TWO

When the call came in, I was at my desk, having just popped two twenty-five-milligram tablets of Captopril. Hypertension. It’s one of the innumerable annoyances that come with getting old. I was also wrapped in a wool coat (the heating had been out for a week), going through a box of old files I’d had shipped over from the Eleventh District Militia Archives. Why had I asked for it? I’m not sure. Maybe it was just nostalgia, because being three days from retirement makes an old man sentimental.

That’s when the phone rang and a calloused voice said, “Comrade Chief Brod?”

“Yes.”

“We met at Brano Sev’s retirement party. Romek,” said the caller. “Colonel Nikolai Romek.”

All I remembered was a painfully dull party at the Grunwald Restaurant three years ago. Brano Sev surrounded by a general contingency of state security elders who only talked about sex. I’d been drunk and angry that night. “Sorry, but I don’t recall.”

“No matter,” said Romek. “This is official business anyway. Seems one of our officers is dead. Lieutenant General Yuri Kolev. He was at the party, too.”

I didn’t remember the Lieutenant General either. Later, I could ask Lena, because despite being seventy-two-eight years older than me-she had a crisp, clean memory for details I never caught. I grabbed a ballpoint and wrote down the dead officer’s name. “How did it happen?”

“Fell over at his desk. Heart attack.”

“Why call us?”

“Why not call you?”

“We’re the Murder Squad, Comrade Colonel. As much as we’d like to, we don’t bother with natural deaths.”

Romek cleared his throat. “As you may know, Emil, we’ve got demonstrations in Sarospatak. What you may not know is that other counties are also making noise. We simply don’t have the manpower to process this.”

It was true that, over the last week, citizens in that western town had been pouring into the streets each night to protest the incarceration of Father Eduard Meyr. But it was also common knowledge that one out of five people in the country worked for the Ministry for State Security in some capacity. They had plenty of men to fill out a lousy form, while I had only two homicide inspectors.

“Just send someone over,” he said. “It’ll take five minutes.”

I looked at the dusty, yellowed file I’d been leafing through, then closed it. “We’ll be right there.” After hanging up, I called down to our coroner, Markus Feder. He sounded pleased-overall, it had been a slow month for corpses.

In those days, murder in the Capital was a rare enough occurrence, and we could make do in the First District with my two detectives, Katja Drdova and Bernard Kovar. We were supposed to have three, but after the death of Captain Imre Papp four years ago, and the subsequent replacements who burned out so quickly, I gave up. When necessary, I went out with Katja or Bernard to visit crime scenes, but they usually insisted on leaving me to my desk. I don’t think they liked having the boss look over their shoulders.

This time, I would insist. I didn’t want either of my detectives going up to Yalta Boulevard without me there to back them up.

This morning, the homicide office was empty. Katja was investigating the murder of a retired judge, Dusan Volan, who’d been shot three days ago while wandering the grounds of his extensive Thirteenth District estate. Bernard had stayed behind, but he wasn’t at his desk. I knew where I’d find him.

In the corridor, some uniforms winked at me knowingly, and others made jokes about me not getting killed before my last day. I told them I’d make a solid effort. For the last two weeks, Katja had been making arrangements for my retirement party Friday; she thought it was a secret, but she’d made the mistake of bringing Bernard in on the deception, and I’d seen the guest list he’d left on his desk.

As expected, he was in the lounge, sipping acorn coffee with one of the receptionists, a pretty girl from Vranov named Margit. “Bernard.”

The big captain was surprised to see me. Surprised and embarrassed. Embarrassment looked funny on a man his size. He stood up, mustache twitching. “Chief.”

“Come on,” I said. “We’ve got a corpse to look at.”

“Oh!” said Margit.

I led Bernard down a pea-colored stairwell to the second underground level, where I signed out an unmarked Militia Karpat and took the wheel. Once we’d turned onto Lenin Avenue, I broke the silence by asking about his wife: “How’s Agi?”

“Good.”

