Ludlum, Robert – The Janson Directive

Thin, balding, gangly, Nelson Agger was the kind of man whom field operatives

were prone to underestimate; what he may have lacked in physical courage he made

up for by his adroitness at office politics. Whatever else the bureaucrat might

be, he was a survivor.

He was also an oddly likable soul. It was hard, in the abstract, to explain why

Janson got along with him so well. Part of it surely had to do with the fact

that Agger had no illusions about himself. He was a cynic, yes, but unlike the

sententious opportunists who populated Foggy Bottom, he never made any bones

about it, at least not when he was around Janson. The dangerous ones, in

Janson’s experience, were those with grand plans and cold eyes. Agger, though no

tribute to his profession, probably did more good than harm.

But if Janson was honest with himself, he had to admit that another reason they

got along was the simple fact that Agger liked and looked up to him. Desk

jockeys, defensive about their role in the system, usually affected a measure of

condescension toward the operatives. By contrast, Agger, who once laughingly

referred to himself as “the gutless wonder,” never bothered to hide his

admiration.

Or, for that matter, his gratitude. In years past, Janson had occasionally seen

to it that Agger was the first person to receive a particular piece of

intelligence; in a few instances, Agger was able to tailor his analytic reports

to make them seem prescient by the time the intelligence cables reached their

channels. The baseline of mediocrity in intelligence analysis was such that an

officer needed only a few such assists to acquire a reputation for excellence.

Nelson Agger was precisely the sort of person who could help him. Whatever

Agger’s shortcomings in the world of international intelligence, he had

extremely sharp ears for intelligence internal to his division—who was in favor,

who was not, who was thought to be losing his edge, who was believed to be on

the rise. A tribute to his political skills was that he had become a

clearinghouse for gossip without ever being known as a gossip himself. Nelson

Agger could shed light on what was going on if anybody could. Nothing could take

place in Athens sector without the knowledge of the small, tightly knit CIA

station.

Now Janson sat in the back of a café on Vassilissis Sofias, just opposite the

American embassy, sipping a mug of the strong, sweet coffee the Athenians

favored, and phoned the station switchboard on his dual-mode Ericsson.

“Trade protocols,” the voice answered.

“Agger, please.”

A few seconds, during which three clicks could be heard; the call would be taped

and logged.

“May I say who’s calling?”

“Alexander,” Janson said. “Richard Alexander.”

A few more seconds. Then Agger’s voice came on the line. “It’s been a long time

since I’ve heard that name,” he said. His voice was neutral, unreadable. “I’m

glad to hear it now.”

“Fancy a glass of retsina?” Deliberately casual. “Can you get away now? There’s

the tavernos on Lakhitos … ”

“I have a better idea,” Agger said. “The café on Papadhima. Kaladza. You

remember it. A little farther, but the food’s excellent.”

Janson felt a small stab of adrenaline: the counteroffer had come too quickly.

And they both knew the food at Kaladza was terrible; it had been a subject of

their conversation when they last spoke, four years ago. “The worst in town,”

Agger had said, taking a mouthful of doubtful calamari and looking green.

Agger was telling him that they would both have to take precautions.

“Sounds great,” Janson said heartily, for the sake of anyone else who was or

would be listening. “Got a cell phone?”

“In Athens, who doesn’t?”

“Take it. If I get held up, I’ll let you know.”

“Good idea,” Agger said. “Good idea.”

From the café on Vassilissis Sofias, Janson observed Agger leaving from a side

door and making his way down the street, toward the naval hospital and the

street that would lead toward Kaladza.

Then he saw what he feared he might see. In Agger’s wake, a woman and a man

emerged from the bland, gray-brick office building adjoining the embassy and set

off in his direction. He was being tailed.

And the desk man did not have the rudimentary field skills to know it.

Whoever had been listening in on their phone conversation had recognized the

legend name and responded immediately. Janson’s relationship with Agger had

doubtless been taken account of, the possibility of his making contact with the

analyst anticipated.

