Pagan picked up the document and stared at the photograph. It showed a man with a rather sulky expression, a petulant set to the lips, hair drawn back tightly against the sides of the head. The ponytail couldn’t be seen because of the direct angle of the shot.
“He entered London at Heathrow three days ago. It’s the only stamp.” Pagan flipped through the blank pages in the manner of a man scanning a murder mystery to reach the denouement without having to wade through the locked rooms and the poisoned sherry and all the other red herrings. “And somewhere along the way he acquired the Bersa.”
The Commissioner said, “And since it’s damned near impossible to smuggle a weapon into any country these days, it stands to reason he had an accomplice who provided him with the weapon. So what are we dealing with, Frank? And who the hell is Jacob Kiviranna anyway? Is he part of some bloody mad right-wing cult? And did he really expect to shoot our Soviet friend in broad daylight and make an escape? These are questions we need to have answered, Frank. And I’m tossing it all, lock stock and bloody barrel, into your court.”
Where else could it be tossed? Pagan wondered.
The Commissioner continued. “Besides, what was so important about Romanenko that he deserved to be shot? As I understand it, he was nothing more than the First Secretary of the Communist Party in some Baltic Soviet Republic, which is not exactly a place where hot-shot Party comrades make a name for themselves. And all he came here for was to discuss some humdrum business proposition pertaining to computers, for heaven’s sake. It isn’t quite the kind of thing that marks a man out for assassination.”
Frank Pagan replaced the passport alongside Kiviranna’s other possessions. It was Romanenko’s briefcase that absorbed his attention now. He wanted to open it, but he realised he was going to have to wait for the Commissioner to give him permission. The Commissioner seemed to be savouring the closed briefcase, wandering around it, and once actually prodding it with his walnut stick.
“I wonder if there’s anything in this case that might suggest a reason why Romanenko was shot,” Burr said.
“I’ve been wondering myself.”
Burr paused a second, then said, “Do the honours, Frank.”
Pagan picked up the case, which was of good brown leather. It was locked, but he easily forced it open with the use of the Commissioner’s sharp brass letter-knife. He dumped the contents on the desk. Papers, files, documents in Russian, a schematic diagram of a computer which looked like a maze in a child’s book of fun. There was a packet of Player’s cigarettes, a disposable razor, a hairbrush, and a shirt, purchased in the Burlington Arcade in London, that was still enclosed in its original cellophane wrapping. There was also a sealed envelope with no address on it.
The Commissioner sifted through the papers. “It’s a pathetic assortment, Frank. Apart from what looks to me like business documents, it’s just the kind of stuff a man might carry if he plans a quick overnight stay in another city.”
Pagan spread the papers on the desk. He knew no Russian at all and he felt, as he always did when he encountered a language with which he was unfamiliar, that he’d been stripped of a vital cognitive sense. He might have been staring at a complicated code. He was also touched a little by sadness, because he’d liked Romanenko. Pagan had always had an affinity for people who courted excess.
The Commissioner, whose own Russian was limited to the word nyet, looked perplexed. “We’re going to have to call in one of the smart boys from the Foreign Office. Otherwise, this is gobbledygook. And I’d personally like it translated before we turn it over to the Soviets.” The Commissioner sniffed. “I’d like to know what’s inside that sealed envelope, though.”
Pagan picked up the envelope and held it up to the light. He longed to tear it open.
The Commissioner asked, “Do we use a steam kettle? Or do we simply slice the thing with a knife?”
Frank Pagan grinned. “Go for broke,” he said, and he ripped the envelope open. It contained a single sheet of yellowing paper covered in a language completely alien to him. Disappointed, he stared at the strange words, written in faded blue ink, as if they might be made to yield up some kind of sense simply by an act of concentration. The Commissioner peered at the sheet with a look of frustration on his face. He even pressed his nose close to it, sniffing the old sheet of paper which smelled musty, like something stored for many years in a damp attic.
“What language is that?” the Commissioner asked.