“The portrait’s today, isn’t it?”

All he did was nod at that, which annoyed me. Today was the most important commission of Agota’s career-a large-format photograph of our Great Leader. He said, “She’s taking Sanja to Ti-sakarad this afternoon. Doesn’t want to wait for me.””Surprising,” I said, without a hint of surprise.

Bernard Kovar was married to, and had a baby with, Agota, the daughter of my oldest friend, Ferenc Kolyeszar. Famous Ferenc. For the last thirty years, due largely to his literary career, Ferenc had been living in internal exile, first in Pocspetri, then in Tisakarad, forty-five minutes from Sarospatak. By now Ferenc was internationally famous; even the French had praised his “dissident” works.

Agota moved to the Capital five years ago and, as her symbolic guardians, neither Lena nor I really approved when Bernard and she became an item. To us, he was still too young, at thirty-seven, to have an adult relationship with a woman ten years his senior. Despite that, they married, and nearly every day I found him flirting with another receptionist.

We turned onto the roundabout at Victory Square. To the right, the high columns of the Central Committee Building rose up. In front of it, a bronze Vladimir Ilyich, jacket raised in a permanent breeze, pointed to the gray sky.

I suppose Vladimir’s gone by now.

“You’ve got a nice family,” I told him.

“Christ, Emil. Can’t a man flirt?”

I turned up Yalta Boulevard, then passed the high glass tower of the Hotel Metropol. Ahead, at number 36, two uniformed Ministry guards stood on the right side of the road, outside Ministry headquarters, waving pedestrians to the opposite sidewalk. “Just watch out,” I said. “It’s not only me you’ll have to answer to.” No?

“Lena will have your balls.”

Bernard groaned.

When we climbed out, a guard waved at us, saying, “Nothing to see.”

I flashed my Militia certificate. “Comrade Colonel Romek called me.” I said it as if the colonel and I were very old friends, then noticed the corpse. It was lying on the cracked sidewalk, covered by a simple white sheet. “Why’s the body out here?”

The guard shrugged. “Orders.”

Unbelievable. I approached Yuri Kolev’s body; his shroud rippled in the frigid breeze. “Go ahead,” I said to Bernard. “Let’s see him.”

He crouched and pulled back the sheet, and when I saw the dead, gray-bearded face it came back to me: a loud, drunken old man from Brano Sev’s retirement party, who ogled Agota all night. I even remembered the man’s bitterness when Agota walked over to Bernard Kovar and asked him to dance.

“Do I know this guy?” said Bernard, crossing his arms over his chest. “I think I know him.”

“I hope you do,” said a calloused voice. We turned to find a small man in his fifties, with a thin gray mustache and brown suit, smiling. He stuck out a hand. “Nikolai Romek. Remember now?”

I did. Yet another Agota-admirer from that party. Lena and I had had our hands busy keeping these men off of her, only to fail with Bernard. “Good to see you again, Comrade Romek. Meet Captain Bernard Kovar.”

Romek smiled but didn’t offer his hand. “Of course. I remember.”

“You going to explain this?” I said.

“Explain what?”

“You’ve taken Kolev out of his office and left him here. My foren-sics man is going to explode.”

“Forensics?” said Romek, smiling involuntarily. “Emil, the man died of a heart attack. I’m just dumping the paperwork on you.”

“Because your men are too busy to fill out a three-page form.”

Romek nodded-he didn’t care whether I believed him or not.

I said, “Could this be related to his work?”

“Why are you obsessed with making this into a murder?”

“I meant stress, Comrade Colonel.”

He paused, then shook his head. “No. We weren’t burdening him with anything tougher than photocopying. He was retiring soon.” Romek looked down at Kolev’s flaccid, pale face. “A damned shame.”

“When?”

“When, what?”

“His retirement.”

“Next month.”

“Medical records?”

“Send a request to Pasha Medical if you like.”

I knew about file requests sent to the Ministry’s private hospital. I’d be retired by the time it showed up. “We should at least have a look at his office.”

