had been a diplomat here and he had spent five years of his youth at school in Tehran. “Just the usual shit, down with Carter and American imperialism.”
“No Allah-u-Akbar,” Erikki said. For a moment his mind took him back to the roadblock, and ice swept into his stomach. “No mullahs.”
“No. I didn’t see one anywhere around.” In the street the tempo picked up with different factions swirling around the iron gates. “Most of them are university students. They thought I was Russian and they told me there’d been a pitched battle at the university, leftists versus the Green Bands - with perhaps twenty or thirty killed or wounded and it was still going on.” While they watched, fifty or sixty youths began rattling the gates. “They’re spoiling for a fight.”
“And no police to stop them.” Erikki handed him the glass. “What would we do without vodka?”
Erikki laughed. “Drink brandy. Do you have everything?”
“No - but a start.” Christian sat in one of the armchairs near the low table opposite Erikki and opened his briefcase. “Here’s a copy of your marriage and birth certificates - thank God we had copies. New passports for both of you - I managed to get someone in Bazargan’s office to stamp yours with a temporary residence permit good for three months.”
“You’re a magician!”
“They promised they’d issue you a new Iranian pilot’s license but when they wouldn’t say. With your S-G ID and the photocopy of your British license they said you were legal enough. Now, Azadeh’s passport’s temporary.” He opened it and showed him the photograph. “It’s not standard - I took a Polaroid of the photo you gave me - but it’ll pass until we can get a proper one. Get her to sign it as soon as you see her. Has she been out of the country since you were married?”
“No, why?”
“If she travels out on a Finnish passport - well, I don’t know how it will affect her Iranian status. The authorities have always been touchy, particularly about their own nationals. Khomeini seems even more xenophobic so his regime’s bound to be tougher. It might look to them as though she’d renounced her nationality. I don’t think they’ll let her back.” A muted burst of shouting from the massed youths in the street diverted them for a moment. Hundreds were waving clenched fists and somewhere someone had a loudspeaker and was haranguing them. “The way I feel right now, as long as I can get her out, I don’t care,” Erikki said.
The younger man glanced at him. After a moment he said, “Perhaps she should be aware of the danger, Erikki. There’s no way I can get her replacement papers or any Iranian passport, but it’d be very risky for her to leave without them. Why don’t you ask her father to arrange them for her? He could get them for her easily. He owns most of Tabriz, eh?”
Bleakly Erikki nodded. “Yes, but we had another row just before we left. He still disapproves of our marriage.”
After a pause Christian said, “Perhaps it’s because you don’t have a child yet, you know how Iranians are.”
“Plenty of time for children,” Erikki said, sick at heart. We’ll have children in good time, he thought. There’s no hurry and old Dr. Nutt says she’s fine. Shit! If I tell her what Christian said about her Iranian papers she’ll never leave; if I don’t tell her and she’s refused reentry she’ll never forgive me, and anyway she’d never leave without her father’s permission. “To get her new papers means we’ll have to go back and, well, I don’t want to go back.”
“Why, Erikki? Usually you can’t wait to get to Tabriz.”
“Rakoczy.” Erikki had told him everything that had happened - except the killing of the mujhadin at the roadblock and Rakoczy killing others during the rescue. Some details are best untold, he thought grimly. Christian Tollonen sipped his vodka. “What’s the real problem?” “Rakoczy.” Erikki held his gaze steady.
Christian shrugged. Two refills emptied the bottle. “Prosit!” “Prosit! Thanks for the papers and passports.”
Shouting outside distracted them again. The crowd was well disciplined though it was becoming noisier. In the American courtyard more floodlights were on now, and they could see faces clearly in the embassy windows. “Just as well they’ve their own generators.”
“Yes - and their own heating units, gasoline pumps, PX, everything.” Christian went over to the sideboard and brought out a fresh bottle. “That and their special status in Iran - no visas necessary, not being subject to Iranian laws - has caused a lot of the hatred.”
