IX The Cave of Swimmers
t out sometearing s. It s in t, ory.
“I can talk al. t mortal yet. In spite of ly distressed talk about it. Sant from everybody. t o communicate o ask o read to me... Do you realize neity.
“Do you have a wife?” Almasy asked.
Caravaggio sat in t, o erase everyt of yout did not come so easily to him any longer.
“You must talk to me, Caravaggio. Or am I just a book? Someto be read, some creature to be tempted out of a loc full of morpation, pockets of stones.” “t deal during timized. e stole. to advise.
e could read t more naturally telligence. e created double bluffs. ure of crooks and intellectuals. I , t’s ery, a vacuum on ts. turning your kno into German oo muc El taj in , ’s o the Germans.” Silence.
“And you still o get back to t?” “Not till I volunteered to take Eppler across t.” “t tell you. to do o Cairo
..” “Operation Salaam.” “Yes. man.... o tell me?” “I o say, roops, travelling en Rommel’s man into Cairo ?” “ I to say is t t just discover Eppler in Cairo. t t let Rommel kno or our sources till Cairo to capture Eppler.
“e c. And because Intelligence erested. ted you as o be killed... If you don’t believe me, you left Gialo and it took you ty days. You folloe. You couldn’t get near U because of Allied troops, and you avoided Abu Ballas. times er like him....
“Planes supposedly ‘lost’ you, but you racked very carefully. You the spies.
Intelligence t you on over t t er you left Cairo in , y