Authors: Dan Fesperman
Tags: #Thrillers, #General, #Action & Adventure, #Mystery & Detective, #Historical, #Fiction
Free. But for how long?
Looking left, I saw a van twenty yards away, engine running, passenger door opening. I set off in the opposite direction, giving it everything I had, all of the old Emil Zátopek effort and drive. But even the great Zátopek was a distance runner, not a sprinter, and I was merely a deskbound flak with fifty-three years on the odometer. They caught me in half a block, a man on either side clamping onto an arm just as a second van squealed to the curb beside us.
Breathless, I expected them to toss me inside. Instead, my escorts nimbly turned me back toward the first van, which was gunning toward us in reverse, straight down the sidewalk, its panel doors open. Behind me I heard the second van back on the move, and voices shouting in Russian. Some sort of brutal competition was under way, and I was the dubious prize.
My shoulder slammed against the floor of the first van as my two escorts shoved me inside. Both tumbled in with me, and everything went dark as the doors slammed shut. I heard the grunting of bodies landing atop me, the grind of the revving engine, the muffled shouts of our pursuers, and the thump-thump of the tires as we roared back onto the street across the curb. Then a drumroll across cobbles, another shout, followed by the shriek of a siren and heavy breathing from above. A needle plunged into my buttocks.
“Ow!”
I was about to say more when the world disappeared.
37
“How many fingers?”
An older fellow with gin blossoms and yellow teeth asked me that question. His face was only a foot from mine. He wore a gray pin-striped suit, tie loosened at the neck.
“Three,” I answered. I was groggy, just coming around.
“How many now?”
“Where the hell am I?”
“He’s fine,” a second man said from somewhere behind me. I twisted in the chair to see him but couldn’t turn more than a few inches because I was strapped around the waist and chest. My hands were bound at my sides, and my feet were bungee-corded to the legs of the chair.
“What the fuck is happening?”
“See? That stuff wears off in an hour, then it’s gone in seconds. Just like I told you.”
An hour. Then it must be close to nine p.m. I had a headache, but the guy was pretty much right, because I seemed to be thinking fairly clearly. I looked around at what I could see of the room. Small and antiseptic, somebody’s office. An American flag in the corner and a picture of the president on the wall. It didn’t look like the sort of place where someone would beat you, waterboard you, or hook up your genitals to electrodes, but these days I suppose you never knew for sure. The important thing was that there was no sign of either Ron Curtin or the Hammerhead.
The first fellow who’d held up his fingers backed away a few feet and inspected me with a rather forlorn expression, as if he’d seen better specimens.
“Should we give him coffee?”
“No. It’ll skew the results. Just wait another few minutes.”
“Could somebody please tell me where I am, and what this is all about? And maybe loosen these ropes.” My hands were numb.
The second man moved into view. Mid-twenties and full of himself. Black stretch pants and a black synthetic top, with his hair mussed. One of the guys who’d grabbed me, probably. The other fellow in the suit tilted his head in a pose of curiosity, but he no longer looked worried.
“I’m staying for the questioning.” he said.
“Of course.”
“I really need to pee,” I said.
“Give him some water. He probably needs a drink.”
“Oh, yeah,” I said, “that’ll help.”
“Get him a jar, or a glass from the canteen. I’ll unzip him.”
“Are you serious?”
He was. The suit left the room. The cocky young man in black squatted in front of me like a prostitute eager to conclude business and move on to the next customer. He unbuckled my belt and unzipped my trousers as I squirmed in the chair. Then he frowned, seemingly uncertain about what to do next.
“Scared to touch it, or worried I’ll get it all over you?”
“You right-handed?”
“What?”
“Are you right-handed?”
“Yes.”
He untied my right hand. The suit brought in a McDonald’s cup. Medium. The way my bladder felt, maybe they should’ve supersized. I flexed the wrist of my free hand, which tingled as the feeling returned, then went about my business while the young guy held the cup with surprising poise. If it hadn’t been such a relief I probably would’ve done something stupid and juvenile like spraying him.
