The Cardinal of the Kremlin
“They sweep the wheels every week,” Jack said. “How bad is it?”
“How bad? That’s what I came over here to find out. Something very odd is happening. You chaps had an op go wrong, didn’t you?”
“I can say yes to that, but the rest’ll have to come from the Judge. Sorry, but I was just cleared for part of it.”
“Recently, I’ll wager.”
“Yep.” Ryan shifted up as he took the turn off the airport road.
“Then let’s see if you can still put two and two together, Sir John.”
Jack smiled as he changed lanes to pass a truck. “I was doing the intelligence estimate on the arms talks when I broke into it. Now I’m supposed to be looking at Narmonov’s political vulnerability. Unless I’m wrong, that’s why you’ve flown over.”
“And unless I’m very far off the mark, your op has triggered something very serious indeed.”
“Vaneyev?”
“Correct.”
“Jesus.” Ryan turned briefly. “I hope you have some ideas, ’cause we sure as hell don’t.” He took the car to seventy-five. Fifteen minutes later he pulled into Langley. They parked in the underground garage and took the VIP elevator to the seventh floor.
“Hello, Arthur. It’s not often I have a knight chauffeur me about, even in London.” The head of SIS took a chair while Ryan summoned Moore’s department chiefs.
“Hi, Bas’,” Greer said on entering. Ritter just waved. It was his operation that had triggered this crisis. Ryan took the least comfortable chair available.
“I’d like to know exactly what went wrong,” Charleston said simply, not even waiting for the coffee to be passed around.
“An agent got arrested. A very well-placed agent.”
“Is that why the Foleys are flying out today?” Charleston smiled. “I didn’t know who they were, but when two people get ejected from that delightful country, we generally assume—”
“We don’t know what went wrong yet,” Ritter said. “They should be landing at Frankfurt right about now, then ten more hours till we have them here for the debrief. They were working an agent who—”
“Who was an aide to Yazov—Colonel M. S. Filitov. We’ve deduced that much. How long have you had him?”
“It was one of your folks who recruited him for us,” Moore replied. “He was a colonel, too.”
“You don’t mean ... Oleg Penkovskiy ... ? Bloody hell!” Charleston was amazed for once, Ryan saw. It didn’t happen often. “That long?”
“That long,” Ritter said. “But the numbers caught up with us.”
“And the Vaneyeva woman we seconded to you for courier service was part of that—”
“Correct. She never came close to either end of the chain, by the way. We know that she was probably picked up, but she’s back at work. We haven’t checked her out yet, but—”
“We have, Bob. Our chap reported that she’d—changed somehow. He said it was hard to describe but impossible to miss. Like the hoary tales of brainwashing, Orwell and all that. He noted that she was free—or what passes for it over there—and related that to her father. Then we learned of something big in the Defense Ministry—that a senior aide to Yazov had been arrested.” Charleston paused to stir his coffee. “We have a source inside the Kremlin that we guard rather closely. We have learned that Chairman Gerasimov spent several hours with Alexandrov last week and under fairly unusual circumstances. This same source has warned us that Alexandrov has a considerable urge to sidetrack this perestroika business.
“Well, it’s clear, isn’t it?” Charleston asked rhetorically. It was quite clear to everyone. “Gerasimov has suborned a Politburo member thought to be loyal to Narmonov, at the very least compromised the support of the Defense Minister, and been spending a good deal of time with the man who wants Narmonov out. I’m afraid that your operation may have triggered something with the most unpleasant consequences.”
“There’s more,” the DCI said. “Our agent was getting us material on Soviet SDI research. Ivan may have made a breakthrough.”
“Marvelous,” Charleston observed. “A return to the bad old days, but this time the new version of the ‘missile gap’ is potentially quite real, I take it? I am awfully old to change my politics. Too bad. You know, of course, that there is a leak in your program?”
“Oh?” Moore asked with a poker face.
“Gerasimov told Alexandrov that. No details, unfortunately, except that KGB think it highly important.”
“We’ve had some warnings. It’s being looked at,” Moore said.
“Well, the technical matters can sort themselves out. They generally do. The political question, on the other hand, has created a bit of a bother with the PM. There’s trouble enough when we bring down a government that we wish to bring down, but to do so by accident ...”
“We don’t like the consequences any more than you do, Basil,” Greer noted. “But there’s not a hell of a lot we can do about it from this end.”
“You can accept their treaty terms,” Charleston suggested. “Then our friend Narmonov would have his position sufficiently strengthened that he might be able to tell Alexandrov to bugger off. That, in any case, is the unofficial position of Her Majesty’s government.”
And that’s the real purpose of your visit to us, Sir Basil, Ryan thought. It was time to say something:
“That means putting unreasonable restrictions on our SDI research and reducing our warhead inventory in the knowledge that the Russians are racing forward with their own program. I don’t think that’s a very good deal.”
“And a Soviet government headed by Gerasimov is?”
“And what if we end up with that anyway?” Ryan asked. “My estimate is already written. I recommend against additional concessions.”
“One can always change a written document,” Charleston pointed out.
