BOOK I (13 page)

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Authors: Genevieve Roland

BOOK: BOOK I
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Of course I can, Appleyard asserted. I can do anything, I can do snow falling. I can do smoke rising. I can do the sun setting. I can do someone dying. The last two are actually very similar. . . .

The American agent known to the Cousins by the code name Khanda picked up his visa from the Mexican consulate in New Orleans the, last week in September, on the clay the newspapers first ran the item about the forthcoming visit of the Prince of the Realm to a particular city.

Travelling, under the alias of Alek James Hidell, he set out by bus for Laredo, Texas, then strolled across to Nuevo Laredo and continued on in a Mexican bus.

Once in Mexico City, Khanda made contact with his Cuban cutout, Normally all contacts between Khanda and his Merchant were handled by the Cubans.

But because the assignment was so sensitive, the rule was ignored and the Cuban set up with the Russians. There were two of them. The first, named Vladimir Volkov, was the Department 13 man in Mexico. The other, the, younger of the two Cousins who ran Department 13, had flown to Mexico especially for this meeting.

The first session took place in a seedy motel near the city's airport.

The Cubans provided warm bodies to seal off the area. The Russians turned up with a bottle of decent Polish vodka and a five-hundred-gram tin of black beluga caviar. Khanda had grown particularly fond of caviar during the two years he had spent in Russia, so the meeting got off on the right foot.

Khanda was five feet, ten inches in height, lean, wiry even, with a look of grim determination etched into the thin lines of his mouth. He impressed people ay being sulky, but the very few who knew him more than casually saw him as someone with a permanent chip on his shoulder, a score to settle.

Speaking Russian, the three chatted about Khanda's life, in America. The Russians asked whether his wife had any idea of what he was up to. He assured them she didn't. She knew about the clip-fed rifle, fitted with the telescopic sight, that he had bought from a mail order house in Chicago, but she believed his story that he used it for target practice.

The Cousin broached the delicate subject of what had gone wrong the previous spring when Khanda tried to assassinate an outspoken anti-Castro military officer. "It was night," Khanda told them with a nervous shrug. "I couldn't see too well. I missed."

The Russians, both of whom were experienced in handling Department 13

field men, were careful not to bruise his ego. "It could happen to anyone," the Cousin said sympathetically.

Khanda produced the article he had clipped from the newspaper, and they talked at length about the Prince's forthcoming visit. Volkov flattened a detailed map of the city on a table, weighing down the corners with ashtrays. The three of them pored over it. Experts had studied the situation, the Cousin said. They had decided that there were two ways for the Prince to reach the luncheon site from the airport. He traced the routes with his thumb. The Prince could go down Main Street, turn onto the boulevard and proceed directly to the site. Or he could jog, right off Main onto Elm Street, then head for the freeway and the site.

"What you must do," the younger Cousin said, "is go there and study the two routes carefully."

Khanda, who had been trained at Department 13's secret espionage school outside of Minsk, squinted at the map as if it were a landscape and he was a gardener. "I have to find work in a building that will give me a clean shot at him no matter which of the two routes he chooses," he said.

They discussed, in very general terms, angles of fire, distances at which the Italian rifle fitted with the telescopic sight could be considered accurate, how many shots Khanda might reasonably expect to fire, escape routes from the scene of the crime and, eventually, from the country.

The room grew dark as the sun disappeared behind the airport hangars.

Volkov drew the shades and switched on several lights. The younger Cousin handed Khanda an envelope fitted with American money. "There's not too much in it because we don't want you to draw attention to yourself," he explained.

Khanda smiled faintly. "I don't need much," he said.

Volkov said, "you have two months to organize things."

Khanda said, "That should give me enough time."

The younger Cousin said, "We all know you're the best man for the job."

"If anybody can pull this off," Volkov chimed in, "it's you."

"I'll do my best to justify your confidence," Khanda said.

The younger Cousin accepted this with an appreciative nod.

