The Midnight Swimmer (25 page)

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Authors: Edward Wilson

BOOK: The Midnight Swimmer
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The rendezvous signal, a vase of
mariposa
silhouetted against the soft light of the bedroom window, was in place.
Catesby checked the
time and continued past the embassy.
He then drove in an evasive way, tracking back on himself and checking the mirror, to make sure he hadn’t grown a tail.

The pickup point, the Hospital Maternidad Obrera, had been chosen by Katya.
The maternity hospital was the least likely place in Havana to meet Soviet personnel.
Katya, her face hidden by a
mantilla,
was waiting near the entrance cradling an empty blanket.
As soon as Catesby pulled up, she hopped in the car and threw ‘baby’ in the back seat.

‘Was it difficult to get away?’
said Catesby.

‘Not at all.
Zhenka is very busy.
He’s been called back to Moscow.’
Katya sounded breathless.
There was something in her manner that seemed on edge.

‘Is something wrong?’

‘I don’t know.
Zhenka has been in a terrible mood – and everyone at the embassy seems very nervous.’

‘Was he called back suddenly?’

‘Yes.
You usually don’t ask me about these things.’
Katya’s voice had a sharp edge.
There was an unspoken agreement that
intelligence
and spying were to have nothing to do with their relationship.

‘I’m not prying,’ said Catesby.
‘I promise you that.
But it’s just that I’ve been called back to London too.’

Katya grabbed his arm hard.
‘Permanently?’

‘No, thank goodness.’

She still clung to his arm.
‘Will you be away long?’

‘I hope not.’

‘Is it not unfortunate to lose one’s husband and one’s lover the same day?’
Katya let out a long sad breath.
‘I’m not a lucky woman.’

‘You haven’t lost us – unless Baba Yaga makes the planes crash into each other.’

‘Don’t make jokes like that, William.’

‘Sorry.’

Something like that had, however, happened to a woman Catesby knew during the war.
Her lover, an American pilot, blew up over Suffolk the same day her infantry officer British husband was killed in Italy.
The American’s name was Joseph Kennedy, Jr., Jack’s older brother.

‘This does frighten me,’ said Katya.
‘It seems too much of a
coincidence
that both you and Zhenka are called back at the same time.’

‘I’m sure it’s nothing more than a coincidence.’
But he wasn’t sure.
A dangerous symmetry was taking shape.

Catesby was driving towards a beach on the outskirts of Miramar.
The suburb gradually became less and less prosperous.
All along the road were posters asking for volunteers to become
alfabetizadores
, literacy tutors.
There were also posters featuring wizened workers and peasants with battered straw hats.
The captions proclaimed:
We shall read!
We shall conquer
!
The campaign, initiated and directed by Che, was a fabulous success.
In one year, illiteracy, which was forty per cent in many rural areas, had been reduced to four per cent and was still falling.
It wasn’t a story that was well known on the churchy Main Streets of the USA.
Maybe, thought Catesby, those white picket fence ghettos, needed their own ‘battle against ignorance’.

Catesby parked between two weather-beaten coconut trees.
It wasn’t a pretty beach, which may have been why it was so empty and lonely.
The most beautiful beach in the region was at Varadero, sixty miles from Havana.
The embassy once had a party there.
It was a blissful day of snorkelling, Pimm’s and beach cricket.
He longed to take Katya there for a midnight swim, but it was too far.
Instead, they embraced for a long time without saying a thing.
Then the ritual unfolded.
Catesby blind with longing, but wanting something else too.

Afterwards, they walked along the beach.
The sea was serene, as if the hurricane season had left it spent and flaccid.
Katya broke the silence which was weighing awkward.
‘There’s something I’ve never told you.’

‘Are you sure you want to?’

‘Yes.’
Katya looked closely at Catesby.
‘I would never see you again if I thought that you were using me to spy on my husband.
But maybe you already knew that?’

‘I realise that.
And I would never, never do it.’

Katya smiled.
‘Then you’re not a very good spy.’

‘You told me that the first time we met.’

‘Would you betray your country for me?’

Catesby didn’t answer.
He wondered if Katya was playing the coquette.

She smiled again.
‘A good spy would have said yes – and then used me to pass false information to Moscow.’

‘You obviously know how we do things in the trade.
It’s not surprising.’

