Brano gazed at the dashboard. “Leave?”
“You killed Lutz before I arrived, then left. I never saw you. But
now
, Brano. It’s your choice.”
Brano put his hand on the door latch. “What about my family?”
“I can protect them, Brano. No problem.”
The colonel’s pink face was very serious. Brano nodded but took his hand off the latch. The yellow light came on below the red. Cerny sighed.
At Ebendorferstraße, Brano spotted Ludwig’s gray Renault but couldn’t see the man inside. They stopped at the iron gate, where a guard checked both their papers. When Brano rolled down the window and handed over his real passport, he glanced back at the Renault. The crew-cut Austrian stared at him a second before fumbling for his radio.
A short paved driveway led around the side of the building, and they got out together. Through the front door they arrived in a foyer with a bulletin board covered in notices for upcoming symposiums on international peace and, in front of them, a desk below the bronze crest of a hawk with its wings folded into its side.
“Good afternoon, Silvia.”
A petite woman with thick black hair smiled at Cerny. “Hello, Comrade Colonel.”
“Do you have the plane schedules?”
While Cerny leaned over the desk and discussed flight arrangements, Brano wandered to the bulletin board and read a warning, drafted on Yalta Boulevard, about enemy intelligence officers.
WARNING SIGNS:
1.
UNPROVOKED FRIENDLINESS
2.
INTEREST IN YOUR PRIVATE LIFE
3.
TENDENCY TO AGREE TOO QUICKLY WITH YOUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE IMPERIALIST THREAT
The notice ended with a final thought:
THE COUNTERREVOLUTIONARY INSTIGATOR OF IMPERIALIST
AGGRESSION SEEKS TO DESTROY WHAT THE WORKERS OF THE
WORLD HAVE BUILT WITH THEIR OWN BLOOD
-
VIGILANCE IS THE ONLY DEFENSE
!
“Comrade Major Sev?”
Brano turned to face a thin man whose eyes bulged from a chronic glandular problem. He was the Ministry representative in the embassy, responsible for the staff’s political education. “Comrade Major Romek, it’s good to see you again.”
Major Nikolai Romek spoke with a slight quiver. “Comrade Major, would you come with me?”
“Why?”
“So we may discuss your adventures.”
Cerny hurried over from the desk. “Comrade Romek, I’ve already debriefed Comrade Sev.”
“I understand,” he said, then shrugged. “I’m afraid, though, that I’ve been asked to repeat the procedure. I’m sure you understand.”
“Who ordered this?” asked Cerny.
“The Comrade Lieutenant General.”
The colonel gave Brano a look. “All right, but don’t take too much time. We’re flying out in the morning.”
Romek smiled. “Of course, Comrade Colonel.”
29 APRIL 1967, SATURDAY
•
Although there
were no windows in his cell, he was sure that by now the plane home had left. Romek, with the assistance of a guard, had brought him downstairs to an empty office with a lock on the outside of the door, asked him to take a chair—there was one on each side of a table—then left and locked the door. Someone had turned off the lights after a few hours, and Brano climbed on the table to catch up on his sleep. He woke to a bright room.
The walls were white and clean. He couldn’t remember if they had someone to clean up after each interview session, or if, as at Yalta Boulevard, they simply repainted such rooms once a week to cover the blood.
In other circumstances he would not have been afraid. Although he and Major Romek had had their differences, Romek was in all ways an officer of the state, a simple man who had devoted himself to that training-school creed of living by his orders. But now, his orders came from Yalta Boulevard, specifically from the Lieutenant General.
Major Romek arrived, followed by a squat, heavy man with a black beard who stood silently in the corner. Romek sat behind the table, and Brano took the seat opposite him.
“Brano, I can tell you I was surprised when I heard you’d walked in here. I thought we’d lost you.” The quiver had left his voice.
“As you can see, Comrade Major, I didn’t run away.”
Romek smiled. “Before we get started, though, let me tell you that I’ve always admired your work. Last year, if you remember, I was upset that you questioned my security in this building. You had my men sweep the offices and, upon finding microphones, gave me quite a reprimand. At the time, I took this personally. I did. But later I realized that you were right. So, before we begin, I want to tell you that I bear no ill will toward you.”
