0 comments/ 6369 views/ 0 favorites The Man Who Remembered Ch. 01 By: NassauHall Lev Davidovich carefully dripped one spoonful of honey into his tea. On the checkerboard tablecloth, the glass sat like a bull’s-eye, the drops of honey hitting the exact center of the target. “Ah,” he thought, “I was a marksman at the academy, but I never got to shoot in the field. Just as well.” A CD player, a holiday gift from his son the fairly honest businessman in St. Petersburg, played music he bought the day before when his pension check arrive. “Papa, you like that old music, now you can listen to it as much as you like,” his son, Grigori, had said a few weeks earlier. “You’ve got a computer, it makes sense you have a CD player. I even got a collection of music for you, to get you started. Vinyl is so . . . Brezhnev.” With bemused enthusiasm, Lev had unfolded the wrapping off the box. Inside, he found a dozen sets of good Russian works, Mussogorsky, Prokofiev, Tchaikovsky, David Oistrakh on the violin, Shostakovich’s complete symphonies. “Shostakovich, now he had a difficult time of it,” Lev said to his son, tapping the CD. “He walked a tightrope over a shark tank. A wonder he survived.” “A wonder any of you survived,” said Grigori. “You, mother, Uncle Nahum. I don’t know how you did it.” “We did what we had to do. I did my job.” Lev smiled through his thick glasses at his son, seated on a worn couch in the apartment, below the ancient picture of Lev’s grandparents, a man with a grey beard and a woman in a head scarf, dead together for 60 years. “Just like you do your job.” As he sipped his tea in the porcelain cup with the flower design, Lev was grateful for the CD player. The radio played such junk these days. He preferred his own musical selections, conjuring beauty and order in a land bereft of both for as long as he could remember. And he remembered a great deal. Lev looked at his Poljot cosmonaut watch with the multiple dials, a bit of masculine decoration that felt heavy and solid on his wrist. He remembered his visitor would arrive in five minutes, at 1 pm. He assumed the visitor would be prompt. At exactly 1 pm, the buzzer rang. Lev stared at the button on the wall that opened the foyer door. He knew that, once he pushed the button and admitted a visitor from the Competent Organs, one synonym for the intelligence services that he especially liked, the door would not swing closed. In Russia, a visitor from the Competent Organs never truly left; he knew from experience. Lev suppressed a smile. “Tak,” he said. “So.” Lev pressed the button, then set out a mismatched teacup, this one with a country scene, part of a set Polina Abramovna bought during their tour of duty in England, early 1960s. While the elevator wheezed up the five flights, he surveyed the table, with teacups, tea bags, lumps of sugar, sliced pickles, neatly arrayed. Something, however, seemed missing. “Polina, tell me, please, you were good with the guests,” he thought. “What must be done?” He looked at their wedding picture on the wall, slight smiles on their lips, the radiant future in front of them, not behind. Lev closed his eyes and, sure enough, her voice drifted into his mind again. Just as Lev pulled two neatly creased napkins from the sideboard, a confident knocking at the door echoed through the apartment. “Odny minutuchku,” he called, carefully laying the napkins beside the teacups. “One moment.” He unsnapped the three locks, then shifted the iron bar that leaned against the door. It swung inward. Lev found himself facing a tall man, mid-40s, neat blond haircut, long camel-hair coat dusted with early-season snow. “Lev Davidovich, it is an honor to see you again,” said the man, extending his hand. Lev shook the hand, vigorously. He still had the unassuming strength that his children loved -- and his enemies overlooked, until he chose to apply it. “Oleg Sergeyevich, I am happy to welcome a colleague.” Oleg removed his coat and folded it neatly over the back of an old-fashioned chair. The two sat at the table outside the tiny kitchen, where only one person could squeeze in. Lev went to the kitchen and brought in the whistling tea kettle with hot water. Oleg, with practiced sincerity, looked somber. “Lev Davidovich, I give you my condolences on the passing of Polina Abramovna. I am sorry I was away at that time. Unavoidable business in Moldova, somewhat unpleasant but necessary. I trust you understand.” “Thank you, Oleg. We were together 45 years. She was a wonderful woman. But, her time came, and she is gone. My time has not yet come, so I remain here. For how long, I do not know.” Lev sipped his tea, tenderly holding in both hands the cup that Polina bought. “And yes, I understand about unpleasant business. I was in your line of work, too.” “She was an honest Soviet citizen,” nodded Oleg, falling back on a cobwebbed cliché from decades past. “At one time that meant something, an honest Soviet citizen,” said Lev. “Now, no Soviet, and not many