The reshuffle had the approval of the president, declared the prime minister. The reforms the White House had initiated needed fresh impetus from a revitalized government. And those reforms were being extended beyond the economy. The U.S. Embassy attack and the ongoing investigation had focused attention on Russian law enforcement and exposed a totally unacceptable level of corruption. The minister ultimately responsible had to bear the burden of that fault. Nikolai Gregorovich Belik was therefore being replaced. In the new democratic system of Russia the role of the Federal Security Service had changed, taking on more of a law enforcement role. Therefore it was as culpable for a level of criminality all too often described in the West as being out of control. It was an accusation that could not be allowed to continue. For that reason Viktor Kedrov was also being moved. The use of a Russian chemical and biological warhead in a fortunately failed attack upon the United Nations and of other Russian devices in further outrages had greatly embarrassed and humiliated the country as well as initially placing some strain upon relationships between Russia and the United States of America. As the Duma already knew, some steps had been taken to rectify clear lack of military supervision. Defense Minister General Sergei Gromov, who should have prevented that failure, was being retired.
“You chose correctly,” said the president’s chief of staff later.
“Unfortunate there was a need to choose,” said Danilov.
“The president supports people who are loyal to him.”
Danilov recognized they feared a parliamentary fight back. A battle in which he could still be the equivalent of a germ warfare missile fired against the White House. A mistake to ease the tension on the ratchet wheel. “I do not know the new interior minister.”
“An advocate of reforms and the new Russia.”
“Whom I should brief?”
Chelyag’s face hardened and Danilov was glad: He wanted the man fully to accept he’d not only deciphered the code but was able to communicate in it, just like a foreign language.
Chelyag said, “The crisis committee no longer exists because so many who formed it no longer exist in any position of authority. It is not being reestablished. You will continue to report only to me. The arrangement is understood by the new minister. Everything is now understood by everybody.”
A mistake to believe he was a better exponent of the newly learned art, Danilov recognized. “I’m sure it is.”
“How sure are you of this all concluding as it has to conclude, Dimitri Ivanovich?” demanded Chelyag, tightening his own ratchet wheel.
“The Russian end of the conspiracy here will be destroyed,” declared Danilov. “There’s still uncertainty-and a Russian element-in America.”
“We don’t want anything involving Russia ending inconclusively,” said the other man. “Don’t forget that, will you, Dimitri Ivanovich?”
That night Baratov did collect his sister in the Oldsmobile, and again they ate in the American-themed restaurant. Their conversation was inconsequential except for two minutes on the recording tape.
Baratov: It must have been good, talking to him again?
Naina: He said he went straight through-that it was the easiest route imaginable.
Baratov: What about the stuff?
Naina: Waved over at Grodno without being stopped. Halfway there by now.
Baratov: What about Gavri?
Naina: Hasn’t made contact yet.
Baratov: I spoke to Svetlana about moving to America. She likes the idea.
Naina: The more I think about it, the more I think Gavri needs to go.
Cowley looked around the embassy listening room and said, “Yevgenni Leanov got past U.S. immigration. He’s in America, waiting for enough materiel to arrive to cause a major catastrophe.”
“‘Already halfway there,’” echoed Martlew. “And he’s probably going to kill another Russian.”
“Hell of a busy guy,” said Cowley.
Exasperated by the military’s insistence that it would take at least a month to run a three services’ personnel comparison against the Chicago e-fit and the manufacturers’ equally frustrating estimate to collate the distribution and purchase of maroon Land Cruisers throughout Illinois, Pamela seized the Oldsmobile intercept as the breath of air to blow her out of the doldrums.
Acknowledging the near impossibility of a search without a name-if indeed Leanov hadn’t traveled under his own-she used Frank Norton’s White House muscle to have immigration check every Russian passport arrival at every U.S. port or airport, East and West Coast, and to run checks for American residency addresses on the visa forms. There was renewed frustration at further insistence that such a search could take weeks despite the narrow timeframe since Leanov’s disappearance from Moscow.
“You want to tell the president it’s going to take that long or shall I?” Pamela asked the deputy director of Immigration, guessing the director himself had ducked her call.
Observing local territory protocol, she had Stephen Murray pass to Chicago Customs the information that the arms cargo ship was already in the Atlantic. In minutes Terry Osnan’s master index identified Peter Samuels as the Customs director who’d attended the first Washington emergency meeting. Unlike the head of Immigration, Samuels personally and at once took her call.
“We’ve got planes as well as ships,” said the man. “If it’s somewhere in the Atlantic, we’ll find it.”
“We don’t want them to realize we’re looking.”
There was a pained silence. “It’s something we’ve done before.”
And they did it again, in just six hours. Pamela immediately called Leonard Ross. She said, “We’ve located the shipment. But we wouldn’t have been able to without Bill Cowley.”
“I still can’t believe it,” said Patrick Hollis. There were six people around the cafeteria table, including Carole Parker. They were all so occupied with Robert Standing that they hadn’t rejected Hollis when he’d joined them.
