of paperwork, messy looking files, a discarded coffee cup.
âGood to meet you, Maggie,â McGrath said. Heâd wasted no time in taking up her invitation to use her first name. âYou come highly recommended.â
She smiled. McGrathâs non-professional interest in her was so transparent that it was difficult not to play up to it. âNot too highly, I hope. I donât know if I can live up to it.â She knew exactly how highly sheâd been recommended, and by whom. More of the string-pulling that they were so adept at in the Agency. It was clever stuff. It was usually a tame informant whoâd set the wheels in motion, getting the word about her out on the grapevine. In this case, according to Salter, theyâd got wind of the fact that McGrath was looking for a discreet administrator to help him keep the various strands of his business in order. Looking at this place, she wasnât surprised. McGrath had positioned himself, as so many of them did, as a legitimate businessman, running a more or less straight operation in parallel with his seamier activities. But, looking at the desk, she could imagine that administration wasnât McGrathâs strongest point.
The key word, of course, was discreet. In her short telephone conversation with McGrath, theyâd maintained the fiction that she would be looking after the above-board element of McGrathâs business â an import/export business which, according to the records sheâd checked at Companiesâ House, had a turnover barely large enough to cover her requested salary. But the grapevine had been very clear that McGrath was looking for someone to help run all parts of his business, including those elements that were kept hidden from the light of day.
Maggie Yates came highly recommended to fulfil that particular brief. The story was that sheâd been the brains behind her ex-husbandâs business, an East End mix of legitimate market-trading and more clandestine dealing. Sheâd given her husband loyal support, up to the point where sheâd caught him dipping his hands into the till to subsidise his affair with some Dalston pole-dancer. Sheâd withdrawn a sizable sum from the business account, packed her suitcases, and headed north, leaving her ex with a pregnant pole-dancer and a pile of debts. It was a decent story, filtered skilfully through a succession of friends of friends. Creating an undercover legend was a little like money-laundering, sheâd sometimes thought. The original source gets lost along the way, and the story becomes a little more legitimate each time itâs passed on. The figure whoâd recommended her to McGrath had sincerely believed everything heâd said, having received the story himself from someone he considered reliable.
Marie had been nervous about it, because again theyâd had so little time to prepare the ground. It had been well-handled, but there was always the risk that someone would pick up the phone and speak to the wrong person, and the whole house of fictional cards would come tumbling down.
It might still happen, but she felt more confident now that everything had been running for a few weeks. The rules were different in this world. If you wanted the right person, you couldnât call the JobCentre or some local temp agency. All you could do was rely on word of mouth. And McGrath wasnât entirely stupid. Heâd take his time, trust her only as far as he needed to until he was confident of her loyalty and discretion. The recommendation might get her through the door, but it was her own abilities that would keep her there. That, and the fact that already McGrath was virtually panting like a lascivious dog.
âWeâre a small but ambitious business,â McGrath was saying, in the tone he probably reserved for the local Chamber of Commerce. âOn the way up, you might say.â
âYou said it was primarily