Read In for a Ruble Online

Authors: David Duffy

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Thrillers, #Private Investigators

In for a Ruble (3 page)

BOOK: In for a Ruble
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“You do anything recently to piss anyone off?” I asked.

“Like make them take their money back? No.” He laughed.

“Tell me about the TV bid.”

His face darkened. “What do you mean?”

“Why you’re in it. This is hardly a bet—sorry, trade—based on market inefficiencies.”

The darkness lifted, replaced by inquisitiveness. “Don’t take this the wrong way, but how much do you know about capital markets?”

“Marx identified three essential elements of capitalism—capital, labor, and markets. I’ve studied their interrelationships, albeit perhaps from a different perspective than yours.”

He chuckled. “Fair enough. But Marx left one element out—cash.”

“I appreciate cash. It’s why I don’t keep much money in the markets.”

He laughed again. “Good for you. Then you’ll understand where I’m coming from. A different perspective, as you say. Everyone focuses on TV networks as businesses in long-term decline. Competition from cable channels, the Internet, video games, not to mention good old evolving demographics. No question about it, long-term outlook sucks. That’s a technical term. Not a business most companies, especially growth-oriented public companies, want to be in anymore.”

“So?”

“Cash. It’s still a cash-rich business. You have any idea how much cash one network throws off in a year? Billions. Now think about two. Then think about two, merged, redundancies and overlaps removed, market share enhanced, if only because there are now three where there were four. In cash flow terms, one plus one equals three, maybe three and a half. You got cash like that, you got options, in a capitalist way of thinking, of course.”

“In any way of thinking. I’m still keeping most of my money in the mattress. How come nobody else figured this out?”

“I’m sure they have, especially now that I’ve shown a spotlight on it. That’s why I expect competition. Cash flow is a commodity, like any other. The difference between success and failure in this deal is price, how much you pay to acquire that cash flow. I think my analysis is better, more productive, than anyone else’s is likely to be. If you were getting into the game, it would be helpful to know what the other guy’s planning to do, wouldn’t it?”

“So you think that’s what’s going on?”

“Timing suggests it is. So does the amount of money involved. It’s enough to attract someone with the kind of resources this guy seems to have.”

“And you want me to find this guy?”

“That would be ideal, of course, but I’m not naïve. I’m more concerned about security. Foos says we’re secure, and I believe him. He also says, no panaceas, as you just heard. I want you to put yourself in this guy’s shoes and see if you can find a way in.”

 

CHAPTER
3

I still didn’t want the job. Foos was staring straight at me, all but imploring—take it, you need something to do. He was trying to kill two birds with one stone—help Leitz and give me something to occupy a troubled mind. Well-meaning friends can be a real pain in the ass.

Nowhere near the pain I’d been in since Moscow, though. I’d gone in December hoping it would change my mood. Not much traction before the family roof caved in once again.

I got reacquainted—more accurately, acquainted—with my son, Aleksei, as we started to fill in the thirty years since the time I’d left him and my ex-wife. “Abandoned” is his word, “thrown out” is mine, but we’ve agreed to disagree. That we found each other was fate at work, especially since Polina and I didn’t talk after the split, and I’d moved to New York back in 1992. There was a price to be paid, of course—if you’re Russian there’s always a price—in this case, the death of his mother. I didn’t feel guilt or sadness. She was a tortured soul, and she’d done more than her share of harm—mostly to me. I didn’t see why he should either, since she truly had abandoned him, but try telling that to a son about his mother.

This was all maybe manageable, although Aleksei wasn’t making it easy. My attempts to find some kind of roadmap to rapport were running into a major roadblock—the Cheka, known today as the FSB, known to most as the KGB (its longest running incarnation), known previously by multiple names and acronyms, but all anyone needs to know is that they all stand for state security. The specific problem was my connection to the Cheka, my employer for twenty years, which my son presumed was as strong as ever, despite ample evidence to the contrary. That made the kick in the gut Sasha delivered, the one I was still trying to work through, all the more devastating.