“Why do you think we brought out the body?” He squinted at me. “It’s a hectic time. We don’t want militiamen crawling about.”

Bernard, silent, watched the two of us stare at each another and exhale clouds of condensation.

“Look,” said Romek, as if he were preparing to do me a great service against his better judgment, “I’ve already sent someone to clear out his home of classified documents. And just for you, I’ll have my people go through his office. We’ll let you know if there’s anything suspicious. All right?”

“Don’t have a choice, do I?”

Romek grunted a half-laugh and stuck his hands into his pockets.

“Was he married?” I asked.

“We’re all married, Comrade Chief. To the Ministry.” Romek nodded at Kolev’s body. “He did have himself a pretty Saxon girl for a while, but that ended long ago.”

“No one now?”

He shook his head again and began to step away. “I’ve got a desk full of work. Are we done?”

“For now,” I said, and Bernard and I watched Romek climb the steps to where another uniformed guard opened the door of Yalta 36 for him.

Markus Feder arrived in a white Karpat hearse with spots of rust along its edges. He climbed out slowly, brushing his white lab coat straight, then his white hair, which still held on to a few flakes of red. After looking at the body for five seconds, he said, “Don’t know why you need me on this, Emil. Look at those eyes-the man’s had a coronary.” He opened a pale hand. “That’ll be eight hundred thousand korona.”

I wasn’t in the mood for his jokes. “Take him back with you. Do a full exam.”

“Suspect something more devious?”

“Just do it, will you?”

Feder lowered his voice. “What’s the story?”

“Just what you see.”

“But why us?”

“They say they’ve got manpower problems.”

He didn’t believe it either. “I’ll get you something in a few hours.”

“Thanks, Markus.”

Bernard was standing over by a kolach shop, answering a pretty shopkeeper’s questions, but I ignored him and went to the Ministry guard. Now that the body was being loaded onto a gurney, he was sneaking a cigarette in the next doorway. “Can I get one?”

He tapped one out and lit it for me. “It’s not murder, is it?”

I shook my head. “Doesn’t look like it. Was the Lieutenant General on any medication?”

“I don’t know,” said the guard, peering over at Bernard, who had somehow made the shopkeeper laugh. “I wonder what’ll happen to his car now.”

“What?”

“The Lieutenant General’s.” He nodded up the street to where a shining white BMW 7 Series was parked by the curb.

“He parked out in the open?”

“Didn’t trust the garage attendants. Besides, no one’s going to touch a car sitting here.”

I thanked him for the smoke, then hurried across the street to Feder’s hearse. He was just getting behind the wheel. “Let me see the body again.”

“You’re getting creepy in your old age.” He walked with me around the back and opened it so I could climb in to where Kolev was sealed inside a translucent body bag. I unzipped it halfway and reached in. Behind me, Feder made lewd jokes. He said, “Hmm,” when I pulled out Kolev’s car keys.

Bernard had finally tired of pestering the local women, and as he walked back I turned him around and guided him up the street to the BMW. “Quick search,” I said.

“What’re we looking for?”

“Anything. Maybe medication.”

Bernard inhaled audibly when I unlocked the car. Across the way, the guard tossed his cigarette and stared. I took the front seat, rummaging around the floorboards and in the glove compartment, while Bernard crouched in the back. “Hey,” he said.

He held up a narrow sheet of paper-a poorly printed flyer- that said

It was the same slogan they used in Czechoslovakia just before everything changed there. Student radicals and underground workers had used the question-and-answer to identify compatriots. The activists of our own country had borrowed the phrase.

I took the flyer and stared at it.

“What’s wrong?” he said.

I looked at him a second, then past him, through the rear windshield. The guard had returned to the steps of Yalta 36 and was speaking with the other guard. I lowered my voice, though it wasn’t necessary.

“This” I told him. “We’re called in to process the death of a Ministry lieutenant general. Forty years, and I’ve never seen this happen. We’re being brought in for a reason.”

