Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
TJUPLE
one of the legals. The Russians were following the legals in order to
witness that meeting and pick up Dickstein's trail. The Israeli team at this
hotel was clearly not involved in a meeting. They were staking out someone,
presumably with a view to tailing him as soon as he showed, and that someone
was not likely to be one of their own agents. Tyrin could only hope that
what they were doing would at least turn out to be of some interesL
He watched the mark come out of the phone booth and walk off in the
direction of the ' bar. He wondered if the lobby could be observed from the
bar. Apparently not, because the mark came back a few minutes later with a
drink in his hand, then sat down across from Tyrin and picked up a
newspaper.
The mark did not have time to drink his beer.
The elevator doors hissed open, and out walked Nat Dickstein.
Tyrin was so surprised that he made the mistake of staring straight at
Dickstein for several seconds. Dickstein caught his eye, and nodded
politely. Tyrin smiled weakly and looked at his watch. It occurred to
him-more in hope than conviction-that staring was such a bad mistake that
Dickstein might take it as proof that Tyrin was not an agent.
There was no time for reflection. Moving quickly withTyrin
thought-something of a spring in his step, Dickstein crossed to the counter
and dropped a room key, then proceeded quickly out Into the street. The
Israeli tail, Meier, put his newspaper on the table and followed. When the
plate-glass door closed behind Meier, Tyrin got up, thinkingrm an agent
following an agent following an agent. Wen, at least we keep each other in
employment.
He went Into the elevator and pressed the button for the first floor. He
spoke into his radio. "This is Twenty. I have Pirate." There was no
reply-the walls of the building were blocking his transmission. He got out
of the elevator at the first floor and ran down the fire stairs, picking up
his raincoat at the half landing. As soon as he was outside he tried the m-
dio again. "Ibis, is Twenty, I have the Pirate.,'
All right, Twenty. Thirteen has him too.
Tyrin saw the mark crossing Cromwell Road. "I'm follow. ing Meier," he said
into his radio.
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Five and Twenty, both of you listen to me'. Do not follow. Have you got
that-Five?
Yes.
Twenty?
Tyrin said, "Understood." He stopped walking. and stood on the comer
watching Meier and Dickstein disappear in the direction of Chelsea.
Twenty, go back into the hotel. Get his room number. Book a room close
to his. Call nte on the telephone as soon as it's done.
"Understood." Tyrin turned back, rehearsing his dialogue: Excuse me, the
fellow that just walked out of here, short an with glasses, I think I
know him but he got into a cab before I could catch up with him ... his
name is John but we all used to call him Jack, what room . . . ? As it
turned out, none of that was necessary. Dickstein's key was still on the
desk. Tyrin memorized the number.
The desk clerk came over. "Can I help your,
"I'd Eke a room," Tyrin said.
He kissed her, and he was like a man who has been thirsty all day. He
savored the smell of her skin and the soft motions of her lips. He
touched her face and said, I'Ms, this, this is what I need." 1106y stared
into each other's eyes, and the truth between them was like nakedness.
He thought: I can do anything I want. The idea ran through his mind again
and again like an incantation, a magic spell. He touched her body
greedily. He stood face to face with her in the little blueand-yellow
kitchen, looking into her eyes while he fingered the secret places of her
body. Her red mouth opened a fraction and he felt her breath coming
faster and hot on his face; he inhaled deeply so as to breathe the air
from her. He thought: If I can do anything I want, so can she; and, as
if she had read his mind, she opened his shirt, and bent to his chest,
and took his nipple between her teeth, and sucked. The sudden,
astonishing pleasure of it made him gasp aloud. He held her head gently
in his hands and rocked to and fro a little to intensify the sensation.
He thought: Anything I wantl He reached behind her, lifted her skirt, and
feasted his eyes on the white panties clinging to her curves and
contrasting with the brown, skin of her long legs. His right hand stroked
her face and gripped her shoulder and weighed her breasts, 164
TRIPLE
his left hand moved over her hips and inside her panties and
between her legs; and everything felt so good, so good, that
he wished he had four hands to feel her with, six. Then, sud
denly, he wanted to we her face, so he gripped her shouldem
and made her stand upright, saying, "I want to look at you."
