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The Sum of All Fears.pdf - Delta Force

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so lovely a face in tears,' the man reported quietly.<br />

'What about the pension, other arrangements?'<br />

'I am seeing to it myself.'<br />

'Good, those damned paper-pushers don't seem to care about anyone or anything.<br />

If there's a problem, let me know.'<br />

'I have nothing more to suggest from the technical intelligence side,' the<br />

Colonel went on, 'Can you follow up elsewhere?'<br />

'We're still rebuilding our network inside their defense ministry. Preliminary<br />

indications are that there is nothing, that the new Germany has disavowed the<br />

whole DDR project,' Golovko said. '<strong>The</strong>re is a hint that American and British<br />

agencies have made similar inquiries and come away satisfied.'<br />

'It is unlikely, I think, that German nuclear weapons would be a matter <strong>of</strong><br />

immediate concern to the Americans or the English.'<br />

'True. We are carrying on, but I do not expect to find anything. I think this is<br />

an empty hole.'<br />

'In that case, Sergey Nikolayevich, why was our man murdered?'<br />

'We still don't know that, damn it!'<br />

'Yes, I suppose he might now be working for the Argentinians . . .'<br />

'Colonel, remember your place!'<br />

'I have not forgotten it. Nor have I forgotten that when someone troubles to<br />

murder an intelligence <strong>of</strong>ficer there is a good reason for it.'<br />

'But there's nothing there! At least three intelligence services are looking.<br />

Our people in Argentina are still working – '<br />

'Oh, yes, the Cubans?'<br />

'Correct, that was their area <strong>of</strong> responsibility, and we can scarcely depend on<br />

their assistance now, can we?'<br />

<strong>The</strong> colonel closed his eyes. What had KGB come to? 'I still think we should<br />

press on.'<br />

'Your recommendation is noted. <strong>The</strong> operation is not over.'<br />

Exactly what he could do now, Golovko thought after the man left, exactly what<br />

new avenues he should explore . . . he didn't know. He had a goodly percentage<br />

<strong>of</strong> his field force sniffing for leads, but as yet there was nothing. This<br />

miserable pr<strong>of</strong>ession was so much like police work, wasn't it?<br />

***<br />

Marvin Russell went over his requirements. Certainly these were generous people.<br />

He still had almost all <strong>of</strong> the money he'd brought over. He'd even <strong>of</strong>fered to<br />

make use <strong>of</strong> it, but Qati would have none <strong>of</strong> that. He had a briefcase in which<br />

were forty thousand dollars in crisp twenties and fifties, and on setting<br />

himself up in America he'd take in a direct bank transfer from an English bank.<br />

His tasks were fairly simple. First he needed new identities for himself and the<br />

others. That was child's play. Even doing the driver's licenses was not<br />

difficult, if you had the right hardware, and he'd be purchasing that for cash.<br />

He'd even be able to set the equipment up in the safe house. Now, exactly why he<br />

had to do hotel reservations in addition to setting up the safe house was<br />

another question. <strong>The</strong>se characters sure liked to keep things complicated.<br />

On the way to the airport, he'd taken a day to stop at a good tailor shop –<br />

Beirut might have been at war, but life still went on. By the time he boarded

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