Along the way, Gaddis gets fed information by a resident (the sixth spy) of an Old Person's Home, intent on setting the record straight, about him and his service to Great Britain. He supposedly died twenty years ago, but his death was faked by British intelligence to hide that he was a double spy, the Russians thinking he was working for them (he was at first until he realized what a beast Stalin had become) but later, he turns and works for the Brits. Along the way, like in all Cummins books, there's some romance, the British agent Tanya, who is told to spy on Gaddis's excavations of the past. She ends up sympathizing with him, realizing his life was in danger. Gradually, we learn the secret: the Soviet Premier, Sergei Platov a former K.B.G agent and clearly, a doppelganger for Vladimir Putin, supposedly, after WW II, tried to defect to the West. If this was ever found it, the Brits would look foolish for not allowing it, the Russian Putin would appear to have been traitor.
The novel, towards the end, becomes almost silly, with one improbability after another. Nevertheless, it was good at creating the tension between the West and the former Soviet Union, which Putin hopes to return to its former glory. And it is interesting to learn about the Cambridge Five, their lives and subterfuge before secretly flying off to Russia to the dismay of Great Britain.
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