since his informal demotion.
Zelach stood and followed. He had no curiosity and thus asked no questions as he followed Rostnikov down the aisle of desks past men at their solitary task of filling out reports. None of the actual interrogation was done out there. Interrogation, which could take hours or days if necessary, was normally carried on in small rooms down another corridor. The rooms could be made extremely warm or extremely cold, depending on the investigating officerâs assessment of the suspect or the witness.
Rostnikov did not try to divert his eyes from the third desk, the desk of Emil Karpo, who had nearly died a month earlier in an explosion in Red Square. Since his return to duty, his right arm lying limp in a black sling, Karpo had been even less communicative than before. Karpo, he thought, had a look of death in his eyes. It was, Rostnikov knew, an old manâs thought, the thought that things were better in the past and would only get worse in the future.
âWhat?â said Zelach, now at his side as he passed the desk.
âI said nothing,â said Rostnikov, though he was not at all sure that he had said nothing.
In front of Petrovka they hurried to the metro. Zelach had not, in the past month, appeared to notice that Rostnikov no longer had access to a car and driver or that the cases he was assigned were far below the level of social and political import of those in the past. In some ways, Rostnikov envied his lumbering assistant. If you do not let the world in, if it seems unchanged, it can cause you no pain. Nichevo, he thought, nothing. Never let anything bother or surprise you. Be resolved to accept anything and nothing.
As he dropped his five kopeks into the metroâs turnstile slot, Rostnikov turned to Zelach. âWhat would you say if I were to tell you that you have been deemed a political liability and that I would have to shoot you in the next ten seconds?â
Zelach, instead of looking puzzled at the question, let a frightened-looking man in a workmanâs cap squeeze by them and then answered, âGood-bye, Comrade Rostnikov.â
âAs I thought,â said Rostnikov, hearing a train rumble below them and rise to a roar that ended conversation.
On the escalator ride down, Rostnikov reflected for the thousandth time that he had been the victim of terrible timing and overconfidence.
The plan had been dangerous but simple, but chance, which should always be reckoned with, had laughed at him. Chance and accident had always played a part in the life of Steve Carella and the 87th Precinct, the American novels purchased on the black market that Rostnikov loved and kept hidden in his apartment behind the Russian classics and the collected speeches of Lenin.
Chance had failed to crown Rostnikovâs plan. He had set up an elaborate blackmailing of a KGB senior officer named Drozhkin that involved Rostnikovâs silence concerning the cover-up and the KGB assassination of a well-known dissident and Rostnikovâs assurance that the official reports, which were with a friend in West Germany, would not be released if exit visas for Rostnikov and his wife were issued. It was to have been processed as a routine exit visa for a dissident Jew and her husband with special permission for a police officer to depart based on his years of loyal service in both the military and the government.
However, Brezhnev had died, and Andropov had taken over. Andropov had been a friend and admirer of Drozhkinâs and when Andropov took over, Drozhkin had been promoted, which meant he spent more quiet days on his dacha in Lobnya. And then Andropov had died, followed quickly by Chernenkoâs death, which confused the situation even further. It had all gone wrong. Drozhkin had simply refused to deal with him. Rostnikov could have committed suicide by having the papers released in Germany to the Western press. As it was, there was still the threat of release, and at some