The opening deliberately contrasts Ausable’s body, accent and surroundings with fictional spy conventions.
Ausable does not resemble the glamorous spies of Fowler’s imagination. He is very fat, speaks with an American accent and lives in a small, ordinary room in a gloomy French hotel. His strength is not appearance or athletic action but calm intelligence and quick invention.
The armed intruder finally supplies the danger Fowler expected from espionage.
Fowler is a young, romantic writer who wants to observe a real secret agent. His first authentic thrill comes when he and Ausable enter the room and find Max waiting there with a small automatic pistol.
Max states this directly when Ausable pretends that he used a balcony.
Max has entered Ausable’s room with a passkey.
The fabricated access route prepares the trap that makes Max jump from the window.
Ausable claims that Max must have entered through a balcony extending beneath the window from the neighbouring apartment. The balcony is an invention; there is actually none.
The comparison uses the physical details in the opening and Ausable’s verbal defeat of Max.
Popular secret agents are often shown as trim, stylish, physically agile and equipped with weapons or gadgets. They move through glamorous settings and defeat danger through action. Ausable is the opposite: he is fat, wheezes, has a noticeable American accent and occupies an ordinary hotel room. Yet the contrast exposes the weakness of judging ability by appearance. Without a weapon, Ausable defeats the armed Max through observation, composure and a convincing lie. The story suggests that a real agent’s most important equipment is intelligence and presence of mind.
Specific architectural detail and Ausable’s natural irritation make the lie credible.
Ausable reacts to Max as though the supposed balcony is a familiar nuisance rather than a sudden invention. He complains that someone has entered through it for the second time in a month, explains that it belongs to the next apartment, describes how the building once formed a larger unit, and says that it extends beneath his window from an empty room two doors away. He even blames the management for failing to block it. These unnecessary, irritated details sound like remembered facts. Because Ausable speaks casually and Max already knows little about the room, Max accepts the story.
The waiter was expected, but Max’s presence was not; this supports an improvised plan.
Ausable probably begins improvising as soon as he sees Max and invents the balcony. That first lie creates a possible escape route in Max’s mind, but it is not yet a complete plan. When the expected waiter knocks, Ausable instantly turns the sound into a second lie by announcing that the police have arrived. Max then chooses the ‘balcony’ himself. Thus Ausable does not appear to have planned every detail in advance; he stays calm, anticipates Max’s reactions and joins two unexpected opportunities into one successful trap.