“Sir, I have a rule. If something goes out with my name on the front, it says what I think, not what somebody else tells me to think,” Ryan said.
“Do remember, gentlemen, that I am a friend. What is likely to happen to the Soviet government would be a greater setback to the West than a temporary restriction on one of your defense programs.”
“The President won’t spring for it,” Greer said.
“He might have to,” Moore replied.
“There has to be another way,” Ryan observed.
“Not unless you can bring Gerasimov down.” It was Ritter this time. “We can’t offer any direct help to Narmonov. Even if we assume that he’d take a warning from us, which he probably wouldn’t, we’d be running an even greater risk by involving ourselves in their internal politics. If the rest of the Politburo got one whiff of that ... I suppose it might start a little war.”
“But what if we can?” Ryan asked.
“What if we can what?” Ritter demanded.
17.
Conspiracy
“ANN” came back to Eve’s Leaves earlier than expected, the owner noted. With her usual smile, she selected a dress off the rack and took it to the dressing room. She was out by the full-length mirrors only a minute later, and accepted the customary compliments on how it looked rather more perfunctorily than usual. Again she paid cash, leaving with yet another engaging smile.
Out in the parking lot, things were a little different. Captain Bisyarina broke tradecraft by opening the capsule and reading the contents. That evoked a brief but nasty curse. The message was but a single sheet of notepaper. Bisyarina lit a cigarette with a butane lighter, then burned the paper in her car’s ashtray.
All that work wasted! And it was already in Moscow, was already being analyzed. She felt like a fool. It was doubly annoying that her agent had been completely honest, had forwarded what she’d thought was highly classified material, and on learning that it had been rendered invalid, had gotten that word out quickly. She would not even have the satisfaction of forwarding a small portion of the reprimand that she would surely get for wasting Moscow Center’s time.
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Well, they warned me about this. It may be the first time, but it will not be the last. She drove home and dashed off her message.
The Ryans weren’t known for their attendance on the Washington cocktail circuit, but there were a few that they couldn’t avoid. The reception was intended to raise money for D.C. Children’s Hospital, and Jack’s wife was a friend of the chief of surgery. The evening’s entertainment was the big draw. A prominent jazz musician owed his granddaughter’s life to the hospital, and he was paying off that debt with a major benefit performance at the Kennedy Center. The reception was intended to give the D.C. elite a chance to meet him “up close and personal” and hear his sax in greater privacy. Actually, as with most “power” parties, it was really for the elite to see and be seen by one another, confirming their importance. As was true in most parts of the world, the elite felt the need to pay for the privilege. Jack understood the phenomenon, but felt that it made little sense. By eleven o’clock the elite of Washington had proved that they could talk just as inanely about just as little, and get just as drunk, as anyone else in the world. Cathy had held herself to one glass of white wine, however; Jack had won the toss tonight: he could drink and she had to drive. He’d indulged himself tonight, despite a few warning looks from his wife, and was basking in a mellow, philosophical glow that made him think he’d overdone the act a little bit—but then it wasn’t supposed to look like an act. He just hoped to God everything went as planned tonight.
The amusing part was the way in which Ryan was treated. His position at the Agency had always been a sketchy one. The opening comments went something like, “How are things at Langley?” usually in an affected conspiratorial tone, and Jack’s reply that CIA was just another government bureaucracy, a large building that contained lots of moving paper, surprised most questioners. The CIA was thought to have thousands of active field spooks. The actual figure was classified, of course, but far lower.
“We work normal business hours,” Jack explained to a well-dressed woman whose eyes were slightly dilated. “I even have tomorrow off.”
“Really?”
“Yes, I killed a Chinese agent on Tuesday and you always get a day off with pay for that sort of thing,” he said seriously, then grinned.
“You’re kidding!”
“That’s right, I’m kidding. Please forget that I ever said it.” Who is this overaged bimbo? he wondered.
“What about the reports that you’re under investigation?” another person asked.
Jack turned in surprise. “And who might you be?”
“Scott Browning, Chicago Tribune.” He didn’t offer to shake hands. The game had just begun. The reporter didn’t know that he was a player, but Ryan did.
“Could you run that one by me again?” Jack said politely.
“My sources tell me that you’re being investigated for illegal stock transactions.”
“It’s news to me,” Jack replied.
“I know that you’ve met with investigators from the SEC,” the reporter announced.
“If you know that, then you also know that I gave them the information they wanted, and they left happy.”
“You’re sure of that?”
“Of course I am. I didn’t do anything wrong and I have the records to prove it,” Ryan insisted, perhaps a little too forcefully, the reporter thought. He loved it when people drank too much. In vino veritas.
“That’s not what my sources tell me,” Browning persisted.
“Well, I can’t help that!” Ryan said. There was emotion in his voice now, and a few heads turned.
“Maybe if it wasn’t for people like you, we might have an intelligence agency that worked,” observed a newcomer.
“And who the fuck are you!” Ryan said before he turned. Act I, Scene 2.
“Congressman Trent,” the reporter said. Trent was on the House Select Committee.
“I think an apology is owed,” Trent said. He looked drunk.
“What for?” Ryan asked.
