Peace on Earth. Gordon Stevens
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Название: Peace on Earth

Автор: Gordon Stevens

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Приключения: прочее

Серия:

isbn: 9780008219369

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ Think when the betrayal started.’

      It was ironic, Nabil had already thought, and probably inevitable, that the man he had chosen to help his people return to their homeland should be the Foreign Minister of the imperial power which had played such a role in their original exodus from it.

      ‘Most people would say the United Nations decision of 1947,’ he began. ‘They would be wrong. It actually began in 1917. The Balfour Declaration. The first open support by the British for the idea of a separate Jewish state.’

      Khaled looked at him again. ‘Kenshaw-Taylor has a very long political pedigree. His father was in politics, his father before him.’

      ‘I knew he came from a political family.’

      ‘Did you know his grandfather was a senior advisor to Balfour?’

      ‘No,’ said Nabil. ‘I did not.’

      He sat silently, remembering the terms of the support, remembering the way his father had taught him to despise what the Declaration had done to his country and people.

      ‘Why did you choose him?’ asked Khaled.

      ‘Because he is ambitious.’

      ‘Some who know him would say he is too ambitious for his own good,’ said the power broker. ‘He is a good choice.’

      Nabil sensed his relief. ‘What else is there to know of him?’ He did not know what answer he expected, only knew later that he had not expected the answer he received.

      Khaled sat back, remembering the first time he had met Kenshaw-Taylor, the many times they had observed each other prior to negotiations, the informal conversations in the receptions after. Something about the man, he thought, something they might be able to use. ‘I don’t know, but I will find out.’

      The coloured lights were shining brightly, even though it was only four in the afternoon, the pavements were crowded. Enderson could smell the roast chestnuts on the corner of the street. It was as Christmas Eve used to be, as it should be, he could not help thinking.

      The children were tugging at his sleeve, forgetting that his left arm was in a sling. It still hurt, where it had been burned and torn, where the surgeon at the Queen Elizabeth Military Hospital in Woolwich had pulled it together and informed him that it was to be checked every month until it was healed. Jane was in front of him, struggling under the weight of the turkey. In his one good hand he carried a bag of food and wine.

      ‘Dad,’ said his children, ‘come on, Dad, you know what, Dad.’ His wife pretended not to hear. ‘Look, love,’ he suggested, ‘you’ll want to get the turkey started. Why don’t you go home and the kids and I will finish here.’ His wife smiled. ‘OK, but don’t be late.’ She watched as Enderson and the children turned back down the pavement and headed for Chadds. ‘Great, Dad, great,’ she heard the boy say. ‘About time,’ said the girl.

      The ground floor of the department store was crowded: he followed the children, protecting his arm. Two weeks in a sling, he had been told, then a plaster. It would not affect his work as long as he took it carefully, the surgeon had said, as long as he came back for the monthly checks. They reached the perfume counter, he watched as the children worked out the prices, how much they could afford, then bought their mother her Christmas presents. ‘You want them wrapped here or shall we do it when we get home?’ He already knew the answer. ‘When we get home, Dad.’ It was his first Christmas with them for three years.

      By the time they left the store it was four thirty. ‘Can we have a Wimpy, Dad?’ He knew it was a conspiracy against which he could not win. ‘OK,’ he conceded, ‘you can have a Wimpy.’ On the way they passed a news-stand, he bought a copy of the Evening News, tucked it under his arm, and followed the children.

      The Wimpy bar was quieter than he would have thought; they sat at a table near the window: the children ordered burgers and coke, he asked for a tea and began to browse through the paper. At the third table to their left, his back against the wall, was a tramp, he had just finished a plate of chips and was eking out his cup of tea. The music in the bar was seasonal. Enderson remembered when he had last sat in a Wimpy bar, what the music had been then, and was glad that the food arrived. The tune changed and he recognised the words. On the table to his left the tramp had finished his tea; in the corner of his eye Enderson saw the waitress approach the man, assuming, he did not know why, that she was going to ask him to leave. She reached across the table and gave him another cup of tea. In the loudspeaker in the ceiling he heard the words of the tune.

       ‘They said there’d be snow at Christmas,

       They said there’d be peace on earth.’

      He looked out the window at the sky. No snow, he thought, remembering the boy in Belfast, the bombings and killings in Europe, the assassination on the motorway near Heathrow, not much peace on earth either.

      He turned to the foreign page of the newspaper. In the right-hand column was an item from the Reuters office in Bonn which a desperate sub-editor had used to fill up space. The piece was headed ‘Christmas terror alert in Germany’. The West German terrorist leader Klars Christian Mannheim, convicted on three bombing charges, had announced that from the New Year he would go on hunger strike in support of demands for greater civil liberties in the country’s prisons.

      On the table to his left the tramp was warming his fingers round the cup of tea. ‘Look, Dad, look.’ His son was pulling at his coat, drawing his attention to a woman in the street outside, trying to push a Christmas tree into the boot of her car. He began to laugh. ‘Can we have another drink, Dad?’ The woman closed the boot, cutting off the top of the tree. He called the waitress.

      ‘Two more cokes, please.’

      She saw what they were laughing at, saw that the tramp had also seen. ‘Why not?’ she began laughing with them. ‘After all, it’s Christmas.’

      Enderson thought of the newspaper article, the man who would begin to die in the New Year. ‘Why not,’ he smiled back, it’s Christmas.’

      John Kenshaw-Taylor sat back in his chair and sipped the malt whisky, he had been shooting since seven and polished off the despatch boxes after lunch. The house was quiet, the children would not be back from the party till six. In the kitchen, the nanny was preparing tea, at the table behind him his wife was wrapping presents. ‘These killings in Europe,’ she suddenly asked. ‘This man who said he will go on hunger strike. It won’t affect you, will it?’

      John Kenshaw-Taylor sat forward, threw a log on the fire, and poured himself another drink. ‘Shouldn’t think so, darling,’ he said confidently.

      *

      The night air was warm, much warmer than Yakov Zubko had ever expected in Moscow. He stood in the window and breathed it in. It was going well, he thought, better than they could ever have hoped; he had been found a job, not as good a job as others with his qualifications would have expected, but a job. They had even been promised a house.

      He walked through to the children’s room, opening the door quietly so that he did not wake them, and looked at them, hearing the sound of their breathing. In the kitchen Alexandra heard the singing from the street below. That afternoon they had been shopping; there had not been enough money and they had bought nothing for themselves, just a present each for the children to show to the friends they had made. It did not worry her.

      She left the kitchen СКАЧАТЬ