29

IN FACT, THE PARAMETERS DID BRING BACK A NO-NO, BUT BY THEN IT WAS the third week in May, and other possibilities were stirring. Our officers at the American Embassy in Moscow reported that Castro was reacting favorably to his Soviet hosts, which upset Director McCone. He soon proposed to Bobby Kennedy and the Standing Group of the National Security Council that we “subvert military leaders in Cuba to the point of their being willing to overthrow Castro.”

My father, receiving this news from Helms, gave me a wink. He had developed in the last month an odd, ribald wink, as if a girl we were talking about had just walked into the room. If the manta ray was now behind us, the prospect of employing AM/LASH remained alive. Indeed, the wink referred to AM/LASH. Cal and Helms had labored for a month to bring McCone around to his last proposal. “Always look to the language,” said Cal. “We’ve built a foundation for ourselves almost as good as a directive. ‘Subvert military leaders to the point where they will be ready to overthrow Castro.’ Well, son, tell me: How do you do that by half? You can subvert a foreign military officer, but you cannot control his every move. If Cubela manages to put a large hole into Fidel Castro’s head, we will be able to point to McCone’s remark. No one at Standing Group countermanded him. We are functioning, therefore, under the sanction of a general authorization. Always look to the language.”

Two weeks later, on June 19, Jack Kennedy sent a memo concerning Cuba over to Special Group: “Nourish a spirit of resistance which could lead to significant defections and other by-products of unrest.”

“By-products of unrest,” said Cal, “enhances the authorization.”

Of Helms, Cal’s opinion had never been higher. “Dick has been perfectly choke-proof on this,” he told me. “It takes moxie to give the go-ahead for AM/LASH. Helms knows as well as you or I how unstable Mr. Cubela has been in the past, but he also knows that we have to finalize Castro or a lot of Third World leaders are going to get the wrong impression. Why, Helms sees the importance of this sufficiently to put his own future up for grabs. He is bound to be the next DCI after McCone, but he is not playing it safe, not with Cubela. I respect that.”

“Yessir.”

I do not know whether my own sense of oncoming events affected my perceptions all summer, but I had to wonder whether everyone might be losing some part of their control. I know I squandered the good part of a week obtaining the answer to a simple question. “Where,” Cal wanted to know, “is Artime now? I want to locate him in my mind.”

Hunt wouldn’t tell me. “I can’t sacrifice someone else’s security,” he informed me. I followed up reports that Artime was in New Orleans with Carlos Marcello and Sergio Arcacha Smith; in the U.S. Army at Fort Belvoir; in Guatemala; in Costa Rica, Mexico, Miami, Madrid, Venezuela, and Nicaragua. It proved to be the last. Chevi Fuertes supplied the information. Under Somoza’s benevolent sanction, Artime was training an army of several hundred Cubans, and his bills were—or were they not?—being paid by the Agency. That last detail I would have to discover for myself. Cal sent a query to Harlot who returned the following reply: “Look no further than Bill Pawley, Howard Hughes, José Alemán, Luis Somoza, Prio Socarras, Henry Luce, Carlos Marcello, Santos Trafficante, or friends of Richard Nixon. Take your pick. God leads Artime to the money, and Howard Hunt may be the guiding light. Unlike Manuel Artime, I do not have God inside my heart. Nor Howard’s angelic certainties. God inhabits my conscience instead. He asks: Is this worth pursuing? Artime has three hundred men. He will march them up the hill, and then he will march them down again. Whereas thee and me and your boy-wonder ought to have a chin-chin. You see, I have come to share your conviction that something must be done about the Great Unmentionable.”

Well, that was news. Harlot had been looking upon Cuba as no more than a mote in the dust of the great Miltonian contest between CIA and KGB. “Yes,” said Cal, “one has to wonder why Hugh has come around.”

