Victory!

  Detective Wilson appeared. “Ah, hello, there. It’s Miss, ah, Hope, isn’t it?”

  “It is, Detective Wilson.”

  “Miss Hope, please follow me.”

  In Detective Wilson’s tidy office, Maggie took a seat in front of his desk, noting he had no personal photos there, just a wilting aspidistra. “I’ve remembered something that Lady Lily mentioned,” she began.

  “Yes?”

  “She was … with child.” Maggie would have liked to have used the proper medical term—pregnant—but it was considered impolite.

  Detective Wilson looked up and smiled. “We know.”

  “How …?”

  “Autopsy.”

  I’m an idiot—obviously they would know. “Of course.”

  “How did you know?”

  “She told me, the night I met her.”

  “She would have had to. Someone only three months along wouldn’t be showing. Any idea who the father might be?”

  “No, I’m afraid not,” Maggie said. “I’ve asked around—apparently, she was a ‘popular girl.’ ”

  “I had an interesting telephone call—from a Mr. Frain. You know him?”

  “Yes,” Maggie said. Frain’s made contact, of course. She tried to see where the conversation was heading.

  “He mentioned the complications in the case and that MI-Five had a … particular interest. And we should help you as much as possible.” He cleared his throat. “And we, the local police, request the same from you.”

  “Of course, sir,” Maggie said. She realized some toes had been stepped on in establishing the jurisdiction of MI-5 and the local police. “We’re all on the same side, after all.”

  Maggie walked to Windsor and Eton Central Station, to get the train to Slough. It was raining harder, nearly sleeting—but it was Thursday, the day she was supposed to meet her father for dinner. She waited under the eaves of the arched glass roof in the cold for the train.

  At Slough, Maggie walked until she found Bell’s Tavern. She was early, so she had some tea.

  She waited.

  The clock ticked on, until the heavy black hands reached six, Maggie and her father’s agreed-on meeting time.

  She waited. Of course he might be late. Doesn’t mean he forgot our dinner, just that something came up.

  Then she ordered and ate some squash-apple soup and bread and margarine.

  She waited. The clock’s hands went to seven.

  Then a cider. The clock’s hands reached eight.

  Finally, close to nine, the waitress came over. “Will that be all, love?”

  Maggie looked up at the clock, which now read 8:10. “Yes. I’m done.” She pulled out her purse to get her wallet to pay the bill, tears threatening to flood her eyes. “I’m really, truly, absolutely done.”

  On the way to the Slough train station in the dark, Maggie saw three men stagger out of one of the pubs. They walked toward her, pushing one another and laughing, until they blocked her way.

  “And what do we have here?” The tall one sniggered.

  Maggie clam
ped her pocketbook under her arm and tried to walk around them.

  “Not so fast, love,” the one with a beard said. “Fancy a drink?”

  “No, thank you,” Maggie replied. They circled around her. “Let me pass!”

  “Wot? Need to go home to your boyfriend?” the short one said. “I could be your boyfriend. Give us a kiss,” he slurred as he staggered toward her.

  Maggie looked around. The main street of Slough was deserted. “I said no.”

  The tall one got up right in front of her, much too close, his breath foul and smelling of gin. “Why don’t you pick one of us, love?” He reached out to stroke her cheek. “Or we’ll pick for you.”

  Maggie kneed him between the legs, hearing him howl and his friends laugh, then sidestepped and ran, as fast as she could, to the train station. “Bitch!” they called after her.

  Trembling, Maggie called Hugh at his office from a public pay phone on the train platform. “Of course I can meet you,” he said.

  An hour later, Maggie stepped off the train and exited the Windsor station, taking High Street to Peascod Street. The blackout curtains were drawn at Boswell’s Books, but when Maggie rapped at the door, Mr. Higgins answered. “What you’re looking for is in the back, Miss.”

