He sipped the cognac until it was gone, then rose lightly to his feet, found a chair, and sat down.
The officer smiled with amusement. "You seem to have made a quick recovery, Mr. . ."
"Snodgrass, Elmer Snodgrass, from Moline, Illinois."
"A nice Midwestern touch," the Russian said, coming around and sitting behind the desk. "I am Peter Velikov."
"General Velikov, if my memory of Russian military insignia is correct."
"Quite correct," Velikov acknowledged. "Would you care for another cognac?"
Pitt shook his head and studied the man across the desk. He judged Velikov to be no taller than five foot seven, weighing about a hundred and thirty pounds, and somewhere in his late forties. There was a comfortable friendliness about him, and yet Pitt sensed an underlying coldness. His hair was short and black with only a touch of gray at the sideburns and receding around a peak above the forehead. His eyes were as blue as an alpine lake, and the light-skinned face seemed sculptured more by classic Roman influence than Slavic. Dress him in a toga and set a wreath on his head, Pitt imagined, and Velikov could have posed for a marble bust of Julius Caesar.
"I hope you don't mind if I ask you a few questions," said Velikov politely.
"Not at all. I have no pressing engagements for the rest of the day. My time is yours."
A look of ice glinted in Velikov's eyes for an instant and then quickly faded. "Suppose you tell me how you came to be on Cayo Santa Maria."
Pitt held out his hands in a helpless gesture. "No sense in wasting your time. I might as well make a clean breast of it. I'm president of the Central Intelligence Agency. My board of directors and I thought it would be a great promotional idea to charter a blimp and drop redeemable coupons for toilet paper over the length of Cuba. I'm told there's an acute shortage down here. Unfortunately, the Cubans didn't agree with our marketing strategy and shot us down."
General Velikov gave Pitt a tolerant but irritated look. He perched a pair of reading glasses on his nose and opened a file on his desk.
"I see by your dossier, Mr. Pitt-- Dirk Pitt, if I read it right-- that your character profile mentions a drift toward dry wit."
"Does it also tell you I'm a pathological liar?"
"No, but it seems you have a most fascinating history. A pity you aren't on our side."
"Come now, General, what future could a nonconformist possibly have in Moscow?"
"A short one, I'm afraid."
"I compliment your honesty."
"Why not tell me the truth?"
"Only if you're willing to believe it."
"You don't think I can?"
"Not if you adhere to the Communist mania of seeing a CIA plot under every rock."
"Seems you have a high disregard for the Soviet Union."
"Name one thing you people have ever done in the last seventy years to earn a humanity award. What is baffling as hell is why the Russians have never wised up to the fact they're the laughing stock of the world. Your empire is history's most pathetic joke. The twenty-first century is just around the corner and your government operates as though it never advanced past the nineteen-thirties."
Velikov didn't bat an eyelid, but Pitt detected a slight redness in his face. It was clear the general wasn't used to being lectured by a man he looked down upon as an enemy of the state. His eyes examined Pitt with the unmistakable gaze of a judge who was weighing a convicted murderer's life in the balance. Then his gaze turned speculative.
"I'll see that your comments are passed on to the Politburo," he said dryly. "Now if you're through with the speech, Mr. Pitt, I'd be interested in hearing how you came to be here."
Pitt nodded toward the table with the decanter. "I think I'd like that cognac now."
"Help yourself."
Pitt half filled his glass and returned to the chair. "What I'm about to tell you is the straight truth. I want you to understand I have no reason to lie. To the best of my knowledge I am not on any sort of intelligence mission for my government. Do you understand me so far, General?"
"I do."
"Is your hidden tape recorder running?"
Velikov had the courtesy to nod. "It is."
Pitt then related in detail his discovery of the runaway blimp, the meeting with Jessie LeBaron in Admiral Sandecker's office, the final flight of the Prosperteer, and finally the narrow escape from the hurricane, omitting any mention of Giordino's downing of the patrol helicopter or the dive on the Cyclops.
Velikov did not look up when Pitt finished speaking. He sifted through the dossier without a flicker of change in his expression. The general acted as if his mind were light-years away and he hadn't heard a word.
Pitt could play the game too. He took his cognac glass and rose from his chair. Picking up a copy of the Washington Post, he noted with mild surprise that the masthead carried that day's date.
"You must have an efficient courier system," he said.
"Sorry?"
"Your newspapers are only a few hours old."
"Five hours, to be exact."
The cognac fairly glowed on Pitt's empty stomach. The awkward consequences of his predicament mellowed after his third drink. He went on the attack.
"Why are you holding Raymond LeBaron?" he asked.
"At the moment he is a house guest."
"That doesn't explain why his existence has been kept quiet for two weeks."
"I don't have to explain anything to you, Mr. Pitt."
"How is it LeBaron receives gourmet dinners in formal dress, while my friends and I are forced to eat and dress like common prisoners."
"Because that is precisely what you all are, Mr. Pitt, common prisoners. Mr. LeBaron is a very wealthy and powerful man whose dialogue is most enlightening. You, on the other hand, are merely an inconvenience. Does that satisfy your curiosity?"
"It doesn't satisfy a thing," Pitt said, yawning.
"How did you destroy the patrol helicopter?" Velikov asked suddenly.
"We threw our shoes at it," Pitt fired back testily. "What did you expect from four civilians, one of whom was a woman, flying in a forty-year-old gas bag?"
"Helicopters don't blow up in midair for no reason."
"Maybe it was struck by lightning."
"Well, then, Mr. Pitt, if you were on a simple search mission to locate a clue to Mr. LeBaron's disappearance and hunt for treasure, how do you explain the report from the captain of the patrol boat, who stated that the blimp's control car was so shattered by shellfire that no one could have survived, and that a streak of light issued from the blimp an instant before the helicopter exploded, and that a thorough search over the crash site showed no signs of survivors? Yet you all appear like magic on this island in the middle of a hurricane, when the security patrols were taking shelter from the winds. Most opportune, wouldn't you say?"
"How do you read it?"
"The blimp was either remote controlled or another crew was killed by the gunners on board the helicopter. You and Mrs. LeBaron were brought close to shore by submarine, but during the landing everyone was thrown onto the rocks and injured."
"You get a passing grade for creativity, General, but you fail accuracy. Only the landing part is correct. You forgot the most important ingredient, a motive. Why would four unarmed castaways attack whatever it is you've got here?"
"I don't have the answers yet," said Velikov with a disarming smile.
"But you intend to get them."
"I'm not a man who accepts failure, Mr. Pitt. Your story, though imaginative, does not wash." He pressed a button on the desk intercom. "We'll talk again soon."