‘It may be an idea if we cast around for something in the States and come back that way,’ suggested Christine.
‘I’m game,’ Wallace said. ‘See if you can find anything.’
‘I’ll drop a line to John Springfield,’ she said, naming a contact of hers in the same business in New York.
As Wallace walked out from her office he was reasonably content, it seemed that there would be sufficient engagements over the next four months to keep the wolf from the door, plus six weeks in England. It would be ideal if John Springfield was able to find a couple of presentation opportunities in America as Wallace travelled westwards across the States en route to Australia.
There was another call from Bramble who suggested a meeting with Wallace. Wallace reluctantly agreed when Bramble mentioned there may be something in it for Wallace’s bank balance. The meeting took place in Bramble’s office.
‘What is it this time?’
‘Oh nothing much’
‘That’s what you said last time and I had security police chasing me from one end of Jakarta to the other.’
‘Well this time you haven’t got to deliver anything or pick anything up.’
‘Then what the hell do you want me to do?’
Bramble pursed his lips, clearly the interview was not going the way he wanted it.
‘We have a man based in London, he does some journalistic work, freelance work for…’he named a well known London daily ‘…and they know nothing of his intelligence connections.’
‘What the hell is there for us to spy on in England?’ Wallace asked crossly. ‘Does he hang around Lords to see if they’re doctoring the pitch?’
‘We just like to know what is going on. England does not always tell us everything….look what happened during the war.’
‘Eh?’ This was a common innuendo uttered by anti-Pom Australians, Wallace had no doubt that Winston Churchill’s perfidy would be mentioned in a minute. He decided to let it go and said. ‘So you want me to go around England ferreting out intelligence?’
‘No we do not. Just call on the man for a general chat. He knows where places and things are, and he can’t be everywhere at once. If there is something he thinks we should know about then you could possibly have a quick look for him…us. There is, however, one small task you could do for us’
‘Like Jakarta?’
‘We need to keep some tabs on a man living in England,’ Bramble continued, ignoring Wallace’s pointed sally. ‘He caused us much trouble when he was here, he betrayed classified information and various other things when he lived and worked here and we have reason to believe he may still be active’
‘I’ll be damned if I’m getting involved with anything like that again,’ Wallace snapped angrily. ‘The answer is NO!’
‘We shall pay you, of course,’ Bramble remarked mildly.
As the plane banked preparatory for the descent into Heathrow Wallace could see the City of London spread around to the left. The sight of the city, old when Norman William reached it, stirred the blood. From previous visits he could remember the atmosphere that the city generated, of all the overseas cities Wallace had visited only Paris and New York had a similar effect. A mixture of the hustle and bustle, the various streets of all shapes and sizes that ran to no set pattern, the underground railways and the many surface rail termini, together with the vast numbers of buildings of great antiquity in which the history of the nation was enshrined.
This atmosphere was engendered in both London and Paris and visitors could never fail to be affected by it. With the monarch still living in Buckingham Palace, in London there was yet another link to the country’s past of well over 1,000 years.
Sydney, it was true, has much of the same atmosphere about it, but of history there is far less, the furthest one could go back in the history of the Australian nation was 1788. In London there were buildings still in use that pre-dated Sydney, in fact some went back to the 1100’s, with excavations revealing foundations of others that went back to Roman times.
Wallace was not pleased that he had committed to meeting the ASIO or ASIS man in London, it still seemed astonishing to Wallace that Australia should have somebody undercover in London who was officially attached to the High Commission. Apparently his name was David McKay and Wallace gathered he had been in the field for some years.
He could not recall the name from his clerical sojourn at ASIO but then he was hardly in the area of the James Bond men and would have had little contact with any field staff. Wallace’s expertise had been in counting paper clips and checking that the tea trolley arrived on time.
The first step would be the hotel, maybe a quick shower and then a quick tour around the city to see some of the sights before turning in. The first priority was to be rid of jet lag; he had no wish to be falling asleep all over the place and at all sorts of odd times during the day, particularly when crossing streets.
Saul Prosser greeted Wallace enthusiastically as he entered his office, shook him warmly by the hand and escorted him to a chair. It was very late in the afternoon; Wallace had had to thread his way through office workers who were on their way home. Saul’s secretary was also clearing her desk preparatory to departure. She was a middle aged lady of severe appearance, yet Wallace knew from past experience that she had a sweet nature that belied her grim exterior.
‘With you in a moment, old son,’ Saul said and busied himself with some papers before dialling on his telephone. ‘Do you like women wrestling in mud?’
‘What…Yes…I beg your pardon?’ Wallace stumbled, not sure whether he was speaking to him or not.
‘Do you like…hallo James…!’ Saul launched off into a conversation with whoever was on the other end of the line.
Mud wrestling, Wallace pondered. Well, why not. It would be no worse than some of the other dens of iniquity Saul had dragged him into in past years.
Saul was about 5’9” in height, fairly broad and with a bald head, with a pair of twinkling eyes that were guaranteed to captivate any lady between the ages of 20 and 60. He had a trace of a northern accent, supplanted by some Cockney as he had been living and working in London for about 30 years.
He was said to have been more than a useful hooker in his younger days when he played for Harlequins, and had once been considered for England selection. He had married fairly late in life at the age of 35, and had decided to give the game up after breaking his collar bone, three ribs and his left arm during a fracas with London Welsh. He had finished up at the bottom of a scrum that had collapsed after which the game had then degenerated into a brawl. He had been aware of pains in his chest but had played on and then tackled a London Welsh forward as he flung himself over the line for a try. He believed he had broken his collarbone on the forward’s hip, his left arm against the post, while his ribs were maybe fractured during the previous fight. His wife then asserted herself and said ‘No more!’, but after a week or so in hospital and his arm in a sling for weeks Saul’s fervour for further punishment had abated.
Aside from the noble art of Rugby, his business had suffered badly while he had been languishing in his hospital bed and he had to concede that business took priority, especially as it put bread on the table.
He had decided to retire, but had then attended the Wales versus England game at Twickenham a few months later and broken his thumb in an argument with a partisan Welshman who had broken his left knuckle on Saul’s head. They had finished up in the same out-patients ward – and the same Magistrate’s court! Apparently they were still communicating with each other via Christmas cards and telephone whenever there was a game on. To Wallace it seemed to be an odd