Dinner with him did not materialize until early in August. I had entertained the illusion that Kittredge might be there, but Cal and I arrived to learn that she was in Maine at the Keep. The meal, served by Merlinda, the Montagues’ cook, was roast beef and Yorkshire pudding, if I recollect, with a magnum of Haut Brion ’55—is it a prank of memory that the year of the wine is recalled?

We were illumined by Glenfiddich before we sat down, and Harlot was in a fine mood, and waxing wicked. Even Helms was dipped. “He’d be perfect if one didn’t sense that when alone, he bites his lip.” For all my father’s newly acquired love of Helms, he roared with delight. I, however, could as easily imagine Harlot saying: “When Cal Hubbard charges through the forest, one does root for the trees.” I had to hope that he would never come around to me. Addressing the defects of others, he would show the same far-off gleam of the eye that a dentist often fails to conceal when he has brought his drill up to the cavity and can begin raiding your molar of its rot. Dean Rusk came under scrutiny—“Incapable of going forward if there is a cloud in the sky.” Nixon fared worse. “Would have been a prize for the devil but that worthy wearied of gazing upon him.” Eisenhower was “a large balloon soaring on inert gas,” and Kennedy is “sufficiently skilled in duplicity to make a good Chief of Station.”

Rosen would soon be honored by a large share of attention. Tonight, Harlot was lit-up, and had a tale to tell.

“You are aware, of course, of Arnold’s half-kept secret?” he asked.

“Yes,” I said.

“I don’t know how you can live with it,” Cal burst out. “Rosen might end up in a police station one morning after a night in the men’s room.”

“Of course, Rosen is in peril,” said Hugh, “but not, for God’s sakes, in a men’s room. A Turkish bath, perhaps. Or the wrong boy in a hotel room. Nonetheless, I have affection for Arnold. He does live in his own kind of peril and it keeps him observant. We can all use some of that.”

As if he had been accused of lacking just such a vital faculty, my father said with some annoyance, “Why bring his name up at all?”

“Because I feel indiscreet. So I will divulge a small operation. Both of you must vow not to pass it on.”

“So vowed,” said Cal, raising his hand. The gesture was automatic—I could recognize they had engaged in this ritual on more than a few occasions.

“So vowed,” said I, joining ranks.

“‘Rosen’s Raid’ I call it,” said Harlot. “He came to me a couple of months ago and asked what I thought of his prospects for advancement. ‘Or the lack of them,’ I answered. I did not waste his time. ‘Rosen, you can go far,’ I began, ‘but only if you get yourself a wife.’ ‘Would you,’ he asked, ‘say the same for Harry Hubbard?’ ‘Certainly not,’ I said, ‘he’s neither ambitious nor homosexual.’”

When I chose not to react, Harlot went on.

“Well, I won’t take up our time with the demoralizingly sad little tale Rosen had to tell. His closet is a dungeon and he is most unhappy with his habit. He would like to break out. He feels what he terms ‘subliminal stirrings’ he has never felt before toward the other sex. I tell him that it wouldn’t be a bad idea to commence a new habit. ‘Sex,’ I tell him, ‘for those who are interested only in the bottom line, is naught but a notably agreeable friction in a familiar channel.’ ‘Should I start with whores?’ he asked, and promptly confessed to a most interesting notion that he might be able to cross the bridge with such a highly promiscuous partner, because then he would be in propinquity with all the men who had gone before him.

“‘Do stay away from whores,’ I said. ‘Since we are speaking frankly, I will suggest that you may simply be too Jewish to bear their scorn.’ ‘That’s half of what I’ve always found in sex,’ Rosen answered. ‘Scorn. I’m used to that.’

