Read Face Me When You Walk Away Online
Authors: Brian Freemantle
He felt the aircraft begin to lose height and Nikolai stirred. Another injection would not be necessary, Josef thought gratefully, certainly not while Nikolai was under his control. He quickly got up and locked himself inside the cramped lavatory, taking the remaining envelope from his pocket. He dropped it into the lavatory bowl, then watched it disappear in a swirl of disinfectant water. When he returned to his seat, Nikolai was shivering and staring around the aircraft. He made no greeting as Josef sat down.
âI feel awful,' he said.
âI'm sorry.'
âWhat am I going to do about it ⦠you know, now I'm back?'
Josef was surprised the question had been so long coming.
âIt will be all right,' he said, vaguely. âI'll arrange something.'
They were below the clouds now and even though there was no moon, Josef could detect the reflection of whiteness. So it had snowed. The wheels grabbed at that moment of landing when airline passengers hold their breath, snatched again and then the plane settled on the runway.
âWe're home,' said Nikolai. He sounded very sad.
âYes,' agreed Josef, with equal reluctance.
The steward beckoned Josef forward immediately the plane came to a stop and he edged into the cramped flightdeck. The pilot gestured out through the port side.
âControl tower has just told me the ambulance is waiting,' he said. Was there censure in his voice? Probably not. There was no reason why there should be. He was becoming oversensitive, which was stupid.
âDoes he know?' asked the captain, jerking his head back towards where Nikolai was sitting.
âNot unless he sees it out of the window.'
âHe's on the wrong side.'
He returned to the seat and Nikolai smiled up at him, a grateful expression.
âThank you, Josef,' he said.
âWhat for?'
âFor not abandoning me.'
Josef detected the sound of the disembarkation ramp locking into the aircraft.
âCome on,' he said. âIt's time to go.'
It had begun to snow, very lightly, but the wind was screeching across the tarmac, grabbing it in handfuls and throwing it into their faces. Nikolai hunched into his topcoat and it wasn't until he got to the bottom of the steps that he focused and saw there was no welcoming party. He turned, squinting, as the snow stung at his face, seeking an explanation. Three men emerged from the shelter of the ambulance, grey and nondescript, bent forward for protection. Nikolai stared at them, at first unaware they were anything to do with him. Then he saw they were coming directly towards him and came back to the negotiator.
âWhat is it Josef â¦?' he said. The words were picked up and jostled by the wind, so that it was difficult for Josef to hear them.
âYou need treatment,' said Josef.
The men were alongside now, nodding to Josef, positioning themselves around the writer.
âNo Josef. Please. You're my friend. You know what it will mean. Please Josef. No.'
They were waiting for his permission, Josef realized.
âGoodbye, Nikolai,' he said.
âBut Josef. No. Please Josef. No. Help me.'
The negotiator nodded and the men either side grabbed Nikolai's arm, turning him towards the vehicle. He tried to snatch away, but they were experts and held him easily. Nikolai attempted to baulk, wedging his heels into the ground, but they were prepared for that too, half lifting him, so the protest ended with his slipping on the ground. Desperately, as they took him away, Nikolai turned, wild eyed now, screaming back at the negotiator, but the wind took the words and discarded them, so that Josef never heard what he said.
He stood, watching the vehicle grunt into life and then move slowly away, the wipers fashioning half-moon eyes in the snow. Track marks formed behind it, like two skeins of wool unwinding. Josef waited until the ambulance was completely out of sight and then looked around for the car to take him to the terminal building. The tarmac was deserted. They had expected him to accompany Nikolai to hospital, he decided. It would be another thirty minutes before the bus arrived for the other passengers, he thought. It would be quicker to walk. His clothes encrusted with snow, he crunched off towards the lights, head down against the wind, trying to draw back into his coat. He stopped inside the arrival building, stamping the snow from his shoes and billowing his coat, trying to shake off the cold and dampness. He wiped his hair and face with a handkerchief which became soaked, so he discarded it in a refuse bin. The arrival was a familiar scene, he thought, wearily. How many times had he entered this building, washed yellow with its unshaded lights, with the immigration desks like the traps from which racehorses emerged in America and Britain? Behind them the narrow, low benches of the customs officials were deserted. He walked forward, towards the nearest immigration channel, nodding as he passed through to the man in the tiny cubicle.
