Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
TRIPU
was one man in it The ship was sailing out of the bay, leaving a broad
wake.
"Looks like we just missed them," Cortone said.
Suza ran down the steps, shouting and waving insanely, trying to attract
the attention of the people on the ship, knowing it was impossible, they
were too far away. She slipped on the stones and fell heavily on her
bottom. She began to cry.
Cortone ran down after her, his heavy body jerking on the steps. "It's
no good," he said. He pulled her to her feet
"The motorboat," she said desperately. "Maybe we can take the motorboat
and catch up with the ship--~'
"No way. By the time the boat gets here the ship Will be too far away,
much too far, and going faster than the boat can."
He led her back to the steps. She had run a long way down, and the climb
back taxed him heavily. Suza hardly noticed: she was full of misery.
Her mind was blank as they walked up the slope of the garden and back
into the house.
"Have to sit down," Cortone said as they crossed the drawing room.
Suza looked at him. He was breathing hard, and his face was gray and
covered with perspiration. Suddenly she realized it had all been too much
for his overweight body. For a moment she forgot her own awful
disappointment. "The stairs,' she said.
They went into the rained hall. She led Cortone.to the wide cmving
staircase and sat him on the second step. He went down heavily. He closed
his eyes and rested his head on the wall beside him.
"Listen," he said, "You can call ships ... or send them a wire ... we can
still reach him . . ."
"Sit quietly for a minute," she said. "Don't talk."
"Ask my cousins-who's there?"
Suza spun around. There bad been a clink of chandelier shards, and now
she saw what had caused it.
Yasif Hassan walked toward them across the ball.
Suddenly, with a massive effort, Cortone stood up.
Hassan stopped.
Cortones breath was coming in ragged gulps. He fumbled in his pocket
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Suza said,
Cortone pulled out the gun.
Hassan was rooted to the spot, frozen.
Suza screamed. Cortone staggered, the gun in his hand weaving about in
the air.
C,ortone pulled the trigger. 7he gun went off twice, with a huge,
deafening double bang. The shots went wild. Cortone sunk to the ground,
his face as dark as death. The gun fen from his fingers and hit the
cracked marble floor.
Yasif Hassan threw up.
Sm knelt beside Cortone,
He opened his eyes. "Listen," he said hoarsely.
Hassan said "Leave him, let's go."
Suza turned her head to face him. At the top of her voice she shout4
"just fuck og." Then she turned back to Cortone.
Tve killed a lot of men' " Cortone said. Suza bent closer to hear.
"Eleven men, I killed myself ... I fornic4ted with a lot of women . . ."
His voice trailed off, his eyes closed, and then he made a huge effort
to speak again. "All my godd
life I been a thief and a bully. But I died for my friend, right? Ibis
counts for something, it has to, doesn't it?"
"Yes," she said. IM really counts for something."
"Okay," he said.
Then he died.
Suza had never seen a man die. It was awful. Suddenly there was nothing
there, nothing but a body; the person had vanished. She thought: No
wonder death makes us cry. She realized her own face was streaked with
tears. I didn't even like him, she thought, until just now.
Hassan said, "You did very well, now let's get out of here."
Suza did not understand. r did well? she thought. And then she
understood. Hassan did not know she had told Cortone an Arab had been
following them. As far as Hassan was concerned she had done just what he
wanted her to: she bad led him here. Now she must try to keep up the
pretense that she was on his side until she could find a way to contact
Nat.
I can't He and cheat anymore, I can% ies too much, rm tired, she thought.
7ben: You can phone a ship, or at least send a cable, Cortone said.,
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TRIPLE
She could still warn Nat.
Oh, God, when can I sleep?
She stood up. "What are we waiting for?"
They went out through the high derelict entrance. "Well take my car,"
Hassan told her.
She thought of trying to run away from him then, but it was a foolish idea.
He would let her go soon. She had done what he'd asked, hadn't she? Now he
would send her home.
She got into the car.
'Wait," Hassan said. He ran to Cortone's car, took out the keys, and threw
them into the bushes. He got into his own car. "So the man in the motorboat
can't follow," he explained.
As they drove off he said, "rm disappointed in your attitude, That man was
helping our enemies. You should rejoice, not weep, when an enemy dies."
She covered her eyes with her hand. "He was helping his friend."
Hassan patted her knee. "You've done well, I shouldn't criticize you. You
got the information I wanted."
She looked at him. "Did W'
"Sure. 1hat big ship we saw leaving the bay-that was the Stmmberg. I know
her time of departure and her maximum speed, so now I can figure out the
earliest possible moment at which she could meet up with the Coparelli. And
I can have my men there a day earlier." He patted her knee again, this time
letting his hand rest on her thigh.
"Don't touch me," she said.
He took his hand away.
She closed her eyes and tried to think. She had achieved the worst possible
outcome by what she had done: she had led Hassan to Sicily but shed failed
to warn Nat. She must find out how to send a telegram'to a ship, and do it
as soon as she and Hassan parted company. There was only one other
chance-the airplane steward who had promised to call the Israeli consulate
in Rome.
She said, "Oh, God, I'll be glad to get back to Oxford."
"Oxford?" Hassan laughed. "Not yet. You'll have to stay with me until the
operation is over."
She thought: Dear God, I can't stand it. "But I'm so tired," she said.
"We'll rest soon. I couldn't let you go. Security, you know.
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Anyway, you wouldnI want to miss seeing the dead body of Nat Dickstein."
At the Alitalia desk in the airport three men approached Yasif Hassan.
