Konstantin looked from face to face, waiting for someone to explain.
It was Maximov who went to him. He put his arm around the boy, speaking in a voice too low for anyone else to hear.
Konstantin’s face turned pale. He seemed to be staring at something no one else could see, as if the ghost of his father were standing right in front of him.
Pekkala watched this, feeling a weight settle in his heart, like a man whose blood had turned to sand.
WHILE MAXIMOV DROVE MRS. NAGORSKI TO THE FACILITY, PEKKALA sat with her son at the dining table in the dacha.
The walls were covered with dozens of blueprints. Some were exploded engine diagrams. Others showed the inner workings of guns or traced the crooked path of exhaust systems. On shelves around the room lay pieces of metal, twisted fan blades, a slab of wood into which different-sized screws had been drilled. A single link of tank track lay upon the stone mantelpiece. The room did not smell like a home—of fires and cooking and soap. Instead, it reeked of machine oil and the sharply pungent ink used to make the blueprints.
The furniture was of the highest quality—walnut cabinets with diamond-paned glass fronts, leather chairs with brass nails running like machine gun belts along the seams. The table at which they sat was far too big for the cramped space of the dacha.
Pekkala knew that the Nagorski family had probably belonged to the old aristocracy. Most of these families had either fled the country during the Revolution or been swallowed up in labor camps. Only a few remained, and fewer still had held on to the relics of their former status in society. Only those who had proved themselves valuable to the government were permitted such luxuries.
Nagorski may have earned that right, but Pekkala wondered what would become of the rest of his family, now that he was gone.
Pekkala knew that there was nothing he could say. Sometimes, the best that could be done was just to keep a person company.
Konstantin stared fiercely out the window as the last purpling twilight bled into the solid black of night.
Seeing the young man so locked away inside his head, Pekkala remembered the last time he had seen his own father, that freezing January morning when he left home to enlist in the Tsar’s Finnish Regiment.
He was leaning out the window of a train as it pulled out of the station. On the platform stood his father, in a long black coat and wide-brimmed hat set squarely on his head. His mother had been too upset to accompany them to the station. His father held up one hand in a gesture of farewell. Above him, bent back like the teeth of eels, icicles hung from the station house roof.
Two years later, left to run the funeral parlor alone, the old man suffered a heart attack while dragging a body on a sled to the crematorium that he maintained some distance into the woods behind their house. The horse that usually hauled the sled had slipped on the ice that winter and was lame, so Pekkala’s father had tried to do the work himself.
The old man was found on his knees in front of the sled, hands gripping his thighs, chin sunk onto his chest. Slung across his shoulders were the leather traces normally worn by the horse for inching the sled along the narrow forest path. The way he knelt gave the impression that his father had just stopped for a moment to rest and would, at any moment, rise to his feet and go back to hauling his burden.
Although it had been his father’s wish that Pekkala enlist in the Regiment, rather than remain at home to help with the family business, Pekkala had never forgiven himself for not having been there to pick the old man up when he stumbled and fell.
Pekkala saw that same emotion on the face of this young man.
Suddenly Konstantin spoke. “Are you going to find who murdered my father?”
“I am not certain he was murdered, but if he was, I will track down whoever is responsible.”
“Find them,” said Konstantin. “Find them and put them to death.”
At that moment, headlights swept through the room as Maximov’s car pulled up beside the house. A moment later the front door opened. “Why is it so dark in here?” Mrs. Nagorski asked, as she hurried to light a kerosene lamp.
Konstantin rose sharply to his feet. “Did you see him? Is it true? Is he really dead?”
“Yes,” she replied, tears coming at last to her eyes. “It is true.”
Pekkala left them alone to grieve. He stood on the porch with Maximov, who was smoking a cigarette.
“Today is his birthday,” said Maximov. “That boy deserves a better life than this.”
Pekkala did not reply.
The smell of burning tobacco lingered in the wet night air.
PEKKALA RETURNED TO THE ASSEMBLY BUILDING, THE FLAT-ROOFED brick structure which Ushinsky had christened the Iron House. Engines hung in wooden cradles against one wall. Against the other wall, the bare metal shells of tanks balanced on iron rails, rust already forming on the welding joints, as if the steel had been sprinkled with cinnamon powder. Elsewhere, like islands in this vast warehouse, machine guns had been laid out in a row. Arching high above the work floor, metal girders held the ceiling in place. To Pekkala, an air of lifelessness hung about this place. It was as if these tanks were not pieces of the future but fragments from the distant past, like the bones of once-formidable dinosaurs waiting to be reassembled by archaeologists.
A table had been cleared off. Engine parts were strewn across the floor where NKVD men had set them hurriedly aside. On the table lay the remains of Colonel Nagorski. The bled-out tissue seemed to glow under the ruthless work lights. Lysenkova was spreading an army rain cape over Nagorski’s head, having just examined the body.
Beside her stood Kirov, the muscles drawn tight in his face. He had seen bodies before, but nothing like this, Pekkala knew.
Even Lysenkova looked upset, although she was trying hard to conceal it. “It’s impossible to say for sure,” the commissar told Pekkala, “but everything points towards an engine malfunction. Nagorski was out testing the machine on his own. He put the engine in neutral, got out to check something, and the tank must have popped into gear. He lost his footing and the tank ran over him before the engine stalled. It was an accident. That much is obvious.”
Kirov, standing behind her, slowly shook his head.
“Have you spoken to the staff here at the facility?” Pekkala asked Lysenkova.
“Yes,” she replied. “All of them are accounted for and none of them were with Nagorski at the time of his death.”
“What about the man we chased through the woods?”
“Well, whoever he is, he doesn’t work here at the facility. Given the fact that Nagorski’s death is an accident, the man you chased was likely just some hunter who made his way onto the grounds.”
“Then why did he run when he was ordered to stop?”
“If men with guns were chasing you, Inspector Pekkala, wouldn’t you run away, too?”
Pekkala ignored her question. “Would you mind if I examine the body?”
“Fine,” she said irritably. “But be quick. I am heading back to Moscow to file my report. Nagorski’s body will remain here for now. Guards will be arriving soon to make sure the corpse is not disturbed. I expect you to be gone when they arrive.”
The two men waited until Major Lysenkova had left the building.
“What did you find out?” Pekkala asked Kirov.
“What she said about the scientists is correct. They have all been accounted for by the guards at the time Nagorski died. During work hours, guards are stationed inside each of the facility buildings, which means that the scientists were also able to account for the whereabouts of the security personnel. Samarin was on his usual rounds this morning. He was seen by all of the staff at one time or another.”