The Parsifal Mosaic Read online

Page 3


  Havelock began to laugh. “Listen, Gravet—”

  “Don’t look at me, please! Keep your eyes on the water.”

  “I went to the Roman collection on the mezzanine. It was filled with a tour from Provence, so I left.”

  “You were always quick, I admired you for it. And now this ominous alarm: He’s no longer active. Avoid him.’ ”

  “It happens to be true.”

  “Whatever this new cover of yours,” continued Gravet quickly, dusting the elbows of his coat, “for it to be so radical can only mean you’re among very distinguished company. I’m also a broker with a wide range of information. The more distinguished my clients, the better I like it.”

  “Sorry, I’m not buying. Avoid me.”

  “Don’t be preposterous. You don’t know what I have to offer. Incredible things are happening everywhere. Allies become enemies, enemies allies. The Persian Gulf is on fire and all Africa moves in contradictory circles; the Warsaw bloc has lacerations you know nothing about, and Washington pursues a dozen counterproductive strategies matched only by the unbelievable stupidity of the Soviets. I could give you chapter and verse on their recent follies. Don’t dismiss me, Michael. Pay me. You’ll climb even higher.”

  “Why should I want to climb higher when I’ve climbed out?”

  “Again preposterous. You’re a relatively young man; they wouldn’t let you go.”

  “They can watch me, but they can’t hold me. All I had to do was give up a pension somewhere down the road.”

  “Too simple. You all have bank accounts in remote but accessible places, everyone knows that. Diverted contingency funds, covert payments made to nonexistent sources, fees for sudden departures or suddenly required papers. You had your retirement covered by the time you were thirty-five.”

  “You’re exaggerating both my talents and my financial security,” said Havelock, smiling.

  “Or perhaps a rather lengthy document,” the Frenchman went on, as though Michael had not interrupted, “detailing certain covert procedures—solutions, you might say—that must, perforce, describe specific events and personnel. Placed beyond reach of those most interested.”

  Havelock stopped smiling, but Gravet persisted: “Naturally, that’s not financial security, but it adds to a sense of well-being, doesn’t it?”

  “You’re wasting your time, I’m not in the market. If you’ve got something of value, you’ll get your price. You know whom to deal with.”

  “They’re frightened second-raters. None of them has your direct avenues to the—centers of determination, shall we say.”

  “I don’t have them anymore.”

  “I don’t believe you. You’re the only man here in Europe who talks directly with Anthony Matthias.”

  “Leave him out of it. And for your information, I haven’t spoken with him in months.” Suddenly Havelock stood up and turned openly to the Frenchman. “Let’s find a taxi and go to the embassy. I know some people over there. I’ll introduce you to a first-level attaché and tell him you’re selling but I don’t have either the resources or the interest to get involved. Okay?”

  “You know I can’t do that! And, please—” Gravet did not have to finish the request.

  “All right, all right.” Michael returned to the wall with the river below. “Then give me a number or a place of contact. I’ll phone it in and you can listen.”

  “Why are you doing this? Why the charade?”

  “Because it’s not a charade. As you said, we go back a long time. I’ll do you the favor and maybe you’ll be convinced. Maybe you’ll convince others, if they ask. Even if they don’t ask. How about it?”

  The Frenchman turned his head while leaning over the wall and stared at Havelock. “No, thank you, Michael. As with all manner of Satans, better a second-rater I’ve dealt with than one I haven’t. For what it’s worth, I think I believe you. You would not reveal a source like me, even to a first-level attaché. I’m down too deep, too respectable; you might need me. Yes, I do believe you.”

  “Make my life easier. Don’t keep it a secret.”

  “What about your opposite numbers in the KGB? Will they be convinced?”

  “I’m sure of it. Their moles probably got word to Dzerzhinsky Square before I signed the separation papers.”

  “They’ll suspect a ploy.”

  “All the more reason to leave me alone. Why bite into poisoned bait?”

  “They have chemicals. You all have chemicals.”

