Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
TRIPLE
It gave him added speed. and power.
He took hold of Hassan's gun arm by the wrist and shoulder, and with a
downward pull broke the arm over his kneeHassan screamed and the gun
dropped from his useless hand. Turning slightly, Dickstein brought his
elbow back in a blow which caught Hassan just under the ear. Hassan turned
away, falling. Dickstein grabbed his bair from behind, pulling the head
backward; and as Hassan sagged away from him be lifted his foot high and
kicked. His heel struck the back of Hassan's neck at the moment he jerked
the bead. There was a snap as all the tension went out of the man7s muscles
and his head lolled, unsupported, on his shoulders.
Dickstein let go and the body crumpled.
He stared at the harmless body with exultation ringing in his ears.
Then he saw Koch.
The engineer was tied to a chair, slumped over, pale as death but
conscious. There was blood on his clothes. Dickstein c1rew his knife and
cut the ropes that bound Koch. Then he saw the man7s hands.
He said, "Christ."
"I'll live," Koch muttered. He did not get up from the chair.
Dickstein picked up Hassan's machine gun and checked the magazine. It was
almost full. He moved out on to the bridge and located the foghorn.
"Koch," he said, "can you get out of that chair?"
Koch got up, swaying unsteadily until Dickstein stepped across and
supported him, leading him through to the bridge. "See this button? I want
you to count slowly to ten then lean on it.99
Koch shook his head to clear it. "I think I can handle it."
"Start. Now."
"One," Koch said. 'Two."
Dickstein went down the companionway and came out on the second deck, the
one he had cleared himself. It was still empty. He went on down, and
stopped just before the ladder emerged into the mess. He figured all the
remaining Fedayeen must be here, lined against the walls, shooting out
through portholes and doorways; one or two perhaps watching the
companionway. There was no safe, careful way to take such a strong
defensive position.
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Come on, Kocht
Dickstein had intended to spend a second or two hiding in the
companionway. At any moment one of the Arabs might look up it to check.
If Koch had collapsed he would have to go back up there and-
Ile foghorn sounded.
Dickstein jumped. He was firing before he landed. There were two men
close to the foot of the ladder. He shot them first. The firing from
outside went into a crescendo. Dickstein turned in a rapid half circle,
dropped to one knee to make a smaller target, and sprayed the Fedayeen
along the walls. Suddenly there was another gun as Ish came up from
below; then Feinberg was at one door, shooting; and Dovrat, wounded, came
in through another door. And then, as if by signal, they all stopped
shooting, and the silence was like thunder.
All the Fedayeen were dead.
Dickstein, still kneeling, bowed his head in exhaustion. After a moment
he stood up and looked at his men. "Where are the others?" he said.
Feinberg gave him a peculiar look. "Iberes someone on the foredeck, Sapir
I think."
"And the rest?"
"That's it," Feinberg said. "All the others are dead."
Dickstein slumped against a bulkhead. "What a price," he said quietly.
Looking out through the smashed porthole he saw that it was day.
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Seventeen
A year earlier the BOAC jet in which Suza Ashford was serving dinner had
abruptly begun to lose height for no apparent reason over the Atlantic
Ocean. The pilot had switched on the seat-belt lights. Suza had walked up
and down the aisle-, saying "Just a little turbulence," and helping people
fasten their seat belts, all the time thinking: We're going to die, we're
all going to die.
She felt like that now.
There had been a short message from Tyrin: Israelis atfacking-then
silence. At this moment Nathaniel was being shot at. He might be wounded,
he might have been captured, he might be dead; and while Suza seethed
with nervous tension she had to give the radio operator the BOAC Big
Smile and say, "It's quite a setup you7ve got here."
The Karkes . radio operator was a big gray-haired man from Odessa. His
name was Aleksandr, and he spoke passable English. "It cost one hundred
thousand dollar," he said proudly. "You know about radioT'
"A little . . . I used to be an air hostess." She had said "used to be"
without forethought, and now she wondered whether that life really was
gone. "I've seen the air crew using their radios. I know the basics."
"Really, this is four radios," Aleksandr explained. "One picks up the
Stromberg beacon. One listens to Tyrin on Coparelli. One listens to
Coparelli's regular wavelength. And this one wanders. Look."
He showed her a dial whose pointer moved around slowly. "It seeks a
transmitter, stops when it finds one," Aleksan& sad.
'Thars incredible. Did you invent that?"
"I am an operator, not inventor, sadly."
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"And you can broadcast on any of the sets, just by switching to TRANsmrr?"
"Yes, Morse code or speech. But of course, on this oper. ation nobody uses
speech."
"Did you have to go through long training to become a ra. dio operator?"
"Not long. Learning Morse is easy. But to be a shipla radionian you must
know how to repair the sev, He lowered his voice. "And to be a KGB
operator, you must go to spy schooL" He laughed, and Suza laughed with him,
thinking: Come on, Tyrin; and then her wish was granted.
The message began, Aleksandr started writing and at the Uwe time said to
Suza, `fWn. Get Rostov, please."
