by Ted Allbeury
“Kind of.” He half smiled and shrugged.
She stood up, folding her arms in that defensive move that all interrogators recognize.
“What happened to Andy?”
“He’s a politician. A leading man in Powell’s election team.”
“Powell’s the man they say is going to win, isn’t he?”
“They say so.”
“And somebody wants to stab Andy in the back with his membership card. I thought that had all finished with McCarthy.”
“It did.”
“So why the questions now?”
“So why no answer?”
She smiled and shrugged. “I expect you know the answer anyway. Yes, he was a member. So was I. So was Halenka, and she was the only reason he joined. He loved her desperately.”
“Did she love him?”
“Oh yes, she adored him. They were like lovers from a book.”
“I can’t remember, did they live together?”
“Yes. They had a place by the Musée de Cluny.”
“Now tell me about you.”
She shrugged amiably. “I do quite well. Two one-man shows. One here in Paris and one in Düsseldorf. I’ve got a cottage near Honfleur. I get by nicely.”
“No grand passion?”
“Why so sure?”
“Because you look contented and level.”
“Touché.” She laughed. “And you?”
“Much the same as I used to be.”
“You haven’t lost your French, anyway.”
“How about we have lunch together?”
“OK. I’ll get dressed. Help yourself to a drink while you’re waiting.”
He sorted through the pile of old 78s and it was still there. He put it on the player and sat in the wicker chair listening. It was Charles Trenet singing “Il pleut dans ma chambre.” He wondered if she might come back into the room when she heard it. She didn’t.
They held hands as they walked down the hill to find a taxi, and lunched at le Petit Bedou in the rue Pergolese. There had been a tension at first, but slowly she relaxed so that he was encouraged to ask her to dinner that evening. When she left she blew him a kiss from the taxi as it turned to cross the bridge.
He phoned the embassy and waited in the Ritz bar for his SIS contact. He came in twenty minutes later.
“Hayles. What can I do for you?”
“MacKay. I need a check on the records of Fresnes, May, June, July 1968.”
“What’s the prisoner’s name?”
“There’s two. One’s an American named Andrew Dempsey, the other’s a girl; Halenka Tcharkova.”
“What were they in for?”
“The student demonstrations.”
“What do you want to know?”
“Most students were released after a couple of days. These two were held for nearly two months. I’d like to know why. And I’d like to know if anyone used influence to keep them in or get them out.”
“Was the girl Russian?”
“Yes.”
“How long have I got?”
“As soon as you can. Two days at most.”
“Where can I contact you?”
“Hotel du Nord. Boulevard des Capucines.”
“See you.”
“Thanks.”
MacKay was impressed. He liked men who didn’t need the social flim-flam but just got on with the job.
The hotel lobby called him in his room to announce that a Mr. Hayles was in attendance. He asked them to send him up.
Hayles was opening his notebook as he sat down. He glanced quickly at MacKay and then started reading from his notes.
“Andrew Joseph Dempsey. American citizen, born 1947. Arrested 9 May 1968 on charge of causing affray. Charge later altered to conspiracy with others to incite public violence. Released 14 July 1968 with surety from Viktor Kleppe United States passport number 917432, point of issue New York.
“Halenka Alexandrova Tcharkova, Soviet citizen, born 1949, passport issued Smolensk. Two-year French visa starting date August 1967. Arrested 9 May 1968 for conspiring with others to incite public violence. Released 14 July 1968 on medical grounds. Three months’ pregnant. Handed over to Soviet embassy officials 14 July and taken direct to Orly where she was put on Aeroflot flight 409 to Moscow at 18.30 hours local time.”
MacKay smiled. It was a real policeman’s report but he guessed that there would be more to come. Those were the facts but there would be some chit-chat.
“First-class, Mr. Hayles. Did you get any background stuff at all?”
“Two items that might be of use. A warder from the prison was sent to check at Orly that the girl was actually put on the plane. There was a scene. The girl and Dempsey were very distressed and the girl had to be forcibly removed by Soviet embassy officials. Dempsey was restrained by the man Kleppe. The warder’s not certain but he had the impression that the Russians knew Kleppe well, and also that when Kleppe got angry at the scene he shouted at them in Russian.
