Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
Ken Folleff
willing to sever. It was Pedlees uranium he wanted, but he was not going to
ask for it, now or ever. Instead he would try to maneuver Pedler into a
position where he was dependent upon Dickstein for his livelihood.
After the factory tour Pedler drove him in a new Mercedes from the works to
a wide chalet-style house on a hillside. They sat in front of a big window
and sipped their Sekt while Frau Pedler--a pretty, cheerful woman in her
forties-busied herself in the kitchen. Bringing a potential customer home
to lunch on the weekend was a somewhat Jewish way of doing business,
Dickstein mused, and he wondered if Pedler had thought of that
Ilia window overlooked the valley Down below the river was wide and slow,
with a narrow road running alongside it Small gray houses with white
shutters clustered in small groups along the banks, and the vineyards
sloped upward to the Pedlers! house and beyond it to the treeline. If I
were going to live in a cold country, Dickstein thought~ this would do
nicely.
"Well, what do you think?" said Pedler.
"About the view, or the factory?"
Pedler smiled and shrugged. "Both."
'The view is magnificent. The factory is smaller than I expected.99
Pedler lit a cigarette. He was a heavy smoker-he was lucky to have lived so
long. "Small?"
Perhaps I should explain what rin looking for.-
"Please."
Dickstein launched into his story. "Right now the Army buys cleaning
materials from a variety of suppliers: detergents from one, ordinary soap
from another, solvents for machinery from someone else and so on. Were
tying to cut costs, and perhaps we can do this by taking our entire
business in this area to one manufacturer."
Pedlees eyes widened. "That, is . He fumbled for a phrase '~ . . a tall
order."
"I'm afraid it may be too tall for you," Dickstein said, thinking: Don't
say yesl
"Not nece&urily. Ile only reason we haven!t got that kind of bulk
manufacturing capacity is simply that we've never had this scale of
business. We certainly have the managerial and technical know-how, and with
a large firm order we could
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get finance to expand it all depends on the figures,
really.-
Dickstem pkJwd up his briefcase from beside his chair and opened it "Here
are the specifications for,the,products," he said, handing Pedler a list.
"Plus the quantities required and the time scAle, You'll want time to
consult with your directon and do your sums---~'
"rm the boss," Pedler said with a smile. "I don't have to consult
anybody. Give me tomorrow to work on the figures, and Monday to we the
bank. On Tuesday 1% call and give you prices."
"I was told you were a good man to work with," Dickstein said.
"There are some advantages to being a small company."
Frau Pedler came in from the kitchen and said, "Lunch is ready.99
My darling Sum
I have never written a love letter before. I don't think I ever called
anyone darling until now. I must tell you, it feels very good.
I am alone in a strange town on a cold Sunday afternoon. The town is
quite pretty, with lots of parks, in. fact rm sitting in one of them
now, writing to you with a leaky ballpoint pen and some vile green
stationery, the only kind I could got My bench is beneath a curious
kind of pagoda with a circular dome and Greek columns all around in a
circle-like a folly, or the kind of summer house you might find In an
English country, garden designed by'a Victorian eccentric. In front
of,me is a fiat lawn dotted with poplar trees, and in the distance I
can hear a brass band playing something by Edward Elgar. The park is
fall of people with children and footballs and dogs.
I dotft know why I'm telling you all this. What I really want to say
is I love you and I want to spend the rest of my life with you. I knew
that a couple of days after we met I hesitated to tell you, not because
I wasn!t sure, but
Well, if you want to know the truth, I thought it might ware you off.
I know you love me, but I also know that you are twenty-five, that
loves comes easily to
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Ken Folleff
you (I'm the opposite way), and that love which comes easily may go
easily. So I thought: Softly, Softly, give her a chance to get to like
you before you ask her to say "Forever." Now that weve been apart for
so many weeks rm no longer capable of such deviousness. I just have to
tell you how it is with me. Forever is what I want, and you might as
well know it now.
I'm a changed man. I know that sounds trite, but when it happens to you
it isn't trite at all, it's just the opposite. Life looks different to
me now, in several ways-some of which you know about, others IT tell
you one day. Even this is different, this being alone In a strange
place with nothing to do until Monday. Not that I mind it,
particularly. But before, I wouldn't even have thought of it as
something I might like or dislike. Before, there was nothing I'd prefer
to do. Now there is always something Id rather do, and you're the
person I'd rather do it to. I mean with, not to. Well, either, or both.
I'm going to have to get off that subject, it's making me fidget.
I'll be gone from here in a couple of days, don't know where I'm going
next, don't know-and this is the worst part-don't even know when I'll
see You again. But when I do, believe me, Im not going to let you out
of my sight for ten or fifteen years.
None of this sounds how it's supposed to sound. I want to tell you how
I feel, and I can't put it into words. I want you to know what ies like
for me to picture your face many times every day, to see a slender girl
with black hair and hope, against all reason, that somehow she might
be you, to imagine all the time what You n-dght say about a view, a
newspaper article, a small man with a large dog, a pretty dress; I want
you to know how, when I get into bed alone, I just ache with the need
to touch you.
I love you so much.
N.
Franz Pedler's secretary phoned Nat Dickstein at his hotel on Tuesday
morning and made a date for lunch.
They went to a modest restaurant in the Wilhelmstrasse and ordered beer
instead of wine: this was to be a working 212
TRIPLE
session. Dickstein controlled his impat ience-Pedler, not he,
was supposed to do the wooing.
Pedler said, "Well, I Chink we can accommodate you."
Dickstein wanted to shout "Hoorayl" but he kept his face impassive.
