Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
TIUPLE
Rostov gave a wolfish grin. "Yes, but this is real life," he mdd.
There are two kinds of shadow: pavement artists and bulldogs. Pavement
artists regard the business of shadowing people as a skill of the highest
order, comparable with acting or cellular biophysics or poetry. They are
perfectionists, capable of being almost invisible. They have wardrobes
or unobtrusive clothes, they practice blank expressions in front of their
mirrors, they know dozens of tricks with shop doorways and bus queues,
policemen and children, spectacles and shopping bags and hedges. They
despise the bulldogs, who think that shadowing someone is the same as
following him, and trail the mark the way a dog follows its master.
Nik Bunin was a bulldog. He was a young thug, the type of man who always
becomes either a policeman or a criminal, depending on his luck. Luck had
brought Nik into the KOB: his brother, back in Georgia, was a dope
dealer, running hashish from Tbilisi to Moscow University (where it was
consumed by--among othem-Rostov's son Yuri). Nik was officially a
chauffeur, unofficially a bodyguard, and even more unofficially a
full-time professional ruffian.
It was Nik who spotted The Pirate.
Ni1c was a little under six feet tall, and very broad. He wore a leather
jacket across his wide shoulders. He had short blond hair and watery
green eyes, and he was embarrassed about the fact that at the age of
twenty-five he still did not need, to shave every day.
At'the nightclub in the Rue Dicks they thought he was cute as bell.
He came in at seven-thirty, soon after the club opened, and sat in the
same comer all night, drinking iced vodka with lugubrious relish, Just
watching. Somebody asked him to dance, and he told the man to piss off
in bad French. When he turned up the second night they wondered if he was
a jilted lover lying in wait for a showdown with his ex. He had about him
the air of what the gays called rough trade, what with those shoulders
and the leather jacket and his dour expression.
Nik knew nothing of these undercurrents. He had been shown a photograph
of a man and told to go to a club and look out for the man; so he
memorized the face, then went to
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the club and looked. It made little difference to him whether the place was
a whorehouse or a cathedral. He liked occasionally to get the chance to beat
people up, but otherwise all he asked was regular pay and two days off every
week to devote to his enthusiasms, which were vodka and coloring books.
When Nat Dickstein came into the nightclub, Nik felt no sense of
excitement. When he did well, Rostov always assumed it was because he had
scrupulously obeyed precise orders, and he was generally right. Nik watched
the mark sit down alone, order a drink, get served and sip his beer. It
looked like he, too, was waiting.
Nik went to the phone in the lobby and called the hotel. Rostov answered.
"Mis is Nik. The mark just came in."
"Goodl". said Rostov. "Whafs he doing?"
"Waiting."
"Good. Alone?"
"Yes.
"Stay with him and call me if he does anything."
"I'm sending Pyotr down. Hell wait outside. If the mark leaves the club you
follow him, doubling with Pyotr. The Arab will be with you in a car, well
back. It's a ... wait a minute . . . its a green Volkswagen hatchback."
"Okay."
"Get back to him now."
Nik hung up and returned to his table, not looking at Dickstein as he
crossed the club.
A few minutes later a well-dressed, good-looking man of about forty came
into the club. He looked around, then walked past Dickstein's table and
went to the bar. Nik saw Dickstein pick up a piece of paper from the table
and put it in his pocket. It was all very discreet: only someone who was
carefully observing Dickstein would know anything had happened.
Nik went to the phone again.
"A queer came in and gave him something-it looked like a ticket," he told
Rostov.
"Like a theater ticket, maybeT'
"Don't know."
"Did they speak?"
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TJUPLE
"No, the queer just dropped the ticket on the table as he went by. They
didn't even look at each other."
"All right. Stay with it. Pyotr should be outside by now."
'Wait," Nik said. "Me mark just come into the lobby. Hold on . . . he's
going to the desk ... he's handed over the ticket, that!s what it was,
it was a cloakroom ticket."
"Stay on the line, tell me what happens." Rostov's voice was deadly calm.
"The guy behind the counter is giving him a briefcase. He leaves a tip
. . ."
"Ira a delivery. Good."
"Ibe mark is leaving the club."
"Follow him."
"Shall I snatch the briefcase?"
"No, I don!t want us to show ourselves until we know what he!& doing,
just find out where he goes, and stay low. Go!"
Nik hung up. He gave the cloakroom attendant some notes, saying: "I have
to rush, this will cover my bill." Then he went up the staircase after
Nat Dickstein.
Out on the street it was a bright summer evening, and there were plenty
of people making their way to restaurants and cinemas or just strolling.
Nik looked left and right, then saw the mark on the opposite side of the
road, fifty yards away. He crossed over and followed.
Dickstein was walking quickly, looking straight ahead, carrying the
briefcase under his arm. Nik plodded after him for a couple of blocks.
During this time, if Dickstein looked back he would see some distance
behind him a man who had also been in the nightclub, and he would begin
to wonder if he were being shadowed. Then Pyotr came alongside Nik,
touched his arm, and went on ahead. Nik dropped back to a position from
which he could see Pyotr but not Dickstein. If Dickstein looked again
now, he would not see Nik and he would not recognize Pyotr. It was very
difficult for the mark to sniff this kind of surveillance; but of course,
the longer the distance for which the mark was shadowed, the more men
were needed to keep up the regular switches.
After another half mile the green Volkswagen pulled to the curb beside
Nik. Yasif Hassan leaned across from the driving seat and opened the
door. "New orders," he said. "Jump in."
Nik got into the car and Hassan steered back toward the nightclub in the
Rue Dicks.
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"You did very well," Hassan said.
Nik ignored this.
