Charlie M (14 page)

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Authors: Brian Freemantle

BOOK: Charlie M
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‘To work,' Charlie told himself, stepping out on to the embankment. He touched his jacket, in needless reassurance: the pocket recorder that he had checked and rewound lay snugly against his hip, quite comfortably.

It would be a long walk, he realised, striding out towards the Karmeni Bridge. But it would be safer to travel on foot, he knew. It was a fine, clear morning and he found the exercise stimulating; if it all goes wrong, he thought, wryly, then the only exercise he would know for the rest of his life would be the sort that Berenkov was getting in Wormwood Scrubs.

In the middle of the bridge spanning the Moskva, he rested, gazing over the parapet at the island in the middle, apparently an aimless tourist with time to waste. After fifteen minutes, he determined he was not being followed and continued his walk, turning down towards the Alexandre Palace.

It was 10.45 a.m. when he entered the park. A standing man is conspicuous, according to the instruction manual, he reminded himself. He meandered along the path-way leading towards the river, pacing the journey, turning back in perfect time to the entrance. The walk had reassured him. The park was not under obvious observation, he decided. His close survey didn't preclude watching and listening points immediately outside, of course.

Kalenin entered exactly on time, a short, chunky figure in an overcoat too long for him and a trilby hat that seemed to fit oddly upon his head. The General hesitated, then began strolling along the same path that Charlie had taken a few minutes earlier, gazing curiously from side to side, a man hopeful of an appointment.

The Englishman watched him go, making no effort to follow. It was ten minutes before Charlie accepted Kalenin was free from close surveillance and another ten minutes before he located the man again.

The General had stopped walking, sitting on a seat halfway down one of the longest paths, the uncomfortable hat alongside him on the bench. The man was so short his feet scarcely touched the ground, Charlie saw, as he approached. It was difficult to believe he was one of the most feared and powerful men in Russia.

General Kalenin turned to him, his eyes sweeping Charlie's westernised clothes and appearance as he smiled, very slightly.

Charlie gave no response, but sat the far end of the bench, stretching in the pale sun. It would be too cold to sit there very long, he decided. He hoped Kalenin didn't engage in the ambiguity he'd shown Snare and Harrison. There was little reason why he should.

‘A wise man always breaks his exercise by sensible rest periods,' opened Charlie.

‘Yes,' agreed Kalenin.

Both spoke without looking at each other.

‘This is my fourth Sunday here,' complained Kalenin. ‘I was beginning to think Snare had missed the point during our conversation at the embassy.'

‘How is he?' asked Charlie. Snare wouldn't have enquired after his well-being had the situation been reversed, Charlie reflected. He was glad Kalenin was going to avoid nuance and innuendo.

‘Perfectly all right,' assured the Russian.

‘There'll be a suspicion if he's not accused or released soon,' warned Charlie.

‘I know,' agreed Kalenin, looking along the bench for the first time. ‘I want to get it over with as soon as possible.'

‘How soon?'

‘Three weeks?'

Charlie looked back at the Russian, frowning.

‘That's very short,' he protested.

‘But very possible,' argued Kalenin. ‘There has been arranged for months that I should make a visit to Czechoslovakia …'

‘… So the crossing would be into Austria …?'

Kalenin nodded. ‘Difficult?' he queried.

‘I don't think so,' said Charlie. ‘We've got a pretty strong system there.'

‘So it would suit you?'

‘Yes. I think it would be perfect.'

Kalenin shivered, conscious of the cold.

‘The Americans are deeply involved,' announced the General, unexpectedly.

Charlie was suddenly attentive.

‘What do you mean?'

‘They identified both Snare and Harrison to our people … I had to act …'

Charlie laughed, surprised.

‘The bastards,' he judged mildly.

‘If Harrison hadn't run, our people wouldn't have shot him. They're trained to react that way.'

‘I know,' accepted the Briton, remembering Checkpoint Charlie. ‘Why do people always run?'