“The other thing is that Kleppe was having an affair with a Dutch girl, also at art school here in Paris. It was generally known that he was very wealthy and a dealer in diamonds in New York. That’s all, I’m afraid.”
“Would you like a drink now, Mr. Hayles?”
“No thanks. I’ve got things to do. By the way, I’d guess that they changed the charge against Dempsey to keep him inside longer.”
They dined at Châtaigner and he took advantage of being her host to ask a few more questions, and she replied without discernible resentment.
“Yes, I remember several people saying that Halenka was pregnant, but I think it was just putting two and two together because she lived with Andy.”
“Did you ever meet a man named Kleppe?”
“Not that I can recall. What was he taking?”
“He wasn’t a student. But he had a student girlfriend. A Dutch girl.”
“Was his name Viktor?”
“Yes. D’you remember him?”
“No. I never met him. Just heard about him. Rich American. Some people said he was a crook or a gangster.”
“What was his girlfriend’s name?”
“Marijke something or other—van Aker or some name like that. A good painter. I’ve seen notices of her stuff in Figaro. I think she lives in Amsterdam. She paints the kind of stuff you used to like. Realistic.” She grinned. “Drops of water on rose petals and highlights on pewter jugs.”
“Maybe she’ll grow out of it.”
She reached across and touched his hand.
“I said something this morning that sounded all wrong. I want to apologize.”
“What was it?”
“I said for you to have a drink while you were waiting for me to dress. It sounded as if I were saying keep out of my bedroom. I didn’t mean that. It wasn’t warning you off. It was just what I said. Nothing more.”
“My love, you only think that it could sound like that because you’re an artist. You notice what other people never see, you hear what other people never hear.”
“But you played that Charles Trenet song, and I thought maybe I had made you sad.”
“No. Just me and Proust ‘A la recherche du temps perdu.’ ”
“Are you sure?”
“It was ten years ago, my love. Kindness, happiness, some loving and a lot of talking are not a permanent credit card for bed. You are the only person I could ask these questions.”
“Will you walk me back?”
“I’d love to.”
He had used his SIS identity card to make contact with CIA at the embassy, and the tall Texan had made him welcome in one of the reception rooms.
“What can I do for you, Mr. MacKay?”
“I’m checking on a Russian girl who was here about ten years ago. She was an art student, and was put in prison during the student demonstrations. I’ve heard that an American student who was also jailed tried to help her, and asked for help from the embassy. I wondered if you have any record of that.”<
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“What were the names?”
“Halenka Tcharkova was the girl, and I believe the boy’s name was Dempsey. Andrew Dempsey.”
“I can check the records. Would you care to wait or shall I contact you later?”
“I’ll wait if that’s OK.”
“Sure. There’s magazines on the table.”
A secretary brought him coffee and cream, and he browsed through a small pile of New Yorkers. It was fifteen minutes before the CIA man came back. He was holding a thin file.
He sat down, looking speculatively at MacKay.
“Are you working with Langley?”
“What makes you think that?”
“I didn’t say that I think it. I’m just asking.”
“Let’s say I’m not.”
“Then let’s say I can’t help you. There’s nothing on the records.”
“You wouldn’t say that in Building 13.”
The Texan laughed. “OK, but there’s not very much.”
Building 13 was where CIA employees took their lie-detector tests.
He opened the file and turned back a couple of pages. He looked up.
“This guy Dempsey wrote a letter to the embassy asking the ambassador to get him and the Tcharkova girl out of jail. Seems he was in for conspiring with others, etcetera, etcetera. There’s a minute from our guy saying no, and there’s a reference to our local index. Dempsey was a member of the Communist Party. The branch that caters for students in Saint-Germain-des-Prés. The girl was a member too, and she was on a Party grant as a student.”
“Is that enough to warrant no assistance?”
The Texan shrugged. “I guess it was, in those days.”
“Anything else?”
“Are you working with Nolan?”
“He’s a friend of mine.”
“Is that so. He queried this record a couple of days ago.”
“About the girl?”