honest citizens.” “She served the Motherland,” said Oleg. “She was the best instructor I had at the academy, incredible knowledge of research and record management. I would like to think she, and you, and I, served something larger than the Party. The Motherland. Like during the war. Our fathers and mothers fought for the Motherland, not for the Party or Stalin. The new generation scoffs at the concept, I know, but when we had to fight, we fought for something older than the Party and Stalin.” Oleg looked thoughtfully at the balding man with fleshy cheeks and a poker-still expression, between mournful and thoughtful. “If you wish. Of course, that anti-Party line would get you killed then. We kept our mouths shut and did what we were told to do.” Lev said. Even now, the habits of decades separated his mind from his mouth. He wanted to avoid a political discussion. Inwardly, he wondered at Oleg’s exuberant “we” and invocation of the Motherland. His tone rang falsely for a condolence call on a former comrade in the Competent Organs. Oleg was a Young Pioneer in knee pants when the tanks rolled into Prague, ’68. Lev was there. That shameful episode was service to the Motherland? What did Oleg truly know about fighting for the Motherland in Sevastopol, Stalingrad, Kursk, Berlin, or ten thousand other boneyards? Unpleasant business in Moldova, he says? Lev chuckled inwardly, imagining how the starry-eyed agents he recruited in New York would have responded: “He doesn’t know from unpleasant business!” “Oleg, I must say, I was intrigued when you called me. I have been out of the service for over a decade. My skills are duplicated many times over by younger men,” said Lev, shifting the conversation. “This visit involves more than condolences and an enquiry into my well-being.” Oleg smiled, with the slight, informed glance of a chess player gazing many moves ahead. “Your modesty about your abilities is misplaced. Yes, the service has younger men, raised in the new thinking. They are quite bright and aggressive and can perform well in our complex times. But they simply cannot match you in certain ways. Yes, Lev, I do have something to discuss with you.” “Whatever you need, why turn to an old man for it? I thank you for your praise. But the new generation uses computers and I am a man from the era when manual typewriters were considered dangerous. I did my service. Let others do theirs, for the Motherland or the dollars or for whatever motivates them. Let me rest.” Oleg sensed Lev’s heart was not behind his protests. Oleg let the old man talk so he could gauge the density of any obstacles. Lev was arguing for form, not for true objection. Three months earlier, with voluble, protective Polina Abramovna at the table, the discussion would have been short and curt and Oleg out the door in minutes. But Polina Abramovna no longer contributed to the discussion. Or, mused Oleg, she mattered in unspoken ways, hovering like a shadow just beyond the frame of a photograph. Oleg leaned forward, straining to connect with Lev across the gulf of years and experience. “What you say is true, about the younger generation. I would note, however, that you have a new computer on the desk behind me, the latest Dell. You obviously retain your interest in technology beyond typewriters." For the first time, Lev smiled broadly. "Touche. So, I like to keep up with the world. I am not going to wither away just yet." "A gift from your son Grigori, the computer entrepreneur?" "Yes. A good son." "So you are not so far behind the new generation, at least in attitude. And, you have something the new agents will not have for decades. Trust me, Lev, this is a truth.” “Oleg, you have set me up with a riddle so I must ask. What do I have that they will not have for decades, besides grey hair and a pension?” “Memory.” “Ah, a trait in short supply when I was a young operative.” “That is the tragedy of our country and our service. The men with memory were killed. Your generation had no, what is the word in English?” “Mentors.” “Yes. The men who would have been your mentors were slaughtered like sheep in ’37, ’38.” “They were killed because of their memory. Stalin wanted no memories except of himself, in his glory." Lev allowed himself a tight, ironic smile. "Smert Shpionam. Death to spies. Only Stalin killed OUR spies." “But you, Lev, survived, and you remember.” Oleg saw restless energy flicker in Lev’s eyes. He sensed a spark in the pensioner, adrift and alone in his apartment and his memories. “I remember more than I want. Please, come to the point of the visit,” said Lev, drumming his fingers on the desk. He wanted to stop the nervous action, but his operational patience was wearing thin. He had to know what Oleg wanted. “Very good, yes, we have reached the point,” said Oleg. He unsnapped the locks on his titanium briefcase, with a pistol-like snap that echoed in the apartment. The retort ricocheted off the tea cups, around the book shelves, circled the