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Prisoners of Tomorrow

Page 19

by James P. Hogan


  Paula stared at her bemusedly. “We attacked? . . . I don’t understand. What are you talking about? No Western nation has ever attacked you—except Hitler, and then we were all on the same side. No Western democracy ever attacked Russia.”

  “You see, they lie to you,” Katherine said. “In the very first year of the nation, in the summer of 1918, the capitalists sent their armies into Russia in an attempt to help treacherous counterrevolutionary forces destroy the new Soviet state. Is that not attacking us?”

  History had never been one of Paula’s consuming passions. She shook her head. “I don’t know. . . .I guess I never really looked into that particular period.”

  Katherine nodded. “There, you see. Yes, American, British, French, Japanese, they all came. You didn’t know? And even after Russia had been weakened by four years of war in Europe and then torn apart by the Revolution, still the people’s Red Army was invincible. And then you say Hitler was not one of you, because you are the democracies. But it was the so-called democracies that rearmed Germany and allowed Hitler to rise, so they could send him against Russia to fight the war for them that they were too cowardly to fight themselves. They tried to start a war that they would wriggle their way out of like worms, but they underestimated Stalin.”

  “I’m not so sure about that. I—”

  “Pah! What do you know? You know nothing. And then, when the tiger they had tried to ride about-turned, it was Russia that killed it and saved them. And then it was Russia that drove the Japanese invaders out of China and ended the war. Russia has always defended countries that were invaded. After the war, you Americans and your puppets tried to invade Korea. And you tried to invade the Middle East, you tried to invade Cuba, you tried to invade Vietnam.”

  Paula stared. “You mean that’s what they teach?”

  Katherine shook her head uncomprehendingly. “And you say we have never been attacked, that we are being paranoid. You think you are victimized, and wonder why. It is we who have always been attacked.”

  Paula sighed. “I don’t know, your propaganda, our propaganda . . . Who’s to say what’s right? But neither one of us is responsible for whatever really goes on. Why should any of it affect us here, personally? In here of all places, I’d have thought we had enough in common to outweigh all that, whatever the real story is.”

  Katherine looked at her coldly. “The reason I’m in here is that my loyalty is in question,” she said. “I used to have a husband. He went to London with a Soviet trade mission, and while he was there he met a reporter from a New York art magazine, and she seduced him. The Americans let him return with her, and now they are living down there somewhere with a family. So, you see, Princess, I do not exactly have strong reason to be fond of Americans, American women in particular, and especially American women journalists. Does that answer your question?”

  Paula lay in the dark, clutching the coarse blanket around her and staring up into the black shadow of the bunk above. She was picturing teenage days of sailing among the islands in Puget Sound, the shining towers of downtown Seattle across the water, and the Olympic Mountains, green in the sunlight, rich with recent rain. As she thought back, she wondered what had become of the self-assurance and single-mindedness that she thought she had learned from her mother, Stephanie. With Paula’s father being so long away at sea, and having come from a naval family before that, Stephanie had always been in control of herself and her life. She’d socialized a lot and thrown lots of parties. There was always a stream of visitors calling at the house. Hence, for Paula, learning to assert herself with people around had been simply another part of growing up. One thing that had made an impression on her, she remembered, was her mother’s adroitness in handling the advances—usually tactful, but sometimes crude—that an attractive woman left on her own for long periods of time was subjected to by the men who came to the house. Ever since then she’d tended to regard men as polarizing into two groups: either they were strong, or they were weak; they were either smart, or stupid; worth getting to know, or not worth wasting time on. She could respect the ones who met her standards . . . but there weren’t many of them. When she was about fifteen, by which time they had moved to the East Coast, she remembered one of those intimate mother-daughter conversations, in which Stephanie had confided that, yes, sometimes she had gone along with those propositions when Paula was younger—with discretion, naturally. Intrigued, Paula had wanted to know which ones. Stephanie mentioned a couple of names, and Paula had found that she approved the choices. Instead of feeling indignation as she had half expected, she had found her mother to be a suddenly far more human and exciting person.