Bernard waited for me to complete my thought, but I couldn’t, not yet. I locked up the BMW, pocketed the keys and thanked the guard again for the cigarette.

Markus Feder was quicker than expected; when we stepped into the homicide office, my phone was ringing. “Emil, I’ve got something.”

“Be right down,” I said, then went out to Bernard, who was settling into his chair. He groaned as he got up again.

We went back down the stairwell to the first underground level and Markus Feder’s “body shop.” Feder had been assigned to the First District Militia in the fifties, and since then he’d gradually built a reputation as the most astute coroner in the country. He was the one who tracked down a rare Nigerian poison used to kill a television broadcaster in 1978. Two years later, he identified not only the weapon-a wrench-that killed the wife of a Ukrainian diplomat, but the manufacturer, the year produced, and the shop where it was purchased. He’d conjured many small miracles in his cold, stainless steel lab, and today was no exception.

“Poisoned,” he said, leaning against the gurney that held Yuri Kolev’s large, naked body aloft. This, for some reason, wasn’t a surprise to me. He raised a finger. “Guess how.”

That, I didn’t know. I shrugged.

“Ever heard of an eight-ball?”

“Billiards?”

Bernard said, “Crack cocaine and heroin.”

Feder wagged the finger at him. “The young man wins. He’s been watching American movies. Anyway, what you’ve got is the same thing but without the crack. Colombian cocaine mixed with heroin.”

“Injected?” I offered.

“Not at all. This man’s been snorting for years. His nasal cavity’s like the Postojna Caves.” Feder propped his gloved finger on the tip of Kolev’s nose to demonstrate. “But this time, it was mixed with uncut heroin. It was pure poison. If his heart hadn’t killed him first, he would’ve suffocated as his body shut down.”

I looked down at Kolev’s pale body and noticed his freshly shaved genitals, which were unusually red. “Could he have done it by accident?”

“Emil, you don’t get hold of pure heroin by accident, and you certainly don’t snort it by accident.”

“What’s wrong with his privates?” said Bernard.

“Herpes,” Feder told him. He wagged his finger again. “A visual lesson for you, son. Oh!”

“What?”

Feder stepped back to the sink and picked up a plastic bag filled with slips of paper, some change, a wallet, and two identification booklets. “His effects.”

I held up the bag and peered through it. “So if it wasn’t an accident, someone spiked his cocaine.”

Feder nodded. “Someone who could get hold of the pure stuff.”

“There you are!” said a woman’s voice. “There’s Daddy!”

Feder brightened, looking past us to where Agota stood in the doorway, clutching two-year-old Sanja wrapped in a purple hooded coat. Agota was beautiful in the way her mother, Magda, had once been, with pale blue eyes and dark hair.

She came in slowly. “We’re interrupting?”

“Absolutely not, dear,” said Feder, a massive grin filling his face.

Bernard waved for her to leave. “I’ll be right out.”

“Yes,” I said, trying to step in front of the corpse. “Go.”

“Oh,” said Agota. She’d just caught sight of Yuri Kolev’s white body. She clutched Sanja tighter, one hand covering the child’s face. “I-”

“Wait outside,” said Bernard.

We watched her retreat and close the door behind herself, then heard coughing from the corridor, and Sanja’s low whine.

“Nice one,” said Feder, a gloved finger on Yuri Kolev’s navel. “I’ve always said your wife was a nice one.”

“Yeah,” Bernard said without interest.

“If I was you, I’d keep a tight rein on myself. A woman like that doesn’t come along every day.”

Bernard looked at Feder, then at me. He blinked and muttered, “Shut up,” before marching out of the lab.

Using Feder’s lamps, I examined Kolev’s effects. He had two ID booklets: a Ministry for State Security certificate with his name, and a general citizen’s pass under the name LIPMANN, ULRICH. He’d used the false one to travel to Sarospatak three times in the last week. It didn’t look like the travel habits of someone who was only making photocopies for the office.

