Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
TRIPLE
he might steal used fuel. Now he knew why nobody had suggested it. It
would be easy enough to hijack the track-he could do it singlehanded-but
how would he sneak a fifty-ton lead flask out of the country and take it
to Israel without anyone noticing?
Stealing uranium from inside the power station was no more promising an
idea. Sure, the security was flimsy-the very fact that he had been
permitted to make this reconnaissance, and had even been given a guided
tour, showed that. But fuel inside the station was locked into an
automatic, remote-controlled system. The only way it could come out was
by going right through the nuclear process and emerging in the cooling
ponds; and then he was back with the problem of sneaking a huge flask of
radioactive material through some European port.
There had to be a way of breaking into the fuel store, Dickstein
supposed; then you could manhandle the stuff into the elevator, take it
down, put it on a track and drive away; but that would involve holding
some or all of the station personnel at gunpoint for some time, and his
brief was to do this thing surreptitiously.
A hostess offered to refill his cup, and he accepted. Trust the French
to give you good coffee. A young engineer began a talk on nuclear safety.
He wore unpressed trousers and a baggy sweater. Scientists and
technicians all had a look about them, Dickstein had observed: their
clothes were old, mismatched and comfortable, and if many of them wore
beards, it was usually a sign of indifference rather than vanity. He
thought it was because in their work, force of personality generally
counted for nothing, brains for everything, so there was no point in
trying to make a good visual impression. But perhaps that was a romantic
view of science.
. He did not pay attention to the lecture. The physicist from the
Weizmann Institute had been much more concise. "There is no such thing
as a safe level of radiation," he had said. "Such talk makes you think
of radiation like water in a pool: if it's four feet high you're safe,
if it's eight feet high you drown. But in fact radiation levels are much
more like speed limits on the highway-thirty miles per hour is safer than
eighty, but not as safe as twenty, and the only way to be completely safe
is not to get in the car."
Dickstein turned his mind back to the problem of stealing
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uranium. It was the requirement of secrecy that defeated every plan he
dreamed up. Maybe the whole thing was doomed to failure. After all,
impossible is impossible, he thought. No, it was too soon to say that. He
went back to first principles.
He would have to take a consignment in transit: that much was clear from
what he had seen today. Now, the fuel elements were not checked at this
end, they were fed straight into the system. He could hijack a truck,
take the uranium out of the fuel elements, close them up again, reseal
the consignment and bribe or frighten the truck driver to deliver the
empty shell& The dud elements would gradually find their way into the
reactor, five at a time, over a period of months. Eventually the reactoes
output would fall marginally. There would be an investigation. Tests
would be done. Perhaps no conclusions would be reached before the empty
elements ran out and new, genuine fuel elements went in, causing output
to rise again. Maybe no one would understand what had happened until the
duds were reprocessed and the plutonium recovered was too little, by
which time-four to seven years later-the trail to Tel Aviv would have
gone cold.
But they might find out sooner. And there was still the problem of
getting the stuff out of the country.
Still, he had the outline of one possible scheme, and he felt a bit more
cheerful.
. The lecture ended. There were a few desultory questions, then the party
trooped back to the bus. Dickstein sat at the back. A middle-aged woman
said to him, "That was my seat," and he stared at her stonily until she
went away.
Driving back from the power station, Dickstein kept looking out of the
rear window. After about a mile the gray Opel Pulled out of a turnoff and
followed the bus. Dickstein's cheerfulness vanished.
He had been spotted. It had happened either here or in Luxembourg,
probably Luxembourg. The spotter might have been Yasif Hassan-no reason
why he should not be an agent-or someone else. They must be following him
out of general curiosity because there was no way-was there?---that they
could know what he was up to. All he had to do was lose them.
He spent a day in and around the town near the miclear power station,
traveling by bus and taxi, driving a rented car,
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TRIPLE
and walking. By the end of the day he had identified the three
vehicles--the gray Opel, a dirty little fiatbe4 truck, and a German
Ford-and five of the men in the surveillance team. The men looked vaguely
Arabic, but in this part of France many of the criminals were North
African: somebody might have hired local help. The size of the team
explained why he had not sniffed the surveillance earlier. They had been
able continually to switch cars and personnel. The trip to the power
station, a long there-and-back journey on a country road with very little
traffic, explained why the team had finally blown themselves.
The next day be drove out of town and on to the autoroute. The Ford
followed him for a few miles, then the gray Opel took over. There were
two men in each car. There would be two more in the flatbed truck, plus
one at his hotel.