“I haven’t got a clue,” Pagan said. He glanced at a couple of words – Kalev, Eesti, tooma. The handwriting wasn’t very good. “Danus Oates is something of a linguist.”
“Then let’s fetch the lad,” said the Commissioner.
“He’s somewhere in the building,” Pagan said. “Last time I saw him he was swallowing Valium in the canteen. Events in Edinburgh unsettled his delicate constitution.” As they had unsettled his own, Pagan thought, which was a lot less sensitive than Danus Oates’s.
“Fat lot of good Valium’s going to do him,” said the Commissioner. “In the meantime, you ought to have a word with our American friends in Grosvenor Square, Frank. See if they’ve got anything on this Jacob Kiviranna. The fellow to contact over there is a chap called Teddy Gunther. See what you can get from Kiviranna first, although from what I hear he’s either rather surly or two bricks shy of a load.”
Pagan arranged Aleksis’s papers in a neat pile.
The Commissioner said, “So far as Romanenko is concerned, if you want to find out if there’s anything that made him a suitable candidate for assassination, the man to see is Tommy Witherspoon. He’s got something to do with the Foreign Office, though if you ask me that’s only a cover. I think Tommy really liaises between the FO and some of our intelligence agencies. Tommy lives and breathes Russia. I’ll give him a call and tell him you might have a question or two for him.”
Pagan looked down at Romanenko’s papers a second. The dead man’s effects. The bits and pieces of a life. A life that had been blown away right in front of his own eyes. He felt acutely depressed, as if he might have done something to prevent the catastrophe. It was too late for regrets – but then when were regrets ever timely? He remembered the hours he’d spent drinking with Romanenko, how the Russian’s booming laughter filled the hotel room, the conspiratorial way Aleksis had said You will see differences, Frank Pagan, such as you have never dreamed of. Big changes are coming. The biggest change so far had been Aleksis’s murder, which was surely the last thing Romanenko had had in mind.
“By the way, if the press gets on your arse, you’ve got nothing to tell them. Keep that in mind.” The Commissioner paused a moment. “Whole thing’s a bit of a bloody mess. But you’ve had worse, haven’t you, Frank?”
Frank Pagan looked up at one of the fluorescent tubes which, slightly flawed, blinked now and again. “Maybe,” he answered. He moved towards the door. “Don’t you want to sit in on my interview with Kiviranna?”
The Commissioner shook his head. “As I said, Frank, I’m leaving it entirely to you. In any case, I’m sure to have some Russians to deal with very shortly.” He adjusted his eyepatch. “One last thing. Change your suit first chance you get. You look like something the cat dragged in.”
Jacob Kiviranna was being held in an interrogation room on the second floor, a bare chamber with no windows, a table, a couple of uncomfortable chairs. He chain-smoked, tilting his chair back against the wall and blowing rings up at the ceiling. He’d undone the ponytail and now his long brown hair fell around his shoulders. He had a glum expression on his face, disturbed only by the occasional tic of a pulse beneath his right eye. Pagan’s impression was of a man whose life was a closed book which, once you opened it, would contain a drab little story of childhood neglect, lonely adolescence and fruitless adulthood, a serial of failures and pitiful vignettes.
He glanced at the young uniformed policeman who stood, arms folded, in the corner of the room, then sat down facing Kiviranna and tossed the US passp
ort on the table. It fell open at the photograph. Pagan wondered about the ethnic origin of the name Kiviranna.
“Jake or Jacob?” he asked.
“I don’t care,” Kiviranna replied. He had a flat, lifeless voice, like that of a man whose verbal interplay with others has been strictly limited.
“Let’s start with the biggie, Jake. Why did you kill Romanenko?”
Kiviranna didn’t answer. He dropped a cigarette on the floor, crushed it with his ragged sneaker.
“It’s going to make my life a whole lot easier if you answer my questions, Jake,” Pagan said.
