“There are a few others I would also like to talk to. Is there another priest in town?”
“Not on a regular basis,” Misha Gonsk said quickly, “but since Father Merhum was so well known, many priests, especially young ones, came from time to time. There are quite a few here now, for the funeral services. And the bishop. Did we mention the bishop?”
“I mentioned the bishop,” the mayor said with obvious irritation.
“Yes,” said Rostnikov.
“And there are newspaper reporters. Pravda itself,” Gonsk said.
“And,” the mayor added with undisguised pride, “a television crew from the nine o’clock news, ‘Vremya.’”
Karpo, who had taken neither tea nor cookies, was taking notes.
“Perhaps we will talk to one or two of them later. And the nun, Sister …?”
“Nina,” said the mayor, who started to cross himself, looked around the table, and stopped with his hand almost to his heart. The hand went quickly to his lap.
“I should like to see her. And anyone in the town named Oleg.”
“Yes,” said Gonsk, coming to life. “I anticipated this request. We have seven Olegs. One of them is four months old. Another is six. Six years. His father … but that is not important. That leaves five, including Oleg Boshisi, who is possibly the oldest-no, the second oldest person in town. Oleg is ninety-one. Dlyana Gremonovaya is ninety-four. The other three are Oleg Brotsch, the baker. He baked these cookies-”
“Very tasty,” said Rostnikov.
“Uh, and then,” Gonsk went on, squinting at a crumpled piece of paper he had extracted from his pocket. The paper looked like the torn corner of a newspaper. “Then, let me see …”
“Oleg Brotsch’s son, who is also Oleg. He is fifteen,” said Petrov, his hands folded on the table.
“Sixteen,” Gonsk countered.
“Sixteen,” Petrov responded. “I am corrected. He is sixteen and feebleminded. He needs his mother’s help to fart.”
“Oleg Grogaiganov is some kind of businessman. He travels.”
“Is he in Arkush now?”
“Yes.”
“And the last Oleg?” Rostnikov added.
“Oleg Pninov,” said Misha Gonsk, returning the paper to his pocket.
“Pninov is the last of a proud line,” Peotor Merhum said. “Town drunks running back for generations. We have several town drunks and a trio of village idiots, though some would say we have even more. Inbreeding does it.”
“We will talk to them all,” said Rostnikov, without looking at Peotor Merhum.
“Even the baby and the child?” asked Gonsk.
“Their parents.”
“The father, the baby’s father, is in Siberia. He’s an engineer working on-” Gonsk said.
“Use your good judgment, comrade,” Rostnikov said. “And one more request, please turn the heat down in this room. Now, if we are finished with this welcome refreshment, I would like to talk to Inspector Karpo privately for a few moments.”
The murderer rose with the others, looked at Rostnikov, and started for the door. It had gone reasonably well. He could think of no error he had made that would give him away. He had played his part with the skill bred of years of practice.
He would watch, listen, and be prepared to act if the two from Moscow began to approach the truth. How he would act was not yet certain, but he had killed once. It could be no harder a second time.
It is illegal to beg in Moscow, but in the subway stations one frequently encounters ragged Gypsy children with their heads almost shorn and their hands out in supplication. They furrow their young brows in transparent mock agony, which covers a bravado beneath which is the real layer of agony.
The Gypsy children, usually carrying even smaller Gypsy children, made Sasha Tkach uneasy. Most Muscovites simply pretended they were not there, though occasionally an older man or woman would scold the begging children. Sasha vacillated between giving them a few kopeks and striding past them as if they did not exist. It depended on his mood. Today his mood was running wild. He handed a little girl a ten-kopek coin and plunged his hands into his pockets.
“We’ll take the purple line to the Dzerzhinsky station and then the red line to Universitet,” he said.
“The green line to Marx Prospekt is faster,” Elena said, “more direct.”
“You are not in charge,” he said as people flowed around them. “I am in charge. I am the senior officer.” He tapped his chest and looked in her eyes.
“The green line is faster,” Elena said. “But suit yourself.”
Sasha looked at the people flowing by, a pair of sailors, shoppers with half-full bags, a mother and child, hand in hand, each eating something that might have been a cucumber. “All right, the green line,” he said softly. “It is a small issue. When a big one comes, we do as I say.”
Elena shook her head. This was her fifth day with this madman. She was not sure she could tolerate another, but what recourse did she have? To complain about her partner after less than a week? It was difficult enough being one of the few women in investigation without being one who immediately complained. Short of physical abuse, she would have to tolerate this sexist.
It was midafternoon when they reached the fifteen-story apartment building on Lomonosov Prospekt behind Moscow State University. A police van was parked outside with its light flashing. No one was inside the van and there was no large crowd of the curious, though passersby did glance toward the nearby doorway and into the empty cab of the van.
Sasha Tkach was familiar with the area. On three occasions he had posed as a university student, twice to uncover black marketers and once to help find a murderer. Now he wondered if he could still get away with such a masquerade, a thirty-year-old man with a wife and, soon, two children.
The building was reasonably maintained, which meant that there were no major holes in the walls, and the stairs-there was no elevator-were a year or two from actual decay. Graffiti on the walls had been almost, but not completely, washed away, LET’S ASK ALBANIA FOR FOREIGN AID would remain until the wall was repainted.
“What floor?” Elena asked as they reached the first-floor landing.
“I don’t know,” Sasha said. “They didn’t tell me.”
Footsteps thundered down the stairwell, echoing voices of girls or young women. Sasha and Elena paused as two young women appeared above them. One of the women was dark-haired with very red lips and a little blue beret. The other was tall, thin, and breastless. The women wore identical dark blue coats. Both carried books and both looked at Sasha with interest.
“Grisha Zalinsky,” Elena asked. “You know where his apartment is?”
The girls stopped. The dark-haired one looked at Sasha. “Zalinsky,” she repeated. “Zalinsky.”
“The Jew on eight,” the tall girl said. “The one who had parties.”
“Which apartment on eight?” Elena asked.
“I don’t-” the dark-haired girl said.
“Eight-ten or eight-twelve,” said me tall girl. “Are you with the police? Are they here because of Zalinsky?”
“Yes,” said Elena, moving past the girls and up the stairs. Sasha moved up behind her.
“What has he done?” the dark-haired girl asked. “Black market? Drugs. I’ll bet it’s drugs. There are drugs in this building.”
Neither Sasha nor Elena answered as they continued up and out of sight of the girls.
“The policeman’s pretty,” one of the girls whispered below them.
“He’s married,” said the other.
“How do you know?”
“He looks married.”
The girls laughed and hurried down the stairwell.
I look married, Sasha thought.
Elena hadn’t thought of Sasha as “pretty,” but now that the girl had said it, she thought the description fit him better than “handsome.”
They had no trouble finding the apartment when they reached the eighth floor. The door was partly open. Elena stepped back to allow Sasha to enter first.