  “I can’t tell them anything they don’t know, and what I do know has already been changed. That’s the funny thing: my enemies have nothing to fear from me. The few names they might learn aren’t worth the price. There’d be reprisals.”

  “You’ve inflicted a great many wounds. There’s pride, vengeance; it’s the human condition.”

  “Not applicable. In those areas we’re even, and again I’m not worth it because there’s no practical result. Nobody kills unless there’s a reason. None of us wants to be responsible for the fallout. Crazy, isn’t it? Almost Victorian. When we’re finished, we’re out. Maybe we’ll all get together in a large black strategy room in hell and have a few drinks, but while we’re here, we’re out. That’s the irony, the futility, Gravet When we’re out we don’t care anymore. We don’t have any reason to hate. Or to kill.”

  “Nicely phrased, my friend. You’ve obviously thought about these things.”

  “I’ve had a lot of time recently.”

  “And there are those who are extremely interested in your recent observations, your conclusions—your role in life, as it were. But then, it’s to be expected. They’re such a manic—depressive people. Morose, then jubilant; filled with violence one minute, songs of the earth and sadness the next. And often quite paranoid; the darker aspects of classicism, I think. The slashing diagonals of Delacroix in a multiracial national psyche, so far-reaching, so contradictory. So suspicious—so Soviet.”

  Havelock stopped breathing; he returned Gravet’s stare. “Why did you do it?”

  “There was no harm. Had I learned otherwise, who knows what I would have told them? But since I do believe you, I explain why I had to test you.”

  “Moscow thinks I’m still in?”

  “I shall render the judgment that you are not. Whether they accept it or not is another matter.”

  “Why won’t they?” asked Havelock, his eyes on the water below.

  “I have no idea.… I shall miss you, Michael. You were always civilized. Difficult but civilized. Then again, you’re not a native-born American, are you? You’re really European.”

  “I’m American,” said Havelock quietly. “Really.”

  “You’ve done well by America, I’ll say that. If you change your mind—or it’s changed for you—get in touch with me. We can always do business.”

  “It’s not likely, but thanks.”

  “That’s not an outright rejection, either.”

  “I’m being polite.”

  “Civilized. Au revoir, Mikhail.… I prefer the name you were born with.”

  Havelock turned his head slowly and watched Gravet walk with studied grace down the pavement of the Pont Royal toward the entrance of the bridge. The Frenchman had accepted a blind interrogation from people he found loathsome; he must have been paid very well. But Why?

  The CIA was in Amsterdam and the CIA did not believe him. The KGB was in Paris and the KGB did not believe him, either. Why?

  So much for Paris. How far would they go to keep him under a microscope?

  The Arethusa Delphi was one of those small hotels near the Syntagma Square in Athens that never let the traveler forget he is in Greece. The rooms were white on white on shimmering white. Walls, furniture and space-dividing ornamental beads were relieved only by garish plastic-framed oil paintings depicting the antiquities: temples, agoras and oracles romanticized by postcard artists. Each room had a pair of narrow double doors that opened onto a miniature balcony—large enough for two small chairs and a
Lilliputian table—on which guests could have black morning coffee. Throughout the lobby and in the elevators one never escaped the rhythmic pounding of Greek folk music, strings and cymbals at prestissimo greco.

  Havelock led the olive-skinned woman out of the elevator, and as the doors closed, both stood for a moment in mock anticipation. The music was gone; they sighed in relief.

  “Zorba took a break.” Michael gestured to the left toward his room.

  “The rest of the world must think we are nervous wrecks,” said the woman, laughing, touching her dark hair and smoothing out the long white dress that complemented her skin and accentuated her breasts and tapered body. Her English was heavily accented, cultivated on those Mediterranean islands that are the playgrounds of the Mediterranean rich. She was a high-priced courtesan whose favors were sought after by the princes of commerce and inheritance, a good-natured whore with a decent wit and a quick laugh, a woman who knew her time of pleasure-giving was limited. “You rescued me,” she said, squeezing Havelock’s arm as they walked down the corridor.

  “I kidnapped you.”

  “Often interchangeable terms,” she replied, laughing again.

