As the tub filled, the P.M.’s lip jutted forward in a pout. “Now get out!”
“Yes, sir.” Inces took his leave.
Churchill rested his cigar in a cut-glass ashtray, then sank beneath the waterline and blew bubbles. Rising to the surface, he stared up at the ceiling, floating. “I was thinking about our meeting at MI-Five today.”
“Yes, sir.”
“It occurs to me that, with Miss Hope’s connections, we have an in.”
“The thought has occurred to me, too, sir. Miss Hope did well at Windsor. She’s in much better physical shape now, stronger, with more endurance. I think with some additional training up at Beaulieu, we’ll have her ready to go in a few months.”
Churchill blew a few blue smoke rings. “War’s a nasty business, my friend.”
“It is, indeed, sir.”
“And when we see an advantage, we must press—no matter what the personal cost.”
“If that’s your decision, sir.”
The P.M. took a swig of brandy and soda. “It is.” He waved Frain away. “Tell Mrs. T. to invite Miss Hope to Number Ten this afternoon.”
Frain rose. “Yes, sir.”
It was strange for Maggie to return to No. 10 Downing Street after so many months and so much that had happened. She remembered how nervous she’d been when she’d first knocked on that dignified front door, so plain and black and unpretentious. She was met by Richard Snodgrass, her former nemesis, now her colleague and friend.
“Good afternoon, Mr. Snodgrass,” she said, extending her hand.
He shook it. “It’s a pleasure to see you again, Miss Hope. Follow me, please.”
She followed Mr. Snodgrass through the dignified hallways of No. 10, past the main entrance with its grand cantilever staircase, and through several carpeted hallways. They reached a small conference room, where a projector and screen were set up. A cut-crystal bowl of apples—green Bramleys, bright red Bismarcks, and mottled Pippins—was set in the middle of the polished wood table.
“Hello, David,” Maggie said, surprised, as David rose to greet her.
“I just found out about all of this myself, Maggie.”
“All of what?” she asked as Mr. Snodgrass left them.
“You’ll see.”
The door opened and in came Frain and another man, short and round, where Frain was tall and slim. He was in his late fifties, with a beaky nose and a shiny pate. “Hello, Maggie, David,” Frain began. “I’d like to introduce Sir Frank Nelson, head of the so-called Baker Street Irregulars.”
“Sir Frank,” Maggie said, extending her hand. “How do you do?”
They shook. “A pleasure to meet you, Miss Hope.”
Maggie’s mind was racing. “Baker Street Irregulars?” She’d heard rumors of a secret spy organization, but had always assumed they were just that—rumors. “How very Holmesian.”
“Nickname for the Special Operations Executive, or S.O.E.,” David said, pleased, for once, to know something she didn’t. “Also known as Churchill’s Secret Army, Churchill’s Toyshop, or the Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.”
“We’re a bit off the grid, Miss Hope. Our mission is to coordinate espionage and sabotage. All hush-hush, of course,” Sir Frank said.
Maggie shot David a look. “Of course.”
They all sat down at the conference table, waiting. Finally, the door burst open. It was the Prime Minister. “You’re all here? Good, good,” Churchill rumbled, taking a seat. He waved his already-lit cigar. “Let’s get on with it, then.”
Frain began. “Maggie, what can you tell me about your mother?”
My mother? Will it never end? “Not very much,” Maggie replied. “As you know, I was raised by my Aunt Edith Hope, outside of Boston, Massachusetts. She didn’t talk about my parents much, and I never pushed her to.” She shrugged. “Until this very morning, I thought that my mother was a typical English housewife, who’d died far too young in an automobile accident. I knew that she played the piano, loved books. In my mind, in the past that I constructed, she was a loving mother and an adoring wife.” She gave a sharp laugh. “Well, that was the fantasy, anyway.”
“Your father sent you one of her books.”
“Yes, he sent it to me at Windsor. The Princess Elizabeth spilled tea on some of the pages, and—well, you know the rest.”
“You found code contained in that book, code to a Sektion agent. The code contained the names of three MI-Five agents who were to be assassinated.”
“Yes,” Maggie said, her heart pierced with sadness as she thought of Hugh’s father and the other agents killed.