by Ted Allbeury
He had been back two hours when he got the call from Washington. He carried out the standard procedure and walked to a public telephone on Second Avenue. He could sense the panic in the first few words. The KGB surveillance team at the UN were certain that his apartment was under permanent surveillance. They had recognized a CIA agent named Altieri. They had tailed him to a known CIA “safehouse” near Central Park. He had left the safe-house with a senior CIA man identified as Peter Francis Nolan, and had driven him to Floyd Bennett Field. A civilian clerk, who was operated by the KGB’s section at the Consulate General, had supplied the information that Nolan had been flown to the civil airport at Hartford. Two KGB men had been sent to Hartford to locate Nolan. And as of that minute, Kleppe’s operation was under the control of the KGB team at the UN. Yuri Katin was in command. Kleppe’s operation was top priority, but of equal priority was preventing its exposure. Kleppe could continue his operation but there would be no signals traffic to Moscow. All communication would be through Katin to Washington. They would rather abandon Kleppe’s operation than have it discovered. That was the prime consideration now, until the situation was under control. Kleppe was given strict instructions to inform nobody, not even Dempsey, of the new situation. He would carry on, as normally as possible.
He phoned Yuri Katin and arranged to meet him at Grand Central in half an hour. They walked in driving snow to a bar on 42nd Street. Katin made clear that Kleppe was now acting under his orders.
“What’s happening about the people watching my place, Yuri?”
“You just carry on as usual, comrade. Keep your operation going until you’re told otherwise.”
“Have you found out anything about the CIA man, Nolan?”
“We’ve got a file on Nolan. I’ll be dealing with him eventually. But first we want to see what he’s doing. They know something. Maybe not much, but we’ll deal with him. I’ve got a full team on the operation now.”
“Is there any indication of how they got on to us? Why they were watching my place?”
“No. It doesn’t matter. They’re trying to find out anything they can. If they knew anything they wouldn’t be running around in New York and Hartford.”
“Are they watching Dempsey?”
“We’ve had no reports that indicate that. The Washington team are taking care of Dempsey.”
“Is it safe for me to carry on as usual?”
“We’ll make it safe, comrade. You do your part. I will do mine.”
Kleppe returned to his apartment cold and dispirited. Katin and his men were the “heavies,” despised by most high-grade agents but attached to all legal outposts like consulates, embassies and trade missions. Expert at breaking and entering, kidnapping and murder. He wondered who had talked. He couldn’t believe that it was Dempsey. He wondered if Dempsey had gone too far with Powell.
He reached for the telephone and dialled Jenny’s number. It was several minutes before she answered. She was obviously not alone but she mentioned the name of a Washington hotel. He checked with the inquiries operator and got through to the hotel switchboard. They said that Mr. Dempsey was not taking calls, and Kleppe left a brief code message for him to ring “Department 31” in New York.
Dempsey called twenty minutes later from a public callbox.
“Why the code, Viktor?”
“Forget it.” His voice was sharp and tense.
“OK. What is it?”
“I need to see you urgently.”
“It’s going to be difficult. Can you come here?”
“That’s impossible.”
“I’ll come up and see Jenny. About eleven tomorrow night.”
“OK. How are things?”
“Fine. You sound worried. What’s the problem?”
“No problem. I’m just screwed out from travelling.”
“Good. See you.”
“OK.”
Kleppe walked to the girl’s apartment on 38th. Dempsey was already there and Kleppe handed him the envelope from Moscow. He saw Dempsey hesitate for a moment and then slip it in his pocket.
Jenny poured them drinks and went to her room.
“How are things with Powell?”
Dempsey shrugged. “He’s beginning to get the message. He knows the score and I’m not pressing him. There’s no need. He’ll cooperate. I laid it on the line. It’s made him uneasy with me but that’ll wear off. He loves the whole damn thing like a kid in a toy shop. Spent two hours this afternoon reading IRS and FBI reports on friends and enemies. He’s flying down to LA tomorrow in Air Force One.”
“What’s he doing down there?”
Dempsey smiled knowingly. “Putting in a pre-emptive word with the company chiefs who’ll lose defence contracts. Handsome compensation and prefabricated housing contracts instead.”
“Moscow will give contracts for modular housing as soon as you say the word.”
“All in good time, Viktor. Let the dust settle first.”
“Who’s he picking for the senior appointments?”
Dempsey went over the list and gave background details on all of them. Dempsey was not attempting to influence any appointments. In the short term they didn’t matter and in the long term a lot could happen.
Dempsey poured more drinks and took off his jacket. As he leaned back comfortably in his chair he laughed.
“You know, if Powell co-operates on all these points he’s going to have Moscow’s ear direct. They won’t need us.”
Kleppe shrugged. “So what’s the bad news?”
“The bad news is that we shall be the only people who know everything that’s gone on. Powell will know that, and Moscow knows it, too.”
Kleppe’s head came up slowly and he swirled his drink around before he looked at Dempsey.
“And?”
“And we shall not only be superfluous but an embarrassment.”