“‘Yes,’ I said, ‘but if you form an attachment to whores, you’ll never find the kind of woman who would be suitable not only to you, but—face the real level of the bar—suitable to the Agency as well. At least, if you wish to rise!’ ‘Well, you could be right,’ he said, ‘but decent women inspire nothing in me.’ ‘Nonsense,’ I answered, ‘there is no greater pleasure than that obtained from a conquered repugnance.’ ‘You are quoting the Marquis de Sade,’ said Rosen. ‘Indeed I am,’ said I, and we had our laugh. ‘Yes,’ I told him, knowing that I had turned the argument, ‘work up an entirely new set of habits on some virgin slate.’ ‘Do you mean literally a virgin?’ he asked. ‘Why not?’ I said. ‘I believe I do. I can think of someone.’ ‘Who is it?’ he wanted to know, ‘have I met her?’ ‘If so, only casually,’ I said, ‘she came back from South America to work for me a couple of years ago, only far down the hall from you. She was bright enough, but not right for what one needed. I encouraged her to resign from the Agency, and had her installed at State. Now she works for Rusk.’ Rosen lit up at this job description. He is so ambitious. ‘What is she like personally?’ he asked. ‘A churchgoer,’ I told him, ‘plain as a post.’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘that makes it sound like an arranged marriage.’ ‘So it is,’ I told him. ‘We’re not inclined to waste each other’s time, are we? Your coreligionists used to go in for arranged marriages in the shtetl, did they not? Your blood must be teeming with such arrangements.’ ‘Yes,’ he answered, ‘but the bride was not a churchgoer.’ ‘Yes, but then, you are not much of a Jew any longer, are you?’ I countered. ‘No,’ he said, ‘not much. The emotional bond, however, is desperately deep.’ ‘How deep?’ ‘Well, not so deep that I can’t take a look.’ ‘Before you do,’ I said, ‘I want to say that you’re not getting the connection for nothing.’ ‘No?’ ‘No,’ I said, ‘you will not only woo her, but manage to traduce her loyalty from Rusk to you, where, of course, it will bubble on tap for me.’ Do you know, I like Rosen. His eyes came right back at me with the sweetest smile. ‘Good,’ he said, ‘at last I’ll be able to practice some of those low techniques you imparted on Low Thursdays.’ What a rejoinder. I had to laugh. He’s alert, is Rosen.

“Since then, it has been in the works. I gave him a few photographs of the lady, and the church she frequents, Old First Presbyterian, near Judiciary Square. Do you know, J. Edgar Buddha’s first communion was there? Rosen hopped to it. Sat behind her for one Sunday, across the aisle on another, bumped into her on the way out, exchanged names—she couldn’t have been more thrilled: A potential convert from Judaism was as exciting to her as an Italian tenor to an English lady. They agreed to meet at the Friday-night church social. Dinner on the following Tuesday. On the next Friday, he walked her home from the church social and managed to kiss her in the hallway. Naturally, I was acting as his case officer. ‘Didn’t you feel it was appropriate to push further?’ I asked. ‘I was not wild about her breath,’ he replied. ‘Well, you’ve got to get past the nonessentials,’ I told him. Since then, we’ve been pushing it.”

“Is this woman’s name Nancy Waterston?” I asked.

“Of course,” said Harlot. “In fact, Nancy spoke most pleasantly of an evening she had with you in Montevideo. I almost thought of putting you on the job instead of Rosen.”

“Wouldn’t it have been more likely to get going with Harry?” asked Cal.

“Up to a point,” said Harlot. “But Rosen, I think, will be ready before long to get through the crux. After that, he may have to marry the girl. I think it’s exactly what it is going to take. She has her own money, is loyal as a hound to whomever is her boss, and so, contrary to the normal precepts, we have to encourage a massive sexual entanglement. We’ve had some curious obstacles en route, I must say. For three evenings in a row, Arnold could not bring himself to go past the point of kissing Miss Waterston on the lips. ‘Everything rebels,’ he said. ‘Or are you merely too timid?’ I asked. ‘Yes, I am frightened,’ he agreed. ‘Take her to a movie,’ I said. ‘Put your hand on her shoulder. Then, at a given moment, move it down to her breast.’”

