new protection squad, for only one of whom he had a name. At the end he had only three thousand pounds left from the twenty-five thousand earlier provided by Wilkinson in the Arbat.

The delay made Charlie much later getting to Moscow’s permanent state circus for his premeeting security check, restricted anyway by the Saturday-afternoon throng of arriving and departing audiences. Natalia responded at once to his precisely timed call, as she had to be told their rendezvous, and said she was twenty minutes away. Charlie bought admission tickets before becoming a crowd person among the outside refreshment and souvenir kiosks. The area was slightly higher than the main approach and from its elevation Charlie picked out Natalia when she was still some way away. She showed no recognition at seeing him, halting at a souvenir seller five booths away. As he reached her, she said: “It’s definitely tomorrow?”

“We need to go through it,” confirmed Charlie, disappointed at her nervousness. “I’ve got tickets for the circus. We’ll be less obvious inside.”

“No,” she refused. “Let’s walk: maybe find somewhere to sit.”

Charlie took her firmly by the arm, leading her back against the incoming crowd. “You have to get what I’m going to tell you totally clear in your mind. Your actual extraction depends on your getting this right.”

“I’m frightened I’ll make a silly mistake and-”

“You won’t make stupid mistakes,” stopped Charlie, as they reached the main road. “If you do what I tell you, you can’t make a mistake. All you’ve got to do is take Sasha to the airport, go through the normal formalities, make one change en route, and you’ll be safely in England by this time tomorrow.”

“You’re saying me, me and Sasha. Where are you going to be?”

“With you, all the way. With others to protect you both.”

“There’s a bench.” She pointed. “I want to sit, to concentrate.”

Charlie was concerned at the indecision he’d never seen in Natalia when they’d lived together at greater risk of discovery. “These are new Russian passports. They’ve got all the necessary exit and entry visas and documentation. Everything is valid. You and Sasha are booked on Finnair flight 362, leaving at noon from Vnukovo Airport to Helsinki. There’s a transfer connection within two hours on Finnair flight 028 to London. I won’t acknowledge you: keep as far away as possible. Sasha won’t remember me. There’ll be three other people on the plane you won’t know: I’ll only know one. We’ll be taken off before other passengers at Heathrow.”

“Stop!” demanded Natalia, urgently. “You’ll definitely be on the same plane? I want you to be with us. I don’t want to be alone, not knowing what to do.”

This was far more difficult than he’d anticipated: as close as he was to her, he could feel her nervousness vibrating along the bench. “I will always be with you but as far back as I can be: the last, probably, to board the plane. The others you don’t know will be onboard, too. I have to tell London we’re on our way. The moment you enter the embarkation lounge I’ll trigger that alert.…” He had to stop her physical shaking, Charlie decided. “What’s the first principle of entering an operational situation?”

Natalia frowned sideways. “Don’t play tradecraft games, Charlie!”

“I’m not playing a tradecraft game!” he insisted. “Answer the question!”

The twitching spread to Natalia’s face at Charlie’s tone. “Guarantee an exit: why do you want me to acknowledge that?”

“There’s a second complete set of tickets, doubly to guarantee our exit,” said Charlie, tapping the bulky manila folder on his lap. “I’ve booked the three of us, as well as our escorts, on a direct MEA flight to Nicosia, also from Vnukovo. I’ll only have minutes from my London call to catch the Helsinki flight. If I miss it you’ll still have three other escorts and an assured, protected arrival in London. I’ll simply call London again, tell them what’s happened but that you’re still on the Finnair flight. If, when we’re all at Vnukovo, there’s something I don’t like, all of us will abandon the Finnair route, although staying booked on it, and switch to Cyprus. But Cyprus is only an exit insurance. But remember, once you’ve started to board, don’t turn back. That’s the unbreakable rule: don’t turn back, keep going.”

“Why can’t one of the escorts alert London, use the Cyprus plane if it’s necessary?” asked Natalia.

Her shaking had subsided and Charlie was reassured by the professional question. “I personally want to guarantee you’re onboard, safe.

“I feel confident every moment I’m with you but so frightened, so incapable, the minute I’m not,” Natalia said, feeling out for his hand.

“Twenty-four hours from now we’ll be exaggerating our stories about it all, laughing.”

“I don’t think I will be.”

“But you’re going to go through with it,” encouraged Charlie. “Not let Sasha down.”

“I won’t let you or Sasha down. You know that.”

Finally handing her the package, Charlie said: “Everything you want is there. We’ll talk a lot on the throwaway phone, on your way to Vnukovo airport.”

“Yes,” she said, looking down at the package before closing her handbag.

“What have you told Sasha?”

“Nothing. I didn’t want her talking at school. I’ll tell her tonight. She’ll be excited.”

“Are you?”

“I will be, this time tomorrow. Excited and happy for the rest of my life.”

“You can’t be serious!”

“I couldn’t be more serious,” said Jane Ambersom. She was glad she’d waited until after their lovemaking, anticipating his reaction to the story prepared between her and Aubrey Smith. Barry Elliott had pulled away and was now sitting directly opposite on their crumpled sheets, naked but with all intimacy gone.

“Why the hell haven’t you told them!”

“You can’t begin to understand Monsford’s outright animosity.”

“But they’ve got to be warned! It’s … it’s what you said, absurd: absurd not to.”

“I’m telling you. They’d dismiss it as disinformation if it came from us.”

“You think it’s this guy Straughan: that it’s why he killed himself?”

“He must have known something: suspected something. There’s got to be a damn good reason for the operations director of M16 to kill his own mother and then himself.”

“This new?” demanded Elliott, head suspiciously to one side. “Or is this something that Irena Novikov told Charlie about the Lvov penetration?”

They hadn’t anticipated the question. Improvising, Jane said: “There could be indications.”

“You going to give them to me: an actual printout of the debriefing?”

Shit, thought Jane. “There isn’t a debriefing paper. It was conversation between them when they were still in Moscow: before Charlie had any reason to suspect her.”

“He didn’t file a proper, official report?” pressed Elliott, head still to one side.

“I wasn’t at M15 during the Lvov affair,” escaped Jane, “I’m picking up secondhand, telling you what I’ve been told. Certainly there’s nothing officially logged.”

“But you know both camps. What’s the problem between you?”

“Monsford,” said Jane shortly. “The bastard who framed me for his mistakes.”

“You’re surely not suggesting…?” stumbled Elliott, incredulous.

“I’m telling you what we suspect from what I’m told of the Lvov investigation. I can’t tell you anything more.”

Elliott looked down, appearing surprised at his nakedness. “I’m cold and think I should get back under the covers.”

“I think so too,” invited Jane.

Within fifteen minutes of their being together Charlie was reassured, a feeling he’d rarely experienced since the very beginning of the attempt to get Natalia and Sasha out of Moscow. Ian Flood appeared a totally controlled, self-confident man who allowed himself to think before speaking, which wasn’t slowness but sensible consideration, not interrupting as Charlie outlined in detail the following day’s extraction. Charlie was enjoying, too, being back in his familiar corner stool at the Savoy bar, brief though the visit had to be. The FSB had discovered his preference for the hotel during the Lvov investigation: Mikhail Guzov, the involved FSB colonel, had personally confronted him as he’d sat on the same stool. At this time of the evening the bar was filling with the professional girls, two of whom

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