Kings of Many Castles (11 page)

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Authors: Brian Freemantle

BOOK: Kings of Many Castles
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“You any idea what sort of pressure I’m under with the goddamned president sitting on my lap!”
“I told you, you’ll get it all. I can’t do more than that.”
“I was looking for a favor.”
Charlie recognized the inherent threat. “I’m going directly from the mother to Olga. Why don’t we establish the working structure then?”
“I’m disappointed, Charlie.”
Which was exactly what Colonel Olga Melnik intended the man to be, Charlie guessed.
 
Walter Anandale snapped off the remote control, blanking the screen upon which they’d watched the entire replay of Aleksandr Okulov’s parliamentary appearance and said, “That’s made me personally responsible for the whole fucking thing, including the maiming of my own wife, for Christ’s sake!”
“That would be an extreme interpretation,” said Wendall North, uncomfortable at the reappearance of security lapses he’d hoped safely swept behind him.
“We got people at home looking for extremes. You know that!”
“It certainly wasn’t necessary,” retreated the chief of staff.
“You get on to that guy … what’s … ?”
“Trishin,” helped the other man. Why did the president have such a problem with that name?
“Trishin. And you let him know I don’t like what his guy’s just
done … that I don’t like it at all … And then you get on to our public affairs people and tell them to start lobbying, not just among the media travelling with us but back home in Washington, too. I want it countered … Okulov wants to play dirty pool he’s going to get his knuckles crunched …”
“We could suggest it’s the Russians trying to get out from under, which it is,” proposed North.
“Sounds good,” agreed the president.
“Doesn’t help the atmosphere,” suggested North.
“There isn’t any atmosphere to be helped, not anymore.”
It remained essential to both sides that there was no suggestion of an irreparable collapse but now wasn’t the moment to start talking of diplomacy and compromise, North decided. “I’ve spoken personally to the four orthopedic surgeons specializing in brachial plexus injuries recommended by Max Donnington. He’s made up complete case notes, together with the X-rays. We’re shipping it all back today … . And we’re also flying Ben Jennings’s body home.”
“What’s arranged?”
“Marines pallbearers from the embassy here taking the coffin to the plane. Honor guard at Andrews.”
“Is he married?”
North nodded. “Two kids, both at college.”
“I should write personally.”
“I’ve already made up a draft.”
“What about the vice president attending the funeral?”
“It would look right.”
“Fix it.”
Vera Bendall’s shoes were laced so Charlie presumed her bra had been returned as well, although she was shapeless beneath a badly knitted cardigan. The gray-streaked hair was straggled, no more than finger combed, and there was no make-up. There was a dirt smudge
beneath her chin and her hands were soiled, blackly dirt-rimmed beneath the odd nail that hadn’t already been bitten to the quick. Despite the laces, Vera scuffed into the interview room, stoop-shouldered, burdened by the unknown fears of whatever was going to happen to her next. She stopped apprehensively as Charlie stood, then gnawed in embarrassment at her lower lip when he held out the one remaining chair.
“Sorry,” she said, quickly.
“You don’t have to be frightened,” said Anne Abbott, in English. “We’re from the embassy.”
“Please help me,” pleaded the woman, at once.
“We’ll try,” promised Anne. “That’s why we’re here.”
“We’d like you to help us, too,” said Charlie. Vera Bendall had responded in English, so he did as well. He held out the small pocket recorder. “We’re going to tape everything. Is that OK?”
She shrugged at the continued politeness. “I suppose.”
Charlie hadn’t bothered to look for the most likely position of the Russian equipment, although he’d shaken his head to stop the horrified lawyer bursting out aloud at the conditions inside Lefortovo while they’d waited for Vera to be brought to them. If the standard fish-eye-lensed camera was mounted somewhere in the overhead light surround, which was normal, the warning would probably have been picked up. It was a starkly functional room, entirely bare except for the center table and three stiff-backed wooden chairs. The door was metal, with a circular peephole. There was a summoning button set into the wall. It was strangely, almost disconcertingly, quiet, as if the room had been soundproofed against either internal or external noise. There was a prison smell, though-urine, sour food, unwashed bodies, decay—to which Charlie thought Vera was probably contributing.
“Tell us about George,” prompted Charlie. He had to guard against showing he knew of Olga Melnik’s first abortive interview or of the possibly improved second, which Natalia had shown him the previous evening, with other material the Russian investigator had not so far made available. It was going to be interesting to see how adept a questioner Anne Abbott turned out to be.