photos on the walls, mercilessly flashed through the bedroom until recently warmed by husband and wife, bounced off the screen of Lev’s Dell computer, and returned to oiled hinges of the silvery briefcase. Oleg pulled a six-inch stack of folders from the depths of the briefcase. A red string bound each tightly, so no paper could slip out. With the subtle flourish of a showman stoking an audience’s anticipation, he fanned the folder out on the table, like playing cards. Lev kept his eyes on Oleg, to avoid the appearance of unseemly curiosity. “Take a look, Lev. Do you recognize them? Don’t touch them, yet.” Lev gazed at the folders laced with string. The thick paper was faded and smelled musty, from too many decades in airless storage vaults under the Lubyanka or in a concrete directorate warehouse down an unmarked guarded road outside Moscow. Across the top of each was a label with project and agent codes, dates, and routing numbers. “I would say they are operational files, quite old, judging from their look. I could perhaps place them more accurately if I saw the labels. But I’m not authorized to look at them, correct?” “The younger agents could learn from your sense of propriety and compartmentalization, Lev,” sighed Oleg. “You look at what you’re supposed to look at.” “Unless I’m instructed to look at things I’m not supposed to look at,” corrected Lev. “Well, if anybody can look at these files, it’s you, Lev Davidovich.” “And why is that so, Oleg Sergeyevich?” asked Lev, sipping his tea. “Because these are your files. They concern the recruited agents you ran in New York.” “Indeed?” said Lev, trying to contain the excitement in his voice. “And the files have not yet been sold to Western scholars, to paw through? They must have little of interest in them.” Oleg made no move to open a file. They sat in the space between the men, like fish swollen with secrets. “That’s a matter for us to decide, not scholars or other meddlers. Of course I have looked through them.” “I would be disappointed if you were not throughly prepared for our little chat.” “You remember what Polina used to say to the new agents, in her class on research?” “Yes, quite clearly. ‘Old operational files are like wine in a cellar,’ she would tell them. ‘Some age poorly and become useless vinegar. But given time, others age well, and after enough time, are far more valuable than new files. You, as the swords and shields of the revolution, are tasked with uncorking the finest vintage.’ Or words to that effect.” “You quoted her perfectly. Her lectures on research strategies and record management were legendary. We loved Polina Abramovna, surely you know that? Not like you loved her, but as an honest model, a teacher.” Lev sat quietly, sensing the spirit of his Polina drift among the bundles bound with red thread. Oleg had been one of her favorite students, a ruthless learner who used the service as his escape from a dreary provincial factory job. Yes, the students loved her as a teacher, and Lev loved her in other ways. Now, they all loved Polina in unfading memory. Lev swallowed and blinked away the barest hint of tears. “Yes, files can mature like fine wine. So, Oleg Sergeyevich, you have come for a tasting with an old vintner?” “Precisely so.” The Man Who Remembered Ch. 02 [The story so far: Retired Soviet spy Lev Davidovich Bronshtein, his beloved wife Polina Abramovna recently died, agrees to meet an agent from his former employer at this apartment in Moscow. The former colleague, Oleg Sergeyevich Rykov, shows Lev files from the time when Lev was stationed in New York. Some historical and linguistic notes: Oleg refers to Russian premier Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin as "ours." This is because Putin formerly worked for the KGB, the Soviet spy agency. Oleg calls Lev a "true Chekist." Chekist refers to the very first Soviet spy agency, the Cheka, or VChK; All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counterrevolution and Sabotage, formed in 1917 and the reorganized into the GPU, OGPU, NKVD, MGB, KGB and post-Soviet FSB. The term Chekist remains in use. Lavrenti Pavlovich: Oleg refers to Lavrenti Pavlovich Beria, chief of the NKVD and successor agencies for Joseph Stalin between 1939 and 1953. He was a notorious abductor and rapist of young women. Beria was arrested and executed after Stalin's death in 1953.] Lev considered the files fanned out before him. His fingers stopped drumming on the table. Instead, his hand ached to untie the red thread binding a folder and leap backward through the decades. But he waited. He looked across the table at Oleg, so trim in his tailored German suit with the slim gold watch circling his wrist. Lev's glance took in the snug, smug, well-tended look that Oleg favored as soon as he could afford it. He was that rare provincial with an innate feel for urban elegance; not an arriviste at all. We were taught to fight the capitalists, Lev thought, and we became the capitalists. Is