Now Agger joined a crowd of pedestrians heading toward the Parko Euftherias, and

the man and woman merged into the sidewalk traffic.

Kaladza was too dangerous; the rendezvous would be on a terrain he chose. Janson

slipped a wad of drachmas beneath his coffee mug and left for the Lykavittós.

The Lykavittós was the tallest hill in Athens, and its forested crest swelled

from the city like a green dome. The Lykavittós was as good a candidate for an

off-the-books briefing as any. What made it attractive to visitors was that it

afforded a breathtaking view of the city. What made it attractive to him was

that the high ground would make it hard for a surveillance team to take up

position undetected—especially if he staked it out first. At the moment, he was

armed with only a small pair of binoculars. Was he being paranoid to worry that

this would not suffice?

The funicular departed every twenty minutes from the top of Ploutárkhou Avenue,

in the upscale Kolonaki district. Alert to any sign of professional interest,

Janson rode the railway up the hill past the tiers of well-tended terracing;

there was the gratifying sense of leaving the smog behind as they climbed up

nearly a thousand feet. The summit was ringed with observation decks and cafes.

At the very top was a small white chapel, Agios Georgios, St. George’s, a

nineteenth-century edifice.

Now Janson telephoned Agger on his cell phone. “Change of plans, old bean,” he

said.

“They say change is good,” Agger said.

Janson paused. Should he tell him about the tail? The slight tremor in Agger’s

voice told him that it would be best not to. Agger would not know how to shake

his followers, and an uninformed attempt would only make him an easier mark.

Besides, being aware of them might overstrain the man’s nerves—might spook him,

send him scurrying back to the office. Better to give him an itinerary that gave

him a shot at shaking his pursuers willy-nilly.

“Got a pen?” asked Janson.

“I am a pen,” the analyst sighed.

“Listen carefully, my friend. I want you to take this series of street trams.”

Janson proceeded to detail a complex sequence of transfers.

“A pretty roundabout route,” Agger said.

“Trust me on this,” Janson said. What would hold back a professional watcher

wasn’t the physical task of keeping up with him; it was the diminishing odds of

doing so without being noticed. In a situation like this, covert operatives

would desist surveillance rather than risk exposure.

“Right,” Agger said with the voice of someone who knew he was in over his head.

“Of course.”

“Now, when you finally get off the cable car to Lykavittós, you’ll take the path

toward the Theatre of Lykavittós. We’ll meet in front of the fountain of

Elijah.”

“You’ll have to give me, what, an hour?”

“See you then.”

Janson tried to sound reassuring; Agger’s voice was nervous, even more nervous

than usual, and that was not good. It would make him cautious in a

counterproductive fashion, too attentive to incidentals, too indiscriminate in

his vigilance.

Janson wandered past a hillside café—a cheerful-looking spot with lime-colored

plastic chairs, peach tablecloths, a slate terrace. Nearby was a sculpture

garden planted with marble figures of modern vintage. Wandering through was a

pair of teenagers wearing white muscle shirts that draped loosely around their

unmuscular chests, whipped this way and that by the breeze. An addled-looking

woman clutching a bag filled with stale pita fed already overfed pigeons.

Now Janson stationed himself within a dense copse of Aleppo pine and took an

inventory of the others in the area. On sweltering days, many Athenians sought

refuge here from the heat and the smarting nephos. He saw a Japanese couple, one

holding a tiny videocamera in his hand, the size of an old Instamatic, a

testament to the ingenuity of consumer electronics. The man was posing his wife

against the dramatic backdrop—all Athens at her feet.

As five minutes stretched into ten and then fifteen, more people came and went

in a seemingly random procession. Yet not everything was random. Thirty yards

below to his left, a man in a caftanlike shirt was sketching the landscape on a

large pad; his hand moved over it in large, looping gestures. Janson focused his

binoculars, zooming in on his strong, powerful hands. One hand loosely gripped a

stick of charcoal and was filling the pad with random squiggles. Whatever he was

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