  “Hello, American Princess,” a voice whispered from nearby. “Are you awake?”

  Paula turned her head and made out a figure crouched by the bunk in the darkness. “Who is it?”

  “It is I, Dagmar.” Dagmar was an East German girl, about the same age as Paula, auburn-haired, not unattractive, with a firm, shapely body and freckled face.

  “What do you want?”

  “To say hello—to be friends. Is not right they all mean to you like this. I think is not Princess’s fault if world can’t get along, yes? So I come, make good. We can be friends together, yes?”

  Paula blinked sleepily—she had been farther gone than she’d realized. “Why not? . . . Maybe.”

  She sensed the face coming closer in the darkness. There was alcohol on the other woman’s breath. “Yes, Dagmar and Princess can be good friends. No sense to fight . . .”

  Paula felt the blanket being lifted and the hand sliding softly over her breast. “Fuck off!” She knocked the hand away sharply, pulled the blanket back around her neck, and turned away.

  “Stuck-up bitch!” Dagmar’s voice hissed.

  Paula heard her straighten up and stamp away to the far end of the cell. Peals of female laughter came through the darkness a moment later. “What, Dagmar, no luck? What did we tell you?”

  “Der Seicherin! That’s it. She can rot for all I care now.”

  “How much did we say you owe me, Dagmar? Or would you rather climb in here instead and call it quits?”

  Paula pulled the blanket around her face and put everything out of her mind but sleep.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  “I remember an American couple I met last year, when I was on vacation with a girlfriend over in Connemara on the Irish Atlantic coast. Nice looker, too: used to model flimsy knickers and things—you know, the kind you see on the posters in the tube stations. . . . Anyway this couple—a carpenter of some kind and his wife, they were, from Michigan—had bought a porcelain figurine, you see, that they’d found in some little antique shop in a fishing village they’d driven through. It was rather attractive, I must say—two leprechauns with long pipes and evil grins, hatching mischief over jugs of grog. It could easily have been a hundred years old or more. . . .”

  “Jeremy,” from the British Special Intelligence Service, paused to smile at the recollection as he sat between the two women in the rear seat of the London taxicab. He was suave, urbane, smooth-shaven, wavy-haired, and nattily dressed in a dark three-piece suit with a buttonhole carnation. His speech and manner evoked something of an image that Barbara thought had gone out of style with tailcoats and dreadnoughts.

  He continued, “Well, this figurine had an inscription round the base in Gaelic which had been intriguing them for days, but nobody they’d met had been able to translate it for them. But Gaelic poetry was something I used to dabble in, back at university. Would you have believed I’d decided to try and become a playwright, years ago? I actually got a couple of things staged, too—the usual provincial kind of thing, you know.”

  “So what did it say?” Sylvia asked from his other side. She was also from SIS, and had been carefully picked for the job because of her tall, lean build, tapering face, and black, shoulder-length hair. She was wearing a navy two-piece costume with polka-dot scarf and trim, white shoes and matching purse, a floppy white hat, and car
rying a lightweight pastel-blue shoulder wrap over her arm.

  “That was the funny part,” Jeremy said. “You see, it said, ha-ha . . . it said, ‘Made in Taiwan.’ “

  Barbara smiled and looked away at the crowd thronging the sidewalk on Oxford Street, a few hundred yards east from Marble Arch. It was well into July, and the summer sun and blue skies had brought out the colors on the London streets: the shirts and dresses of the tourists and late-morning shoppers, the seasonal offerings in the windows of the fashion houses, and riotous displays of orchids, roses, and lilies on the carts of streetcorner flower vendors. There were couples old and young, some arm in arm, some with children; businessmen strolling to lunch, jackets slung over their shoulders, women in colored slacks and bright summer dresses; two Arabs studying a painting in one of the shop windows; an Indian in a turban, munching an ice-cream cone. Just ordinary people, wanting nothing more than to be left alone.

