The Case of Comrade Tulayev (28 page)

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Authors: Victor Serge,Willard R. Trask,Susan Sontag

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical

BOOK: The Case of Comrade Tulayev
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Kondratiev hesitated before answering, for he had thought a great deal on the subject, convinced that the disappearance of the Aviation Experiment Center's best engineers had unquestionably resulted in poorer quality products.

“Perhaps not … Perhaps it is only that German technique is still superior …”

The Chief said:

“He was sabotaging. It has been proved. He confessed it.”

The word
confessed
produced a distinct feeling of discomfort between them. The Chief felt it so clearly that he turned away, went to the table for a map of the Spanish fronts, and began asking detailed questions which could not really have been of any significance to him. At the point which things had reached, what could it matter to him whether Madrid's University City was more or less well supplied with artillery? On the other hand, he did not discuss the shipping of the gold reserves, probably having been already informed of it by special messenger. Kondratiev passed over the subject. The Chief made no reference to the changes in personnel suggested in Kondratiev's report … On a clock in the faraway bay window, Kondratiev read that the audience had already lasted more than an hour. The Chief walked up and down, he had tea brought, answered a secretary, “
Not until I call you
…” What was he expecting? Kondratiev became tensely expectant too. The Chief, his hands in his pockets, took him to the bay window from which there was a view of the roofs of Moscow. There was only a pane of glass between them and the city, the pale sky.

“And here at home, in this magnificent and heart-rending Moscow, what is not going right, do you think? What isn't jelling? Eh?”

“But you just said it, brother. Everyone lies and lies and lies. Servility, in short. Whence, a lack of oxygen. How build Socialism without oxygen?”

“Hmm … And is that all, in your opinion?”

Kondratiev saw himself driven to the wall. Should he speak? Should he risk it? Should he wriggle out of it like a coward? The tension in him prevented him from reading the Chief's face clearly, though it was only two feet away. Despite himself he was very direct, and therefore very clumsy. In a voice that was emphatic though he tried to make it casual:

“The older generation is getting scarce …”

The Chief put aside the outrageous allusion, pretending not to notice it:

“On the other hand, the younger generation is rising. Energetic, practical, American style … It's time the older generation had a rest …”

“May they rest with the saints” — the words of the Chant for the Dead in the liturgy …

Tensely, Kondratiev changed his tack:

“Yes, the younger generation, of course … Our youth is our pride …” (“My voice rings false, now I'm lying too …”)

The Chief smiled curiously, as if he were laughing at someone who was not present. And then, in the most natural tone:

“Do you think I have many faults, Ivan?”

They were alone in the harsh white light, with the whole city before them, though not a sound from it reached them. In a sort of spacious courtyard below and some distance away, between a squat church with dilapidated towers and a little red-brick wall, Georgian horsemen were at saber practice, galloping from one end of the courtyard to the other; about halfway they stooped almost to the ground to impale a piece of white cloth on their sabers …

“It is not for me to judge you,” said Kondratiev uncomfortably. “You are the Party.” He observed that the phrase was well received. “Me, I'm only an old militant” — with a sadness that had a shade of irony — “one of those who need a rest …”

The Chief waited like an impartial judge or an indifferent criminal. Impersonal, as real as things.

“I think,” said Kondratiev, “that you were wrong in ‘liquidating' Nicolai Ivanovich.”

Liquidating:
the old word that, out of both shame and cynicism, was used under the Red terror for “execute.” The Chief took it without flinching, his face stone.

“He was a traitor. He admitted it. Perhaps you don't believe it?”

Silence. Whiteness.

“It is hard to believe.”

The Chief twisted his face into a mocking smile. His shoulders hunched massively, his brow darkened, his voice became thick.

“Certainly … We have had too many traitors … conscious or unconscious … no time to go into the psychology of it … I'm no novelist.” A pause. “I'll wipe out every one of them, tirelessly, mercilessly, down even to the least of the least … It is hard, but it must be … Every one of them … There is the country, the future. I do what must be done. Like a machine.”

Nothing to answer? — or to cry out? Kondratiev was on the point of crying out. But the Chief did not give him time. He returned to a conversational tone:

“And in Spain — are the Trotskyists still intriguing?”

