Read No Time for Heroes Online
Authors: Brian Freemantle
âWe needed luck,' said the Russian quietly, as disbelieving as the American. âWe've got it!'
âIt
has
to be about the conversation he had with you,' said Cowley, beginning their analysis. Mentally continuing it, he thought,
No problem with the other one ⦠and he knows
. Soon, Cowley supposed: very soon. It was like slowly bleeding to death.
âIt'll be proved definitely, if he makes another approach.'
âFor an assurance,' reminded Cowley. Rhetorically he said: âWhat does Gusovsky want an assurance about?'
âThat we're no further forward,' said Danilov, answering it anyway. âWhich until five minutes ago we weren't.'
âBut now we are,' said Cowley. âHere's how I read it. The Chechen are sending two men, Zimin and Zavorin, to Sicily: all arranged, Gusovsky said. But they're not going until he's sure.'
Danilov nodded, agreeing with the assessment. âWe can manipulate it, if Kosov comes to me again!'
â
When
he comes to you again,' said Cowley, without any doubt.
More subdued, Danilov took the analysis on. âA Russian Mafia group is linking with the established Mafia, in Sicily â¦' Repeating the phrase the American had already echoed, Danilov added: âMaybe it already has:
all arranged
, like Gusovsky said. So what the hell
has
been arranged? It's as frightening as you thought it could be.'
âWorse,' warned Cowley. âWe know the Italian and American Mafia are partners: always have been. Now we've got the global connection: Worldwide Mafia Incorporated. You any idea what that means?'
âNo,' replied Danilov honestly. âAt the moment I don't think I have.'
âWe can do a lot of damage,' insisted Cowley, a promise as much to himself as a suggestion to the Russian. âWe
can
manipulate it, if we're reading it correctly. If we can catch these two guys in Sicily we can not only sweat them about the murders: we can bust their deal. Maybe break a Sicilian ring, too.'
Danilov felt a sharp and surprising inadequacy, at the enormity of what they were discussing. âI can't get to Sicily without authority ⦠which means admitting the listening devices â¦'
For several moments they sat unspeaking, each trying to assess the loss. The car bug â and Kosov â was their
only
lead, Cowley acknowledged. There was no way to prevent his destruction. So why didn't he take all the responsibility?
Cowley said: âThe eavesdropping equipment is American: nobody here knows anything about it. And they can't ever. I've travelled in Kosov's car. I could have planted it. Be working independently of you, after all the fuck-ups.'
Danilov iooked back at the American, head curiously to one side. âSo I don't know you're doing it â¦?' he groped.
âAll you know is what you're told,
by
an American. Which could have come
from
America.'
âAnd the bugs stay in the car!' acknowledged Danilov.
âUnbeknown to anyone except those who need to know,' said Cowley. âHow's that sound?'
âJust fine,' accepted the Russian.
The call came from Kosov two days later, to Petrovka, not to the apartment; an invitation for lunch the following day â âjust the two of us, like old times.' Danilov couldn't remember any such old times, but said he'd look forward to it. He fixed an appointment with Smolin afterwards: Cowley spent most of that afternoon sending messages to Washington and replying to the flurry of questions they prompted from the FBI Director.
Kosov was already seated when Danilov arrived at the
Dom na Tverskoi
, and for once did not attempt the arm-waving flamboyance of champagne and permanently attentive waiters: he actually shook his head against the interruption of one man who began to approach, pouring the red wine himself. They touched glasses and toasted each other's health, and Kosov said at once: âSo it's getting nowhere?'
âWe've had to release Antipov,' disclosed Danilov, alert to the reaction.
Kosov nodded. âI know,' he boasted. âWhat now?'
The knowledge could still have been either Mafia or government, decided Danilov. âBill's under a lot of pressure from Washington. They're talking of withdrawing him. After all the problems they think he's wasting his time. He seems to think so, too.'
âWhich would leave it to you?'