  Barbara liked watching people minding their own business. It summed up her outlook on life, as she’d said to Foleda. She thought it a pity that so many people were incapable of doing likewise. And always the wrong people. For invariably, it seemed, it was those of mediocre talents but inflated ambitions, with no affairs of their own worth minding, who meddled the most in other people’s. So the people most likely to end up making decisions about other people’s lives were usually the last ones anyone would want doing the job. Although she worked for a government, privately she thought they were not unlike germs: the only thing anyone really needed them for was to protect themselves from other people’s.

  The cab crossed the end of Baker Street, and Jeremy glanced at his watch. They were exactly on time. The driver slowed down and cruised for a block. A woman was waiting on the corner of Duke Street. She was tall and lean, with a tapering face, black shoulder-length hair, and wearing a navy two-piece costume with polka-dot scarf and trim, white shoes and purse, a floppy hat, and carrying a light-weight pastel-blue shoulder wrap. “That’s her, Freddie,” Jeremy said, pointing. The woman was looking at the taxi-cabs in the oncoming traffic. She saw the yellow-bound notebook wedged on top of the dashboard inside the windshield and raised her arm. The cab pulled over, and she climbed in, seating herself next to Sylvia, who was on the curb side. Because of the tinted rear windows and the high upright back with just a tiny window in the center that London taxis had, it would not be apparent to anyone watching that it was already occupied. The woman would seem to have simply hailed a cab and climbed in.

  “Gawd, it’s ’er twin sister!” Freddie chirped.

  “Just drive, there’s a good fellow,” Jeremy said. He closed the driver’s partition, and they pulled back out into the traffic.

  “This is Anita Dorkas,” Jeremy said to Barbara. “Anita, this is the American who wants to talk to you. Don’t worry about this other person. She’s you, as you’ve probably gathered already, so there’s nothing I can tell you about her. So how are things? Do you still have the afternoon free?”

  Anita nodded. “I need to be back at the embassy by five, though.” She spoke English competently, though her Russian accent was distinctive. “I’m pleased to meet you,” she said to Barbara.

  “Me, also.”

  “Did you arrive in England this morning?” Anita asked.

  “Nobody said I’d just come here from anywhere,” Barbara pointed out. “Only that I’m American.”

  “Incurably Russian and suspicious,” Jeremy said breezily. “She fishes compulsively.”

  Sylvia was scrutinizing Anita carefully, from her hat down to her shoes. “Tch, tch. You’re not wearing lipstick,” she said reproachfully.

  Anita raised a hand to her mouth involuntarily. “I forgot. I’m sorry—I hardly ever use it.”

  “Terrible capitalist muck, anyway,” Jeremy remarked.

  Sylvia produced a handkerchief and mirror from her purse, moistened the handkerchief with her tongue, and wiped her own lips clean. “How’s that?”

  Jeremy looked her up and down, then Anita, and nodded. “Splendid. Two peas in a pod.”

  They made a right into New Bond Street, followed it down to Picadilly, and there turned left to head toward the Circus. Jeremy slid the partition open again. “Here’ll do, Freddie.” The cab pulled over and stopped. Sylvia squeezed by in front of Anita’s knees to open the door and climb out. She paid Freddie the fare and added a tip, then strolled along the sidewalk for a few yards before stopping to admire a diorama of the South Seas in a travel agent’s window. A half block back along the street, the thickset man in the felt hat and baggy blue suit, who had gotten out of another cab following a few cars behind, stopped in a doorway and studied his newspaper. After a few seconds Sylvia began moving again, and so did he. By that time the cab carrying Barbara, Anita, and Jeremy was already lost in the traffic and on its way to a hotel near Regent’s Park, where a suite had been reserved. Meanwhile Sylvia had a slow, solitary but relaxing afternoon ahead of her, leading her tail, whom she had already spotted, around the circuit that Anita had memorized: window shopping along Picadilly and Regent Street, lunch in Leicester Square, a visit to the National Gallery, and then a walk across St. James’s Park and coffee over a magazine in a boulevard cafe near Victoria Station before the rendezvous in Buckingham Palace Road to work the switch back again. And she was getting paid for it. There could be worse ways of making a living, she supposed.

