Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
Ken Folleff
"Military Intelligence were bodyguarding a VIP, and they spotted the kid
tailing them. Military don't have operational personnel in the city, so
they asked my department to pick him up. It was an official request."
"God damn," Borg said feelingly. "What happened to himro
"I had to do it by the book," Kawash said. He looked very sad. "rhe boy was
interrogated and killed. His name was Avrarn Ambache, but he worked as
Towfik el-Masiri."
Borg frowned. "He told you his real name?"
"He's dead, Pierre."
Borg shook his head irritably: Kawash always wanted to linger over personal
aspects. "Why did he tell you his name?"
"Were using the Russian equipment-the electric shock and the lie detector
together. You're not training them to cope with it."
Borg gave a short laugh. "If we told them about it, wed never get any
fucking recruits. What else did he give awayr'
"Nothing we didn't know. He would have, but I killed him first."
"You killed him?"
"I conducted the interrogation, in order to make sure he did not say
anything important. All these interviews are taped now, and the transcripts
filed. We're learning from the Russians." The sadness deepened in the brown
eyes. "Why-would you prefer that I should have someone else kill your
boysr'
Borg stared at him, then looked away. Once again he bad to steer the
conversation away from the sentimental. "What did the boy discover about
Schulz?"
"An agent took the professor into the Western Desert."
"Sure, but what for?"
"I don't know."
"You must know, you're in Egyptian Intelligence!" Borg controlled his
irritation. Let the man do things at his own pace, he told himself;
whatever information he's got, he'll tell.
"I don't know what they're doing out there, because they've set up a
special group to handle it," Kawash said. "My department isn't informed."
"Any idea why?"
The Arab shrugged. "I'd say they don't want the Russians to know about it.
These days Moscow gets everything that goes through us."
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TRIPLE
Borg let his disappointment show. "Is that all Towfik could manage?"
Suddenly there was anger in the soft voice of the Arab. "Tbe kid died for
you," he said.
"IM thsink him in heaven. Did he die in vain?"
"He took this from Schules apartment." Kawash drew a hand from inside his
coat and showed Borg a small, square box of blue plastic.
Borg took the box. "How do you know where he got it?"
"It has SchuWs fingerprints on it. And we arrested Towfik right after he
broke into the apartment."
Borg opened the box and fingered the light-proof,envelope. It was unsealed.
He took out the photographic negative.
Ile Arab said, "We opened the envelope and developed the film. It's blank."
With a deep sense of satisfaction, Borg reassembled the box and put it into
his pocket. Now it all made sense; now he understood; now he knew what he
had to do. A train came in. "You want to catch this oner' he said.
Kawash frowned slightly, nodded assent, and moved to the edge of the
platform as the train stopped and the doors opened. He boarded, and stood
just inside. He said, "I don't know what on earth the box is."
Borg thought, You don't like me, but I think you're just great. He smiled
thinly at the Arab as the doors of the subway train began to slide shut. "I
do," he said.
33
Two
The American girl was quite taken with Nat Dickstein.
They worked side by side in a dusty vineyard, weeding and hoein& with a
light breeze blowing over them from the Sea of Galilee. Dickstein had
taken off his shirt and worked in shorts and sandals, with the contempt
for the sun which only the city-born possess.
He was a thin man, small-boned, with narrow shoulders, a shallow chest,
and knobby elbows and knees. Karen would watch him when she stopped for
a break-which she did often, although he never seemed to need a rest.
Stringy muscles moved like knotted rope under his brown, scarred skin.
She was a sensual woman, and she wanted to touch those scars with her
fingers and ask him how he got them.
Sometimes he would look up and catch her staring. mid he would grin,
unembarrassed, and carry on working. His face was regular and anonymous
in repose. He had dark eyes behind cheap round spictacles of the kind
which Karen's generation liked because John Lennon wore them. His hair
was dark, too, and short: Karen would have liked him to grow it. When he
grinned that lopsided grin, he looked younger, though at any time it was
hard to say just how old he might be. He had the strength and energy of
a young man, but she had seen the concentration-camp tattoo under his
wristwatch, so he could not be much less than forty, she thought.
He had. arrived at the kibbutz shortly after Karen, in the summer of
1967. She had come, with her deodorants and her contraceptive pills,
looking for a place where she could live out hippy ideals without getting
stoned twenty-four hours a day. He had been brought here in an ambulance.
She assumed he had been wounded in the Six-Day War, and the other
kibbutzniks agreed, vaguely, that it was something like that
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TRIPLE
His welcome had been very different from hers. Karen's reception had been
friendly but wary: in her philosophy they saw their own, with dangerous
additions. Nat Dickstein returned like a long-lost son. They clustered
around him, fed hun soup and came away from his wounds with tears in
their eyes.
If Dickstein was their son, Esther was their mother. She was the oldest
member of the kibbutz. Karen had said, "She looks like Golda Meir's
mother," and one of the others had said, "I think she's Golda's father,"
and they all laughed affectionately. She used a walking stick, and
stomped about the village giving unsolicited advice, most of it very
wise. She had stood guard outside Dickstein's sickroom chasing away noisy
children, waving her stick and threatening beatings which even the
children knew would never be administered.
