Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
Eleven
In the bar at Heathrow Airport David Rostov ordered another round of
drinks and decided to take a gamble on Yasif Hassan. Ile problem, still,
was how to stop Hassan telling all he knew to an Israeli double agent in
Cairo. Rostov and Hassan were both going back for interim debriefing so
a decision had to be made now. Rostov was going to let Hassan know
everything, then appeal to his professionalism---such as it was. Tbe
alternative was to provoke him, and just now he needed him as an ally, not
a suspicious antagonist.
"Look at this," Rostov said, and he showed Hassan a decoded message.
To: Colonel David Rostov via London Residency FRom: Moscow Center
DATE: 3 September 1968 Comrade Colonel:
We refer to your signal g/35-21a, requesting further information
concerning each offour ships named in our signal r/35-21.
The motor vessel Stromberg, 2500 tons, Dutch ownership and
registration, has recently changed hands. She was purchased for DM
1,500,000 by one Andre Papagopolous, a ship broker, on behalf of the
Savile Shipping Corporation of Liberia.
Savile Shipping was incorporated on 6 August this year at the New Ybrk
office of Liberian Corporation Services, Inc., with a share capital of
five hundred dollars. The shareholders are Mr. Lee Chung, a New York
lawyer, and a Mr. Robert Roberts, whose address is care of Mr. Chung's
office. 7he three directors were provided in the usual way by Liberian
Corporation Services, and they resigned the day after the company was
set up,
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again in the usual way. The aforementioned Papagopolous took over as
president and chief executive.
Savile Shipping has also bought,the motor vessel Gil Hamffton, 1500
tons, for ze 80,000.
Our people in New York have interviewed Chung. He says that "Mr.
Roberte' came into his office from the street, gave no address'and paid
his fee in cash. He appeared to be an Englishman. The detailed
description is on file here, but it is not very helpful.
Papagopolous is known to us. He is a wealthy international businessman
of indeterminate nationality. Shipbroking is his principal activity.
He is believed to operate close to the fringes of the law. We have no
address for him. There is considerable material in his Ille, but much
of it is speculative. He is believed to have done business with Israeli
Intelligence in 1948. Nevertheless, he has no known political
affiliation.
We continue to gather information on all the ships in the list.
-Moscow Center.
H4ssan. gave the sheet of pape~ back to Rostov. "How do they get hold of
all this stuff?"
Rostov began tearing the signal into shreds. "It's all on file somewhere
or other. The sale of the Stromherg would have been notified to Lloyd's
of London. Someone from our consulate in Liberia would have gotten the
details on Savile Shipping from public records in Monrovia. Our New York
people got Chung's address out of the phone book, and Papagopolous was
on file in Moscow. None of it is secret, except the Papagopolous file.
The trick is knowing where to go to ask the questions. The squirrels
specialize in that trick. Ifs all they do!'
Rostov put the shreds of paper into a large glass ashtray and set fire
to them. "Your people should have squirrels," he added.
"I expect we're working on it."
"Suggest it yourself. It won't do you any harm. You might even get the
job of setting it up. That could help your career."
Hassan nodded. "Perhaps I will."
Fresh drinks arrived: vodka for Rostov, gin for Hassan.
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Rostov was pleased that Hassan was responding well to his friendly
overtures. He examined the cinders in the ashtray to make sure. the signal
had burned completely.
Hassan said, "You're assuming Dickstein is behind the SavHe Shipping
Corporation."
"Yes."
"So what will we do about the &romberg?"
"Well . . ." Rostov emptied his glass and set it on the table. "My guess
is he wants the Stromberg so he can get an exact layout of the sister
ship CopareUl."
"It will be an expensive blueprint"
"He can sell the ship again. However, he may also use the Stromberg in
the hijack of the Coparellt-l doift quite see how, just yet.99
"Will you put a man aboard the Stromberg, like Tyria on the Coparelft?"
"No point Dickstein is sure to get rid of the old crew and fill the ship
with Israeli saflom FU have to think of something else."
"Do we know where the Stromberg is now?"
"I've asked the squirrels. They'll have an answer by the time I get to
MOSCOW."
I Hassan's ffight was called. He stood up. "We meet in Luxembourgr'
"I'm not sure. Ill let you know. Listen, theres, something I've got to
say. Sit down again."
Hassan sat down.
"When we started to work together on Dickstein I was very hostile to you.
I regret that now, I'm apologizing; but I must tell you there was a
reason for it You see, Cairo isn't secure. lirs certain there are double
agents in the Egyptian Intelligence apparatus. What I was concerned
about-and still am-is that everything you report to your superiors will
get back, via a double agent, to Tel Aviv; and then Dickstein will know
how close we are and will take evasive action."
"I appreciate your frankness.11
Appreciate, Rostov thought: He loves it "However, you are now completely
in the picture, and what we must discuss is haw to prevent the
information you have in your possession getting back to Tel Aviv."
Hassan nodded. "What do you suggest?"
"Well. Youll have to tell what weve found out, of course,
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but I want you to be as vague as possible about the details. Don't give
names, times, places. When you!re pushed, complain about me, say Ive
refused to let you share all the information. Doift talk to anyone except
the people you're obliged to report to. In particular, tell nobody about
Savile Shipping, the Stromberg, or the Copareft As for Pyotr Tyrin being
aboard the Copareffl-try to forget it."
Hassan looked worried. -Whaes left to tell?"
