A part of Gabriel did not mourn Hughes’s passing, for it appeared he had met with the end he richly deserved. But why had Alistair Hughes died? It was possible that it was an accident, that Hughes had simply rushed into the street, into the path of an oncoming car. Possible, thought Gabriel, but unlikely. Gabriel did not believe in accidents; he made accidents happen. So did the Russians.
Israeli intelligence is “on the nose” with its allies following the aborted defection of Russian double-agent Konstantin Kirov, gunned down in sight of a safe house in Vienna. Recriminations fall squarely on the shoulders of intelligence chief, Gabriel Allon, former master spy and art restorer. Then, as Alistair Hughes, head of MI6’s Vienna station, is killed in an unauthorised trip to Bern, Switzerland and found to be the subject to a clandestine Israeli intelligence operation, the Swiss authorities are far from pleased.
“ISIS’s ideology endures, and it’s finally managed to seep into Switzerland.” Bittel fixed Gabriel with a reproachful stare. “And so I will overlook that you entered the country without bothering to inform the NDB, and on a false passport at that. I assume you are not here for the skiing. It’s been terrible this year.”
Hughes’ final movements points to the possibility of a Russian mole highly-placed in Britain’s MI6, and in an attempt to discover who is behind the leaks, businessman and SVR operative Sergei Morosov is snatched off the streets of Strasbourg for interrogation. But it is Allon’s predecessor, Uzi Navot, in discussions with Werner Schwartz in Vienna, who makes the vital link to cold-war operations in Beirut in the early sixties, and the “Other Woman” of the title.
From surveillance to safe houses, the Schweizerhof Hotel to Starbucks, from Andalucia to Washington DC, author Daniel Silva brings us a contemporary fictional spy-ring scandal reaching back to the infamous spy scandal of the early sixties surrounding the “Cambridge 5” – MacLean, Burgess, Philby, Blunt and Cairncross. Fact and fiction blur in light of recent true-life assassination attempts by the SVR; where the “fictional” head of MI6, Graham Seymour, was twelve-year old in the sixties when his father Arthur Seymour was stationed, in Beirut. Allon and Seymour work tirelessly through his reports sent to London in search of an identity. There are cameos of Office stalwarts, former spy boss Ari Shamron and Christopher Keller, now with MI6.
A reader might find a notebook handy to keep track of names and events. As always, the book starts slowly and momentum increases rapidly as the mole is cornered and seeks to escape via the Potomac River locks, undone by divided loyalties. Expect a twist in the tail as long-held friendships between British, American and Israeli intelligence services falter in the wake of scandal.