Authors: Brian Freemantle
Charlie waited patiently for Natalia to recover and when she did she matched the professionalism of Balg, earlier, in not demanding proof or sources. âIt's already being acted upon?'
âOf course.'
âYou sure of an arrest? A recovery?'
âNo.'
âWhat can I do?'
âNothing, practically,' cautioned Charlie. âBut use it, carefully. Go on as you did today, with people like Fomin and Badim. At that level â but not the operational group â argue as strongly as you can that Russia can't operate in isolation; that you need Western involvement and cooperation.' What he was hoping to achieve would need more than Natalia's lone voice, although she would have impressed people who mattered by what appeared to be the result of her interrogation of the Kirov gang leader.
There was another brief pause. âThat excludes Aleksai.'
âNo, it doesn't,' said Charlie, reluctantly. âOf course I expect you to talk about it to him.'
âHe'll oppose it, privately as well as publicly. You particularly. He thinks you've picked arguments at the meetings.'
For once Charlie was uncomfortable with pillow talk because of whose pillow the talk came from. âYou know that's not true.'
â
I
do,' Natalia accepted, pointedly. Then she said, âI feel I should do more, something practical! I just can't leave it, like that!'
âYou haven't got a choice,' said Charlie, objectively.
âI don't feel I'm doing enough!' Natalia protested.
He hadn't felt that about himself, until the last two days: maybe even less. And he still had a lot to prove to himself, before he even considered trying to convince others. âThat's ridiculous! If half of what you got from Yatisyna is true you've taken the investigation a long way forward, with further to go when you get Agayans. You're being brought to the attention of the President, for Christ's sake!'
She didn't appear convinced. âI'm not comfortable with this.'
âYou could find the key to everything!' he insisted.
âI didn't mean the questioning. I meant this: you and I. Doing this ⦠I feel I'm deceiving Aleksai. Which I am.'
A flurry of responses came to Charlie's mind. He didn't want to lose her: lose this link. And it wasn't just personal, not any more. He needed this back channel. Without it, now that official cooperation was denied him, he couldn't gauge the moves to make. âWe're not deceiving Aleksai: not in any proper meaning of the word. We're protecting you. And Sasha. And doing everything we can â more than anyone else with whom you're working â to solve a robbery that could cause a catastrophe. Where's the deceit,
real
deceit, in that?'
âI suppose you're right.'
âYou know I'm right. Think about it.'
âAny idea how long you'll be away?'
âJust a few days.' There was an intake of breath from the other end of the line and he expected her to say something. When she didn't he added; âI'll have to call you, when I get back. It won't be difficult for you to let me know if it's inconvenient.'
âAll right,' she agreed.
âWe haven't talked about Sasha.'
âNo.'
She was still uncertain, Charlie recognized. âShe all right?'
âFine.'
âGood.'
âLearning numbers,' Natalia volunteered, at last. âNot very well,' she added.
âShe's only â¦'
â⦠I know how old she is, Charlie.'
âI â¦' he started and then stopped abruptly, before saying he'd like to see her again. Natalia had to trust him a lot more before that would be an easy request. Instead he said, âWhen I get back maybe we should meet: not rely always on telephoning like this?'
âWhy?'
He didn't like the immediate sharpness. âI'd like to.' Not like: want to. He should have said something better; far better.
âThis is professional.'
âI know that'
âSo this way is good enough.'
Was it that she was frightened of meeting him alone, not trusting herself? Careful, he told himself. âSo Sasha's all right?'
âI already told you.'
âThere's nothing wrong in talking about her, is there?'
âI'm sorry, I â¦'
â⦠This is getting confused,' he stopped, although he didn't want to cut her off. âI'll call you when I get back from London.' And persuade her somehow, some way to meet him again. But not with Sasha. By themselves. He had to take away her apprehension about the baby. He could lie, about London: invent something that sounded professional to get her to agree. He'd cheated her far worse in the past and this wasn't cheating. Was there any point, he asked himself. He didn't need to reationalize it, not yet, not now. Just not give up.