âI suppose so.'
âAnd there's no way forward?'
âNot that I can see. Maybe I'll get lucky.'
Kosov added to their glasses. âYou thought any more of what else we spoke about?'
âLike what?' Danilov was glad he was not in the car, where he would have known everything was being overheard: self-consciousness might have been obvious.
âLike missing the old days.'
âI don't think I said I missed them.'
âJust some of the benefits.'
âOlga certainly misses them.' He didn't like bringing Olga into the conversation, but it fitted.
âWomen like nice things. Larissa wouldn't know how to live any other way.'
For a few brief seconds Danilov wondered if there were some hidden meaning in the remark, before deciding there couldn't be. Larissa was going to have to learn. âIt's too late for me now.'
âIt doesn't have to be.'
âI've lost contact.'
âYou introduced me, once. I could re-introduce you.'
âPeople will have changed, surely?'
âI've made other friends: important friends. It's much better than it was in your day: better organised.'
âThe work I do now is a lot different from a uniformed division. It wouldn't be as easy to co-operate, like it was before.'
âThings can always be worked out. Don't forget I want a transfer. I could be there, ensuring things run smoothly.'
One team replaced by another, recognised Danilov. A lot of careful thought had gone into this approach. âI need to think about it.'
âYou
do
need to think about it. I'm your friend, so I think I can talk honestly: you've been stupid, for far too long.'
Not as stupid as you're going to be proven to be, thought Danilov. âPerhaps you're right.'
âYou
know
I'm right! I can introduce you to the proper people,' persisted Kosov. âFix everything.'
Danilov nodded, wondering how far he might be able to utilise that boast. âLet's keep in touch.'
â
Close
touch,' insisted Kosov. âFriends should help friends.'
âYou're right,' said Danilov. âThey should.' He still had time to meet Larissa, before the Federal Prosecutor. He didn't feelat all hypocritical.
The Tatarovo apartment had two full-sized bedrooms, as well as a separate living room with a dining annexe, and kitchen fittings better even than Larissa's existing flat. It was on the eighth floor, and from the balcony there was a view of the river.
âIt's fabulous!' declared Larissa. âI want it!'
âHow much is it?' asked Danilov.
âFour hundred and fifty roubles a month if you're paying in Russian; three hundred if you give the concierge twenty dollars a week for himself. And the bribe to jump the list is two hundred and fifty dollars.'
âI don't have two hundred and fifty dollars.'
Larissa looked at him uncertainly. âWe need it, to get the flat,' she said simply.
Larissa wouldn't know how to live any other way
, he remembered. âI'll have to try to get it.'
âYes darling, you will,' Larissa agreed. âWhy don't you ask Bill?'
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
Danilov went to Pushkinskaya unsure if it would be as easy to convince a trained lawyer as it had been to deceive Kosov. He still believed he was correctly pursuing the investigation by holding things back from Nikolai Smolin, so strongly did he believe the man would make any ultimate decision about the case thinking of government sensitivity first and the law second. But until now it had been nothing more than delaying the information, until he was sure. What he was attempting that afternoon was going further: it
was
deception, even if the eventual outcome might be justified. And if it didn't turn out to be justified, he'd be open to the sort of tribunal that had condemned Anatoli Metkin.
âWhat's the development?' prompted Smolin. He had a notepad open, ready, in front of him.
âNot here,' warned Danilov, edging out on to creaking ice. âThe Americans have decided it's sufficiently sound for Cowley to examine. I think we should consider my going, too.'
âGoing where?'
âSicily,' announced Danilov. âThe information came from America: specifically Brighton Beach,' he elaborated. âThe rumour, confirmed from several different sources, was of a forthcoming meeting between Russian and Italian Mafia. The American authorities are already liaising with the Italians.'
âWhat has it got to do with the investigation here?'
âThe people named in the Serov documents are thought to be involved,' said Danilov, lying openly.
âIt's vague,' complained the Federal Prosecutor.