Two of them were young and thuggish, the third was a tall sharp-faced man
in his fifties.
The older man said to Hassan, "You damn fool, you deserve to be shot."
Hassan looked up at him, and Suza saw naked fear in his eyes as he said,
"RostovI"
Suza thought: Oh God, what now?
Rostov took hold of Hassan's arm. It seemed for a moment that Hassan
would resist, and jerk his arm away. The two young thugs moved closer.
Suza and Hassan were enclosed. Rostov led Hassan away from the ticket
desk. One of the thugs took Suza's arm and they followed.
They went into a quiet corner. Rostov was obviously blazing with fury but
kept his voice low. "You might have blown the whole thing if you hadn't
been a few minutes late."
"I don't know what you mean," Hassan said desperately.
"You think I don't know you've been running around the world looking for
Dickstein? You think I can't have you followed just like any other bloody
imbecile? I've been getting hourly reports on your movements ever since
you left Cairo. And what made you think you could trust her?" He jerked
a thumb at Suza.
"She led me here."
"Yes, but you didn't know that then."
Suza stood still, silent and frightened. She was hopelessly confused. The
multiple shocks of the morning-missing Nat, watching Cortone die, now
this-had paralyzed her ability to think. Keeping the lies straight had
been difficult enough when she had been deceiving Hassan and telling
Cortone a truth that Hassan thought was a lie. Now there was this Rostov,
to whom Hassan was lying, and she could not even begin to think about
whether what she said to Rostov should be the truth or another, different
lie.
Hassan was saying, "How did you get here?"
"On the Karla, of course. We were only forty or fifty miles off Sicily
when I got the report that you had landed here. r also obtained
permission from Cairo to order you to return there immediately and
directly."
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TRIPLE
"I still think I did the right thing," said Hassan.
"Get out of my sight"
Hassan walked away. Suza began to follow him but Rostov said, "Not you."
He took her arm and began to walk.
She went with him, thinking: What do I do now?
"'I know you've proved your loyalty to us, , Miss Ashford, but in the
middle of a project like this we can't allow newly recruited people
simply to go home. On the other hand I have no people here in Sicily
other than those I need with me on the ship, so I can't have you escorted
somewhere else. rm afraid yotere going to have to come aboard the Karla
with me until this business is over. I hope you don't mind. Do you know,
you look exactly like your mother."
They had walked out of the airport to a waiting car. Rostov opened the
door for her. Now was the time she should ran: after this it might be too
late. She hesitated. One of the thugs stood beside her. His jacket fell
open slightly and she saw the butt of his gun. She remembered the awful
bang Cortones gun had made in the ruined villa, and how she had scremed;
and suddenly she was afraid to die, to become a lump of clay Me poor fat
Cortone; she was terrified of that gun and that bang and the bullet
entering her body, and she began to shake.
"V&a is it?" Rostov said.
"Al Cortone died."
"We know," Rostov said. "Get in the car."
Suza got in the car.
Pierre Borg drove out of Athens and parked his car at one end of a
stretch of beach where occasional lovers strolled. He got out and walked
along the shoreline until he met Kawash coming the other way. They stood
side by side, looking out to sea, wavelets lapping sleepily at their
feet. Borg could see the handsome face of the tall Arab double agent by
starlight. Kawash was not his usual confident self.
'Thank you for coming," Kawash said.
Borg did not know why he was being thanked. If anyone should say thank
you, it was he. And then he realized that Kawash had been making
precisely that point. The man did everything with subtlety, including
insults.
'Me Russians suspect there is a leak out of Cairo," Kawash said. "They
are playing their cards very close to their
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Kon Folleff
collective Communist chest, so to speak." Kawash smiled thinly. Borg did not
see the joke. "Even when Yasif Hassan came back to Cairo for debriefing we
didn't learn much-and I didn't get all the information Hassan gave."
Borg belched loudly: he had eaten a big Greek dinner. "Don't waste time
with excuses, please. Just tell me what you do know."
"All right," Kawash said mildly. "Iley know that Dickstein is to steal some
uranium."
"You told me that last time."
"I don't think they know any of the details. Their intention is to let it
happen, then expose it afterward. Tbey've put a couple of ships into the
Mediterranean, but they don't know where to send them."
A plastic bottle floated in on the tide and landed at Borg's feet. He
kicked it back into the water. "What about Suza Ashford?"
"Definitely working for the Arab side. Listen. There was an argument
between Rostov and Hassan. Hassan wanted to find out exactly where
Dickstein was, and Rostov thought it was unnecessary."
"Bad news. Go on."
"Afterward Hassan went out on a limb. He got the Ashford girl to help him
look for Dickstein. They went to a place called Buffalo, in the U.S., and
met a gangster called Cortone who took them to Sicily. They missed
Dickstein, but only just: they saw the Stromberg leave. Hassan is in
considerable trouble over this. He has been ordered back to Cairo but he
hasn't turned up yet."
"But the girl led them to where Dickstein had been?"
stftactly.vs
"Jesus Christ, this is bad." Borg thought of the message that had arrived
in the Rome consulate for Nat Dickstein from his "girlfriend." He told
Kawash about it. "Hassan has told me everything and he and I are coming to
see you." What the hell did it mean? Was it intended to warn Dickstein, or
to delay him, or to confuse him? Or was it a double bluff--an attempt to
make him think she was being coerced into'leading Hassan to him?
"A double bluff, I should say," Kawash said. "She knew her role in this
would eventually be exposed, so she tried for 272