“I’m pleased to hear that.”
Romek scratched the corner of a bulging eye. “But since then, the world has become a little more complicated, hasn’t it? You attacked Josef Lochert in August—yes, he was open with us here at the embassy about what you’d done to him—and after returning home you murdered an innocent worker and have since finished what you began with Lochert. You’ve spent a lot of time in this city with known counterrevolutionaries—the moderately famous Filip Lutz, as well as a whole cast of curiosities connected to the Committee for Liberty in the Captive Nations, which we believe to be a front for the CIA. Do you deny any of this?”
“I did not attack Josef Lochert last year, nor did I kill Jakob Bieniek. But the rest is true.”
“Better than I expected,” said Romek.
“I came here of my own free will.”
“Free will.” Romek grunted, as if this were funny. “I suppose you did. But now, what I need from you is complete and utter honesty. Forget about the outside world. There are prisons and work camps out there, but they have nothing to do with what we are doing in here. What I want from you is the whole story.”
So Brano Sev began with August 1966, outlining what happened with Josef Lochert and Bertrand Richter. Romek used his notepad sometimes and did not interrupt. Brano told him about the appearance of Jan Soroka and about the murder of Jakob Bieniek, arranged by Pavel Jast. Then he explained why all of this had happened, that it was the Ministry’s plan to get him into Austria for his mission.
“Wait,” said Romek, frowning at his notes. “You’re telling me that all this was simply to get you into Austria?”
“That’s what I’m telling you. Colonel Cerny will verify this.”
“Okay. Go on.”
Brano described his time with Ludwig in that suburban house and told him what information he’d been forced to give.
“That’s all you told them?”
“It’s all I remember. I might have told them more, but I don’t think I did.”
“Well, Brano. It’s important we know everything you told them. So we know what’s been compromised.”
“Of course. I’ll work on it.”
“You do that.”
Brano outlined his time in Vienna, his meetings with Filip Lutz and Ersek Nanz, the lecture at the Committee for Liberty. He told them the names of everyone he recognized there.
“Andrezej Sev?”
“Yes.”
“Your father, huh?”
“Yes.”
Romek wrote something down.
Brano gave a step-by-step review of his two meetings with Lochert, ending with his murder.
“But you’re leaving something out, Brano.”
“What am I leaving out?”
“Your girlfriend.”
Brano closed his eyes and told everything he knew about Dijana Franković, including the information she’d given him about Bertrand Richter’s meetings with the Russians.
“And she didn’t ask him about it?”
“She believes in privacy.”
“Go on.”
The stroke was only a brief story, though he gave the names of the men who helped him on the border. “They don’t know anything about me.”
“You’re sure of that?”
“I am.”
“What about when you came back? You were no longer being followed, so why didn’t you report here immediately?”
“I tried, but I wouldn’t have made it to the gate. There was an Austrian watching the street. He’s still there now.”
“Oh, is he?”
“He has a crew cut, and he’s sitting in a gray Renault.”
“Dragan,” Romek said to the big man in the corner, and Dragan stood up and left the room. Romek smiled at Brano. “Go on.”
“I called Yalta Boulevard on Monday. I spoke with the Comrade Lieutenant General.”
“Yes,” said Romek. “And he ordered you to go home. Who else have you spoken to since you returned?”
“My father, Jan Soroka, and Dijana Franković. Yesterday, Colonel Cerny contacted me.”
“And so?”
“And what?”
“Now, Brano, it’s time for you to tell me exactly what’s going on.”
Brano almost smiled. It wasn’t the kind of tale a simple man like Romek would be able to absorb. It was too confused, too indirect. But more important, Romek would pass anything he heard in this room directly back to Yalta Boulevard. “That’s classified information. I’ll have to talk to Cerny first.”
Romek shook his head slowly. “And I thought you were being cooperative, Brano. Remember what I said, everything outside this room does not exist.”
“I can’t take that leap of faith, Nikolai.”
Dragan didn’t speak when he returned, only nodded at Romek’s questioning gaze.
“Okay, at least one part of your incredible story has been verified. Shall I go get the Comrade Colonel?”
