Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
TRiPLE
Hassan thought Dickstein's story was probably true. In his shabby suit~
with the same round spectacles and the same inconspicuous air, he looked
exactly like an underpaid sale
with a product he could not promote. However, there was that odd business
in the Rue Dicks the previous night: two youths, known to the police as
petty thieves, had been found in the gutter savagely disabled. Hassan had
got all the details from a contact on the city police force. Clearly they
had picked on the wrong sort of victim. Their injuries were professional:
the man, who had inflicted them had to be a soldier, a policeman, a
bodyguard . . . or an agent After an incident like that, any Israeli who
flew out in a hurry the next morning was worth checking up on.
Hassan drove back to the Alfa Hotel and spoke to the desk clerk. "I was
here an hour ago when one of your guests was checking out;'he said. "Do
you remember?"
"I think so, sir.99
Hassan gave him two hundred Luxembourg francs. "Would you tell me what
name he was registered under?"
"Certainly. sir." The clerk consulted a f3le. "Edward Rodgers, from
Science International magazine."
"Not Nathaniel Dickstein?"
The clerk shook his head patiently.
"Would you just see whether you had a Nathaniel Dickstein, from Israel,
registered at all?"
"Certainly." The -clerk took several minutes to look through a wad of
papers. Hassan's excitement rose. If Dickstein had registered under a
false name, then he was not a wine salesman--so what else could he be but
an Israeli agent? Finally the clerk closed his fae and looked up. "Defi-
nitely not, sir."
"Thank you." Haman left. He was jubilant as he drove back to his office:
he had used his wits and discovered something important. As soon as he
got to his desk he composed a message.
SUSPECTED ISRAELI AGENT SEEN HERE. NAT DICKSTEIN ALIAS ED RODGERS. FIVE
FOOT SIX, SMALL BUILD, DARK HAIR, BROWN EYES, AGE ABOUT 40.
He encoded the message, added an extra code word at its
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top and sent it by telex to the banles Egyptian headquartem It would never
get there: the extra code word instructed the Cairo post office to reroute
the telex to the Directorate of General Investigations.
Sending the message was an anticlimax, of course. There would be no
reaction, no thanks from the other end. Hassan had nothing to do but get on
with his bank work, and try not to daydream.
Then Cairo caged him on the phone.
It had never happened before. Sometimes they sent him cables, telexes, and
even letters, all in code, of course. Once or twice he had met with people
from Arab embassies and been given verbal instructions. But they had never
phoned. His report must have caused more of a stir than he had anticipated.
The caffer wanted to know more about Dickstein. "I want to confirm the
identity of the customer referred to in your message," he said. "Did he
wear round spectacles?"
"Yea."
"Did he speak English with a Cockney accent? Would you recognize such an
accent?"
"Yes, and yes."
"Did he have a number tattooed on his forearm?"
"I didn't see it today, but I know he has it ... I was at Oxford University
with him, years ago. I'm quite sure it is him."
"You know him?" There was astonishment in the voice from Cairo. "Is this
information on your file?"
"No, Irve never-Y
"Then it should be," the man said angrily. "How long have you been with
us?"
"Since 1957."
'Mat explains it those were the old days. Okay, now listen. This man is a
very important ... client. We want you to stay with him twenty-four hours
a day, do you understand?"
"I caWt," Hassan said miserably. "He left town."
"Where did he go?"
"I dropPed him at the airport. I don't know where he went.*
"Then find out. Phone the airlines, ask which flight he was on, and call me
back in fifteen minutes."
TJUPLE
"I'll do my best---r
"I'm not interested in your best," said the voice from Cairo. "I want his
destination, and I want it before he gets there. Just be sure you call me
in fifteen minutes. Now that we've contacted him, we must not lose him
again."
"I'll get on to it right away," said Hassan, but the line was dead before
he could finish the sentence.
He cradled the phone. True, he had got no thanks from Cairo; but this was
better. Suddenly he was important, his work was urgent, they were depending
on him. He had a chance to do something for the Arab cause, a chance to
strike back at I ast.
He picked up the phone again and started calling the airlines.
