Read No Time for Heroes Online
Authors: Brian Freemantle
âWhich makes me think you are,' intruded Gusovsky. He was very red, as always resenting being treated as the inferior.
Danilov held up a halting hand, intentionally overbearing. âI'm going to open the briefcase,' he warned, more for his protection than theirs. âYou know what it is I am going to show you, but I want you to understand the position it puts you in â¦' Very slowly, he unclipped the case and extracted the photocopy of the replacement Founder's Certificate for the
anstalt
, announcing what it was for Yerin's benefit as he handed it beyond the blind man, to the standing Gusovsky. â
This
is proof! You know we have the original. It carries both your names and both your signatures ⦠I guess you were guided to the place where you had to sign, Aleksandr Dorovich, but the signature is still provably yours. I now hold irrefutable documentary proof of your attempt to gain control of a government fortune. But not held
here
, in Moscow. Evidence can disappear in Moscow, can't it? The original is already back in Washington, sealed, in Cowley's name. You can't get it or interfere with it â¦'
Once more it was the rational Yerin who spoke. âYou said, at the beginning, you were going to deal.'
âI know and Cowley knows you kept copies of the photographs,' said Danilov. âIt was always inconceivable you'd part with something as useful: you must have thought us very naive, unable to think beyond the amount of money you were talking about. But the deal I offered then still stands,
exactly
as I set it out. I will ensure no prosecution against you. And you will never use those photographs. If you do, Cowley will in turn produce the original Swiss document, and no influence you think you've got could keep you out of jail â¦' He paused, not wanting to show the fear but knowing how he had to finish, for his own safety. âAnd that is why I am going to walk out of here today, without any interference. Why I'm not in any personal danger. You'd agree about that, wouldn't you? Understand now why Cowley isn't here â¦?'
Gusovsky's face blazed, and he had to grip the back of the other man's chair to keep his control. Yerin said: âA standoff, this time. What about next time?'
âI shall investigate as hard and as properly as I can. And bring whatever prosecution I can. And if you tried to fight me off by using the photographs, then I'd have a second prosecution with the Swiss case, wouldn't I? Cowley would have to resign, but we've already gone through that. Like we've talked of how I'd respond to the pictures of Olga being released.' The future was the weakest part of the whole bluff. And not just with future investigations into one of the major crime Families in Moscow: there was always the outside possibility the Justice Ministry and the Federal Prosecutor might change their minds, later, about bringing against these men precisely the prosecution they'd decided
not
to pursue. There was, he accepted philosophically, always going to be a nagging uncertainty. It was just another, to go with all the rest: he wasn't sure in which order.
âYou
were
silly,' insisted Yerin. âOf course we kept copies of the pictures. But I don't think we would ever have used them. You would have been far too valuable. Worth the money and everything else we would have given you.'
âI'm more comfortable this way,' said Danilov, recognising the closeness to pomposity. âYou know why it was so easy to trick you? You can't imagine anyone being honest, can you? That's what the director before Metkin said: that everyone in Russia is still too entrenched in the old ways â¦'
âLeonid Andreevich Lapinsk certainly knew how to work the old ways in the old system,' agreed Yerin. âWe lost a good and grateful friend with his retirement. He managed to block your succession, but Metkin was never good enough to be the sort of director we wanted. He was far too stupid and far too greedy.'
Gusovsky's control went completely after Danilov's unopposed departure, the man's fury fuelled by his impotency to orchestrate a situation of which he'd imagined themselves in charge. Yerin, no less furious but contemptuous of timewasting performances, said in rare impatience to the other man: âStop it! It's not achieving anything.'
âI
want
him!' insisted Gusovsky. âNo-one treats me â no-one treats either of us! â like that!'
âHe's got us, so that's exactly what he can do,' accepted Yerin. âHe's got protection, with the American, that we can't touch. You know it and I know it but most importantly, he knows it. He's fucked us. Absolutely.'
âHe
can't
!'
âHe has,' said Yerin flatly. âBut he has to be reminded how vulnerable he'll always be.'