Kiviranna shut his eyes, placed his arms on the table, then lowered his face. His mouth hung open and he made exaggerated snoring noises. Bloody comedian, Pagan thought. He glanced again at the cop who stood in the corner. The young man looked about nine years of age. Every year’s influx of new recruits seemed younger than ever and they made Pagan, at forty-one, feel old and weatherbeaten.
“Let’s try another question,” Pagan said. “Where did you get the gun?”
Kiviranna opened one eye. He smiled at Pagan but remained silent. He had brown teeth misaligned in his dark gums. Pagan studied the man’s combat jacket, the Mickey Mouse patch on one sleeve, the small US flag on the other. He gazed at the beard, which was shapeless. He had the feeling he was peering into the past, confronting a species that, if not extinct, was at the very least threatened. You rarely encountered hippies these days. Now and then an old DayGlo van would chug past you on the street and it would be plastered with faded peace signs and weathered bumper-stickers bearing mellow messages, or you’d see some clapped-out forty-year-old flower-child sliding quietly along the sidewalk – but they didn’t seem to come in bunches any more. Pagan remembered a time when he’d admired the lifestyle, before it became ugly and drugged.
He wandered around the room, pausing when he reached the door. “I wish you’d talk to me, Jake,” he said. “If it’s something simple, if it’s just that you don’t like Russians and you think the only good Commie’s a dead one, I wish you’d say so.”
Kiviranna sucked on a cigarette. There was some tiny response just then when Pagan had mentioned the Russians, a very slight thing, a small change in the man’s expression.
Pagan decided to pursue the opening. “By the way, Jake, they want you. Did I mention that already? They’d like to talk to you. In the circumstances, I can’t say I blame them.”
“Who wants me?”
Pagan went back to the table and sat down. “The Soviets. They’d like me to turn you over to them. They’re being pretty persistent about it. And I’m not sure I can prevent it.”
“You’re out of your mind,” Kiviranna said. “No way would you hand me over.”
Pagan shrugged. Sometimes when you interviewed a person you got lucky very quickly and you managed to touch a little nerve of fear. And it was apprehension that showed now on Kiviranna’s gaunt face.
“I don’t know, Jake. You shot one of their own. They’re not happy with you. Come to think of it, I’m not exactly delirious about you either. Take your pick. Either you talk to me, or you take a short car ride to the Soviet Embassy, where you get to sit in a dark room and they shine lights in your eyes and smoking isn’t allowed. You’ll meet some men whose coats seem just a little too tight and who make loud noises with their fists.”
Kiviranna sat upright now. “I killed the guy on British soil. I know the law, man.”
“You think you know the law, Jake. But when it comes down to tricky stuff like the death of a Russian, it starts to get pretty complicated. Diplomatic considerations raise their ugly little heads, chum. Her Majesty’s Government might owe the Soviets a favour, let’s say, and that favour might just turn out to be you.”
Kiviranna leaned back against the wall. “I set one foot inside that Embassy and I’m history. I’m past tense.”
“Right, Jake. It’s not a healthy prospect.”
“It’s a fucking political game. And I get shuffled like a pawn.”
“Pawns don’t get shuffled, Jake. You’re thinking about cards.” Pagan smiled, and leaned across the table so that his face was a mere six inches away from the other man’s. “Let’s just talk, okay? No more rubbish. Let’s start with motive.”
“Motive?”
“Why did you kill Romanenko? Money? Political conviction? Or was it something else?”
“He was a fucking asshole, man.”
Breathtaking. Pagan had expected some high-flown political cant, the kind of platitude assassins and terrorists so enjoy, that overblown rhetoric which was ultimately meaningless. He was a fucking asshole, man wasn’t the kind of thing he’d anticipated at all. He stared at Jacob Kiviranna for a while before he said, “If that was sufficient cause to blow a man away, the streets would be practically empty.”
“Okay. He sold out to the Russians. Is that enough for you?”
“Exactly how did he do that?”
“You name it. He carried out Kremlin policies in Estonia. He kissed all the Russian ass going. Guy was never off his fucking knees. An order came down from Moscow, Romanenko was the first to implement it. Didn’t matter what it was. He’d get the job done. He was the Kremlin’s rubber stamp. It didn’t matter he was born in Estonia, he was the Kremlin’s boy through and through. Which made him a goddam traitor.”
