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Cambridge Five Spy Ring — Part 32
Page 85
85 / 121
7 ,
t
in the middle thirties; he wa: «
classical scholar of distinction to
whom the code-name Homer would
be appropriate; Homer, in its Rus-
sian form of Gomer, was 4 near-
anagram of Gore; as for ideals,
Gore-Booth was a Christian Sci-
entist and a teetotaler. What more
could { want? It was a neat bit of
work, good enough, I hoped, to give
London pause for a few days.
Burgess packed up and left. We
dined together his last evening in a
Chinese restaurant where each
booth had “personalised music”
which helped to drown our voices.
We went over the plan step by step.
He was to meet a Spe contact on
arrival in London,‘and give him a —
fuli briefing. He was then to call
as aemed
a sheet of paper giving the time and
_ place of rendezvous which he would’
slip across the desk. He would then
_ meet Maclean and put him fully in
the picture. From then on, the mat-
- ter was out of my hands. Burgess |
did not look too happy, and I must
shave had an inkling of what was
on his mind. When I drove him to
the station next morning, my last
‘words, spoken only half-jocularly,
were: “Don't you go too.”
MNT.3 were not particularly im-
sat, yy Mackenzie’s brainwave
cyt <icre-Booth. Confronted by
tuaig aturt list, they were looking
iz odd man out, the man who
-.2.7d least to pattern. It wa.
‘+o ieent procedure, and it led
tae to put Maclean at the top of
the list. He had never enjoyed the
social round of the diplomatic corps.
He had preferred the society of
independent minds. By contrast, the
others on the list were depressingly
conformist. In communicating to us
their conclusions, MI-5 informed us
that Maclean would probably be
approached when the case against
him was complete. Meanwhile, cer-
tain categories of Foreign Office
1 0er would be withheld from him,
. 4 his movements would be put
under surveijlance. These last two
decisions, taken presumably to
soothe the Americans, were foolish,
but J saw no reason to challenge
them. I judged that they might
seyvye me in good stead if anything
\
went wrong. I was quite right.
I was nevertheless alarmed by
the speed with which the affair was
developing, and at the next meeting
with my Soviet contact told him of
the pressing need for haste. I was
alse given a pretext for writing to
Burgess direct. The Embassy trans-
port officer had twice asked me what
was to be done about the Lincoln
Continents! which he had left in
the car park. So I wrote to Burgess
in pressing terms, telling him that
if he did not act at once, it would
be tcdo late—because ] would send
his car to the scrap-heap. There was
nothing more that I could do.
One morning, at a horribly early
_hour, Geoffrey Paterson called me
by telephone. He explained that he ©
had just received an enormously
long Most Immediate telegram from
London. It would take him all day
to decgpher without help, and. he
had just sent his secretary on a
week’s leave. Could he borrow
_ mine? J] made the necessary ar-
rangements and sat ba¢k to compose
myself. This was almost certainly
it. Was Maclean in the bag? Had
Maclean got away? I was itching
to rush round to the Embassy and
lend a third hand to the telegram.
But it was clearly wiser to stick to
. Tay usual routine as if nothing had
happened. When I reached the Em-
bassy, I went straight to Paterson's
office. He looked grey. “Kim,” he
said in a half-whisper, “the bird has
flown.” I registered dawning hor-
ror (I hope). “What bird? Not
Maclean?” “Yes,” he answered.
“But there’s worse than that...
‘Guy Burgess has gone with him."
At that, my consternation was no
pretence. —
7
ih
hi
URGESS’ DEPARTURE with Mac-
lean faced me with a fateful —
- decision. From the earliest discus-
sions of Maclean’s escape, my Soviet
colleagues had been mindful that
something might go wrong and put
me in danger. To meet such a pos-
sibility, we had elaborated an es-
cape plan for myself, to be put into
effect at my diseretion in case of
wave
u.creme emergency. Tt was clear
that the departure of Burgess gave
rise to an emergency. But was it
an extreme emergency? I had to.
put aside the decision for a few
hours, in order to deal with two
. immediate problems. One was to
get rid of certain compromising
equipment hidden in my house. The
other was to get the feeling of the
FBI, since that might affect the
details of my escape. Getting rid of
- the equipment was perhaps the most
urgent task of the two, but I de-
cided to let it wait. It would have
looked very odd if I had left the
Embasay immediately after hearing
the news; and Paterson's telegram
gave me a good excuse for testing
the FBI without delay. It concluded
with instructions that he should in-
form Boyd of its contents, Paterson, ©
doubtless thinking that his face
would be pretty red by the end of
the interview, asked me if I would
accompany him on the grounds that
two red faces might be better than
one. The fact that my face was: _
probably more grey than red did.
not alter the principle of the thing.
Boyd took the news wit
able calm. A few flashes of miachief
suggested that he might almost be
a
chk a kaeee ae
pleased that the bloody Britiah had-
made a mese of it. But I guessed
that his calm masked a personal
worry. Boyd hac often met Burgess
at my house, and had invited him
back to his own. Against all the
odds, they had got on well together.
Both were aggressive, provocative
characters; they exchanged insults
with mutual appreciation. At their
first meeting, Burgesa had attacked
the corruption and graft which, he
alleged, made nonsense of the Indi-. .
anapolis motor trials, and in doing
so took several hefty sideswipes at
the American way of life in general.
Boyd positively liked it, He had
probably never heard a prissy Eng-
lishman talk that way before. In the
present crisis, he would not have
been Boyd if he had not wondered
how much “the boss,” Hoover, knew
about his own acquaint.nce with
Burgess. I concluded tha: Boyd's
personal interest would work in my
favour. From him, we wernt to see
Lamphere, whose manner was quite
+h wamarl -
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