Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
Ken Fpliett
"V&Y not?"
It was his turn to leer.
"But all my trousers have flys."
"No good," he said. "No room to maneuver."
And like that.
They acted as if they had just invented sex. The only faintly unhappy
moment came when she looked at his scars and asked how he got them. "Weve
had three wars since I went to Israel," he said. It was the truth, but not
the whole truth.
"What made you go to Israel?"
"Safety."
"But it's just the opposite of safe there."
"It's a different kind of safety." He said this dismissively, not wanting
to explain it, then he changed his mind, for he wanted her know all about
him. "Miere had to be a place where nobody could say, 'You!re different,
you're not a human being, you're a Jew,' where nobody could break my win-
dows or experiment on my body just because rm Jewish. You see ... " She had
been looking at him with that cleareyed, frank gaze of hers, and he had
struggled to tell her the whole truth, without evasions, without trying to
make it look better than it was. "It didn!t matter to me whether we chose
Palestine or Uganda or Manhattan Island-wherever it was, I would have said,
That place is mine,' and I would have fought tooth and nall to keep it.
Thafs, why I never try to argue the moral rights and wrongs of the
establishment of Israel. Justice and fair play never entered into it After
the war . . . well, the sugge5don that the concept of fair play had any
role In international politics seemed like a sick joke to me. rm not
pretending this is an admirable attitude, I'm just telling you how it is
for me. Any other place Jews live-New York, Paris, Toronto-no matter how
good it is, how assimilated they are, they never know how long ifs going to
last, how soon will come the next crisis that can conveniently be blamed on
them. In Israel I know that whatever happens, I won't ' be a victim of
that. So, with that problem out of the way, we can get on and deal with the
realities that are part of everyone's life: planting and reaping, buying
and selling, fighting and dying. That's why I went, I think . . . Maybe I
didn't see it all so clearly back then-in fact, I've never put it into
words like thi"ut that's how I felt, anyway."
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TJUPLE
After a moment Suza said, "My father holds the opinion that Israel itself
is now a racist society."
'That's what the youngsters say. They've got a point. if .. ."
She looked at him, waiting.
"If you and I had a child, they would refuse to classify him as Jewish.
He would be a second-class citizen. But I don!t think that sort of thing
will last forever. At the moment the religious zealots are powerful in
the government: it's inevitable, Zionism was a religious movement. As the
nation matures that will fade away. The race laws are already con-
troversial.were fighting then% and we'll win in the end."
She came to him and put her head on his shoulder, and they held each
other in silence He knew that she did not care about Israeli politics:
it was the mention of a son that had moved her.
Sitdng in the restaurant window, remembering, he knew that he wanted Suza
in his Ufa always, and he wondered what he would do if she refused to go
to his country. Which would he give up, Israel or Suza? He did not know.
He watched the street. It was typical June weather: mining steadily and
quite cold. The familiar red buses and black cabs swished up and down,
butting through the rain, splashing in the puddles on the road. A country
of his own, a woman of his own: maybe he could have both.
I should be so lucky.
A cab drew up outside the caf6 opposite, and Dickstein tensed, leaning
closer to his window and peering through the rain. He recognized the
bulky figure of Pierre Borg, in a dark short raincoat and a trilby hat,
climbing out of the cab. He did not recognize the second man, who got out
and paid the driver. The two men went into the caM Dickstein looked up
and down the road.
A gray Mark 11 Jaguar had stopped on a double yellow line fifty yards
from the caf6. Now it reversed and backed into a side street, parking on
the comer within sight of the caf6. The passenger got out and walked
toward the caf&
Dickstein left his table and went to the phone booth in the restaurant
entrance. He could still see the caf6 opposite. He dialed its number.
:rYes?"
'Let me speak to Bill, please."
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Ken Foliett
"Bill? Don!t know hini."
"Would you just ask, please?"
"Sure. Hey, anybody here called Bill?" A pause. 'Tea, he's con-ting.1,
After a moment Dickstein heard Borg's voice. "Yes?"
"Who's the face with you?"
"Head of London Station. Do you think we ran trot him?"
Dickstein ignored the sarcasm. "One of you picked up a shadow. Two men
in a gray Jaguar."
"We saw them."
"Lose them."
"Of course. Listen, you know this town-wbat's the best way?"
"Send the Head of Station back to the Embassy in a cab. That should lose
the Jaguar. Wait ten minutes, then take a taxi to . . ." Dickstein
hesitated, trying to think of a quiet street not too far away. "To
Redcliffe Street. ru meet you there."
"Okay."
Dickstein looked across the road. "Your tail is just going into your
caM." He hung up.
He went back to his window seat and watched. Ile other man came out of
the caf6, opened an umbrella, and stood at the curb looking for a cab.
The tail had either recognized Borg at the airport or had been following
the Head of Station for some other reason. It did not make any
difference. A taxi pulled up. When it left, the gray Jaguar came out of
the side street and followed. Dickstein left the restaurant and hailed
a cab for himself. Taxi drivers do well out of spies, he thought.
He told the cabbie to go to Redcliffe Street and wait. After eleven
minutes another taxi entered the street and Borg got out. "Flash your
lights," Dickstein said. "Mat's the man rM meeting." Borg saw the lights
and waved acknowledgment. As be was paying, a third taxi entered the
street and stopped. Borg spotted it.
The shadow in the third taxi was waiting to see what happened. Borg
realized this, and began to walk away from his cab. Dickstein told his
driver not to flash his lights again.
Borg walked past them. The tail got out of his taxi, paid the driver and
walked after Borg. When the tail's cab had gone Borg turned, came back
to Dickstein!s cab, and got in. 154
TRIPLE
Dickstein said, "Okay, let's go." They pulled away, leaving the tail on the
pavement looking for another taxi. It was a quiet street: he would not find
one for five or ten minutes.