The slips of paper were receipts for four meals at the Hotel Metropol. Large bills, at least three people at the table.

I thanked Feder and found Bernard and Agota whispering in the stairwell, Sanja on her mother’s knee.

“Hey, old man,” said Agota.

Since moving to the Capital in 1984, Agota had gone from disconsolate textile-factory worker to weekend photographer. Then, after one successful commission shooting a Ministry general’s son’s wedding, she started getting calls. She applied for permission to leave her factory just after the birth of her daughter two years ago and had been photographing full-time ever since, sharing a studio co-op on Lenin Avenue, not far from the Militia station. Her life showed us that change was never impossible. She’d married a man ten years youngerthan herself and then became pregnant at the age of forty-five-Katja often spoke of this as if it were a miracle-and then she’d made a complete career change. These things gave the rest of us hope.

I kissed her cheeks, then Sanja’s soft white forehead. “You know better than to walk into that room.”

“I needed to find Berni.” She wrinkled her nose. “But the smell. What is that smell?”

“Chemicals,” Bernard guessed. He reached down to take Sanja.

“So how was it?” I asked.

“How was what?”

“Don’t be funny. It doesn’t suit you.”

People say a lot of things about Tomiak Pankov now, most of them true, but back then you could think what you wanted; it didn’t change the fact that his very name frightened you. So none of us said it aloud.

She’d done his portrait in the newly finished Workers’Palace, that Third District monstrosity fronted by the long, cobblestone Workers’Boulevard, which The Spark continually reminded us was one meter wider than the Champs-Elysees.

She frowned, trying to find the words to describe the experience.

“Scary?” I offered.

She blew some air, then nodded. “Terrifying. I got some nice shots, though.”

“That’s good.”

“They searched me.”

“What?” said Bernard, bouncing Sanja on his hip.

“On my way out. They searched me. As if I were a thief.”

Neither of us knew how to answer that. Agota reached for her purse as she stood. “I’ve gotta go. Train leaves in a half hour.”

“Wait a minute,” I told her as we started up the stairs. “Let’s call your father-I might drive you halfway. He can take you the rest.”

Bernard groaned loudly. He and his father-in-law spoke only at family gatherings in the Tisakarad farmhouse. Even then, conversation was strained. He smiled, pressing his nose against Sanja’s. “If you can get him to speak about something other than how much the French love him, you’ll have done a great service to humanity.” “Bernard,” warned Agota.

Back in the office, I closed the door and pulled the blinds shut before dialing. After three rings Magda Kolyeszar picked up. We hadn’t talked in a month, and it surprised me how old she sounded. “Emil, that you?”

“How’s the easy life, Magda?”

“Speak for yourself. I’ve been assigned the job of archivist.”

“Archivist?”

“For the dissident. It’s amazing how much bad writing you can accumulate over a lifetime.”

“You should read my case reports.”

She gave a polite chuckle. “You hear about Agi’s commission? Scares me to death.”

“She’s here now. Made it out without a scratch. Is the farmer in?”

“You’re in luck,” she told me. “He’s decided to stay in today. You’ll put Agi on afterward?”

Sure.

She called for her husband, and after a moment that deep voice came on the line. “Emil?”

“Ferenc.” I leaned into the receiver. “How’s the farming?”

“The land doesn’t like me.”

“Can we meet today?”

“Important?”

“I’ve got a dead Ministry officer, and I’d like to know what all’s possible.”

“Who?”

“Yuri Kolev. Lieutenant general. You know him?”

“I know them all, but…” Ferenc trailed off. “The usual spot? I’ll have to get back for tonight’s rally”

“Should you say that over the phone?”

He made a harruph noise. “Trust me, Emil. They know already.”

“What time?” I said, looking up as Agota opened my door and smiled. I waved her in.

“Say, three o’clock.”

By the dusty clock on my wall, it was a little after one. “Perfect. Hold on. I’ve got someone who wants to talk to you.”

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