Harlot now looked at us. “One phenomenon never fails to amaze me. It does not matter how sophisticated an agent you are dealing with, sooner or later there will be some undeveloped aspect that will call for elementary instruction. So, with Rosen. I had to lead him through the petting game. ‘If you cannot bring yourself to shift your hand,’ I told him, ‘count to ten slowly, and, of course, silently, and in that time concentrate on the fact that you will have no respect for yourself if you fail to obey the challenge. Then, at the count of ten, plunge.’ Rosen took it in, and replied, ‘That is a technique Julien Sorel employed in The Red and the Black.’ ‘Certainly is,’ I said, ‘and Stendhal was a master psychologist.’ Do you know, the moment he could picture himself as Julien Sorel, it commenced to work. You turn the lock in every agent with a separate key. Rosen made progress. By now, I can tell you, they are commingled in a heap on her living room floor. No coitus, not yet, but Rosen is getting there. She is consumed with a taste for hours of polymorphous perverse, which is, I suppose, the level of sex most suitable to swamp creatures. Carnality that is all but consummated has become her cup of tea. I believe it is going to work. Rosen now sees her every night, has confessed to his hitherto homosexual bondage, and she is wholly captured. In her mind, they are both virgins. Since he is also Jewish and she has obviously made up her mind to convert him, we have an effective quid pro quo. Rosen gives up his religion plus his bachelordom; she gives us top-level tap into State.”

“I don’t know that you have an equation,” said Cal.

“Care to make a side bet?”

“Yes. One of us pays for dinner at Sans Souci within sixty days.”

“You’re on,” said Harlot. “I expect to eat and drink at no expense to myself. The Red and the Black has proved most useful, you see. Not unlike Madame de Rênal, Miss Waterston is consumed with passion. At my suggestion, Arnold absented himself for a couple of days and she was absolutely beside herself. I am convinced that before long, he will blossom into honest priapic ventures. After all, she provides him with such a sense of power and purpose.”

“Wait till he wakes up to the fact that she is, by your words, ‘plain as a post,’” said Cal.

“I regret the characterization,” said Hugh. “Arnold now shows me photographs of her in summer dresses. She has blossomed. I tell you, before she will allow herself to lose her Reed Rosen, she will come to understand that his career is of first importance to both of them, and that the Agency is a better guardian of the chalice than State. Leave it to Arnold. He’s coming onto the high ground now, and he does know how to maneuver. Another man might have seduced the woman in a week and taken a year to decide what to try next.”

“Well, let us root for you to win,” said Cal, “even if I have to buy the wine.”

“Yes,” said Harlot. “After all, knowing what Rusk is up to may yet count for a good deal.”

“Well, I might just agree.”

“Of course,” said Hugh. “Since Cuba is now of interest to me, Rusk can be a factor there. A couple of years ago when everyone, including you, Cal, saw the Caribbean as the main go, I knew it was incidental to the show. Now, after Pigs and Mongoose, it’s on the back burner. I, however, am worried stiff. Cuba can be used most adroitly these days by Khrushchev and Mao.”

“I don’t know about that,” said Cal. “Khrushchev and Mao are two gentlemen who, at this moment, seem pretty far apart to me.”

“On the contrary,” said Hugh, “I see them as actors in a scenario of far-reaching disinformation. I will pose a chronology—ponder it, would you? In May, right in the midst of Castro’s visit to Moscow, Peking announced its desire to hold talks with the U.S.S.R. Stated object: Bring to an end all ideological rifts between them. Then, last month, Soviets and Chinese held most secret meetings in Moscow. By their termination on July 21, the attempt at conciliation was an announced failure. The Soviet Union declared its advocacy of “peaceful coexistence with the U.S.,” and the People’s Republic of China publicly judged that course to be an abject surrender to capitalism. We were witnessing—it was generally agreed upon by Western correspondents and diplomats—nothing less than a full-dress split in the international Communist movement. I say we are being handed a scenario.”

“To what end?”

“To divide us. I tell you, they are bringing off a gargantuan production in disinformation. It will yet overshadow Dzerzhinsky’s manipulation of the Trust.”

