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But will they grant it? Zaitzev wondered.
Surely they would. He could tell them about all manner of KGB operations in the West. He had the names of officers and the code names of agents-traitors to the Western governments, people whom they would definitely wish to eliminate.
Was that being an accessory to murder? he asked himself.
No, it was not. Those persons were traitors, after all. And a traitor was a traitor....
And what does that make you, Oleg Ivanovich? The little voice in his mind asked, just to torment him.
But he was strong enough now to shake it off with a simple movement of his head left and right. Traitor? No, he was preventing a murder, and that was an honorable thing. And he was an honorable man.
But he still had to figure a way to do it. He had to meet with an American spy and say what he wanted.
Where and how?
It would have to be a crowded place, where people could b.u.mp into each other so naturally that even a counterspy from the Second Chief Directorate would not be able to see what was happening or hear what was being said.
And suddenly he realized: His own wife worked in such a place.
So he'd write it down on another blank message form and transfer it on the metro as he'd already done twice. Then he'd see if the Americans really wanted to play his game. He was in the Chairman's seat now, wasn't he? He had something they wanted, and he controlled how they could get it, and he would make the rules in this game, and they would have to play by those rules. It was just that simple, wasn't it?
Yes, he told himself.
Wasn't this rich? He'd be doing something the KGB had always wanted to do, dictate terms to the American CIA.
Chairman for a day, the communicator told himself. The words had a delicious taste to them.
IN LONDON, Cathy watched as two local ophthalmic surgeons worked on one Ronald Smithson, a bricklayer with a tumor behind his right eye. The X-rays showed a ma.s.s about half the size of a golf ball, which had been so worrisome that Mr. Smithson had only waited five weeks for the procedure to be done. That was maybe thirty-three days longer than it would have been at Hopkins, but considerably faster than was usual over here.
The two Moorefields surgeons were Clive Hood and Geoffrey Phillips, both experienced senior residents. It was a fairly routine procedure. After exposing the tumor, a sliver was removed for freezing and dispatch to Pathology-they had a good histopathologist on duty and he would decide if the growth was benign or malignant. Cathy hoped for the former, as the malignant variety of this tumor could be troublesome for its victims. But the odds were heavily on the patient's side, she thought. On visual examination it didn't look terribly aggressive, and her eye was right about 85 percent of the time. It was bad science to tell herself that, and she knew it. It was almost superst.i.tion, but surgeons, like baseball players, knew about superst.i.tion. That was why they put their socks on the same way every morning-pantyhose, in her case-because they just fell into a pattern of living, and surgeons were creatures of habit, and they tended to translate those dumb personal habits into the outcome of their procedures. So, with the frozen section off to Pathology, it was just a matter of excising the pinkish-gray encapsulated ma.s.s....
"What time is it, Geoffrey?" Dr. Hood asked.
"Quarter to one, Clive," Dr. Phillips reported, checking the wall clock.
"How about we break for lunch, then?"
"Fine with me. I could use something to eat. We'll need to call in another anesthesiologist to keep Mr. Smithson unconscious," their gas-pa.s.ser observed.
"Well, call and get one, Owen, would you?" Hood suggested.
"Righto," Dr. Ellis agreed. He left his chair at the patient's head and walked to the wall phone. He was back in seconds. "Two minutes."
"Excellent. Where to, Geoffrey?" Hood asked.
"The Frog and Toad? They serve a fine bacon, lettuce, and tomato with chips."
"Splendid," Hood said.
Cathy Ryan, standing behind Dr. Phillips, kept her mouth shut behind the surgical mask, but her china-blue eyes had gone wide. They were leaving a patient unconscious on the table while they went to lunch? Who were these guys, witch doctors?
The backup anesthesiologist came in just then, all gowned up and ready to take over. "Anything I need to know, Owen?" he asked Ellis.
"Entirely routine," the primary gas-pa.s.ser replied. He pointed to the various instruments measuring the patient's vital signs, and they were all in the dead center of normal values, Cathy saw. But even so . . .
Hood led them out to the dressing room, where the four medics shucked their greens and grabbed their coats, then left for the corridor and the steps down to street level. Cathy followed, not knowing what else to do.
"So, Caroline, how do you like London?" Hood asked pleasantly.
"We like it a lot," she answered, still somewhat sh.e.l.l-shocked.
"And your children?"
"Well, we have a very nice nanny, a young lady from South Africa."
"One of our more civilized local customs," Phillips observed approvingly.
