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Werner had recently tipped him off about Markus, a diplomat at the German embassy in Moscow who was secretly a Communist. Volodya had sought Markus out and recruited him as a spy. For some months now Markus had been supplying a stream of reports that Volodya translated into Russian and passed to his boss. The latest was a fascinating account of how pro-Nazi American business leaders were supplying the right-wing Spanish rebels with trucks, tires, and oil. Texaco's chairman, the Hitler-admiring Torkild Rieber, was using the company's tankers to smuggle oil to the rebels in defiance of a specific request from President Roosevelt.

Volodya was on his way to meet Markus now.

He walked along Kutuzovsky Prospekt and turned toward the Kiev Station. Their rendezvous today was a workingmen's bar near the station. They never used the same place twice, but finished each meeting by arranging the next one: Volodya was meticulous about tradecraft. They always used cheap bars or cafes where Markus's diplomatic colleagues would never dream of going. If somehow Markus were to fall under suspicion and be followed by a German counterespionage agent, Volodya would know, for such a man would stand out from the other customers.

This place was called the Ukraine Bar. Like most buildings in Moscow, it was a timber structure. The windows were steamed up, so at least it would be warm inside. But Volodya did not go in immediately. There were further precautions to be taken. He crossed the street and ducked into the entrance of an apartment house. He stood in the cold hallway, looking out through a small window, watching the bar.

He wondered if Markus would show up. He always had, in the past, but Volodya could not feel sure. If he did show up, what information would he bring? Spain was the hot issue in international politics, but Red Army Intelligence was also passionately interested in German armaments. How many tanks were they producing per month? How many Mauser M34 machine guns per day? How good was the new Heinkel He 111 bomber? Volodya longed for such information to pass to his boss, Major Lemitov.

Half an hour went by, and Markus did not come.

Volodya began to worry. Had Markus been found out? He worked as assistant to the ambassador, and therefore saw everything that crossed the ambassador's desk, but Volodya had been urging him to seek access to other documents, especially the correspondence of military attaches. Had that been a mistake? Had someone noticed Markus sneaking a peek at cables that were none of his business?

Then Markus came along the street, a professorial figure in spectacles and an Austrian-style loden coat, white snowflakes spotting the green felt cloth. He turned into the Ukraine Bar. Volodya waited, watching. Another man followed Markus in, and Volodya frowned anxiously, but the second man was obviously a Russian worker, not a German counterespionage agent. He was a small, rat-faced man in a threadbare coat, his boots wrapped in rags, and he wiped the wet end of his pointed nose with his sleeve.

Volodya crossed the street and went into the bar.

It was a smoky place, none too clean, and it smelled of men who did not often bathe. On the walls were fading watercolors of Ukrainian scenery in cheap frames. It was midafternoon, and there were not many customers. The only woman in the place looked like an aging prostitute recovering from a hangover.

Markus was at the back of the room, hunched over an untasted glass of beer. He was in his thirties but looked older, with a neat fair beard and mustache. He had thrown open his coat, revealing a fur lining. The rat-faced Russian sat two tables away, rolling a cigarette.

As Volodya approached, Markus stood up and punched him in the mouth.

"You cowfucker!" he screamed in German. "You pig's cunt!"

Volodya was so shocked that for a moment he did nothing. His lips hurt and he tasted blood. Reflexively, he raised his arm to hit back. But he restrained himself.

Markus swung at him again, but this time Volodya was ready, and he easily dodged the wild blow.

"Why did you do it?" Markus yelled. "Why?"

Then, just as suddenly, he crumpled, falling back into his chair, burying his face in his hands, and beginning to sob.

Volodya spoke through bleeding lips. "Shut up, you fool," he said. He turned around and spoke to the other customers, who were all staring. "It's nothing, he's upset."

They all looked away, and one man left. Muscovites never voluntarily got involved in trouble. It was dangerous even to separate two scrapping dr

unks, in case one of them was powerful in the party. And they knew that Volodya was such a man: they could tell by his good coat.

Volodya turned back to Markus. In a lowered voice he said angrily: "What the hell was that for?" He spoke German; Markus's Russian was poor.

"You arrested Irina," the man replied, weeping. "You fucking bastard, you burned her nipples with a cigarette."

Volodya winced. Irina was Markus's Russian girlfriend. Volodya began to see what this might be about and he had a bad feeling. He sat down opposite Markus. "I didn't arrest Irina," he said. "And I'm sorry if she's been hurt. Just tell me what happened."

"They came for her in the middle of the night. Her mother told me. They wouldn't say who they were, but they weren't regular police detectives--they had better clothes. She doesn't know where they took her. They questioned her about me and accused her of being a spy. They tortured her and raped her, then they threw her out."

"Fuck," said Volodya. "I'm really sorry."

"You're sorry? It must have been you that did it--who else?"

"This is nothing to do with Army Intelligence, I swear."

"Makes no difference," Markus said. "I'm finished with you, and I'm finished with Communism."

"There are sometimes casualties in the war against capitalism." It sounded glib even to Volodya as he said it.

"You young fool," Markus said savagely. "Don't you understand that socialism means freedom from this kind of shit?"

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