67
Four
Nat Dickstein chose to visit a nuclear power station in
France simply because French was the only European lan
guage he spoke passably well, except for English, but En
gland was not part of Euratom. He traveled to the power
station in a bus with an assorted party of students and tour
ists. The countryside -slipping past the windows was a dusty
southern green, more like Galilee than Essex, which had been
"the country" to Dickstein as a boy. He had traveled the
world since, getting on planes as casually as any jet-setter, but
he could remember the time when his horizons had been
Park Lane in the west and Southend-on-Sea in the easL He
could also remember how suddenly those horizons had
receded, when he began to try to think of himself as a man,
after his bar mitzvah and the death of his father. Other boys
of his age saw themselves getting jobs on the docks or in
printing plants, marrying local girls, finding houses within a
quarter of a mile of their parents' homes and settling down;
their ambitions were to breed a champion greyhound, to see
West Ham win the Cup Final, to buy a motorcar. Young
Nat thought he might go to California or Rhodesia or Hong
Kong and become a brain surgeon or an archaeologist or a
millionaire. It was partly that he was cleverer than most of
his contemporaries; partly that to them foreign languages
were alien, mysterious, a school subject like algebra rather
than a way of talking; but mainly the difference had to do
with being Jewish. Dickstein's boyhood chess partner, Harry
Chieseman, was brainy and forceful and quick-witted, but he
saw himself as a working-class Londoner and believed he
would always be one. Dickstein knew-although he could not
remember anyone actually telling him this-that wherever
they were born, Jews were able to find their way into the
greatest universities, to start new industries like motion pic-
68
TIUPLE
tares, to become the most successful bankers and lawyers and
manufacturers; and if they could not do it in the country where they were
born, they would move somewhere else and try again. It was curious,
Dickstein thought as he recollected his boyhood, that a people who had
been persecuted for centuries'should be so convinced of their ability to
achieve anything they set their mind to. Like, when they needed nuclear
bombs; they went out and got them.
The tradition was a comfort, but it gave him no help with the ways and
means.
The power station loomed in the distance. As the bus got closer,
Dickstein realized that the reactor was going to be bigger than he had
imagined. It occupied a ten-story building. Somehow he had imagined the
thing fitting into a small room.
The external security was on an industrial, rather than military, level.
The premises were surrounded by one high fence, not electrified.
Dickstein looked into the gatehouse while the tour guide went through the
formalities: the guards had only two closed-circuit television screens.
Dickstein thought: I could get fifty men inside the compound in broad
daylight without the guards noticing anything amiss. It was a bad sign,
he decided glumly: it meant they had other reasons to be confident.
He left the bus with the rest of the party and walked across the
tar-macadamed parking lot to the reception building. The place had been
laid out with a view to the public image of nuclear energy: there were
well-kept lawns and flower beds and lots of newly planted trees;
everything was clean and natural, white-painted and smokeless. Looking
back toward the gatehouse, Dickstein saw a gray Opel pull up on the road.
One of the two men in it got out and spoke to the security guards, who
appeared to give directions. Inside the car, something glinted briefly
in the sun.
Dickstein followed the tour party into the Jounge. There in a glass case
was a rugby football trophy won by the power station7a team. An aerial
photograph of the establishment hung on the wall. Dickstein stood in
front of it, imprintifig its details on his mind, idly figuring out how
he would raid the place while the back of his mind worried about the gray
Opel.
They were led around the power station by four hostesses
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Ken Folloff
in smart uniforms. Dickstein was not interested in the massive turbines,
the space-age control room with its banks of dials and switches, or the
water-intake system designed to save the ft and return them to the. river.
He wondered if the men in the Opel had been following him, and if so, why.
He was enormously interested in the delivery bay. He asked the hostess,
"How does the fuel arrive?"
"On trucks," she said archly. Some of the party giggled nervously at the
thought of uranium running around the cotmtryside on trucks. "It's not
dangerous," she went on as soon as she had got the expected laugh. "It
isn't even radioactive until it is fed into the atomic pile. It is taken
off the truck straight into the elevator and up to the fuel store on the
seventh floor. From there, everything is automatic."
"What about checking the quantity and quality of the consignmentr
Dickstein said.
"This is done at the fuel fabrication plant The consignment is sealed
there, and only the seals are checked here."
"Mank you." Dickstein nodded, pleased. The system was not quite as
rigorous as Mr. Pfaffer of Euratom had claimed. One or two schemes began
to take vague shape in Dicksteiifs mind.
They saw the reactor loading machine in operation. Worked entirely by
remote control, it took the fuel element from the store to the reactor,
lifted the concrete lid of a fuel channel, removed the spent element,
inserted the new one, closed the lid and dumped the used element into a
water-filled shaft which led to the cooling ponds.
The hostess, speaking perfect Parisian French in an oddly seductive
voice, said, "T'he reactor has three thousand fuel channels, each channel
containing eight fuel rods. The rods last four to seven years. The
loading machine renews five channels in each operation."
They went on to see the cooling ponds. Under twenty feet of water the
spent fuel elements were loaded into pannets, then-cool, but still highly
radioactive-they were locked into fifty-ton lead flasks, two hundred
elements to a flask, for transport by road and rail to a reprocessing
plant.
As the hostess served coffee and pastries in the lounge Dickstein
considered what he had learned. It had occurred to him that, since
plutonium was ultimately what was wanted,
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