Child 44 Part 25
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-What's this for?
-Some of the component parts I collect, as samples, are fragile, some are dirty. This jar is useful for my work. Listen, officer, I know I shouldn't have gone off with this girl. I don't know what came over me. I was here, checking the times for the buses tomorrow and she approached me. You know how it iswith urges. One came over me. But look in the pocket of the case, you'll find my Party members.h.i.+p card.
Aron found the card. He also found a photograph of the man's wife and two daughters.
-My daughters. There's no need to take this any further, is there, officer? The girl is the one to blame: I would've been on my way home by now otherwise.
A decent citizen momentarily corrupted by a drunken girl, a reprobate. This man had been polite: he hadn't stared at Aron's lip or made any disparaging comments. He'd treated him as an equal even though he was older with a better job and a member of the Party. He was the victim. She was the criminal.
Having felt the net close around him, Andrei realized he was almost free. The photograph of his family had proved invaluable on numerous occasions. He sometimes used it to persuade reluctant children that he was a man who could be trusted. He was a father himself. In his trouser pocket he could feel the coa.r.s.e length of string. Not tonight; he'd have to exercise patience in the future. He could no longer kill in his home town.
Aron was about to let the man go, putting the card and photograph back, when he caught sight of something else in the case: a slip of newspaper folded in half. He pulled it out, opening it up.
Andrei was unable to watch this idiot with his revolting lip touch that piece of paper with his dirty fingers. He could barely stop himself from s.n.a.t.c.hing it from his hands.
-May I have that back, please?
For the first time the man's voice had become agitated. Why was this paper so important to him? Aron studied the page. It was a clipping from several years ago, the ink had faded. There was no text, no copythat had all been cut away so that it was impossible to tell which newspaper it had come from. All that remained was a photograph taken during the Great Patriotic War. It showed the burning wreck of a panzer. Russian soldiers stood with guns triumphantly pointing into the air, dead German soldiers at their feet. It was a victory photo, a propaganda photo. With his deformed deformed upper lip Aron understood all too well why this photo had been printed in a newspaper. The Russian soldier at the centre of the photo was a handsome man with a winning smile. upper lip Aron understood all too well why this photo had been printed in a newspaper. The Russian soldier at the centre of the photo was a handsome man with a winning smile.
Moscow 10 July Leo's face was swollen, tender to touch. His right eye remained closed, hidden beneath folds of puffy skin. There was intense pain down the side of his chest as though he'd broken several ribs. He'd been given basic medical a.s.sistance at the scene of the crash, but as soon as it had been ascertained that his life wasn't in danger he'd been loaded into a truck under armed guard. On the journey back to Moscow he'd felt each b.u.mp in the road like a punch in the gut. Without painkillers on the journey he had pa.s.sed out several times. His guards had woken him by prodding him with the barrels of their guns, fearful of him dying on their watch. Leo had spent the journey alternating between feverish heat and freezing cold. These injuries, he accepted, were merely the beginning.
The irony of ending up heresecured to a chair in a bas.e.m.e.nt interrogation cell in the Lubyankahadn't escaped his attention. A guardian of the State had become its prisoner, a not uncommon reversal of fortunes. This is what it felt like to be an enemy of his country.
The door opened. Leo raised his head. Who was this man with sallow skin and yellow-stained teeth? He was a former colleague, he remembered that much. But he couldn't remember the man's name.
-You don't remember me?
-No.
-I'm Dr Zarubin. We've met on a couple of occasions. I visited you when you were ill not so many months ago. I'm sorry to see you in this predicament. I say that not as a criticism of the action being taken against you; that is just and fair. I simply mean that I wish you hadn't done it.
-What have I done?
-You've betrayed your country.
The doctor felt Leo's ribs. Each touch caused him to clench his teeth.
-Your ribs aren't broken, as I was told. They're bruised. No doubt it's painful. But none of your injuries require surgery. I've been ordered to clean up the cuts and change the dressings.
-Treatment before torture, a quirk of this place. I once saved a man's life only to bring him here. I should have let Brodsky drown in that river.
-I don't know this man of whom you speak.
