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FROM: OFFICE OF CHAIRMAN, MOSCOW CENTRE.
TO: REZIDENT SOFIA.
REFERENCE: OPERATIONAL DESIGNATOR 15-8-82-666.
OPERATIONAL APPROVAL EXPECTED TODAY, VIA CHANNELS DISCUSSED IN OUR MEETING. REPORT WHEN PROPER CONTACTS ESTABLISHED.
And that meant that operation -666 was going forward. The day before, that notice had chilled Zaitzev, but not today. Today he knew he'd be doing something to prevent it. If anything bad happened now, it would be the fault of the Americans. That made a considerable difference. Now he just had to figure how to establish some sort of regular contact with them....
UPSTAIRS, Andropov had the Foreign Minister in his office.
"So, Andrey, how do we go about this?"
"Ordinarily our Amba.s.sador would meet with their First Secretary, but, in the interests of security, we might want to try another method of approach."
"How much executive authority does their First Secretary have?" the Chairman asked.
"About as much as Koba did thirty years ago. Bulgaria is run in a very tight way. Their Politburo members represent various const.i.tuencies, but only their Party First Secretary really has decision-making power."
"Ah." That was good news to Yuriy Vladimirovich. He lifted his desk phone. "Send in Colonel Rozhdestvenskiy," he told his secretary.
The colonel appeared through the dresser door in two minutes. "Yes, Comrade Chairman."
"Andrey, this is Colonel Rozhdestvenskiy, my executive a.s.sistant. Colonel, does our Sofia rezident talk directly to the Bulgarian head of government?"
"Rarely, comrade, but he has done so occasionally in the past." Rozhdestvenskiy was surprised that the Chairman didn't know that, but he was still learning how field operations worked. At least he had the good sense to ask questions, and he was not embarra.s.sed to do so.
"Very well. For security reasons, we would prefer that the entire Bulgarian Politburo not know the scope of this operation -666. So, do you think we could have Colonel Bubovoy brief in their party chief and get approval by a more direct route?"
"To that end, a signed letter from Comrade Brezhnev would probably be necessary," Rozhdestvenskiy answered.
"Yes, that would be the best way to do it," the Foreign Minister agreed at once. "A good thought, colonel," he added approvingly.
"Very well. We'll get that today. Leonid Ilyich will be in his office, Andrey?"
"Yes, Yuriy. I will call ahead and tell him what is needed. I can have it drafted in my office if you wish, or would you prefer it to be done here?"
"With your permission, Andrey," Andropov said graciously, "better that we should do it. And we'll have it couriered to Sofia for delivery tomorrow or the day after."
"Better to give our Bulgarian comrade a few days, Yuriy. They are our allies, but they remain a sovereign country, after all."
"Quite so, Andrey." Every country in the world had a bureaucracy, whose entire purpose was to delay important things from happening.
"And we don't want the world to know that our rezident is making a highly important call on the man," the Foreign Minister added, teaching the KGB Chairman a little lesson in operational security, Colonel Rozhdestvenskiy noted.
"How long after that, Aleksey Nikolay'ch?" Andropov asked his aide.
"Several weeks, at least." He saw annoyance in his boss's eyes and decided to explain. "Comrade Chairman, selecting the right a.s.sa.s.sin will not be a matter of lifting a phone and dialing a number. Strokov will necessarily be careful in making his selection. People are not as predictable as machines, after all, and this is the most important-and most sensitive-aspect of the operation."
"Yes, I suppose that is so, Aleksey. Very well. Notify Bubovoy that a hand-delivered message is on the way."
"Now, Comrade Chairman, or after we have it signed and ready for dispatch?" Rozhdestvenskiy asked the question like a skilled bureaucrat, letting his boss know the best way without saying it out loud.
This colonel would go far, the Foreign Minister thought, taking note of his name for the first time.
"A good point, Colonel. Very well, I will let you know when the letter is ready to go."
"By your command, Comrade Chairman. Do you need me further?"
"No, that is all for now," Andropov answered, sending him on his way.
"Yuriy Vladimirovich, you have a good aide."
"Yes, there is so much for me still to learn here," Andropov admitted. "And he educates me every day."
"You are fortunate in having so many expert people."
"That is the truth, Andrey Andreyevich. That is the truth."
DOWN THE HALL in his office, Rozhdestvenskiy drew up the brief dispatch for Bubovoy. This was moving fast, he thought, but not fast enough for the Chairman of the KGB. He really wanted that priest dead. The Politburo certainly seemed fearful of political earthquakes, but Rozhdestvenskiy himself was doubtful of that. The Pope, after all, was just one person, but the colonel had tailored his advice to what his boss wanted to hear, like a good functionary, while also letting the Chairman know the things he needed to know. His job actually carried great power with it. Rozhdestvenskiy knew that he could break the careers of officers whom he did not like and influence operations to a significant degree. If CIA ever tried to recruit him, he could be an agent of great value. But Colonel Rozhdestvenskiy was a patriot, and besides, the Americans probably had no idea who he was and what he did. The CIA was more feared than it deserved to be. The Americans didn't really have a feel for espionage. The English did, but KGB and its antecedents had enjoyed some success at infiltrating it in the past. Less so today, unfortunately. The young Cambridge communists of the 1930s were all old now, either in British prisons or drawing their government pensions in peace, or living out their years in Moscow, like Kim Philby, considered a drunk even by Muscovites. He probably drank because he missed his country-missed the place in which he'd grown up, the food and drink and football games, the newspapers with which he'd always philosophically disagree, but he'd miss them even so. What a terrible thing it must be to be a defector, Rozhdestvenskiy thought.
