
One day, when he's about to go for a walk, Verloc's wife Winnie asks him to bring Stevie (Winnie's brother) along.

Verloc takes a trip to the continent to supposedly clear his head, although you can guess that he's trying to find some way to deal with the task Mr. You good? Good? Good! The novel suddenly jumps back in time (though you don't know it right away). You doing okay? That was a lot of names and a lot of intrigue. Heat's boss, however, doesn't want Michaelis tied up with the crime, so after consulting a member of English parliament, he goes over Inspector Heat's head and investigates the crime himself. Despite the connection with Verloc, though, Heat chooses to blame another known anarchist named Michaelis for the crime. While investigating the crime, Chief Inspector Heat finds a piece of material with Verloc's address sewn into it. The Professor reveals to Ossipon that he gave a bomb to Verloc a few days earlier, and Ossipon becomes convinced that Verloc is the man who's blown himself up. Ossipon says that someone has blown himself up in Greenwich Park, near the observatory. Next thing you know, you're listening to one of Verloc's friends, Ossipon, chatting with another guy (called the Professor) at a bar. Vladimir threatens his cushy life, he becomes very anxious and agrees to the plan. Verloc doesn't want to do it, but when Mr.

Vladimir orders Verloc to make sure that a bomb is planted at the Greenwich Observatory. Vladimir who hatches a plan that'll force the police to start locking up political agitators without due process. One day, he is suddenly summoned to meet his new boss at the embassy, a guy named Mr. Verloc, a man who runs a pornography shop and hangs out with a bunch of anarchists…but who is also a secret agent for a foreign government.