“No, about the guy. I did some cross-checking with the French. It seems they were got out of jail by an American named Kleppe. The Soviet embassy came into it. Seems like they leaned on the French for both of them to be released into Kleppe’s custody. The girl to go straight back to Moscow. No restrictions on Dempsey, but Kleppe had to bail him for about a thousand bucks. The French have put a permanent visa block on Kleppe. I asked them why, but I didn’t get a satisfactory answer. Referred me to the Quai d’Orsay. They referred me to SDECE. And they gave me a vague story about suspect diamond deals. Kleppe’s a diamond dealer.”
“Nothing more about the girl?”
“No. Nothing.”
“Any known associates on the index for Dempsey?”
He opened the file again and turned over a buff card with a green diagonal stripe. He turned his head on one side to read the text.
“Two. D’you want to note them?”
“Thanks.”
“Pierre Benoit, 15 bis rue Jean de Beauvais and Jean-Paul Prouvost, 14 rue Lagrange. Both of them Party members in 1968.”
He ordered a meal in his hotel bedroom, and when he had finished eating he read again through his notes. He wondered what Morton Harper and Nolan were discovering, and he wondered, too, what their attitude was to him. There had been no congratulations on his revelation, and no hint of thanks. They must find it embarrassing and annoying that an outsider had spotted the flaw. On the other hand there had been no attempt to whitewash, no haste to send him packing, and none of the bland disclaimers they would have got in London if the positions had been reversed. By the time he got back to Washington they would probably have decided to close ranks and send him back to London, so that they could deal with the problem in their own sweet way, and without the inhibitions that came from being observed by an outsider. But Americans were an odd kind of people. If a similar problem had come up in London, Magnusson would have had a discreet word with the Foreign Secretary and all the efforts would have gone into sweeping it all under the carpet. But Americans never reacted that way. They ferreted away until they got at the truth and to hell with who got exposed. And they generally did it in public with the TV cameras letting you watch it happening. There would never be a Watergate in Britain. The axes would grind and there would be nods and winks among the knowing, a couple of D-notices and much waving of the Official Secrets Act. It would be interesting to see how the Americans dealt with this little can of worms.
MacKay took a taxi to the Place Maubert and then walked slowly down to find 14 rue Lagrange. It was a narrow building above an archway that led to a row of garages. There were six names against the bell-pushes and Prouvost was number 4. The front door was ajar and he walked inside. There was no elevator and the stairs were ill-lit, but everywhere was clean, and the heavy wooden doors gave an air of mild prosperity. Apartment 4 had a door with a stained-glass window and, after pressing the bell, MacKay heard footsteps inside.
When the door opened, a man in his middle thirties stood there smiling.
“I’m sorry but it’s already gone.”
“M’sieur Prouvost?”
“Yes. You came about the ’cello, yes?”
“I came to speak to you. My name is MacKay.”
The eyes behind the thick lenses were friendly but puzzled. But after a moment’s hesitation the man opened the door and waved MacKay inside. The narrow hallway led to a big room. It was more a workshop than a room. A heavy bench littered with woodworking tools ran along one wall, and on various tables lay stringed instruments and parts of instruments. Three old-fashioned armchairs were placed round a low table and the man waved MacKay to one of these and sat down himself. He looked expectantly at MacKay.
“If it’s insurance I’m afraid that’s out of the question.”
MacKay smiled and shook his head. “No, m’sieur, I wanted to ask if you could remember two men who were students when you were a student.”
“Ah yes. It seems a long time ago but it was, how long—ten years perhaps. Who were these students?”
“One was Pierre Benoit.”
“And what did you want to know?”
“What kind of man was he?”
Prouvost leaned back smiling. “Hardly a man in those days, but certainly with talent. He could paint, no doubt about that. But not an artist. Too narrow, too derivative.” He shrugged. “He lacked originality, and inspiration. Mind you, he might have developed if he had been given time.”
“Given time? What happened?”
“He’s dead. Long ago. Five years, six it could be.”
“What was the cause of death?”
“Killed himself. Gas. Money troubles and that ridiculous woman.”
