I, Said the Spy

Home > Other > I, Said the Spy > Page 43
I, Said the Spy Page 43

by Derek Lambert


  Nicholas tried to cut his steak. She was right: tough was the understatement of the year.

  ‘I know I can’t cook,’ Suzy said, sawing at her steak, ‘but I am good on ideas.’

  ‘Such as what?’

  ‘While I was cooking – well, murdering – the meal, I was thinking.’

  ‘And?’

  Suzy put down her knife and fork, rested her chin in her hands and stared at Nicholas. ‘I believe you’ve misplaced your talents. You should have been a novelist.’ She stretched out her hand and touched Nicholas’ cheek. ‘Why don’t you write a novel about Bilderberg? A novel based on fact.’

  Nicholas persevered with his steak in silence. After a while he said: ‘You’re right, you are better on ideas than cooking.’

  He stood up and went round the table and kissed her. Then he refilled his glass with wine, walked into the spare room, rolled a sheet of paper into his portable typewriter and, after a few moments’ thought, he began to type.

  Danzer didn’t look like a spy.

  If you enjoyed I, Said the Spy, check out these other great Derek Lambert titles.

  Derek Lambert’s classic spy novel exposes the truth about the life of the Western community in post Stalin Moscow, and their existence in which tensions and hostility of the Soviet Union sometimes prove intolerable.

  An American working for the US embassy and the CIA, a young Englishman at the British Embassy gradually cracking under the strain of Moscow life, and a member of the Twilight Brigade. In an alien land their lives become inextricably joined in a vivid and tense story of diplomats, traitors, Soviet secret police and espionage.

  Buy the ebook here

  The Red House follows a year in the life of Russian diplomat Vladimir Zhukov, the new Second Secretary at the Soviet Embassy in Washington – a ‘good Communist’ in 1960s America.

  Seeing what life in the West is really like, he discovers there is more to American than what Soviet propaganda has taught him. Increasingly intrigued by the Washington circuit, from outspoken confrontation between diplomats to the uninhibited sexual alliances arrange by their wives with other diplomats, the capitalist ‘poison’ begins to work on him and his wife.

  As he struggles to remain loyal to his country and begins to question who is the real enemy, he has to decide to whom is first loyalty due: country or lover, party or conscience.

  Buy the ebook here

  The Trans-Siberian Express has left Moscow carrying the most powerful, closely guarded man in the Soviet Union - and also the man who plans to kidnap him.

  Tension aboard the train is at a maximum. The KGB has checked and double checked. But as Vasily Yermakov, the Soviet leader, tries to sleep on the first night in his cabin, he has an uneasy feeling that something is about to go wrong.

  Buy the ebook here

  As the Soviet space-shuttle Dove orbits 150 miles above the earth on its maiden flight, Warsaw Pact troops crash into Poland.

  The seventy-two-year-old President of America wants to be re-elected, and for that he needs to win the first stage of the war in space: he needs to capture the Soviet space shuttle. But as the President plans his coup a nuclear-armed shuttle speeds towards target America – and only defection in space can stop it.

  Buy the ebook here

  In neutral Lisbon, British Intelligence have concocted a ruthless doublecross to lure Russia and Germany into a hellish war of attrition on the Eastern Front and so buy Britain the most precious commodity of all: time.

  That plot now hinges on one man: Josef Hoffman, a humble Red cross worker. But who is Hoffman? And where do his loyalties really lie?

  Buy the ebook here

  Moscow treated defectors from the West with kid-gloves. That is, until they had outlived their usefulness. But the American Robert Calder was different. He had defected to Russia with information so explosive that even the iron-clad regime of the Kremlin shook with fear. It had kept him alive. Until now.

  For Calder is desperately keen to return to the West. So they place the ruthless and scheming Spandarian on his trail, a KGB chief with a mind as sharp as the cold steel of an ice pick. And as a back-up they unleash Tokarev, a professional assassin who kills for pleasure…

  Buy the ebook here

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Derek Lambert was born in 1929, and served in the RAF for two and a half years, before becoming a foreign correspondent, travelling the world to exotic locations that later inspired his novels. His travels gave him first-hand knowledge of his material and his authentic tales of espionage made him a household name and bestselling author. He spent the later years of his life in Spain, where he died in 2001 at the age of 71.

  BY THE SAME AUTHOR

  FICTION

  Angels in the Snow

  The Kites of War

  For Infamous Conduct

  Grand Slam

  The Red House

  The Yermakov Transfer

  Touch the Lion's Paw

  The Great Land

  The Saint Peter's Plot

  The Memory Man

  I, Said the Spy

  Trance

  The Red Dove

  The Judas Code

  The Golden Express

  The Man Who Was Saturday

  Vendetta

  Chase

  Triad

  The Night and the City

  The Gate and the Sun

  The Banya

  Horrorscope

  Diamond Express

  The Killing House

  NON-FICTION

  The Sheltered Days

  Don't Quote Me But

  And I Quote

  Unquote

  Just Like the Blitz

  Spanish Lessons

  ABOUT THE PUBLISHER

  Australia

  HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty. Ltd.

  Level 13, 201 Elizabeth Street

  Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia

  www.harpercollins.com.au

  Canada

  HarperCollins Canada

  2 Bloor Street East - 20th Floor

  Toronto, ON, M4W, 1A8, Canada

  www.harpercollins.ca

  New Zealand

  HarperCollins Publishers (New Zealand) Limited

  P.O. Box 1

  Auckland, New Zealand

  www.harpercollins.co.nz

  United Kingdom

  HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.

  1 London Bridge Street

  London SE1 9GF

  www.harpercollins.co.uk

  United States

  HarperCollins Publishers Inc.

  195 Broadway

  New York, NY 10007

  www.harpercollins.com

 

 

 


‹ Prev