âComrade.'
âWhat?'
âPassport.'
Josef stared at him, aware for the first time of a difference. There were hardly any passengers in the terminal building, yet there were more airport officials and people than usual.
âMy name is Bultova,' he said expectantly, âJosef Bultova.'
âPassport,' insisted the immigration official, doggedly.
âI see,' said Josef. He groped into the briefcase and produced the document. There was hardly any conversation in the hall, Josef realized. The man was steadfastly leafing through the pages, even making the pretence of checking against a hardbound, loose-paged book at his side. It took a full ten minutes.
âThank you,' he said.
Josef nodded, his face expressionless, passing through into the customs hall. His suitcases stood, isolated, on the very middle bench, in full view of the entire hall and in a spot where he would have to walk at least forty yards to claim them. He was aware of his own footsteps, as if the ground upon which he were walking was hollow. There was no official near his baggage. He waited, gazing straight ahead, ignoring the attention. It was nearly fifteen minutes before anyone approached him.
âYour baggage?'
âYes.'
âOpen them, please.'
âWhich one?'
âAll of them.'
There were three cases. Josef unlocked the smallest first, ending with the largest. They were painstakingly packed, the suits with tissue paper in the arms and legs to prevent creasing, the shirts laundered and neatly packed, in the American fashion. The customs official rummaged them all, taking everything out, snatching the paper from the suits, unfolding the shirts, reducing the cases to chaos.
âThe briefcases,' he demanded.
Josef offered both to him. The man jumbled through them, sorting aimlessly through the tapes and miniature recorders, then shuffling the papers into a disorganized mess. He lifted Josef's pills from the second case and dropped one of the bottles. It smashed against the concrete and sleeping pills rolled everywhere. The man looked at him for reaction, but Josef said nothing.
âFollow me.'
Josef walked to the cubicle with the man and entered and stood, waiting.
âPersonal search,' announced the official, shortly. The hut was created from pressed cardboard sheets and there was no heating. The temperature would be near freezing, thought Josef. Naked, he stood while the man explored his pockets, rifling through his wallet and credit-card holder. Thank God, thought Josef, he had got rid of the heroin on the plane. He clamped his teeth together, determined not to show his discomfort. The cold was drawing the feeling away from his legs. As he finished with each piece of clothing, the official was tossing it aside on to a bench, but Josef held back from reclaiming it. He had to await permission, he knew. How easily the old rules came back.
âThank you.' the man said, flatly.
The cold had permeated Josef's body and so even dressed it was difficult for him to walk. He hobbled to the bench across which the contents of his cases were strewn and stood, looking at the man. He was still in charge, Josef accepted.
âThat's all,' said the official.
Slowly, Josef picked up every pill from the floor, taking an unused tape from its cardboard carton and using that as a container. He laid his suits out, replaced the tissue paper, then folded the shirts into their original, pressed creases. He worked unhurriedly, with no sign of stress. The official stood attentive, aware of the occasional snigger from people watching. The other passengers had been allowed off the plane, but prevented from entering the customs area. Josef could hear the babble behind him and knew they would be staring over the partition, curious at the scene.
âMay I go?' asked Josef, finally. He was very polite.
âYes.'
âThank you, sir.'
The âsir' came automatically.
He knew there would be no car waiting, so he looked around for a taxi. Several stood in the reserved bay, but there were no drivers. He opened the door of the first and sounded the horn, but no one came. Sighing, he carried his bags to the bus and humped them into the baggage section. The negotiator managed to get a taxi at the terminal and slumped back as it drove towards the apartment. He felt exhausted, almost unable to move, as if someone had tapped an artery and drained the blood from him. He was unaware of the car stopping and felt stupid when the driver turned, looking quizzically at him, and announced his arrival. He loaded the cases under his arms, backed in through the apartment door and found the lift had been turned off. He made two trips up and down from the fourth floor, to get his belongings into the apartment.
