Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
Kon Folleff
distic, or insubordinate-so long as he knew about it He could make
allowances for faults: but he could not allow for unknown factors. He
would be unsure of his hold over Dickstein until he had figured out the
cause of the change. That was all. He had Do objection in principle to one
of his agents acquiring a sunny disposition.
He came within sight of the Embassy. He would put Dickmein under
surveillance, he decided. It would take two cars and three teams of man
working in eight-hour shifts. The Head of London Station would complain.
I'lie. hell with him.
The need to know why Dickstein7s disposition had changed was only one
reason Borg had decided not to pull him out The other reason was more
important Dickstein had half a plan; another man might not be able to
complete it Dickstein had a mind for this sort of thing. Once Dickstein
had figured it all out, then somebody else could take over. Borg had de-
cided to take him off the assignment at the first opportunity. Dickstein
would be furious: he would consider he had been shafted.
The hell with him, too.
Major-Pyotr Alekseivitch Tyrin did not actually like Rostov. He did not
like any of his superiors: in his view, you had to be a rat to get
promoted above the rank of major in the KGB. SO, he had a sort of
awestruck affection for his clever, helpful boss. Tyrin had considerable
skills, particularly with electronics, but he could not manipulate
people. He was a major only because he was on Rostov's incredibly
successful team.
Abba Allon. High Street exit. Fifty-two, or nine? Where are you,
fifty-two?
Fifty-two. We're close. Well take him. What does he look like?
Plastic raincoat, green hat, mustache.
As a friend Rostov was not much; but he was a lot worse as an enemy. This
Colonel Petrov in London had discovered that. He had tried to mess around
with Rostov and had been surprised by a middle-of-the-night phone call
from the head of the KGB, Yuri Andropov himself. The people in the Lon.
don Embassy said Petrov,had looked like a ghost when he hung up. Since
then Rostov could have anything he wanted: if he sneezed five agents
rushed out to buy handkerchiefs. -
- Ise
71UPLE
Okay, this Is Ruth Davisson, and she's going north ... Nineteen, we can
take her-
Relax, nineteen. False alarm. les a secretary who looks like her.
Rostov had commandeered all Petrov's best pavement artists and most of
his cars. -The area around the Israeli Ernba3sy in London was crawling
with agent&--someone had said, "There are more Reds here than in the
Kremlin Clinid'!--but it was hard to spot them. They were in cars, vans,
minicabs, trucks and one vehicle that looked remarkably like an unmarked
Metropolitan Police bus. There were more on foot, some in public
buildings and others walking the streets and the footpaths of the park.
There was even one inside the Embassy, asking in dreadfully broken
English what he had to do to emigrate to Israel.
The Embassy was ideally suited for this kind of exercise. It was in a
little diplomatic ghetto on the edge, of Kensington Gardens. So many of
the lovely old houses -belonged to foreign legations that it was known
as Embassy Row. Indeed, the Soviet Embassy was close by in Kensington
Palace Gardens. The little group of streets formed a private estate, and
you, had to tell a policeman your business before you could get in.
Nineteen, this time It is Ruth Davisson . . . nineteen, do you hear me?
Nineteen here, yes.
Are you still on the north side?
Yes. And we know what she looks like.
None of the agents was actually in sight of the Israeli Embassy. Only one
member of the team could see the doorRostov, who was a half mile away,
on the twentieth floor of a hotel, watching thr-ough a powerful Zeiss
telescope mounted on a tripod. Several high buildings in the West End of
London had clear views across the park of Embassy Row. Indeed, certain
suites in certain hotels fetched inordinately high prices because of
rumors that from them you could see into Princess Margaret's backyard at
the neighboring palace, which gave its name to Palace Green and
Kensington Palace Gardens.
Rostov was in one of those suites, and he had a radio
transmitter as well as the telescope. Each of his sidewalk
squads had a walkie4alkie. Petrov spoke to his men in fast
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Ken Fo1W
Russian, using confusing codewords, and the wavelength on which he
transmitted and on which the men replied was changed every five minutes
according to a computer program built into all the sets. The system was
working very well, Tyrin thought-he had invented it-except that somewhere
in the cycle everyone was subjected to five minutes of BBC Radio One.
Eight, move up to the north side.
Understood.
If the Israelis had been in Belgravia, the home of the more senior
embassies, Rostov's job would have been more difficult. There were almost
no shops, caf6s or public offices in Belgravia-nowhere for agents to make
themselves unobtrusive; and because the whole district was quiet, wealthy
and stuffed with ambassadors it was easy for the police to keep an eye
open for suspicious activities. Any of the standard surveillance
ploys-telephone repair van, road crew with striped tentwould have drawn
a crowd of bobbies in minutes. BY contrad the am around the little oasis
of Embassy Row was Kensington, a major shopping area with several
colleges and four museums.