that what the Marxists meant by historical inevitability? Again, he thought, no political discussion. Stay on the operational level. He finally asked, "Give me the background, Oleg. Why now? Why me? Why these files? You have millions to choose from." "Very good, Lev. I will speak frankly to you," said Oleg evenly. He sipped his tea. He prefered something stronger, but he knew Lev and Polina never quite shared the Russian fondness for drink. "The change started at the top. Putin, you know, nasha," he said, using the Russian word that means "ours." "We've been told to inventory our assets and identify promising ones for follow-up. Good Lord, we're even putting bar codes on operational files." "Like they were bananas in a U.S. supermarket." "An excellent analogy. We can never match the Americans in spending, but we have our strengths. Our records are excellent and detailed. Some agents — and I'm thinking of men like you, Lev Davidovich — provided a great deal of insights into their recruits." He paused. Lev watched him with quiet intensity. Behind Lev's glasses, Oleg could sense the wheels spinning, gearteeth locking into place. "We took a matrix approach, starting with key locations and key agents. We overlaid our current understanding of the world, to eliminate places that were vital in the past but not so relevant now." "Vietnam, Nicaragua." "Yes. We will turn to them later. You never know where unusual grapes can be squeezed, but we had to establish some parameters. We started with what the Americans call 'the low hanging fruit.'" Lev stared uncomprehendingly at Oleg. He prided himself on staying current with American English and its endless flow of new phrases, but this phrase baffled him. "Excuse me, what do you mean, 'low hanging fruit'?" Oleg smiled indulgently. "Ah, please pardon me, it is a strange phrase, isn't it? It means, the cases where results are easiest to obtain.' I did not know the phrase until recently, when I attended that executive education program at Harvard Business School. It is something American businessmen like to say, usually when they have no idea of how to deal with a problem." "That was the program where our people attended classes with their people, CIA, FBI? Applying management theory to counter-terrorism programs?" "Yes. I quite enjoyed it. My CIA opposites and I engaged in some friendly ear-pulling. They tried to recruit me, I tried to recruit them. I spoke to some graduate students in technology, passed out business cards in case they wanted to contact me. You know how the game is played. You taught me how." "In my day, spies did not distribute business cards. I am afraid you are playing a different game by new rules." "Welcome to the NBA, my friend." The dribble of strange Americanisms made Lev's temples throb. He made a mental note to conduct an Internet search on American slang. "You are tiring me, Oleg. I'm curious, but I'm old." Oleg straightened in his chair and ran the back of his hand, lovingly, over the files, as if they were pictures of his children. "Quite so, Lev. You worked among students interested in technology in New York, early 1950s. Based on our analysis, that was a promising time for a file review." "I was just one of many." "I am having other conversations. Out of the case files, we chose 10 for further investigations. These are the 10. In each case, the subject showed potential in either his area of research or range of contacts in academia, along with political reliability. We did follow-up research in Moscow, then sent the files to the New York field office for additional digging, to see if anything of interest happened after you passed your cases to the next resident, before you moved to Australia." Now Oleg's hands were in motion, patting the folders, straightening and then fanning them out, running a finger under the red thread, still like a magician preparing to pull a rabbit from a hat. "Our people attached to the UN consulate did several weeks of investigation. Of the 10 files you helped develop, four of the people are dead, including one who committed suicide after being called to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1958." Lev had no expression, but his mind whirred back to the eager young people he dealt with so long ago. Now, one had been dead, for almost 45 years. "And who was that?" "The code name was FULCRUM." Lev remembered him, a tall young man from the Bronx, a City College engineer recruited after the Rosenberg executions in 1953. "Go on." "As I said, four are dead. Three went on to careers of no interest to us, one a plumber, another a school teacher, another delivering mail." "That's seven." "Two were women. One refused all contacts with the incoming resident after you left New York, married rather quickly, and devoted herself to her family after that with no political activity except service as a poll watcher in elections. She is now a widow and lives in a retirement center in Arizona. You knew her as