“Not to the extent that some fools insist. By the way, I want to talk to you about a matter that is of no great importance but which may have repercussions … Our people are doing some stupid and dangerous things …”

In a few sentences Kondratiev set forth the case of Stefan Stern. He tried to divine whether the Chief had already been told of it. Natural and impenetrable, the Chief listened attentively, made a note of the name, Stefan Stern, as if it were new to him. Was it really new to him?

“Right — I'll look into it … But about the Tulayev case, you are wrong. It was a plot.”

“Ah!”

“Perhaps, after all, it was a plot …” Kondratiev's mind gave a halting assent … “How accommodating I'm being — the devil take me!”

“May I ask a question, Yossif?”

“Of course.”

The Chief's russet eyes still had their friendly look.

“Is the Political Bureau dissatisfied with me?”

That really meant: “Are you dissatisfied with me, now that I have spoken to you freely?”

“What answer can I give you?” said the Chief slowly. “I do not know. The course of events is unsatisfactory, there is no doubt of that — but there was not much you could do about it. You were in Barcelona only a few days, so your responsibility does not extend far … When everything is going to the dogs, we have no one to congratulate, eh? Ha-ha.”

He gave a little guttural laugh, which broke off abruptly.

“And now what shall we do with you? What work do you want? Would you like to go to China? We have fine little armies there, a trifle infected with certain diseases …” He gave himself time to think. “But probably you've had enough of war?”

“I've had enough of it, brother. No, thank you — so far as China is concerned, spare me that, please. Always blood, blood — I am sick of it …”

Precisely the words he ought not to have spoken, the words that had been in his throat since the first minute of their meeting, the weightiest words in their secret dialogue.

“I see,” said the Chief, and suddenly the bright daylight became sinister. “Well, what then? A job in production? In the diplomatic corps? I'll think about it.”

They crossed the carpet diagonally. Sleepwalkers. The Chief took Ivan Kondratiev's hand.

“I have enjoyed seeing you again, Ivan.”

Sincere. That spark deep in the eyes, that concentrated face — the aging of a strong man living without trust, without happiness, without human contacts, in a laboratory solitude … He went on:

“Take a rest, old man. Have yourself looked after. At our age, after our lives, it has to be done. You're right, the older generation is getting scarce.”

“Do you remember when we hunted wild ducks on the tundra?”

“Everything, everything, old man, I remember everything. Go and take a rest in the Caucasus. But I'll give you a piece of advice for down there: Let the sanatoriums look out for themselves, and you go climb as many mountain trails as you can. That's what I'd like to do myself.”

Here there began, within them and between them, a secret dialogue, which they both followed by divination, distinctly: “Why don't
you
go?” Kondratiev suggested. “It would do you so much good, brother.” — “Tempting, those out-of-the-way trails,” mocked the Chief. “So I'll be found one day with my head bashed in? I'm not such a fool as that — I'm still needed …” — “I pity you, Yossif, you are the most threatened, the most captive of us all …” — “I don't want to be pitied. I forbid you to pity me. You are nothing, I am the Chief.” They spoke none of these words: they heard them, uttered them, only in a double tête-à-tête — together corporeally and also together, incorporeally, one within the other.

“Good-by.”

“Good-by.”

Halfway across the huge anteroom Kondratiev encountered a short man with shell-rimmed glasses, a thick, curving nose, and a heavy brief case which almost dragged along the carpet: the new Prosecutor of the Supreme Tribunal, Rachevsky. He was going in the opposite direction. They exchanged reticent greetings.

