Of course he’d been aware of solitude in those early days, those assignments after Vietnam, after the careful, circuitous CIA suggestion mat he quit the regular army and serve his country another way.
Vienna the first time. January 1974. A bad month, operationally, because of the weather. Thick snow everywhere and the temperature hovering around freezing during the day and well below it after about four P.M., which made the necessary surveillance a problem because no one hung around on street corners or in doorways in conditions like that. His name had been Mohammad Mouhajer, and there had not been any doubt about his guilt, about why the sentence should be carried out, because the man had been paraded as a hero in Tripoli, leader of the PLO extremist group that hijacked a TWA plane and slaughtered ten Americans before blowing the aircraft up in front of selected television cameras. A freedom fighter, he’d been called. At a press conference he’d pledged himself to continue fighting to bring attention to the Palestinian cause. O’Farrell could even recall the translated phrase at that bombastic Libyan media event. It is inevitable that people must die. Inevitable, then, that Mouhajer had to die. His case was classic proof, in fact, of the doctrine preached at those top-secret training sessions at Fort Pearce and Fort Meade. Assassination saves lives. O’Farrell had spent two weeks watching the man’s every move, tracing his every contact. Mouhajer had been boastful, oversure of himself, never taking any precautions. A single shot from the car—a Kalashnikov rifle, a provable Soviet bullet—as the man walked along the Naglergasse near midnight, the weather now a positive advantage because it was five degrees below and no one was on the street.
Alone then, but not a difficulty. Only away three weeks. He’d taken a leather purse back for Jill, a dirndl-dressed doll for Ellen, and a mechanical car for John.
How was Vienna, darling?
Pretty. I’ll have to take you sometime.
I’d like that.
There’d been a connection with Vienna the second time: March 1975. Paris. The name this time had been Leonid Makarevich, although they discovered at least four aliases during the investigation. A KGB major, the guns-and-bombs delivery man for the terrorist groups. A similarity with the current operation, O’Farrell supposed. The proof was that Makarevich had supplied the explosives for the TWA bombing and O’Farrell recognized the Russian immediately from the photographs; he was the man with whom Mouhajer had conducted three meetings in Vienna. Assassination saves lives. True. Always true. He wouldn’t be doing it, if it weren’t true and justified, would he? Ridiculous self-doubt. A more complicated operation evolved when O’Farrell disclosed the Vienna information. More planning was necessary, too, because Makarevich was a professional who took no chances, always trying to clear his trail, aware of everything around him. The rule was that the method should be left to O’Farrell, but now a shooting was ordered, because the death had to tie in with Mouhajer’s. On the street again, as Makarevich left the Hotel Angleterre, the weapon and the bullet as before: it had to appear tit-for-tat. O’Farrell had nothing to do with the anonymous telephone call to the hotel, supposedly from the PLO, talking of revenge. Or the planted stories in the CIA-controlled media—not in America, but in Italy and France itself—which were picked up and reported in the rest of the world’s press, recounting a supposed feud between Moscow and the PLO. In fact, a rift actually did develop, because neither believed the other’s denial of involvement in the two killings.
A Hermes scarf on this occasion for Jill, another nationally dressed doll for Ellen, a penknife for John.
Is Paris prettier than Vienna, darling?
I think so.
I’d like to see that, too.
One day we’ll go.
They never had, though. Would he ever bring her here to London? O’Farrell wondered, as the airport bus left the motorway to become clogged in the morning rush-hour traffic. He doubted it. The decision to avoid all the operational places had been unconscious, until now. He never wanted to return anywhere he’d worked professionally, never wanted to be reminded by a street he’d walked, a building he’d passed, a restaurant where he’d eaten. Alone.
He was alone now. Had to be. The unseen, never-there man. Coming into the city by bus was the necessary initial move, mingling with a crowd and not risking a taxi. From the city terminal, garment bag in hand, he walked three streets before hailing one, changing transport this time because a person boarding a town bus with a suitcase is remembered. He paid the cab off in Courtfield Road and waited until it disappeared into Earls Court before setting out again to lose himself, crossing the Cromwell Road in the direction of Kensington but soon stopping short, locating the ideal guest house just past Cottesmore Gardens. The owner was a thin-faced, weak-eyed man who greeted O’Farrell in shirt sleeves and offered him the choice of a front or back room. O’Farrell chose the back and paid in cash for three nights, saying that he was on an economy vacation and would be going north, to Edinburgh, by the middle of the week. He was asked to enter his own registration, in an exercise-book type ledger. He used the name Bernard Hepplewhite, the First of the four aliases that had been decided upon, and said he would not be needing any food, not even breakfast.
The room was basic but clean and the bed linen fresh, for which he was grateful; it was always necessary to use anonymous places like this, and sometimes they’d been dirty.
It had, of course, been an overnight flight—from New York, not Washington, a further security detour—and O’Farrell had not slept at all. He attempted to now. Tired, overly fatigued people made mistakes he couldn’t make … O’Farrell lay wide-eyed for an hour and then reluctantly took the prescribed pill, which gave him relief for four hours. He awoke just after midday, clog-eyed and dry-mouthed and unrested. Water, that’s all; all he’d take was water. Didn’t need anything else. A lot to do. Not Rivera yet, though. One of those first lessons: Think backward, not forward. Plan escape routes before looking the other way.
He ignored the bars and restaurants and hotels on Kensington High Street and others in Kensington Church Street and Earls Court Road, noting instead the name of a boardinghouse in Holland Street and another in Queen’s Gate Terrace. He found an unvandalized telephone booth back on Kensington High Street from which he called both boardinghouses, setting up consecutive reservations for when he left Courtfield Road. Always move on; never remain long enough to be remembered afterward.
O’Farrell used a map of the London underground to cross the city and locate another boardinghouse in Marylebone—in Crossmore Road—and a fifth, a small commercial hotel, two miles to the west off Warwick Road. It was more difficult this time to find a telephone box that worked but he managed it at last, in Porteus Road, and made three-night reservations to continue from those he’d already secured in Kensington.
By 5:30 he felt exhausted, heavy-eyed and heavy-limbed, aching everywhere. And thirsty; very thirsty. Carefully he chose an unlicensed coffee bar, where the actual coffee was disgusting, and ate chicken coated in a gluti-nously cold sauce and papier-mâché peas.