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Red Chameleon Page 16
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“Yes,” said Karpo, trying to sit up. His head was light, and he felt dizzy. He realized that the first touches of an aura indicating a migraine might be on him. “How do I get my clothes?”
The doctor looked at Rostnikov, who offered her no support, so that she had to turn to Mathilde, who smiled.
“You are a very sick man,” the doctor said.
Karpo was up now, his feet dangling over the side of the bed.
“My clothes,” he repeated,
Outnumbered, the doctor closed her notebook with a slap. “That is your right as a citizen,” she said grimly. “But I warn you that the infection is almost certain to kill you. You’ll have to sign papers indicating that you chose to leave the hospital in spite of my warnings.”
Mathilde held out a hand to help Karpo, who had managed to retain his dignity in spite of the absurd hospital gown. At first he rejected her offered hand and then took it.
The two debating patients behind them argued at a somewhat lower level the relative merits of leaving the hospital.
“It may take a while to get your clothes,” Rostnikov observed. “I’ll wait.”
But as it turned out, he could not wait. After five minutes, Sasha Tkach entered the ward, looked around, spotted Rostnikov, and hurried over.
“Karpo,” he said, brushing his straight hair back from his forehead. “How are you?”
“He is well, fine. We are waiting for his pants,” said Rostnikov. He didn’t introduce Mathilde, though Tkach stood waiting for an introduction. “Why are you here?”
“Posniky,” he said with a smile. “We found him. He’s a guest at the Metropole Hotel. He has a plane ticket to New York for this evening. I left Zelach to watch him. He’s with a younger man.”
“No one approached them?”
Tkach couldn’t stop looking at the woman helping Emil Karpo to stand, but he tried not to look at her, to wonder. Karpo had always been a puzzle to him, a person to stay away from unless they were forced together for an investigation. Emil Karpo and this woman did not fit together.
“No one approached them. They don’t know they have been identified, are being watched.”
“Good, fine,” Rostnikov said, sighing. “Then you and I will drive to the Metropole for a little drink. Emil,
Comrade Verson, you are on your own. I’ll give you Alex’s address this evening.”
Emil Karpo lifted his head to speak, realized there was nothing to say, and watched his two fellow officers of the state as they left the ward and the smell of alcohol behind them.
There was no real excuse for going to the Metropole. Rostnikov was off the case, had been told to stop the investigation. There was almost no way out of this if it came to a confrontation with Procurator Khabolov. His only hope was to bring in the killers, apologize for having them accidentally fall into his hands, and back away, taking the consequences. He could do one other thing. He could simply let Tkach turn them in and take no credit at all, simply disappear, but it was not in Porfiry Petrovich Rostnikov to disappear. He had tried it before and failed.
Tkach and Rostnikov rode in a bumpy taxi. It was hot all over Moscow, but a breeze through the open car window felt good. Rostnikov watched the streetlights go by and said nothing as they turned down Marx Prospekt.
“You want me to go with you to their room if they’re in?” asked Tkach to the back of Rostnikov’s head. “They are probably packing to leave.”
Rostnikov grunted a barely audible no.
For the rest of the trip, Tkach was silent.
Rostnikov was quite familiar with the Metropole. He had investigated murders committed there, thefts, interviewed suspects.
There was an Old World seediness about the old hotel. One expected to encounter criminals in its dusty halls and shabby restaurant. The food was awful, the service terrible even by Moscow standards. Criminals of some stature were, however, almost obligated to make an appearance at the Metropole. On the staircase leading up to the mezzanine of the hotel stood a large bronze statue of two naked children passionately kissing. The statue symbolized the hotel and had become a good-luck charm for the bolder criminals who touched the eternally embracing underage couple.
Rostnikov liked the Metropole. It was like stepping into the past. He could, at least for a moment, imagine himself Dostoyevski’s Porfiry Petrovich, for whom he was named, could imagine himself fencing verbally with a rapidly wilting Raskolnikov.