Tyrin himself was in a pub in Kensington Church Street. The resident KGB
men had told him that the pub was frequented by detectives from "Special
Branch!-the rather coy name for Scotland Yard's political police. The
four youngish men in rather sharp suits drinking whiskey at the bar were
probably detectives. They did not know Tyrin, and would not have been
much interested in him if they had. Indeed, if Tyrin were to approach
them and say, "By the way, the KGB is tailing every Israeli legal in
London at the moment," they would probably say "What, again?" and order
another round of drinks.
in any event Tyrin knew he was not a man to attract second glances. He
was small and rather rotund, with a big nose and a drinkees veined face.
He wore a gray raincoat over a green sweater. The rain had removed the
last memory of a crease from his charcoal flannel trousers. He sat in a
comer with a glass of English beer and a small bag of potato chips. no
radio in his shirt pocket was connected by a fine, fleshcolored wire to
the plug-it looked like a hearing aid-in his left car. His left side was
to the wall. He could talk to Rostov by pretending to fumble in the
inside pocket of his raincoat 160
TFdPLE
turning his face away from the room and muttering into the perforated
metal disc on the top edge of the radio.
He was watching the detectives drink whiskey and thinking that the
Special Branch must have better expense accounts than its Russian
equivalent: he was allowed one pint of beer per hour, the potato crisps
he had to buy himself. At- one time agents in England had even been
obliged to buy beer in half pints, until the accounts department had been
told that in many pubs a man who drank halves was as peculiar as a
Russian who took his vodka in sips instead of gulps.
Thirteen, pick up a green Volvo, two men, High Street.
Understood,
And one on foot . . . I think that's Yigael Meier Twenty?
Tyrin was "Twenty." He turned his face into his shoulder and said, "Yes.
Describe him."
Tall, gray hair, umbrella, belted coat. High Street gate.
Tyrin said, "rm on my way." He drained his glass and left the pub.
It was raining. Tyrin took a collapsible umbrella from his raincoat
pocket and opened it. The wet sidewalks were crowded with shoppers. At
the traffic lights he spotted the green Volvo and, three cars behind it,
'Mirteen!l in an Austin.
Another car. Five, this one's yours. Blue Volkswagen beetle.
Understood.
Tyrin reached Palace Gate, looked up Palace Avenue, saw a man fitting the
description heading toward him, and walked on without pausing. When he
had calculated that the an had had time to reach the street he stood at
the curb, as if about to cross, and looked up and down. The mark emerged
from Palace Avenue and turned west, away from Tyrin.
Tyrin followed.
Along High Street tailing was made easier by the crowds. Then they turned
south into a maze of side streets, and Tyrin became a bit nervous; but
the Israeli did not seem to be watching for a shadow. He simply butted
ahead through the rain, a tall, bent-figure under an umbrella, walking
fast, intent on his destination.
He did not go far. He turned into a small modern hotel just off the
Cromwell Road. Tyrin walked past the entrance
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Ken FOII*ff
and, glancing through the glass door, saw the mark step Into a phone booth
In the lobby. A little farther along the road Tyrin passed the green
Volvo, and concluded that the Israeli and his colleagues in the green
Volvo were staking out the hotel.
He crossed the road and came back on the opposite side, just In case the
mark were to come out again immediately. He looked for the blue
Volkswagen beetle and did not see it, but he was quite sure it would be
close by.
He spoke into his shirt pockeL "M is Twenty Meier and the green Volvo
have staked out the Jacobean HoteL"
Confirwd, Twenty. Five and Thirteen ham the Israeli cars covered. Where
is Meier?
,in the lobby." Tyrin looked up and down and saw the Austin which was
following the green Volvo.
Stay with him.
"Understood." Tyrin now had a difficult decision to make. If he went
straight into the hotel Meier might spot lum, but if he took the time to
find the back entrance Meier might go away in the meanwhile.
He decided tD chance the back entrance, on the grounds that he was
supported by two cars which could cover for a few minutes if the worst
happened. Beside the hotel there was a narrow alley for delivery vans.
Tyrin walked along it and came to an unlocked fire exit In the blank side
wall of the building. He went in and found himself in a concrete stair-
well, obviously built to be used only as a fire escape. As he climbed the
stairs he collapsed his umbrella, put it in his raincoat pocket and took
off the raincoat He folded it and left it In a little bundle on the first
half landing, w1we he could quickly pick it up N he needed to make a fast
exlL He went to the second floor and took the elevator down to the lobby.
When he emerged in his sweater and trousers he looked like a guest at the
hotel.
The Israeli was still in the phone bootlL
Tyrin went up to the glass door at the front of the lobby, looked out,
chocked his w&hratch and returned to the waiting area to sit down as if
he were ineeting someone. It did not seem to be his lucky day. The
object: of the whole exercise was to find Nat Dickstein. He was known to
be in Englax4 and it was hoped that he would have a meeting with 162