‘That a problem for you?’ asked Cowley.
‘Should it be?’ Johannsen came in quickly.
‘No,’ said Cowley.
‘Just point and whistle,’ said Rafferty.
Cowley sighed, indicating their report on the desk. ‘Fill me in on that.’
‘Good place to kill anyone. Mostly offices all around. There’s a jazz club, but there was a big band gig. No-one heard any shots. Same in the only bar that fronts on to the street.’
‘How’d he get there?’
‘No car that we can link to him so far.’
‘The main Russian compound is at 1500 Massachusetts Avenue. Let’s check all the cab companies for a pick up from there to Georgetown. Cover the embassy on 16th Street, too.’
‘Yes, sir!’ said Rafferty.
Cowley ignored it. ‘Wisconsin Avenue runs right down to the river: how far from the end was the body?’
‘About ten yards along, in the direction of the boat club.’
‘There are a lot of apartment blocks below M Street,’ Cowley pointed out. ‘People would have been in, at night. They been checked?’
‘No,’ conceded Rafferty, wearily.
‘According to this report’ – Cowley tapped it – ‘death could have been somewhere around seven or eight. Let’s do every apartment, around that time tonight. And the garages beneath, for a car that might be Serov’s.’
‘Just the two of us!’ protested Rafferty.
‘We’ll draw men from the Bureau’s Washington office and you can call for additional help from your division…’ Cowley looked to Rafferty. ‘I’d like you to do the briefing. Anyone seconded, you included, goes on the Bureau budget.’ He turned to Johannsen. ‘I want you at the mortuary with me, for the formal identification.’ Cowley spread his hands, towards them. ‘Anything I’ve missed out?’
Rafferty looked at his partner before both shook their heads.
‘You saw the body,’ said Cowley. ‘Was it a professional hit?’
‘No doubt about it,’ said Rafferty positively.
‘Shit!’ said Cowley.
‘You said you were going to be made Director: I told people!’ Olga’s accusing voice was muffled, and Danilov guessed she had her hand over the mouthpiece: there was noise in the background. Olga was a general typist at the Ministry of Agriculture.
‘It’s internal politics.’ Danilov wished he hadn’t undertaken to telephone her. But when he’d promised he had expected to get the job.
‘But there’s a car?’
‘Yes.’
‘And more money?’
‘Yes.’
‘Will there be official functions to go to?’
‘Probably.’ The charade was continuing. What about the joint divorce, so that he and Larissa could marry, now there wasn’t the protective power of the directorship!
Ironically, Olga said: ‘Is the rank of deputy director higher than Kosov’s?’
‘Of course it is.’ He hadn’t known Olga was jealous of Kosov: even his previous investigative rank had been superior to that of a Militia division commander.
‘That’s something.’ There were further muffled words, away from the telephone. ‘I’ve got to go.’
Danilov had to wait several minutes for Larissa to be found, when he rang the Druzhba Hotel on Prospekt Vernadskovo, where Larissa was one of assistant reception managers. ‘I didn’t get it.’
‘There’s a room we could use, until seven o’clock.’
‘That’s not what I called for.’
‘Just to talk. You need to talk.’
‘I’ve lost,’ Danilov said, hating the admission.
‘Only if you allow yourself to lose. Fight!’
He never wanted to lose, Danilov accepted: so he wouldn’t.
‘He could have lied to you!’ Arkadi Gusovsky had a sick man’s pallor and when he became red with annoyance, as now, he looked clown-like, contrasting red and white. The ornate, heavily brocaded, smoky back room of the restaurant on Glovin Bol’soj was full, because the Chechen leaders liked the protection of bodyguards, but no-one would have dared show any reaction to Gusovsky’s strange appearance. Very early after assuming control Gusovsky had made everyone look on while he personally beat to death with a metal stave a man he’d imagined was smiling mockingly at him. It had happened in this same room. Gusovsky had insisted the body remain where it was while he ate rare steak.
‘I made him watch what I did to Serov,’ insisted Mikhail Antipov, nervously. ‘He didn’t lie.’
‘He might not have understood Russian. The family was Ukrainian.’
‘I asked him in both.’ It was Antipov’s knowledge of both languages that had made him ideal for the job.
Gusovsky, who was also unnaturally thin, threw the papers that had been taken from Michel Paulac’s briefcase too hard on to the table between them; some fell off. ‘You should have brought everything! These aren’t anything to do with it. We need the original, to see the names that need changing.’
‘You made a mess of it, didn’t you?’ Aleksandr Yerin had adjusted so completely to his blindness he was always able to appear to be looking at the person to whom he was talking. He asked the question of Zimin, the third member of the Chechen ruling heirarchy; there was no reply Zimin could find.
‘I don’t want anyone else making any more mistakes,’ said Gusovsky generally.
Once more, no-one spoke.
CHAPTER FIVE
Cowley and Johannsen went to the mortuary an hour before the time set for the official identification: the enthusiastic Brierly hurried from behind his desk, hand outstretched, and when Cowley introduced himself said he presumed Cowley was taking over the investigation. Cowley wished he hadn’t, in front of the DC detectives.
The detailed autopsy did not take anything much further than the preliminary report. Either body shot would have proved fataclass="underline" the heart had been shattered by one. There were no indications of a struggle and no skin particles or hair beneath Serov’s fingernails to indicate he had tried to fight off his attacker: he’d bitten his nails anyway, so the chances of finding anything had been remote. There was an old abdominal scar, possibly from a hernia or an appendicectomy. He had eaten just prior to his death; the stomach contained undigested fish and what had obviously been an entree salad, plus traces of alcohol. The massive damage to both the back of the body and the head by the exiting of the flattened bullets made it difficult for Brierly to be absolutely sure, but he’d found no evidence of any organic disease or illness. There was no sign of torture, either.
‘Will the Bureau want its own autopsy, for DNA and stuff like that?’ asked the young examiner.
Cowley nodded. ‘But we’re going to need more than science and technology to catch whoever did this.’
‘I’ve packaged all the clothes up. I guessed you’d want them?’
‘All part of the system,’ confirmed Cowley. ‘What about time of death?’
‘Nine,’ said Brierly. ‘Maybe half an hour earlier.’
‘How long before that had he eaten?’ asked Johannsen.
‘Perhaps an hour,’ said Brierly.
‘And Georgetown is full of restaurants,’ reflected Cowley.
‘He could have eaten at home and left immediately afterwards,’ disputed Johannsen.
‘Entree salads aren’t a Russian way of eating,’ said Cowley. ‘It’s American restaurant style.’
‘This investigation is going to wear out a lot of shoe leather,’ complained Johannsen.
‘Investigations do,’ said Cowley.
Warning of the Russians’ arrival came from the downstairs reception, which Cowley, Johannsen and Brierly reached as the foreigners entered. There were two men, only one of whom identified himself: his visiting card described Valery Pavlenko as a member of the cultural section of the embassy. Cowley, who over the previous five years, as Director of the Russian division, had supervised the assembly of the FBI files on Russian diplomats in the United States, recognised the second Russian as Nikolai Fedorovich Redin, supposedly in the embassy’s trade section. He was, in fact, a member of the Russian external security service: when the man had been posted to Washington, four years earlier, it had still been called the KGB. A year after his arrival Redin had been positively identified trying to buy export-controlled computer base plates; Cowley had had the Department of Commerce ban the export, but argued against expelling Redin on the well established grounds that it was better to retain a spy they knew than discover who his successor might be.