âDo that,' said Natalia and was the first to hang up.
Charlie was pouring the second scotch, no longer in quite the celebratory mood as before, when the telephone rang again. Hillary Jamieson said, âWhat's a gal do for fun around here!'
âGo up and down,' said Charlie.
âThat sounds interesting.'
âIt's the name of the best club in town.' And if everything worked out in the coming weeks, one in which he hoped to spend a lot of time. So tonight was as good a time to start as any. But what was this call about from Hillary Jamieson? More confusion to add to that he already felt.
Hillary Jamieson entered the bar looking sensational in a mid-thigh sheath dress that didn't waste a single silk thread and a contrasting blue matador jacket, completed by just a single strand gold choker: several glasses stalled between table and lip as she eased towards him. Charlie couldn't remember seeing anyone move like her and didn't want the distraction of trying. Eased didn't describe it: poured was better but still lacking. He was at the bar because all the tables had been occupied when he arrived and poured still fitted the way she got on to the stool. She asked for vodka and said, âWhen in Rome,' clinked glasses and then said, âHere's to a new day,' and Charlie decided it was certainly going to be very different from a lot he'd known for a long time.
âWhat's left of this one's looking good enough.' Charlie was totally bemused and happy to be so. He still needed to know about Ulitza Volkhonka so he even had the excuse that this was work, not pleasure. There weren't, he told himself, any limits to which he wouldn't go for the job.
âLet's hope,' she smiled.
âSo how are you scoring Moscow, out of ten?'
âEmbassy compound accommodation nil. Socially, three and only then when the sun shines. Workwise, ten.'
He hadn't tried to rush anything, but it was all right with him if she wanted to get work out of the way. âThe canisters were OK?'
âPerfectly safe.' Then, at once, âBut I was right.'
âRight?'
âAbout their being held in racks, in the lorries. The outside of every one was scored at exactly the same height, where they'd shifted slightly during the drive from Pizhma.'
âSo how was Volkhonka itself?'
âCharlie, you wouldn't believe it!'
He thought he probably would. âTry me.'
âEven though I'm classified a scientist I've gone through the courses at Quantico, right? Done the basics. This wasn't even Keystone Kops. By the time I got to the garage there were at least eight guys, all standing around looking at each other doing fuck all but hoping to get into the television pictures that were being set up; their scientific guys â the same ones that were at the Arbat, I think although I'm not sure â had come and gone. It might have been them who'd put one of the canisters on its side but I'm not sure about that, either. There was a Militia man actually
sitting
on it, smoking a cigarette: if there'd been a leak he'd have been frying the balls he was trying to prove he had!' She needed a breath, after the outrage. âAnd don't worry. I left before the cameras started shooting and I wasn't wearing FBI cover-alls anyway.'
Although he already had the lead from Natalia he still wanted to hear it from Hillary. âWhat about forensic?'
She snorted a laugh. âNothing. And I mean just that:
nothing
. No dusting, no fibre checks, no positional diagrams, no ground casts, no scene-of-crime measurements, no nothing. Is there such a word as evidence in the Russian language?'
Charlie wished he had been at Ulitza Volkhonka, to have overheard the conversations among the posing policemen: he was surprised a Russian-speaking old timer like Lyneham hadn't hung around with Hillary. There was a crowd building around them, with Hillary the attraction, so Charlie pushed their way through the linking corridor to the Savoy restaurant, confident he wouldn't lose the momentum. The more he thought about it, and he was thinking about nothing else now, the more he realized how important Hillary Jamieson was and could be to him. Charlie didn't hurry with the comparison he wanted with what he'd been told on his first day at the British embassy. He went along with the predictable enthusiasm for the baroque decor and translated the menu and agreed it would be interesting to have the beluga before the sturgeon and took care over the imported Montrachet. Only then did he say, intentionally obtuse, âI'm not really sure what we're up against here.'
