âWe'll find his office first, I understand it's off the main street.'
They found Ben's office premises and entered a coffee shop just down the road. Time was getting on and it was nearly 3.30 pm. They had heard a police siren as they walked around the town, whether it was to do with Wallace was difficult to say but he assumed it was. The possible presence of a political murderer in the town would probably generate considerable excitement and activity. He had walked with Kelsey, while McKay had walked some distance behind with Dick Jackson. Jackson was carrying a small metal case.
Kelsey drained his coffee and put down his cup.
âReady to go,' he announced. âI'll walk in and introduce myself to his receptionist, you come in when I get the come hither, I'll then signal to you or Dave McKayâ¦OK? I'll look to the door, Dave can give you the nod and you come in, I'll vouch for you as being with me, you've been parking the car or something like that.'
Wallace and the others agreed. Kelsey appeared to have taken over the operation.
âDave and Dick Jackson will stay out here, we don't want too many pairs of boots clumping into his office, four men will be a bit intimidating, even for a bloke like Wakefield. When we get into his sanctum leave the talking to me, in any case he may not recognise you initially in that get up.'
McKay stationed himself outside the office doorway, Wallace didn't want to be seen hovering around the entrance if he was supposed to be parking a car while Kelsey waited inside. He had conflicting emotions as he valued the friendship with Ben and feared that this business could change it forever now that he knew. Ben Wakefield must know what baggage Wallace bore on his back, a suspected murderer on the run from the police, who had compromised him by taking refuge under his roof.
Wallace saw McKay signal and headed for the front door of Ben's premises which he entered. Alan Kelsey was just outside the door to Ben's sanctum, the receptionist looked a little puzzled when Wallace entered but Kelsey said: âIt's OK, he's with me, he's been parking the car,' whereupon she nodded and waved him in.
They entered Ben's office and Ben rose from behind his desk and extended his hand to Kelsey who shook it warmly. Then he caught sight of Wallace and gave a double take.
âHarry!' he ejaculated. âWhat the blazesâ¦! What the hell's going on?'
âHe's with me,' said Kelsey.
âWith you?' Ben asked. âWhat has Harry to do with your factory, Mr Johnson?'
He ignored his own question and looked at Wallace again.
âWhat's going on with you, Harry?' he demanded. âLiz showed me your picture in the paper, what the hell have you been doing?'
Kelsey raised his hand and interrupted before Ben could continue.
âMr Wakefield, will you give me time to explain?'
âExplain, how can you explain what I saw in the papersâ¦?'
âMr Wakefield, just give me five minutes,' Kelsey said. âFive minutes is all I ask, after that you can either listen further to what we have to say, or throw us out.'
Ben remained standing behind his desk, Kelsey eyed him levelly, and Ben nodded.
âOK,' he said finally. âIt had better be good.'
âIt will be,' promised Kelsey. âMay we sit down?'
Ben nodded reluctantly and Kelsey sat down opposite him, Wallace remained standing by the door. Ben's reaction to his presence, although he had been expecting something like it as Ben couldn't be insulated from his plight indefinitely, Wallace found upsetting. However, it was up to Kelsey now. Ben switched his gaze from Kelsey to Wallace, it wasn't friendly.
âFirstly, my name is Alan Kelsey, not Johnson. I had to use a subterfuge to gain entry to your office, and I hope to make it clear why I did so. I am attached to the Australian High Commission in London, this is my card,' he flipped a business card in front of Ben who picked it up and perused it.
âWhat is this?' asked Ben. âHow do I know this is genuine?'
âYou don't,' Kelsey responded. âBut I can confirm it, or better still, you can. I suggest you ring the High Commission in London, they will vouch for me.'
Ben sat, and looked at the business card.
âIf you've any doubts about our bona fides, ask your receptionist to ring them, don't rely on what's on the card or what I tell you, she can get the number herself using Directory Enquiries,' said Kelsey. âWhen they answer, ask the girl on the switchboard if you can speak to me, obviously I won't be there. Then ask for Gordon Espley. He's in Commerce and Trade.'