6. Every Man Has His Own Way of Drowning

For six months a dozen officials had been turning over the one hundred and fifty selected dossiers of the Tulayev case. Fleischman and Zvyeryeva, as “examiners appointed to follow the most serious cases,” followed this one from hour to hour under the immediate supervision of Deputy High Commissar Gordeyev. Fleischman and Zvyeryeva, both formerly Chekists — that is, in the old heroic days — should have been under suspicion; they knew it, and hence they could be counted on to show the utmost zeal. The case ramified in every direction, linked itself to hundreds of others, mingled with them, disappeared in them, re-emerged like a dangerous little blue flame from under fire-blackened ruins. The examiners herded along a motley crowd of prisoners, all exhausted, all desperate, all despairing, all innocent in the old legal meaning of the word, all suspect and guilty in many ways; but it was in vain that the examiners herded them along, the examiners always ended up in some fantastic impasse. Common sense suggested dismissing the confessions of half a dozen lunatics who all told how they had murdered Comrade Tulayev. An American tourist, a woman who was almost beautiful and completely mad, though her self-control was an impenetrable weapon, declared: “I know nothing about politics, I hate Trotsky, I am a Terrorist. Since childhood I have dreamed of being a Terrorist. I came to Moscow to become Comrade Tulayev's mistress and kill him. He was so jealous; he adored me. I should like to die for the U.S.S.R. I believe that the love of the people must be spurred by overwhelming emotions … I killed Comrade Tulayev, whom I loved more than my life, to avert the danger that threatened the Chief … I can't sleep for remorse — look at my eyes. I acted from love … I am happy to have accomplished my mission on earth … If I were free, I'd like to write my reminiscences for the papers … Shoot me! Shoot me!” During her periods of depression she sent her consul long messages (which of course were not transmitted), and she wrote to the examining judge: “You cannot shoot me because I am an American.” — “Drunken trollop,” Gordeyev cursed, when he had spent three hours studying her case. Wasn't she simulating insanity? Hadn't she actually
thought
about committing a murder beforehand? Didn't her declarations contain some echo of plans ripened by others? What was to be done with her, mad as she was? An embassy was taking an interest in her, news agencies on the other side of the globe distributed pictures of her, described the tortures which they claimed the examiners were inflicting on her … Psychiatrists in uniform, still faithful to the rite of question-and-answer, applied suggestion, hypnotism, and psychoanalysis in turn, to persuade her to admit her innocence. She exhausted their patience. “Well then,” Fleischman suggested, “at least persuade her that she killed somebody else, anybody … Have you no imagination! Show her photographs of murder victims, give her details of sadistic attacks, and let her go to the devil! The witch!” But in her waking dream she would only consent to murder prominent people. Fleischman hated her, hated her voice, her accent, her yellowish-pink complexion … A young doctor assigned to the investigation spent hours with the madwoman, stroking her hands and knees while he made her repeat: “I am innocent, I am innocent …” She repeated it perhaps two hundred times, gave a beatific smile, and said softly: “How sweet you are … I've known for a long time that you love me … But it was I, I, I who killed Comrade Tulayev … He loved me as you do.” The same evening the young doctor made his report to Fleischman. A sort of bewilderment clouded his eyes and troubled his speech. “Are you quite sure,” he asked at the end of the interview, with a strange seriousness, “that she has no connection with the case?” Fleischman angrily crushed out his cigarette. “Go take a shower, my boy — right away!” The young doctor was sent to rest his nerves in the forests of northern Pechora. Five sets of detailed confessions were thus classed as products of insanity — yet it took courage to dismiss them. Gordeyev sent the suspects back to the doctors. The doctors went mad in their turn … So much the worse for them! “To the insane asylum under a strong guard,” Fleischman proposed with his soft smile. Zvyeryeva smoothed her dyed hair with her slim fingers, and answered: “I consider them extremely dangerous … Antisocial mania …” Face massages, creams, and make-up kept her face an irritating, ageless mask of blurred features and indistinct wrinkles. The hard, restless look in her eyes aroused uneasiness. It was she who told Fleischman that Deputy High Commissar Gordeyev expected them in his office at one-thirty for an important conference. She added, in a significant tone: “Prosecutor Rachevsky will be there. He has had an interview with the Boss …”

“Then the crisis will soon be upon us,” Fleischman thought.

They conferred in Gordeyev's office on the thirteenth floor of a tower that overlooks the principal streets of the city. Fleischman, having taken a drink of brandy, felt well. Leaning toward the window, he watched the human swarm in the street below, the line of parked cars in front of the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs, peered at the show windows of the bookstores and co-operatives. To wander around down there for a while, go into an antique shop, stare into windows, follow a pretty girl — what a joy that would be! A hell of a life! Even when you manage not to think of the danger. Stout, decorated, with flabby jowls, tired eyelids, yellow blotches under his eyes, thinning hair, he had lately begun to age quite obviously. He thought: “I shall be absolutely impotent in another year or two …” no doubt because his eye had been caught by a group of students, with their caps and books, who were roughhousing cheerfully as they crossed the street between a black prison van, a shining diplomatic Fiat, and a green bus.

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