“They can never manage to keep it secret,” Cal said. “Too many of their people have to get in on it sooner or later.”

“Not nearly so many as you expect. What the hell, they are free of public opinion, so they need never worry over the morale of their middle-level cadres. Tell a good Communist to despise Red China on Monday and smile at it on Tuesday—he will be able to function with only a small dislocation of the gut. Even if they can’t keep it an absolute secret, it is going to work. World opinion follows the form of things rather than the substance. Already this masterpiece of disinformation is known to a few of us Agency folk. We set out to convince our own leaders. Can we? Dubious. Why, even Helms is of two minds over it. And all the while, the few Communists in the know will be elaborating their scenario. We will be provided with border clashes. We will hear scalding vilifications of each other. Separate spheres of influence will emerge in the Communist world. Of course, we will buy it. Their inner guard will play on us with consummate art.”

“How do you fit Cuba into this?” I asked.

“As the lead horse. Castro will make overtures of peace. Russia will not be far behind. Communism will begin to seem human. Some of it, at any rate. Can it be Christian not to make friends with reformed enemies? I tell you, they will end by inhabiting our councils and our economy. Where we can never trust all of Communism, we will certainly put our trust in what we think is the more amiable half of a now-divided entity. We will even think we control the balance of power.

“In consequence,” said Harlot, “I have come around to thinking that Castro must go. Before Mao and Khrushchev gave their assent to this elevated form of theater, Cuba was but a folly for the Soviets; now, it could be the prettiest piece on their board.”

“Is Castro aware of the scenario?” I asked.

“I would surmise,” said Harlot, “that he is too young and too emotional to be taken into the councils of the elders. Only when passion is ready to transmute itself into will can one be trustworthy at the highest level.”

His eyes were the embodiment of his own statement. Luminous as the light of still water was the steel-tipped manifest of his eyes.

Harlot's Ghost
titlepage.xhtml
Mail_9781588365897_epub_tp_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_toc_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_ded_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_epi_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm1_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm2_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm3_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm4_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm5_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm6_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm7_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm8_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm9_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm10_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm11_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm12_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_fm13_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_p01_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c01_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c02_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c03_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c04_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c05_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c06_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c07_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c08_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c09_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c10_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c11_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c12_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c13_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c14_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_p02_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c15_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c16_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c17_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c18_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c19_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c20_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c21_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c22_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c23_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c24_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c25_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c26_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c27_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c28_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c29_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c30_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_p03_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c31_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c32_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c33_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c34_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c35_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c36_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c37_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_p04_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c38_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c39_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c40_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c41_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c42_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c43_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c44_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c45_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c46_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c47_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c48_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c49_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c50_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c51_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c52_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c53_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c54_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c55_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c56_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c57_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c58_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c59_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c60_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c61_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c62_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c63_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c64_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c65_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c66_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c67_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c68_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c69_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c70_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c71_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c72_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c73_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_p05_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c74_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c75_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c76_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c77_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c78_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c79_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c80_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c81_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c82_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c83_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c84_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c85_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c86_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c87_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c88_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c89_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c90_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c91_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c92_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c93_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c94_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c95_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c96_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c97_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c98_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_c99_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_100_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_101_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_102_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_103_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_104_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_105_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_106_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_107_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_108_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_109_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_110_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_111_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_112_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_113_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_114_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_p06_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_115_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_116_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_117_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_118_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_119_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_120_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_121_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_122_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_123_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_124_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_125_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_126_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_127_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_128_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_129_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_130_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_131_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_132_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_133_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_134_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_135_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_136_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_137_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_138_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_139_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_140_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_141_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_142_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_143_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_144_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_145_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_146_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_147_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_148_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_149_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_150_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_151_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_152_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_153_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_154_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_p07_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_bm1_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_bm2_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_bm3_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_bm4_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_bm5_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_bm6_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_bm7_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_bm8_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_bm9_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_adc_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_qts_r1.htm
Mail_9781588365897_epub_cop_r1.htm