When the cab stopped, Tkach paid the driver, and Rostnikov moved ahead, not even glancing back across Sverdlov at the Bolshoi where, he knew, Swan Lake would soon be starting.
Zelach was seated conspicuously in the lobby, his hands folded on his lap, his eyes looking toward the entrance to the restaurant. He spotted Rostnikov and stood to greet him.
“They are in the restaurant,” Zelach said.
“Fine.”
“I’ll point them out to you.”
“I think I’ll know who they are,” said Rostnikov.
Tkach had now joined them. “Zelach, place yourself at the entrance of the restaurant,” he said. “I don’t care if they see you. In fact, it would be better if they do. Sasha, you make your way to the door by the kitchen. Just stand there looking like a policeman.”
Tkach had no idea of how to look like what he was, but he nodded and watched Rostnikov move slowly, pulling his reluctant leg behind him. The several people in the lobby worked hard not to watch the scene, but watch they did.
As he entered the restaurant and let his eyes take in the various tables, he was grateful that the regular orchestra was not there. It was too early, but they were loud and terrible at any time. He did not want to shout over them.
There were a few dozen people in the room and at one table a man and woman Rostnikov recognized. The man had been imprisoned for beating another man who filled beer vending machines. The man pretended not to see the policeman.
Then Rostnikov saw the two men he was looking for. They were seated near the marble fountain in the center of the room in front of the stage, where there was no orchestra. The light from the fountain played on the stained-glass window behind the stage, and Rostnikov felt quite comfortable as he made his way to the two men and listened to the gentle splashing of the water in the fountain and the murmur of voices in the room.
The two men did not look up until he was standing next to the table. Even then only the younger of the two raised his head. The other man, the old man with the white hair, looked at his drink.
“Good afternoon,” Rostnikov said amiably in English. “I am Chief Inspector Porfiry Petrovich Rostnikov, I do not know what name you are registered under, but you are Mikhail Posniky.”
The younger man, a burly figure, very much the way Sofiya Savitskaya had described him, started to rise, his eyes looking about.
“Sit down, Martin,” the old man said in English, taking a sip of his wine. “We’re in the middle of Moscow. Where are we going to run to? “
“May I sit?” Rostnikov said, still in English. “I have a bad leg. The war.”
“Sit,” said Posniky in Russian, and Rostnikov sat. Rostnikov could see a faint resemblance between this old man and the young one in the photograph. This man’s face was a dry landscape, a parched riverbed filled with crevices. “You like wine, chief inspector?”
“That would be nice.”
Rostnikov glanced at the younger man, who was looking around the room. His eyes stopped first on Zelach, then circled and found Tkach. If he panicked, Rostnikov was prepared to reach out and grab him. He looked trained, formidable, possibly even a challenge. Posniky’s very blue eyes came up and met Rostnikov’s.
“Don’t do anything stupid, Martin,” the old man said in English.
“Thank you,” said Rostnikov, accepting a glass of dark wine.
“The wine isn’t as I remembered it,” Posniky said, looking at this glass. “Has it changed that much, or have I?”
“It has changed,” said Rostnikov. “But you’ve been gone for a l
ong time. If you would feel more comfortable speaking English …”
“More than sixty years,” Posniky said with a little smile. “I’ll try Russian, though my phrases may be a bit out-of-date and there are many words I’ve forgotten. I am over eighty years old. Do I look it?”
“I would have guessed sixty,” said Rostnikov, sipping the wine. It was awful.
“Let’s try—” Martin said, leaning forward, his voice urgent.
“Sit and do what you are told,” Posniky said with authority. Martin sat back and divided his attention between the three policemen in the room.
“The candlestick,” Rostnikov said. “You have a story. I would like to hear it.”
“I have a story,” the old man said. “Do we have time?”
“We have time,” said the detective, placing his half-finished drink on the table.
“In 1891—” he began. “You’ll forgive me if I go back that far. It might help you to understand the—how do you say, ugly?”
“Nekrasivyi,” said Rostnikov.