The suit wrinkled his nose and took away the cup, which was filled alarmingly close to the brim. Then the other guy pushed up a small table to my right and set down a full glass of water, which I greedily drained.
“Got anything to eat?”
“Later.”
“Mind telling me where I am?”
“The U.S. embassy. You better be damn glad we got to you first.”
“Actually, that’s not how I remember it.”
“Okay, but we got you.”
“The other guys were Russian?”
“Just like old times, huh? And believe me, you wouldn’t be peeing into any cups with those guys.”
“A samovar, you think?”
“Funny. In your pants, more like it.”
“You guys are the best.”
But in spite of everything, I
was
relieved. Being abducted and then bound to a chair by my countrymen might still lead just about anywhere, I supposed, but it seemed preferable to the alternative.
“Does my father know I’m here?”
“He has no idea about any of this.”
“That’s not what I asked.”
“You’ll be released into his custody. Provided you cooperate.”
I exhaled slowly. By now my head was completely clear, and I felt better after the water. Maybe I would be all right.
The suit returned, this time with a man in a white lab coat carrying a silver hard-shell briefcase, which he placed on the table and snapped open. The guy in black removed the rest of my bindings and backed away toward the door. Then, without a word, the man in the lab coat unrolled a black band, wrapped it tightly around my right biceps, and secured it with Velcro, as if he was about to take my blood pressure. He secured two thinner bands around my chest and began connecting sensors to the fingers on my right hand.
They were hooking me up to a polygraph. I was about to be fluttered.
I suppose it could have been an aftereffect of the knockout drug, but for a moment I experienced a sensation close to dizziness. It was as if the room was in motion and I was whirling on a long comet tail of history, preparing to land at the very point where all of this had started half a century ago, when Dad had been in an identical position. They’d hooked him up to an older version of the same machine and placed him before an inquisitor, all in the name of security. A moment that changed our lives, and now I would relive it. But I doubted my captors felt that way. To them this was more like battlefield cleanup, carting the last litters of the wounded from a very old and dormant field of action.
Rather than freaking out, I began to relax, fortified by the moment of solidarity with Dad. I realized then that I was ready for any question.
“All set,” the technician said.
I flexed my hand and drummed my fingers on the table.
“Don’t do that,” he said.
The young fellow in black introduced himself.
“I’m Peter West.” Then, gesturing toward the suit, “This is Arnold Harrison.”
“Am I really supposed to believe those names?”
“Believe what you want, as long as you answer the questions completely and truthfully. Are you ready to do that?”
“Fire away.”
West started me off with a series of easy questions to establish a baseline response. Name, age, home address, and so on, although about halfway through they threw in a wild card.
“Have you ever had sexual relations with Austrian national Litzi Strauss?”
“Yes.”
West checked with the technician, who nodded.
“Within the past week?”
I decided to test the machine.
“No.”
Another look. The techie shook his head. West frowned and tried again.
“Have you had sexual relations with Austrian national Litzi Strauss at any time during the past seven days?”
“Yes.”
A nod. A short time later they got down to business.
“Tonight at the bookstore, did the Russians take possession of the Lothar Heinemann book?”
“There was no Lothar Heinemann book.”
West didn’t even bother to check with the techie.
“We monitored your phone conversation. We know there was a book, whether Lothar’s name was on it or not. Did the Russians take possession of it?”
“Not to my knowledge. I told them I’d put it in a burn box. That got their attention long enough for me to get away.”
West raised an eyebrow and nodded.
“Not bad. Where was it really?”
“In the desk. A locked drawer. If you haven’t found it by now then I guess they have it.”
West looked over at the white coat. Then he frowned.
“You’re lying.”
“So you really haven’t found it?”
“Answer the question.”
“I got rid of it.”
“Where?”
“Down the coal chute. A flap behind the file cabinet.”
West seemed surprised when my answer passed muster.
“How did you know to put it there?”
“Earlier instructions. I’m a good listener.”
