Joseph Kanon - Istanbul Passage

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Istanbul Passage: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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From the acclaimed, bestselling author of Stardust, The Good German, and Los Alamos – a gripping tale of an American undercover agent in 1945 Istanbul who descends into the murky cat-and-mouse world of compromise and betrayal that will come to define the entire post-war era.
A neutral capital straddling Europe and Asia, Istanbul has spent the war as a magnet for refugees and spies. Even American businessman Leon Bauer has been drawn into this shadow world, doing undercover odd jobs and courier runs for the Allied war effort. Now as the espionage community begins to pack up and an apprehensive city prepares for the grim realities of post-war life, he is given one more assignment, a routine job that goes fatally wrong, plunging him into a tangle of intrigue and moral confusion.
Played out against the bazaars and mosques and faded mansions of this knowing, ancient Ottoman city, Leon's attempt to save one life leads to a desperate manhunt and a maze of shifting loyalties that threatens his own. How do you do the right thing when there are only bad choices to make? Istanbul Passage is the story of a man swept up in the aftermath of war, an unexpected love affair, and a city as deceptive as the calm surface waters of the Bosphorus that divides it.
Rich with atmosphere and period detail, Joseph Kanon's latest novel flawlessly blends fact and fiction into a haunting thriller about the dawn of the Cold War, once again proving why Kanon has been hailed as the 'heir apparent to Graham Greene' (The Boston Globe).

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“Not for me. I have to go.”

“We don’t talk tonight?” Alexei said, surprised, thinking Leon was Tommy, not just the babysitter. “No questions?”

“Later.”

“Well, join me anyway. A welcome toast.” Alexei poured the drinks, then raised his. “To safe journeys.”

“Safe journeys,” Leon said, feeling the heat as it slipped down, finally something real.

“You don’t stay here?” Alexei said. “The watchdog?”

“It’s safe.”

“Safe,” Alexei said, his voice neutral.

“No one followed us here.”

“I know. I worked in the field too. So, now the only risk is you.”

“Me?”

“When you come back. Or is someone else coming tomorrow? Either way, a visitor leaves a trail. Like Hansel and the pebbles. So perhaps it’s better to stay.” Again trying to be light. He poured more raki in his glass. “I haven’t talked to anybody in two days. Dominoes, it’s not the same thing. A game for simpletons. You see them in the mountains. Every village. Sitting in the cafés, click, clack . Two days of that.”

Leon smiled a little. “You’ll be all right now. Just stay put.”

“Where would I go?” He walked over to the window. “Where are we? What part?”

“The old city.”

“Constantinople,” Alexei said, playing with it for effect, a student reciting homework. “And that?” He pointed to a hulking shadow beyond the mosque.

“Valens Aqueduct.”

“Aqueduct? From Romans?”

“Byzantine. Fourth century.” A fact he’d picked up from Anna on one of their walks.

“Fourth?” Alexei said, genuinely impressed, a tourist. “They still use it?”

“Not anymore. Not for fifty years or so.”

“So nothing is forever.” He turned to Leon, a half smile. “But of course that’s why we’re here. The new order. Another one. Yours, this time.”

Leon drained his glass. “I have to go.”

“Let’s hope this one lasts for a while,” Alexei said, turning to glance again at the aqueduct. “I can’t change sides again. You’re the last.”

Leon looked at him for a moment. Not what he expected, not a rescue, one of ours, someone buying his life with betrayal.

“I’ll be back tomorrow. Do you need anything?”

“Something to read maybe,” Alexei said, nodding to the empty shelf. “Not even dominoes now. What should I do? Think about my sins? That’s what the priests used to recommend.”

“When was this?”

“When I was young.” He smiled. “Before I had any.”

“Lock up behind me,” Leon said, turning.

“One more thing? The gun?” He held out his hand.

“You’re safe here.”

“Then I’ll be safer. A precaution,” Alexei said, staring him down until Leon reached into his pocket and handed it over. “Thank you.” He looked at the gun, then around the room. “Very trusting, Americans. No guard.”

“You’re not a prisoner. You came to us, remember?” Leon said, improvising, a guess.

“What if I changed my mind?”

“Changed it to what?”

