He descended the stairs deep in thought. Retired colonels did not rate personal drivers.
Back in his own flat, two blocks behind the Ukraina Hotel, Karpov called the KGB motor pool and insisted on speaking to the chief clerk. When he identified himself, the clerk’s reaction was suitably deferential. Karpov was bluff and jovial. “I’m not in the habit of handing out bouquets of carnations, but I see no reason not to when good work has been done.”
“Thank you, Comrade General.”
“That chauffeur who has been driving for my friend Comrade Colonel Philby. He speaks extremely highly of him. A very fine driver, so he says. If my own man is ever sick, I must ask for him personally.”
“Thank you again, Comrade General. I’ll tell Gregoriev myself.”
Karpov hung up. Gregoriev. Never heard of him. But a quiet talk with the man might be useful.
The next morning, April 8, the
The habitual practice when Soviet illegals enter a country by ship is that their names do
The extra crewman had arrived with the men from Moscow only hours before the
Nevertheless, the man had taken a cabin to himself, spent the whole voyage in it, and the two genuine deckhands whose cabin it was had become fed up with their sleeping bags on the wardroom floor. These bags were cleared away by the time the Scottish pilot came on board. Down in his cabin, tense, for evident reasons, Courier Two was waiting for midnight.
While the Clyde pilot stood on the bridge of the
“My driver looks as if he’s coming down with the flu,” he said. “He’ll see the day out, but I’m giving him tomorrow off.”
“I’ll ensure that you get a replacement, Comrade General.”
“I’d prefer Gregoriev. Is he available? I’ve heard the best reports of him.”
There was a rustle of paper as the clerk checked his files. “Yes, indeed. He’s been on temporary assignment but he’s back in the pool.”
“Good. Have him report to my Moscow flat at eight tomorrow morning, I’ll have the keys, and the Chaika will be in the basement.”
Stranger and stranger, Karpov thought as he put the phone down. Gregoriev had been ordered to drive Philby around for a while. Why? Because there was a great deal of driving to do, too much for Erita to cope with? Or so that Erita should not know where he was going? And now the man was back in the pool again. Meaning? Probably that Philby was now somewhere else and did not need a driver anymore, at least not until the end of whatever operation he was involved in.
That evening, Karpov told his grateful regular driver he could have the following day off to take his family out.
The same Wednesday evening, Sir Nigel Irvine had a dinner date with a friend in Oxford.
One of the charming things about Saint Antony’s College, Oxford, is that, like so many highly influential British institutions, so far as the general public is concerned it does not exist.