“I don’t know,” said Carole. “There was always something about him not just quite right.”
“There must be a lot involved for there not even to have been a bail application,” suggested a teller.
“You spent a lot of time with the FBI guy,” said another, to Hollis. “You get any idea how much?”
“No,” said Hollis, enjoying being asked for an opinion. “But I got the impression it was fairly substantial.”
“So he’ll go to jail?”
“I would think so,” said Hollis. “Poor guy.”
“Why ever feel sorry for him?” demanded Carole.
38
The aerial surveillance docking estimate of five days was confirmed by the Cidicj Star’s cargo manifest filed with Chicago Customs. It gave the fifteenth as the arrival date and listed three containers of tractor and engine parts for OverOcean portside collection. With so much time to prepare, William Cowley had the uneasy impression that he was returning to a vacuum, an impression heightened by all the necessary planning already under way. Worryingly, Leonard Ross’s diary was too full to see him on his first day back.
Terry Osnan had installed a large map of the eastern seaboard of the United States, extending up to include the east coast of Canada and the St. Lawrence Seaway entrance to the Great Lakes. On it he marked the progress of the Cidicj Star-appropriately designated by a red stick pin-constantly updating from Coast Guard aerial reports. Pamela had organized three SWAT teams and fixed at twenty the number of extra agents needed in Chicago to maintain the necessary surveillance on the containers once they were unloaded, to lead them to the terrorist group and the General for whom the military hadn’t offered any identification. Neither had the General made any further approach to the now totally FBI firewalled Cyber Shack.
Although the contact between Washington and Moscow had been absolute, Cowley and Pamela reviewed every development in his absence. Pamela began to regret the meeting halfway through, because it came out like a litany of her achievements, which she hadn’t int
ended. She thought Cowley looked drained-worse, he looked distracted.
She was even more discomfited when, at the end, he said, “Quite a success story! Congratulations!”
“You already said that, from Moscow,” Pamela reminded him curtly. “I got a couple of lucky breaks and you had a bad one. From which we’ve recovered. We’re still in good shape.” Her ex-husband had drunk too much-it was as much that as her career determination that wrecked the marriage-but she couldn’t recognize any of the signs in Cowley, although there was perhaps the vaguest hand tremor.
“Can’t think of anything you haven’t already got in hand,” he said. There was something like condescension in Pamela surrendering the desk chair to him. The irritation came at once. That was self-pity-or something like it-and went way beyond any remorse he needed to feel. Unless, perhaps, the uncertainty wasn’t remorse at losing the cargo-which she’d pointed out they’d found again-but something else. Back on base now. Time to get a grip on himself.
“What about going there ourselves?” Pamela said.
Cowley considered the question. “Chicago’s going to be the focus. Nowhere else we need to be.”
“Together.”
Cowley wasn’t sure if it was a question or a statement. “There’ll have to be split-second coordination between us and Dimitri in Moscow. I can do that as easily from Chicago as from here; better, even, actually being on the spot.”
“I think we should be together,” stated Pamela.
“So do I.”
“How’s Dimitri taking the death of his wife?”
Cowley had forgotten Pamela had known. “OK.”
“What was it?”
“Routine operation that went wrong,” avoided Cowley. “Don’t know the details.”
“Your hair doesn’t look as if it’s sliding off the side of your head anymore. How have you been?” She couldn’t talk about what she wanted to in official surroundings like this. When-how-could she talk about it?
“OK,” he said, leaning sideways to his briefcase. “I brought you a present.” It was a joke matroyshka set; the one-on-top-of-the-other doll representing Boris Yeltsin had a red nose and a glass of vodka in its hand.
Pamela smiled her thanks and said, “I haven’t been anywhere to justify bringing back a gift. I could buy you dinner if you’re not one of those old-fashioned guys who thinks a man always has to pay.” Was this how it was done in singles’ bars? Not that the intention was sex. She wanted a different setting for a quite different sort of intimacy, and this was the best she could think of.
Cowley appeared as surprised as Pamela was at herself. He said, “That would be a nice welcome home.”
They went to Georgetown again. It was Cowley’s suggestion to stop for a drink at the Four Seasons, and Pamela chose a martini to his scotch. She changed to mineral water at Nathans and because that meant a half bottle Cowley fit in a second whiskey while she finished it. After walking aimlessly along M Street, they decided on the restaurant in which they’d eaten with Danilov. Again they were early enough not to need a reservations. Cowley had another scotch while they considered the menu and chose a French beaujolais to go with the meal.
Pamela said; “I’ve forgotten who’s to be the host.”
“So had I. Sorry. Want me to cancel the wine?”
“Shouldn’t you?” she asked, taking the opening.
He was caught by her seriousness. “Have I missed part of the plot here?”
“I hope not.”
“Why don’t you sketch it out for me?”
Pamela did, in seconds, knowing nothing beyond what Osnan had told her the day she returned from Albany. Anticipating the question, she said, “I tried to get a name but couldn’t.”
