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tc.thebearandthedragon-第104章

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ignment had been from 1989 to '91 in the Soviet Embassy in Beijing; where he'd again tried to gather diplomatic intelligence; and; they saw; with some success this time。 The acplishments had not been questioned at the time; Provalov saw; probably because he'd had some minor victories against the same country's diplomatic service while in Moscow。 His file said that he could both speak and write Chinese; skills learned at the KGB Academy that had militated in favor of making him a China specialist。
 One of the problems with intelligence operations was that what looked suspicious was often innocuous; and what looked innocuous could well be suspicious。 An intelligence officer was supposed to establish contact with foreign nationals; often foreign intelligence officers; and then the foreign spy could execute a maneuver that the Americans called a 〃flip;〃 turning an enemy into an asset。 The KGB had done the same thing many times; and part of the price of doing such business was that it could happen to your own people; not so much while you were not looking as when you were。 Nineteen eighty…nine to '91 had been the time of glasnost; the 〃openness〃 that had destroyed the Soviet Union as surely as smallpox had annihilated primitive tribesmen。 At that time; KGB was having problems of its own; Provalov reminded himself; and what if the Chinese had recruited Suvorov? The Chinese economy had just been starting to grow back then; and so they'd had the money to toss around; not as much as the Americans always seemed to have; but enough to entice a Soviet civil servant looking at the prospect of losing his job soon。
 But what had Suvorov been doing since then? He was now driving a Mercedes…Benz automobile; and those didn't appear in your mailbox。 The truth was that they didn't know; and finding out would not be very easy。 They knew that neither Klementi Ivan'ch Suvorov nor Ivan Yurievich Koniev had paid his ine taxes; but that merely put him at the same level as most Russian citizens; who didn't want to be bothered with such irrelevancies。 And; again; they hadn't wanted to question his neighbors。 Those names were now being checked to see if any were former KGB; and perhaps; therefore; allies of their suspect。 No; they didn't want to alert him in any way。
 The apartment looked 〃clean〃 in the police sense。 With that; they began looking around。 The bed was mussed up。 Suvorov/Koniev was a man and therefore not terribly neat。 The contents of the apartment were; however; expensive; much of them of foreign manufacture。 West German appliances; a mon affectation of the Russian well…to…do。 The searchers wore latex surgical gloves as they opened the refrigerator door (refrigerator…freezers are well…regarded hiding places) for a visual examination。 Nothing obvious。 Then dresser drawers。 The problem was that their time was limited and any residence just had too many places to hide things; whether rolled up in a pair of socks or inside the toilet…paper tube。 They didn't really expect to find much; but making the effort was de rigueur…it was too hard to explain to one's superiors why one didn't do it than it was to send the search team in to waste their expensively trained time。 Elsewhere; people were tapping the apartment's phone。 They'd thought about installing some pinhole…lens cameras。 These were so easy to hide that only a paranoid genius was likely to find them; but putting them in took time…the hard part was running the wires to the central monitoring station…and time was an asset they didn't have。 As it was; their leader had a cell phone in his shirt pocket; waiting for it to vibrate with the word that their quarry was driving back home; in which case they'd tidy up and leave in a hurry。
 
 He was twelve kilometers away。 Behind him; the trail cars were switching in and out of visual coverage as deftly as the Russian national football team advancing the soccer ball into tied…game opposition。 Provalov was in the mand vehicle; watching and listening as the KGB/FSS team leader used a radio and a map to guide his people in and out。 The vehicles were all dirty; middle…aged; nondescript types that could be owned by the Moscow city government or gypsy…cab operators; expected to dart around; concealing themselves among the numerous twins they all had。 In most cases; the second vehicle occupant was in the back seat; not the front; to simulate a taxi's passenger; and they even had cell phones to plete the disguise; which allowed them to municate with their base station without looking suspicious。 That; the FSS leader remarked to the cop; was one advantage of new technology。
 Then came the call that the subject had pulled over; stopped; and parked his car。 The two surveillance vehicles in visual contact continued past; allowing new ones to close in and stop。
 〃He's getting out' a Federal Security Service major reported。 〃I'm getting out to follow on foot。〃 The major was young for his rank; usually a sign of a precocious and promising young officer on the way up; and so it was in this case。 He was also handsome with his twenty…eight years; and dressed in expensive clothing like one of the new crop of Moscovite business entrepreneurs。 He was talking into his phone in a highly animated fashion; the very opposite of what someone conducting a surveillance would do。 That enabled him to get within thirty meters of the subject; and to watch his every move with hawk's eyes。 Those eyes were needed to catch the most elegant of maneuvers。 Suvorov/Koniev sat on a bench; his right hand already in his overcoat pocket while his left fiddled with the morning paper he'd brought out from the car…and that is what tipped the FSS major that he was up to no good。 A newspaper was the main disguise used by a spy; something to cover the actions of the working hand; just as a stage MAGICian kept one hand ostentatiously busy while the other performed the actual illusion。 And so it was here; so beautifully done that had he been an untrained man; he would never have caught it。 The major took a seat on another bench and dialed up another false number on his cell phone and started talking to a fictitious business associate; then watched his surveillance subject stand and walk with studied casualness back to his parked Mercedes。
 Major Yefremov called a real number when his subject was a hundred meters away。 〃This is Pavel Georgiyevich。 I am staying here to see what he left behind;〃 he told his base station。 He crossed his legs and lit a cigarette; watching the figure get back into his car and drive off。 When he was well out of sight; Yefremov walked over to the other bench and reached under。 Oh; yes。 A magnetic holder。 Suvorov had been using this one for some time。 He'd glued a metal plate to the bottom of the green…painted wood; and to this he could affix a magnetic holder 。 。 。 about a centimeter in thickness; his hand told him。 Their subject was a 〃player〃 after all。 He'd just executed a dead…drop。
 On hearing it; Provalov experienced the thrill of seeing a crime mitted before his very eyes。 Now they had their man mitting a crime against the state。 Now he was theirs。 Now they could arrest him at any time。 But they wouldn't; of course。 The operation's mander next to him ordere
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