  It had been a little of both. Michael had run across a man on the Marathonos with whom he had worked in the Thermaikos sector five years ago. A dinner party was being held that night at a café on Syntagma Square; since it was convenient, Havelock accepted the invitation. The woman was there, the escort of a considerably older, boorish businessman. The ouzo and the prestissimo greco had done its damage. Havelock and the woman had been seated next to each other; legs and hands touched, they exchanged looks: comparisons were obvious. Michael and the island courtesan had slipped away.

  “I think I’m going to face an angry Athenian tomorrow,” said Havelock, opening the door of his room, leading the woman inside.

  “Don’t be silly,” she protested. “He’s not a gentleman. He’s from Epidaurus; there are no gentlemen in Epidaurus. He’s an aging bull of a peasant who made money under the colonels. One of the nastier consequences of their regime.”

  “When in Athens,” said Michael, going to the bureau where there was a bottle of prized Scotch and glasses, “stay away from Epidaurians.” He poured drinks.

  “Have you been to Athens often?”

  “A few times.”

  “What did you do? What line of work?”

  “I bought things. Sold things.” Havelock carried the drinks back across the room. What he saw was what he wanted to see, although he had not expected to see it so quickly. The woman had removed her thin silk cape and draped it on a chair. She then proceeded to unbutton her gown from the top, the swelling of her breasts provocative, inviting.

  “You didn’t buy me,” she said, taking the drink with her free hand. “I came of my own free will. Efharistou, Michael Havelock. Do I say your name right?”

  “Very nicely.”

  She touched his glass with hers, the sound gentle as she stepped closer. She reached up and placed her fingers on his lips, then his cheek, and finally around the back of his neck, drawing his face to hers. They kissed, her lips parting, the soft swollen flesh and moisture of her mouth arousing him; she pressed her body against his, pulling his left hand to the breast beneath her half-open gown. She leaned back, breathing deeply.

  “Where is your bathroom? I’ll get into something—less.”

  “Over there.”

  “Why don’t you? Get into something less, that is. We’ll meet at the bed. I’m really rather anxious. You’re very, very attractive, and I’m—very anxious.”

  She picked up her cape from the chair and walked casually, sensually toward the door beyond the bed. She went inside, glancing back over her shoulder, her eyes telling him things that probably were not true, but were nevertheless exciting for the night The practiced whore, whatever her reasons were, would perform, and he wanted, needed, the release of that performance.

  Michael stripped himself down to his shorts, carried his drink to the bed, and tore away the spread and the blanket. He climbed under the sheet and reached for a cigarette, turning his body away from the wall.

  “Dobriy vyehchyer, priyatel.”

  At the sound of the deep male voice, Havelock spun around on the bed, instinctively reaching for a weapon—a weapon that was not there. Standing in the frame of the bathroom door was a balding man whose face Michael recognized from dozens of photographs going back years. He was from Moscow, one of the most powerful men in the Soviet KGB. In his hand was a gun, a large, black Graz-Burya automatic. There was a click; the hammer snapped into firing position.

  3

  “You may leave now,” said the Russian to the woman concealed behind him. She slid past, glancing at Havelock, then rushed to the door and let herself out.

  “You’re Rostov. Pyotr Rostov. Director of External Strategies. KGB. Moscow.”

  “Your face and name are also known to me. And your dossier.”

  “You went to a lot of trouble, priyatel,” said Michael, using the Russian word for friend, its meaning, however, denied by his cold delivery. He shook his head, trying to clear it of a sickening mist, the effect of the ouzo and Scotch. “You could have stopped me on the street and invited me for a drink. You wouldn’t have learned any more or any less, and very little that’s valuable. Unless this is a kazn gariah.”

  “No execution, Havlíček.”

  “Havelock.”

  “Son of Havlíček.”

  “You’d do well not to remind me.”

  “The gun is in my hand, not yours.” Rostov eased the hammer of his automatic back into its recess, the weapon still leveled at Michael’s head. “But that’s in the distant past and has no connection with me. Your recent activities, however, are very much my concern. Our concern, if you will.”