Ben considered the proposal, and then nodded.
âAll right,' he agreed. âHang on a minute.'
He rose and went to the door.
âBeryl!' he called. âGet me the Australian High Commission in London; you'll have to find the number.'
They heard her respond and Ben returned to his seat.
Kelsey began. He started way back in Jakarta as Wallace had done with Fred Hackett, and added that Wallace had at one time been employed by the intelligence agency. He had reached the point where Kalim had ingratiated himself with Wallace at the hotel when the telephone rang. Ben picked it up, and after confirming it was the High Commission he asked for Kelsey. As expected he drew a blank whereupon he asked for Gordon Espley.
âMr Espley?' he asked. âGood. My name is Ben Wakefield, I am an insurance broker in Stratford-on-Avon, and I have a gentleman in my office who claims he's from your High Commission andâ¦what? Yes, that's rightâ¦Kelsey. He's here. Hold on.'
âHe wants to speak to you,' he said, proffering the telephone instrument to Kelsey.
Kelsey took hold of it and spoke to Espley.
âHello Gordon,' he said. âYes, he needed confirmation, understandably so. Yesâ¦yesâ¦OK, I'll hand you back.'
âHe wants to speak with you again,' he said to Ben.
There was a brief exchange between Ben and the speaker at the other end before he replaced the receiver and looked at Kelsey.
âAll right, so you are who you say you are,' he said to Kelsey. âNow go on, I'm listening.'
Kelsey resumed the story, he didn't miss anything out; Wallace saw a smile flicker across Ben's face when Kelsey mentioned how Wallace had been tipping drinks into the flower pots at the restaurant and later at the apartment.
âThat'd be right, the bastard never could hold his liquor,' he grunted. âHe always was a right piss pot!' Despite the seriousness of the situation both Kelsey and Wallace found time to smile. It also made Wallace feel happier, it indicated that Ben's rancour against him could be dissipating, and he valued that.
Kelsey finished the story, bringing it up to date with McKay and Wallace alighting at Knowle. He didn't mention Fred Hackett by name, since Fred had probably broken the law by giving them succour he didn't want to drag his name in unnecessarily.
âSo why are you here?' Ben asked. âWhat do you want me to do?'
âTwo reasons,' said Kelsey. âFirstly, to clear the lines between you and Harry here, I understand you are old friends and he was concerned about that. Secondly, you told Harry you'd had a burglary some weeks back. We believe the object of the break-in was to bug your telephone. There have been other break-ins suffered by people that Harry might contact in England. We believe they were carried out by these people who wanted to keep tabs on him while he was in England. This was so they could place where he was while they were making arrangements for compromising him after the assassination.'
âMy God!' Ben was alarmed. âYou mean this telephone could be bugged?'
âWell, it's a possibility,' conceded Kelsey. âBut unlikely, we can check it and we can check it now.'
âHow is that?'
âWe have one of our operatives outside; he is an electronics technician, in factâ¦' a slight smile passed his lips ââ¦you could say he's a professional buggerâ¦he is an expert in matters like this. We need your permission to check your home telephone, but we can check this one now if you wish.'
âYes, check it by all means,' Ben nodded. âA lot of confidential information comes over this phone, if details of burglary protections or personal details get into the wrong hands and they are traced back to me then I'm really in trouble.'
Kelsey produced a card from his pocket.
âI can bring him in now. He's right outside,' he extended his hand for the phone and Ben pushed it across the desk. Kelsey dialled a number and Wallace could hear Jackson's gravelly voice at the other end.
âSorry, wrong number, I wanted the Gas company,' said Kelsey and hung up. He turned to Ben. âSorry about the melodrama, we arranged that previously. If it is bugged we don't want to broadcast that we might be onto it.'
âAll right, I can understand that,' said Ben.
âHow's Liz?' Wallace asked as they waited for Jackson.
âShaken and churned up,' said Ben. âYou've got some explaining to do.'
âYes, I know,' Wallace said sadly. âI'm not looking forward to that.'
âShe'll come roundâ¦in time!' Ben said and smiled. âYou've got a lot of credit there.'