BLACKSMITH." BLACKSMITH, that was a funny name for a woman with bright red hair and a blazing enthusiasm for Party work in very difficult times. Lev shifted in his chair, as the image of BLACKSMITH returned to him, her passionate efforts to seduce him even now making him uneasy. At the time he worried if she were in fact with the FBI, attempting to entrap him. "Eight." "The other woman became a writer, well known in her dreary sphere of polemics. Her politics never changed much, and her career choice made her useful for several years. She kept the resident informed of activities among certain liberal groups in New York. By 1960 she retired from her work with us." "That must have been CHICAGO." She was a slender woman with straight brown hair, interested in a career in medicine but then radicalized and turned to creative expression. "And today?" "She continues her work as a writer and critic on social issues. She remains friendly to socialism." "Then she never thinks about our country," smiled Lev. "Nine. One more." Oleg stacked all the folders save one. The nine towered over the one, but it was the thickest single folder, with extra twine to keep it closed. It sat alone in the center of the table, the secrets trying to burst out. Oleg asked, "Can you remember the cover name for the last?" Lev counted names on his fingers. The names of the living and the dead ticked off on his fingertips, young faces dragged from the crypts of memory of 50 years before. One last person hovered just beyond recall, edging in and out of Lev's ability to connect the face and an operational name. Then it hit him. "JACKPOT, that's what we called him." Oleg smiled, reminding Lev of a wolf on the steppe, baring fangs against a blizzard. "And given its American meaning, the name is very telling." Now Lev smiled. He wondered, in his retirement, about the mystical connections between operational names and true identities. Over the years, he had inferred connections in more cases than one would suspect. "As in, we 'hit the jackpot' with him?" Oleg pushed the file toward Lev, a dare, a threat, a connection to the Lev of another century. "Go ahead. Untie the string. Read it. He was your contact." "Oleg, you should be in the theater. You know how to set a scene and build anticipation." "When you're a spy, all the world's a stage," he said. "Including my apartment?" asked Lev, his fingers working on the thread. "Yes, but who's the audience and who's the player?" said Oleg. Lev opened the file and began to read. JACKPOT came back to him, through surveillance photos, Lev's comments typed on a Cyrillic typewriter with a faded ribbon on pages stamped "secret," receipts for Lev's expenses as he traveled to meet JACKPOT, receipts for cash withdrawals, copies of JACKPOT's academic records. "It looks standard enough. A promising student we recruited, he helped us, we helped him." "He was still your contact when you rotated out. Did you follow his file after he entered graduate studies at Columbia, or that of any other of your agents?" asked Oleg, all business. "I had enough to keep me occupied once I moved to Sydney. If the incoming resident needed me, he knew where to reach me. But on a first glance, JACKPOT's file ends a year or two after I left." "Once JACKPOT started graduate school at Columbia, he proved useful. You gave him financial support, and he was grateful. He provided lecture notes in his academic specialty, aerodynamics, clued us in to the latest research, put us in touch with people who had a progressive understanding of history. Then, he stopped." "Then he was unduly influenced by people with a retrogressive understanding of history? A visit from the FBI, squeezing him?" asked Lev, trying to form an image of the pressures the Americans applied to those under suspicion. He recalled Oleg's mention of FULCRUM's suicide. "Not that we could tell. Our sources in the FBI never found a mention of him." "Nobody asked why? Nobody approached him?" "We spoke to him. He was sympathetic, but he wanted to concentrate on his career and felt that working with us, on any level, was a distraction and a danger." "And that stopped the resident from squeezing him? I didn't know we were so understanding." "JACKPOT knew a lot. He made noises about going to the FBI if we didn't leave him alone. He never said he wouldn't work for us. The time was not right for the relationship to continue." "So the file ends with a firm handshake and the end of the affair." Oleg smiled again, the magician ready to pull the rabbit from his hat. He held the stage for an audience of one. "To be technical, that file ends." He pulled another folder, unbound, from his brief case. He handed it to Lev, no theatrics such as placing it in the center of the table. "Our research people did the required follow-up on JACKPOT and found he's been a busy fellow over the last half century. He earned his name. Take a look." Lev opened the folder and found, not the flimsy sheets with fuzzy Cyrillic letters and