It stank. And was filthy, dusty with neglect, several unwashed glasses lying on pieces of furniture, all of which was disarranged. There were several cushions half on, half off the chairs and embers of a long-dead fire mottled the fireplace and the carpet in front of it. Ashtrays overflowed, some even spilling their contents on the floor. The cow. The filthy, spoiled cow.
He went from place to place, putting back cushions, emptying ashtrays. Anger flooded over him, a reaction to the dirtiness of the flat and to the carefully orchestrated humiliation since he had stepped off the plane.
Josef burst into the bedroom, flooding it with light. It was as filthy as the main room and a sour odour hung over everything.
Pamela snored, an ugly, phlegmy sound. Savagely, he snatched the clothing from her, staring down, waiting for her shocked awakening. She was completely naked, her hair matted over her face, which was swollen and red, almost as if she had been slapped. An overpowering smell of alcohol wafted up at him. She shifted and groaned, but did not wake up. His eyes swept over her nakedness, almost clinically. He stopped, concentrating on her navel, then reached out, touching her pubic turf with his finger, like someone apprehensive that contact might burn. She murmured and turned over. There was no feeling, he thought. No desire, not even lust. She moved again and there was an odd sound and he saw she had urinated in the bed and was lying in it, unconsciously. Gently, anxious not to awaken her now because there was nothing to say, he replaced the bed covering and walked softly from the bedroom. He made the couch acceptable, then sat down. She was disgusting, he thought, utterly disgusting. How prescient Nikolai had been on the homecoming plane.
Everything was different. Completely different.
22
She looked at him curiously, as if he were a stranger. Neither spoke. Her eyes carried on, moving over the apartment that had taken him three hours to clean. He had worked carelessly, disregarding the noise, purposely creating it in the beginning hoping to awaken her, but there had been no movement within the bedroom. Now it was almost noon. The front of her towelling robe was stained and the hem had become unstitched, he saw. The belt had gone, too. She held it across the front of her body, defensively.
âHello,' she said. Instinctively she ran her fingers through her hair, fussing it into shape.
âHello,' he said.
âDidn't know you were coming back. Should have told me. Telephoned or something.'
Properly constructed sentences seemed too much for her. She was still half drunk, he realized. Pamela came unsteadily into the room and sat down opposite him. Her feet were dirty where she had walked around the flat for several days without stockings or shoes. They stared at each other, seeking a bridge to cross.
âNice you're back,' she tried.
He said nothing.
âTrip.'
âWhat?'
âGood trip?'
He shrugged.
âPlace was a mess,' she confessed.
âYes.'
âShould have told me. Didn't know.'
âWhy?'
She squinted to understand the question.
âWhy?' repeated Josef. âThe filth? And the drink?'
Pamela began to move, then realized she was holding her robe and risked exposing herself. She stared down at her hand, reluctant to release it, then back up at her husband. She squinted again.
âWhat?' she mumbled.
âWhat's happened to you?'
âLonely.'
âThat isn't sufficient reason.'
âUnhappy. Don't like it.'
He went to the kitchen, made coffee and then served her, refilling the cup as she emptied it, watching without sympathy as sobriety came to her. She grew more and more uncomfortable under his stare.
âBetter?'
âSuppose so.'
âI know,' he announced. He had decided it had to be done abruptly.
âKnow?'
âAbout Nikolai. At the dacha.'
âOh.'
âHe took great delight in telling me.'
âI thought he would.'
âWhy?' he demanded, again.
âHe got me drunk.' She jumped immediately into the practised defence.
âNo,' he refused.
âWe
did
drink.'
âYou knew what you were doing.'
âI was frightened.'
âFrightened!' It was a sneer.