‘Yes,’ she lowered her voice, ‘and that’s why I was aware of what Andreas was trying to do.’

‘But he loved you.’

‘I think so, but he also loved money.’
Katya’s eyes flashed.
‘I hated it when he tried to use me to spy on Zhenka.
Hated it.’
She smiled.
‘We had an awful argument when I found the camera.
I made sure he never brought it again.
Each time he visited, I stripped him and went through every stitch of his clothing.
I made sure he was only seeing me for love.’

Something big and loud dropped in Catesby’s brain.
It sounded like a steel girder landing in an empty ship’s hold.
Andreas hadn’t told him the whole truth.

‘But something awful happened.’
Katya had placed a hand on her mouth as if trying to stop the words.
Her face had turned pale.
‘One day he stole one of my letters.
I didn’t realise it at first, but it must have been him.’

Catesby turned away.
He didn’t want her to see the deceit lines on his face.
‘Was it an important letter?’

‘The most important letter.’

Catesby didn’t pry further.
He didn’t need to.
He’d already read it.

 

 

H
enry Bone looked at Catesby with a wry half-smile.
‘Are you going through a D.H.
Lawrence phase?’

‘Okay, I’ll shave it off.
I’ve come straight from the airport and haven’t had time.’

‘Well, it does suit you.
But at the moment a more conventional appearance might be preferable – particularly when we meet the Americans.’

‘Your annoyingly urgent cable suggested that the cousins are having a fit about something.
Any chance of a cup of tea?’

‘Will ordinary workmen’s tea suffice?’

‘Of course, I am an ordinary workman.’

‘Please don’t start singing the
Internationale
, Catesby, it’s too early in the morning.’

‘I can sing in it Spanish, if you like?’

‘No, not even in Spanish.
There’s still a bag of Lapsang Souchong left.’

‘Ordinary char will be fine.’
Catesby was a bit shocked to see that Bone was making ‘bag’ tea.
He also noted that the barely
satisfactory
Burleigh service had been replaced by vile-looking cracked mugs.
One mug had a handle missing.
He had never known Bone to fall so low in the tea service league table.
He must be in danger of relegation.

‘Help yourself to milk.’

‘So what’s the situation with the Americans?’

Bone sighed.
He looked tired and annoyed, as if he had been asked to explain something tedious for the tenth time.

‘Okay,’ said Catesby, ‘don’t tell me.’

‘No, you’ve got to know.
It’s almost as serious as it is ridiculous.
The Americans, especially Angleton and his goggle-eyed acolytes, are now in the land of the Great British Conspiracy.
They think that Albion, at her most perfidious, has just stabbed Washington in the back.’

‘Pity it isn’t true.’

Bone looked at Catesby with one eye.
‘For the foreseeable future can you learn to be perfidious and keep those views private?’

‘Sure.’

‘The Americans claim to have received numerous intelligence reports, all supposedly confirmed and corroborated, that a
high-level
meeting took place in either Poland or East Germany between a high-ranking British politician or UK government official and the Soviet leadership.
The Americans, of course, don’t know – or won’t say – what this meeting was about.
They prefer letting the pot of wild speculation boil over.
Is Britain planning to leave Nato and join the Warsaw Pact?
Is the Queen, wearing hammer-and-sickle
earrings
and a Red Army tunic, about to announce the Sovietisation of the United Kingdom?
The Americans love this sort of thing.
It somehow justifies their self-righteous xenophobia.’

‘Are C and the PM in the know?’

‘Very much so.
On the surface at least, Macmillan is very blasé about it.
He shouldn’t be.’

‘Oh?’

‘I like your wide-eyed curiosity, Catesby.
You haven’t been in England for some time.
While you’ve been swanning about on your Caribbean idyll, there’s been a time bomb ticking away beneath the government – which is why this secret meeting nonsense comes at a most awkward time.’
Bone paused.
‘You love scandal, don’t you?’

‘I don’t really.
You’re confusing me with Kit Fournier.’
Catesby remembered the crude way Kit used to refer to scandals as ‘cum stains on cassocks’.
The expression probably said a lot about his strict Catholic upbringing.