“By God, it’s cold in here, Christian. Don’t you have any wood?” “Not a damned bit. The damned heat’s been off ever since I moved in here - three months, that’s almost all winter.”
“Perhaps that’s just as well.” Erikki motioned at the pair of shoes. “You have heat enough. Eh?”
Christian grinned. “Sometimes. I will admit Tehran is one of the - used to be one of the great places on earth for all sorts of pleasures. But now, now, old friend…” A shadow went over his face. “Now I think Iran won’t be the paradise those poor bastards out there believe they’ve won, but a hell on earth for most of them. Particularly the women.” He sipped his vodka. There was an eddy of excitement beside the compound wall as a youth, with his U.S. Army rifle slung, climbed on the shoulders of others and tried unsuccessfully to reach the top. “I wonder what I’d do if that was my wall and those bastards started coming over at me in strength.” “You’d blow their heads off - which’d be quite legal. Wouldn’t it?” Christian laughed suddenly. “Only if you got away with it.” He looked back at Erikki. “What about you? What’s your plan?”
“I don’t have one. Not until I talk to McIver - there was no chance this morning. He and Gavallan were both busy trying to track down the Iranian partners, then they had meetings at the British embassy with someone called - I think they said Talbot…”
Christian masked his sudden interest. “George Talbot?”
“Yes, that’s right. D’you know him?”
“Yes, he’s second secretary.” Christian did not add: Talbot’s also covert chief of British Intelligence in Iran, has been for years, and is one very important operator. “I didn’t know he was still in Tehran - I thought he’d left a couple of days ago. What do McIver and Andrew Gavallan want with him?”
Erikki shrugged and turned away, absently watching more youths trying to scale the wall, most of his mind concerned with what to do about Azadeh’s papers. “They said something about wanting to know more about a friend of his they’d met at the airport yesterday - someone called Armstrong, Robert Armstrong.”
Christian Tollonen almost dropped his glass. “Armstrong?” he asked, forcing calm, very glad that Erikki had his back toward him.
“Yes.” Erikki turned to him. “Mean anything to you?”
419 “It’s a common enough name,” the younger man said, pleased to hear that his voice was matter-of-fact. Robert Armstrong, MI6, ex-Special Branch, who had been in Iran on contract for a number of years - supposedly on loan from the British government - supposedly chief adviser to Iran’s highly classified Department of Inner Intelligence; a man rarely seen in public and known only to very few, most of whom would be in the intelligence community. Like me, he thought and wondered what Erikki would say if he knew that he was an Iranian intelligence expert, that he knew a lot about Rakoczy and many other foreign agents, that his prime job was to try to know everything about Iran but to do nothing and never to interfere with any of the combatants, internal or external, just to wait and watch and learn and remember. What’s Armstrong still doing here?
He got up to cover his disquiet, pretending to want to see the crowd better. “Did they find out what they wanted to know?” he asked.
Again Erikki shrugged. “I don’t know. I never caught up with them. I was…” He stopped and studied the other man. “Is it important?”
“No - no, not at all. You hungry? Are you and Azadeh free for dinner?” “Sorry, not tonight.” Erikki glanced at his watch. “I’d better be getting back. Thanks again for the help.”
“Nothing. You were saying about McIver and your Gavallan? They have a plan to change operations here?”
“I don’t think so. I was supposed to meet them at 3:00 P.M. to go to the airport but seeing you and getting the passports was more important to me.” Erikki stood up and put out his hand, towering over him. “Thanks again.” “Nothing.” Christian shook hands warmly. “See you tomorrow.” Now in the street the shouting had ceased and there was an ominous silence. Both men ran for the window. All attention turned toward the main road once called Roosevelt. Then they heard the growing, “Allahhnh-uuuu Akbarrrr!” Erikki muttered, “Is there a back way out of the building?” “No. No, there isn’t.”