“He was a member of the Communist Party, wasn’t he?”
Prouvost grinned. “Of course. We all were. Paid our dues. Even went to meetings if there was nothing better to do.”
“Are you still a Communist?”
“Well, I never resigned. You forget about these things when you’ve got work to do. Are you a policeman, my friend?”
“No. I just want to get the feel of those times. Research. The other man who interested me was a fellow named Dempsey. D’you remember him?”
“Oh yes. A lovely fellow. Had the painter’s eye but not a painter’s hand. Hopeless. Hopeless. But charming, delightful.”
“He joined the Party too?”
“I believe he did. He wasn’t really interested, of course. Too lazy, too happy. But his girl was Russian and I think he just joined to identify with her.”
“Did he ever discuss Communism?”
“Dempsey?” Prouvost laughed aloud. “He just laughed at them. Thought they were crazy.”
“Why did you join?”
Prouvost smiled and waved his arm at the violins and ’cellos scattered round the room.
“I joined because of Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov, Prokoviev, even Glazunov. I suppose even then I knew I couldn’t paint. Poor artist. Poor musician. But lots of feeling, lots of love.” He shrugged and smiled. “But they say I am good at all this.”
“Does it pay?”
“I eat. I drink. And I’m happy and respected. What more could a man want in these grim days?”
CHAPTER 3
Nolan and MacKay sat in silence as they waited for Morton Harper. The message had said that he would be ten minutes late. There was no reason to talk. They had gone over every aspect of the information they had gathered and it was for Harper to decide.
MacKay’s eyes wandered round the room. The walls were all painted white. There were no paintings, no photographs or decoration. The desk was typically Scandinavian in plain teak, the chairs were comfortable but not luxurious. There were no book cases or shelves. Indeed, there were no books. No silver-framed photographs of wife and family on the desk, no clue to the character or mind of the man whose office it was. And, MacKay thought, perhaps that was the clue to the man’s character. He felt no need to persuade or influence. The room was a room for listening rather than talking, so far as its occupant was concerned. Harper came in, quietly for so large a man. He smiled and nodded to both of them as he walked around and settled at his desk. He reached for the ashtray and lit his cigar.
“I’ve seen both your reports, gentlemen, but I find no logic in them. You state the facts, both of you, and then draw conclusions that appear to be based on instincts rather than facts. Explain. You first, Nolan.”
“Kleppe is a long term immigrant. Came from Norway via Canada. Has been a citizen for about twenty years. He deals in precious stones, mainly diamonds, and has shareholdings and interests in a wide range of businesses. He operates out of a luxury apartment in Sutton Place that is packed full of electronics. Security devices. He has no servants, not even a daily help. He has contacts at top level in most government departments and with influential politicians in the Republican Party. Dempsey has been a frequent visitor over the last ten years. There’s nothing on our files, the FBI files or the NYPD. Not even a traffic offence.”
Harper waited to see if there was any more and then nodded to MacKay.
“I found your report intriguing. Tell me more.”
“I must emphasize, sir, that these are my views, not my service’s views. They may share them, I just don’t know. I believe we assume too readily that people join the Communist Party from considered conviction. That they have weighed up capitalism and found it wanting. In my experience there are very few of these, and in my view Dempsey is typical of most people. He joined the Party when he was a student; a more carefree student than most because he had no worries about money or career. His father was, is, a millionaire. And he joined the Party because he was in love with a girl who was not only a Party member but a Soviet citizen. It was a gesture to her. And because of her he did not see Russians as monsters. His own Russian was beautiful, she didn’t dig the streets of Moscow, she painted. And I’ve no doubt he got a picture of a society that had a human face. When he and his girl were beaten up and jailed he turned to his own government’s representative for help. It was refused. He would guess why. With their usual long-sightedness the Soviet authorities stepped in. Not directly, but through an American. A man who can draw on Dempsey’s goodwill for years to come. The girl goes off to Moscow—a perfect hostage. Dempsey will hate his own government and feel grateful to the Russians. And you couldn’t have a more malleable puppet than that. It’s not difficult to love a regime that exists thousands of miles away, that you never see.”