“It’ll do more than pay him back.”

“So you say. You better tell me about it.”

“Aren’t you a little young? I thought it’d be George Costello I was dealing with?”

“You’ve been given a chance, Major, and you’re dealing with us. You’d do well to take us seriously. We can leave if you like, but you won’t get another chance.”

He ground his teeth. “Fine. I’m sorry, it’s just––it’s just––”

“It’s just what?”

He paused. Edward could almost see his mind turning. “No, it’s fine,” he said eventually. “I’m based at Honeybourne. Do you know it?”

“The big base near Evesham? I passed through it briefly during my training.”

“You’re Army?”

“We both are.”

“Where?”

“Burma.”

That helped the man to relax. “I was there, too. Bloody place. Took a Jap bullet in the shoulder when we pulled out of Rangoon and that was the bloody war over for me. They transferred me to logistics when I got out of hospital.”

“To Honeybourne?”

“Eventually. The Americans took it over during the war but when they left they handed it back to us. Ministry of Supply runs it now, and we look after it for them. It’ll be bigger now than when you were there––a thousand huts over five hundred acres. Small town, really. They had shops, playing fields, everything.”

“And there’s an opportunity there?”

He laughed dryly. “Bloody right there is. Biggest opportunity I’ve ever seen in my life. When the Yanks went they left all their gear behind. All sorts––you can’t imagine it unless you see it: cars, jeeps, trucks, radios, medical supplies, refrigerators, washing machines. Then there’s gear that’s still on the ration: tinned food, fuel, bedding, towels. They even left half a dozen Sherman tanks. Two bloody Dakotas, for Christ’s sake. Dakotas! Everything’s brand spanking new. A fellow from the Ministry came down to try and put a value on it all. He took one look at the stores and gave up––there’s too much to inventory. But he reckoned it was worth hundreds of thousands.”

“And there’s no record of what’s there?”

“Nothing precise. I doubt even the Yanks know, but even if they did it wouldn’t matter––they’re gone, and they’re not interested in any of it. They wouldn’t care if we dropped it in the sea.”

“Is it guarded?”

“They’ve got chaps on the gate, like at any camp. You couldn’t just walk in off the street and help yourself.”

“But?

“But it’s lightly guarded and they’ve all been bought off. Between us, we’ve already disposed of a few lorry loads.”

“So why do you need us? Why not take it all yourself?”

“That’s the problem––we can manage small loads but that’s missing the opportunity. It’s scale. We don’t have the means to get enough of the stuff off the base and even if we did we wouldn’t have a clue how to sell it. We need someone who knows the black market. George Costello said––”

“Fine,” Joseph interrupted him. “What’s your plan?”

“It’s all worked out. I can get you onto the base, that’s easy, but it’s too risky to take the gear straight to a warehouse or to customers. If it got traced back to us we’d all be buggered. But a captain who used to work with me has just been transferred to an OS Depot at Barry. And we can write transfer orders to move anything we want. We load the gear up at Honeybourne, consign it to the Barry depot and then we move it where it needs to go. The chaps at Barry won’t miss it because they weren’t expecting it in the first place. My mate supervises the arrival and departure of the goods in Wales. And if they ever get trouble at Honeybourne, they’ll have the paperwork to show where the goods went. It’ll all look above board. We’ll just say that it must have gone missing there. Call it bureaucratic mismanagement––Christ knows there’s enough of that going on. By the time the Ministry tracks the goods to Wales, the trail will have gone cold. It’s foolproof.”

“Who else knows about this?”

“There are four of us. The lieutenant colonel, me, my mate and a lieutenant. “

“The C.O.’s involved?”

“It’s his idea.”

They sat in silence. Edward could tell at once that the scheme had enormous potential but he knew better than to say anything. Better to let Butler think they were hesitant. Joseph had evidently reached the same conclusion and sat silently. He almost looked bored.

“What do you say?” Butler asked anxiously.

Joseph spoke speculatively. “Let’s say for the sake of this discussion that we could be interested. What do you expect to get out of it?”

“To pay off what I owe and then a share of the profits.”

“What kind of share?”

“Half.”

“Don’t be daft, mate. We’re doing all the work.”

“You can’t do it without me.”

“No, but you owe my uncle a small bloody fortune and he’s been generous with you so far. I wouldn’t recommend trying to drive too hard a bargain. Being greedy won’t end well for you.”

“Forty per cent.”

Joseph shook his head firmly. “More like twenty.”

“Twenty? Christ, man––that’s ridiculous.”

Joseph got up. “Come on, Edward,” he said. “We’re finished here.”

“Thirty.”

“Good night, Major. Enjoy the races.”

“Damn it all,” he spluttered. “Alright. Twenty. Twenty.”

“Good. My uncle will be pleased.”

He spluttered something about daylight robbery and Edward noticed, for the first time, that Butler’s hands were trembling. He saw Edward looking at them and slid them beneath the table. “So what do we do next?” he said, aiming for brusqueness but coming up short.

“We’ll come and have a look.”

“When?”

“No time like the present. How’s tomorrow?”

“Fine.”

“Tomorrow, then.”

They bid him farewell and made their way back to the table for a drink.

“What do you think?” Edward said. “Sounds good?”

“I’ll say,” Joseph grinned. “I think this sounds very bloody good indeed.”

38

EDWARD DECIDED TO treat himself to a meal out. Joseph was going out to see Eve and so it would have to be alone, but, he thought, that suited him best. He enjoyed his own company and it would be an opportunity to assess how far he had travelled in achieving his objectives. He went home and shaved, changed his suit for an understated grey pinstripe that he matched with a white shirt and black tie and brown brogues. There were plenty of new establishments opening up all around Soho but he was in the mood for something with a little more history and class. He had enjoyed Claridges when he and Joseph had taken Chiara and Eve but the foolishness that had followed that night––despite the nimble extrication that he had orchestrated––had soured the memory a little. If he was going to fix a trip there in his memory, it would have to be one without blemish. He would return, just by himself, and do things properly. It would be a pure experience, as it should have been before.

The maitre d’ recognised him and showed him to an excellent table in the corner of the restaurant. He sat and ordered a gin and tonic, looking around, enjoying the almost palpable sense of tradition and the ambience. These were normal people; people of a particular class, certainly, but people who led normal lives. Bankers and salesmen and their wives and lovers. Most would never have been stolen from and most would never steal. Most would never have experienced physical violence, or the raw, visceral thrill of a robbery. They would live out their lives, one day after the other with the predictability of a fine, Swiss watch. All as regular as clockwork: home, the train, the office, the train, home. All the money in the world was no compensation for a life like that. Edward would have the money but he would not sacrifice the joy in his life to get it.

He was lost in a dreamy reverie when he became aware of a man standing next to the table, looking down at him.


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