Princess Elizabeth's Spy(14)
“Yes, sir,” Mr. Thompson and Maggie both answered.
“When do I leave?” Maggie said.
“Friday,” Frain replied. “I’ll arrange for Mr. Greene to drive you. I doubt he’d mind.”
He’ll be thrilled to be thought of as a chauffeur. “How long will I be there?”
“It is … unclear,” Frain said.
Windsor Castle. Of all places.
“That will be all, Mr. Thompson,” Frain said. “I’ll send Miss Hope down to your office shortly.”
“Yes, sir.” Mr. Thompson gave Maggie a quick smile and then left.
When the heavy oak door had clicked shut again, Frain turned to Maggie, a softer look on his face. “And, Maggie, I’m sorry to hear about John.”
“Thank you,” she managed, as her heart lurched. Then she raised her chin. “Will that be all, then?”
“Yes,” Frain said. “Mr. Thompson’s office is three floors down.”
Maggie made her way down to the smoke-filled windowless offices crammed with battered wooden desks, dented beige filing cabinets, and worn green carpeting that the junior MI-5 agents called home.
Mr. Thompson caught sight of her in the hallway and waved. “This way,” he said, ushering her into the small office he shared with fellow agent Mark Standish. He moved a pile of papers from a wooden chair to the floor. “Please sit down.”
“Hello,” Maggie said to Standish.
“Pleasure to meet you, Miss Hope,” he replied, blinking and looking up from his paperwork. Like Hugh, he was dedicated to his work. Unlike Hugh, he was married to his childhood sweetheart, with a two-year-old girl and another baby on the way.
Hugh took the seat behind his desk. “Miss Hope, ah, Maggie,” he said, “there’s a bookshop in the town of Windsor, Boswell’s Books—the proprietor is a retired agent, Mr. Archibald Higgins. There’s a room in the back. We’ll meet there the second Sunday afternoon you’re at the castle. Afterward, we’ll work out a system where we can indicate meeting times and various places that won’t seem suspicious.”
“Yes,” Maggie said. There was a long silence. In the silence, she took in his desk, piled high with papers and folders. Perched at the edge, nearly pushed over, was a framed photograph of a young blond woman in a spring dress, laughing at the camera. His wife? She rose to her feet.
Hugh sprang to his as well, almost knocking over a pile of folders and running his hands through his wild crop of hair.
“I look forward to working with you, Hugh,” she said, extending her hand.
“Me too!” Hugh blurted as they shook. “I mean, I look forward to working with you, also.” Maggie gave him a pained smile.
When the sound of her footsteps receded, he sat down at his desk and began sorting through papers madly.
When the click of her heels could no longer be heard, Mark spoke. “So, you’re the handler for Maggie Hope.”
Hugh reached for several more folders from his inbox. “Yes, thank you, Sherlock. Now I know why you’re such a brilliant agent. Those ace skills of deduction.”
Mark grinned. “Lucky bastard. She’s a looker, she is.”
Hugh opened the top folder and began making notes. “Really? I hadn’t noticed.”
Maggie was pulling on her gloves in the building’s lobby when she caught sight of a familiar figure, tall and thin, with receding mouse-brown hair streaked with gray. “Dad?” He didn’t notice her. “Edmund?”
Edmund Hope spun on his heel. “Margaret!” he said, shocked. “What are you doing here?”
“Meeting with Mr. Frain,” she replied. “You?”
“Just … meetings.”
Maggie and her father hadn’t seen each other since their awkward reunion a few months earlier. And since Edmund Hope was undercover as a mad cryptographer at Bletchley, there wasn’t much opportunity for social interaction.
“How—how are you?” Maggie asked. “How have you been?”
He looked down at her in the way he used to sort out a maths problem or squint at a crossword puzzle. “Uh, fine … fine. And, er, you?”
“Persevering.” She paused, searching for something to say, then added, “John’s missing. His plane was shot down over Berlin.”
“I heard.”
You did? Maggie thought. And you didn’t even call me?
There was another awkward pause. “Well, I should go,” Edmund said.
“Wait—”
There was a tense silence.
“Dad,” Maggie said, trying to keep her tone light. “Could we have tea? Lunch maybe? I’d still like to talk with you about my mother.”