CHAPTER SIXTY-FOUR
It should have been pleasant â an enjoyable culmination, the farewell party â but it wasn't. He'd achieved everything and more than he'd ever imagined possible. But too much was soured for Danilov to think of enjoyment. Leonid Lapinsk was the biggest disappointment: Lapinsk, whose admired protégé he'd always imagined himself to be, and to whom he'd disclosed the progress of every case upon which he'd ever been engaged for Lapinsk to decide against whom to proceed and whom to protect, depending upon the bribe being offered: to realise â totally and for the first time â the real reason for Lapinsk's head-down attitude that take-over day at Petrovka, when Metkin had been performing not to humiliate Lapinsk but to amuse the old man â to amuse everyone â at his expense. He tried telling himself Lapinsk had committed suicide from remorse and actually sent a letter of apology, but the cynicism was now so bomb-proof Danilov suspected the regret was probably more that he would eventually discover Lapinsk's crookedness than belated penitence. Danilov was surprised Pavin hadn't known, to warn him. Perhaps Pavin
had
known, all along. Perhaps, Danilov decided, he was everyone's fool.
Another distraction was having not Larissa but Olga beside him for the ceremony. Not because he felt embarrassed by Olga and would have been prouder of Larissa, although the sweater Olga wore with the Swiss-bought skirt and shoes showed a moth-hole neither had noticed until too late, beneath the left arm. He wanted Larissa because it was all too cruel to Olga: she was moving around the American embassy dazed, smiling and nodding but not speaking because she was frightened, believing herself in surroundings to which she had still to become accustomed and in which she must learn how to behave in the future. And in just over twenty-four hours, when the confrontation was finally to be staged, Olga was to learn she was being discarded: that she was never again going to be in such a situation, never again have to worry about how to cope.
Danilov accepted he was moving around smiling and nodding and near dazed, like Olga, because he had never expected to receive the FBI's Medal of Valour like this. He'd thought it would simply arrive: in the post even, a wrapped package â although if it had been delivered that way, with an American postmark, it would have been stolen. He certainly hadn't expected a formal presentation ceremony in the American embassy, before a phalanx of Russian and American cameramen (which made him glad he'd taken the precaution of a short haircut) and with Sergei Vorobie and Vasli Oskin and Nikolai Smolin as invited guests, which was to prompt later comment in the media of both countries on the continuing investigative rapprochement between Moscow and Washington such an invitation indicated. There were legal restrictions about what could be said, so the press conference and television interviews were limited. Cowley participated in both but apart from that remained determinedly in the background, letting it be Danilov's day: they had their own farewell plans for later.
The American ambassador made a speech of platitudes, the only highlight another relayed message from David Patton, and Danilov delivered a matching set of clichés. The objects of the toasts became confused, after four, and Danilov kept raising and lowering his glass automatically, although he was drinking very little. There was still the parting meeting with Cowley to come and after that the final arrangements for the following day to be made with Larissa, who was expecting him at the end of a split-shift duty at the Druzhba.
The event over-ran, although it still ended by mid-afternoon. When she realised Danilov was driving her back to Kirovskaya, Olga said: âI thought we might have gone on somewhere! Had a party.'
It was the last deceit Danilov would have considered, letting her imagine there was anything to celebrate. âI've still got a lot to tidy up. Cowley's going the day after tomorrow: there are things to do. I'll be late home tonight.' For the last time, he thought.
Olga was hardly listening, still held by what had happened at the American embassy. âI was photographed ten times: I counted! Four times by myself.'
And once at a nightclub with a murdered hooker that doesn't count any more, thought Danilov. âYou'll probably be in the papers tomorrow.'
âI want you to buy every one. And I might be on television tonight.'
âMake sure to watch.'
âYou going to wear the medal?'
It had been ceremoniously pinned on to his lapel â worrying him it might puncture the cloth of his Italian jacket â but he'd taken it off before leaving the embassy. âIt's not that sort of medal.'
âI thought you looked very handsome today!' she said.
âI thought you looked very attractive,' he said, dutifully.