  Maggie went through the stacks to the back room, used for bookkeeping and storage. Hugh was there, sitting at a small round table. He stood up. “Hello.” Then, “You look a bit pale. Is everything all right?”

  Maggie didn’t look at him.

  He sat back down.

  She took off her coat and her sweater, then rolled up her shirtsleeves.

  “Get up,” she said.

  “Beg pardon?”

  “Get up.”

  He did.

  “Help me move the table and the chairs out of the way.”

  Together, in silence, they cleared the room.

  “Are you all right?” Hugh said finally.

  “At Camp Spook, my downfall was the physical,” she said, ignoring his question. “So, every morning and night, I’ve been doing exercises. Sit-ups, push-ups, jumping jacks, jackknives … you name it. I’ve started running too, before dawn, so no one can see. I’ve been practicing shooting with clay pigeons. But one thing I can’t do is practice any martial-arts skills.”

  She walked to the center of the room. “That’s what I need you for.”

  “What?” Hugh was confused.

  “Come on, you’ve had the same training I had, probably more and better.”

  “Maggie …” He looked positively horrified. “I—I can’t.”

  “Afraid a girl’s going to beat you up?” Maggie walked up to him and began poking him. They were not gentle pokes.

  “Ouch!” Hugh said.

  “Come on, you deskbound fop!”

  He saw the desperation in her eyes. “All right,” he said. “It’s been a while for you.” He took off his jacket. “Let’s go back to the basics.”

  Maggie took a wide-legged stance and glared.

  Hugh loosened his tie. “Your aim is to get your opponent off-balance. Once off-balance, you can use his weight to throw him down.” He gestured to Maggie. “Pretend you’re just walking along the street.”

  She walked past him. He reached out to grab her. She threw her arm across him and flipped him to the ground.

  “Ouch,” Hugh said. He moved his appendages to see if anything was broken.

  Maggie paced back and forth in front of him. “Get up.”

  He did. “Now pretend I’m coming at you again.” He came behind her in a choke hold and she bent over and, with a grunt, flipped him over. He hit the floor again with a loud bang.

  “Ooof,” he said, blinking against the pain.

  Archibald Higgins knocked at the door. “Everything all right in there?”

  “Just fine, Mr. Higgins,” Maggie replied, breathing hard. “Never better.”

  “All right, then.” The door clicked closed.

  “Again,” Maggie demanded.

  Hugh rose to his feet. He rolled up his shirtsleeves. He came at her from the front, going for her neck. She grabbed his arm and twisted it, causing him to bend over and groan in pain.

  She let go.

  He came at her again, this time trying to kick her. She grabbed his leg and rotated; he fell onto his stomach.

  He got up, breathing hard, sweat breaking out on his temples, and came at her again, both hands reaching out to choke her. They wrestled together for what felt like an eternity, before Maggie managed to fall deliberately under him, bringing him down with her. Their lips were almost touching.

  Then, with a foot to his midsection, she managed to kick-flip him over.

  They both lay on the ground, trying to catch their breath.

  Finally, Maggie got up and stood over Hugh. “Are you all right?” she said, extending a hand. He took it and allowed her to help him up.

  “I’ll live,” he said. “You?”

  Maggie’s eyes were hot and red. She sniffled. “I’m fine.”

  Hugh led her over to the table. They both sat down on it.

  “You’re obviously not,” he said. “And I don’t think it’s anything physical.”

  There was a long silence, then, “I went to Slough today. I was supposed to have dinner with my father. And he forgot. I waited for hours!” She sniffled again. Hugh handed her a handkerchief, which she took and wiped her eyes with. “And then some, some men hassled me.”

  Hugh looked concerned. “Are you all right?”

  “Fine,” Maggie said. “I made a run for it. And, on top of everything, Lily’s dead. It could just as easily have been Lilibet! But—my father—and I haven’t even seen him since I bumped into him, by accident, at the office.… He never even asked me about John! And then—and then, I was stood up by my own father.” She blew her nose, making a loud and unladylike snuffling sound.

