Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
TRiPLE
Schulz had been making notes on his trip while he sipped his gin sling.
Towfik searched the apartment for sheets torn from the pad.
He found them on the balcony, burned to cinders in a large glass ashtray.
Ihe night was cool. Later in the year the air would be warm and fragrant
with the blossom of the jacaranda tree in the garden below. The city
traffic snored in the distance. It reminded Towfik of his fathees apartment
in Jerusalem. He wondered how long it would be before he saw Jerusalem
again.
He had done all he could here. He would look again at that foolseap pad, to
see whether Schulz's pencil had pressed hard enough to leave an impression
on the next page. He turned away from the parapet and crossed the balcony
to the French windows leading back into the drawing room.
He had his hand on the door when he heard the voices.
Towilk froze.
"rm sorry, honey, I just couldn't face another overdone steak."
"We could have eaten something, for God's sake."
Tle Schulzes were back.
Towilk. rapidly reviewed his progress through the roomi: bedrooms,
bathroom, drawing room, kitchen . . . he had replaced everything he had
touched, except the little plastic box. He had to keep that anyway. Schulz
would have to assume he had lost it.
If Towfik could get away unseen now, they might never know he had been
there.
He bellied over the parapet and hung at full length by his fingertips. It
was too dark for him to see the ground. He dropped, landed lightly and
strolled away.
It had been his first burglary, and he felt pleased. It bad gone as
smoothly as a training exercise, even to the early return of the occupant
and sudden exit of spy by prearranged emergency route. He grinned in the
dark. He might yet live to see that desk job.
He got into his car, started the engine and switched on the lights.
Two men emerged from the shadows and stood on either side of the Renault
Who ... ?
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Ken Folleff
He did not pause to figure out what was going on. He rammed the gearshift
into first and pulled away. The two men hastily stepped aside.
They had made no attempt to stop him. So why had they been there? To make
sure he stayed in the car ... ?
He jammed on the brakes and looked into the back seat, and then he knew,
with unbearable sadness, that he would never see Jerusalem again.
A tall Arab in a dark suit was smiling at him over the snout of a small
handgun.
"Drive on," the man said in Arabic, "but not quite so fast, please."
Q: What is your name? A: Towfik el-Masiri. Q: Describe yourseff. A: Age
twenty-six, five-foot-nine, one hundred and eighty
pounds, brown eyes, black hair, Semitic features, light brown skin. Q: Who
do you work for? A I am a student.
Q What day is today? A: Saturday.
Q: What is your nationality? A: Egyptian.
Q: What is twenty mintis seven? A: Thirteen.
The above questions are designed to facilitate fine calibration of the lie
detector.
Q: You work for the CIA. A : No. (TRuE)
Q: The Germans? A: No.(TRUE) Q: Israel, then. A: No. (FALSE) Q: You really
are a student? A: Yes. (FALSE)
Q: Tell me about your studies.
A : I'm doing chemistry at Cairo University. (TRUE) I'm in-
terested in polymers. (TRuE) I want to be a petrochemi-
cal engineer. (FALSE) Q: What are polymers?
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TRIPLE
A:Complex organic compounds with long-chain molecules----the commonest is
polythene. (TRUE)
Q: What is your name?
A: I told you, Towfik el-Masiri. (Fnw)
Q :The pads attached to your head and chest measure your pulse, heartbeat,
breathing and perspiration. When you tell untruths, your metabolism
betrays you-you breathe faster, sweat more, and so on. This machine, which
was given to us by our Russian friends, tells me when you are lying.
Besides, I happen to know that Towfik el-Masiri is dead. Who are you?
A: (no reply)
Q:Ile wire taped to the tip of your penis is part of a different machine.
It is connected to this button here. When I press the button-
A: (scream)
Q:--an electric current passes through the wire and gives you a shock. We
have put your feet in a bucket of water to improve the efficiency of the
apparatus. What is your name?
A: Avram Ambache.
The electrical apparatus interferes with the functioning of the lie
detector.
Q: Have a cigarette.
A: Thank you.
Q:Believe it or not, I hate this work. The trouble Is, people who like it
are never any good at it-you need sensitivity, you know. rm a sensitive
person ... I hate to see people suffer. Don!t you?
A: (no reply)
Q:You're now trying to think of ways to resist me. Please don't bother.
There is no defense against modem techniques of . . . interviewing. What
is your name?
A : Avraw Ambache. (TRuE)
A: Who is your control?
A: I don't know what you mean. (PALsE)
Q : Is it Bosch?
A: No, Friedman. (READwa mDETERmiNATE)
Q: It is Bosch.
A: Yes. (PALsE)
Q: No, it's not Bosch. Tt's Krantz.
A: Okay, it's Krantz-whatever you say. (TRuE)
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Kon Folloff
Q: How do you make contact?
A: I have a radio. (PALsE)
Q: You're not telling me the truth.
A: (scream)
Q: How do you make contact?
A : A dead-letter box in the faubourg.
Q:' You are thinking that when you are in pain, the lie detector will not
function properly, and that there is therefore safety in torture. You are
only partly right. This is a very sophisticated machine, and I spent many
months learning to use it properly. After I have given you a shock, it
takes only a few moments to readjust the machine to your faster
metabolism; and then I can once more tell when you are lying. How do you
make contact?
A: A dead-letter-(scream)
Q:Ali! He's kicked his feet free-these convulsions are very strong. Tie him
again, before he comes round. Pick up that bucket and put more water in
it.
(pause)
Right, he's waking, get out. Can you hear me, Towfik?