It had been a long time since the Potter's last, best sleeper had been called by his Russian name; so long, in fact, that to his own ear it didn't seem to refer to him anymore. His papers referred to him as Raven, a name that the Potter hadn't liked at all (even though it had the advantage of being close to his real name of Revkin) when they were working up his legend back in the sleeper school in Moscow. I would prefer something more common, the Potter had said, by which he meant a name that filled several columns, several pages even, in the local phone book, and he had come up with half a dozen suggestions: Carter, Jackson, Livingstone, Parker, Taylor, Turner. But Piotr Borisovich had insisted.

It's me who has to live with the name, he had argued, so it's important I feel comfortable with it.

In the end the Potter had agreed reluctantly to "Raven," the name of the killer in Graham Greene's This Gun for Hire. To Piotr Borisovich, Greene's Raven had something of a fallen angel about him, which is roughly how he saw himself; like the Greene character, he fancied he came equipped with a sense of morality that belonged to another time, another place, which was a roundabout way of saying that he couldn't control what century he happened to have been born in, that it wasn't his fault if morally speaking he had to improvise.

For a long time Piotr Borisovich had been delighted with his new name, and the fallen-angel status that went with it. "Peter Raven," he would introduce himself boldly to women, doffing his hat, cocking his head, smiling with his eyes until little fanlike wrinkles formed at their corners. In recent weeks, though, for reasons he had not yet put his finger on, he had taken to whispering his old name to himself when he was alone, like some high priest murmuring the sacred name of God in the holy of holies so that the correct pronunciation would not be lost to posterity.

"Piotr Borisovich Revkin," the Sleeper whispered now, articulating each syllable.

"What was that?" Kaat called down. She was leaning over the banister at the top of the stairs, a forefinger nervously curled through the necklace of worry beads dangling from her neck. The blue point with the gray nose and gray paws sprawled at her feet, peering down, looking from one to the other as if she could follow the conversation.

"What are you doing here?" the Sleeper demanded. "You're supposed to be at work." He looked at her sharply. "Are you spying on me?"

"I thought I heard you say something," Kaat explained. She began to nibble on a fingernail.

"You're biting your nail again," the Sleeper told her.

"I'm hungry," Kaat said.

"You're nervous," the Sleeper corrected her.

"Have it your way," Kaat said. "What were you saying?"

"If it makes any difference, I said you were particularly imaginative last night," the Sleeper said. Again little wrinkles spread out from the corners of his eyes.

"Liar!" Kaat shot back. Then, "You think so?"

"I think so," the Sleeper acknowledged.

"How did you find Millie?" Kaat challenged.

"Millie I found . . . conventionally violent," the Sleeper replied thoughtfully.

"You like violence, don't you?' Kaat commented in a melancholy undertone.

"I like sex," the Sleeper corrected her, "and to the degree that violence is related to it, I appreciate violence."

The Potter, too, probably because of his own relationship with that bitch of a wife of his, had several times, in his conversations with the Sleeper, referred to the relationship between sex and violence. It turns you on, he had once suggested. (He had arranged for one of the Center's female stringers to come up to the Sleeper's apartment the night before, and was surveying the damage the morning after.) You mean violence turns me on to sex? the Sleeper had asked. I mean sex turns you on to violence, the Potter had said. The Sleeper had nodded moodily, acknowledging the insight. I'd give my right arm to know why you recruited me for the sleeper school, he had said suddenly; it was not something they had talked about before. I recruited you, the Potter had informed him, because you are a man of strengths. The Sleeper couldn't restrain a snicker. I see myself as a man of weaknesses, he had said, surveying the apartment in disgust. But the Potter had only shaken his head knowingly. Your principal strength, he had remarked, is that you are aware of your weaknesses.

"God knows why I go on living with you," Kaat called down from the banister.

The Sleeper shrugged. "Nobody's forcing you."

"Here's the thing," Kaat burst out. "I like the sense of mystery you convey. That's what drew me to you in the first place, the feeling that I could peel layers of you away, as if you were an onion, and never get to a center. But I admit it: sometimes you drive me straight up the wall." She started to bite a nail again, caught his look and stopped.

