44

The willows along the river are dotted with fresh growth and bathed in sunlight that strikes the House on the Embankment at a nattering angle. Like hibernating bears, the residents venture from their caves to thaw frozen marrow and stretch long-dormant muscles. The benches are jammed with elderly sun worshipers, the paths crowded with chatting strollers, the grounds alive with the playful shrieks of children. A bouncing ball. A soaring kite. Tricycles. The smell of cottonwoods. I remember days like this.

I park the Zhiguli on Morisa Toreza, put Scotto’s pistol in the glove box, and make my way across the grounds to the entrance, taking the elevator to Mrs. Churkin’s apartment.

She reacts as if she’s never seen me before when she opens the door. “Nikolai?” she finally exclaims, brightening. “You look so— so healthy. I didn’t recognize you. Please come in.” Her fashionable skirt swirls gracefully as she turns and leads the way. “I’ve been hoping to hear from you. I thought you might call from Washington. I couldn’t imagine what happened.”

“I wanted to be sure one way or the other, first.”

“And now you are?” she prompts apprehensively as we cross the grandly proportioned living room, taking seats near the windows.

I wait until I can capture her eyes with mine. “Yes. You were right. He was wholly innocent.”

She sighs, the pent-up anxiety released like air escaping from a balloon. “Oh. Thank God.”

“He was murdered to prevent him from doing his job.”

She smiles weakly, then looks off with a thought. “Then why are they still saying otherwise? First they called him a black-mailer. Now, he’s the mastermind.”

“It’s all part of the cover-up. He was neither, Mrs. Churkin, believe me. Your father was an honest man—honest to a fault.”

“Will you write that?”

“Of course I will.”

“Thank you, Nikolai,” she says, beaming. “Thank you for everything.” She leaves the chair and fetches her jacket from a closet near the door. It makes a metallic tinkling sound as she slips it on. My eyes dart to a cascade of brightly colored ribbons and shimmering medals arranged in neat rows on the black wool. She notices me staring. “There’s a demonstration in Red Square this morning,” she explains. “I’m taking the children. Thank you again. This is going to be the most wonderful May Day.”

My gut tightens. My face falls. I can’t hide my reaction. May Day was always the symbol of everything I despised; the endless parade of tanks, missiles, and troops. Mile after mile of them marching like robots, marching in the same goose step as the hated Nazis. The bizarre military affectation always baffled me. As did the huge portraits—Marx, a Jew: Engels, a German; and Lenin, a Western-educated lawyer—that hung above the latter’s tomb, where members of the Politburo stood in precise pecking order, their beaming faces failing to conceal the flinty malevolence in their eyes.

“You disapprove, don’t you?” Mrs. Churkin prompts.

“I disapprove of anything that glorifies tyrants and dictators.”

“My father was neither. He was a war hero, a patriot, and a great man.”

“A Communist.”

“True. It’s part of my children’s heritage. You’re not suggesting I lie about it, are you?”

“On the contrary. I think it’s important they know the truth.”

“Which is?”

“Seventy-five years of totalitarian rule, of repression, terror, the denial of human rights.”

“It wasn’t the Communists who took away my father’s human rights, was it?” she declares pointedly.

I stiffen, stung by the penetrating accuracy of her remark. “No, it wasn’t.”

“Do you know who?”

“Yes, I asked him about your father. That’s why I’m so positive of his innocence.”

Her eyes narrow in suspicion. “Why aren’t you telling me his name? Aren’t you going to reveal it?”

“I’m not sure.”

“I don’t understand.”

“I thought you wanted to restore your father’s reputation?”

“Yes, I’d also like to see the man responsible for his death punished.”

“The man who killed him is dead, Mrs. Churkin.”

“I said the man responsible.”

“What if I told you it might hurt Russia?”

“What do you mean?”

“Democracy. Our commitment to a free society. What you’re asking me to do could have consequences that—”

“This has nothing to do with that, as far as I’m concerned,” she interrupts indignantly. “My father was killed in cold blood, Nikolai. I want justice. I have a right to it. So does he.”

“To use the common analogy, justice is best served by weighing opposing views, and I assure you, that’s what I’m doing.”

“Yes, and eventually one side of the scale goes up and the other goes down.”

“I’m afraid you’re forgetting that there’s always a slim chance they’ll balance.”

She stares at me for a long moment, then nods resignedly and crosses to a doorway. “Children? Children, we don’t want to be late.”

They come running excitedly from their rooms. Their faces are brighter than I recall. Their posture straighter. Both are impeccably dressed. The boy struts proudly in his white shirt, tie, and blazer adorned with several of his grandfather’s medals. His sister, immaculate in a flowery spring dress and prim white gloves, holds a stick to which a small Soviet flag is affixed. The Hammer and Sickle against the bright red field still raises my hackles and sends shivers of terror up my spine.

We leave the apartment and take the elevator to the lobby in silence. “I used to live here,” I say, as we exit and cross toward the big wooden door. “Did I ever mention that?”

Mrs. Churkin brightens, pleasantly surprised. I sense that this revelation, more than retrieving the medals, or determining her father’s innocence, somehow validates me. “Your family? Here?”

“Uh-huh,” I reply, opening the door for them. “Until my father was arrested by the KGB.”