Pagan listened to the man’s toneless voice, then picked up the US passport, flipped the pages. “You’re an American citizen, Jake. How come you give a damn about Romanenko anyway? I don’t see how he could have affected your life.”
“I got family left over there,” Kiviranna said. “Cousins, a couple of uncles, aunts.”
Revenge, Pagan wondered. Did it come down to a motive as basic as that? “Had Romanenko threatened your family? Had he done something to them?”
Kiviranna didn’t say anything for a time. He smoked another cigarette and the small windowless chamber clouded up and the young cop by the door coughed a couple of times. Kiviranna gestured with the cigarette and looked very serious. “He didn’t have to do anything personal to them, man. He was a Communist and a traitor to his own people. That’s enough. We’re talking about evil. I eliminated evil. That’s the only thing that matters. You see evil, man, you wipe it out. The more evil you get rid of, the more good there is in the world. That’s what it’s all about. It’s logical.”
Evil – now there was a fine melodramatic word you didn’t hear a great deal these days unless you frequented certain extreme religious sects or moved in mad terrorist circles, where it was used to describe anyone who didn’t believe in either your choice of a God or your cause. Pagan studied Kiviranna’s face again, wondered about his background. Had this wild-eyed character, who impressed Pagan as the kind of man you saw speaking to himself in the reading-rooms of public libraries, come three thousand miles to commit a murder because he believed that Aleksis Romanenko was evil? Was he driven by a missionary sense of bringing goodness and light into the world? Had he planned this killing all alone? Had he walked around with a dream of death in his head for weeks, perhaps months on end? An obsessive, a sociopath, the kind of guy who suddenly pops up with a handgun and makes a name for himself by killing a person of some standing in a political system he thought deplorable. I eliminated evil. Jake the avenger, the equaliser, the mad angel of light.
“So wiping out this evil was your own idea, Jake? Is that what you’re telling me?”
“You got it.”
Pagan was unhappy with this reply. It didn’t answer the question of how Kiviranna had come into possession of the gun. Somebody had presumably passed the weapon to him after his arrival in Britain, and when you had two people you had a conspiracy, and so much for a lone killer theory. For another, Pagan had the feeling, which he couldn’t readily explain and which surfaced in his mind at the end of a chain of unanalysable instincts, that Jake, albeit lonely and out of touch, was basically a gullible soul, and that the killing of Romanenko was an idea that had been encouraged in
him. It wasn’t a conclusion he’d reached without some kind of assistance, some kind of persuasion.
“How did you know Romanenko was going to be in Edinburgh, Jake?”
“I read it in a paper, I guess.”
“An American paper?”
“I guess so, I don’t remember.”
Pagan’s eyes were watering in the smoky room. It was hardly likely that Romanenko’s visit to Britain had been mentioned in any US newspaper. It wasn’t entirely newsworthy in America to print a story about an obscure Communist Party official making a quick business trip to the United Kingdom. It was even less likely that any press item would mention something so utterly unimportant as the side-trip to the Edinburgh Festival. So here was another question: how had Jake come across his information? There was only one answer – it had come from the same person or persons who provided the gun.
Pagan got up from his chair and walked round the room.
“Let’s go back to the weapon. How did you get it, Jake?”
“I bought it here in London. I don’t remember the store.”
Pagan wheeled around quickly and strode back to the table. “You don’t just walk into a shop and buy a gun in this country, Jake. You fill in forms, there’s a waiting-period, the police run a thorough check on applicants. You haven’t been in England long enough to acquire a weapon legally.”
Kiviranna looked down at the surface of the table. His hands shook, and he pressed his palms together to keep them steady. “I need a favour,” he said.
“Let’s hear it.”
“I had some medication in my backpack. I’d like it.”
Pagan nodded at the young policeman, who went out of the room to fetch Kiviranna’s medicine.
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