I’ve been doing long-distance research for years into an unknown past—wondering if it was truly unknowable. The Gulag, where I’d grown up, did a few things well. One was eviscerate its victims’ lives. Another was keep records. The records still exist, in the archives of the Cheka. I’ve been working, in secret, with an archivist I know only as Sasha, who’s helped many people uncover their pasts. My mother’s history was relatively easy to reconstruct, from what I’d been told as a child and from Gulag documents. There was a brief period in the chaos of the early 1990s when things opened up, even at Lubyanka, and Sasha was able to unearth a little information about my presumed father, then the Cheka flexed its still considerable muscle, and the doors to the archives slammed shut. Numerous questions about my parentage remained unanswered. Sasha had managed a breakthrough last summer, but he and the new information ran afoul of Lachko Barsukov. Before I figured out that Lachko wasn’t my only Barsukov nemesis, Sasha had to go underground. When he surfaced and felt safe, I booked a flight to Moscow. I had a bad feeling about what awaited me there, and I wasn’t wrong, but I wanted out of New York, away from Victoria’s memory. For some reason, I keep thinking distance can dull the pain of the past.

Sasha met me for dinner a few days after I arrived.

“I never should be telling you this,” he said. “You’re not ready, nobody could be. There’s a chance I’m not right, but I can’t follow up. It’s a new world at Lubyanka since I got back. Everything’s locked up tighter than ever. You need special clearance. Orders from the Kremlin. Some say from the man himself.”

The man would be Comrade Putin, whose positions in the New Russia have included president and prime minister, but whose power is more akin to that of general secretary of the Communist Party in the old days. Even after he entered politics, Putin remained first and foremost a Chekist.

Sasha slid a piece of paper across the table and stared into his glass. “It looks like we were wrong, and this is your father, your real father.” He didn’t want to say it. I can’t blame him.

I unfolded the paper.

Two initials and a name.

L. P. Beria.

*   *   *

I spent Christmas back in New York, researching what I could about Lavrenty Pavlovich Beria, thinking about Aleksei and trying not to think about Victoria. Not necessarily in that order. It’s funny—growing up in the Gulag, there weren’t any holidays to celebrate. When I was an adult in the Soviet Union, Christmas wasn’t observed. When I moved to New York, I lived alone, and I didn’t pay much attention. But this year, for the first time, as I walked the streets amid the holiday decorations and preparations, I felt lonely. I wasn’t sure what to make of that. For all I knew, Victoria didn’t even like Christmas. She’d lived alone much of her life too. All I wanted was to be able to ask her.

Progress with Aleksei might have cut the blues, but he’d walked out on our second dinner together when he found out how deeply the Cheka runs in his lineage and declined to meet again. I couldn’t fault him. The Cheka was the one Soviet institution to make the transition to so-called Russian democracy with little loss of power. What was once known as the state within the state became in many ways the state itself once Putin took power, and it ruled with the same tools it had long used so successfully—fear, intimidation, violence, and making absolutely certain its own interests came first. As an officer with the Russian Criminal Prosecution Service, which wages a form of David-and-Goliath institutional warfare against its much more powerful rival, Aleksei viewed all Chekists as enemies for life. Like many, he also blamed the Cheka for the problems with the New Russia, and he wasn’t entirely wrong. Or even mostly. I kept trying to demonstrate that my departure from the organization was complete and total and twenty years earlier, but he inherited my stubborn streak, at least on that subject.

All of which meant it was going to take time for him to figure out what he really thought of me—I understood that—but I wasn’t prepared to wait another couple of decades for the result. I understood equally well that to push it would shove him in the wrong direction. One more situation whose outcome I couldn’t do a damned thing about, which just added to the general depression.

Then there was Beria—the Soviet Union’s most brutal butcher, head of the Cheka from 1938 to 1953, serial rapist, Stalin’s favorite executioner—and the idea that he could be my father. He doesn’t look like a bad man—ski-jump nose, receding hair line, cleft chin, and rimless spectacles. Looks can be deceiving. But did
I
look like
him
?