The children dash through it enthusiastically. Mrs. Churkin hesitates. “Why?”

“He didn’t think Soviet tanks belonged in Prague.”

“Neither did mine, as I recall.”

“Yes, well, mine made the mistake of saying it.”

“What happened to him?”

“He died in a labor camp. Many years ago. He was a good man. Educated. Compassionate. He had every bit as much integrity and love for his country as yours.”

She smiles sympathetically and hurries down the steps, then pauses and turns back to face me. “I’m counting on you, Nikolai.”

I force a smile as she goes after the children, then return to the Zhiguli. It seems to be giving off a faint electronic twitter when I open the door. The sound is coming from the backseat. I pull my briefcase from beneath the suitcases and throw back the flap. The sound gets louder. It’s my beeper. It’s been in there since I left Moscow. I’d forgotten all about it. I jog across the grounds to a phone kiosk, thumb two kopeks into the slot, and dial Militia Headquarters.

“Dispatcher seventeen.”

“Vera? Vera, it’s Nikolai. You beep me?”

“Of course. Who else? Several times in the last few weeks, I might add.”

“I was away for a while. What’s going on?”

“You’re in trouble with the militia.”

“Gudonov?”

“No, Shevchenko. He put out an alert for a rented Zhiguli and identified you as the driver.”

“Oh,” I sigh, relieved. “That’s okay. We’re still working on that story. It’s been a long night. He’s probably wondering what happened.”

“I don’t know about that. The alert carries a warning that you’re armed.”

“Great. Listen, Vera, I’m at the Embankment. Can you meet me?”

“No, I’m working.”

“Get someone to cover for you. I’m in a quandary over this. I need to talk.”

“I can’t. What about Yuri? Call him.”

“It’s about Yuri. Please, it’s important. You’ve no idea how important.”

“All right, Niko. I’m on my way.”

My stomach flutters at the thought of seeing her. I settle on one of the benches, wondering if she meant it, if she’s really going to come. Fifteen minutes. A half hour. I’m lighting one cigarette from the next and on the verge of giving up hope when I spot Vera’s lithe figure weaving through the crowd.

She apologizes for taking so long, explaining that the May Day demonstration has snarled traffic and the taxi couldn’t get through. She’s predictably intrigued and impressed by my tale of adventure, and as shocked and confused by my dilemma as I am. “I can’t tell you what to do, Nikolai,” she replies with a comely shrug. “I’ve no idea how to handle it. Besides, you never listened to me before. Why would you start now?”

“I’m desperate,” I reply with a little smile. “And anyone who could come up with those documents is well worth listening to. I’m sorry. I never thanked you. None of this could’ve happened without them.”

“I’m not sure how to take that.”

“That makes two of us. Want to tell me how you did it?”

“I didn’t. I have a friend in the mail room who owed me a favor. She intercepted the envelope before it got out of the building.” Vera splays her hands and grins. “You still want advice from me?”

“You have some?”

“Uh-huh.”

“What? Join a monastery?”

She chuckles and throws her hair back over her shoulder. “No. Just be yourself. It’s always served you well.”

“I’m not sure I know who I am anymore.”

“You don’t seem different.”

“I’m not. Everything else is. It all used to be so clear. So simple. The assholes in the Kremlin were the bad guys. We were the good guys. It’s all muddled now.”

“Trust your instincts. Do what feels right. You’ll be okay, Nikolai. I know you will.” She smiles, then glances to her watch. “I have to go.” She turns to leave, then pauses and lunges into my arms. Her eyes are brimming with emotion. “I missed you. Will you call me?”

“If you really want me to.”

“Of course I do.” She kisses my cheek, steps back, then turns and hurries off.

I watch until she disappears in the crowd, then walk along the river lost in my thoughts. A half hour later, I find myself back at the Zhiguli. As I’m opening the door, I hear the shuffle of feet and I whirl to see four men running toward me brandishing guns.

“Police!” one of them shouts. “Turn around and put your hands on the car!”

“I’m not armed,” I call out, complying with the order. “The gun’s in the glove box.”

One of the officers fetches it. They frisk me anyway, confiscating my wallet and car keys, then spin me around to face them. “Nikolai Katkov?”

I nod wearily.

“Investigator Shevchenko wants to see you. You’ll have to come with us.”

Two of them hustle me into a patrol car. As we drive off, another gets behind the wheel of the Zhiguli and follows. The driver avoids the demonstration-clogged streets, and makes quick work of the drive to Militia Headquarters. In less than fifteen minutes, we’re hurrying down the corridor to Shevchenko’s office.

“Katkov. Katkov, you okay?” Scotto asks anxiously as we enter.

“Yeah, I’m fine.”

“Good, because I’m gonna kill you, dammit. Now, what the hell’s going on?”

“Going on?” I’m stalling, vacillating like a flickering light bulb. “What do you mean?”

“Come on, Katkov!” Shevchenko growls, jumping out of his chair and circling the desk to confront me. “Twelve hours to check out a hunch?!”

“Some take longer than others.”

“Am I to assume that means you’ve completed your investigation into the container’s whereabouts?” he asks sardonically.

I nod, buying every last second before deciding.

“And?” he groans, exasperated.

Silence. I could hear a pin drop. A long moment passes before I shrug and hear myself say, “I was wrong.”