Wearing Indian sandals, a copper-colored miniskirt and a tie-dyed Tshirt with the word "Maybe" stencilled across the front, Kaat scooped up her cat (which she called Meow) and came tripping down the stairs. "I'm off to the mortuary," she announced, massaging her forehead with her thumb and third finger as if she were keeping a migraine at bay.

"Why don't you leave the cat home for once?" the Sleeper asked.

Kaat shook her head. "She doesn't like to be separated from me. You know that."

The Sleeper said, "I don't know how you do what you do."

"It's a job like any other," Kaat said. "Setting the hair of dead people pays better than setting the hair of the living. And it's a great comfort to the relatives to see their loved ones looking lifelike.

Besides, I don't consider dead people dead. They're just in passage between two incarnations. ' Kaat turned back at the front door. The cat, nestled in the crook of an elbow, purred with a dignified rolling of R's. "I almost forgot," Kaat said. "A letter came for you this morning.

I left it in the salad bowl in the kitchen on top of Millie's birth-control pills." She smiled hesitantly in the Sleeper's direction. "I passed my ring over your horoscope again," she told him.

"And?"

"It's pretty much what I told you last night. From the twenty-seventh of this month until the thirteenth of October, you are particularly vulnerable to anaxiphilia-"

"Another one of your A words," he moaned.

"Millie gave it to me last week. She found it in a movie-magazine horoscope. It means the falling in love with a schnook by someone who ought to know better."

"I don't see myself falling in love with anyone," said the Sleeper.

You will never fall in love, the Potter had once told Piotr Borisovich after they had had a bit too much vodka at a private military restaurant. Falling in love is needing someone, and the only person you need is yourself.

"I don't see you needing anyone either," Kaat told him now. He glanced quickly at her, but she was already changing the subject. "As for your physical safety, you should be particularly prudent on the ides. This month's are past, happily for you. October's come on the fifteenth.

November's are on the thirteenth. Also, watch out for vicious circles."

"How can you tell a vicious circle from a normal circle?" the Sleeper asked sarcastically.

"All circles," Kaat snapped with a flash of temper- how could he be so thick as not to see it?-"are potentially vicious." Smiling vaguely at a fleeting thought, tucking the cat firmly under her arm, she disappeared out of the door.

The Sleeper shook his head in frustration. She wasn't the easiest person in the world to live with, this catlike Kaat with her collection of words beginning in A and the sunken eyes that stared out with an almost mystical intensity at the world she could never quite get a handle on.

She had been violated once, the Sleeper knew; violated again when the man she loved at the time refused to have anything to do with a violated woman. More than once the Sleeper had seen her wince at what he took to be the memory of pain. The thing she valued most in lovers these days-she made no bones about it-was kindness.

It was the thing the Sleeper gave her the least of.

The letter was where Kaat had tossed it. The address on the envelope had been typed out on a typewriter with a red ribbon. Peter Raven, I45 Love Apple Lane, Brooklyn, New York. The postmark indicated it had been mailed in New York two days before. There was no return address. The Sleeper held the envelope up to the light filtering through the kitchen window. He could see the outline of a folded piece of paper inside.

He didn't like the look of it. At all.

It flashed through his mind that maybe they had gotten wind of his living arrangements, that they were furious with him for drawing attention to himself when he should have been melting into the foliage of what people considered a more conventional sexual arrangement. Yet the Sleeper's menage a trois provided the ultimate cover, in the sense that it went against preconceived notions. Who would ever believe that a man living with two women was in reality a Soviet agent?

The Sleeper laughed out loud. He was jumping at shadows. It was ridiculous to think they could have learned about his roommates. Or that having learned of the situation they would risk communicating with him about it. The letter was probably nothing more than the announcement of the opening, on Pierrepont Street, of a new coffee shop where the local talent could read aloud poetry at night. Or another reminder from the Keep Brooklyn Heights Clean Committee to curb the dog he didn't own.

The Sleeper slit open the envelope with a kitchen knife, extracted the folded piece of paper and opened it. And the words, typed on the same red ribbon, leapt off the page at him.

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