A: (indistinct)
Q: What is your name?
A : (no reply)
Q: A little jab to help you
A : (scream)
Q: -to think.
A: Avram Ambacbe.
Q- What day is today?
A: Saturday.
Q What did we give you for breakfast?
A Fava beans.
Q: What is twenty minus seven?
A: Thirteen.
Q : What is your profession?
A:I'm a student. No don't please and a spy yes rm a spy don't touch the
button please oh god oh god-
How do you make contact?
A: Coded cables.
Q:Have a cigarette. Here ... oh, you don't seem to be able to hold it
between your lips-let me help ... there.
A: Thank you.
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TRIPLE
Q: Just try to be calm. Remember, as
long as you're telling
the truth, there will be no pain.
(pause)
Are you feeling better?
A: Yes.
Q: So am 1. Now, then, tell me about
Professor Schulz. Why
were you following him?
A: I was ordered to. (TRuE)
Q: By Tel Aviv?
A: Yes. (TRuE)
Q: Who in Tel Aviv?
A: I don't know. (READING iNDETERmiNATE)
Q: But you can guess.
A: Bosch. (READING INDETERmiNATE)
Q: Or Krantz?
A: Perhaps. (TRuE)
Q: Krantz is a good man. Dependable.
How's his wife?
A: Very well, 1-(scream)
Q: His wife died in 1958. Why do you
make me hurt you?
What did Schulz do?
A: Went sightseeing for two days, then
disappeared into the
desert in a gray Mercedes.
Q: And you burglarized his apartment
A: Yes. (TRuE)
Q: What did you learn?
A: He is a scientist. (TRUE)
Q: Anything else?
A: American. (TRuE) That's all. (TRu*E)
Q: Who was your instructor in training?
A: Ertl. (READING INDETERMINATE)
Q: That wasn't his real name, though.
A: I don't know. (FALSE) Nol Not the
button let me think it
was just a minute I think somebody said his real name
was Manner. (TituR)
Q: Oh, Manner. Shame. He's the
old-fashioned type. He still
believes you can train agents to resist interrogation. It's
his fault you7re suffering so much, you know. What about
your colleagues? Who trained with you?
A: I never knew their real names.
(FALSE)
Q - Didn't you?
A: (scream)
Q: Real names.
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Ken Folleff
A: Not all of them-
Q: Tell me the ones you did know. A: (no reply)
(scream)
The prisoner fainted. (pause)
Q: What is your name?
A: Uh... Towfik. (scream)
Q: What did you have for breakfast? A: Don't know.
Q: What is twenty minus seven? A: Twenty-seven.
Q: What did you tell Krantz about Professor
Schulz?
A: Sightseeing ... Western Desert ... surveillance aborted.. . Q: Who did
you train with?
A: (no reply)
Q: Who did you train with? A: (scream)
Q: Who did you train with?
A:Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death- '
Q: Who did you train with? A: (scream)
The prisoner died.
When Kawash asked for a meeting, Pierre Borg went. There was no
discussion about times and places: Kawash sent a message giving the
rendezvous, and Borg made sure to be there. Kawash was the best double
agent Borg had ever had, and that was that.
The head of the Mossad stood at one end of the northbound Bakerloo Line
platform in Oxford Circus subway station, reading an advertisement for
a course of lectures in Theosophy, waiting for Kawash. He had no idea why
the Arab had chosen London for this meeting; no idea what he told his
masters be was doing in the citv-, no idea, even, why Kawash was a
traitor. But this man had helped the Israelis win two wars and avoid a
third, and Borg needed him.
Borg glanced along the platform, looking for a high brown bead with a
large, thin nose. He had an idea he knew what Kawash wanted to talk
about. He hoped his idea was right.
Borg was very worried about the Schulz affair. It had
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TJUPLE
started out as a piece of routine surveillance, juit the right kind of
assignment for his newest, rawest agent in Cairo: a high-powered American
physicist on vacation in Europe decides to take a trip to Egypt. - The first
warning sign came when Towilk lost Schulz. At that point Borg had stepped up
activity on the project. A freelance journalist in Milan who occasionally
made Inquiries for German Intelligence had established that Schules air
ticket to Cairo had been paid for by the wife of an Egyptian diplomat in
Rome. Then the CIA had routinely passed to the Mossad a set of satellite
photographs of the area around Qattara which seemed to show signs of
construction work-and Borg had remembered that Schulz had been heading,in
the direction of Qattara when Towfik lost Win.
Something was going on, and he did not know what, and that worried him.
He was always worried. If it was not the Egyptians, it was the Syrians; if
it was not the Syrians it was the Fedayeen; if it was not his enemies it
was his friends and the question of how long they would continue to be his
friends. He had a worrying job. His mother had once said, "Job, nothing-you
were born worrying, like your poor father-if you were a gardener you would
worry about your job." She might have been right but all the same, paranoia
was the only rational frame of mind for a spyinaster.
Now Towfik had broken contact, and that was the most worrying sign of all.
Maybe Kawash would have some answers.
A train thundered in. Borg was not waiting for a trafiL He began to read
the credits on a movie poster. Half the names Were Jewish. Maybe I should
have been a movie producer, he thought.
The train Pulled out, and a shadow fell over Bor& He looked up into the
calm face of Kawash.
The Arab said, '7bank you for coming.- He always said that
Borg ignored it: be never knew how to respond to thanks. He said, 'Vhat's
new?"
"I had to pick up one of Your youngsters in Cairo on Friday. "
"You had tor
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