  Barbara stuck her head through into the bedroom of the hotel suite. “Don’t hang up. Anita wants milk, not cream, for the coffee,” she told Jeremy, who was sitting propped on the bed with his back against a stack of pillows and his legs stretched out in front of him. His jacket and shoulder strap with holster containing a .38 were draped over the back of a chair, and he was holding a book lying open on his lap.

  He addressed the viphone by the bed, which was switched to voice only and at that moment connected to room service. “Oh, one moment. Could we have some milk as well as cream for the coffee, please?” He glanced at Barbara. “Is that it?” She nodded. “That will be all, thank you.”

  “Thank you, sir,” a dignified voice acknowledged from a grille in the unit. “It will be about fifteen minutes.” The voice signed itself off with a click.

  “Everything going all right?” Jeremy asked.

  “Better than we hoped,” Barbara said.

  “Good-o. The firm likes to please, you know.” Jeremy settled himself back more comfortably and returned his attention to his book.

  Barbara turned from the doorway and walked back across the lounge to where Anita was sitting in one of the two easy chairs at the table by the window. The view outside was a rolling green sea of Regent’s Park treetops, with the buildings of the zoological gardens visible above like white cliffs in the distance. Anita resumed talking as Barbara sat down.

  “It was a difficult decision in many ways, but I came to the conclusion that there are basic human values that have to come before patriotism. Certainly that’s true if one defines loyalty to the present Soviet regime as patriotism. But that isn’t how we see it. Before 1917, Russia was socially and politically backward compared to Western Europe, I admit, but when you allow for the effect of a czar who was living in a different age and an emotionally unbalanced empress, it was making tremendous strides to catch up. Russia was starting to assert itself as a modern state. The charade of archaic pomp, royal courts, and fairy-tale palaces was played out. Nothing could stop the tides of industry and trade that were sweeping Russia into the twentieth century. The uprising in March was the voice of the real Russia. That was the direction that it should have kept going in. What happened in November was all wrong, an aberration. That is what has to be undone. At the time of the Revolution, Maxim Gorky—and he was no lover of czarism—warned the people not to destroy the palaces and treasures of the old order, because those things represented a cultural heritage that would continue to grow in the new Russia. But instead, it was stunted. What we have seen in the last hundred years is a cancer of barren political dogma and
mindless slogans that has suppressed culture. That is what we are committed to ending. Our loyalty is to the Russia that should have been, and which will be one day.”

  Anita sat on the edge of her chair, polite, but at the same time tense and unsmiling. Her face, though at first sight attractive in proportion and line, revealed an undertone of pallor and tiredness in the daylight by the window which seemed to accentuate the spareness of her frame. Barbara’s impression was of someone very serious and very dedicated, for whom one ideal had come to dominate all other considerations in life. Her instinct was to accept Anita as being what she claimed to be—but, of course, something more substantial than that would be needed eventually.

  “What I wanted to ask you about was something else,” Barbara said. “It goes back a number of years, now. Your former husband, Igor. What can you tell me about him?” She watched Anita’s face but was unable to detect an immediate reaction that hinted either of aversion, lingering affection, or any other emotion.

  “A lot of things,” Anita replied. “What would you like to know?”

  “You don’t seem surprised or curious about why we should be interested in him.”

  “Nothing surprises me anymore. I’m sure you have your reasons.”

  “You were a member of the Friday Club as long as eight years ago,” Barbara said, making it a matter-of-fact statement rather than a question.

  “Yes.”

  “And other affiliated groups before that.” That was a guess, but worth a stab.

  “Yes,” Anita answered.

  “What kinds of activities were you involved in back then?”

  “Is this really necessary? I’ve been through this over and over with the British. Don’t you people talk to each other? I’m sure I don’t have to remind you that we have limited time. My understanding was that you considered this meeting to be very important. I would like to make it as useful as possible.”

 

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