Charlie raised his hands, warding off apology before he spoke. “You couldn’t have misunderstood?”
“Not after yesterday.”
“Which you seem to have won?”
“This time. I need to go on winning.”
“More than that, even. If they’re trying to destroy you, you’ve got to destroy them.”
“I’m so tired of playing games: our games, their game, anyone’s game!”
“We’re not playing games anymore,” insisted Charlie. “We’re going to fight.”
“With what? I was lucky yesterday-the timing was in my favor-but it was a fluke. If I don’t stay ahead on this every step of the way, I’ll be replaced.”
Charlie lapsed into silence again, immersed in thought. He wouldn’t say it-couldn’t say it-because the resolve had been obvious for a very long time and they’d shaken it to death like two dogs holding on to a single bone, but if Natalia were forced to leave the ministry-to become simply but all-importantly his proper legal wife, Sasha’s mother-all their personal working difficulties wouldbe ended, at a finger snap. But Natalia needed her job, as much as he needed his. Until now-uncertain, unsure now-both their personal lives had been a litany of one disaster imploding upon another. They were only confident about their professional ability and success, clinging to it as a blind man tightly holds his stick to get through each day without colliding with unseen obstacles. He said, “If they want a war, we’ll take it to them.”
Natalia said, “I’ve talked to Lestov. He thinks you had a lot you hadn’t shared. According to the American woman, you’re a sneaky son-of-a-bitch. Her words.” That was an exaggeration, but Natalia had no difficulty with it.
So, thought an unoffended Charlie, was Miriam Bell. “You knew that without being told.”
“Have you got something I can fight with?” demanded Natalia, gazing steadily at him.
Decision time, Charlie recognized: shit or get off the pot. Loyalty to the department? Or loyalty to Natalia? The department had cheated him and been disastrously cheated in return; and they’d cheat him again, if it became expedient to do so. Natalia had never cheated him-tried to even any score-despite the times and the ways he’d failed her. Nor, he thought, would she ever. And was the job as important to him as he’d tried to make out, with his elaborate blind man’s analogy? Charlie was surprised he even needed to pose himself the question.
He stood, breathing in deeply, offering his hand to bring her up with him, and began slowly wandering the path toward the hothouses. And as they walked, Charlie told Natalia all he knew or thought he knew: even, toward the end, his director-general’s now-ignored insistence that he offer as little as possible to gain as much as he could, until a reason was established for the English lieutenant being in Yakutsk.
“Miriam Bell’s right. You are a sneaky son-of-a-bitch.”
“Do you still have sufficient authority to try to find the records of Gulag 98?” demanded Charlie.
“It would have been Beria’s time. The NKVD,” Natalia recalled, talking as much to herself as to Charlie. “It’s said that for more than a layered mile beneath the Lubyanka there’s a virtual city beneath a city stretching as far as Red Square and the Kremlin and PloshchadSverdlova, under the Bolshoi: Stalin had his own railway system, to move around it. One entire level is occupied by archives, hundreds of millions of them. Yakutskaya was one of the biggest secrets, so records might have been destroyed, as they were in Yakutsk itself. But we won’t know that until we look.”
“Don’t be specific,” warned Charlie. “A general inquiry about camps is an obvious extension of the inquiry: something you’d be expected to do. Isolating a specific camp at the very beginning wouldn’t be, unless the information came from your own people.”
“Charlie!” she protested, pained.
“If we’re not going to take chances, we’re not going to take chances,” he said, offering Charlie Muffin logic. “Channel everything through you. You’ll know what you’re looking for. Dump the rest on Travin. Drown him. Nikulin is your secret weapon-so secret that he doesn’t know it.”
“You’re going to have to spell this out for me step by step!” protested Natalia.
“You’ll understand every little skirmish,” promised Charlie.
“Recognize something?” she demanded, stopping abruptly where they were.
