Call for the Dead

Call for the Dead by John le Carré Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Call for the Dead by John le Carré Read Free Book Online
Authors: John le Carré
Tags: Fiction, General, Suspense, Thrillers, Espionage
suit, very threadbare and without a vestige of a crease in the trousers. His shirt cuffs were black with sweat, grime and motor oil and held in place by paper-clips twisted into a knot. The landlord appeared and took their orders. The stranger bought a large whisky and ginger wine and took it at once to the saloon bar, where there was a coal fire. The landlord watched with disapproval. "That's him all over, mean sod. Won't pay saloon prices, but likes the fire." "Who is he?" asked Mendel. More hilarious laughter. Mendel leant over to Smiley. "You go and wait in the car--you're better out of this. Got a fiver?" Smiley gave him five pounds from his wallet, nodded his agreement and walked out. He could imagine nothing more frightful than dealing with Scarr. "You Scarr?" said Mendel. "Friend, you are correct." "TRX 0891. That your car?" Mr. Scarr frowned at his whisky and ginger. The question seemed to sadden him. "Well?" said Mendel. "She was, squire, she was." "What the hell do you mean?" Scarr raised his right hand a few inches then let it gently fall. "Dark waters, squire, murky waters." "Listen, I've got bigger fish to fry than ever you dreamed of. I'm not made of glass, see? I couldn't care bloody less about your racket. Where's that car?" Scarr appeared to consider this speech on its merits. "I see the light, friend. You wish for information." "Of course I bloody well do." "These are hard times, squire. The cost of living, dear boy, is a rising star. Information is an item, a saleable item, is it not?" "You tell me who hired that car and you won't starve." "I don't starve now, friend. I want to eat better." "A fiver." Scarr finished his drink and replaced his glass noisily on the table. Mendel got up and bought him another. "It was pinched," said Scarr. "I had it a few years for self-drive, see. For the deepo." "The what?" "The deepo--the deposit. Bloke wants a car for a day. You take twenty quid deposit in notes, right? When he comes back he owes you forty bob, see? You give him a cheque for thirty-eight quid, show it on your books as a loss and the job's worth a tenner. Got it?" Mendel nodded. "Well, three weeks ago a bloke come in. Tall Scotsman. Well-to-do, he was. Carried a stick. He paid the deepo, took the car and I never see him nor the car again. Robbery." "Why not report it to the police?" Scarr paused and drank from his glass. He looked at Mendel sadly. "Many factors would argue against, squire." "Meaning you'd pinched it yourself?" Scarr looked shocked. "I have since heard distressing rumours about the party from which I obtained the vehicle. I will say no more," he added piously. "When you rented him the car he filled in forms, didn't he? Insurance, receipt and so on? Where are they?" "False, all false. He gave me an address in Ealing. I went there and it didn't exist. I have no doubt the name was also fictitious." Mendel screwed the money into a roll in his pocket, and handed it across the table to Scarr. Scarr unfolded it and, quite unselfconscious, counted it in full view of anyone who cared to look. "I know where to find you," said Mendel; "and I know a few things about you. If that's a load of cock you've sold me I'll break your bloody neck." He drew level with the first of the two pre-fabs which bordered Scarr's yard. A car was parked in the yard with its sidelights on. Curious, Smiley turned off the street and walked towards it. It was an old MG Saloon, green probably, or that brown they went in for before the war. The number-plate was barely lit, and caked in mud. He stooped to read it, tracing the letters with his forefinger: TRX 0891. Of course--that was one of the numbers he had written down this morning. He heard a footstep behind him and stood up, half turning. He had begun to raise his arm as the blow fell. It was a terrible blow--it seemed to split his skull in two. As he fell he could feel the warm blood running freely over his left ear. "Not again, oh Christ, not again," thought Smiley. But he

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