murky copies of journal articles from the early 1950s, but newspaper articles photocopied from the 1970s on, magazine articles, including cover articles in trade and finance magazines, patents awarded, successful stock offerings for technology companies, notices from Jewish newspapers about JACKPOT's philanthropic activities, even real estate records showing his purchase in the 1980s of an estate in Greenwich, Connecticut, a list of corporate boards on which he served, companies in which he had invested. After 10 minutes of awed reading, Lev looked up. "Quite a career as a scientist and executive. A model capitalist. Jackpot, indeed. And to think he had a progressive view of history at one time." "I have been wondering, Lev Davidovich," said Oleg, drawing the words out slowly. "Could it be possible that JACKPOT retains his progressive view of history and would once again share his ideas with us? He supported liberal causes and politicians. He never turned on us, not exactly." "Even if he does have that 'progressive view of history,' I would hardly think our current government is in the vanguard of social justice, even as a myth. How long before he would call us a 'degenerate workers' state?" "Simple. He would never say that," said Oleg. "Our current political structure is not a factor here. Our current economic needs ARE a factor behind our interest in JACKPOT, as well as . . ." Oleg did not complete the sentence, so his words lingered in the closed air of the apartment on a grey Moscow afternoon. ". . . As well as his exceptionally friendly relations with our former political structure," said Lev. The mist around Oleg and JACKPOT began to burn off in the heat of operational analysis. "Bravo!" exclaimed Oleg, thumping the table. "See, you have not lost a step in your ability to think through a situation. Lev, you remain a true Chekist." Lev shrugged. "I will take that in the spirit in which you offer it, as a compliment." "The highest compliment! Now, the pieces of the puzzle should be interlocked in your mind. JACKPOT, with our financial support, attended graduate school and became immensely successful in his sphere. He helped us as a student, in ways I've already outlined. We have records of his service to us, and our financial support for him. Surveillance photos, even a signed receipt." Oleg sipped his tea. He wanted something stronger. "That was then. Now, he is chairman of a company with technology that greatly interests us. He is on the board of other companies that are very promising. His talent blossomed decades ago, and now we want the fruits." "We?" asked Lev. "The competent organs are now technology investors?" "No, but companies in which we have a stake are interested in JACKPOT's technologies. Some of them have even approached him about joint ventures, investments, but he has rebuffed everything." "Why? His progressive views do not extend to investment opportunities?" asked Lev, now seeing the game unfold before him. An analytical calm covered him. "Other companies also want his technology. Ours are one of many. Perhaps he feels uneasy about his old associations. Frankly, I am disappointed at the lack of a fair hearing. Russian companies simply want to make their case to him. They are willing to pay. He has become quite unbending in his dismissal." "Old men can be that way, especially when money is at stake." Oleg looked at Lev quizzically. Both men sensed the conversation had reached an inflection point. "Lev, let me be frank. We can make JACKPOT at least listen. Our companies have wanted to play fair, let our case stand on its own merits, but he has not been forthcoming. At the highest levels of our government and industry, we believe the time has come to have a friendly chat with JACKPOT about the good old days." "Remind him of the fraternal support we provided to him as a struggling student?" "Without us, he'd be teaching physics at a high school in Brooklyn. We paid for his graduate education. He owes us. He thinks he paid that debt with some work for us, but the debt remains not quite paid in full." "Let me be frank with you, Oleg. Will that debt ever be stamped 'paid in full'?" "Probably not." "So I expected. Our type never let go." Lev paused. "Which brings us to the question, why are we having this chat? I was his controller 50 years ago. Where do I fit in?" "Memory, Lev, memory. You remember JACKPOT. With perhaps some prompting, he will remember you. You are both men of a certain time and place." "He remembers me. A man does not forget his controller, no matter how much time passes." "We want you to talk to him, Lev. Two men chatting about their unbreakable bond of the 1950s, when history ran at flood tide. Remind him of our connections and mutual respect. Ask him to at least listen." "And if he won't meet with me?" "He has strong incentives to cooperate. We have files with undeniable evidence he spied for the Soviet Union in the 1950s. Does he want that to become known? He has his