‘At the end of this war, which the Finns know as the Continuation War, there was a peace treaty and the frontier was withdrawn. The old frontier was too close, to Leningrad, which had the Russians edgy. An artilleryman could stand in Finland and lob shells right into the middle of Leningrad, so the Russians took over the whole of the Karelian Isthmus, together with a few other bits and pieces. This put Meyrick’s home town, Enso, on the Russian side, and the Russians renamed it Svetogorsk.’
Carey sucked on his pipe which had gone out. It gurgled unpleasantly. ‘Am I making myself clear?’
‘You’re clear enough,’ said Denison. ‘But I want more than a history lesson.’
‘We’re getting there,’ said Carey. ‘Meyrick was seventeen at the end of the war. Finland was in a hell of a mess; all the Karelian Finns cleared out of the isthmus because they didn’t want to live under the Russians and this put the pressure on the rest of Finland because there was nowhere for them to go. The Finns had to work so bloody hard producing the reparations the Russians demanded that there was no money or men or time left over to build housing. So they turned to the Swedes and asked calmly if they’d take 100,000 immigrants.’ Carey snapped his fingers. ‘Just like that – and the Swedes agreed.’
Denison said, ‘Noble of them.’
Carey nodded. ‘So young Meyrick went to Sweden. He didn’t stay long because he came here, to Oslo, where he lived until he was twenty-four. Then he went to England. He was quite alone all this time – his family had been killed during the war – but as soon as he arrived in England he married his first wife. She had what he needed, which was money.’
‘Who doesn’t need money?’ asked McCready cynically.
‘We’ll get on faster if you stop asking silly questions,’ said Carey. ‘The second thing you have to know about Meyrick is that he’s a bright boy. He has a flair for invention, particularly in electronics, and he has something else which the run-of-the-mill inventor doesn’t have – the ability to turn his inventions into money. The first Mrs Meyrick had a few thousand quid which was all he needed to get started. When they got divorced he’d turned her into a millionairess and he’d made as much for himself. And he went on making it.’
Carey struck a match and applied it to his pipe. ‘By this time he was a big boy as well as a bright boy. He owned a couple of factories and was deep in defence contracts. There’s a lot of his electronics in the Anglo-French Jaguar fighter as well as in Concorde. He also did some bits and pieces for the Chieftain main battle tank. He’s now at the stage where he heads special committees on technical matters concerning defence, and the Prime Minister has pulled him into a Think Tank. He’s a hell of a big boy but the man-in-the-street knows nothing about him. Got the picture?’
‘I think so,’ said Denison. ‘But it doesn’t help me a damn.’
Carey blew a plume of smoke into the air. ‘I think Meyrick inherited his brains from his father, so let’s take a look at the old boy.’
Denison sighed. ‘Must we?’
‘It’s relevant,’ said Carey flatly. ‘Hannu Merikken was a physicist and, by all accounts, a good one. The way the story runs is that if he hadn’t been killed during the war he’d have been in line for the Nobel Prize. The war put a stop to his immediate researches and he went to work for the Finnish government in Viipuri, which was then the second biggest city in Finland. But it’s in Karelia and it’s now a Russian city and the Russians call it Vyborg.’ He looked at Denison’s closed eyes, and said sharply, ‘I trust I’m not boring you.’
‘Go on,’ said Denison. ‘I’m just trying to sort out all these names.’
‘Viipuri was pretty well smashed up during the war, including the laboratory Merikken was working in. So he got the hell out of there and went home to Enso which is about thirty miles north of Viipuri. He knew by this time that no one was going to stop the Russians and he wanted to see to the safety of his papers. He’d done a lot of work before the war which hadn’t been published and he didn’t want to lose it.’
‘So what did he do?’ asked Denison. He was becoming interested.
‘He put all the papers into a metal trunk, sealed it, and buried it in the garden of his house. Young Harri Merikken – that’s our Harry Meyrick – helped him. The next day Hannu Merikken, his wife and his younger son, were killed by the same bomb, and if Harri had been in the house at the same time he’d have been killed, too.’
‘And the papers are important?’ said Denison.
‘They are,’ said Carey soberly. ‘Last year Meyrick was in Sweden and he bumped into a woman who had given him a temporary home when he’d been evacuated from Finland. She said she’d been rummaging about in the attic or whatever and had come across a box he’d left behind. She gave it to him. He opened it in his hotel that night and looked through it. Mostly he was amused by the things he found – the remnants of the enthusiasms of a seventeen-year-old. There were the schematics of a ham radio he’d designed – he was interested in electronics even then – some other drawings of a radio-controlled model aircraft, and things like that. But in the pages of an old radio magazine he found a paper in his father’s handwriting, and that suddenly made the papers buried in Merikken’s garden very important indeed.’
‘What are they about?’ asked Denison.
Carey ignored the question. ‘At first, Meyrick didn’t realize what he’d got hold of and he talked about it to a couple of scientists in Sweden. Then the penny dropped and he bolted back to England and began to talk to the right people – we’re lucky he was big enough to know who to talk to. The people he talked to got interested and, as an end result of a lot of quiet confabulation, I was brought in.’
‘The idea being to go and dig up the garden?’
‘That’s right. The only snag is that the garden is in Russia.’ Carey knocked out his pipe in the ashtray. ‘I have a couple of men scouting the Russian border right now. The idea was that as soon as they report, Meyrick and I would pop across and dig up the papers.’
McCready snapped his fingers. ‘As easy as walking down Piccadilly.’
‘But Meyrick was snatched,’ said Carey. ‘And you were substituted.’
‘Yes,’ said Denison heavily. ‘Why me?’
‘I don’t think we need to go too deeply into that,’ said Carey delicately. He did not want Denison to ruminate about his past life and go off into a fugue. ‘I think it could have been anybody who looked enough like Meyrick to need the least possible surgery.’
There was a whole list of other qualifications – someone who would not be missed too easily, someone who had the right psychological make-up, someone very easily accessible. It had been a job which had been carefully set up in England and back in London there was a team of ten men sifting through the minutiae of Denison’s life in the hope of coming up with a clue to his kidnapping. It was a pity that Denison could not be directly questioned but Harding was dead against it, and Carey had a need for Denison – he did not want an insane man on his hands.
‘Which brings us to the next step,’ said Carey. ‘Someone – call them Crowd X – has pinched Meyrick, but they’re not going to broadcast the fact. They don’t know if we’ve tumbled to the substitution or not – and we’re not going to tell them.’ He looked steadily at Denison. ‘Which is why we need your co-operation, Mr Denison.’
‘In what way?’ asked Denison cautiously.
‘We want you to carry on being Meyrick, and we want you to go to Finland.’
Denison’s jaw dropped.