Tapestry of Spies

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Authors: Stephen Hunter

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ASSASSINATION

Portela led them down the slope and out into no-man’s-land. A mist had risen, and the three men seemed to wade through it. Oddly, up above, the stars were clear and sharp, shreds and flecks of remote light. Florry was last in the file. He had the Webley in his hand, and a four-five-five in each chamber. He was just behind Julian.

Wait till you get beyond the lines. Then lift and fire. Clean. Into the back of the head. It’ll be much easier….

Florry gripped his Webley so tight he thought he’d smash it: what an opportunity for Julian, and so early on! A single noise, a cough, the smallest twitch, and the bloody thing was over….

Also by Stephen Hunter
FICTION
Pale Horse Coming
Hot Springs
The Second Saladin
Time to Hunt
Black Light
Dirty White Boys
Point of Impact
The Day Before Midnight
The Master Sniper

NONFICTION
Violent Screen: A Critic’s 13 Years on the Front Lines of Movie Mayhem

Contents

Other Books by this Author

Title Page

Dedication

Acknowledgments

Prologue

Part I - Robert

   
Chapter 1 - London, Late Fall of 1936

   
Chapter 2 - The Lux

   
Chapter 3 - Barcelona, Late 1936

   
Chapter 4 - Mr. Sterne and Mr. Webley

   
Chapter 5 - Barcelona

   
Chapter 6 - The Akim

   
Chapter 7 - MI-6, London

   
Chapter 8 - The Water

   
Chapter 9 - The Interrogation

   
Chapter 10 - On the Ramblas

   
Chapter 11 - Igenko

   
Chapter 12 - The Parade

   
Chapter 13 - The Major

Part II - Julian

   
Chapter 14 - Huesca

   
Chapter 15 - The Grand Oriente

   
Chapter 16 - The Attack

   
Chapter 17 - Comrade Major Bolodin

   
Chapter 18 - News from the Front

   
Chapter 19 - The Club

   
Chapter 20 - Tarragona

   
Chapter 21 - The Hospital

   
Chapter 22 - The Mission

   
Chapter 23 - ¡Viva La AnarquÍa!

   
Chapter 24 - Tristram Shandy

   
Chapter 25 - Behind the Lines

   
Chapter 26 - The Club Chicago

   
Chapter 27 - Pamplona

   
Chapter 28 - Midnight

   
Chapter 29 - The Oberleutnant

   
Chapter 30 - The English Dynamiters

   
Chapter 31 - The Suppression

   
Chapter 32 - The Bridge

Part III - Sylvia

   
Chapter 33 - Arrested

   
Chapter 34 - Bad News

   
Chapter 35 - The Trial

   
Chapter 36 - Tibidabo

   
Chapter 37 - Papers

   
Chapter 38 - Ugarte

   
Chapter 39 - Detectives

   
Chapter 40 - Pavel

   
Chapter 41 - Night Train to Paris

   
Chapter 42 - The Green

   
Chapter 43 - The Hangar

   
Chapter 44 - A Walk in the Park

About the Author

Copyright

This one, as promised,
is for Amy

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The author would like to thank those who gave so generously of their time and their imaginations. First, thanks to Ernie Erber, who actually spent part of 1936 in Barcelona. Thanks to Mike Hill and Joe Fanzone for valuable early consultations; they see their ideas reflected on every page of the book. Thanks to Fred Rasmussen, of
The Sun
library, for digging out the Spanish Civil War photos that were of so much help; Antero Pietila of
The Sun’s
Moscow bureau, for unearthing the location, size, and architecture of the Hotel Lux; to another colleague, Matt Sieden, for his kind words and good suggestions. Thanks to my old college roommate, Lenne Miller, for his enthusiasms for the book. Thanks to my mother, Virginia Hunter, and my brother, Tim Hunter, for their comments and patience; and to my brother-in-law, medical consultant, and good friend, John D. Bullock, M.D. Thanks to David Petzal for his reading. Thanks to the night-shift concierge at the Hotel Colón in Barcelona for numerous courtesies and unfailing good humor. Thanks to Jeff Bass, for suggesting the epigram from the Mason book. And to Susan Carnochan and Zita Dabars, for assistance with my Spanish. Thanks especially to my courageous and stubborn agent, Victoria Gould Pryor, who believed in this
book from the very start and fought for it as if it were her own; and to my brilliant editor, Barbara Grossman, of Crown, for her quotient of belief and her refusal to accept anything less than my best. And thanks—special thanks—to my wife, Lucy Hageman Hunter, for her glamourless, thankless, and yet heroic efforts on behalf of this book. Needless to say, errors are entirely my own.

The Ruy-Lopez is more popular than any other king pawn opening…. The Gambit is astonishingly complicated, embodying as it does a perpetual intertwining of grandiose strategical planning with an alarming maze of difficult tactical finesses and combinative motifs. It is no exaggeration to affirm that mastery of the Spanish Gambit is a requisite for anyone aspiring to become a strong chess player.

Adapted from James Mason,

The Art of Chess
,

London, April 1898

PROLOGUE

T
HE TRIAL OF THE ASSASSIN BENNY LAL IN THE OLD COURTHOUSE
at Moulmein, lower Burma, in February of 1931, caused a bit of a stir in its own day, but its memory has not lingered. It was a forgotten moment in the history of a vanished empire.