career and family to consider. And, you'll see in the file he serves as a technology and fund-raising advisor to a prominent Democratic candidate for President. "So I saw." "Does JACKPOT want that candidate associated with a dreaded Red spy? The American capitalist press would rip the candidate apart like weasels on a chicken," Oleg considered the image and found it pleasing. "We have yet to approach JACKPOT with the signal code, which will indicate who and what he's dealing with. Do you remember the signal code, how he would recognize a contact with us?" "Ah, you are trying my memory now, Oleg. Names are easy, signals are more complex." "It's in the file. I can tell you." Once more Lev trawled the muddy ocean floor of memory for something solid. Something about a kitchen, food . . . "A hint, please," conceded Lev. "You would say, 'My aunt enjoyed the cake.' And he would say . . . " "'We can make more for her.'" "Again, a superb performance, Lev. Honestly, I don't know why you retired." "Polina Abramovna wanted us to have time for the grandchildren. She wanted to visit places as tourists, not operatives leaving chalk marks on mail boxes." "But you left field work behind years ago. You were both senior instructors at the academy." "Ah, that's what she wanted, to live a normal life. I could have stayed, but after 1991, I decided to agree with her. Polina could be persuasive." "You never wanted to retire?" "No, I wanted to stay. She wanted to leave. After 1991, it became much easier to leave. The world began to see us as Russians, not the Red Threat. For over 10 years we enjoyed our family and traveling. And now, no more Polina." "Now you have an opportunity to serve your country again, and still travel. A winning combination, you see. Killing several dogs with one rock, I believe the Americans say." "Close enough." "Will you consider it? Putin himself will call you if that's what you require. That should show the level of our interest in JACKPOT." Lev sipped his tea, his head slowly turning to gaze upon the apartment, bursting with so many memories and so little future, like a balloon leaking its oxygen day by day. The screensaver on his Dell cycled through photos of the vacations with Polina, sights they enjoyed through unencumbered eyes: the Eiffel Tower, Big Ben, a water buffalo at an African game park, some of the grandchildren in Tel Aviv, Polina in front of the World Trade Center, before, before . . . "Vladimir Vladimirovich does not have to call me. I will go. I have nothing to hold me here. It will be a clean job? A conversation? Will I travel with a cover?" "No, just an pensioner on a vacation. The resident in New York will brief you more fully, and you will visit JACKPOT with an industrial representative based in New York, the one who has attempted to contact JACKPOT. Once she knows your schedule, she will set up the meeting. The signal should be helpful in jogging JACKPOT's feelings of fraternal cooperation. The two of you will go see him with a copy of the full dossier, in case he needs additional encouragement in these matters. Our past efforts to contact him haven't made use of them." The Man Who Remembered Ch. 02 "A good memory aid, for him and for me." Oleg paused and straightened his tie, a nervous sign that Lev remembered from the academy, slight, but a signal that Oleg had yet to address some final issues. Lev could guess what they were, since they were on his mind, but he wanted to hear Oleg's presentation. "Aside from patriotic service, you are perhaps wondering how this work will benefit you. That's acceptable, Lev. We live in that kind of era." "We always did. Why else should I do this?" asked Lev. "A medal? A week at a spa on the Black Sea?" "Let me ask you, Lev: How is your son's business these days? Telecommunications systems, I believe?" Lev considered. Oleg probably knew more about Grigori's business than Lev did. "Considering the economy, good. He knows the technology, he can market, he maintains honest relationships with his suppliers." "And his krisha?" asked Oleg, referring to the "roof," or common "protection" offered by the Russian mafia to ward off other criminals. Lev hesitated. "Unobtrusive but effective. A cost of doing business." "If JACKPOT cooperates, certain companies stand to benefit from the influx of technology opportunities. That naturally includes telecommunications. We've had our eye on Grigori as a possible vendor. Everything you said about him is true. The organs can always use more telecommunications gear. We can take care of our own, you know." "Understood. But where does the krisha fit in?" "We can offer better protection, less financial pain, and in an official capacity, as a state agency. One of the benefits of dealing with us. But that hinges, for Grigori and others, on whether JACKPOT plays with us." Oleg stood up, gathering the folders and placing them in the briefcase that he left unlocked, Lev noticed. He pushed his chair back and stretched. The apartment