‘Well,’ said Bone, ‘I have to tell you in any case.
It isn’t just
tittle-
tattle.
It’s a crisis that’s going to bring down Macmillan’s
government
.
I suspect that the Americans already know about it – at least Kennedy does.
I suspect the secret meeting in East Germany nonsense is something the CIA is concocting to discredit a future Labour government as Moscow stooges.’

‘They’ve interfered this way before, Henry.
It’s outrageous.’
Catesby was referring to the CCF, the Congress for Cultural Freedom.
The CCF was a CIA front organisation that tarred left-wing Labour MPs as ‘undercover communists’.

Bone smiled.
‘I certainly know which buttons to press to get you going.
Meanwhile, let’s get back to the other business.’
Bone picked up an A4 size envelope and passed it over.

Catesby pulled out the photographs.
The undressed cabinet
minister was the one with whom he had shared a lift to the
Ambassador’s
residence on US election night.
He hadn’t seen the girl before.

‘What do you think?’
said Bone.

‘She’s very pretty and sensuous – in the way young women from my social class often are.
Your toff friends don’t know what joys they’re missing.’
Catesby gestured at the photo.
‘He looks
embarrassed
, as if he can hear the camera clicking.
She looks bored.’

‘There are more photos.’

Catesby shook two more out of the envelope – than sat up as if he had been stung.
‘Good god, I don’t believe it.’

‘You recognise him?’

‘It’s Ivanov.’
Catesby laughed.
‘They weren’t a threesome, were they?’

‘No, fortunately, but the fallout could be just as bad.’

‘Is this still going on?’

Bone shook his head.
‘Five told Brook, Brook told the PM and the PM told the minister to stop slumming it.’

‘I resent the last comment.’

‘You have, Catesby, got very tetchy since we sent you to Cuba.
Fine, the woman’s social class is not a factor – nor is an extra-marital affair.
After all, the PM’s wife is still having an affair with Boothby, who, interestingly, shares his affections with Ronnie Kray.
And the PM, as you know, has a close relationship with Eileen O’Casey.
Meanwhile, the Leader of the Opposition is enjoying a long-
standing
affair with the wife of a former SIS colleague – the one who writes those Bond books.
In fact, Catesby, the ruling class’s attitude to sex and sexuality is a refreshingly open and liberal one that the rest of the country would do well to emulate.’

‘Except,’ said Catesby holding up the photo of Ivanov in his
birthday
suit, ‘you don’t share a mistress with the Soviet military attaché?’

‘It’s never a good idea.
I was there, by the way.’

‘In the bedroom?’

‘Don’t be silly.
No, I was at Cliveden when, apparently, the affairs got going.
Billy Astor invited some of my friends and they dragged me along.
It was a splendidly warm weekend, the warmest of the summer, so the action centred around the pool.
The young woman must not have packed her swimming costume – not that it
mattered
.
The garden sculpture was also resplendent with female nudes.’
Bone sighed.
‘You know, it was a little vulgar – especially the topiary.
Catesby, in the unlikely event you ever own a stately home, avoid topiary at all costs.
It’s the sign of a parvenu.’

‘Thanks.
I’ll keep that in mind.’

‘In any case, what with the lovely sun, the still heat and the
splendour
of Cliveden, there was a sense that anyone could get away with anything.
It was only natural that the minister and the Soviet
military
attaché should have a swimming competition.
It was very close.
I’m not sure who won – but it must have been our lad for he got to have the girl first.’

‘Did you behave yourself, Henry?’

‘Impeccably.
In fact, I had a quiet word with Five about what went on, on the following Monday.
Which is odd.’

‘What’s odd?’

‘That it took Hollis so long to get on to the Cabinet Secretary about what happened.
Hollis has to watch his back.
There are some unsavoury characters in Five who are out to get him.
In any case, you’ll see for yourself.
We’re all having a big powwow about this secret summit that allegedly happened someplace in East Germany.
Utter paranoid nonsense.’

‘Who’s going to be there?’

‘Hollis, a pair of his poisonous underlings, Dick White, Chairman of the JIC, myself – yourself, of course, since you’re still officially Head E.Eur.P – Angleton and at least one other American.
You must understand, this meeting is meant to be a sop to Washington.’

There was, thought Catesby, something in Bone’s demeanour that was a little too glib and assured.
He finished his tea and looked at the chipped and cracked enamel of the mug.
Henry was going through a rough patch and trying not to show it.

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