Vera Bendall’s pent-up denials of anything her son had planned
or done came in a babbled rush of protested innocence and uncaring admission of a totally dysfunctional relationship between mother and son but virtually everything she’d told Olga Melnik was included. The regular Tuesday and Thursday routine emerged in answer to a question from Anne.
“How did you feel about being in Russia?” explored Charlie, gently. “Did you hate it as much as George?”
“Not as much.”
“But you didn’t like it?”
“I’ve adjusted, after all this time. No alternative.”
“You were a schoolteacher, in England?” remembered Charlie, from the English records.
“Yes.”
“Were you forced to quit after Peter defected?”
“No.”
“Why did you follow Peter?” came in Anne.
“I was his wife. It was my duty.”
“He abandoned you. You and George?” persisted the other woman.
There was the familiar listless shrug. “I thought it was the right thing to do.”
“George was only five?” picked up Charlie. Would Sasha hate being uprooted from Russia if the need ever arose?
“Not quite. Four and a half.”
“So he knew virtually nothing of England; had no comparison against life here?”
Vera frowned, considering the question. “That’s right.”
“Why did he grow up to hate it?” said Anne, following Charlie’s direction.
The faded woman didn’t answer at once. “Peter and I, I suppose.”
“I don’t understand,” said Charlie.
“We didn’t get on, after I came here. Argued a lot about how much better it would have been if I hadn’t come. I was close to George then. Not like it was later … he used to take my side … that’s how it always seemed to be, how I remember it. George and me against Peter … every day … .” She trailed off, seemingly in bitter memories.
“There were stories … suggestions … in England that Peter wanted to return … ?”
“I wanted to. With George.”
“What about Peter?”
“Maybe. I’m not sure.”
“Why didn’t you and George go back?”
“They wouldn’t let us.”
“They?” Charlie was dominating the questioning now, Anne silent beside him.
“The people Peter worked for?”
“The KGB?”
“Yes.”
Charlie’s bunched-up feet twitched. He’d spent more than an hour the previous night hunched over the recorder Natalia had protectively carried in—and out—of the Lubyanka, as surprised as she had been not just at getting past the reception area without being searched—prepared to insist upon the authority of the acting president—but also that Spassky’s office hadn’t been equipped with a “white noise” baffler to prevent tapes unknowingly being made. His instinct—as well as another foot spasm—told him the gaps in Peter Bendall’s KGB files hadn’t occurred accidentally. “Did Peter tell you that you couldn’t go back to England? Or was it one of the Russians he worked for?”
“Peter.”
Charlie instantly recognized the hesitation in her voice. He had to tiptoe, an inch at a time. “Only
ever
Peter?”
“As I told the Russian detective colonel, sometimes in the last few years Peter worked from home, at Hutorskaya Ulitza. The arguments got really bad around that time: that was when George was sixteen or seventeen. He said he didn’t believe what Peter was saying and that he was keeping us prisoner. Once one of the people who came to see Peter took George into the room with them.”
She looked at the water carafe alongside the tape and unasked Charlie poured for her.
“Did George tell you what went on in the room?”
“He said the man told him there were things he had to do but that he wouldn’t do them.”
“What things?”
“He didn’t tell me.”
“Didn’t you ask him?”
“No.”
Charlie felt a burn of frustration at Vera Bendall’s constant, look-away acceptance of everything and anything that happened to her. “What did he say?”
“He said he wasn’t weak, like Peter. That they were going to be surprised.”
“Peter had been in the room?” persisted Charlie.
“Yes.”
“So he would have heard whatever it was?”
“I suppose.”
“Didn’t you ask him?” said Anne.
“He said it was none of my business. That it was too late and that if I hadn’t wanted to be here I shouldn’t have followed him.”
Would this be how his relationship with Natalia would finally—so disastrously—implode if she took Sasha away from Russia to live with him somewhere in the West, Charlie wondered again. No, he decided, just as quickly. The circumstances were far too different for there to be any conceivable comparison. “Did George accept it?”
The fatalistic shrug came again. “That was when the trouble started.”
“What trouble?” asked the lawyer.