Dickstein had recovered very quickly. Within a few days he was sitting
out in the sun, peeling vegetables for the kitchen and telling vulgar
jokes to the older children. Two weeks later he was working in the
fields, and soon he was laboring harder than all but the youngest men.
His past was vague, but Esther had told Karen the story of his arrival
in Israel in 1948, during the War of Independence.
Nineteen forty-eight was part of the recent past for Esther. She had been
a young woman in London in the first two decades of the century, and had
been an activist in half a dozen radical left-wing causes from suffragism
to pacifism before emigrating to Palestine; but her memory went back
further, to pogroms in Russia which she recalled vaguely in monstrous
nightmare images. She had sat under a fig tree in the heat of the day,
varnishing a chair she had made with her own gnarled hands, and talked
about Dickstein like a clever but mischievous schoolboy.
"Mere were eight or nine of them, some from the university, some working
men from the East End. If they ever had any money, they'd spent it before
they got to France. They hitched a ride on a truck to Paris, then jumped
a freight train to Marseilles. From there, it seems, they walked most of
the way to Italy. Then they stole a huge car, a German Army staff car,
a Mercedes, and drove all the way to the toe of Italy." Esther's face was
creased in smiles, and Karen thought: She would love to have been there
with them.
"Dickstein had been to Sicily in the war, and it seems he
35
Ken Folleff
knew the Mafia there. They had all the guns left over from the war.
Dickstein wanted guns for Israel, but he had no money. He persuaded the
Sicilians to sell a boatload of submachine guns to an Arab purchaser, and
then to tell the Jews where the pickup would take place. They knew what he
was up to, and they loved it. The deal was done, the Sicilians got their
money, and then Dickstein and his friend stole the boat with its cargo and
sailed to Israell"
Karen had laughed aloud, there under the fig tree, and a grazing goat
looked up at her balefully.
"Wait," said Esther, "you haven't heard the end of it Some of the
university boys had done a bit of rowing, and one of the other lot was a
docker, but that was all the experi.ence they had of the sea, and here they
were sailing a fivethousand-ton cargo vessel on their own. They figured out
a little navigation from first principles: the ship had charts and a
compass. Dickstein had looked up in a book how to start the ship, but he
says the book did not tell how to stop it So they steamed into Haifa,
yelling and waving and throwing their hats into the air, just like it was
a varsity rag--and ploughed straight into the dock.
"lley were forgiven instantly, of course-the guns were more precious than
gold, literally. And that!s when they started to call Dickstein The
Pirate'."
He did not look much like a pirate, working in the vineyard in his baggy
shorts and his spectacles, Karen thought. AN the same, he was attractive.
She wanted to seduce him, but she could not figure out how. He obviously
liked her, and she had taken care to let him know she was available. But he
never made a move. Perhaps he felt she was too young and innocent. Or maybe
he was not interested in women.
His voice broke into her thoughts. "I think we've finished."
She looked at the sun: it was time to go. "You've done twice as much as
me."
'Tm used to the work. Ive been here, on and off, for twenty years. 'Me body
gets into the habit."
11ey walked back toward the village as the sky turned purple and yellow.
Karen said, "What else do you do-when you're not here?"
"Oh ... poison wells, kidnap Christian children."
Karen laughed.
36
TRIPLE
Dickstein said, "How does this life compare with Californiar,
"This is a wonderful place," she told him. "I think theres a lot of work
still to be done before the women are genuinely equal."
"That seems to be the big topic at the moment."
"You never have much to say about it."
"Listen, I think you're right; but it's better for people to take their
freedom rather than be given it."
Karen said, "That sounds like a good excuse for doing nothing."
Dickstein laughed.
As they entered the village they passed a young man on a pony, carrying a
rifle, on his way to patrol the borders of the settlement Dickstein called
out, "Be careful, Yisrael." The shelling from the Golan Heights had
stopped, of course, and the children no longer had to sleep underground;
but the kibbutz kept up the patrols. Dickstein had been one of those in
favor of maintaining vigilance.
-rm going to read to Mottie," Dickstein said.
"Can I comer,
"Why not?" Dickstein looked at his watch. "We've just got time to wash.
Come to my room in five minutes."
They parted, and Karen went into the showers. A kibbutz was the best place
to be an orphan, she thought as she took off her clothes. McAtie's parents
were both dead-the father blown up in the attack on the Golan Heights
during the last war, the mother killed a year earlier in a shoot-out with
Fedayeen. Both had been close friends of Dickstein. It was a tragedy for
the child, of course; but he still slept in the same bed, ate in the same
room, and had almost one hundred other adults to love and care for him-he
was not foisted onto unwilling aunts or aging grandparents or, worst of
all, an orphanage. And he had Dickstein.
When she had washed off the dust Karen put on clean clothes and went to
Dickstein's room. Mottie was already there, sifting on Dickstein's lap,
sucking his thumb and listening to Treavure Island in Hebrew. Dickstein was
the only person Karen had ever met who spoke Hebrew with a Cockney accent.
His speech was even more strange now, because he was doing different voices
for the characters in the story: a high-pitched boy's voice for Jim, a deep
snarl for Long John
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