âLet's get together with Yevgennie and Larissa soon! I want to show your medal off to them!'
âI've arranged something tomorrow night,' said Danilov. Committed! he thought.
â
You
called them?' frowned Olga.
âI telephoned Yevgennie,' Danilov lied. âHe wasn't there but Larissa was. I invited them over.' He was making the decision on how it was to be done without consulting Larissa. Now she'd have to agree.
âYou want to eat in?' protested Olga.
âNo!' said Danilov. âDrinks. Then we'll decide what to do.' She'd hate him for this conversation, later.
âWill Bill come, too? He told me today he wants us to go and stay with him in Washington: said I'd like it.'
âWe'll see,' avoided Danilov.
âI'm so happy!' said Olga. âAren't you?'
âYes,' said Danilov, thick-voiced.
Danilov thought it was a considerate gesture for Cowley to have invited Yuri Pavin, as well. And there was the additional benefit, as far as Danilov was concerned, that Pavin's presence prevented the American repeating yet again he didn't know how to thank Danilov for what he'd done about the photographs. The American had said it twice, in the bar while they were waiting for Pavin, and Danilov now thought there'd been enough gratitude.
Because Danilov said he had an appointment later, they ate early in the ornate dining room of the Savoy, at a discreet table quite near the street entrance. Each agreed it was difficult to imagine it finally over, and Pavin pointed out that it wasn't really, because Cowley would undoubtedly have to return for the Antipov trial and there would also be the reunion in Italy, for the Mafia hearing.
Cowley said all the eavesdropped tapes from Kosov's BMW â a total of 56 â had been returned from America and were waiting, together with the transcripts, at the embassy. âTaking up quite a lot of space,' he added.
Danilov hadn't thought of where to store them, until he made his professional move against Kosov: one step at a time, he thought. He supposed they could be conveniently lost among his now established chaos in the Petrovka office he did not actually occupy any more.
âAnd there's still the bugs, in the car,' reminded Cowley. âOur technical people are dismantling the recording and listening apparatus in the next few days, but at the moment it's all still live and hearing everything Kosov says or does. I guess you'll be able to get them out easily enough, on some trip or other?'
He wouldn't, Danilov realised. After tomorrow night he'd hardly be a welcome guest in the ostentatious vehicle. And he wouldn't be in it before then. âWhat happens if I can't?'
Cowley shrugged. âThey stop functioning when we disconnect at our end, I suppose. And I guess the magnetism of the fixings will give out, sooner or later. So they'll fall off in the car. When he finds them he'll know what's happened.'
He'd know that anyway, recognised Danilov. He'd just let the microphones stay where they were. To Pavin, Danilov said: âWe'll collect everything tomorrow.'
Cowley said: âYou want what's still coming in? There's been nothing much since you went to Kutbysevskij. Quiet, in fact.'
âWe'll take it all,' decided Danilov. If evidence was available he wanted it, even if he didn't know its worth at that stage.
âIt was quite a bunfight at the embassy today,' smiled Cowley.
âMy one and only medal!'
Cowley appeared briefly uncomfortable. âBut not the final presentation.' He reached into his inside pocket, bringing out two gift-wrapped packages. âYou weren't the only guy shopping at Geneva airport.'
Danilov's gift was a heavily calibrated chronometer, with three time-measuring dials in addition to the second hand. Pavin's was a tortoiseshell-bodied fountain pen.
âYou always seemed to have difficulty with the time,' grinned Cowley, to Danilov. â⦠and you sure as hell do a lot of notetaking,' the American completed, to Pavin.
Both Russians were embarrassed, Danilov more so, because it hadn't occurred to him to buy anything for Cowley, and although there would be time before the American finally left Moscow Danilov couldn't think of anything
to
buy, in the meagrely stocked shops. Perhaps Larissa would have an idea. Both Danilov and Pavin stumbled their thanks and Cowley said pointedly he had more to be grateful for to them than they had to him.
The American, who was drinking but not excessively, lifted his glass towards Danilov and said: âHere's to the final recognition! Your directorship!'