"Plenty. Dickstein, Euratom, uranium, the meeting with Pierre Borg ...
youll be a hero in Cairo if you tell half the litory.99
Hassan was not convinced. "Ill be as frank as you. If I do this your way,
my report will not be as impressive as yours."
Rostov gave a wry smile. "Is that unfair?"
"No," Hassan conceded, "you deserve most of the credit."
"Besides, nobody but the two of us will know how different the reports
are. And you!re going to get all the credit you need in the end."
"All right," Hassan said. "I'll be vague."
"Good." Rostov waved his hand for a waiter. "You've got a little time,
have a quick one before you go." He settled back in his chair and crossed
his legs. He was satisfied: Hassan would do as he had been told. "Im
looking forward to getting home."
"Any plans?"
"IT try to take a few days on the coast with Mariya and the boys. Weve
a dacha in the Riga Bay."
"Sounds nice.'
"It's pleasant ~here--but not as warm as where you're going, of course.
Where will you head for-Alexandria?"
The last call for Hassan!s flight came over the public address system,
and the Arab stood up. "No such luck," he said. "I expect to spend the
whole time stuck in filthy Cairo."
And Rostov had the peculiar feeling that Yasif Hassan was lying.
Franz Albrecht Pedler's life was ruined when Germany lost the war. At the
age of fifty, a career officer in the Wehrmacht, he was suddenly
homeless, penniless and unemployed. And, like millions of other Germans,
he started again.
He became a salesman for a French dye manufacturer:
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Ken FoHoff
small commission, no salary., In 1946 there were few customers, but by
1951 German Industry was rebuilding and when at last things began to look
up Pedler was in a good position to take advantage of the new
opportunities. He opened an office in Wiesbaden, a rail Junction on the
right bank of the Rhine that promised to develop into an Industrial
center. Ms product list grew, and so did his tally of customers: soon he
was selling soaps as well as dyes, and he gained entry to the U.S. bases,
which at the time administered that part of occupied Germany. He had
learned, during the hard years, to be an oppontunist: if a U.S. Army
procurement officer wanted disinfectant in pint bottles, - Peddler would
buy disinfectant in ten-gallon drums, pour the stuff from the drums into
secondhand bottles in a rented barn, put on a label saying "R A. Pedler's
Special Disinfectant" and resell at a fat proft
From buying in bulk and repackaging it was not a very big step to buying
ingredients and manufacturing. The first barrel of F. A. Pedler's Special
Industrial Cleanser-never called simply "soapt-was mixed in the same
rented barn and sold to the U.S. Air Force for use by aircraft
maintenance engineers. The company never looked back.
In the late Fiffies Pedler read a book about chemical warfare and went
on to win a big defense contract to supply a range of solutions designed
to neutralize various kinds of chemical weapons.
F. A. Pedler had become a military supplier, small but secure and
profitable. The rented barn had grown into a small complex of
single-story buildings. Franz married again-his first wife had been
killed in the 1944 bombing-and fathered a child But he was still an
opportunist at heart, and when he heard ;i;;;t a small mountain of
urannun ore going cheap, he smelled a profit.
The uranium belonged to a Belgian company called Socidt6 G&drale de la
Chimie. Chimie was one of the corporations which ran Belgium!s African
colony, the Belgian Congo, a country rich in minerals. After the 1960
pullout Chimie stayed on; but, knowing that those who did not walk out
would eventually be thrown out, the company expended all its efforts to
ship home as much raw material as it could before the gates slammed shut.
Between 1960 and 1965 it accumulated a large stockpile of yelloweake at
its refinery near
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the Dutch border. Sadly for Chimie, a nuclear test ban treaty was ratified
in the meantime, and when Chimie was finally thrown out of the Congo there
were few buyers for uranium. The yellowcake sat in a silo, tying up scarce
capital.
F. A. Pedler did not actually use very much uranium in the manufacture of
their dyes. However, Franz loved a gamble of this sort: the price was low,
he could make, a little money by having the stuff refined, and ff the
uranium market improved-as it was likely to sooner or later-he would make
a big capital profit. So he bought some.
Nat Dickstein liked Pedler right away. The German was a sprightly
seventy-three-year-old who still had all his hair and the twinkle in his
eye.. 17hey met on a Saturday. Pedler wore a loud sports jacket and fawn
trousers, spoke good English with an American accent and gave Dickstein a
glass of Sekt, the local champagne.
They were wary of each other at first. After all, they had fought on
opposite sides in a war which had been cruel to them both. But Dickstein
had always believed that the enemy was not Germany but Fascism, and he was
nervous only that Pedler might be uneasy. It seemed the same was true of
Pedler.
Dickstein had called from his hotel in Wiesbaden to make an appointment.
His call had been awaited eagerly. The local Israeli consul had alerted
Pedler that Mr. Dickstein, a senior' army procurement officer with a large
shopping list, was on his way. Pedler had suggested a short tour of the
factory on Saturday morning, when it would be empty, followed by lunch at
his home.
if Dickstein had been genuine he would have been put off by the tour: the
factory was no gleaming model of German efficiency, but a straggling
collection of old huts and cluttered yards with a pervasive bad smell.
After sitting up half the night with a textbook on chemical engineering
Dickstein was ready with a handful of intelligent questions about agitators
and baffies, materials-handling and quality-control and packaging. He
relied upon the language problem to camouflage any errors. It seemed to be
working.
The situation was peculiar. Dickstein had to Play the role of a buyer and
be dubious and noncommittal while the seller wooed him, whereas in reality
he was hoping to seduce Pedler into a relationship the German would be
unable or un-
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