  “Maggie …” Hugh made a few awkward pats to her shoulder. “Maggie, listen to me. You have a job to do. You can’t let your relationship—or nonrelationship—with your father affect you. You can’t let a bunch of buffoons affect you. You can’t let what happened to John affect you. And you can’t let your fear, and your anger, and your sorrow—” Hugh broke off suddenly.

  “I know.” Maggie reached out and took Hugh’s hand. It was large and warm. “Thank you. I’m all right now.”

  After a few moments, she let go of his hand. “I have some official business,” he said.

  Maggie swiped at her eyes again. “Of course.”

  “We want you to get the King’s file on Lily Howell.”

  “If MI-Five wanted Lily Howell’s file, surely Frain could just ask the King for it. Unless you think …” Maggie considered. “The King? You think the King had something to do with Lily Howell’s murder?”

  “It’s possible,” Hugh said. “Or it’s possible there are some things in Lily’s file the Royals would want to remove, before showing it to us.”

  “And let’s just suppose for a moment I was to get caught by all those Coldstream Guards who protect the king. Would MI-Five stand up for me? Or let me hang?”

  “But you won’t get caught. We’ll make sure of it.” His forehead creased. “What’s in those files might shed some light on what’s been happening at the castle.”

  “I’ll need clay to make imprints of the keys—those files are bound to be locked,” she said.

  “Your wish is my command.” Hugh slipped off the table and went to his jacket, pulling out a wrapped pad of soft brown clay from the inside pocket. He handed it to her. “Get the imprints, and then we’ll make you the keys.” He bent down to the briefcase again, rummaging.

  “And I’ll need a—”

  Hugh handed her a small camera.

  “Ha!” Maggie said, pleased, as she accepted it.

  Then he handed her a felted handbag. “Not really my style,” she remarked, turning it in her hands and looking at it from all angles.

  “There’s a false bottom. For hiding the camera.”<
br />
  “Fantastic.” Feeling better, she rolled down her sleeves and gathered her things to leave, placing the clay and camera in the purse’s false bottom. As she did, she made a mental note to photograph Louisa’s files as well.

  “By the way,” Hugh said. “You’re not bad. At fighting, that is.”

  “Well, I—” Maggie was momentarily flustered.

  “For what it’s worth, I think you could have held your own in France,” Hugh said.

  “That means a lot to me, Hugh,” she replied. Then she left.

  At Maumbrey Cottage, his home at Bletchley, Edmund Hope went to the large wooden desk, picked up the telephone receiver, and dialed. “Margaret wanted to have dinner with me,” he said into the telephone receiver.

  On the other end of the line, Peter Frain said, “We know.”

  Static crackled and spluttered over the line.

  “I knew she was going to ask me questions about her mother.”

  “And what did you say?”

  “Nothing,” Edmund replied. “I didn’t meet her.” He didn’t mention he’d been there, at the pub in Slough, and that he’d stared at her through the plate-glass windows in the dark and cold, before finally leaving. The answers his daughter wanted from him—they just weren’t anything he could or would tell her. Even if it meant disappointing her. Even if it meant losing her again.

  “Good,” Frain said. “Let’s keep it that way.”

  Chapter Thirteen

  Monday morning was Princess Elizabeth’s first maths lesson.

  It was not going well.

  “But Crawfie’s already taught me how to add, subtract, multiply, and divide,” Lilibet said earnestly in the nursery, warmed by orange and indigo flames crackling behind the brass fender. “And we’ve gone over decimals and fractions. I really don’t know what more there is.” A few of the corgis were napping in front of the fender on their needlepoint pillows, snoring. Dookie snorted and opened his black eyes for a moment, then went back to sleep.

  Maggie smiled. “A bit more.”

  “But it’s not as if I’ll have to do my own books,” Lilibet said, parroting what she must have heard Crawfie say.

 

‹ Prev