‘Lack of experience,' recorded Kalenin, sadly. ‘And neither he nor Snare were very good. It would have been difficult for them to have avoided suspicion.'

The same assessment that Berenkov had made, recalled Charlie. He was glad he had the tape recorder.

‘Why would Washington do it?' probed Charlie, still conscious of the recording.

‘Involvement,' said Kalenin, looking surprised at Charlie's question. ‘They don't know of you, do they?'

‘I hope not.'

‘They suspect somebody is here, though,' said the General. ‘They've alerted their embassy staff.'

The K.G.B. would have an excellent monitoring system on the American embassy, Charlie knew. He supposed Washington would be aware of it: it would have been safer for them to have sent the instructions in the diplomatic bag. The mistake showed a lack of planning, decided Charlie. Or panic.

‘Have they listed the name of Charles Muffin?' asked the Briton. He'd had to register in the hotel under his real identity and knew it would take little more than a day to check the hotels on the Intourist list.

‘No,' reassured the General. ‘They just know somebody is coming.'

So Cuthbertson was keeping him anonymous to the Americans. Thank God.

‘Who's working on the request?' asked Charlie.

‘The new C.I.A. station chief is a man called Cox,' identified Kalenin. ‘A sportsman … runs around the embassy.'

‘We won't meet again,' stipulated Charlie, protectively. He was leaving the following night and knew that unless he monitored Kalenin's movements, which was virtually impossible, Cox could never discover his presence in the capital. If there
were
a confrontation, he'd kill the man. It would be necessary for his own protection: and Cox's organisation had been responsible for a British operative's death, which would give the killing some justification in Cuthbertson's view.

‘There'll be no need,' said Kalenin. He was silent for several moments. Then he asked, ‘Will Washington provide the money?'

‘On the promise of participation, I would expect so,' responded Charlie. ‘If they won't, Whitehall will …' he smiled. ‘… they're extraordinarily keen to get you across.'

Kalenin grinned back.

‘It feels strange to be so important.'

‘You never had any doubts, did you?' asked Charlie.

Kalenin shrugged. ‘I was concerned the request wouldn't have been taken seriously.'

Charlie thought back to the last dispute with the Director and Cuthbertson's insistence that the defection was genuine. The little man was very convincing, thought Charlie. But then security men were often excellent actors.

The Briton became conscious that Kalenin was studying him minutely.

‘You're recording this meeting?' the Russian demanded, expectantly.

‘Whitehall will need some proof, other than my word.'

‘Of course,' accepted Kalenin. ‘But it would be awkward if the tape were found at the airport.'

‘It won't be,' promised Charlie.

‘Just in case, I'd better guarantee the flight,' cautioned Kalenin.

Momentarily Charlie hesitated, then gave the flight number of the aircraft in which he was leaving Moscow on the Monday night. It was getting very cold and there was still a lot to discuss, Charlie realised.

‘Shall we walk?' invited Kalenin and Charlie stood, gratefully, falling into step beside the Russian. The man couldn't be more than five feet tall, thought Charlie. Maybe less.

‘The Americans will mark the dollar notes,' warned the Russian.

‘I expect so,' agreed Charlie.

‘So the money will be worthless.'

‘Yes,' agreed Charlie.

‘That won't do,' protested Kalenin.

‘I can ask for it in advance of the cross-over and “wash” it,' offered Charlie.

‘It's important to do so.'

‘I know that,' said Charlie.

‘I'll need to know that it's been done.'

They turned on to a bisecting path.

‘What date do you have in mind?'

‘The nineteenth,' said Kalenin. That will give me a week in Prague.'

‘We'll need to meet again,' said Charlie.

‘You'll have to be careful of the Americans,' continued Kalenin. ‘They might leak it to the
Statni Tajna Bezpec-nost
and the involvement of the Czech secret police could be embarrassing.'