Borg said, "Slick."
&$IF
lasy," Dickstein replied.
The driver said, "What was all that about, then?"
"Don!t worry," Dickstein told him. "We're secret agents."
The cabbie laughed. "Where to now-MI5r'
"The Science Museum."
Dickstein sat back in his seat. He smiled at Borg. "Well, Bill, you old
fart, how the hell, are your'
Borg frowned at him. "What have you got to be so fucking cheerful about?"
They did not speak again in the cab, and Dickstein realized he had not
prepared himself sufficiently for this meeting. He should have decided in
advance what he wanted *from Borg and how he was going to got it.
He thought: What do I want? The answer came up out of the back of his mind
and hit him like a slap. I want to give Israel the bomb-and then I want to
go home.
He turned away from Borg. Rain streaked the cab window like tem. He was
suddenly glad they could not speak because of the driver. On the pavement
were three coatless hippies, soaking wet, their faces and hands upturned to
enjoy the rain. It I could do this, if I could finish this assignment, I
could rest.
The thought made him unaccountably happy. He looked at Borg and smiled.
Borg turned his face,to the window.
They reached the museum and went inside. They stood in front of a
reconstructed dinosaur. Borg said, "I'm thinking of taking you off this
assignment."
Dickstein nodded, suppressing his alarm, thinking fast. Hassan must be
reporting to Cairo, and Borg's man in Cairo must be getting the reports and
passing them to Tel Aviv. "I've discovered Im blown," he told Borg.
"I kneW that weeks ago," Borg said. "if you!d keep in touch you!d be
up-to-date on these things."
"If I kept in touch I'd be blown more often."
Borg grunted and walked on. He took out a cigar, and Dickstein said, "No
smoking in here." Borg put the, cigar away.
is$
Ken Folleff
"Blown is nothing," Dickstein said. qes happened to me half a dozen
times. What counts is how much they know."
"You were fingered by this Hassan, who knows you from years back. Hes
working with the Russians now."
"But what do they know?"
"You've been in Luxembourg and France."
'That's not much."
"I realize it's not much. I know you've been in Luxembourg and France
too, and I have no idea what you did
so
there.
"So you'll leave me in," Dickstein said, and looked hard at Borg.
"That depends. What have you been doingT'
"Well." Dickstein continued looking at Borg. Ime man had become fidgety,
not knowing what to do with his hands now that he could not smoke. The
bright lights on the displays illurninated his bad complexion: his
troubled face was like a gravel parking lot. Dickstein needed to judge
very carefully bow much he told Borg: enough to give the impression that
a great deal had been achieved; not so much that Borg would think he
could get another man to operate DicksteiWs plan. .'. . "I've picked a
consignment of uranium for us to steal," he began. "It's going by ship
from Antwerp to Genoa in November. I'm going to hijack the ship."
"Shitl" Borg seemed both pleased and afraid at the audacity of the idea.
He said, "How the bell will you keep that secret?"
'Tm working on that" Dickstein decided to tell Borg just a tantalizing
little bit more. "I have to visit Lloyd's, here in London. rm hoping the
ship will turn out to be one of a series of identical vessels--I'm told
most ships are built that Way. If I can buy an identical vessel, I can
switch the two somewhere in the Mediterranean."
Borg rubbed his hand across his close-cropped hair twice
Pt
then Pulled at his ear. "I don't see ...
"I haven't figured. out the details yet, but rm sure this is the only way
to do the thing clandestinely."
"So get on and figure out the details."
"But You're thinking of puffing me out"
"Yeah . - ." Borg tilted his head from one side to the other, a gesture
of indecision. "If I put an experienced man in to replace you, he may be
spotted too."
156
7RIPLE
"And if you put In an unknown he won't be experienced."
"Plus, rm really not sure there is anyone, experienced or otherwise, who
can pun this off apart from you. And there is something else you don't
know."
They stopped in front of a model of a nuclear reactor.
"Well?" Dickstein said.
'Ve've had a report from Qattara. The Russians are helpIng them now. Were
in a hurry, Dickstein. I can!t afford delay, and changes of plan cause
delay."
"Will November be soon enough?"
Borg considered. "Just," he said. He seemed to come to a decision. "All
right, I'm leaving you in. Youll have to take evasive action."
Dickstein grinned broadly and slapped Borg on the back. "You're a pal,
Pierre. Don!t you worry now, I'll run rings around them."
Borg frowned. "Just what is it with you? You caet stop grinning."
"It's seeing you that does it. Your face is like a tonic. Your sunny
disposition is infectious. When you smile, Pierre, the whole world smiles
with you."
"You're crazy, you prick," said Borg.
Pierre Borg was vulgar, insensitive, malicious, and boring, but he was
not stupid. "He may be a bastard," people would say, "but he's a clever
bastard." By the time they parted company he knew that something
important had changed in Nat Dickstein's life.
He thought about it, walking back to the Israeli Embassy at No. 2 Palace
Green in Kensington. In the twenty years since they had first met,
Dickstein had hardly changed. It was still only rarely that the force of
the man showed through. He had always been quiet and withdrawn; he
continued to look like an out-of-work bank clerk; and, except for
occasional flashes of rather cynical wit, he was still dour.
Until today.
At first he had been his usual self-brief to the point of rudeness. But
toward the end he had come on like the stereotyped chirpy Cockney sparrow
in a Hollywood movie.
Borg had to know why.
He would tolerate a lot from his agents. Provided they were efficient,
they could be neurotic, or aggressive, or sa-
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