looked more temporary than ever, a way station between places in Lev's life. Once resigned to that station, Lev now felt that Oleg offered him a road to another place. Packing would take little time. He could leave in a few days. Oleg shrugged the expensive coat on and exchanged closing words with Lev. Picking up the brief case, he said, "Oh, I almost forgot. One more file." He pulled a thin folder from the briefcase and tossed it on the table. "Somewhat off the subjects we're discussing, but here's a file you will enjoy reading. You can keep it. I have the original." "Thank you." "It's the initial file on JACKPOT's younger sister, Helene. Remember her?" "Somewhat. She kept her distance from politics." "A shame, since she was so bright and personable. Attractive, too, judging from the file." "It was a long time ago." "Lev, the two of you had serious conversations. She wanted to show you New York. I believe you remember her more than 'somewhat.'" Oleg smiled, the magician pulling the audience in to one more trick. "You know about our conversations? I shouldn't be surprised," Lev felt a flush, recalling his private moments with Helene, a teenager. "Who watches the watchers? Somebody has to," said Oleg, eyes boring into Lev. "And she expressed herself very passionately about you." "How do you know, or should I not ask?" "We read her diary. We have copies of the pages about you. A matter of operational security, of course. She was very taken with the 25 year old representative of the first socialist republic." "I never had any intentions toward her. She was so much younger than me, relatively, and 'operational security' could not be compromised," said Lev, wondering how Helene might have endangered him. "You were no Lavrenti Pavlovich, I see. We're all better for that." "We know how things ended for him. I preferred to make as few enemies as possible in my career," said Lev. He paused, then continued, "How is Helene?" "Healthy, happy, as far as we can tell. A widow for several years, two children, in Atlanta and Los Angeles, several grandchildren. She still lives in New York. She works as a researcher for a management consulting firm. All the details are in the follow-up folder, in the New York office. I don't have it. You can see it when you get there, of course. Most interesting reading. Her married name is Helene Weinstock." Lev could now see below the surface of the conversation, to where the file on Helene danced and flickered like a tropical fish in sunlit waters. Oleg played his last trick, exquisitely. Even without Helene, Lev knew he'd take the assignment, but now Oleg had dangled a 50-year old inducement that still had a power that left Lev shaken. Helene! She was barely 16 when he met her at a save-the-Rosenbergs event, where he fetched a package of papers from JACKPOT. She had long wavy hair, a form-fitting sweater favored by high-school girls of the day, ripe lips, a strongly Semitic nose, a serious manner tinged with a flirtatiousness that drew the furtive attention of all the young men in the room. Did she know the power of her allure? Surely she did, for several times she focused its bright beam on Lev, only for him to skitter away, fearful of the operational consequences. She was too young, too close to a major contact of his, and too volatile and uncontrollable at a time when Moscow would have no scruples about yanking him back and executing him for any step that harmed undercover operations in the U.S. He'd seen that happen, too. Oleg smiled. From reading her file and diary, he knew just what passions Lev had avoided – preserving his career, perhaps his life, in the bargain. She was beautiful in that first-generation Eastern European way, Helene of Flatbush if not Helene of Troy. Oleg never would have mentioned Helene had Polina been alive. Even he, Oleg, the very sword and shield of the revolution, would not have betrayed Polina, his old instructor, by dangling a youthful love in front of Lev. But Polina was gone, Lev was lonely, and a job in the U.S. needed a man who remembered. Helene's file was simply – how did the Americans phrase it? The ice on the pie? It made no sense, but whatever the Americans said, Helene played that role here, even more than the opportunity for business for Grigori. He was certain that an old man's curiosity about his younger self's passions would prove irresistible. "My friend, I must return to the offices and inform New York of your arrival. The travel office will contact you about the arrangements," said Lev, his hand on the doorknob. "I am confident everything will work out, for you and for Grigori." Lev shook his hand. "Thank you, Oleg Sergeyevich. I am pleased that you called on me for this assignment. I will serve the best I can. I can pack quickly." "Welcome back, tovarisch," said Oleg, using the Russian word for "comrade." As soon as Oleg left, Lev sat at his computer with the files in front of him, and began to read more about his past and his future.