At the Goodson Airport, in one of the gilt-framed mirrors
of its old-fashioned waiting room, Van glimpsed the silk hat of
his father who sat awaiting him in an armchair of imitation
marblewood, behind a newspaper that said in reversed characters:
"Crimea Capitulates." At the same moment a raincoated man with
a pleasant, somewhat porcine, pink face accosted Van. He
represented a famous international agency, known as the VPL,
which handled Very
Private Letters.
After a first flash of
surprise, Van reflected that Ada Veen, a recent mistress of his, could
not have chosen a smarter (in all senses of the word) way of conveying to
him a message whose fantastically priced, and prized, process of
transmission insured an absoluteness of secrecy which neither torture
nor mesmerism had been able to break down in the evil days of
1859.