“I drink,” Cowley declared flatly.
“I’ve noticed.”
“But it doesn’t-will never-screw up how I work a case. Booze had nothing to do with my lifting the street surveillance in Moscow.”
“I accept that. But I’m not the person you’ve got to convince if these stories build.”
“How can I stop them? The stories, I mean?”
Pamela shook her head. “I don’t know. It was important that you knew they were circulating.”
“I appreciate it.”
“Were there any problems in Moscow?”
She couldn’t have heard of the previous occasion with the hooker. Only Danilov knew that. She was talking about now. “There were a couple of sessions: a celebration when we found the arms cache. Other people drank more than I did.”
“I just wanted you to be warned,” Pamela said. She supposed there had never been a right time but decided that her moment had been wrong. Until at least halfway through the meal Cowley toyed with just one glass of wine before deciding-and declaring-that it was a stupid reaction and began sharing it properly with her. It was an improvement and each relaxed a little, but what she’d said hung between them. Finally he said, “Was that what this was all about? Warning me?”
“Partly, I guess.”
“What’s the other part?”
Pamela shrugged, bemused by her difficulty. “Maybe an apology.”
“For what?”
“Being such a tight-ass before.”
“Got you what you wanted.”
“So let’s make another part a celebration,” she said. “For you as well as me. I did get some breaks. You prevented the Lincoln Memorial catastrophe. If we’re scoring points, we’re about even.”
Cowley finished the bottle between their two glasses. “So here’s to us.”
“I’ll drink to that,” said Pamela.
Once more he was caught by her seriousness. “Is there another part we haven’t covered yet?”
“I’m not sure. I think there could be.” Wasn’t that the way of single bars, always up front, in your face?
“So how we going to cover it?”
“My taking control ends with my buying the meal.”
Cowley was very nervous, frightened at first that he was going to fail, which made him even more nervous. He tried to cover his difficulty with foreplay, which she seemed to enjoy and matched him, stroke for stroke, tongue for tongue, hand for hand, and it began to happen. They joined hurriedly and came hurriedly together, but he didn’t need to stop. Their second orgasm took longer but was again together, Pamela bucking and crying out and then arcing under him.
It was a long time before they spoke. Cowley said, “You were right. If we’d tried that the last time you stayed over, it would have killed me.”
“You believe me when I tell you I had no idea this was going to happen?”
“Easily. I had no idea it was going to happen, either. Sorry?”
“No. You?”
“No.”
“We don’t need to analyze anything, do we?”
“No,” he agreed again.
There was another long silence before he said, “I can handle it, you know. Booze.”
“I’m here now. We can handle it together.”
Dimitri Danilov had the same time during which to organize the simultaneously coordinated swoop the moment the Americans were led to the terrorist group but was confronted with the difficulty of Petrovka security, particularly now that Ashot Mizin had been positively identified as the eyes and ears of the other intended targets. He considered and rejected going to Gorki, not wanting prematurely to confront Reztsov and Averin. He continued using the U.S. Embassy facilities to produce enlarged, identifying photographs he personally distributed to the commanders of the three spetznaz units selected for the seizure operation upon the personal authority of Georgi Chelyag. Danilov spent most of one day with the three men, all colonels, a lot of it convincing them that such a level of cooperation really did exist between Moscow and Washington.
Yuri Pavin reached the end of an inquiry that had begun while Danilov had still been in America, folding back layer upon layer of company concealment finally to discover that the ownership of the Golden Hussar was joint between Naina Ka
rpov and Igor Baratov. Naina also turned out to share ownership of both of Baratov’s garages.
The watch was maintained on the Oldsmobile’s garage, but during the one outing there was nothing of any significance in the overheard conversation between brother and sister, apart from Baratov wondering what the terrorists planned to hit, to Naina’s dismissal that she didn’t know. Intriguingly she added, “We’ll probably find out soon.”
It was during another cleaning visit to Larissa’s grave that Danilov began reflecting on the militia corruption that her husband had so epitomized and how his determination to eradicate it at least from Petrovka had been overwhelmed by her death.
He summoned Pavin as soon as he got back to militia headquarters and said, “How many detectives on your suspect list?”
“Six,” replied his deputy. “Seven including Mizin.”
“Who’ll tell us everything we want to know to save his neck,” judged Danilov. “And I want it all. Every name, every brigade or organization. We’ll put Mizin in court as a prosecution witness against those he knows about and in turn use what they know to get the others. I’ll clear the whole damned place out.” It would be sensational, Danilov recognized. But at that precise moment he was in a strong enough position to initiate such a purge. Which wasn’t entirely the altruism of an honest policeman. Quite a long way from it, in fact. He was following the cynically discovered-and practiced-rules of survival. There were few more effective ways of bringing himself to the attention of the newly installed interior minister as well as publicly demonstrating the declared aim of the president.
Pavin regarded him curiously. “It’s a hell of an undertaking.”
“So’s what we’re doing now.”
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