The pub was scarcely a block away, west on City Road. A table was quickly found. Hood immediately fished out a cigarette and lit it. He noticed Cathy's disapproving look.
"Yes, Mrs. Ryan, I know it's not healthy and bad form for a physician, but we are all ent.i.tled to one human weakness, aren't we?"
"You're seeking approval from the wrong person," she responded.
"Ah, well, I'll blow the smoke away from you, then." Hood had himself a chuckle as the waiter came over. "What sort of beer do you have here?" he asked him.
It was good that he smoked, Cathy told herself. She had trouble handling more than one major shock at a time, but at least that one gave her fair warning. Hood and Phillips both decided on John Courage. Ellis preferred Tetley's. Cathy opted for a Coca-Cola. The docs mainly talked shop, as physicians often do.
For her part, Caroline Ryan sat back in her wooden chair, observing three physicians enjoying beer, and, in one case, a smoke, while their blissfully unconscious patient was on nitrous oxide in Operating Room #3.
"So, how do we do things here? Differently from Johns Hopkins?" Hood asked, as he stubbed out his cigarette.
Cathy nearly gagged, but decided not to make any of the comments running around her brain. "Well, surgery is surgery. I'm surprised that you don't have very many CAT scans. Same for MRI and PET scanners. How can you do without them? I mean, at home, for Mr. Smithson, I wouldn't even think of going in without a good set of shots of the tumor."
"She's right, you know," Hood thought, after a moment's reflection. "Our bricklayer chum could have waited several months more if we'd had a better idea of the extent of the growth."
"You wait that long for a hemangioma?" Cathy blurted out. "At home, we take them out immediately." She didn't have to add that these things hurt to have inside your skull. It caused a frontal protrusion of the eyeball itself, sometimes with blurring of vision-which was why Mr. Smithson had gone to this local doctor to begin with. He'd also reported G.o.d-awful headaches that must have driven him mad until they'd given him a codeinebased a.n.a.lgesic.
"Well, here things operate a little differently."
Uh-huh. That must be a good way to practice medicine, by the hour instead of by the patient. Lunch arrived. The sandwich was okay-better than the hospital food she was accustomed to-but she still couldn't get over these guys drinking beer! The local beer was about double the potency of American stuff, and they were drinking a full pint of it-sixteen ounces! What the h.e.l.l was this?
"Ketchup for your chips, Cathy?" Ellis slid the bottle over. "Or should I say Lady Caroline? I hear that His Highness is your son's G.o.dfather?"
"Well, sort of. He agreed to it-Jack asked him on the spur of the moment in the hospital at the Naval Academy. The real G.o.dparents are Robby and Sissy Jackson. Robby's a Navy fighter pilot. Sissy plays concert piano."
"Was that the black chap in the papers?"
"That's right. Jack met him when they were both teachers at the Naval Academy, and they're very close friends."
"Quite so. So the news reports were correct? I mean-"
"I try not to think about it. The only good thing that happened that night was that Little Jack arrived."
"I quite understand that, Cathy," Ellis responded around his sandwich. "If the news accounts were accurate, it must have been a horrid evening."
"It wasn't fun." She managed a smile. "The labor and delivery was the good part."
The three Brits had a good laugh at that remark. All had kids, and all had been there for the deliveries, which were no more fun for British women than for American women. Half an hour later, they headed back to Moorefields. Hood smoked another cigarette along the way, though he had the good manners do stay downwind of his American colleague. Ten more minutes, and they were back in the OR. The pinch-hitting gas-pa.s.ser reported that nothing untoward had taken place, and surgery resumed.
"Want me to a.s.sist now?" Cathy asked hopefully.
"No, thank you, Cathy," Hood replied. "I have it," he added, bending over his patient, who, being soundly asleep, wouldn't smell the beer on his breath.
Caroline Ryan, M.D., FACS, thought to congratulate herself for not screaming her head off, but mostly she leaned in as closely as she could to make sure these two Englishmen didn't screw up and remove the patient's ear by mistake. Maybe the alcohol would help steady their hands, she told herself. But she had to concentrate to keep her own hands from trembling.
THE CROWN AND CUs.h.i.+ON was a delightful, if typical, London pub. The sandwich was just fine, and Ryan enjoyed a pint of John Smith Ale while talking shop with Simon. He thought vaguely about serving beer at the CIA cafeteria, but that would never fly. Someone in Congress would find out and raise h.e.l.l in front of the C-Span cameras, while enjoying a gla.s.s of Chardonnay with his lunch in the Capitol Building, of course, or something a little stronger in his office. The culture was just different here, and vive la difference, he thought, walking across Westminster Bridge Road toward Big Ben-the bell, not the bell tower, which was, in fact, St. Mary's Bell Tower, tourist errors to the contrary. The Parliamentarians there had three or four pubs right there in the building, Ryan was sure. And they probably didn't get any drunker than their American colleagues.
