
This too impressed me. They've got cubicles next to the signals room where the controls can catch some sleep if a mission starts running hot and they have to keep close to the board. But I could remember Croder mounting a round-the-clock stint only once in the whole of my time with the Bureau, and that was when Flack was stuck in a trap within a mile of the Kremlin with the proceeds of a document snatch that had to reach the Ministry of Defence in London before the PM could raise the president of the United States on the red telephone to say whether or not he was prepared to send troops in with the UN forces if an air strike against Iran was ordered first. Croder had lit a fuse under Flack's support group and got the documents out and faxed within three hours and brought Flack home with not much more than a touch of shell-shock. Croder is that good.
More toys, I'm never satisfied. 'Who can I have as my director in the field?'
'Whom would you like?'
'Ferris.'
In a moment: 'Ferris is directing Rickshaw in Beijing. But if -'
'Who's the executive?'
'Tully.'
One of the higher-echelon shadows, or he wouldn't have been given Ferris. 'Where are they,' I asked Croder, 'with Rickshaw?'
'Approaching the end-phase.'
'Does it look sticky?'
'Not at present, though in the end-phase anything can happen, of course.'
Conscience pricked. 'I'd give a lot for Ferris, but -'
'You need give nothing.' He was looking down, Croder, saw the problem, was trying to assess my thinking. To take a major DIF away from a top shadow moving into the end-phase of a mission was probably unheard-of in the annals of the Bureau.
