Poskrebychev turned to face his master. ‘I beg your pardon, Comrade Stalin?’
Holding the match between his thumb and index finger, Stalin waved it lazily from side to side until the flame disappeared in a ribbon of smoke.
‘You heard me,’ he replied.
Back at his desk, Poskrebychev took out a clean sheet of paper and wound it into the typewriter, an American Smith and Brothers model no.3, fitted with Cyrillic lettering, a personal gift to Poskrebychev from Ambassador Davies. Poskrebychev folded his hands together and then, extending his arms, bent his fingers backwards until they cracked. He paused for a moment, fingertips hovering above the machine. Slowly, he typed out the name ‘Akhatov’ and under the heading he wrote ‘Lost Cat’, the code word agreed upon between Stalin and the agent, to signal his immediate summons to the Kremlin. And then the room filled with a sound like miniature gunfire as his fingertips raced across the keys. Within minutes, Poskrebychev had completed the message and it was taken by courier to the Kremlin telegraph office for immediate dispatch. He then ordered a plane to be fuelled and placed on standby at an airfield just outside the city. The fastest one available was a Lavochkin fighter, specially outfitted with two seats for use as a training aircraft.
When hours passed without reply, Poskrebychev allowed himself to hope that perhaps the Siberian might have moved on beyond the Kremlin’s reach. After all, it had been several years since Stalin had required the services of the notorious Siberian. But just as he was preparing to go home for the day, one of the Kremlin guards called the office.
‘There’s someone here,’ said the guard. ‘He won’t give his name. He says it’s about a lost cat. Should I just throw him out?’
‘No,’ sighed Poskrebychev. ‘Send him up.’
It was not long before a heavy-set man entered Stalin’s outer office, which was Poskrebychev’s personal domain. He had a mop of curly brown hair, a hooked Roman nose and cheerful, ruddy cheeks. He wore a belted raincoat and old-fashioned black ankle boots which fastened with buttons. Under his arm, he carried a brown paper parcel tied with string.
‘Akhatov,’ said Poskrebychev, as if quietly uttering a curse.
The man nodded at the door to Stalin’s office. ‘Should I go straight in?’
‘Yes. He is expecting you.’
Stalin was sitting at the small table in the corner of his study where he took his meals and morning tea. The table had a round, brass top, engraved with a prayer in Arabic. Stalin had spotted the table on display at the Hermitage museum and had ordered it brought to the Kremlin. ‘It’s just the size I want,’ he told the bewildered museum curator.
In front of Stalin was a glass of tea, supported in a brass holder. Also on the table was a small bowl filled with rock sugar, which resembled fragments of a broken bottle. Stalin set one of these pieces between his teeth and sipped at the tea as he gestured for Akhatov to take a seat in the chair on the other side of the little table.
Poskrebychev, meanwhile, had switched on the intercom so that he could overhear what was being said in Stalin’s room.
‘How may I be of service, Comrade Stalin?’ asked Akhatov.
‘In the usual way,’ he replied.
Barely able to make out what was being said, Poskrebychev leaned closer and closer to the dust-clogged pores of the intercom speaker. Then, in frustration, he picked up the whole machine and pressed it against his ear.
‘Who is it this time, Comrade Stalin?’
‘Pekkala.’
‘The Inspector?’
‘You sound surprised, Akhatov.’
‘I heard he was already dead.’
‘That appears to have been wishful thinking.’
‘I see,’ said Akhatov. ‘And where is the Inspector now?’
‘In a town called Rovno in western Ukraine.’
‘That must be near the front line.’
‘It is the front line, Akhatov.’
‘Then how am I to get there?’
‘My secretary will drive you to an airfield outside Moscow, where a plane is standing by. It will fly you directly to Rovno. As soon as you land, you must move quickly, Akhatov. Every hour that goes by will make Pekkala more difficult to find.’
‘I understand,’ said Akhatov.
‘You have come prepared?’
Akhatov held up the parcel. ‘Everything I need is here, Comrade Stalin.’ There was the groan of a chair moving back across the floor as Akhatov rose to his feet. He was about to leave, but then he paused. ‘If I might ask, Comrade Stalin, why not use someone from Special Operations, especially for a mission like this?’
‘Because it is Pekkala!’ roared Stalin. ‘And the men of Special Operations all but worship him. I cannot count on them to carry out the task. That is why I called upon you, Akhatov, because you worship nothing but the money I will pay you for your work.’
‘But why must it be done at all, Comrade Stalin?’
‘Yes,’ whispered Poskrebychev in the other room. ‘Why? For the love of God, why?’ His arms ached from the effort of holding the bulky intercom, but he did not dare let go for fear of missing a single word.
‘My reasons are none of your concern,’ said Stalin. ‘I am not paying you to have a conscience, Akhatov. All I ask is that you do it quickly and cleanly and that you leave no trace behind which could connect your actions to the Kremlin.’
*
The Jeep pulled up outside the cabin. Its stubborn Detroit engine had kept running, in spite of having driven through a series of puddles, which had soaked the driving compartment, as well as the feet of its passengers.
Pekkala climbed out of the vehicle and walked towards the cabin. ‘You built this yourself?’ he asked, admiring its solid construction.
Malashenko, who was walking just ahead of him, turned and smiled and opened his mouth, ready to take credit for it all.
At that moment, Vasko stepped out from behind the cabin, the Tokarev in his hand.
‘Get down!’ Pekkala shouted as he drew his gun.
Malashenko turned to face the agent. ‘No!’ he shouted, raising his hands.
Vasko pulled the trigger.
The first round struck Malashenko square in the chest. Two more bullets had punched through his ribcage by the time he collapsed into Pekkala’s arms. The next shot sounded dull and flat. A burst of sparks sprayed from the Tokarev. The gun had misfired. Vasko tried to chamber a new round, but a cartridge had jammed in the ejection port.
Vasko raised his head and found himself staring down the barrel of Pekkala’s Webley.
Malashenko lay on the ground between them. He was already dead, the pale blue sky reflected in his half-open eyes.
‘Did they not tell you in Berlin,’ asked Pekkala, ‘that soft-point bullets are a frequent cause of misfired ammunition?’
Cursing, Vasko tried once more to work the slide of the Tokarev.
Pekkala set his thumb upon the hammer of the Webley, drawing it back with a click so that even the slightest pressure on the trigger would cause the gun to fire.
Vasko heard that click. He knew it was useless to go on. Slowly, he breathed out, and then tossed the gun away. It landed with a soft thump upon the pine-needled ground. ‘Inspector Pekkala,’ he said.
‘Who are you?’ asked Pekkala.
‘My name is Peter Vasko.’
‘Who sent you? Was it Skorzeny or Himmler himself?’
‘Neither,’ answered Vasko. ‘My orders come from Admiral Canaris.’
‘You killed Andrich?’
Vasko nodded. ‘That’s what Canaris sent me here to do.’
‘Then why didn’t you leave when you still could?’
‘Because I wasn’t finished yet,’ he replied. ‘I swore to kill you too, Pekkala, before this war even began.’
A flicker of confusion passed over Pekkala’s face.
‘I don’t expect that you recall the name William Vasko. Or his wife. Or his daughter, or his son, who stands before you now? I am all that’s left of a family that set sail from America in the summer of 1936, hoping to escape the Great Depression and with a promise of a better life in Russia.’