One of them-perhaps the nurse-had laid Vassily out and covered him with a blanket from one of the adjoining chambers. But he was there in the center of the room, a mute macabre focal point, and they clustered near the door to be away from him. Oleg said vigorously, “We cannot have all our plans-the fate of Russia herself-founder on this murder. Leon, I fail to see how you could even entertain a notion of going to the Spanish police. Among the seven of us don’t you think they’d soon worm it out of at least one? What we were discussing here, what we were planning?”
“It would appear,” said Count Anatol, “that our enemies know our plans already. Otherwise why was Vassily killed?”
Alex tried to steady them. “We’ve got to take up one thing at a time. The first matter’s the doctor. I’ll fetch him.” He turned to the door, his heart still chugging.
Prince Leon said, “Before you go, Alex.”
He turned and waited for it.
Leon said, “Vassily half-expected this. They tried to kill him before.”
“I know.”
“It was Vassily’s wish that you succeed him.”
“He told me that. Obviously it is up to the rest of you.”
“There is no question in our minds.”
Count Anatol said, “I should not accept it too eagerly if I were you. It puts you at the top of their list, whoever these killers are.”
Alex didn’t reply to any of them; he needed time. He left the room and went down into the villa in search of the doctor.
16
It was nearly four o’clock in the morning and most of them had gone home or to bed.
The announcement would be made in the afternoon by which time Vassily would be embalmed and on view in a casket with his wounds concealed by clothing and the mortician’s art.
Sergei Bulygin found him pacing the veranda. “It will be a long time before anyone finds that vermin.”
“Thank you, Sergei. Did you find anything on him?”
“This-his invitation.” A faint aroma of the stables rolled off Sergei’s clothes. “Are there instructions?”
“Not tonight,” Alex said. “Sleep-there’ll be things to do today.”
Sergei nodded and made a half-turn, and paused. “I grieve with you for the General’s passing.”
“Yes…”
“I will mention him in my prayers.” Then Sergei left him.
A sweetness of honeysuckle flavored the air; the moon had come and gone, the stars made patchwork patterns among scudding cottonball clouds. He stared toward the mountains with preoccupied inattention.
A shadow fell through the doorway and he turned to find Prince Leon there. The Prince limped onto the veranda; he had an unlit cigar between his fingers and was nipping at the end with the blade of a brass-handled dagger. It was a knife the Prince had cherished for many years: Peter the Great had carried it at Azov in 1696.
“The question is, why did they kill him? What did they hope to gain?”
“Maybe they thought the scheme would die with him.”
“Presupposing they knew a great deal about the scheme. But if they knew that much would they not have known it was too big to be destroyed by one man’s death?”
“If you’d killed Lenin in nineteen-sixteen there might not have been an October Revolution.”
“It is not the same thing.”
“They’ve delayed the program. Maybe that’s all they expected to accomplish.”
“We have assumed the assassin was a paid hireling-a professional.” Leon laid the dagger on the stone rail and searched his pockets for matches. The dagger’s blade glinted dully. “It could have been the Germans you know.”
“How would they have found out about it?”
“How would anyone?” Leon got the cigar lighted. “Someone did-that is the sum of our knowledge. It leads to the conclusion we have a traitor among us.” His voice was very soft.
“Who knows about this besides those of us who were in that room?”
“Not many. The Americans-two or three of them. Deniken of course. The Grand Duke Dmitri and perhaps a few of his advisors in Switzerland. Churchill and a few of his people.”
Alex shook his head. “Then any one of them could have let something drop. A secret’s only a secret as long as one person knows it.”
“We can only hope the details of it do not reach the Kremlin.” Leon puffed on the cigar and took it away from his mouth. “Have you decided, Alex?”
He had tried to weigh it: tried to deal with the realities. But the guiding consideration was emotional, not susceptible to reason. The factors of history should have dominated his thinking: the opportunity to free the land of his birth from the evil of Stalin’s tyranny; the chance to help two hundred million people realize the dreams for which his father and millions of Russians had died; the possibility of making the gift of justice to a nation which had never in its history been free of despotism.
Against those he had tried to weigh the odds: the rocky instability of the coalition backing the scheme; the unlikelihood of prevailing with a small commando force where the mighty Wehrmacht of the Third Reich had not yet succeeded. The scheme was absurd from any objective vantage; Stalin’s armies numbered millions. In so many ways it had to be viewed as an exercise in fruitless and suicidal fantasy.