WHAT WILL I DO? Zaitzev asked himself. What will I ask for?
Money? CIA probably paid its spies very well-more money than he would ever be able to spend. Luxuries beyond his imagination. A videotape machine! They were just becoming available in Russia, mainly made in Hungary, patterned after Western machines. The bigger problem was in getting tapes-p.o.r.nographic ones were particularly in demand. Some of his KGB coworkers spoke of such things. Zaitzev had never seen one himself, but he was curious, as any man might be. The Soviet Union was run by such conservative men. Maybe the Politburo members were just too old to enjoy s.e.x, and so saw no need for younger citizens to indulge.
He shook his head. Enough! He had to decide what to tell the American in the metro. That was a task that he chewed on with his lunch in the KGB cafeteria.
CHAPTER 15.
MEETING PLACE.
MARY PAT WAS EXPECTED to come into the emba.s.sy sometimes, to see her husband about family matters or to purchase special food items from the commissary. To do this, she always dressed up-better than she did for the Moscow streets-with her hair well-brushed and held in place by a youthful headband, and her makeup done, so that when she drove into the compound parking lot she would look like a typical airheaded American blonde. She smiled to herself. She liked being a natural blonde, and anything that made her appear dumb worked for her cover.
So she breezed in the front door, waving airily at the ever-polite Marines, and into the elevator. She found her husband alone in his office.
"Hey, baby." Ed rose to kiss her, then drew back to take in the whole picture. "Looking good."
"Well, it's an effective disguise." It had worked fine in Iran, too, especially when she'd been pregnant. That country didn't treat women especially well, but it did extend them an odd deference, especially when pregnant, she'd found, right before she'd skipped the country for good. It was one station she didn't particularly miss.
"Yeah, babe. Just gotta get you a surfboard and a nice beach, maybe the Banzai Pipeline."
"Oh, Ed, that's just so tubular. And Banzai Beach is in Hawaii, dummy." A quick gear change. "The flag go up wrong?"
"Yep. The TV cameras didn't show anyone on the street paying particular attention to it. But you could see it from a block away, and the security cameras don't look that far out. We'll see if our friend drops a message in my pocket on the ride home tonight."
"What did the Marines say?" she asked.
"They asked why, but Dom didn't tell them anything. h.e.l.l, he doesn't know either, does he?"
"He's a good spook, Dominic is," Mary Pat judged.
"Ritter likes him. Oh," Foley remembered. He fished a message out of his drawer and handed it across.
"s.h.i.+t," his wife breathed, scanning it quickly. "The Pope? Those motherf.u.c.kers want to kill the Pope?" Mary Pat didn't always talk like a California blonde.
"Well, there's no information to suggest that directly, but, if they want to, we're supposed to find out."
"Sounds like a job for WOODCUTTER," who was their man in the Party Secretariat.
"Or maybe CARDINAL?" Ed wondered.
"We haven't flagged him yet," MP pointed out, but it would soon be time to check in with him. They checked his apartment every night for the light-and-blinds combination in his living room. His apartment was agreeably close to their own, and the ratline was well established, beginning with a piece of paper tape on a lamppost. Setting that flag signal was MP's job. She'd already walked Little Eddie by it half a dozen times. "Is this a job for him?" she asked.
"The President wants to know," her husband pointed out.
"Yeah." But CARDINAL was their most important agent-in-place, and not one to be alerted unless it was really critical. CARDINAL would also know to get something like this out on his own if he became aware of it. "I'd hold off on that unless Ritter says different."
"Agreed," Ed Foley conceded. If Mary Pat advised caution, then caution was justified. After all, she was the one who enjoyed taking risks and betting her skill against the house odds. But that didn't mean that his wife was a reckless player, either. "I'll sit on that one for a while."
"Be nice to see what your new contact will do next."
"Bet your cute little tushy, babe. Want to meet the Amba.s.sador?"
"I suppose it's time," she agreed.
"SO, RECOVER FROM yesterday?" Ryan asked Harding. It was the first time he'd beaten his workmate into the office.
"Yes, I suppose I have."
"If it makes you feel any better, I haven't met the President yet, myself. And I'm not exactly looking forward to the experience. Like Mark Twain said about the guy who got himself tarred and feathered, if it weren't for the honor of the thing, he would just as soon have missed it."
Harding managed a brief laugh. "Precisely, Jack. One does go a little weak in the knees."
