“We must arrange for a place of delivery,” he said in as businesslike a manner as he could muster. “A street corner will be fine. I’ll have the cash in a small box. You can count it, and I’ll-”
It was at that point that she had begun to unbutton her tight jeans. Each metal button, shiny and silver, popped open.
“What-?” he began, but he knew just what she planned.
There was no way he could refuse without a mad story, and his failure to answer her earlier questions about his assumed family and life had already created a possible suspicion that he did not want to build upon by saying that he was impotent, ill, homosexual, or any of several possibilities that sprang to mind. As her jeans dropped to the stone floor, Sasha knew that in his heart of hearts he did not want an excuse. Not only did he have to play out this scene; he wanted to do so. His head was warm and aching. Nausea swirled within, and moments later they were on the mattress in the corner, his clothes discarded, the warm, firm body of the woman on top of him, the smell of her sweat in his face. There was no doubt from the beginning that the woman named Marina was in charge. She grunted, sweated, controlled, urged, kissed, almost smothered him in frenzy, and left him exhausted as she rose and strode across the room to retrieve her clothes.
And so now he sat naked, guilty, confused, and watched her button her American jeans.
“The delivery,” he said, looking for his clothes and trying to gain some control of the situation. The thought struck him that when they were all arrested and brought to trial, the woman would certainly tell what had happened in the room. He didn’t know if he could keep Maya from finding out. He could simply deny it had happened. The court might tell her to be quiet. Perhaps no trial would be necessary. He wished he had a towel to relieve his drenched body and clean away some of the feeling, but all that existed was a grimy sheet crumpled at the foot of the mattress.
“You have delivered,” she said, looking down at him, mocking.
“The money, the automobile,” Sasha said, now feeling at a distinct disadvantage with her dressed.
Marina smoothed her hair and shook her head slowly to indicate a negative.
“But-”Sasha began.
“There is no money, policeman,” she said, her hands back on her lips. “At least I hope you are a policeman, and not KGB. I don’t think you’re KGB. You don’t have the look, the confidence, and a KGB man would have had his background story better rehearsed, at least most KGB men. Even within the KGB there is, sadly, some incompetence.”
Sasha got up and tried indignation.
“Look,” he began, and she indeed looked, which made him stop and feel his exposure from the soles of his feet through his soul.
“I’ve always wanted to make sex with a policeman,” she said, walking to the door. He considered leaping forward, stopping her if he could, and searching for a way, though he was sure there was no way out of this room but through the door through which they had come. The only windows were small and very high on the stone walls.
“You were not bad,” she said, “though you could have participated more. You are remarkably passive for a policeman. Have you ever killed anyone?”
“Yes,” he said, feeling the last possibility of his charade slipping away.
“Good,” she said, beaming. “I like that. Until today, I have never been responsible for anyone’s death. What is your real name?”
Sasha did not answer the question but inched toward the chair behind the table where he hoped he had thrown his clothes.
“There are policemen at the exits to this building,” he said. “It is best if you simply gather a few things and urge your partners to come out with me.”
She shook her head as if a small child had tried to play a trick on her.
“No,” she said. “There are no policemen at the exits. You would not have gone through all this, would not be sweating quite so hard, if you were not alone. Shall I guess, my little policeman? You simply stumbled on us here. You and maybe others are making the rounds, checking places on your own.”
“Make no mistake,” he said, knowing that dignity was impossible without clothing.
“I’ll make no mistake, policeman,” she said. “Ilya will kill you, and we will cut you into little pieces, very little pieces, and bury the pieces deep below the floor.”
With that and before he could move or speak, Marina threw open the door. Beyond it stood a burly, sad-faced man in a rumpled suit who looked something like a massive washtub.
Porfiry Petrovich Rostnikov looked beyond the startled woman at the naked detective and pursed his lips. His head shook slightly, and Sasha realized that he could hear the man sigh. The sounds of machinery in the outer room had stopped. Sasha didn’t know when it had happened.
“Put your pants on, Sasha,” Rostnikov said.
“Inspector, I-” Sasha began, but Rostnikov interrupted.
“Pants, Sasha. Dignity.”
Sasha went for the chair, found his pants, and began dressing quickly, without looking at what he was doing, pushing his sockless feet into his untied shoes, buttoning his shirt incorrectly.
Beyond Rostnikov, Sasha could see the man called Ilya and the other two in overalls. Their goggles were off their eyes and on their heads, pushing back their dark hair. All three were taller, younger, than the inspector, who seemed not in the least perturbed.
“He came to the door,” Ilya explained to Marina. “Said he wanted to see the man who had come to buy a car. I didn’t know-”
“It’s all right,” Marina interrupted, looking directly at the rumpled inspector before her with interest. “Inspector-”
“Rostnikov. Porfiry Petrovich Rostnikov,” the inspector supplied. “Sasha, come.”
Tkach stuffed his sock into his pocket, brushed his damp hair back, and hurried across the room, past Marina, and to Rostnikov’s side. Ilya and the two goggled men stepped back a bit, confused, into the crowded shop but blocked the path to the door.
Marina, apparently unconcerned and quite curious, closed the door behind her.
“Inspector,” she said, “I had planned to kill one policeman today, but you afford me the opportunity to kill two.”
“Marina,” one of the men in overalls said.
“We kill them quickly,” she explained, “and go out the back through the apartment. It is what we planned from the beginning. These are the only two who have seen us. Even if there are more outside, once we are gone, no one knows our faces. We start again, Ilya.”
Sasha looked at the sullen Ilya, who examined the younger policeman with quite obvious jealousy and hatred. Something metal and tarnished and heavy rested in Ilya’s oilstained hand.
Marina’s eyes met those of Rostnikov. She smiled, and he smiled back. There was something sympathetic in the man’s eyes that she didn’t like, that made her confidence falter. The man was about to die because she willed it, and yet he looked at her with-
“Do it,” she said. “Do it and let’s get out of here. Just leave the bodies on the floor and let’s go before the others outside start breaking down the door.”
Sasha stepped back and felt his bare ankle scrape against metal as Ilya raised the wrench to Rostnikov’s back.
“No,” Sasha screamed, and the Washtub stepped back quickly and to the right. The wrench sliced across his shoulder, and the two men in overalls leaped forward to grab the inspector’s arms. Sasha moved quickly forward toward Ilya and felt Marina’s push. He felt himself tumbling over a blanket-covered engine. His back struck something hard and jagged, and he rolled over, trying to grab something, to help the inspector and himself. Panting, he looked up as Ilya stepped forward toward Rostnikov, whose arms were held by the two men, and made it quite clear that he planned to aim his large wrench more carefully.