Suza left the bridge reluctantly; she wanted to know what was in the
message. She hurried to the mess, expecting to find Rostov there drinking
strong black coffee, but the room was empty. She went down another deck and
made her way to his cabin. She knocked on the door.
His voice in Russian said something which might have meant come in.
. She opened the door. Rostov stood there in his short% washing in a bowl.
'Tyrin's coming through," Suza said. She tamed to leave.
'Suza.
She turned back. 'What would you say if I surprised you in your underwear?"
'Td say piss off," she said.
"Wait for me outside."
She closed the door, thinking: Tbat's done it
When he came out she said, "I'm sorry."
He gave a tight smile. "I should not have been so unprofessional. Lets go."
She followed him up to the radio room, which was Imme. diately below the
bridge In what should have been the captain's cabin. Because of the mass of
extra equipment, Aleksandr had explained, it was not possible to put the
radio operator adjacent to the bridge, as was customary. Suza bad figured
out for herself that this arrangement bad the additional advantage of
segregating the radio from the crew when the ship carried a mixture of
ordinary seamen and KGB agents.
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TRIPLE
Aleksandr had transcribed Tyrin!s signal. He banded it to Rostov, who
read it in English. "Israelis have taken Coparelli. St?vmberg alongside.
Dickstein alive."
Suza went lunp with relief. She had to sit down. She slumped into a
chair.
No one noticed. Rostov was already composing his reply to Tyrin: "We will
hit at Six A.M. tomorrow."
The tide of relief went out for Suza and she thought: Oh, God, what do
I do now?
Nat Dickstein stood in silence, wearing a borrowed seaman!s cap, as the
captain of the Stromberg read the words of the service for the dead,
raising his voice against the noise of wind, rain and sea. One by one the
canvas-wrapped bodies were tipped over the rail into the black water:
Abbas, Sharrett, Porush, Gibli, Rader, Reinez, and Jabotinsky. Seven of
the twelve had died. Uranium was the most costly metal in the world.
There had been another funeral earlier. Four Fedayeen had been left
alive--three wounded, one who had lost his nerve find hidden-and after
they had been disarmed Dickstein had allowed them to bury their dead.
"Mein had been a bigger funeral-they had dropped twenty-five bodies into
the sea. lbey had hurried through their ceremony under the watchful
eyes,--and guns--of three surviving Israelis, who understood that this
courtesy should be extended to the enemy but did not have to like it,
Meanwhile, the Stromberg's captain had brought aboard all his shies
papers. ne team of fitters and joiners, which had come along in case it
was necessary to alter the Coparelli to match the Stromberg, was set to
work repairing the battle damage. Dickstein told them to concentrate on
what was visible from the deck: the rest would have to wait until they
reached port. 'Mey set about filling holes, repairing furniture, and
replacing panes of glass and metal fittings with spares Cannibalized from
the doomed Stromberg. A painter went down a ladder to remove the name
Coparelli from the bull and replace it with the stenciled letters
s-T-R-o-m-B-E-R-o. When he had finished he set about painting over the
repaired bulkheads and woodwork on deck. All the Copareffs life. boats,
damaged beyond repair, were chopped up and thrown Over the side, and the
Stromberg's boats were brought over to
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replace them. The new oil pump, which the Stromberg had carried on Koch's
instructions, was installed in the Coparellirs engine.
Work had stopped for the burial. Now, as soon as the captain had uttered
the final words, it began again. Toward the end of the afternoon the
engine rumbled to life. Dickstein stood on the bridge with the captain
while the anchor was raised. The crew of the Strontherg quickly found
their way around the new ship, which was identical to their old one. The
captain set a oourse and ordered full speed ahead.
It was almost over, Dickstein thought The Coparelli had disappeared: for
all intents and purposes the ship in which he now sailed was the
Stromberg, and the Stromberg was legally owned by Savile Shipping. Israel
had her uranium, and nobody knew how she had got it. Everyone in the
chain of operation was now taken care of-except Pedler, still the legal
owner of the yellowcake. He was the one man who could ruin the whole
scheme if he should become either curious or hostile. Papagopolous, would
be handling him right now: Dickstein silently wished him luck.
WeW clear," the captain said.
The explosives expert in the chartroom pulled a lever on his radio
detonator then everybody watched the empty Strontberg, now more than a
mile away.
There was a loud, dull thud, like thunder and the Stromberg seemed to sag
in the middle. Her fuel tanks caught fire and the stormy evening was lit
by a gout of flame reaching for the sky; Dickstein felt elation and faint
anxiety at the sight of such great destruction. The Stromberg began to
sink. slowly at first and then faster. Her stem went under; seconds later
her bows followed; her funnel poked up above the water for a moment like
the raised arm of a drowning man, and then she was gone.
Dickstein smiled faintly and turned away.
He beard a noise. The captain heard it too. They went to the side of the
bridge and looked out, and then they understood.
Down on the deck, the men were cheering.
Franz Albrecht Pedler sat in his office on the outskirts of Wiesbaden and
scratched his snowy-white head. The telegram from Angeluzzi. e Bianco in
Genoa, translated from the Ital-
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