West looked at Harrison, who shrugged. The CIA must already have checked the cellar but come up empty. Maybe the Russians had it. Then I remembered the scrape of footsteps I thought I’d heard below. Lothar must have arranged for someone to be there to retrieve it. Many of those old cellars, I knew, had connecting doors that had been installed during the Second World War so that people could escape through their neighbors’ houses in case their own homes collapsed in an air raid. Ziegler himself might have been down there, the old rat. I smiled.
“Why are you smiling?”
“It was a good book. I enjoyed reading it.”
“Why didn’t you take notes?”
“Lothar asked me not to.”
West shook his head, seemingly unable to comprehend the idea that I’d actually done as I was told.
“Tell us about the contents.”
The questions continued in this vein for the next hour or so. I kept my answers as vague as possible, which wasn’t all that difficult considering that I truly couldn’t remember the material down to the finer details in the way that West wanted. I knew the names of the bookstores, of course, because they were ones I’d visited myself, and I easily remembered all the code names. But the dates and times, the sequences of the various couriers, and the finer points on who learned what, and when, and from whom, had already faded, so much so that after a while West finally threw in the towel.
“Shit, this is worthless.”
“You think Lothar still has the book, don’t you.” I said. “Him or one of his people.”
West shrugged.
“As long as it’s not the other guys.”
“Why do you even want it, after all this time? To expose it or bury it?”
“You’re not cleared for that answer. Let’s just say that maybe it’s not so bad that you don’t remember too much. But obviously you formed some sort of conclusion after reading it, or you wouldn’t have said what you did to Lothar on the phone.”
“About Lemaster being guilty? That was Lothar’s conclusion. I didn’t say it was mine.”
“But your handler still wants to know, doesn’t he?”
“Yes. I take it you know his name.”
“Giles Cabot has made himself pretty obvious lately. Especially by Agency standards.”
“Pretty neat trick for a guy in a wheelchair.”
“You were up there for the Nethercutt funeral, weren’t you? That’s probably when you came to his attention.”
“Probably.”
“How did he first make contact? Was it that weekend?”
“No. Later.”
I led them through the process, from that first anonymous message in Georgetown, typed on my own stationery, right up to the messages he’d sent me in Prague. I said nothing of what I’d learned about my father’s past, or Litzi’s, which meant I said very little about the events in Budapest. Neither of them seemed troubled by my apparent omissions. In fact, West seemed downright charmed and intrigued by my account.
“Christ,” he said. “It’s like something you’d read in a novel.”
“I think that was the point.”
“Well, we’d like you to finish it for us,” Harrison said. “Write one last chapter, then close the cover for good. If you’re up for it.”
Now they had me. Almost.
“Why not use one of your own people?”
Harrison cast a nervous glance at the technician.
“Let’s talk generally for a moment, shall we?”
He pulled up a chair and motioned to the technician to clear away his tools. The man in the white coat stripped me of the various monitors and sensors, then packed up his briefcase and left. No one said good-bye as he shut the door.
“You ask a very good question,” Harrison said. “Let’s just say that the work that needs to be done is likely to occur on territory outside our authorized area of operations. Places where a private citizen is certainly free to do as he chooses, even a particularly nosy and intrusive one, but not an employee of the Central Intelligence Agency.”
“So you want me to go to Block Island, to where Cabot lives?”
“We want you to bring this matter to a conclusion. If it involves activities on U.S. soil, then we’re not permitted to have a role in it. So you would be free to determine the latitude of the work within your own discretion as a private, law-abiding citizen.”
I almost laughed. Lawyers, I thought. Spies were powerless once you let lawyers into the equation. Maybe this explained why legal thrillers had overtaken espionage novels on bestseller lists in the wake of the Cold War.
“Okay, then. What is it that you
don’t
want me to do?”
“Find Cabot’s stash, then dispose of it.”
“His stash?”
West picked up the thread.
“All the Angleton people had one after they retired. So did the Dark Lord himself, as it turned out. Things that were never supposed to leave the building, but somehow did anyway, most of it having to do with all the stuff that no one knew they were up to.”