Smiley’s People by John le Carré

‘This would be extremely terrible for me,’ Grigoriev added, needlessly.

Next the reward, and the reward was substantial. If Grigoriev acquitted himself well, and with absolute secrecy, his career would be furthered, his indiscretions overlooked. In Berne he would have an opportunity to move to more agreeable quarters, which would please Grigorieva; he would be given funds with which to buy himself an imposing car which would be greatly to Grigorieva’s taste; also he would be independent of Embassy drivers, most of whom were neighbours, it was true, but were not admitted to this great secret. Lastly, said the priest, his promotion to Counsellor would be accelerated in order to explain the improvement in his living standards.

Grigoriev looked at the heap of Swiss francs lying on the desk between them, then at the Swiss passport, then at the priest. And he asked what would happen to him if he said he would rather not take part in this conspiracy. The priest nodded his head. He too, he assured Grigoriev, had considered this third possibility, but unfortunately the urgency of the need did not provide for such an option.

‘So tell me what I must do with this money,’ Grigoriev had said.

It was routine, the priest replied, which was another reason why Grigoriev had been selected : ‘In matters of routine, I am told you are excellent,’ he said. Grigoriev, though he was by now scared halfway out of his skin by the priest’s words, had felt flattered by this commendation.

‘He had heard good reports of me,’ he explained to Smiley with pleasure.

Then the priest told Grigoriev about the mad girl.

Smiley did not budge. His eyes as he wrote were almost closed, but he wrote all the time – though God knows what he wrote, said Toby, for George would never have dreamed of consigning anything of even passing confidentiality to a notepad. Now and then, says Toby, while Grigoriev continued talking, George’s head lifted far enough out of his coat collar for him to study the speaker’s hands, or even his face. In every other respect he appeared remote from everything and everybody inside the room. Millie McCraig was in the doorway, de Silsky and Skordeno kept still as statues, while Toby prayed only for Grigoriev to ‘keep talking, I mean talking at any price, who cares? We were hearing of Karla’s tradecraft from the horse’s mouth.’

The priest proposed to conceal nothing, he assured Grigoriev – which, as everyone in the room but Grigoriev at once recognized, was a prelude to concealing something.

In a private psychiatric clinic in Switzerland, said the priest, there was confined a young Russian girl who was suffering from an advanced state of schizophrenia : ‘In the Soviet Union this form of illness is not sufficiently understood,’ said the priest. Grigoriev recalled being strangely touched by the priest’s finality. ‘Diagnosis and treatment are too often complicated by political considerations,’ the priest went on. ‘In four years of treatment in our hospitals, the child Alexandra has been accused of many things by her doctors. “Paranoid reformist and delusional ideas… An over-estimation of her own personality… Poor adaptation to the social environment… Over-inflation of her capabilities… A bourgeois decadence in her sexual behaviour.” Soviet doctors have repeatedly ordered her to renounce her incorrect ideas. This is not medicine,’ said the priest unhappily to Grigoriev. ‘It is politics. In Swiss hospitals, a more advanced attitude is taken to such matters.’ It was essential that the child Alexandra should go to Switzerland.

It was by now clear to Grigoriev that the high official was personally committed to the girl’s problem, and familiar with every aspect of it. Grigoriev himself was already beginning to feel sad for her. She was the daughter of a Soviet hero – said the priest and a former official of the Red Army who, in the guise of a traitor to Russia, was living in penurious circumstances among counter-revolutionary Czarists in Paris.

‘His name,’ the priest said, admitting Grigoriev to the greatest secret of all, ‘his name,’ he said, ‘is Colonel Ostrakov. He is one of our finest and most active secret agents. We rely on him totally for our information regarding counter-revolutionary conspirators in Paris.’

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