“Not going to classes … the beginning of the drinking … he was in an accident, in a stolen car. He wasn’t charged with the theft because he couldn’t drive. He started to use the Russian name around that time. Insisted I call him Georgi …”
“Used a Russian name but didn’t like Russia?” queried Charlie, despite already knowing the answer: it was a logical question the eavesdroppers would expect to be asked.
“He said he didn’t want to be known as George Bendall anymore.”
“The behavior began suddenly?” pressed Anne.
“As I remember it.”
“You must have thought about it, the reason I mean?”
Vera smiled, faintly. “I did. I think in some silly way he thought
if he misbehaved badly enough he’d get thrown out … expelled from the country.”
“Did you challenge him about it?”
“Not directly. I think I said once that it wouldn’t work, that he’d just end up with a criminal record. He said he didn’t know what I was talking about. That he didn’t care anyway.”
“Was there any more contact between him and the KGB people who came to Hutorskaya Ulitza?”
She nodded. “The same man came back. Peter didn’t go into the room with them this time. Then others came and took him to a psychiatrist and for a while he got better, although he started to spend a lot of time away … not bothering to come home, I mean …”
“Who was the psychiatrist, Vera?”
“I never knew.”
“But you knew he was seeing a psychiatrist?”
“Peter told me. He said it was best. That I’d given birth to an idiot and that it was my fault.”
“Did George continue behaving himself?”
“I don’t know. He would have been about eighteen then. He joined the army. After that we hardly saw him at all.”
Charlie went to speak but suddenly remembered he wasn’t supposed to know about the man’s military record. “How long was he in the army?”
“A long time. He didn’t contact me—it was always me, never ever Peter—for years at a time, two years was the longest. I don’t believe he wrote more than ten letters, the whole time. When he did it was to ask for money. For a long time, towards the end, I thought he was probably dead. Then there was a letter from a prison in Odessa. He said he was being kicked out of the army. One day he just turned up.”
“Was Peter still alive?”
“Yes.”
“What did he say?”
“Accepted it. He wasn’t well by then.”
“Did the KGB still come?”
“Hardly ever.”
“Did George ever meet any of the KGB people again, after coming out of the army?”
“I don’t remember.”
“What work did he do, after he came out of the army?”
“He didn’t, not for a long time.”
“How could he pay you to live at Hutorskaya Ulitza?” asked Anne.
“He didn’t.”
“He was still drinking?”
“Worse than ever, after the army. Every day. All day.”
“Did you give him the money to buy it?”
The woman shook her head, positively. “There wasn’t any. Not for drink. After Peter died, all I got was a 3,420 ruble-a-month pension.”
She could count it to the last kopek, thought Charlie, less than sixteen pounds a month. “How did he get money to drink?”
“Stealing. He used to go out to Sheremet‘yevo and steal suitcases from tourists. And the same at the railway stations, at the Kiev and Kazan departure terminals and at the central passenger bureau at Komsomol’skaya. There was always a lot of Western things at the apartment. I asked him not to because if he got caught we’d be thrown out of the apartment … .” She briefly trapped her lower lip between her teeth again. “That’ll definitely happen now, won’t it? The detective colonel said it could.”
“I don’t know,” admitted Charlie, who thought it probably would. Hurriedly he went on, “Did he stop?”
She nodded. “Just under a years ago, when he started work at the television station.”
“How did that happen?”
“I never knew how or why it happened, but George stopped stealing ever so suddenly. It was a long time before he told me he was seeing a doctor, a friend, who was helping him. I don’t remember his name but I know you’ll want to know it. I’ll try. I’ll really try.”
“What about the job?”
“He said he’d met someone who’d helped him. I thought it might be the doctor.”
Charlie felt a flare of hope. Don’t rush, he cautioned himself. “Was he still drinking heavily?”
“I don’t know about at work. Certainly at home. There were always bottles.”
“What did he earn?”
“I don’t know.”
It should be easy enough to find out from the station. “But it was certainly enough to keep bottles at home?”
“It seemed to be.”
“Who was the person he’d met who helped him get the job?”
“He never told me.”
“Do you think it could have been the person he went out to meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays: perhaps stayed with on the times he didn’t come home?” asked Anne.
“It could have been.”
“Do you think this person worked at the TV stations, too?”
“It would have made sense, wouldn’t it?”
“Was it a man? Or a woman?”
“I don’t know. He didn’t have girlfriends. It would most likely have been a man, I think.”

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