"You know, Simon, I think everyone's worried about this."
"It's a pity he had to send that letter to Warsaw, isn't it?"
"Could you expect him not to?" Ryan countered. "They are his people. It is his homeland, after all, isn't it? It's his parish the Russians are trying to stomp on."
"That is the problem," Harding agreed. "But the Russians will not change. Impa.s.se."
Ryan nodded. "Yeah. What's the chance that the Russians will back off?"
"Absent a solid reason to, not a very great chance. Will your President try to warn them off?"
"Even if he could, he wouldn't. Not on something like this, buddy."
"So we have two sides. One is driven by what it deems to be the proper moral course of action-and the other by political necessity, by fear of not acting. As I said, Jack, it's a b.l.o.o.d.y impa.s.se."
"Father Tim at Georgetown liked to say that wars are begun by frightened men. They're afraid of the consequences of war, but they are more afraid of not fighting. h.e.l.l of a way to run a world," Ryan thought out loud, opening the door for his friend.
"August 1914 as the model, I expect."
"Right, but at least those guys all believed in G.o.d. The second go-round was a little different in that respect. The players in that one-the Bad Guys, anyway-didn't live under that particular constraint. Neither do the guys in Moscow. You know, there have to be some limits on our actions, or we can turn into monsters."
"Tell that to the Politburo, Jack," Harding suggested lightly.
"Yeah, Simon, sure." Ryan headed off to the men's room to dump some of his liquid lunch.
THE EVENING DIDN'T come quickly enough for either of the players. Ed Foley wondered what was coming next. There was no guarantee that this guy would follow up on what he'd started. He could always get cold feet-actually, it'd be rather a sensible thing for him to do. Treason was dangerous outside the U.S. Emba.s.sy. He was still wearing a green tie-the other one; he had only two-for luck, because he'd gotten to the point where luck counted. Whoever the guy was, just so he didn't get cold feet.
Come on, Ivan, keep coming and we'll give you the joint, Foley thought, trying to reach out with his mind. Lifetime ticket to Disney World, all the football games you can handle. Oleg Penkovskiy wanted to meet Kennedy and, yeah, we can probably swing that with the new President. h.e.l.l, we'll even throw in a movie in the White House theater.
AND ACROSS TOWN, Mary Pat was thinking exactly the same thing. If this went one more step, she'd play a part in the opening drama. If this guy worked in the Russian MERCURY, and if he wanted a ticket out of Mother Russia, then she and Ed would have to figure a way to make that happen. There were ways, and they'd been used before, but they weren't what you'd call "routine." Soviet border security wasn't exactly perfect, but it was pretty tight-tight enough to make you sweat playing with it, and though she had the sort of demeanor that often worked well while playing serious games, it didn't make you feel comfortable. And so she started kicking some ideas around, just in her head, as she worked around the apartment and little Eddie took his afternoon nap, and the hours crept by, one lengthy second at a time.
ED FOLEY HADN'T sent any messages off to Langley yet. It wasn't time. He had nothing substantive to report, and there was no sense getting Bob Ritter all excited over something that hadn't developed yet. It happened often enough: People made approaches to CIA and then felt a chill inside their shoes and backed away. You couldn't chase after them. More often than not, you didn't even know who they were and, if you did, and if they decided not to play, the sensible thing for the other guy was to report you to KGB. That fingered you as a spook-rendering your value to your country as approximately zero-and covered his a.s.s nicely as a loyal and vigilant Soviet citizen, doing his duty to the Motherland.
People didn't realize that CIA almost never recruited its agents. No, those people came to you-sometimes cleverly, sometimes not. That left you open to be fooled by a false-flag operation. The American FBI was particularly good at that sort of play, and KGB's Second Chief Directorate was known to use the gambit, too, just to identify spooks on the emba.s.sy staff, which was always something worth doing. If you knew who they were, you could follow them and watch them service their dead-drops, and then camp out on the drop site to see who else stopped off there. Then you had your traitor, who could lead you to other traitors, and with luck you could roll up a whole spy ring, which earned you a gold star-well, a nice red star-in your copybook. Counterespionage officers could make their whole careers on one such case, both in Russia and in America, and so they worked pretty hard at it. The Second Directorate people were numerous-supposedly, half of KGB's personnel were in there-and they were smart, professional spooks with all sorts of resources, and the patience of a vulture circling over the Arizona desert, sniffing the air for the smell of a dead jackrabbit, then homing in to feast on the carca.s.s.