  “Then your moles aren’t earning their money.”

  “They file reports with irritating frequency, if only to justify it. But are they accurate?”

  “If they told you I was finished, they were accurate.”

  “Finished? A word with such finality, yet subject to interpretation, no? Finished with what? Finished with one phase, on to another?”

  “Finished with anything that might concern you.”

  “Out of sanction?” asked the KGB officer, rounding the border of the doorframe and leaning against the wall, his Graz-Burya steady, leveled now at Havelock’s throat. “No longer employed by your government in any official capacity? It’s difficult to accept. It must have been a blow to your dear friend Anthony Matthias.”

  Michael studied the Russian’s face, lowering his eyes to the huge gun aimed at him. “A Frenchman mentioned Matthias the other day. I’ll tell you what I told him, although I don’t know why I should. You paid him to bring up Matthias’s name.”

  “Gravet? He despises us. He’s civilized toward us only when he’s walking through the galleries of the Kremlin or the Hermitage in Leningrad. He might tell us anything.”

  “Why did you use him, then?”

  “Because he’s fond of you. It’s far easier to spot a lie when the liar is referring to someone he likes.”

  “Then you believed him.”

  “Or you convinced him and our people had no choice. Tell me. How did the brilliant and charismatic American Secretary of State react to his krajan’s resignation?”

  “I have no idea, but I assume he understood. It’s exactly what I told Gravet. I haven’t seen Matthias or spoken to him in months. He’s got enough problems; there’s no reason why those of an old student should be added.”

  “But you were far more than a student. His family knew your family in Prague. You became what you are—”

  “Were,” interrupted Havelock.

  “—because of Anton Matthias.”

  “It was a long time ago.”

  Rostov was silent; he lowered his weapon slightly, then spoke. “Very well, a long time ago. What about now? No one’s irreplaceable, but you’re a valuable man. Knowledgeable, productive.�
��

  “Value and productivity are generally associated with commitment. I don’t have it anymore. Let’s say I lost it.”

  “Am I to infer you could be tempted?” The KGB man lowered the weapon further. “In the direction of another commitment?”

  “You know better than that. Outside of personal revulsions that go back a couple of decades, we’ve got a mole or two in the Dzerzhinsky. I’ve no intention of being marked ‘beyond salvage.’ ”

  “A hypocritical term. It implies compassion on the part of your executioners.”

  “It says it.”

  “Not well.” Rostov raised his automatic, thrusting it forward slowly. “We have no such problems with verbal rationales. A traitor is a traitor. I could take you in, you know.”

  “Not easily.” Michael remained still, his eyes locked with the Russian’s. “There are corridors and elevators, lobbies to pass through and streets to cross; there’s risk. You could lose. Everything. Because I have nothing to lose but a cell at the Lubyanka.”

  “A room, not a cell. We’re not barbarians.”

  “Sorry. A room. The same kind of room we have reserved in Virginia for someone like you—and we’re both wasting money. When people like you and me get out with our heads still on, everything’s altered. The Amytals and the Pentothals are invitations to traps.”

  “There are still the moles.”

  “I don’t know who they are any more than you did when you were in the field—for those same reasons, those same rooms. None of us do on either side. We only know the current codes, words that take us where we have to go. Whatever ones I had are meaningless now.”

  “In all sincerity are you trying to convince me a man of your experience is of no value to us?”

  “I didn’t say that,” interrupted Havelock. “I’m simply suggesting that you weigh the risks. Also something else, which, frankly, you pulled off with reasonable success two years ago. We took a man of yours who was finished, ready for a farm in Grasnov. We got him out through Riga into Finland and flew him to a room in Fairfax, Virginia. He was injected with everything from scopolamine to triple Amytal, and we learned a lot. Strategies were aborted, whole networks re-structured, confusion the order of the day. Then we learned something else: everything he told us was a lie. His head was programmed like a computer disk; valuable men became useless, time was lost. Say you got me to the Lubyanka—which I don’t think you could—how do you know I’m not our answer to what you did to us?”

 

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