Выбрать главу

“What highest levels?” said Nate. “And what sort of unpleasantness? Just so I can inform my own authorities, at the highest levels, of course.” Dominika closed her eyes. Nate’s smart mouth would be his undoing—and hers.

“Whom were you sent here to meet?” said the doctor brusquely. “We know a great deal. In a matter of hours we will know your true name and a summary of your career. I sincerely hope it was more illustrious than this debacle.” Dominika knew the technique: belittle the subject, impress him with Russian omniscience, take away hope, and then give a little back. Hard-soft, push-pull.

“If you know so much,” said Nate, “then you know I’m here to work on the art-restoration project and take a look at the compound.”

“What did you expect to do on the compound?” asked the doctor.

Nate shrugged. “The usual. Take latitude, longitude, GPS coordinates. So we can bomb it later.”

The doctor slapped Nate’s face, losing his cool. “Who is CHALICE?” he yelled. “We know all about your ill-fated plan.”

“I never heard the crypt CHALICE in my life,” said Nate, his cheek red. He knew instantly that he was at the end of a barium enema concocted by Benford and that the answer was already here: CHALICE. But now it had to get back to Langley. Maybe he could break out of his room at night and make it to the beach. The doctor nodded to one of the guards, who backhanded Nate on the side of the face. Dominika was about to get out of her chair when the doctor from Moscow State University interceded. His halo was blue. Dangerous.

“It would be counterproductive to strike the subject if I am to use certain compounds. As I’m sure my esteemed colleague knows, punches and slaps will raise his levels of adrenaline and endorphins,” he said softly, as if he were berating his counterpart from the insane asylum, who knew only about restraints and shock therapy.

“We’re wasting time,” Anton said. “What are your compounds? Do they work?”

“Let’s see, shall we?” the doctor said to Nate. Dominika held her breath.

The doctor took out three separate syringes, and laid them on the side table. Presumably each syringe contained a different chemical cocktail.

“Just so you don’t have Polonium-210 in that little black bag of yours,” said Nate. A guard clamped his hands on Nate’s right arm, but he shook it off, grabbed the guard’s lapel, twisted it, and pulled him forward to sprawl on the floor with a clatter. Two more guards clamped down on Nate’s wrist. The doctor lanced one of the needles into the vein on Nate’s arm, then stepped back to look at his face. He lifted one of Nate’s eyelids and looked at his pupils.

“Now I want you to relax,” said the doctor. “The experience will be quite pleasant.” Nate felt a hot rush travel up his arm, up his cheeks, then up the back of his skull. He experienced an intense wave of vertigo. The walls of the cottage spun in front of his eyes, and he had a sensation of falling a great distance out of the sky. He held on to the arms of the chair and rode the sensation, while quietly taking deep breaths to oxygenate his lungs. The doctor’s voice came to him from a great distance away, as if he were talking through a speaking trumpet.

“Psychotropic drugs are chemical substances that change brain function, and result in alterations in perception, mood, or consciousness,” said the doctor. “There is a wide range of compounds; the effectiveness of each depends on the personality of the subject. A period of testing is required to determine which specific drug will be most effective on an individual subject. I have chosen one that normally is quite effective.” Anton looked as though he was ready to plunge the needle into the doctor’s own neck.

“Perhaps you have not observed that this interrogation must be conducted with extreme urgency,” said Gorelikov. “We don’t have time for your damn chemical analyses, and we don’t have time for this other idiot’s moronic attempts to establish the subject’s trust, and we don’t have time for the luxury of Line S’s leisurely records searches. I need a name, the name of one of the two hundred guests now arriving for the president’s reception. One name. I need it before the sun goes down tonight. Can any of you duraki, mutton heads, accomplish that?” The doctor who had injected Nate stood stiffly with nervous indignation.

“I appreciate the urgency of the situation, you can be sure, comrade. I, therefore, have selected a robust compound of 3-Quinuclidinyl benzilate and amobarbital mixed with a stabilizing derivative of Valium. You will observe the effect on the subject quite soon.”

He pulled up a chair, and sat close to Nate, whose head was now lolling, his chin on his chest. The doctor looked nervously at a fuming Gorelikov, leaned close, and started speaking softly.

“Now Mr. Hale, we are going on a pleasant trip, you and me. It will be quite enjoyable. Are you ready? By the way, who is CHALICE?”

Nate’s furtive deep breathing was just keeping the effects of the drugs from totally swallowing up his head, WHO IS CHALICE? and the room was still spinning but his grip on the armchair helped, as did digging his fingernails into his palm so he could concentrate on the pain, which became his tenuous hold on to the lip of the cliff, to the real world, keep breathing, he was on the edge of the abyss, WHAT IS CHALICE’S NAME? between consciousness and the dreamy state where he might start talking a blue streak, keep breathing dammit, think about Benford, keep your wits about you, Nash, and he thought about Forsyth, you’re stronger than they are, and he thought about Gable, rookie, don’t give those fuckers one thing, I’m proud of you, and he thought about them all, Korchnoi, and Hannah, and Udranka, and Ioana, everybody but Dominika, she doesn’t exist, WHO IS CHALICE? and he thought about Agnes two days ago in the hotel room in Warsaw, keep breathing, how her hands felt on his cheeks, feel the sensation, remember the sensation, don’t let go, and the room spinning and the doctor’s voice intruded into his thoughts, friendly, soothing, insistent, WHO IS CHALICE? don’t let go, stay in this room, his face was hot, and he could feel the sweat running down his cheeks. He looked up, the spinning got worse with his eyes open, but there was the photograph of Lenin looking down at him with those doll black eyes and the goatee unevenly trimmed, and the tight-lipped mouth waiting for Nate to start talking, but I won’t talk unless you do, you bastard, and Nate concentrated on those eyes, he locked on them, nothing else, nothing else, and waited for them to blink or move and the more he stared at Lenin’s face the stronger he became and he kept staring at the bridge of Lenin’s nose, taking in the whole photo, come down off that wall you bastard, come down and take over the interrogation, because the drugs weren’t going to work, Nate knew that now his head was clearer, and he kept breathing and the room slowed, and he kept looking at the photograph, and Lenin’s eyes blazed with hatred, and Gable’s voice told Lenin, you can go ahead and blink first, you goat fucker, because you’re not getting shit from us, and shove your proletarian revolution up your ass, and Nate kept staring at Lenin’s face, expecting the photograph to combust into the fire of Hades and to hear the roar of rage as his will was denied, and suddenly Nate was through the tunnel and his head cleared with an enormous rush, his eyesight crystal clear, noticing the grain of the logs on the wall, a fly on a windowpane, the frayed collar of the doctor, everything was humming and then Gable’s words came to him. “Listen up, rookie, just when things look darkest, they go black.” And Nate took a deep breath, and looked at the doctor. It had been twenty minutes, or three hours, Nate had no clue.