Pedier continued: "The, prices, which IM give you in a moment are
conditional. We need a five-year contz-act. We will guarantee prices for
the first twelve months; after that they may be varied in accordance with
an index of world Prim of certain mw matenals. And there!s a cancellaton
Penalty amounting to ten percent of the value of one Yeaes Supply."
Dickstein wanted to say, "Donel" and shake hands on the deal, but he
reminded himself to continue to play his part. $wren per-cent is stiff.99
"It's not,excessive," Pedler argued. "It certainly would not recompense
us for our losses if you did cancel. But it must be large enough to deter
you fmm canceling except under very compelling circumstances."
"I see that. But we may suggest a smaller percentage."
Pedler shrugged. "Everything is negotiable. Here are the prices."
Dickstein studied the list then said, 'This is close to what we're
looking for."
"Does that mean we have a deal?"
Dickstein thought: Yes, yes! But. he said, "No, it means that I think we
can do business."
Pedler beamed. "In that case," he said, "let's have a real drink.
Waiterl"
When the drinks came Pedler raised his glass in a toast. "'To many years
of business together."
"1711 drink to that," Dickstein said. As he raised his glass he was
thinking: How about that-1 did it againI
Life at sea was uncomfortable, but it was not as bad as Pyotr Tyrin had
expected. In the Soviet Navy, ships had been run on the principles of
unremitting hard work, harsh discipline and bad food. The Coparelli was
very different. Tte captain, Eriksen, asked only for safety and good
seamanship, and even there his standards were not remarkably high. The
deck was swabbed occasionally, but nothing was ever polished or painted.
The food was quite good, and Tyrin had the advantage of sharing a cabin
with the cook. In theory Tyrin 213 -
Ken Folleff
could be called upon at any hour of the day or night to send radio
signals, but in practice all the traffic occurred during the normal
working day so he even got his eight hours sleep every night. It was a
comfortable regimen, and Pyotr Tyrin was concerned about comfort.
Sadly, the ship was the opposite of comfortable. She was a bitch. As soon
as they rounded Cape Wrath and left The Minch and the North Sea she began
to pitch and roll like a toy yacht in a gale. Tyrin felt terribly
seasick, and had to conceal it, since he was supposed to be a sailor.
Fortunately this occurred while the cook was busy in the galley and Tyrin
was not needed in the radio room, so be was able to lie flat on his back
in his bunk until the worst was over.
The quarters were poorly ventilated and inadequately heated, so
immediately it got a little damp above, the mess decks were full of wet
clothing hanging up to dry and making the atmosphere worse.
Tyrin's radio gear was in his sea-bag, well protected by polythene and
canvas and some sweaters. However, he could not set it up and operate it
in his cabin, where the cook or anyone else might walk in. He had already
made routine radio contact with Moscow on the ship~s radio, during a
quiet-but nonetheless tense--mornent when nobody was listening; but he
needed something safer and more reliable.
-Tyrin was a nest-building man. Whereas Rostov would move from embassy
to hotel room to safe house without noticing his environment, Tyrin liked
to have a base, a place where he could feel comfortable and familiar and
secure. On static surveillance, the kind of assignment he preferred, he
would always find a large easy chair to place in front of the window, and
would sit at the telescope for hours, perfectly content with his bag of
sandwiches, his bottle of soda and his thoughts. Here on the Copareffl,
he had found a place to nest.
Exploring the ship in daylight, he had discovered a little labyrinth of
stores up in the bow beyond the for'ard hatch. The naval architect had
put them there merely to fill a space between the hold and the prow. The
main store was entered by a semiconcealed door down a flight of steps.
It contained some tools, several drums of grease for the cranes and-inex-
plicably-a rusty old lawn mower. Several smaller rooms opened off the
main one: some containing ropes, bits of
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machinery and decaying cardboard boxes of nuts and bolts; others empty but
for msects. Tynn had never seen anyone enter the area-stuff that was used
was stored aft, where it was needed.
He chose a moment when darkness was failing and most of the crew and
officers were at supper. He went to his cabin, picked up his sea-bag and
climbed the companionway to the deck. He took a flashlight from a locker
below the bridge but did not yet switch it on.
The almanac said there was a moon, but it did not show through the thick
clouds. Tyrin made his way stealthily foeard holding on to the gunwale,
where his silhouette would be less likely to show against the off-white
deek. There was some light from the bridge and the wheelhouse, but the
duty officers would be watching the surrounding sea, not the deck.
Cold $Pray fell on him, and as the Copareni executed her notorious roll
he had to grab the rail with both hands to avoid being swept overboard.
At tunes she shipped waternot much, but enough to soak into Tyrin's sea
boots and frem his feet. He hoped fervently that he would never find out
what she was like in a real gale.
He was miserably wet and shivering when he reached the bow and entered
the litdc disused store. He closed the door behind him, switched on his
flashlight and made his way through the assorted junk to one of the small
rooms off the main store. He closed that door behind him too. He took off
his o9skin, rubbed his hand on his gweater to dry and warm them some,
then opened his bag. He put the transmitter in a corner, lashed it to the
bulkhead with a wire tied through rings in the deck, and wedged it with
a cardboard box.
He was Wearing rubber soles, but he put on rubber gloves as an additional
precaution for the next task. The cables to the ship's radio mast ran
through a pipe along the deckhead above him. With a small hacksaw
pilfered from the engine room TYrin cut away a six-inch section of the
pipe, exposing tht cables. He took a tap from the power cable to the
power input of the transmitter, then connected the aerial socket of Ins
radio with the signal wire from the mast
He switched on the radio and called Moscow.
His Outgoing sigrials would not interfere with the shies radio because
he was the radio operator and it was unlikely that an)rone else would
attempt to send on the ship!s equip-
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