Charlie gazed around the huge glassed building with its giant, roof-sized fern leaves, realizing for the first time they’d actually gone into one of the houses. “No,” he conceded.
“It’s the same one you walked me to when you admitted your defection was phony and that you’d lied,” identified Natalia. “It was right here you told me you were going to abandon me and go back to London.”
The recollection-and the remorse-was immediate. Charlie said, “I came back. And this time I’m not abandoning you.”
“No,” accepted Natalia. “It’s a good feeling.”
Going personally to the American embassy, leaving the protection of his own territory for the uncertainty of theirs, was as conscious a psychological act as dressing to be despised and therefore underrated, despite Miriam Bell’s suspicion. Charlie didn’t expect an identity for the murdered American to be freely offered if it had already been found, but he’d sense the nuance if there had been progress. There were other considerations, too. The FBI quarters at Ulitza Chaykovskovowere far more extensive and certainly more luxurious than his badger’s hole in which more than three people at any one time risked suffocation, and the American embassy mess extended happy hour to two and on occasions three. There was no drink price concession at all at the British bar. Charlie suspected Gerald Williams.
It had been Miriam’s number he’d called from the Lesnaya apartment before leaving to meet Natalia, and the Americans were waiting for him, easily accommodated in Saul Freeman’s office. It was little more than a passing impression that Miriam had showered and washed her hair and tried makeup on a face showing scarcely any sign of the Yakutsk ravages. His immediate concentration was upon two men already in the room, against a far wall almost as if they were not part of the intended gather. Charlie looked curiously, invitingly, to Freeman, who instead of introductions said, “Coupla guys from State. Just sitting in.”
The elder, white-haired man was clear-skinned and tight-bodied and beak-nosed, which, combined with the length at which he wore his hair, gave him a patrician appearance. It was the second man who held Charlie’s attention. He was slightly built and unobtrusively dressed in muted gray and sat completely unmoving. What registered most was washed-out blue eyes that never blinked. In Charlie’s experience men with no name who didn’t blink either wore six-guns in Western movies or ear protectors on practice ranges, where he’d never been able to stop blinking. And this man didn’t look at all like an actor.
Determinedly Charlie said, “Hi. Charlie Muffin.”
The two men nodded back but didn’t speak.
Freeman said, “Must be good to get back?”
“Great,” said Charlie. And waited.
“Good of you to come,” said Freeman.
“We’re all working together, aren’t we?” Charlie spoke looking at the two silent strangers, able to see Miriam at the same time. She was subdued, unsmiling.
“Like to think so,” agreed the FBI chief.
“So would I,” said Charlie.
“Everything escalated while you were away. It’s been a media circus. The president’s responded with an executive order demanding answers. Plans an Arlington burial.”
“Very impressive.”
Freeman shifted, seemingly uncomfortable. “Thought it might be useful to talk through everything we’ve got.”
Who thought? wondered Charlie. “I’d like to hear that, too.” He took from his pocket a much-edited and sometimes altered version of the account he’d earlier sent to London. “That’s all I’ve got together at the moment.”
Freeman’s forced bonhomie faltered at being outmaneuvered. His e
yes flickered to the men against the wall.
Miriam said, “I’m afraid I haven’t worked as fast as you. All we’ve done is talk it through in very general terms.”
Charlie estimated it had been a full five minutes since the blue-eyed man had blinked. He wondered if he could make him now. He said, “Okay, so let’s talk. It was clearly a combined intelligence mission. Records of American military intelligence, G2, are stored at Adelphi, Maryland. With the urgency and authority of an executive order, you’ll have accessed them by now, so I’d appreciate knowing the result of that. It’s too soon, obviously, to have got your own photographs of your body, but you’re quite clearly geared up to run graduation checks at West Point. What sort of time frame are you running on that? You have a Rapid Physiognomy Comparison facility at Bureau headquarters, don’t you? It shouldn’t take long, if you use that. I’d be interested in your theories about the missing articles, against what was left on the bodies. We’ve quite a lot to talk about, in fact, haven’t we?”