But KGB was more dangerous than a vulture. A vulture didn't actively hunt. Ed Foley could never be sure if he had a shadow as he traveled around Moscow. Oh, sure, he might spot one, but that could just be a deliberate effort to put a clumsy-or an exceedingly clever-officer on his tail to see if he'd try to shake him. All intelligence officers were trained in surveillance and countersurveillance, and the techniques were both universally valid and universally recognized, and so Foley never used them. Not ever. Not even once. It was too dangerous to be clever in this game, because you could never be clever enough. There were other countermoves to use when necessary, like the preplanned brush-pa.s.s known to every spook in the world, but very difficult to spot even so, because of its very simplicity. No, when that failed, it was usually because your agent got rattled. It was a lot harder to be an agent than a field officer. Foley had diplomatic cover. The Russians could have movie film of him b.u.g.g.e.ring Andropov's pet goat and not be able to do a thing about it. He was technically a diplomat, and protected by the Vienna Convention, which made his person inviolable-even in time of war, though things got a little dicier then. But that, Foley judged, was not a problem. He'd be fried like everyone else in Moscow then, and so would not be lonely in whatever afterlife spies inhabited.
He wrenched his mind away from the irrelevancies, entertaining though they might be. It came down to one thing: Would his friend Ivan take the next step, or would he just fade back into the woodwork, taking satisfaction that he'd managed to make the U.S. Emba.s.sy dance to his tune one cool Moscow morning? To find that out, you had to turn over the cards. Would it be blackjack, or just a pair of fours?
That's why you got into this business, Ed, Foley reminded himself-the thrill of the chase. It sure as h.e.l.l was a thrill, even if the game disappeared into the mists of the forest. It was more fun skinning the bear than smelling it.
Why was this guy doing what he was doing? Money? Ideology? Conscience? Ego? Those were the cla.s.sic reasons, as summarized by the acronym MICE. Some spies just wanted the mayonnaise jar full of onehundred-dollar bills. Some came to believe in the politics of the foreign countries they served with the religious fervor of the newly converted. Some were troubled because their Motherland was doing something they couldn't abide. Some just knew they were better men than their bosses, and this was a way to get even with the sons-of-b.i.t.c.hes.
Historically, ideological spies were the most productive. Men would put their lives on the betting line for their beliefs-which was why religious wars were so b.l.o.o.d.y. Foley preferred the monetarily motivated. They were always rational, and they'd take chances, because the bigger the risk, the greater their reward. Ego-driven agents were touchy and troublesome. Revenge was never a pretty motive for doing anything, and those people were usually unstable. Conscience was almost as good as ideology. At least they were driven by a principle of sorts. The truth of the matter was that CIA paid its agents well, just out of the spirit of fair play if nothing else, and besides, it didn't hurt to have that word out on the street. Knowing that you'd be properly compensated made for one h.e.l.l of a tiebreaker for those who had trouble making up their minds. Whatever your baseline motivation, being paid was always attractive. The ideological needed to eat, too. So did the conscience-driven. And the ego types saw that living well was indeed a pretty good form of revenge.
Which one are you, Ivan? Foley wondered. What is driving you to betray your country? The Russians were a ferociously patriotic people. When Stephen Decatur said, "Our country, right or wrong," he could well have been speaking as a Russian citizen. But the country was so badly run-tragically so. Russia had to be the world's unluckiest nation-first too large to be governed efficiently; then taken over by the hopelessly inept Romanovs; and then, when even they couldn't hold back the vitality of their nation, dropped screaming into the b.l.o.o.d.y maw of the First World War, suffering such huge casualties that Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov-Lenin-had been able to take over and set in place a political regime calculated to do destruction to itself; then handing the wounded country over to the most vicious psychopath since Caligula, in the person of Josef Stalin. The acc.u.mulation of that sort of abuse was beginning to shake the faith of the people here....
Your mind sure is wandering, Foley, the Chief of Station told himself. Another half hour. He'd leave the emba.s.sy on time and catch the metro, with his topcoat open and loose around him, and just wait and see. He headed off to the men's room. Occasionally, his bladder got as excited as his intellect.
