In fact, something else nags me, and I realize what it is just before the second intermission of Boris Godunov at the Bolshoi Theatre that evening, where Kedrov takes us as a cultural surprise. An extraordinary and moving performance, of course, in the most sublime surroundings. The bass in the title role is as big and fearsome as a Cossack. We sit in a gilded box with a couple of Politburo types and their wives, who don’t speak English and whose names I don’t remember. Kedrov sits on one side and Fox sits on the other, murmuring the occasional translation in my ear. My agitation increases by the moment. I sit there in an agony of impatience until the curtain drops, the lights illuminate. I snatch Fox’s hand and attempt to sweep him off for a moment of private conversation, but Kedrov steps between us, smiling his emollient smile, and insists we accompany him for a tour of the costume archives.
By the time we return to the hotel, the hour is just past midnight. A trace of gardenia perfumes the air, and a tray of caviar and chilled vodka sits on the sofa table in our suite. How nice. I kick off my shoes—unzip my long evening gown and kick that off, too—drag Fox straight into the bedroom—tug off his bow tie—purr, Let’s do what we did in Paris.
“What did we do in Paris?”
“Don’t you remember Paris, darling? I’ll show you.”
He catches on quickly. When we’re both in bed, covers over our heads, I whisper, “Something’s fishy over there, and I think you know it.”
“Your sister?”
“No. Him. He’s happy. He’s not going anywhere.”
Fox catches his breath. Our tent grows stuffy. I throw back the covers, suck in some oxygen, and moan, “Oh! Oh! Yes, oh God!”
Under the blankets again, I roll him over and bite his neck, so he shouts out the name of his Savior. Then I whisper in his ear, “I’m right, aren’t I? She’s the one who wants out. Which raises the question.”
“What question?” he gasps.
Stuffy again. I sit up and straddle him—tear the buttons off his crisp white formal shirt—oh, yes I do—because I want him off guard, you see—I want him to act and sound like a man making ferocious love to his wife—I want him to let slip something he’d never slip otherwise. His pale hair bristles against the white sheets. His hands find my hips. His eyes shut tight against the sight of Ruth Macallister wearing nothing but her creamy satin slip.
“God, yes, yes! More!” I howl. I roll him on top of me—not an easy feat, he weighs a ton—and draw the covers back up.
“What’s in it for you?” I whisper. “Why all this trouble for a housewife and her kids?”
“Not now!” he hisses back.
“Yes, now! Or I’ll—”
And I guess I’ll never know whether he does what he does next for my sake, for himself, or for the United States of America. Does it matter? He starts with a kiss, a real one. I kiss him back—why not? Down below, he’s just as formidable as you might expect, an advantage he wields so tenderly, so patiently, I fly a little out of my mind at one point and possibly confess a few things you shouldn’t confess to any man, even in bed. Afterward, he carries the caviar into the bedroom and feeds it to me in tiny spoonfuls. Allows me a little vodka to wash it down. Before we sleep, we do it all over again, and I imagine we leave those invisible listeners in no doubt of one thing, anyway, the authenticity of our connection, which might perhaps save our lives—who knows?
At five in the morning, the telephone rings. Fox untangles himself and answers it grimly. He returns with the news that Iris went into labor in the middle of the night and was taken to the Botkin Hospital in central Moscow, where she’s now calling for me.
Iris
August 1948
Dorset, England
The men had concocted a plan to sail to the Isle of Wight and meet some friend of Burgess’s who was throwing a sunset party right by the water. Aunt Vivian and Iris were invited; the children had to stay home with Mrs. Betts—it was that kind of party. What sailboat? Iris wanted to know. Not to worry, Burgess assured her, he’d already chartered one from a chap in Bournemouth who would sail it for them, too.
Iris hated sailing. She was not reassured.
Still, she and Aunt Vivian set about packing a robust and mostly alcoholic picnic for the journey. The restless sky had turned to drizzle, so the children stayed indoors, where Burgess drew them caricatures—he was really a clever artist—that left them in stitches of giggles. When the charm of that amusement faded, he and Sasha and Davenport gave them horsey rides all around the house, neighing and pawing and rearing and racing, culminating in the Honeysuckle Guineas around the drawing room, all furniture moved to the middle (Burgess won, piloted by a shrieking Little Viv).
Eventually someone looked at his watch and said Good God, we’re going to be late. Pandemonium. Sasha and Davenport pushed all the furniture back in place, on Iris’s orders. Aunt Vivian put on lipstick and changed her clothes. Iris scurried around the kitchen and the pantry chasing last-minute necessaries—napkins, champagne glasses, a knife for the cheese, a first aid kit because of knives and champagne—while Burgess did the necessary work of soothing Mrs. Betts’s frayed nerves after all this commotion.
As a result, they were almost an hour late making their way down the cliff path to the rendezvous. The schooner captain was understandably cross. He asked them whether they understood about tides and wind and how they were subject to change according to the time of day, and that he couldn’t possibly think of nipping up the Solent now—they’d have to tack around the entire damned island to reach Abingdon’s place.
Burgess looked at his watch and shrugged. “What’s another hour among men of honor?”
The journey started off well enough, after that dodgy beginning. Sasha and Davenport—both reasonably experienced sailors—helped the captain cast off, while Burgess opened a couple of champagne bottles. The rain lifted. Everybody came out from the shelter of the deckhouse and sprawled comfortably near the bow, drinking champagne and nibbling sandwiches. Iris lay on her stomach and stared at the gray-green water, rising and falling, until she realized she was getting seasick.
“Stare at a fixed point on the horizon,” Sasha said helpfully, so Iris stared at the white chalk cliffs of the island ahead of them and took long, slow breaths of the salty air, until her insides righted themselves.
Behind her, Aunt Vivian talked to Burgess about silkworms. Davenport came to sit beside Iris and sympathize. “Rotten show, seasickness. My brother’s a navy man, doesn’t bother him a bit. Cigarette?”
“No, thank you.”
He took one out and stuck it in his mouth. “Like Beauchamp, eh? Chap’s so chilly, he’s never required a smoke in his life.” He cupped his hand around the end of the cigarette and lit it carefully in the draft. “Intelligence man, you know.”
“Yes, I’d heard.”
“Had you? Well, so much for official secrecy and that.”
“You just told me, didn’t you?”
“Yes, I suppose I did.” He blew a long cloud of smoke into the draft and lowered his voice. “They say Beauchamp pulled off stunts you wouldn’t credit. Dropped him into France, you know, to stir up trouble. I knew a chap who ran a few of them. Told me one story that made my hair stand on end.”
“What happened?”
“Oh, some village in the occupied zone—not sure where, exactly. Beauchamp’s radio operator happens to be some local girl. Possibly he’s sleeping with her, c’est la guerre and all that, one doesn’t ask awkward questions. Anyway, the girl’s just been taken by the local Gestapo, put in some jail in the next village for questioning. I expect you know what that means.”