Yet a case could be made that it changed the political history of our century, however secretly, however subtly. Still, in the mind of one man, the event was important for exactly what it was, and not for what it eventually made possible. He was, on the last day of the trial, the Crown’s chief witness, a tall, not unpleasant-looking young officer in the service khaki of the India Imperial Police. It was his duty to put the noose around the neck of Benny Lal.

The blades of the overhead fan moved through the air in a stately whirl, yet without palpable effect. Robert Florry stared at the motion, its easy, hypnotic blur fascinating him.

“Assistant superintendent?”

The magistrate’s voice. Florry swallowed awkwardly and, blinking, embarrassed, redirected his vision toward the bench. He hoped his discomfort did not show, knowing of course that it did. He swallowed again. It had taken such a
long time for this moment to arrive, but now it rushed at him with the power of the undeniable future.

“Assistant superintendent?”

Florry attempted a wretched smile. The courtroom, jammed with other Imperial Policemen and natives, was as still as a photograph. He could feel their scrutiny: it had the weight of accusation.

“Yessir,” he said. His own voice always bothered him. It was a reedy, thin instrument and tended to disappear in key moments such as this one.

“The man I saw—” he said a bit more smartly, raising his finger to point—

At the defense table, under the slow whirl of the fan, amid a collection of more fortunate members of his race, sat a Hindu.

He was small and had that furtive, shifty, almost liquid swiftness in which the wogs seemed to specialize. He had a shock of thick dark hair and two darting black eyes, his skin so mocha-chocolate that it made his white teeth blaze like diamonds in the firelight. For Benny Lal was smiling; he always smiled. He was an idiot.

“That’s the man,” said Florry, suddenly finding his policeman’s voice. “That’s the man I saw running from the deceased on Tuesday last, half past eleven in the evening, outside the Moulmein officers’ club. Sir.”

He added the bit of recapitulation as if in testimony to his own efficiency, which was on trial here, too. Yet surely every officer and every native in the courtroom would have known that Tuesday last at half-eleven, a drunken Burmese merchant named U Bat had had his throat opened all over his white suit not fifty paces from the veranda of the club where Florry, nursing his fifth gin of the night, had sat trying to write Georgian poetry in the lamplight, amid moths and fancies. Only slightly drunk, the young officer had rushed to the still form in the dust as a smaller, quicker
shape had dashed by him. Perhaps, it was being said in certain quarters, a man with more wit about him (or less gin in him) would have made the pinch right there. But Florry, stunned by the suddenness with which the violence had occurred and a little dotty not only with drink but also with dreams of literature and then still further staggered by his first exposure to the gaudy wreckage of a human body soaking in its own blood in the dust, had let the villain slip away in the shadows of an alley.

A manhunt organized rather like a tiger drive had come upon the naked Benny Lal sleeping in blissful abandon by the side of the road a few miles away early the next morning. It developed swiftly, under blunt methods of investigation, that he had once been a houseboy in the domicile of U Bat and a frequent target of the drunken merchant’s weekly rages. Under questioning Benny Lal, idiot child of the East, neither confessed nor defended himself. He merely smiled pleasantly at everybody and tried not to offend the British.

Was he in fact the guilty party?

If Florry could not really say yes, neither could he really say no. Yet he could not say nothing. These were tricky times, it had been explained to him by a fellow in the Intelligence Department. Already ugly rumors were afoot. The British themselves, it was said, had been behind the slaying. U Bat, in certain quarters, was being inflated into some kind of nationalist saint, not the black brute he’d been in reality. It would do, the chap explained with sweet reason and abundant charm on his side, it would do to be done with this matter quickly. It was a duty; sometimes one had to see the bigger picture.

“You’re certain, then?” said the magistrate.

“I am sure, sir, yessir, I am,” said Florry in a clear, unwavering voice.

“Mr. Gupta? Have you any questions?”

Mr. Gupta, who had been fanning himself this long time, at last arose. He was a tiny Hindu lawyer, up at no fee save mischief from Rangoon to speak for Benny Lal. He offered Florry a broad, extremely pleasant smile.

“How much, Constable Florry, would you—”

Conscious of the contest and eager not to fall behind from the start, Florry corrected the man. “Assistant superintendent please,” he said, and in the instant he said it, realized he’d been snookered.

“Oh!” said the lawyer, in mock astonishment. “Oh, I am begging the officer’s pardon,” his smile radiating heat, “oh, I am so sorry of the mistake. Then you have received so recently a promotion? For duties of spectacular success?”

“I don’t see what the devil dif—” Florry began with an extra measure of sahib’s bluster, but the sudden swell of bright laughter from the unsympathetic Hindus in the back of the courtroom drowned him out.

“Mr. Gupta, the bench does not quite see what relevance the assistant superintendent’s recent promotion has to do with the facts at issue,” said the magistrate coolly.

“I meant no disrespect, your honored self. A simple mistake, in which no harm was meant nor even intended or implied. I congratulate the new assistant. If I have it right, over the year, the difference in moneys is about one hundred pounds, is that not so?”

“Perhaps counsel could explain what relevance to the case of the accused is meant by this?” the magistrate requested.

“Apologies, apologies, many and profuse,” said Gupta, his cynicism as broad as his smile. “I only mean it to remark on the fortune of some and the misfortune of others in this cruel world. I mean never to imply or infer any kind of payment for services ren—”

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