Douglas Atwill

Creep Around the Corner


Скачать книгу

line/>

      CREEP

      AROUND

      THE

      CORNER

      CREEP

      AROUND

      THE

      CORNER

       A Spy Novel

      DOUGLAS ATWILL

      © 2010 by Douglas Atwill.

      All Rights Reserved.

      No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.

      Sunstone books may be purchased for educational, business, or sales promotional use. For information please write: Special Markets Department, Sunstone Press, P.O. Box 2321, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-2321.

      Book design

Vicki Ahl

      Body typeface

Book Antiqua

      Printed on acid free paper

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Atwill, Douglas.

      Creep around the corner : a spy novel / Douglas Atwill.

      p. cm.

      ISBN 978-0-86534-654-3 (pbk. : alk. paper)

      1. Cold War--Fiction. 2. Europe--Politics and government--1945---Fiction. I. Title.

      PS3601.T85C74 2010

      813′.6--dc22

      2009051829

       WWW.SUNSTONEPRESS.COM

      SUNSTONE PRESS / POST OFFICE BOX 2321 / SANTA FE, NM 87504-2321 / USA (505) 988-4418 / ORDERS ONLY (800) 243-5644 / FAX (505) 988-1025

      I WISH TO ACKNOWLEDGE

      and thank the following for their help with the manuscript—Douglas Bland, Walter Cooper, Billy Halsted, John Strand, Melinda K. Hall, Shelley McGehee, and Sylvia Debenport, who each read parts of this story or listened patiently while I read them aloud. If names, places or incidents seem familiar, they are not.

      All of this book is fiction, cooked up from everyday ingredients.

      FAT SCOTTISH PEAS

      It furthers one to undertake something.

      It furthers one to cross the great water.

      –I Ching

      AS THE MINUTES TO DEPARTURE closed in, Henry Zilbert turned to me and asked, “Are you scared?”

      “I’m angry that I got caught.”

      “Are they still shooting at us in Korea?”

      “I don’t think so.”

      “You’ll be okay. You’re a good shot when you try. Problem is, you don’t try very often.”

      This was the day in May that I was called up by the Middleton draft board. The West Texas summer had come in early and we were waiting in front of the bus station in Henry’s convertible, top up and windows open. He looked straight ahead, his way of not showing much emotion or vulnerability. I always admired Henry’s lanky posture, good looks, black hair with umber-brown eyes, and wished away my light hair, blue eyes and long-waisted sturdiness.

      We had planned to share the Zilbert house on Water Street, Henry’s now that his grandfather had died. I would fix up the attic for a studio, starting the first paintings of an art career and Henry could manage the Martin County ranch from the offices on the ground floor. A Dallas architect designed the house in the palmy spring of 1929, but it was not completed until well into the Depression. A shingle-sided, three story mansion with a full basement, it had the only built-in vacuum machine in Middleton, now barely able to suck up the dead flies that piled up beside the painted shut windows.

      This would be after we both graduated from university next year. We would open up the windows and give beer parties for all of young Middleton. Before now, there had been plenty of girl friends because Henry was handsome and I was too, I guess, but nothing ever took. The girls went on to the men who really wanted them. Life was good when I was with Henry but now it was ending, or at least being put on hold. Because I had willfully allowed myself to be taken up in the draft, we left my mother in tears an hour earlier. My father could not even mention my name without choking. I had mocked their many years of college support, mother said, and danced away my future with drink and song. Mother had a way with invective.

      I said, “The bus is here and there’s Mrs. Flack with my papers.”

      “Who’s Mrs. Flack?”

      “She is the draft board. You haven’t had to deal with her, thanks to your asthma. She told me, Well, Mr. Coward College Deferral . . . when the mighty fall.”

      “She looks harmless.”

      “Not so. I’ll miss you, bud.” I put my hand on his shoulder and shook his hand. He did not get out of the convertible, but just sat to watch me go. I waved back at him and he tilted his chin upwards, ever so little. Mrs. Flack stood at attention in her flowered house-dress and gave me a pink-gummed smile, like a happy horse, as she handed over my papers and the bus ticket to Arkansas. Have a good two years, Bradford, she said and snorted out another smile.

      Basic training in Camp Chaffee was a summer-long blur of chiggers, thunderstorms, disgrace, aches and pain. If I was average in push-ups, chin-ups, sit-ups, squats and running uphill with a forty-pound pack, I earned the top Sharpshooter’s Badge, as Henry predicted.

      The army had failed that summer to meet its quota with volunteers for the Counterintelligence School in Baltimore, so I, along with two others, was assigned there. We were very lucky young men, they said. Ordinary draftees were rarely accepted. No one thought to check back with Mrs. Flack about my cowardice, however, and how the fallen mighty might be rising once again.

      At Baltimore we learned the tricks to becoming a spy, sixteen weeks of them. Ju-jitsu, bridge explosives, sub-machine guns, deadly force, listening devices, poison gas in a fountain pen and surveillance by the book. We drove into the Maryland countryside to shoot a sub-machine gun at cut-out images of the enemy that popped up as we walked along, Russian agents in trench-coats and Chinese fanatics in high collars. I scored a hundred on that, all the painted villains flat in the weeds, the spy-to-be Bradford the envy of his classmates.

      However, the instructor told us that we were mere analysts, draftees never able to become full-blown field agents. He made it clear that we were the lowest echelon, the untouchables of espionage, cleaning the safe-house toilets and shining the bullet-proof windows.

      That summer, the spoiled boy Bradford, like many before him, lost some of his callowness and became a cog in the machine of war. If not the bravest or the strongest, I was a trained soldier, dagger at the ready. At the graduation ceremony, I felt I was becoming the man, muscles rippling, the superficial student morphed into a trained killer. I practiced my sharp look and angled my khaki cloth cap just so.

      After that late November commencement day, two of us waited for a military flight to Labrador, connecting with a six-propellered flight across