who appeared more solid.â
âI see,â said Maisie.
âBut thereâs respect there, one for the otherâalways is among enemies when theyâre strong. And these men with their businesses have enemies all over the place. Donat has them in Germany, as Huntley told you in the briefing. You see, Maisie, you and I, weâre not of this world of commerce, but I can tell you one thingâthere are more captains of industry than officers on the battlefield willing to kill a man. And people like Leon Donatâquiet, methodical, thoughtful, yet very, very cleverâthey will always have as many against them as for them. But as we know, Donatâs people were always for him.â He blew out his cheeks. âAnyway, at least Otterburn is on our side, Maisie.â
S urrounded by mature Leylandi cypresses, and fields and forest beyond, the house had originally been built in the early 1600s,with a later addition in the mid-eighteenth century. At the back, overlooking the manicured lawns, it had the hallmarks of a Tudor palace, with beamed construction and candy-cane chimneys. Maisie thought the front of the mansion would have been at home in Georgian Bathâshe imagined Jane Austen taking a turn around the fountain that divided the carriage sweep. But it was now the twentieth century, and it was clear the building no longer accommodated a well-to-do landowner, or a clergyman with an enviable personal income over and above a church stipend. Each day she saw a few men and women coming and going, some toward various outbuildings, othersâmostly womenâscurrying along corridors clutching folders, or writing notes as they went. No one stopped to converse with her, and if they greeted her, it was in German. Every teacherâfrom Strupper to the man who told her exactly how she could use her pen as a weaponânow spoke to her in German. She took her meals in her well-appointed rooms, the maid announcing her entrance with âGuten Tag, Fräulein Donat. Ich bin hier mit dem Essenâhoffen wir, dass Sie hungrig sind!â Good day, Miss Donat. Iâm here with your foodâI hope youâre hungry! Or perhaps âGuten Abend, Fräulein Donat. Es war so kalt heute, so habe ich einige heiÃe Suppe für Sie.â Good evening, Miss Donat. It has been so cold today, so I have some hot soup for you. In general the conversation amounted to a comment on the weather, and a desire to know whether Maisieâor Fräulein Donat, as she was now knownâwas hungry, because Cook had made something special for her. At first Maisie offered a halting âThank youâ in German, but necessity forced her to dredge her memoryâs depths for the language she had learned almost twenty years earlier, and even then it was only enough to get her through the basics of polite conversation. In one week she was not expected to demonstrate fluency, but she needed to be able to offer pleasantriesâand to grasp the essence of any conversations taking place around her.
On the morning of Maisieâs penultimate day at the manor house she found a note pushed under her bedroom door, informing her that she should proceed to the conference room following her lesson with Mr. Strupper, which was planned for the hour just after lunch. There was no indication of whom she would be meeting, or if preparation was required.
With a high-pitched whine still ringing in her ears, Maisie made her way down from the shooting range to the conference room. She had been to the room only once before, on her first day. It was here that she received her schedule for the week and instructions regarding how her immersion in the unknown territory of what she considered to be diplomatic risk-taking would proceed. The walls were lined in dark wood, with some panels bearing a coat of arms and others carved to depict hunting scenes and vine fruit. Rich velvet curtains draped leaded windows, and a heavy iron