Hillary looked at him blankly. âYou want to help me with that?'
âI don't mean the chaos and the inefficiency. What's plutonium and all the rest of it
do
? Where's the danger?'
Hillary smiled, nodding her head in a gesture Charlie didn't immediately understand. âIt's what makes the atom go bang: what splits it. By itself it emits rays you can't see â the radiation like X-rays â which burn and cause several kinds of cancer. It destroys bones literally within the body. And mutates unborn foetuses.'
âI wouldn't sit on it,' agreed Charlie.
âIt's best not to.'
âHow many weapons could be made from what's missing?'
She smiled again. âEverybody's question: it was one of the first that Fenby wanted answering. I can't give one, specifically. Depends what sort of tactical weapon you want. If you're talking Hiroshima, Nagasaki size and we've still got more than 200 kilos missing, then a minimum of forty.'
âMinimum! You mean there could be more?' queried Charlie, who'd thought the lower figure was inconceivable.
âNuclear technology has come a long way in half a century, Charlie!'
âHow endangered are the men who breached the canisters at Pizhma? And the soldiers who cordoned it off, later?'
âThe thieves, hardly at all. I've gone through our picture sequences: their exposure was very brief, less than ten minutes and that wasn't concentrated. The soldiers would have been stationary for a much longer time, just standing around being subjected to the contamination. They'll need a lot of monitoring: it could already be in their thyroids. They'll all be on iodine treatment. Or should be.'
This could all be academic, acknowledged Charlie. But if he succeeded in what he intended to propose the following day, it could literally be the difference between life and death: maybe his life and death. âCould the Russians have hosed the contamination away from where the train was stopped? And the train itself, like they said they had?'
âThey should have been able to, although I hope to Christ their nuclear people are better at what they do than their police are.'
âHow long's the danger last if they aren't?'
She made her curious head-nodding movement again. âWe're talking plutonium 239 here, right?'
âRight.'
âSo here's your question, for the kewpie doll on the back row. What's the life span of plutonium 239? You get one clue: give it your longest shot.'
âA hundred years,' guessed Charlie.
She laughed at him over the iced vodka he'd ordered with the caviare. âTwo hundred and forty thousand years. Not even Methuselah would have been safe; he only made it to 969.'
âYou saying that's how long Chernobyl's going to be dangerous!'
âAnd a lot of that time lethal. Some nuclear scientists reckon the final death toll is going to be 500,000. But let's not stop at Chernobyl. After exploding their first atom bomb in 1949 the Russians concentrated a lot of their nuclear research around Sverdlovsk and Chelyabinsk. And used the Techa river as their radioactive disposal sewer. The current casualty figure is 100,000 â¦' She gave a resigned shrug. âBut it's not only Russia that deserves the finger. There's been more fuck-ups, cover-ups and outright murderous criminality in every country in the world developing nuclear technology than any other supposed science. In America we contaminated hundreds of people and hundreds of acres around Hanford, in Washington State; babies were bom deformed. In Oregon Penitentiary American doctors paid lifers five bucks a month to let them do what that stupid bastard could have been risking at Volkhonka this afternoon, subjecting their testicles to radiation exposure to see what happened. Your people did fuck all to clear the aborigines out of your Australian test sites â¦'
âWhoa!' stopped Charlie, abruptly aware of the growing vehemence. âAre we getting a statement here?'
She flushed, which surprised him. âThere are mistakes with every new discovery: they can't be helped. We developed nuclear fission fifty years ago. The mistakes should have stopped by now. And the nuclear power lobby shouldn't have been allowed to grow so strong or remain unchallenged, like they're too strong to be challenged now.'
âThat why you're not part of it?'
She flushed again. âShouldn't I have a bright light shining into my face, with you hitting me with a rubber truncheon?'
âThat isn't an answer.'
âMaybe,' she finally conceded. âNow my question for you.'
âOK.'