Honour Among Thieves
he was being shown round what would shortly be his office looking out over a Paris that was turning from the half-light of dusk to the artificial light of night, that the Administrator said something Al Obaydi didn't quite catch. He felt he should have been paying closer attention. 'I'm sorry to say that your secretary is on holiday, Excellency. Like the rest of us, Miss Ahmed wasn't expecting you for another fortnight. I know she had planned to be back in Paris a week ahead of you, so that she would have everything ready by the time you arrived.' 'It's not a problem,' said Al Obaydi. 'Of course, you'll know Miss Saib, the Deputy Foreign Minister's secretary?' 'I came across Miss Saib when I was in Baghdad,' replied Al Obaydi. The Chief Administrator nodded, and seemed to hesitate for a moment. 'I think I'll have a rest before dinner,' the Ambassador said, taking advantage of the temporary halt in an otherwise unending flow. 'I'll have something sent up to your room, Excellency. Would eight suit you?' 'Thank you,' said Al Obaydi, in an attempt to put an end to the conversation. 'Shall I place your passport and tickets in the safe, as I always did for the previous Ambassador?' 'A good idea,' said Al Obaydi, delighted to have at last found a way of getting rid of the Chief Administrator. Scott put the phone down and turned to face Dexter Hutchins, who was leaning back in the large leather chair at his desk, his hands clasped behind his head and a questioning look on his face. 'So where are they?' asked Dexter. 'Kratz wouldn't give me the exact location, for obvious reasons, but at his current rate of progress he feels confident they'll reach the Jordanian border within the next three days.' 'Then let's pray that the Iraqi Ministry of Industry is as inefficient as our experts keep telling us it is. If so, the advantage should be with us for at least a few more days. After all, we did move the moment sanctions were lifted, and until you showed up in Kalmar, Pedersson hadn't heard a peep out of anyone for the past two years.' 'I agree. But I worry that Pedersson might be the one weak link in Kratz's chain.' 'If you're going to take these sorts of risks, no plan can ever be absolutely watertight,' said Dexter. Scott nodded. 'And if Kratz is less than three days from the border, you'll have to catch a flight for Amman on Monday night, assuming Mr O'Reilly has finished his signatures by then.' 'I don't think that's a problem any longer,' said Scott. 'Why? He still had a lot of names to copy when I last looked at the parchment.' 'It can't be that many,' said Scott, 'because Mr Mendelssohn flew in from Washington this morning in order to pass his judgement, and that seems to be the only opinion Bill is interested in.' 'Then let's go and see for ourselves,' said Dexter as he swung himself up out of his chair. As they left the office and made their way down the corridor, Dexter asked, 'And how's Bertha's bible coming along? I turned a few pages of the introduction this morning and couldn't begin to get a grasp of why the bulbs turn from red to green.' 'Only one man knows Madame Bertha more intimately than I do, and at this moment he's pining away in Scandinavia,' said Scott as they climbed the stone steps to Dollar Bill's private room. 'I also hear that Charles has designed a special pair of trousers for you,' Dexter said. 'And they're a perfect fit,' replied Scott with a smile. As they reached the top of the steps, Dexter was about to barge in when Scott put an arm on his shoulder. 'Perhaps we should knock? He might be .. .' 'Next you'll be wanting me to call him "sir".' Scott grinned as Dexter knocked quietly, and when there was no reply, eased the door open. He crept in to see Mendelssohn stooping over the parchment, magnifying glass in hand. 'Benjamin Franklin, John Morton and George Clymer,' muttered the Conservator. 'I had a lot of trouble with Clymer,' said Dollar Bill, who was looking out of the window over the bay. 'It was the damn man's squiggles, which I had to complete in one flow. You'll find a couple of hundred of them in the waste-paper basket.' 'May we approach the bench?' asked Dexter. Dollar Bill turned and waved them in. 'Good afternoon, Mr Mendelssohn. I'm Dexter Hutchins, Deputy Director of the CIA.' 'Could you possibly be anything else?' asked Dollar Bill. Dexter ignored the comment and asked Mendelssohn, 'What's your judgement, sir?' Dollar Bill continued to stare out of the window. 'It's every bit as good
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