The Opel was still with him when he found a pedestrian bridge over the
road in a place where there were no turnoffs from the highway for four
or five miles in either direction. Dickstein pulled over to the shoulder,
stopped the car, got out and lifted the hood. He looked inside for a few
minutes. The gray Opel disappeared up ahead, and the Ford went by a
minute later. The Ford would wait at the next turnoff, and the Opel would
come back on the opposite side of the road to see what he was doing. That
was what the textbook prescribed for this situation.
Dickstein hoped these people would follow the book, otherwise his scheme
would not work.
He took a collapsible warning triangle from the trunk of the car and
stood it behind the offside rear wheel.
T'he Opel went by on the opposite side of the highway.
They were following the booL
Dickstein began to walk.
When he got off the highway he caught the first bus he saw and rode it
until it came to a town. On the journey he spotted each of the three
surveillance vehicles at different times. He allowed himself to feel a
little premature triumph: they were going for it.
He took a taxi from the town and got out close to his car but on the
wrong side of the highway. The Opel went by, then the Ford pulled off the
road a couple of hundred yards behind him.
Dickstein began to run.
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Ken Folloff
He was in good condition after his months of outdoor work in the kibbutz.
He sprinted to the pedestrian bridge, ran across it and raced along the
shoulder on the other side of the road. Breathing hard and sweating, he
reached his abandoned car in under three minutes.
One of the men from.the Ford had got out and started to follow him. The
man now realized he had been taken in. The Ford moved off. The man ran
back and jumped into it as it gathered speed and swung into the slow
lane.
Dickstein got into his car. The surveillance vehicles were now on the
wrong side of the highway and would have to go all the way to the next
junction before they could cross over and come after him. At sixty miles
per hour the round trip would take them ten minutes, which meant he had
at least five minutes start on them. They would not catch him.
He pulled away, heading for Paris, humming a musical chant that came.
from the football terraces of West Ham: "Easy, easy, eeeezeee."
Ilere was a godalmighty panic in Moscow when they heard about the Arab
atom bomb.
The Foreign Ministry panicked because they bad not heard of it earlier,
the KGB panicked because they had not heard about it first, and the Party
Secretary's office panicked because the last thing they wanted was
another whos-to-blame row between the Foreign Ministry and the KGB, the
previous one had made life hell in the Kremlin for eleven months.
Fortunately, the way the Egyptians chose to make their revelation allowed
for a certain amount of covering of rears. The Egyptians wanted to make
the point that they were not diplomatically obliged to tell their allies
about this secret project, and the technical help they were asking for
was not crucial to its success. Their attitude was "Oh, by the way, we're
building this nuclear reactor in order to get some plutonium to make atom
bombs to blow Israel off the face of the earth, so would you like to give
us a hand, or not?" The message, trimmed and decorated with ambassadorial
niceties, was delivered, in the manner of an afterthought, at the end of
a routine meeting between the Egyptian Ambassador in Moscow and the
deputy chief of the Middle East desk at the Foreign Ministry.
The deputy chief who received the message considered
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very carefully what he should do with the information. Ifis first duty,
naturally, was to pass the news to his chief, who would then tell the
Secretary. However, the credit for the news would go to his chief, who
would also not miss the opportunity for scoring points off the KGB. Was
there a way for the deputy chief to gain some advantage to himself out of
the affair?
He knew that the best way to get on in the Kremlin was to put the KGB
under some obligation to yourself. He was now in a position to do the
boys a big favor. If he warned them of the Egyptian Ambassador's message,
they would have a little time to get ready to pretend they knew all about
the Arab atom bomb and were about to reveal the news themselves.
He put on his coat, thinking to go out and phone his acquaintance in the
KGB from a phone booth in case his own phone were tapped-then he realized
how silly that would be, for he was going to call the KGB, and it was
they who tapped people's phones anyway; so he took off his coat and used
his office phone.
The KGB desk man he talked to was equally expert at working the system.
In the new KGB building on the Moscow ring road, he kicked up a huge
fuss. First he called his boss's secretary and asked for an urgent
meeting in fifteen minutes. He carefully avoided speaking to the boas
himself. He fired off half a dozen more noisy phone calls, and sent
secretaries and messengers scurrying about the building to take memos and
collect files. But his master stroke was the agenda. It so happened that
the agenda for the next meeting of the Middle East political committee
had been typed the previous day and was at this moment being run off on
a duplicating machine. He got the agenda back and at the top of the list
added a new item: "Recent Developments in Egyptian Armaments-Special
Report," followed by his own name in brackets. Next he. ordered the new
agenda to be duplicated, stiff bearing the previous day's date, and sent
around to the interested departments that afternoon by hand.
Then when he had made certain that half Moscow would associate his name
and no one elses with the news, he went to see his boss.
The same day a much less striking piece of news came in. As part of the
routine exchange of information between Egyptian Intelligence and the
KGB, Cairo sent notice that an
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