"We want you to go back to the club, pick out the delivery man and follow
him home," Hassan said.
"Colonel Rostov said this?"
"Yes."
"Okay."
Hassan stopped the car close to the club. Nil went in. He stood in the
doorway, looking carefully all about the club.
The delivery man had gone.
The computer printout ran to more than one hundred pages. Dickstein's
heart sank as he flicked through the prized sheets of paper he had worked
so hard to get. None of it made sense.
. He returned to the first page and looked again. There were a lot of
jumbled numbers and letters. Could it be in code? No-this printout was
used every day by the ordinary office workers of Euratom, so it had to be
fairly easily comprehensible.
Dickstein concentrated. He saw "U234." He knew that to be an isotope of
uranium. Another group of letters and numbers was "180KG"---one hundred
and eighty kilograms. "17F68" would be a date, the seventeenth of
February this year. Gradually the lines of computer-alphabet letters and
numbers began to yield up their meanings: he found placenames from
various European countries, words such as "TamN" and "TRucx!I with
distances affixed next to them and names with suffixes "SA" or "mc,"
indicating companies. Eventually the layout of the entries became clear:
the first line gave the quantity and type of material, the second line
the name and address of the sender, and so on.
His. spirits lifted. He read on with growing comprehension and a sense
of achievement. About sixty consignments were listed in the printout.
There seemed to be three main types: large quantities of crude uranium
ore coming from mines in South Africa, Canada and France to European
refineries; fuel elements-oxides, uranium metal or enriched mix-
tures-moving from fabrication plants to reactors; and spent fuel from
reactors going for reprocessing and disposal. There were a few
nonstandard shipments, mostly of plutonium and
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transuranium elements extracted from spent fuel and sent to laboratories
in universities and research institutes.
Dickstein!s head ached and his eyes were bleary by the time he found what
he was looking for. On the very last page there was one shipment headed
"NON-NUCLEAR."
He had been briefly told, by the Rehovot physicist with the flowered tie,
about the non-nuclear uses of uranium and its compounds in photography,
in dyeing, as coloring agents for glass and ceramics and as industrial
catalysts. Of course the stuff always had the potential for fission no
matter how mundane and innocent its use, so the Euratom regulations still
applied. However, Dickstein thought it likely that in ordinary industrial
chemistry the security would be less strict.
The entry on the last page referred to two hundred tons of yellowcake,
or crude uranium oxide. It was in Belgium, at a metal refinery in the
countryside near the Dutch border, a site licensed for storage of
fissionable material. The refinery was owned by the Soci6t6 Generale de
la Chimie, a mining conglomerate with headquarters in Brussels. SGC had
sold the yelloweake to a German concern called F.A. Pedler of Wiesbaden.
Pedler planned to use it for "manufacture of uranium compoun4 especially
uranium carbide, in commercial quantities." Dickstein recalled that the
-carbide was a catalyst for the production of synthetic ammonia.
However, it seemed that Pedler were not going to work the uranium
themselves, at least not initially. Dickstein's interest sharpened as he
read that they had not applied for their own works In Wiesbaden to be
licensed, but instead for permission to ship the yellowcake to Genoa by
sea. There it was to undergo "non-nuclear processing" by a company called
Angeluzzi e Bianco.
By seat The implications struck Dickstein instantly: the load would be
passed through a European port by someone else.
He read on. Transport would be by railway from SGCs refinery to the docks
at ' Antwerp. There the yelloweake would be loaded on to the motor vessel
Coparelli for shipment to Genoa. The short journey from the Italian port
to the Angeluzzi e Bianco works would be made by road.
For the trip the yellowcake-4ooking like sand but yellower-would be
packed into five hundred and sixty 200-liter oil drums with heavily
sealed lids. The trainvould require
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eleven cars, the ship would carry no other cargo for this voyage, and the
Italians would use six trucks for the last leg of the journey.
It was the sea journey that excited Dickstein: through the English
Channel, across the Bay of Biscay, down the Atlantic coast of Spain,
through the Strait of Gibraltar and across one thousand miles of the
Mediterranean.
A lot could go wrong in that distance.
Journeys on land were straightforward, controlled: a train left at noon
one day and arrived at eight-thirty the following morning; a truck
traveled on roads that always carried other traffic, Including police
cars; a plane was continually in contact with someone or other on the
ground. But the sea was unpredictable, with its own laws-a trip could
take ten days or twenty, there might be storms and collisions and engine
trouble, unscheduled ports of call and sudden changes of direction.
Hijack a plane and the whole world would see it on television an hour
later; hijack a ship and no one would know about it for days, weeks,
perhaps forever.
The sea was the inevitable choice forThe Pirate.
Dickstein thought on, with growing enthusiasm and a sense that the
solution to his problem was within his reach. Hijack the Coparelli ...
then what? Transfer the cargo to the hold of the pirate ship. The
Coparelli would probably have its own derricks. But transferring a cargo
at sea could be chancy. Dickstein looked on the printout for the proposed
date of the voyage: November. That was bad. There might be storms--even
the Mediterranean could blow up a gale in November. What, then? Take over
the Coparelli and sail her to Haifa? It would be hard to dock a stolen
ship secretly, even in top-secarity Israel.
Dickstein glanced at his wristwatch. It was past midnight. He began to
undress for bed. He needed to know more about the Coparelth her tonnage,
bow many crew, present whereabouts, who owned her, and if possible her
layout. Tomorrow he would go to London. You could find out anything about
ships at Iloyd's of London.
There was something else be needed to know- who was following him around
Europe? There had been a big team in France. Tonight as he left the
nightclub in the Rue Dicks a thuggish face had been behind him. He had
suspected a tail, but the face had disapptared---coincidence, or another
big
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