"Is she as tough as they say?"
"I'm not sure I'd want to play rugger against her. She's also very, very bright. Doesn't miss a thing, and asks b.l.o.o.d.y good questions."
"Well, answering them is what they pay us for, Simon," Ryan pointed out. There was no sense being afraid of people who were only doing their job as well, and who needed good information to do it properly.
"And her, too, Jack. She has to do questions in Parliament."
"On this sort of thing?" Jack asked, surprised.
"No, not this. It's occasionally discussed with the opposition, but under strict rules."
"You worry about leaks?" Jack asked, wondering. In America, there were select committees whose members were thoroughly briefed on what they could say and what they could not. The Agency did worry about leaks-they were politicians, after all-but he'd never heard of a serious one off The Hill. Those more often came from inside the Agency, and mainly from the Seventh Floor . . . or from the White House's West Wing. That didn't mean that CIA was comfortable with leaks of any kind, but at least these were more often than not sanctioned, and often they were disinformation with a political purpose behind them. It was probably the same here, especially since the local news media operated under controls that would have given The New York Times a serious conniption fit.
"One always wonders about them, Jack. So, anything new come in last night?"
"Nothing new on the Pope," Ryan reported. "Our sources, such as they are, have run into a brick wall. Will you be turning your field spooks loose?"
"Yes, the PM made it clear to Basil that she wants more information. If something happens to His Holiness, well-"
"-she blows a head gasket, right?"
"You Americans do have a way with words, Jack. And your President?"
"He'll be seriously p.i.s.sed, and by that I do not mean hitting the booze. His dad was Catholic, and his mom raised him a Protestant, but he wouldn't be real happy if the Pope so much as catches a late-summer cold."
"You know, even if we turn some information, it is not at all certain that we'll be able to do a thing with it."
"I kinda figured that, but at least we can say something to his protective detail. We can do that much, and maybe he can change his schedule-no, he won't. He'd rather take the bullet like a man. But maybe we can interfere somehow with what the Bad Guys are planning. You just can't know until you have a few facts to rub together. But that's not really our job, is it?"
Harding shook his head, as he stirred his morning tea. "No, the field officers feed it to us, and we try to determine what it means."
"Frustrating?" Ryan wondered. Harding had been at the job much longer than he had.
"Frequently. I know the field officers sweat blood doing their jobs-and it can be physically dangerous to the ones who do not have a 'legal' cover-but we users of information can't always see it from their perspective. As a result, they do not appreciate us as much as we appreciate them. I've met with a few of them over the years, and they are good chaps, but it's a clash of cultures, Jack."
The field guys are probably pretty good at a.n.a.lysis themselves, when you get down to it, Ryan thought. I wonder how often the a.n.a.lyst community really appreciates that? It was something for Ryan to slip into his mental do-not-forget file. The Agency was supposed to be one big happy team, after all. Of course it wasn't, even at the Seventh Floor level.
"Anyway, we had this come in from East Germany." Jack handed the folder across. "Some rumbles in their political hierarchy last week."
"Those b.l.o.o.d.y Prussians," Harding breathed, as he took it and flipped to the first page.
"Cheer up. The Russians don't much like them either."
"I don't blame them a bit."
ZAITZEV WAS DOING some hard thinking at his desk, as his brain worked on autopilot. He'd have to meet with his new American friend. There was danger involved, unless he could find a nice, anonymous place. The good news was that Moscow abounded with such places. The bad news was that the Second Chief Directorate of the KGB probably knew all of them. But if it was crowded enough, that didn't matter.
What would he say?
What would he ask for?
What would he offer them?
Those were all good questions, weren't they? The dangers would only increase. The best possible outcome would be for him to leave the Soviet Union permanently, with his wife and daughter.
Yes, that was what he'd ask for, and if the Americans said no, he'd just melt back into his accustomed reality, knowing that he'd tried. He had things they would want, and he'd make it clear to them that the price of that information was his escape.
Life in the West, he thought. All the decadent things the State preached to everyone who could read a newspaper or watch TV, all the awful things they talked about. The way America treated its minorities. They even showed pictures on TV of the slum areas-but they also showed automobiles. If America oppressed its blacks, why, then, did it allow them to purchase so many automobiles? Why did it permit them to riot in the streets? Had that sort of thing happened in the USSR, the government would have called in armed troops. So no, the state propaganda could not be entirely true, could it? And, besides, wasn't he white? What did he care about some discontented blacks who could buy any car they wished? Like most Russians, he'd only seen black people on TV-his first reaction was to wonder if there really were such a thing as a chocolate man, but, yes, there were. KGB ran operations in Africa. But then he asked himself: Could he remember a KGB operation in America using a black agent? Not very many, perhaps one or two, and those had both been sergeants in the American army. If blacks were oppressed, how then did they get to become sergeants? In the Red Army, only the politically reliable were admitted to Sergeant School. So, one more lie uncovered-and that one only because he worked for KGB. What other lies was he being told? Why not leave? Why not ask the Americans for a ticket out?