Mark stopped outside a building that had the number 11873 scrawled on it in faded black marker — the address Cox had given him. Out front, a wrinkled old man sat on a wooden chair, in the shade of a straggly apple tree, listening to a soccer game on a small radio. He looked drowsy, but cocked his head when he saw Mark approaching. When he smiled, he revealed a mouthful of teeth — top and bottom — that were solid gold.
Mark extended his right hand. The Azeri responded in kind. His fingers were swollen and calloused. Half-moons of dirt lay under each fingernail. “Hello, my friend,” Mark said cheerfully in Azeri. “And how are Kapaz faring today?”
Kapaz was the local soccer team.
“They lead. One to zero. Karim has scored.”
As he continued to hold the old man’s hand, Mark said, “I’m looking for Rasul Tagiyev, the husband of Aida.”
Mark spoke Azeri like a native, albeit one who’d grown up in Baku. He was also dressed for the part — wearing a high-end Turkish-made coat and tie that he’d just bought downtown. It was true his facial features — fair skin, dark brown hair, deep-set light brown eyes, slightly droopy eyelids — were more Russian than Azeri, but after many decades of Russians and Azeris intermarrying, they wouldn’t instantly mark him as a foreigner. His left hand clutched a box of rosewater-flavored Turkish delight candies.
“Do you have a cigarette?”
Mark released the old man’s hand and patted his sport coat. “Oh, but I wish I did. I gave them up three months ago. Had I one now, it would be yours.”
The old man shrugged and adjusted the tuner dial on his radio.
Mark knew the street address for Aida Tagiyev, but Cox hadn’t known the apartment number — he’d never visited her home.
Mark asked, “Would you know if Rasul Tagiyev is receiving guests?” He added, “I worked with his wife at Bazarduzu Construction.” He held up the box of Turkish delight. “I’ve come to pay my respects.”
Mark figured there was a chance that the old man was a plant. But he’d checked up on Bazarduzu Construction. They employed nearly a thousand people in Ganja alone. So it was entirely possible, likely even, that people from the company would be stopping by. If the old man had been paid to watch the building, all he’d report was that a colleague of Aida Tagiyev’s had come to pay his respects.
The old man looked Mark over, then shrugged again. “Apartment 214. He is home, I believe.”
“Thank you, my friend.” Mark patted the Azeri’s shoulder. “Thank you.”
It took little effort on Mark’s part to imagine why Aida Tagiyev might have been receptive to taking money from the CIA.
All of the tenement’s first-floor windows were protected with jury-rigged metal bars. The ground-floor hallway was cold and damp, and smelled of mold. Though the tiled floors had been recently swept, the ceiling paint was peeling where water had leaked in. What little light there was seeped in from a narrow barred prisonlike window on the first stairwell landing.
The door to apartment 214, however, had been painted a bright green. He knocked — a bit too loudly, he realized, when a moment later an infant begin to cry.
A short, slender man opened the door as far as the security chain would allow. “Yes?”
The single word was spoken with suspicion.
Mark introduced himself as Adil Orlov, a name he’d chosen because Adil suggested Azeri roots, which would explain his fluency in Azeri, while Orlov implied a Russian heritage, which would explain his face. “Would you be Rasul Tagiyev?”
Thick, dark eyebrows accentuated dark troubled eyes.
“I am.”
Mark flashed a deferential smile and explained that he worked for Bazarduzu Construction, in the employee benefits division. “I was so sorry to hear of what happened to Aida.” And he was sorry. Rasul, Aida, their child…they’d done nothing to deserve this.
Mark held up the box of Turkish delight but it was clear it wouldn’t fit through the narrow opening between the door and the frame.
Rasul Tagiyev’s eyes began to fill with tears.
“May I come in?” asked Mark.
“Someone already came to collect her things.”
“From Bazarduzu?”
“Of course.”
“What things?”
“Her computer, her badge. They came yesterday.”
“I see. But I am from a different department at Bazarduzu. I am not here to collect anything.”
“Aida”— He wiped a tear from his cheek with the back of his hand —“never spoke of anyone named Adil.”
“I am told she was a good accountant, but in truth, we did not know each other. I am here because there are financial matters I must discuss with you regarding your wife’s estate. Did you know she opted to purchase our company’s life insurance policy when she joined the firm?”
Two seconds passed. Mark guessed that Aida Tagiyev had possessed no such insurance; few Azeris did. But it was not outside the realm of possibility.
The baby was still crying in the background, which made Mark wonder whether Lila was awake, and what it would be like to have to raise her in such a place — he envisioned himself pushing a stroller down the rutted street, seeing her clothes drying on lines hung from scrap-wood balconies. What would the schools be like? Terrible, he imagined. He pushed the thought out of his head, and said, “I’m so sorry to have disturbed your child.”
Rasul was staring intently at Mark. “You said you were from Bazarduzu?”
“Yes.”
He undid the lock. “Come in. I will make us some tea.”
Always it was tea, thought Mark as he sat waiting in the cramped living room. He liked to think of himself as a patient man, but that image of himself was always tested when he visited an Azeri for the first time. They prided themselves on being hospitable — the most hospitable people in the world! — and hospitality inevitably involved taking a long time to prepare tea.
As he waited, Mark studied what he could of the apartment. The walls in the living room had been painted a pale green and the furniture looked new. Two handcrafted lutes — one long-necked, one short — were displayed on stands in the corner. Floor-to-ceiling shelving lined one wall. In the center, at eye level, was a cranberry-colored crystal vase etched with a starburst pattern. He stood to examine it.
“Beautiful,” Mark said — quietly, so as not to wake the baby again — when Rasul came out with the tea. Gesturing to the vase, he said, “The quality of Czech crystal can’t be compared to what they make today.”
Back in the Soviet days, Czechoslovakia had been known for making the best crystal in Eastern Europe.
“A wedding gift. From my parents.”
“They live in Ganja?”
“Baku.”
Rasul set a tray with pear-shaped clear glasses and a teapot down on a low table. His hand trembled as he poured the tea. Also on the tray was a bowl of sour cherry jam, two baklava pastries, and a Snickers bar that had been sliced into bite-sized pieces.
“Thank you.” Mark took a sip of tea. It had been prepared the Azeri way — light — instead of the dark Turkish method that he preferred. “Perfect. Do you have any family in Ganja?”
“No.”
“And Aida. She was from Baku as well?”
“Yes. We moved last year. For her job. It was supposed to be temporary.”
“Will you now move back?”
Rasul shrugged and stared blankly down at his hands, looking as though he just wanted to be left alone but was too polite to say as much.
“Please,” said Mark. “Sit a moment.”
Rasul sat down on a chair opposite the couch.
Mark ate a slice of Snickers, then said, “About this life insurance. As I said, your wife took out a policy when she signed up with the firm. At Bazarduzu, we consider our employees to be family. We grieved when we heard of your loss. And we want you to know how much we valued your wife’s work. We want to do everything we can to help.”