The stranger didn’t blink but Freeman did, looking even more obviously at the Washington visitors. He said, “You’ve covered quite a lot of ground there.”
“I thought that’s what we had to do,” said Charlie. “What’s come out of Adelphi?”
“Nothing so far,” said Freeman.
“But you’re checking there, so you’ve already decided it was intelligence,” accepted Charlie, smiling at the unintentional admission. “That’s something, I suppose. Means you’re already wondering, as I am, how two officers could disappear like they obviously did, for so long. So you’ll be organizing a records search of your CIA forerunner, the Office of Strategic Services …?” He gestured to his specially prepared report, lying unread and untouched on Freeman’sdesk. “You’ll see we’re carrying out those sort of inquiries in London. I’d appreciate your letting me have your results as soon as possible, as you’ll see I’ve promised to let you have ours …?”
“Yes, of course,” said Freeman.
“What’s the State Department guidance about possible embarrassment?’ he asked, directly addressing the two unspeaking men.
“That’s the big question,” tried Freeman. “What was our guy-your guy, too-doing there in the first place?”
Which wasn’t even an attempt to answer the question, Charlie acknowledged. An executive order from the president himself was certainly important enough for someone to have traveled all the way from Washington. But it was a very long way to come to sit and say nothing-practically like a performance in a B-movie. Unless they did know and their participation was turning into a damage-limitation exercise better planned than his at Yakutsk.
As if aware of the reflection, Freeman said, “That Nazi business really was a hell of a bluff.”
“Thanks.”
“It was that, wasn’t it? A bluff, I mean, like you told Miriam it was.”
“Absolutely.” Or were they groping more than he believed? If they were, he’d already achieved all there was to achieve, misdirecting sufficiently and disclosing nothing he shouldn’t have disclosed.
“You really can’t take it-anything-any further?”
“Everything I’ve got is there,” said Charlie.
“I’ll get something to you,” promised Miriam.
“With whatever there might be from Washington,” added Freeman.
“That’s about it, then,” accepted Charlie. There wouldn’t be the expected happy hour invitation today.
“We’ll keep in touch,” insisted Freeman.
Freeman had to accompany Charlie to be officially signed past embassy security. As they walked, Charlie said, “You want to tell me about that?”
Freeman said, “I’m sorry. They made the rules.”
“Which were?”
“That’s how they wanted it done.”
“What are their names?”
“I can’t tell you, Charlie.”
“And you expect me to cooperate!”
“How do you think I feel?”
“I don’t know, Saul. How do you feel?”
“Like a prime cunt.”
“That’s about right,” said Charlie. “I’m sorry for you.”
“I’m sorry for myself.” The man straightened as he walked, as if trying physically to cast off the episode. Actually smiling, which he hadn’t done so far, he said, “Dick Cartright tells me a girl I introduced him to is related to the one you’re with. Isn’t that a fantastic coincidence?”
“Fantastic,” agreed Charlie, without a pause. Sometimes gossip and an inferior man’s need to boast was a wonderful thing.
“I’ve never known arrogance like it!” protested Kenton Peters, who hadn’t from anyone who knew who he was. The appalled indignation echoed over the line from the embassy’s secure communications bunker.
“That’s appalling,” sympathized James Boyce. “But you’ve no doubt there is something he’s keeping back, not telling London?”
“None.”
“It can’t be about there being a second officer. I’ve seen what he sent today. It’s there.”
“Our people haven’t. So he hasn’t shared it.”
“So you could be right that he’s got the connection. Is it time to eliminate him?”
There was silence from Moscow. Then Peters said, “I’ll leave everything in place. We’ll take him anytime, when it suits us. Maximum effect.”
“I’m not happy,” complained Boyce.
“Neither am I.”
“Damned nuisance.”
“Yes.”