ACROSS TOWN, Zaitzev took his time. He'd be able to write on only one message blank-throwing one away in plain view was too dangerous, the burn bag could not be trusted, and he could hardly light one up in his ashtray-and so he mentally composed his message, then rethought the words, then rethought them again, and again, and again.
The process took him more than an hour in full, and then he was able to write it up surrept.i.tiously, fold it, and tuck it into his cigarette pack.
LITTLE EDDIE SLID his favorite Transformers tape into the VCR. Mary Pat watched idly, behind her son's rapt attention on the living room floor. Then it hit her.
That's what I am, she realized. I transform myself from ditsy blonde housewife to CIA spy. And I do it seamlessly. The thought appealed to her. She was giving the Soviet Bear a peptic ulcer, hopefully a bleeding one that wouldn't be fixed by drinking milk and taking Rolaids. In another forty minutes, Ed will find out if his new friend really wants to play and, if he wants to play, I'll have to work the agent. I'll hold his hand and lead him along and take his information and send it off to Langley.
What will he give us? she wondered. Something nice and juicy? Does he work in their communications center, or does he just have access to a blank message pad? Probably a lot of those in The Centre . . . well, maybe, depending on their security procedures. Those would be pretty stringent. Only a very few people would be trusted with KGB signals....
And that was the worm dangling on the hook, she knew, watching a Kenworth diesel tractor turn into a two-legged robot. This Christmas, they'd have to start buying those toys. She wondered if Little Eddie would need help transforming them.
THE TIME CAME. Ed would leave the emba.s.sy door exactly on time, which would be a comfort to his shadow, if any. If there was, he'd notice a green tie again, and think that the earlier one was not all that unusual-not unusual enough to be any sort of signal for an agent he might be working. Even the KGB couldn't think every emba.s.sy employee was a spook, Foley told himself. Despite the paranoia that was pandemic in the Soviet Union, even they knew the rules of the game, and his friend from the The New York Times had probably told his own contacts that Foley was a dumb son of a b.i.t.c.h who hadn't even made it as a police reporter in the Big Apple, where the busy police made that field about as difficult as watching TV on a weekend. The best possible cover for a spook was to be too dumb, and what better person to set it up for him than that arrogant a.s.s, Anthony-never just plain Tony-Prince.
Out on the street, the air was cool with approaching autumn. Ed wondered if the Russian winter was all it was cracked up to be. If so, you could always dress for cold weather. It was heat that Foley detested, though he remembered playing stickball out on the streets, and the sprinklers on the tops of some of the fire hydrants. The innocence of youth was far behind him. A d.a.m.ned far way behind, the chief of station reflected, checking his watch as he entered the metro station. As before, the efficiency of the metro worked for him, and he entered the usual subway car.
THERE, ZAITZEV THOUGHT, maneuvering that way. His American friend was doing everything exactly as before, reading his paper, his right hand on the grab rail, his raincoat hanging loose around him . . . and in a minute or two, he was standing next to him.
FOLEY'S PERIPHERAL VISION was still working, The shape was there, dressed exactly as before. Okay, Ivan, make your transfer. . . . Be careful, boy, be very careful, his mind said, knowing that this sort of thing was going to be too dangerous to sustain. No, they'd have to set up a dead-drop somewhere convenient. But first they'd have to do a meet, and he'd let Mary Pat handle that one for him, probably. She just had a better disguise....
ZAITZEV WAITED UNTIL the train slowed. Bodies s.h.i.+fted as it did so, and he reached quickly in and out of the offered pocket. Then he turned away, slowly, not so far as to be obvious, just a natural motion easily explained by the movement of the metro car.
YES! WELL DONE, IVAN. Every fiber of his being wanted to turn and eyeball the guy, but the rules didn't allow that. If there was a shadow in the car, those people noticed that sort of thing, and it wasn't Ed Foley's job to be noticed. So he waited patiently for his subway stop, and this time he turned right, away from Ivan, and made his way off the car, onto the platform, and up to the cool air on the street.
He didn't reach into his pocket. Instead, he walked all the way home, as normal as a sunset on a clear day, into the elevator, not reaching in even then, because there could well be a video camera in the ceiling.
Not until he got into his flat did Foley pull out the message blank. This time it was anything but blank, covered with black ink letters-as before, written in English. Whoever Ivan was, Foley reflected, he was educated, and that was very good news, wasn't it?
"Hi, Ed." A kiss for the microphones. "Anything interesting happen at work?"
"The usual c.r.a.p. What's for dinner?"