Leo fell silent. Anyone could regret their actions once the tables had been turned. He understood, more clearly than ever, that his only chance of redemption had slipped through his fingers. The killer would continue to kill, concealed not by any masterful brilliance but by his country's refusal to admit that such a man even existed, wrapping him in perfect immunity.
The doctor finished patching up Leo's injuries. Such a.s.sistance was intended to guarantee full sensitivity to the torture which would follow. Make them better so they could be hurt to a greater extent. The doctor leaned down and whispered into Leo's ear.
-I'm now going to tend to your wife. Your pretty wife, she's tied up next door. Quite helpless, and it's your fault. Everything I'm going to do to her is your fault. I'm going to make her hate the day she ever loved you. I'm going to make her say it aloud.
As though it had been spoken in a foreign language it took a while for Leo to comprehend what was being said to him. He had no grudge against this man. He'd barely recognized him. Why was he threatening Raisa? Leo tried to stand up, lunging for the doctor. But his chair was secured to the floor and he was secured to the chair.
Dr Zarubin pulled back, like a man who'd put his head too close to a lion's cage. He watched Leo strain against his restraints, his veins bulging in his neck, his face red, his eye pathetically swollen. It was intriguinglike watching a fly trapped under a gla.s.s. This man didn't understand the nature of his predicament.
Helplessness
The doctor picked up his case and waited for the guard to open the door. He expected Leo to call out after him, perhaps threaten to kill him. But on that front, at least, he was disappointed.
He walked down the bas.e.m.e.nt corridor, a matter of metres, arriving at the adjacent cell. The door was opened. Zarubin entered. Raisa was seated and secured in exactly the same way as her husband. The doctor was excited by the prospect of her recognizing him and recognizing that she should have accepted his offer. If she had, she would've been safe. She was evidently not the skilled survivor he'd taken her for. She had extraordinary beauty, something she'd failed to capitalize on, opting instead for fidelity. Perhaps she believed in an afterlife, a heaven where her loyalty would be rewarded. It had no value here.
Convinced that he'd find her regret stimulating, he expected her to beg:
Help me.
She'd accept any conditions now: he could ask anything of her. He could treat her like filth and she'd willingly accept it and plead for more. She'd submit to him completely. The doctor opened the grate on the wall. Although the grate appeared to be part of a ventilation system, in fact it was designed to carry sound from one cell to another. He wanted Leo to listen to every word.
Raisa stared up at Zarubin, watching as he struck a look of pantomime sadness, no doubt trying to communicate a sense of pity, as if to say:
If only you'd accepted my offer.
He put his case down and began examining her even though she had no injuries.
-I need to study every part of you. For my report, you understand.
Raisa had been taken without any fuss. The restaurant had been surrounded: agents had entered and secured her. As she'd been escorted out, Basarov had shouted with predictable malice that she deserved whatever punishment she got. Tied up in the back of a truck, given no information, she had no idea what had happened to Leo until she overheard an officer say they'd got him. She guessed, from the satisfaction in his voice, that Leo had at least attempted to escape.
She tried to remain looking straight ahead as the doctor's hands crept across her body, as though he wasn't there. But she couldn't help stealing glances at him. His knuckles were hairy, his nails perfectly clean and carefully cut. The guard behind her began to laugh, a childish laugh. She concentrated on the idea that her body was out of his reach and no matter what he did, he wouldn't be able to lay a finger on her. It was an impossible idea to sustain. His fingers moved up the inside of her leg with awful and deliberate slowness. She felt tears in her eyes. She blinked them away. Zarubin moved closer: his face close to hers. He kissed her cheek, sucking her skin into his mouth as though about to take a bite.
The door opened. Vasili entered. The doctor pulled back, stood up, stepping back. Vasili was annoyed.
-She's not injured. There's no need for you to be here.
-I was just making sure.
-You may leave.
Zarubin took his case and left. Vasili closed the grate. He crouched down beside Raisa, observing her tears.
-You're strong. Maybe you think you can hold out. I understand your desire to stay loyal to your husband.
-Do you?
-You're right. I don't. My point is it would be better for you if you told me everything immediately. You think I'm a monster. But do you know who I learnt that particular line from? Your husband, that's what he used to tell people before they were torturedsome of them in this very room. He meant it sincerely, if that matters.