âI can only pass on what I have been told.' It
wasn't
as easy confronting a legal mind.
âWhy didn't Cowley come with you this afternoon?' frowned Smolin.
A mistake: it would have been more convincing for an American to have talked about a development supposed to have come from America. âHe's been ordered to leave, as soon as he gets the final go-ahead from Washington,' improvised Danilov. The earlier rehearsal with Cowley provided the escape. âAnd there are implications about it I felt best only discussed between the two of us.'
âWhat implications?'
âI suspect the Americans have had this information for several days,' said Danilov. âIf the decision had not been made to involve Cowley, I don't think we would have been told at all. The Americans and Italians could have handled it quite independently.'
âMeaning?'
âThey don't trust us.' Danilov paused, wanting to get the argument absolutely right, although Smolin had earlier not rejected the sort of thing he was going to say. âThey've got every reason not to. If whatever might happen in Sicily
is
linked with our enquiry, and it becomes generally known in advance at Petrovka and in the ministries most closely involved, it will almost inevitably leak.'
âOr
be
leaked?' The Federal Prosecutor was subdued, but showed no surprise at the suggestion.
âIt's a danger we've got to accept,' insisted Danilov. Too soon to judge how it was going, but he was encouraged.
âYou got names of people you don't trust, at Petrovka or the ministries?'
âIf I had I would have given them to you officially,' said Danilov. And still would, if he ever understood the significance of Ilya Nishin and Ivan Churmak and Gennardi Fedorov. What, he wondered, would officially happen after he did?
âNot even an indication of rank?'
âI would have considered that sufficient for an official report, as well.'
Smolin nodded, slowly. âI suppose the American attitude
is
unavoidable.'
It was moving in the right direction. Danilov said: âBut they
have
told us.'
Smolin took the point. âSo if nothing happens in Sicily â if it
is
a rumour, without foundation â we're damned, suspected of leaking it from here without any chance of defending ourselves?'
âUnless we absolutely restrict the number of people to be told. At the moment there are only four, here in Moscow: Cowley, myself, Major Pavin and yourself. There is nothing in any of the case files at Petrovka.'
âAre you suggesting we do
not
tell Vorobie or Oskin?'
âI think they should have it made clear to them what I believe the American attitude to be, and ensure nothing about Sicily is passed to
anyone
in their departments.'
âThat still wouldn't cover us if it
is
an unsubstantiated rumour.'
âThe Americans don't believe it is.' Could he escape censure, if it went wrong or nothing
did
happen? Hardly.
âYou should go, of course,' decided Smolin.
There was relief but little satisfaction. âAnd by a very special route.'
Smolin had given his agreement distantly, as if he was preoccupied with something else. Now he came fully back to the investigator, frowning. âWhat special route?'
âWe won't be able to avoid people at Petrovka knowing I am away. We need a deception.' It was the moment he and Cowley had accepted to be the most difficult to steer past the other man. It was essential, further to convince Kosov of the collapsing murder case, but it was flawed if examined too closely. Determinedly Danilov pressed on. âA way has already been suggested: it might, too, reassure the Americans of our genuine co-operation.'
âHow?'
âThere has still been no public announcement about our having to release Antipov,' reminded Danilov. âIf the announcement about the release
was
made, it would be entirely understandable for me to return to America to review the progress of the case of far, wouldn't it?'
âReview
the failure
of the case so far,' qualified Smolin. âThat's how it would be interpreted.'
âThat's how I want it to be interpreted,' seized Danilov. âIt
has
failed:
is
failing. I very much want the people we're trying to find to believe that.'
âBy publicly humiliating ourselves!'
âThere's no choice about that: it's got to happen, sooner or later. And there wouldn't be any humiliation in the end, if we made it clear we allowed the impression, to create a trap.'
Smolin's head moved, in further acceptance. âVorobie and Oskin will have to know the truth, if there is going to be a public declaration.'