With the cold war over, the Foreign Office has decided to retire its veteran spies, beginning with McCready, the ``deceiver’’—head of Britain’s disinformation desk since 1983. McCready balks, demanding a hearing at which his assistant relates four of McCready’s most daring exploits. The first and longest, ``Pride and Extreme Prejudice,‘’ is at once the most suspenseful and melancholic. Here, McCready, having ``turned’’ a top Russian general, sends spy-pal Bruno Morenz into East Germany to accept the Russian’s latest gift—the Soviet Army War Book; but, unknown to McCready, Morenz has just killed a cheating mistress and is cracking up. When the East Germans catch on to Morenz, who panics into hiding, McCready must sneak across the Iron Curtain, find Morenz, retrieve the book, and deal—irrevocably—with his friend. Also subtly shaded with the grays of spydom is ``The Price of the Bride,‘’ in which McCready learns from a pro-West Soviet source that the CIA’s new prize, defecting KGB colonel Pyotr Orlov, is actually a double agent bent on falsely implicating a top CIA-man as a Soviet mole. It’s a masterful spy-vs.-spy battle of wits as McCready sets out to unmask the Russian and save the marked Yank.
Greece, 1940. Not sunny vacation Greece: northern Greece, Macedonian Greece, Balkan Greece—the city of Salonika. In that ancient port, with its wharves and warehouses, dark lanes and Turkish mansions, brothels and tavernas, a tense political drama is being played out. On the northern border, the Greek ar…