Kleppe had already worked out that equation months ago, and it disturbed him even more that Dempsey found it an obvious solution. Yuri Katin would enjoy solving that little problem. He reached forward and switched on the TV. The newsreader was covering a homicide on the Staten Island ferry and moved on to the Traffic Commissioner’s warning about dangerous road conditions on all roads out of the city. Kleppe was just reaching forward to switch off when the newsreader’s eyes went from the teleprinter to a note that had been slid along the desk. With his eyes down he read the item.
“We have just received reports of a double killing in Hartford, Connecticut, late last night. A retired union official and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Siwecki, and a secretary who was employed in the District Attorney’s office all died from gunshot wounds.” The announcer looked up to the camera. “We have no further details at this moment. The weather tomorrow is expected to be the same mixture of snow and …”
“For Christ’s sake, Viktor. What’s going on?”
“I’ve no idea.”
“Siwecki was the union negotiator at the strike at the Haig plant way back.”
“Who’s the girl?”
“How in hell should I know?”
“Maybe it’s some union fight.”
“Don’t shit me, Viktor.”
“I’m not, Andy. I’ve no idea what it’s all about. Phone your contacts down there and check it out.”
“No way, my friend.” He looked intently at Kleppe’s face. “If this is you, Viktor, or your people, then they’re crazy.”
“Why should I do that? Give me a reason.”
Dempsey sighed. “I couldn’t, but some of those goons of yours at the UN don’t need reasons.”
After Kleppe had gone Dempsey took out the envelope and looked at it. It was ten minutes before he tore it open. He read it slowly.
There were two pages in that big, childish handwriting, with small circles instead of dots over the i’s. And as always she wrote in French, the only language they had in common.
Cher Andy,
Your lovely letter came last month and I’ve read it a thousand times. I a
m back from Leningrad. They gave me an exhibition there in the annexe to L’Hermitage. One reviewer said they reminded him of Van Gogh. Three have been bought by the Minister herself. One of them is to be a birthday present to the Chinese Ambassador.
Little Alexandra is with me and she is doing well at school. We have a refrigerator now in the Moscow apartment and we live very well. Always I am thinking of you and your sacrifice for us. The man who came with your letter said he had seen you in New York and you were well. Sometimes at night I think of us in the rue Mouffetard and how you loved the chocolate cake from the pâtisserie across the road.
Some day, perhaps, there will be no more problems for us.
Je t’aime, chéri, jusqu’au dernier jour de ma vie.
Ta Halenka.
Tears were running down his face when the girl walked back into the room.
“Andy, what is it, my love?”
He shook his head, and wiped his eyes with the back of his hand. The girl saw the letter and the photograph.
She said softly and gently. “Is it from Halenka?”
He nodded.
“Are they both all right?”
“Yes.” He shuddered from crying, as children do. She put her hand on his knee. “Don’t be unhappy, love. She loves you. You can be sure of that.”
He shook his head. “It’s not that, Jen. I miss her so terribly. One morning we got up not knowing it was going to be the last. Eight hours later we were both in jail, and apart from that terrible journey to the airport that was it. Finished. Over.”
“When were you married?”
“A few weeks ago. Viktor arranged it. We were married by proxy.” He looked up at the girl, his face still wet with tears. “I’ve tried to be patient, Jenny … But it doesn’t work. I miss her so.”
“She’ll know how you feel, Andy. It’s the same for her.”
He picked up the photograph. Halenka was smiling at the camera, her thick, dark hair in plaits, her arm curved gently round the waist of the pretty, solemn-eyed girl who was his daughter. He turned it over, but there was nothing on the back. He turned it back to look again. There was no background, nothing to identify where it was taken. Halenka looked just the same. He wondered if she ever protested.
In bed he clung to Jenny like a child in the night, and then lay silent and inert until he fell into uneasy sleep. Jenny slid out of bed and stood by the window, looking out as the false dawn spread across the city. One of Nolan’s surveillance teams reported seeing an unidentifiable figure at the apartment window.
She turned silently to look at the figure on the bed. He was handsome in a rather juvenile fashion. Quick to smile and laugh, but few of his friends would see him as the constant lover. Physically he wasn’t constant. He slept with many girls, and with as much affection as lust, but he was never involved. Not even with her. He recognized that she really cared for him, and her reward was to sometimes share his distress about the girl in Moscow.
CHAPTER 9
MacKay walked from the Central Station and crossed the bridge over the canal and turned into Hendrik Kade. The warehouses and shops served the ships’ crews from the Oosterdok, and number 147 was at the side of the chandlery.
The narrow stairs led steeply upwards from the open door and the doors on the first two landings carried business names on typed postcards as if to emphasize their temporary occupation. Right at the top was a solid oak door whose brass-work shone, catching the colour from geraniums in a large clay pot. A small printed card said “M. van Aker—Painter.” He pressed the porcelain bell-push, and waited.
The girl who opened the door was unexpectedly pretty. She was wearing an oversize sweater and blue denims. She half-smiled as she looked at him, as if she were used to men being silenced by her looks. She spoke softly.