17
Natalia recognized that with the open support-at the moment, at least-of Dmitri Borisovitch Nikulin and the now totally shared guidance of Charlie Muffin, she potentially held a very sharp two-edged sword. The importance was properly using it against the attacks of the deputy interior minister and his acolyte, not falling upon it herself. Which made Charlie, whom she could easily believe a reincarnation of Machiavelli, the more important: the one from whom she had to learn.
It was certainly Charlie’s survival plan for her that, although incomplete, sounded feasibly straightforward when he sketched it out in the botanical gardens but less certain when she was alone, as she was now, back in her echoing ministry office, knowing that Petr Travin, two doors along their shared corridor, and Viktor Viskov, on the floor above, were plotting her overthrow with equal determination.
Lead, Charlie had insisted: that was the way for her to remain ahead, from the front, not by following from behind. And she’d substantially increased her lead, she knew. The Moscow homicide detective had performed far better than she’d expected at his departure press conference from Yakutsk-Natalia made a note to congratulate the man-and her unattributed statement accusing the Yakutskaya authorities of inexplicable obstruction had chimed perfectly with it. The overseas digest of the foreign press frenzy-circulated to Viskov as well as to her-from the Foreign Ministry showed it quoted favorably by every major print and network television outlet in America, Canada and England, as well as being widely reported throughout Europe.
Leading from the front did, of course, expose her back to be stabbed. The cynicism actually surprised Natalia. More Charlie’s mind-set than hers. Maybe the way she had to think-try to think-if she could in the future. No question of trying, she told herself atonce. There was Sasha, always Sasha. Natalia had been too long alone ever, completely, to lose her most deeply rooted fear of all, of being alone again.
Which wasn’t a consideration of the moment, she decided, rising positively from her desk. The consideration of the moment was continuing to follow Charlie’s script (“mountains can be made from bureaucratic bullshit”), which she’d already initiated by a telephone call to the Lubyanka. Now that had to be followed immediately by the personal visit, because everything had to be in sequence. She made a point of announcing to her secretariat that she was going out but not saying where-happy for the gossip if not the positively offered information to permeate along the corridor-and used the metro i
nstead of an official car and driver, by which and through whom she could have been quickly traced.
She got off at the Bolshoi station, preferring to walk the rest of the way, seeing as she crossed the final square that the briefly removed glowering statue of Felix Dzerzhinsky, the founder of the Soviet intelligence service, had been replaced in front of its yellow-washed headquarters building while so many other, less despised reminders of communism had been removed.
Fyodor Lyulin, the chief archivist to whom she had already spoken, was obediently waiting. He was a bespectacled, anxious-to-please and unexpectedly young man apprehensive at personally being sought out by someone of Natalia’s rank and authority, which immediately registered with her as an advantage, alien though it was for her to bully. Something else she perhaps had to learn.
Lyulin believed there were records of Yakutskaya, nervously pointing out that it was all too long ago for him to have had anything personally to do with them and certainly for which he had no responsibility, apart from their being somewhere in the intelligence service archives. He did not know if they were complete-indeed, even where they might be kept-but he would, of course, search at once.
The man twitched more than blinked at Natalia’s demand for details of gulags for the ten years between 1935 and 1945. “I’ve no way of estimating at the moment, of course, but that could conceivably run into tens-hundreds-of thousands. They might not be indexed. In any chronological order. Material often isn’t, from that period.”
Better than she could have hoped, thought Natalia. “I want whatever exists-all of it. Don’t worry about indexing or chronology. As they’re found I want them shipped immediately to me at the ministry.”
“Just located and sent to you?” pedantically qualified the relaxing archivist, seeing an insuperable job becoming comparatively easy.
“That’s all,” agreed Natalia. “Until I tell you to stop.”
“Going through so much could be a monumental task for anyone, for a team of people,” cautioned the relieved man.
“I am organizing that. It’s a survey that has to be made.”
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