“How about for all the screw-ups across the river?”
“As opposed to the ones on this side?” Jack inquired. People were drifting over. Entertainment is where you find it.
“I know what you people just tried to pull off, and you fell right on your ass. You didn’t let us know, as the law requires. You went ahead anyway, and I’m telling you, you’re going to pay, you’re going to pay big.”
“If we have to pay your bar bill, we’ll have to pay big.” Ryan turned, dismissing the man.
“Big man,” Trent said behind his back. “You’re heading for a fall, too.”
Perhaps twenty people were watching and listening now. They saw Jack take a glass of wine off a passing tray. They saw a look that could kill, and a few people remembered that Jack Ryan was a man who had killed. It was a fact and a reputation that gave him a sort of mystery. He took a measured sip of the chablis before turning back around.
“What sort of fall might that be, Mr. Trent?”
“You might be surprised.”
“Nothing you do would surprise me, pal.”
“That may be, but you’ve surprised us, Dr. Ryan. We didn’t think you were a crook, and we didn’t think you were dumb enough to be involved in that disaster. I guess we were wrong.”
“You’re wrong about a lot of things,” Jack hissed.
“You know something, Ryan? For the life of me I can’t figure just what the hell kind of a man you are.”
“That’s no surprise.”
“So, what kind of man are you, Ryan?” Trent inquired.
“You know, Congressman, this is a unique experience for me,” Jack observed lightheartedly.
“How’s that?”
Ryan’s manner changed abruptly. His voice boomed across the room. “I’ve never had my manhood questioned by a queer before!” Sorry, pal ...
The room went very quiet. Trent made no secret of his orientation, had gone public six years before. That didn’t prevent him from turning pale. The glass in his hand shook enough to spill some of its contents onto the marble floor, but the Congressman regained his control and spoke almost gently.
“I’ll break you for that.”
“Take your best shot, sweetie.” Ryan turned and walked out of the room, the eyes heavy on his back. He kept going until he stared at the traffic on Massachusetts Avenue. He knew that he’d drunk too much, but the cold air started to clear his head.
“Jack?” His wife’s voice.
“Yeah, babe?”
“What was that all about?”
“Can’t say.”
“I think it’s time for you to go home.”
“I think you’re right. I’ll get the coats.” Ryan walked back inside and handed over the claim check. He heard the silence happen when he returned. He could feel the looks at his back. Jack shrugged into his overcoat and slung his wife’s fur over his arm, before turning to see the eyes on him. Only one pair held any interest for him. They were there.
Misha was not an easy man to surprise, but the KGB succeeded. He’d steeled himself for torture, for the worst sort of abuse, only to be ... disappointed? he asked himself. That certainly wasn’t the right word.
He was kept in the same cell, and so far as he could determine he was alone on this cellblock. That was probably wrong, he thought, but there was no evidence that anyone else was near him, no sounds at all, not even taps on the concrete walls. Perhaps they were too thick for that. The only “company” he had was the occasional metallic rasp of the spy hole in his cell’s door. He thought that the solitude was supposed to do something to him. Filitov smiled at that. They think I’m alone. They don’t know about my comrades.
There was only one possible answer: this Vatutin fellow was afraid that he might actually be innocent—but that wasn’t possible, Misha told himself. That chekist bastard had taken the film from his hand.
He was still trying to figure that one out, staring at the blank concrete wall. None of it made any sense.
> But if they expected him to be afraid, they would have to live with their disappointment. Filitov had cheated death too many times. Part of him even yearned for it. Perhaps he would be reunited with his comrades. He talked to them, didn’t he? Might they still be ... well, not exactly alive, but not exactly gone either? What was death? He’d reached the point in life where the question was an intellectual one. Sooner or later he’d find out, of course. The answer to that question had brushed past him many times, but his grasp—and its—had never quite been firm enough ...
The key rattled in the door, and the hinges creaked.
“You should oil that. Machinery lasts longer if you maintain it properly,” he said as he stood.
The jailer didn’t reply, merely waving him out of the cell. Two young guards stood with the turnkey, beardless boys of twenty or so, Misha thought, their heads tilted up with the arrogance common to the KGB. Forty years earlier and he might have done something about that, Filitov told himself. They were unarmed, after all, and he was a combat soldier for whom the taking of life was as natural as breathing. They were not effective soldiers. One look confirmed it. It was fine to be proud, but a soldier should also be wary ...
Was that it? he thought suddenly. Vatutin treats me with wariness despite the fact that he knows ...
But why?
“What does this mean?” Mancuso asked.
“Kinda hard for me to tell,” Clark answered. “Probably some candyass in D.C. can’t make up his mind. Happens all the time.”
The two signals had arrived within twelve hours of one another. The first had aborted the mission and ordered the submarine back to open waters, but the second told Dallas to remain in the western Baltic and await further orders.
“I don’t like being put on hold.”
“Nobody does, Captain.”
“How does it affect you?” Mancuso asked.
Clark shrugged eloquently. “A lot of this is mental. Like you work up to play a ball game. Don’t sweat it, Cap’n. I teach this sort of thing—when I’m not actually doing it.”