‘I'll think of something,' promised Charlie. After today's meeting there could be protection in American presence, he decided.

They walked in silence for several minutes.

‘Alexei Berenkov is probably my best friend,' Kalenin announced, suddenly.

‘Yes,' prompted Charlie.

‘How is he adapting to prison?'

‘Badly,' said Charlie, honestly.

‘He would,' agreed Kalenin. ‘He's not a man to be caged.'

Kalenin would have adjusted fairly easily, assessed Charlie. The General was a man who lived completely within himself.

‘Poor Alexei,' said the Russian.

Again there was silence.

‘Do you think there'll be any serious problems?' demanded Kalenin, suddenly, stopping on the pathway to reinforce the question and looking intently up at the Briton.

Charlie answered the look.

‘I don't know,' he replied. ‘Are you frightened?'

Kalenin considered the question, hands deep inside the pockets of his overlarge coat. He was right to feel uncomfortable in that hat, decided Charlie; he looked ridiculous.

‘Yes,' replied the General, finally, ‘I'm a planner, not a field operative like you. So I'm very scared. I'm under intense pressure from a man in the Praesidium. That's why I want it all over so quickly.'

‘Being a field operative doesn't help,' offered Charlie. ‘I'm nervous too. I always am.'

The smaller man stood examining him for several moments.

‘The other two men wouldn't have admitted that, Mr Muffin,' he complimented. ‘I'd heard you're very sensible.'

It came as no surprise to learn the K.G.B. had a file upon him.

‘I'm a survivor,' agreed Charlie.

‘Aren't we all?'

‘We'll know the answer to that on the nineteenth,' said Charlie.

They stopped inside the park gate, hidden by shrubbery.

‘If the crossing is to be on the nineteenth, then I will be in Prague by the thirteenth,' undertook Charlie.

‘It should be a casual encounter, like that of today,' advised Kalenin.

‘Do you know the Charles Bridge?'

The Russian nodded.

‘Let it be at midday on the fourteenth, on the side looking away from Hrad
any Castle towards the sluices.'

Kalenin nodded, but stayed on the pathway, looking downwards. His shoes were brightly polished, Charlie saw.

‘The Americans frighten me,' said Kalenin.

Charlie waited, frowning.

‘I could arrange quite easily for you to have a minder,' offered the Russian.

Charlie laughed, genuinely amused.

‘A British operative guarded by the K.G.B.?' he queried. ‘Oh, come on!'

‘It could be done without suspicion,' insisted Kalenin.

Such detailed surveillance would pad the file already existing upon him in Dzerzhinsky Square, he realised. The awareness alarmed him.

‘I prefer to work completely alone,' reminded Charlie. ‘I always have.'

‘As you wish,' said Kalenin. ‘But sometimes that's not possible.'

So I'm to be watched, realised Charlie. In Kalenin's position, able to invent any reason for such observation, he would have taken the same precautions, he knew. The irony amused him. It would soon need a small bus to accommodate the number of people assigned to him.

‘Until the thirteenth,' said Kalenin, offering his hand.

‘Yes,' agreed Charlie.

‘Isn't that number considered unlucky in your country?' asked the Russian, suddenly.

‘I'm not superstitious,' rejected Charlie.

‘No,' said Kalenin. ‘But I am.'

Charlie arrived back at the hotel in time for the afternoon tour, content with the morning's encounter. He was very alert, conscious of everyone around him, but was unable to identify anybody who could obviously have been an American paying special attention to his party.

When he attempted to run his bath that night, he discovered the plug missing. Smiling, he crossed the corridor and paused outside the clerk's doorway, listening before knocking. The noise they were making, thought Charlie as he turned away, was quite astonishing. But then, some girls were inclined to shout a lot. At the top of the corridor, he saw one of the women concierges who occupy a desk on every floor of Russian hotels. She had a pen in her hand and a book was open before her. She was staring fixedly towards the sounds.

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