They heard the outside office door into the street opening and within a few seconds Dick Jackson was admitted into Ben's office.
âG'day!' he said. âDick Jackson' and shook Ben's hand. He turned to Alan Kelsey. âI'll check this one first.'
He opened his case and produced various pieces of equipment. Ben vacated his desk and a high pitched whine assailed their eardrums as Jackson ran a meter around the telephone. After several passes, and after he had unscrewed the receiver and checked it inside, he nodded.
âAll clear,' he said. âI'll just check around the room, won't take me long.'
He did so, holding a detector in his hand he went all around the room, until the high pitched whining began to bring tears to their eyes.
âAll clear,' he said again. âCan I check in the other office now?'
Ben nodded.
âThere's a telephone in my assistant's office, another in my junior clerk's office and one in an interview room.'
âTell your girl I'm from British Telecom, we don't want too many rumours circulating around. We're out of our jurisdiction strictly speaking and we don't want angry police or security authorities descending on the High Commission,' said Jackson.
After several minutes of probing Jackson pronounced he was satisfied.
âAll clear,' he said.
âYou're not trading under your own name here are you?' Kelsey asked Ben.
âNo, I trade under the name Foresight Insurance Brokers.'
âThat may be one reason why they didn't bug you here, they didn't associate you and your brokerage together,' said Kelsey.
âWell, that leaves your home phone.'
âYou want to do it now?'
âNo, when you arrive home at your normal time. Stick to your normal routine. We'll come with you and Dick will travel with you and go in the house with you. I suggest you drive into your garage before Dick gets out with his box of tricks. We'll have to stay in the vicinity somewhere. If anyone is watching your house, which is just possible but not likely, we can't take chances. Consequently we don't want to all go trooping in. If they are around it may warn them that we're on to them.'
They spent the rest of the afternoon touring around Stratford, Wallace wasn't too keen to emerge from Kelsey's car because of fears of being recognised. There appeared to be some police activity around the town, so it did look as though the woman at Anne Hathaway's Cottage had reported Wallace's presence in the town. In view of that it was decided to drop Dick Jackson at Ben's office while Kelsey, McKay and Wallace made the trip to Knowle. They arrived in the vicinity of Ben's house and took a few circles around the neighbourhood keeping an eye open for any parked cars that looked suspicious. There were quite a few, but all seemed to be empty and parked outside houses.
âWhat do we do if his telephone is bugged, zap it?' Wallace asked as they paused for a few minutes outside the main village. Kelsey shook his head.
âNo, our thinking is to leave it in place. We could use it to set a trap. But we can't do it ourselves. What I said in Ben Wakefield's office is quite true. We're out of our jurisdiction here. We can't go conducting our own police or anti-terrorist operations in England, that's the job of M.I.5. We have to contact them and give them what we've got. They'll know all about Kalim from their own sources, even if they aren't aware of his latest activities, and we'll have to include Murray Craddock as well.'
Another thought, or two of them, occurred to Wallace and he turned to McKay.
âWhat happened to your car at Albrighton?' he asked. âAnd what about my canal boat, is it still where I left it?'
âNo idea, we'll have to find out,' said McKay. âI'd say the car could have been reported by now, more than likely by another householder, I'd certainly wonder if a car was parked outside my house in Canberra for nearly a week. Not so sure about the canal boat, the hirers won't be asking questions for about another week, and I don't think other canal users will take much notice of it. But somebody at Amblecote may start to wonder about it if it's sitting around there for too long.'
âWe'll cross those bridges when we come to them,' grunted Kelsey. âWhat time is it now?'
âAbout 5 o'clock.'
âIt's time to go and have a look around the vicinity of Ben's house.'
It wasn't long before Ben rolled up with Dick Jackson in the passenger seat. He drove into the driveway and the garage door started to roll up.
âDamned useful things, those electronic tilt-a-doors,' remarked Kelsey. âI must get one fitted at home.'
They saw the garage door began to descend and the car disappeared from view.
âHallo, who's that?' asked McKay as a car drew up outside the house and parked outside the front fence.