“If you want to learn more, yes.”
Romek patted the table and stood up. Before leaving, he gave a quick nod past Brano’s shoulder to Dragan, similar to the one Dragan had given him, and said, “Not the head. We don’t want another stroke.” Then he walked through the door and locked it.
For a moment there was nothing. Brano stared at the closed door, listening to Dragan’s light breaths behind him, waiting. Then Dragan approached. He had the heavy, flat-footed step of his kind. The young, unreflective violence that served the Ministry so well. And when Dragan said, “Stand up,” Brano was surprised that the voice was so high, and light. The voice of the kind of man who tended flowers in his free time.
He stood and turned to face the man. Dragan had bright, twinkling eyes, too, but no smile. He punched Brano in the stomach.
Brano did not fight back, because he knew his role here. To be cowed. A second fist struck his chest, knocking him across the table.
This is nothing
, he told himself, but without conviction. Dragan stepped around the table and lifted him again, then kneed his testicles.
Dijana was right. This world of men with endless questions that no answers would satisfy was a hateful place. He’d always known this, despite the meager justifications he had clung to for years. There had been so many justifications, hundreds, but now he was having trouble remembering what they could have been.
Brano was in the chair again when the door opened. His limp hands hung between his knees, his head fallen to the side. He tried to make out Romek through the tears, and Romek leaned close to help. “Brano,” he whispered. “There’s someone to see you.”
Then he straightened and stepped back as Cerny leaned down. The colonel sniffed, wiped his mustache, and said, “Tell them, Brano. There’s no reason to hide it now. He can’t get you here.”
Brano raised his head. “Who?”
“You know who. Just tell them everything. You can trust Comrade Romek. I have his promise that he’ll keep this quiet for as long as necessary.”
“Dragan,” said Romek. “You’re not needed now.”
Dragan walked out.
“And you, Comrade Colonel.”
Cerny looked at Brano. “Remember what I told you. We’ll get him, don’t worry.” The colonel left.
Romek returned to his seat on the other side of the table. “Now, if you please. I don’t have all day.”
So Brano began to speak, and in speaking felt that the world had become less infused with
zbrka
. Despite the pain, the world was now simpler, a place where he could share the burden of his knowledge.
There was a conspiracy, he told Romek. A conspiracy to undermine socialism in their country. The conspiracy would take the form of an armed revolution, its soldiers made up of émigrés who had, over the past few years, been smuggled back into their country. Unlike similar operations conducted in the early fifties by the Office of Policy Coordination, under the stewardship of the CIA, this one was run by a religious group—the Committee for Liberty in the Captive Nations—with only a loose, probably financial, connection to the CIA. The central conspirators included Filip Lutz and Bertrand Richter, both now dead, as well as Brano’s father. Lochert had been among their number, which was why he had attempted to kill Brano—because Brano was asking too many questions. There was also another person, placed inside the Ministry itself, who could retard their government’s reaction to the uprising.
“Who is this person?”
“Comrade Cerny and I suspect it is the Lieutenant General.”
“Then why hasn’t he been arrested?”
“Because we don’t have enough evidence.”
Romek touched his pencil to his lips. “The Comrade Colonel told me that you were responsible for Filip Lutz’s death. Correct?”
Brano hesitated. “Yes.”
“Why didn’t you instead interrogate him? If the crux of the problem is a mole in Yalta, then why did you kill a man who could identify this person?”
“I was following orders.”
“Whose?”
“The Comrade Lieutenant General’s.”
Romek smiled and pointed at Brano, as if he’d made a particularly good point. “But Lutz wasn’t the only one, was he? Josef Lochert could have given us the information.”
“I was acting in self-defense.”
“Of course you were. But you weren’t acting in self-defense when you, or Lochert—it doesn’t matter, but you did it together—killed Bertrand Richter, who was making a deal to sell this name to the KGB.”
Brano looked at him.
“It seems to me,” said Romek, touching a finger to the tabletop, “that you have gotten rid of anyone who could implicate you in the whole scheme. I imagine the final conspirator with this knowledge—your father—would be difficult to capture, wouldn’t he?”