“Can I help you?”
“Miss van Aker?”
“Yes.”
“Could I talk to you for a few moments?”
She made to open the door wider, and then hesitated.
“What about?”
“You.”
She laughed softly and opened the door. The studio was large and bare, except for two easels and the paraphernalia of painting. There was a low divan with a wolfskin cover, and a dozen or so unframed paintings on the walls.
The girl stood, one hand on her hip, sipping coffee slowly as she looked at him over the cup.
“I don’t expect you remember me?”
She shook her head, smiling, as if she had heard that opening gambit before. He went on.
“I was in Paris in ’68. My girlfriend was Adèle de Velancourt.”
She put down the cup and folded her brown arms across her chest. A bad sign when you’re asking questions.
“How is Adèle? I saw a piece in Figaro about her. It seemed she was doing well.”
“Yes, she is doing well. Do you remember Andrew Dempsey?”
She laughed. “Show me a girl who didn’t remember him.”
She pointed to a wicker chair. “Do sit down. What’s your name?”
“James MacKay. I was taking French literature at the Sorbonne.”
She nodded but made no comment. She wasn’t refusing to talk but she wasn’t going to help him either. He looked at the questioning, hazel eyes and accepted the unspoken challenge.
“Can we talk about Viktor Kleppe?”
“I wondered what it was going to be. The answer’s no. We can’t.”
She stood up and brushed imaginary specks from her jeans. MacKay sat, and looked up at her face.
“It would be easier if we could talk here.”
“As an alternative to where?”
“The Central police station.”
“Don’t bluff, mister.”
“I’m not bluffing. Perhaps you’d like to phone Inspector van Rijk at Elandsgracht?”
She walked briskly to the telephone and asked the operator to connect her to police headquarters and when a voice said “Polizei-zentraal” she hung up, swinging round to look at him.
“You weren’t bluffing, were you?”
“No.”
“What’s it all about?”
“Are you a member of the Party?”
She sat down, slowly and carefully.
“No. I’m not a member of the Party.”
“But you’ve got connections?”
“Maybe.”
“I want to know why you help Kleppe.”
“I don’t help him. He just shacks up here when he comes on business to Amsterdam.”
“I mean the trips to the Hague for the diamonds.”
Her mouth opened to speak, the shock all too obvious on her face. She swallowed, and then spoke in a whisper.
“How did you find out?”
“Miss van Aker, I think it would be better if you just answered my questions.”
“And then you arrest me. I should see a lawyer.”
“You won’t be allowed any outside contacts until the inquiry is complete.”
“What do you want to know?”
“Why you helped him?”
“Is this to be used in court?”
“If you co-operate fully it’s unlikely to go to court.”
She sighed. “I’ve known Viktor for years. Way back I was a member of the Party. They told me to leave. That I could help more outside. I just passed messages and collected the packages from the Hague.”
“You knew the man who gave you the stuff was KGB?”
“I guessed. They didn’t tell me.”
“You knew that you were committing a serious crime under Dutch law?”
She sighed again. “I suppose so.”
“Did you know Kleppe was KGB?”
It was a shot in the dark and he saw her look towards the window to collect her scattered thoughts. He waited, tense and silent. Her head turned back to look at him.
“You can’t expect me to betray a friend.”
It was answer enough. Enough to let him extend the bluff.
“Where
did the messages come from for Kleppe?”
“The embassy in the Hague.”
“What were they about?”
“Just dates for him to come over.”
“How did you pass them on?”
“I phoned him in New York.”
“Who paid you?”
“The Soviet Embassy.”
“How did they pay you. And how much?”
“They bought a painting every month. They paid six hundred guilders each time, in cash.”
“How did you meet Kleppe in the first place?”
“He had an apartment in Paris when I was there. I met him through the Party and eventually I moved into his place.”
“Are you fond of him?”
She shrugged. “I was in those days. I guess it’s just friendship now. He was very important too, in those days. He had a lot of influence.”
“What nationality did you think he was?”
“He had a United States passport.”
“That’s not the same thing, is it?”
“I guess not. I suppose I assumed he was a Russian.”
“Why?”
“The people who came to the apartment were mostly Russians from the embassy in Paris. He always talked Russian with them. At least I assumed it was Russian. And he seemed relaxed with them. They joked and laughed a lot.”
“What did you think his job was?”
“He was a diamond dealer in New York. I think he was very successful.”
“Do you remember when he got Dempsey out of jail?”
“Yes. Andy came back from Le Bourget with Viktor. He was terribly upset. We sat up all night with him, and Viktor calmed him down. He flew back to the States the next morning with Viktor.”
“Have you seen Dempsey since then?”
“No. Never.”
“Has Kleppe talked about him?”
“Not that I can remember.”
“Is there anything else you think you should tell me?”
She shook her head. “No. What will happen to me now?”
“I expect Inspector van Rijk will want to talk to you, but I don’t think they will bring any charges provided you will sign a statement.”
She looked relieved.
“I hope this doesn’t mean problems for Viktor.”