Jones looked at his watch: half past three in the morning. He took a sip of the tea. It was heavily sugared, too sweet for Jones’ taste. He tried to sleep, but the combination of the room’s bright lights, the lack of somewhere to lie down and the uncertainty of the interrogation to come made that impossible. After a time, he got up, folded his overcoat into a pillow, lay down on the floor and closed his eyes.
The moment he did that, he heard the sound of a key in the door. When he opened his eyes, he saw the door already ajar and three GPU guards coming in. He clambered to his feet. They turned him round, mimed for him to take off his jacket. Then, putting handcuffs on his wrists, they led him gently to the chair where they sat him down.
Soon, Lintz and Yacob came in, Yacob carrying a cardboard box.
While the three guards looked on, Lintz unfastened Jones’ watch from his wrist and, from his jacket, removed his wallet, keys, notebook and fountain pen. He read out a description of each object to Yacob who laboriously filled in a docket. Lintz then took off Jones’ jacket, tie and belt from his trousers and took away his shoes, taking out the laces and returning the shoes to him. Jacket, tie, belt and laces went into the box, and were logged in the docket along with everything else. Lastly, Lintz went to take off Jones’ glasses. Jones swung his head to one side, refusing permission. One of the guards, a huge Uzbek, was summoned. He held out his hands politely, signalling that he needed to take the glasses. Once more, Jones shook his head. The Uzbek turned to Lintz, who nodded. With little anger, the Uzbek placed Jones in a choke-hold. Lintz took off his glasses and placed them in the box. Jones’ world was reduced to a fuzzy blur.
“Listen, give me my glasses back now. When I’m out of here, I’m going to complain in the strongest possible terms to the British Embassy. I’m a British reporter.”
A blow to the back of the head knocked him clean off the chair. As he lay on the ground, the Uzbek guard kicked him in the neck once – but Lintz said, “nyet”, and after that the kicking stopped. The Uzbek picked Jones up and, together the five of them left the room. With no belt and no laces in his shoes, his glasses removed, his hands cuffed behind his back, he shuffled along the corridor, blinking in the light, uncertain and afraid.
They got to the lift, but this time, almost as blind as a freshly-born mole, Jones couldn’t make out which button was punched. His stomach lurched as they went down. He counted the floors they passed. Six in all. They were at minus-two, the under basement. Down here, the Lubyanka was unheated and his breath ballooned in front of his face. In his shirt, he began to shiver. They pushed him along a dark, dank corridor. Then, stopping in front of a cell, they unlocked the door, unlocked his handcuffs and thrust him forward. The cell door clanged shut behind him and he heard the key turn in the lock.
It was the stench that hit him first. The only illumination came from a slit of light underneath the door. As his eyes grew accustomed to the darkness, he made out a dark hole in the far corner. That would be the source of the stink. He sat down with his back against the door and closed his eyes. Not so far away, a scream, intense, animal, pierced the silence.
The scream grew louder and louder; then it lost its force, and soon the Lubyanka basement returned to silence.
Chapter Fifteen
Time had no meaning down here. With his watch gone, no light worthy of the name, Jones was entombed. Hours treacled by. He was broken, finished and he tasted salt as tears ran down his cheeks.
Then he remembered that last kiss from Evgenia and her warning that their roof had run out, and he yearned for her sweetness and beauty and savoured the memory, etched in his mind’s eye, of that last dance with her, while Winnie sang so beautifully. He remembered, too, the moments after Evgenia had fled, all of them waiting for the knock on the door – and Winnie singing the song that the Wobblies who’d ended up trapped in Stalin’s enormous prison camp so loved. Here in the darkness, he started to sing it too.
The silence of the basement was not only broken by his singing. There was something else: footfalls coming his way. They stopped outside his cell and a key turned in the lock. Jones stood up and blinked in the harsh light from the corridor. Lintz and the Uzbek guard were standing there. The Uzbek stepped behind him and snapped handcuffs onto his wrists. Then he followed them out of the cell into the corridor, back towards the lift.
Robbed of his glasses Jones couldn’t make out anything with clarity but coming the other way was a group, two dark blobs either side, a white blob in the middle, a prisoner escorted by two guards. The two groups closed within a few feet of each other and that was when Jones could make out detail. The prisoner was dressed in a white shirt above the waist; below he was naked, his groin dripping with blood. Only when they were virtually face to face did he recognise the prisoner. As he passed Jones, Attercliffe spat in his face.
Jones was too shocked to react and couldn’t wipe his face because of his handcuffs. This time, when they got into the service lift, they ascended seven floors. Lintz took Jones to a large bathroom, airy and spacious. Here his handcuffs were unlocked and removed and Lintz made his exit.
Alone in the bathroom, Jones washed Attercliffe’s spittle off his face – but the memory of it stayed with him, and always would. On a chair was the box containing his possessions, on some hooks his jacket, overcoat, belt, tie, hat and a large towel. Jones studied himself in the bathroom mirror and realised that both his hands were shaking uncontrollably.
“Get a grip man,” he said out loud. The Cheka were playing with him, of course. But to see Attercliffe in that hideous state had unmanned him, far more than the spell in the under-basement. The sight of the poor man, untouched from the waist up, tortured from the waist down, explained the confessions in the show trial succinctly.
Jones studied himself in the mirror and said out loud, “Behold, the useful idiot.”
Drying himself, he dressed and went to open the door of the bathroom. It was locked. He knocked, once, and almost instantly it was opened by Yacob, Lintz and the Uzbek standing a few steps behind him. They took him along a wide corridor with a wooden parquet to a door. Yacob knocked, a voice said “enter” in Russian and soon Jones was taken through. A clear view of the office ahead was blocked by a large wooden screen, effectively making a kind of internal lobby. Beyond that, Jones could hear someone working, breathing rather heavily and the scratch-scratch-scratch of a fountain pen.
After a time, the man within cleared his throat and asked, “Cigareta?” It was Lyushkov. No mistaking that rumble.
“No, thank you,” said Jones. “I don’t smoke.”
Still unseen, Lyushkov could be heard lighting a cigarette, giving out a satisfied puff of smoke and returning to scratching his nib across the page. More minutes passed. Then the sound of the colonel writing stopped and he snapped his fingers. At this command, Yacob urged Jones around the partition, and Lyushkov finally came into view, his pink jowls wobbling behind a large mahogany desk. To his side, the last of the day’s sunlight poured in through the window. To Jones’ right was a second wooden screen, masking a corner of the room.
“Ah, Mr Jones. I’m sorry that you’ve been kept waiting.” Yacob translated so professionally, neutrally, almost as if he wasn’t in the room at all; then he bowed to Jones and sat to one side. Lintz and the Uzbek stood behind Jones, arms akimbo.
Lyushkov paused for Jones to accept the apology. Jones said nothing. Lyushkov said something in Russian, mentioning the words Hitler and Mein Fuhrer.