Alexei made a wry smile. “Not so many choices left, you mean. No,” he said to himself, then shrugged.

“I’ll see you tomorrow then.”

Alexei raised his head. “I’ll look forward to that.”

картинка 8

Outside, Leon crossed the street heading toward Süleyman’s Mosque, then ducked suddenly into a doorway catty-corner from the building. A few minutes, just to be sure. No one in the streets. He felt the same tingling, the caffeine alertness he’d felt on the quay. He should have arranged for someone to watch the building. But there hadn’t been any reason for that. Not a few hours ago. A simple pickup, just slipping someone in and out of the country, a kind of card trick. Not shoot-outs, someone lying in a pool of blood. Or carried away by now, tossed into the Bosphorus, another secret in the water.

Leon looked up at the lighted window, remembering Alexei’s face, wary and then tired, gone to ground. But there must have been other times, eyes confident, standing tall in his uniform. Romanian, it turned out, not Wehrmacht , whatever that looked like. Probably the same peaked hat, padded shoulders. Fighting alongside the Germans, all the way to Stalingrad. And now in the Russians’ crosshairs, Mihai taking the bullet instead. Luck just a matter of turning a few inches, a hand on the duffel where his head should have been. He thought of himself, flat on the damp concrete of the quay, waiting, afraid to breathe.

He moved away from the doorway, through the dark streets around the mosque, then the even darker ones below the Grand Bazaar, just an occasional light through shutters or a radio playing, streets as dark as they must have been when Valens was building his aqueduct. The timeless city, houses with bay overhangs, cobbles slick with peels and rinds. Leon had never been afraid on the streets in Istanbul, not even in the back alleys of neighborhoods like Fatih, full of headscarves and long stares, but tonight every movement, every faint rustling, put him on edge. In one street, two dogs raised their heads to watch him pass, some of Istanbul’s roaming wild dogs, fed on scraps.

He kept going east, through Cağaloğlu, where all the newspaper offices were. Had they heard about the shooting yet? Pages being made up, lines of type. Murder in Bebek. Mysterious shooting on the Bosphorus. No witnesses. Never suspecting the witness was outside their windows right now. Not just a witness, the killer. And looking at the swirl of lights down at Sirkeci, he knew the sudden shortness of breath, doubling over, was about this, not about Alexei or Mihai, how the job had gone wrong, but about this, killing a man, a line he’d never expected to cross. The sound of the shot was still in his head, an echo. Life gone in a minute, that easy.

He caught a taxi at the station and took it to the Park. A few minutes just to establish his presence, pretending to look for someone in the big art deco dining room, waving at Mehmet in the bar, then using the men’s room off the lobby, spotted by regulars who would say, vaguely, that they’d seen him there that evening.

A few minutes later he was back out on Aya Paşa, past the now dark German Consulate, down to his building, sliding the key in the door, then freezing, the door already unlocked. He pushed at it gently, listening for sounds. No light, but the smell of tobacco, a cigarette burning, still here. He felt for the gun in his pocket, then remembered it wasn’t there. He took another step, a faint creaking. Not a burglar, something he knew without knowing why. Someone waiting for him.

“Turn on the light, for god’s sake.” Mihai’s voice in the living room. “It’s only me.”

Leon flicked on the hallway switch, then walked into the room. Mihai was sitting by the window smoking, the only light the glow of his cigarette tip.

“How did you get in?” Leon said.

“A child could get in.”

“What are you doing here?”

“Thinking.”

“About what?” Leon said, turning on a table lamp.

Mihai winced at the sudden light. “What you know. What you don’t know. Whether you’re a fool. Or something else.”

Leon nodded to his bandaged hand. “You think I knew? I wouldn’t have asked you-”

“Not that,” Mihai said, waving his hand toward the drinks tray. “Make yourself a drink.”

“I just had one.”

“Oh yes? With Alexei?” he said, his voice curling around the name. “A celebration?”

“Not exactly.”

“And how did you find him? Good company?”

“Worried.”

“Ah. Pour me one, will you?”

Leon poured two, handing one over.

“A natural reaction,” Mihai said. “To being shot at. I don’t feel so wonderful, either.”

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