Since Sasha’s revelation, Lavrenty Pavlovich has taken to putting in periodic appearances in my consciousness, showing up unannounced, often in uniform, usually wearing a mocking grin. I’m not that familiar with apparitions, although lots of my fellow
zeks
saw them all the time in the camps. Murdered sons, daughters, or parents. Loved ones left behind. Relatives who’d vanished, just as they themselves had done. Sometimes the visions were causes of comfort, other times, fear. Beria didn’t comfort, he didn’t scare either. There was a time when the mere mention of his name could cause unchecked terror, but he’d been dead for sixty years. Old ghosts aren’t that scary. Mostly he mocked—with well-chosen words and that grin. The first few times, I was mildly concerned with my state of mind, but I put the visions down to too much vodka and the head injury I’d given myself last summer when, a day after being beaten senseless, I’d cracked my skull on a glass coffee table. After the first few appearances, Lavrenty Pavlovich and I reached our own détente—he showed up when he chose, and he mostly left when I told him to.

Information on Beria the man was hard to come by, beyond the essential facts of his career. Head of the Georgian secret police, secretary of the Communist Party in Georgia, then for the Transcaucasian region, member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, deputy head of the People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD), member of the Politburo, commissar general of state security, overseer of purges, murders, and crimes too numerous to count. Stalin is supposed to have introduced him to Roosevelt at Yalta as “our Himmler.”

Beria hasn’t received the attention most mass murderers get, and what was out there wasn’t necessarily reliable. A couple of biographies (one overly florid, the other too dry), some academic papers, but not much that told me about the man. I could have gone back to Russia, but I’d find less information there. The current powers are schizophrenic in their treatment of history, particularly the Stalin era. On the one hand, they want it remembered as a great patriotic age—the time when the Soviet Union became a major twentieth-century power and, at enormous sacrifice, turned the tide of the Great Patriotic War. This is true, so far as it goes. But buying into Stalin as icon requires turning a blind eye to the greatest crimes against humanity this side of Nazi Germany, crimes that Russia as a nation—Russians as a people—have never come to terms with. So we try, with the active participation of our leaders, to sweep them under the rug, hoping in time, I suppose, that the world will forget. One reason there’s little information available about the perpetrators, including Comrade Beria, and much of what there is has been locked away.

I badgered Sasha periodically by phone and e-mail, but the answer was the same—no clearance, no access. I was stuck in genealogical limbo, hoping for the opposite of a smoking gun. No way to move things forward with Aleksei until I found it—or didn’t. Unable even to look, I got more and more gloomy.

Seeking diversion, I pestered Foos about the Basilisk and Victoria. He just shook his curly mane and ignored me. He’s good at that. But I got on his nerves and that’s one reason he took me to see Leitz.

*   *   *

“I’m not a computer expert,” I said to Leitz.

“I got that end covered,” Foos said.

“A bunch of firms do this kind of thing for a living,” I argued. “Network protection, cyber-security, hackers for hire. This is right up their line.”

“I don’t know them and I don’t trust them. There’s also the issue of publicity. I don’t want any. Foos says I can trust you.”

“‘Trust’ and ‘qualifications’ have different definitions in the dictionary.”

Leitz shook his head. “Foos knows everything anyone needs to know about computers. He tells me you’ve been in jail and you used to be a spy. You have a shot at knowing how someone like this thinks. That’s the most important qualification I can think of.”

I looked at Foos. “How much did you tell him?”

“The basics.”

Leitz said, “He told me you have what we call a checkered past—in and out of jail in the Soviet Union until you caught the attention of the KGB. You speak half a dozen languages, a valuable skill. You served twenty years in the most elite department of one of the world’s most successful espionage organizations, including several tours here in the States. He says you have an unconventional mind and you’re choosy about your clients. He hinted he might have some leverage in that regard.”

I was still looking at Foos. “That mean what I think it means?”

“Maybe.”

“When?”

“Soon.”

Leitz’s summary was accurate as far as it went. The jail he referred to was the Gulag, the network of prison, forced labor, and death camps established by the Bolsheviks, expanded beyond comprehension under Stalin and maintained by his successors up until the end. I was born in the Dalstroi camps, in Siberia, my mother having been sent away twice, the first time for doing nothing, the second time for being arrested the first time. I’d worked hard to overcome my past, including having the official record of my birth and subsequent arrest and imprisonment erased, but I still know I’m a
zek
—the most shameful thing a Russian can be. Unless he’s also the son of Lavrenty Beria.

BOOK: In for a Ruble
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