“Ah, yes,” said the old man, shaking his head at the memory of the word, “the ugly details. In the winter of 1891 the Gentile soldiers of the fonie, the czar, came to Yekteraslav for their quota of boys twelve and older who were to go for an indeterminate period, which the fonie forever varied from five to forty years. The longer the period of service, the more likely the boy to die or accept Christ, though Jewish boys had proved stubborn and deaths outnumbered conversions among Hebrew soldier children. It had been agreed that only one son would be taken for each family. According to my father, the Russian officer who came that day was a foolish man, a stupid man. He took who he wanted, which meant my father and his two brothers, one of whom was only eleven. My uncles died. My father came back in six years, half mad.”
Rostnikov nodded to show that he was listening, but the old man was not watching the policeman. He was holding his wineglass in both hands and watching the last drops as he spoke more to himself.
“My father was arrested in 1909 by an officer who came to the door in a blue coat and fur hat. I was only a few years old, but I remember my father, or—who knows?—my mother may have described him so often that I think I remember him. He was arrested because we had a local shopkeeper’s son working for us during the small harvest of our farm. The soldier at the door quoted the May Laws of 1881 stating that Jews could not hire Christian domestics without the express permission of the regional governor. The shopkeeper’s son was only half Christian; and we paid him only with a few vegetables. We had no money, but”—Posniky shrugged—“they took my father, and we never saw him again. … My father, the village lunatic.
“And now,” Posniky said, looking up with narrow eyes at the uneasy Martin, “and now ten years later, the Revolution. I was a boy. My friends were boys. Yekteraslav was an isolated Jewish village. We knew little of the Revolution. We didn’t know which side was which. Some said the Jews would be better off after the Revolution. Most of us didn’t believe it. Shmuel Prensky believed it. Abraham Savitskaya and I had lost too many relatives to the Christian Russia to believe it.”
“And Ostrovsky,” Rostnikov added, reaching for the bottle of wine. It was awful wine, but it was wine. “The actor.”
Posniky looked up warily, not quite startled. “It will be easier to tell my story if you let me know what you know so I don’t have to repeat—”
“I know names,” Rostnikov said, biting back a bitter sip. “I know events of the last days, the murder of Abraham Savitskaya by you and your companion, the theft of the candlestick.”
“It was no theft,” the old man said with some emotion. “It was mine. It was my mother’s. When the Reds came to our village in 1919 or 1920 to collect young men the way the fonie had collected our fathers, Abraham and I decided to get out. My mother and his gave us some food, and my mother gave me the candlestick. It was all she could give, and it was worth little. I said good-bye to my mother and sister, and we left on a winter morning. We were young, too stupid to see the uselessness of what we were trying, to get to Riga, to walk to Riga or steal a ride, but to get to Riga and get on a boat for Canada or America. We didn’t know about passports. We didn’t know that the few rubles in our pockets would buy not even enough bread for the trip. We assumed other Jews would help us on the way. We had names of friends of friends in towns along the way. We never found the towns or the friends. How much detail do you want, policeman?”
“As much as you wish to give,” said Rostnikov, checking to see that Zelach and Tkach were alert. Zelach, across the room, looked puzzled by the scene.
“When we got to the road leading out of town,” Posniky said, “we were too stupid even to go across the fields. We met two soldiers who had been left to stop just what we were doing. One was young. One was quite old. Their uniforms were makeshift, and they were surprised when we killed them. They expected docile young Jewish boys to run back into town, weeping. They had one horse between them, and both were standing on the ground, ordering us to turn around, when I pulled out the brass candlestick from my cloth sack and hit the young one in the face. His cheek gave way, and he tried to scream. I hit him again while the old soldier watched. Neither of them were real soldiers. The old one turned to run, but Abraham leaped on him, and I beat him to death, too. Since then, I have killed others.”
“Including Abraham Savitskaya,” said Rostnikov.
Martin was examining the faces of the two men across from him, trying to understand odd words in a foreign language, tense with frustration. Rostnikov was sure the young man would have to be dealt with before the afternoon was over.