Raisa stared at this man's handsome features and wondered, as she had in the train station all those months ago, why he appeared ugly. His eyes were dull, not lifeless or stupid, but cold.
-I'll tell you everything.
-But will that be enough?
Leo should have been conserving his strength until there was an opportunity to act. That moment wasn't now. He'd seen many prisoners waste their energy banging fists against doors, shouting, relentlessly pacing their tiny cells. At the time he'd wondered why they couldn't see the futility of their actions. Now that he was in that same predicament he finally appreciated how they felt. It was as if his body was allergic to this confinement. It had nothing to do with logic or reasoning. He simply couldn't sit and wait and do nothing. Instead, he strained against his restraints until his wrists began to bleed. Some part of him actually believed he might be able to break these chains even though he'd seen a hundred men and women secured to them and not once had they broken. Lit up with the notion of a great escape, he ignored the fact that this kind of hope was as dangerous as any torture they could inflict.
Vasili entered, gesturing for the guard to place a chair opposite Leo. The guard obeyed, positioning it just outside of Leo's reach. Vasili stepped forward, picking up the chair and moving it closer. Their knees were almost touching. He stared at Leo, taking in the way his whole body was straining against his restraints.
-Relax, your wife is unharmed. She's next door.
Vasili waved the guard towards the grate. He opened it. Vasili called out: -Raisa: say something to your husband. He's worried about you.
Raisa's voice could be heard like a faint echo: -Leo?
Leo pulled back, relaxing his body. Before Leo could answer the guard slammed the grate shut. Leo looked at Vasili.
-There's no need to torture either of us. You know how many sessions I've seen. I understand there's no point in holding out. Ask me any question, I'll answer.
-But I already know everything. I've read the files you collected. I've spoken to General Nesterov. He was very keen that his children shouldn't grow up in an orphanage. Raisa has confirmed all his information. I only have one question for you. Why?
Leo didn't understand. But his fight was gone. He just wanted to say whatever it was this man wanted to hear. He spoke like a child addressing a teacher.
-I'm sorry. I mean no disrespect. I don't understand. You're asking why...?
-Why risk the little you had, the little we allowed you to keep, for this fantasy?
-You're asking about the murders?
-The murders have all been solved.
Leo didn't reply.
-You don't believe that, do you? You believe that someone or some group of people are randomly murdering Russian boys and girls up and down this country for no reason at all?
-I was wrong. I had a theory. It was wrong. I retract it fully. I'll sign a retraction, a confession, an admission of guilt.
-You realize you're guilty of the most serious act of anti-Russian agitation. It feels like Western propaganda, Leo. That, I could understand. If you're working for the West then you're a traitor. Maybe they promised you money, power, the things you had lost. That I could at least understand. Is this the case?
-No.
-That is what worries me. It means you genuinely believe these murders were connected rather than the actions of perverts and vagrants and drunks and undesirables. To be blunt, it is madness. I've worked with you. I've seen how methodical you are. And if the truth be told, I even admired you. Before, that is, you lost your head over your wife. So when I was told of your new adventures it didn't make sense to me.
-I had a theory. It was wrong. I don't know what else I can say.
-Why would anyone want to kill these children?
Leo stared at the man opposite him, a man who'd wanted to execute two children for their parents' a.s.sociation with a vet. He would've shot them in the back of the head and thought nothing of it. Yet Vasili had asked this question in earnest.
Why would anyone want to kill these children?
He'd murdered on a scale comparable to the man Leo was hunting, perhaps even greater. And yet he scratched his head over the logic of these crimes. Was it that he couldn't understand why anyone who wanted to kill simply didn't join the MGB or become a Gulag guard? If that was his point then Leo understood it. There were so many legitimate outlets for brutality and murder, why choose an unofficial one? But that wasn't his point.
These children.
Vasili's confusion came from the fact that these crimes were apparently motiveless. It wasn't that the murder of children was unfathomable. But what was the gain? What was the angle? There was no official need to kill these children, no notion of it serving a greater good, no material benefit. That was his objection.
Child 44 Part 25
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Child 44 Part 25 summary
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