The second novel of the first Bernard Samson trilogy, Mexico Set is a straight follow-on from Berlin Game. The dust from the shock ending of the first novel is still settling. Bernie has been cleared of suspicion - officially, at least - but he still feels he's on probation. He's in Mexico City with Dicky Cruyer, who has got the Berlin Desk at London Central which should, by rights, have been Bernie's. They are there because there's a disgruntled KGB operative called Erich Stinnes, who might just be ready to defect. He approached Werner Volkmann and his young wife Zena in a German club. Stinnes said he'd mistaken her for a famous beauty (whose brother Bernie and Werner just happened to know, growing up in Berlin). A genuine mistake or a coded message?
Ultimately, Bernie gets the job of enrolling Stinnes. He knows this is his only chance to recover his career. But what if it's all a con? What if Stinnes is actually out to enrol Bernie? And why is everyone, friend or foe, apparently dead set on banjaxing Bernie's operation?
It all ends in a genuine Mexican stand-off, which is truly thrilling - and also multilayered. Deighton's mastery shows in the way he ends the novel. No what-happened-next, no analysis and absolutely no unravelling or regathering of loose ends. He always knew he had a third novel for that. And a second trilogy... maybe a third.
A second instalment, then, that is every bit as good as the first.
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