“Including Savitskaya,” agreed Posniky. “We dragged the bodies into the gray weeds off the road, and we ran through the field, leaving the horse standing in the middle of the road. Neither of us even considered taking the horse.”
“Young boys often do very foolish things,” said Rostnikov.
“And old men,” added Posniky, holding up his glass, which Rostnikov refilled with wine.
“Mr. Parker,” Martin said, glancing at Rostnikov. “I think—”
Posniky didn’t even bother to look at the man. He shook his head and held up a wrinkled hand to quiet him. And then he went on with his story, interrupted only by a waiter, who brought a fresh bottle of wine and some bread.
“The trees were thin in near spring, and they gave little protection in the light of day, so we had to walk deeper in the woods to be sure we weren’t seen from the road. When we heard a cart passing, we found shelter and waited. By early evening we had circled around a pair of small villages and watched a line of men on horseback heading in the direction from which we had come.
“‘They’re coming for us,’ Abraham said softly.
“‘No,’ I told him, rubbing my lower back and putting down his sack. ‘They are riding slowly and laughing.’
“‘Why are we still hiding in the woods instead of walking the roads?’
“‘We will take no chances until we are far away.’
“‘And how will we get on a boat at Riga? We have no money.’
“‘When we get to Riga’—I sighed—‘we will find the money.’
“‘God willing,’ said Abraham.
“A savage cold rain hit by evening, driving us under an outcrop of rocks where children had been before us, leaving a few torn books and pieces of glass. We shared the last of our cheese, drank rainwater from our clothes, and slept chilled. I remember dreaming of a town I had never seen, a town with no people, a town where rows of houses were being torn down. I had to run from house to house to stay ahead of the men and machines that moved forward to knock down the walls and send the dust of brick and mud into the air. I fled to a river and a long bridge that frightened me. I trembled and hesitated to put my foot on the white bridge, but behind me I heard the breathing of a sick cow, and I put my foot forward just as I woke up.
“We moved slowly, so slowly that our feet sometimes sank ankle-deep into mud in the woods and fie
lds. The roads were a bit better, but we still avoided them. Sometimes we saw or heard someone working in a field, and one time we moved boldly through a nameless town and asked a ragged water carrier if we were on the right road to Riga.
“‘You’re on the right road, but you’ll both be old men by the time you walk there.’ The water carrier was a dry old man himself, a stick of a man, a kindling of a man with a brittle beard and no teeth. Very much like Abraham Savitskaya was in the bathtub when Martin and I found him.
“‘We haven’t any money,’ Abraham said.
“The old man opened his mouth to comment or laugh but said nothing. Instead, he held out his water bucket to us, and we took a drink. The street was cobbled, and three little children wearing sacks for clothes played near us, some game with sticks and a little ball. I thanked the old water carrier, and we hurried out of town and back off the road.
“After three days of travel, Abraham was shivering and estimated that we had gone no more than a tenth part of our journey at most. Even if we could keep up our present pace, it would be at least thirty days before we reached Riga, and Abraham, always fragile, could not keep it up for thirty days.
“‘We can go back,’ he said, sitting on a wet tree stump. ‘We could hide in the fields until we’re sure it’s safe.’
“I remember searching my sack for the last of our bread, finding it and tearing it in two for us.
“‘We killed two soldiers,’ I reminded him. ‘We will not be soon forgotten. And I don’t want to go back. You can go back if you want to.’
“We sat in the darkness, hugging ourselves, waiting for the night cold to take us. Abraham was first to give in to the chill and let it carry him to sleep, but I fought it, gritted my teeth, challenged until I felt I had proven myself and could allow my body the reward of rest. Before I slept, however, I planned.
“The next day’s travel was like the last, and we spoke little. The road turned, and we followed it, afraid that we had made a mistake and were now bound in the wrong direction, had somehow missed a turn and were headed into the vastness of an endless Russia toward Moscow; but the road gradually turned back in a direction I thought was north. Late in the brown afternoon we came to a large town and circled it. It took us an hour, and we never discovered the town’s name.