Smiley’s People by John le Carré

Karla’s questions from Moscow, which Toby showed to Smiley late that night in a rare meeting at a country inn, had a beseeching ring : ‘… report more fully on Alexandra’s appearance and state of mind…Is she lucid? Does she laugh and does her laughter make a happy or a sad impression? Is she clean in her personal habits, clean finger-nails, brushed hair? What is the doctor’s latest diagnosis; does he recommend some other treatment?’

But Grigoriev’s main preoccupations at their rendezvous in Allmendigen turned out not to be with Krassky, nor with the letter, nor its author. His lady-friend of the Visa Section had been demanding outright to know about his Friday excursions, he said. Hence his depression and drunkenness. Grigoriev had answered her vaguely; but now he suspected her of being a Moscow spy, put there either by the priest or, worse, by some other frightful organ of Soviet Security. Toby, as it happened, shared this belief, but did not feel that much would be served by saying so.

‘I have told her I shall not make love to her again until I completely trust her,’ Grigoriev said earnestly. ‘Also I have not yet decided whether she shall be permitted to accompany me in my new life in Australia.’

‘George, this is a madhouse!’ Toby told Smiley in a furious mixture of images, while Smiley continued to study Karla’s solicitous questions; even though they were written in Russian. ‘Listen, I mean how long can we hold the dam? This guy is a total crazy!’

‘When does Krassky return to Moscow?’ Smiley asked.

‘Saturday midday.’

‘Grigoriev must arrange a meeting with him before he leaves. He’s to tell Krassky he will have a special message for him. An urgent one.’

‘Sure,’ said Toby. ‘Sure, George.’ And that was that.

Where had George gone in his mind? Toby wondered, watching him vanish into the crowd once more. Karla’s instructions to Grigoriev seemed to have upset Smiley quite absurdly. ‘I was caught between one total loony and one complete depressive,’ Toby claims of this taxing period.

While Toby, however, could at least agonize over the vagaries of his master and his agent, Smiley had less substantial fare with which to occupy his time, which may have been his problem. On the Tuesday, he took a train to Zurich and lunched quietly at the Kronenhalle with Peter Guillam, who had flown in by way of London at Saul Enderby’s behest. Their discussion was restrained, and not merely on the grounds of security. Guillam had taken it upon himself to speak to Ann while he was in London, he said, and was keen to know whether there was any message he might take back to her. Smiley said icily that there was none, and came as near as Guillam could remember to bawling him out. On another occasion – he suggested – perhaps Guillam would be good enough to keep his damned fingers out of Smiley’s affairs? Guillam switched the topic hastily to business. Concerning Grigoriev, he said, Saul Enderby had a notion to sell him to the Cousins as found rather than process him at Sarratt. How did George feel about that one? Saul had a sort of hunch that the glamour of a senior Russian defector would give the Cousins a much-needed lift in Washington, even if he hadn’t anything to tell, while Grigoriev in London might, so to speak, mar the pure wine to come. How did George feel on that one, actually?

‘Quite,’ said Smiley.

‘Saul also rather wondered whether your plans for next Friday were strictly necessary,’ said Guillam, with evident reluctance.

Picking up a table-knife, Smiley stared along the blade.

‘She’s worth his career to him,’ he said at last, with a most unnerving tautness. ‘He steals for her, lies for her, risks his neck for her. He has to know whether she cleans her finger-nails and brushes her hair. Don’t you think we owe her a look?’

Owe to whom? Guillam wondered nervously as he flew back to London to report. Had Smiley meant that he owed it to himself? Or did he mean to Karla? But he was far too cautious to air these theories to Saul Enderby.

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