"Why should I? I came by it honestly. And somebody wants to start something, I can take care of myself."
Merle shrugged. "Okay, please yourself. It's your funeral. But don't say I didn't warn you. French Louise is a bitch in spades."
She stood up. "Let's be on our way. Nice to meet you boys."
Blodwen settled the poodle in its basket with a dish of meat, then she pulled on a black nylon fur coat and ushered them to the door. They walked down to the first floor together. The girls stopped there, and Blodwen said, "Thanks for coming. Now you know where we live, drop around again."
The market had closed down and Berwick Street was practically empty. Solo and Illya walked through to Brewer Street and caught a cab to the hotel.
As the taxi threaded through the first rush of theater traffic Illya asked, "What now?"
Solo said, "The trap's baited. All we can do is wait. I've got a feeling it won't be long."
When they got up to the suite Solo went into the bathroom and pulled out a suitcase. He unlocked it, took out a black transmitter, and placed it on the bed. He unwound aerial wire, draping it carefully in loops around the walls. Then he tuned in and said, "Open channel D."
The voice of the operator in the brownstone block near the East River was distorted by static. She said, "This is a lousy line. Sunspots or something. Why didn't you bounce your call off Early Bird?"
"We'll have to get U.N.C.L.E. to put up his own satellite," Solo said. "Put me on to I.D., please."
There was a second's delay and then a male voice announced, "Identification and Records."
"Hi, Al," Solo greeted. "I want all you can get me on a woman called Anna, surname unknown. She runs a club called Gloriana in Newport Street, London. She is Oriental, probably Chinese but could be Indonesian, about thirty years old, height not more than five feet, weight around ninety-eight pounds, no visible distinguishing marks. Antecedents unknown, but rumored to have come to London from Cardiff. No criminal record, as far as I can trace."
"You say the sweetest things." Al sounded bitter. "All of a sudden I'm a magician? Why don't you try Scotland Yard? The West End squad must know her, even if she's clean."
"I don't want to bring the Yard into it at this stage."
"Okay. I'll do what I can. When do you want the dope?"
Solo said, "Yesterday," and tuned out hurriedly.
He rewound the aerial, packed the set back in the suitcase and went into the living room. He told Illya, "Ring room service and ask them to send dinner up here. I'll call Al back in a couple of hours and see if he's managed to produce."
"Anna?"
"Who else?"
It was ten-thirty when the phone rang.
Solo put down the paperback he was reading and picked up the receiver.
Blodwen's voice said perkily, "Napoleon? Can you do me a teeny-weeny little favor?"
"Where are you?"
"I'm in the Bow Street Police Station. Be a darling and come and bail me out."
Chapter Eleven
The desk sergeant was a middle-aged man with a deeply tanned face that looked like old leather. There was a Burma Star in the row of ribbons above the pocket of his tunic. He said, "Yvonne Grey? I don't know why she had to drag you out of bed. She could have bailed herself out if she'd wanted to. We weren't anxious to keep her."
"I suppose she had her reasons," Solo said. "What is she booked for?"
"Disorderly conduct. She was having a bit of a fight with another woman in Newport Street. We picked them both up."
"Where is she now?"
"In the cells. Sleeping it off, I hope." He signaled to a young constable. "Bring Mitchell up."
He opened a drawer and took out an orange form. "You sign this. Better read it first. If she fails to surrender to her bail, it'll cost you ten quid."
"She'll show up," Solo signed along the dotted line.
The young policeman reappeared with Blodwen beside him. Her red curls were tousled, the front of her dress was torn, and there was an angry furrow where fingernails had ripped down her cheek, but she seemed in high spirits.
She said, "Thanks for coming to the rescue. Have you completed the formalities?"
The sergeant put her handbag on the counter and gave her a form. "Check the contents and sign for them," he told her. "And remember, you've got to be back here in court at ten sharp tomorrow."
"On the dot," she promised. "And thanks for your hospitality."
They went out into the street. Solo hailed a taxi and gave the cabbie the Berwick Street address.
"Now," he said, when they were back in Blodwen's apartment, "perhaps you'll explain what you've been up to."
She went to the cabinet and poured drinks. "We're making progress," she said. "You were right about the medallion. It was a sensation. That's how I ended up in jail."
She handed Solo his glass, took her own and settled herself comfortably on the settee with the poodle in her lap.
"We got to the Gloriana around eight o'clock," she began. "The place was half-empty then. Just a couple of girls at the bar and a few customers at the tables. Dancer drifted over after a while and had a few words with Merle. If he recognized the medallion he didn't show it. He had a quick drink and then got on with his job. Apart from saying good-evening he didn't give me a tumble. Like I told you, the girls drift in and out and no questions asked.
"Anna only showed up once. She came into the room, looked around to see that everything was going smoothly and then went away again, presumably back to her office.
"The fun didn't start until half-past nine. That's when French Louse arrived. She was obviously as high as a kite, and once she got her beady eyes on the medallion she was fit to be tied. I'll skip the details, but her main complaint seemed to be that I had pinched her boyfriend, a character called Scalesi. She kept pushing his photograph under my nose and yelling at me in gutter French. And all the time she kept trying to grab the medallion.
"Merle tried to calm her down but it was like trying to plug a volcano with a medicine cork. In the end Dancer gave us both the old heave-ho out on to the cold hard sidewalk, and it was there the battle started. The boys in blue broke it up and the next thing you know, we're in the Black Maria and on the way to Bow Street."
She finished her drink and went to the cabinet for another. "I sent for you," she explained, "because I hoped you'd be in time to get a look at French Louise before they took us down to the cells. But that sergeant was to efficient. Now you'll have to wait until the morning when we come up before the judge." She raised her glass. "Here's to crime!"
"You've done a good job," Solo said. He stood up. "Now I'd better get out of here before I ruin your reputation."
"You must be joking," she retorted. "In this house you'd do it more good if you stayed the night."
He shook his head sadly. "You're showing a dedication to your work," he said, "that is beginning to disturb me."
"That's what Stanislavsky does for a gal. It's the Method."
"Well, don't get carried away. I'll see you in court in the morning."
Illya was waiting up in the hotel suite. He said, "New York came through with a message from I.D. They've checked on Anna. Her description ties up with an enterprising young woman called Anna Soo Lee, born 1934 in Shanghai. Soo Lee's father was a minor war lord. He joined up with Chiang Kai-shek and went to Formosa in 1949. For some reason Anna didn't go with him. She showed up briefly as a dancer in Singapore and in Sydney, Australia, and was next reported as the girlfriend of a polo-playing maharajah, complete with white Mercedes and all the trimmings. Something broke that up, but she came out of it with quite a stake. She arrived in Britain by air in 1960 and for some reason only known to herself settled down in Bute Town, Cardiff — the old 'Tiger Bay.' For the record, incidentally, Bute Town these days is as respectable as Poughkeepsie and a model of racial integration. The rough stuff went out with hobble skirts."