
Methuen, a seasoned survivor of countless spy missions thrust upon him by the Old Etonians running the Awkward Shop (as the British Secret Service was called), feels he needs a respite from it all. He is looking forward to some trout fishing in Scotland. But when his superior, Dombey, explains that something strange is afoot in the Balkans, Methuen's curiosity is immediately aroused. A fellow British spy has been murdered on a remote mountainside in Serbia by the White Eagles—underground Royalists—presumably because he fell afoul of their life-or-death struggle against Tito and the Communists. What the Royalists are up to is a mystery Dombey wants Methuen to solve. The Cold War—weary Methuen feels his blood stir. At the very least, he thinks, the trout fishing ought to be excellent. Setting up camp in a cave deep in the Serbian countryside, Methuen baits his hooks and waits for the contact who will lead him into the deeper water of the mystery. He finds out soon enough that his mission involves far more than sport fishing—his life is the one on the line. Hunted by both the Communists and the White Eagles, Methuen is played to his limit. He fights for his life, summoning every ounce of his strength as he gets pulled into a roaring cataract of events that eventually lands him on a dizzying mountain peak—and reels readers in for a tour-de-force climax that will leave them breathless.
A veteran British intelligence operative is dispatched to the Serbian mountains to investigate the murder of a colleague, only to find himself caught in a lethal crossfire between rival political factions. Methuen, a weary agent seeking a reprieve from his duties, accepts one final assignment that promises to be a simple reconnaissance mission. He navigates the rugged, isolated terrain of the Balkans, relying on his survival instincts to evade both Communist forces and the underground Royalist group known as the White Eagles. The narrative follows his transition from a man seeking solitude to a target fighting for survival in a high-stakes geopolitical conflict.
Readers frequently highlight the contrast between the protagonist's desire for quiet and the violent reality of his mission. Discussion often centers on the author's ability to render the Serbian wilderness as a character in its own right, adding tension to the espionage plot. Critics note that the pacing effectively mirrors the protagonist's own exhaustion and eventual adrenaline-fueled survival. The book is often cited for its grounded approach to the spy genre, prioritizing tactical realism over elaborate gadgetry. Many readers appreciate the atmospheric quality of the prose, which maintains a sense of unease throughout the narrative.
Page Count:
200
Publication Date:
1980-01-01
Publisher:
Penguin UK
ISBN-10:
0140054774
ISBN-13:
9780140054774
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