Her eyes filled with tears, and he knew that these were sips
not of sadness but of intense pleasure. Again they stued into
each other's eyes, and this time it was not just truth between
them but raw emotion gushing ft-om one to another in rivers,
in torrents. Then he knelt at her feet like a supplicant First
he lay his head on her thighs, feeling the heat of her body
through her clothing Then he reached beneath her skirt with
both hands, found the waist of her panties, and dmw them
down slowly, holding the shoes on her feet as she stepped
out He got up from the floor. 'Mey were still standing on the
spot where they had kissed when he had first come into the
room. Just there, standing up, they began to make love. He
watched her face. She looked peaceful, and her eyes were
half closed. He wanted to do this, moving slowly, for a long
time: but his body would not wait. He was compelled to
thrust harder and faster. He felt himself losing his balance, so
he put both arms around her, lifted her an inch off the floor,
and without withdrawing from her body moved two paces so
that her back was against the wall. She pulled his shirt out of
his waistband and dug her fingers into the hard muscles of his
back. He linked his hands beneath her buttocks and took her
weight. She lifted her legs high, her thighs gripping his hips,
her ankles crossed behind his back, and, incredibly, he
seemed to penetrate even deeper inside her. He felt he was
being wound up like a clockwork motor, and everything she
did, every look on her face, tightened the spring. He watched
her through a haze of lust. Them came into her eyes an ex
pression of something like panic; a wild, wide-eyed animal
emotion; and it pushed him over the edge, so that he knew
that it was coming, the beautiful thing was going to happen
now, and he wanted to tell her, so he said, "Suza, here it
comes," andshe said, "Oh, and me," and she dug her nails
into the skin of his back and drew them down his spine in a
long sharp tear which went through him like an electric shock
and he felt the earthquake in her body just as his own erupt
ed and he was still looking at her and he saw her mouth
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Ken Folloff
open wide, wide as she drew breath and the peak of delight overtook them
both and she screamed.
"We follow the Israelis and the Israelis follow Dickstein. All it needs is
for Dickstein to start following us and we can all go around in a circle
for the rest of the day," Rostov said. He strode down the hotel corridor.
Tyrin hurried beside him, his short plump legs almost running to keep up.
Tyrin said, "I was wondering what, exactly, was your thinking in abandoning
the surveillance as soon as we saw hiM?V1
"It's obvious," Rostov said irritably; then he reminded himself -that
Tyrin's loyalty was valuable, and he decided to explain. "Dicksteia has
been under surveillance a great deal during the last few weeks. Each time
he has eventually spotted us and thrown us off. Now a certain amount of
surveillance is inevitable for someone who has been in the game as long as
Dickstein. But on a particular operation, the more he is followed the more
likely he is to abandon what he's doing and hand it over to someone
els&-and we might not know who. All too often the information we pin by
following someone is canceled out because they discover that we're
following them and therefore they know that we've got the information in
question. This way-by abandoning the surveillance as we have done today-we
know where he is but he doesn't know we know."
"I see," said Tyrin.
"Hell spot those Israelis in no time at all," Rostov added. "He must be
hypersensitive by now."
"Why do you suppose they're following their own man?"
"I really can't understand that." Rostov frowned, thinking aloud. -rm sure
Dickstein met Borg this morning-which would explain why Borg threw off his
tail with that tax! maneuver. it's possible Borg puffed Dickstein out and
now he's simply checking that Dickstein really does come out, and doesn't
try to carry on unofficially." He shook his head, a gesture of frustration.
'That doesn't convince me. But the alternative is that Borg doesn't trust
Dickstein anymore, and I find that unlikely, too. Careful, now."
They were at the door to Dickstein's hotel room. TYrin took out a small,
powerful flashlight and shone it around the edges of the door. "No
telltales," he said.
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TOPLE
Rostov nodded, waiting. This was Tyrin!s province. The little round man
was the best general technician in the KGB, in Rostov's opinion. He
watched as Tyrin took from his pocket a skeleton key, one of a large
collection of such keys that he had. By tying several on the door of his
own room here, he had already established which one fitted the locks of
the Jacobean Hotel. He opened Dickstein's door slowly and stayed outside,
looking in.
"No booby traps," be said after a minute.
He stepped inside and Rostov followed, closing the door. This part of the
game gave Rostov no pleasure at all. He liked to watch, to speculate, to
plot: burglary was not his style. He felt exposed and vulnerable. If a
maid should come in now, or the hotel manager, or even Dickstein who
might evade the sentry in the lobby . . . it would be so undignified, so
humiliating. '7~ees make it fast," he said.
The room was laid out according to the standard plan: the door opened
into a little passage with the bathroom on one side and. the wardrobe
opposite. Beyond the bathroom the room was square, with the single bed
against one wall and the television set against tke other. There was a
large window in the exterior wall opposite the door.
Tyrin picked up the phone and began to unscrew the mouthpiece. Rostov
stood at the foot of the bed, looking around, ft*g to get an impression
of the man who was staying in this room. There was not much to go on.
TIle room had been cleaned and the bed made. On the bedside table were
a book of chew problems and an evening newspaper. There were no signs of
tobacco or alcohol. The wastepaper basket was empty. A small black vinyl
suitcase on a stool contained clean underwear and one clean shirt. Rostov
muttered. "Me man travels with one spare shirtl" The drawers of the
dresser were empty Rostov looked into the bathroom. He saw a toothbrush,
a rechargeable electric shaver with spare plugs for different kinds of
electrical outlets, and-the only personal touch-a pack of indigestion
tablets.
Rostov went back into the bedroom, where Tyrin was reassembling the
telephone. "Its done."
"Put one behind the headboard," Rostov said.
Tyrin was taping a bug to the wall behind the bed when the phone rang.
If Dickstein returned the sentry in the lobby was to call
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