birthday morning dream. But,' she added, 'interesting.'

'What?'

The way you see yourself, my dear. As a target. Furious and impotent.' She laughed. 'Isn't that a joke?'

'You pretend to be sympathetic until you get the goods. Then you turn nasty again.'

She shrugged, got up from the bed, went to the window, looked down at the Pacific, the surf crashing against the rocks. You really think you're a government in exile? You! You have a Trotsky complex, Sasha. You dream of your assassination as if you're important enough for them to send out a special man to shoot you down. Such dramatizations! Such an ego you have! Meantime, the truth is you're bored and bottled up. You've barricaded us here in this super-luxurious concentration camp, and now you long for excitement, anything, even a KGB assassin to come and take a shot at you. So, okay, you want to be killed, why don't you go someplace where that will happen?' She turned to him, her mouth twisted. 'And now you know just where to go, too, don't you? Don't you, Mister Toe-Kisser?' She flung the postcard at him again. 'I'll see you at lunch.' She turned her back and swept out of the room.

Boyce, the journalist, had intelligent eyes. He was in his late twenties with a good, young, well-shaped, eager face. The last interviewer, an awful British woman, had written Targov up as a nasty scold. But he was shrewd, was never burned twice. Boyce had written three intelligent letters, he'd sounded solid, and Rokovsky had checked him out. Many reporters had asked; only one could be chosen. In the end, he'd decided Boyce was worth the risk.

So, what must he think of us, our curious menage? Targov wondered. The burly lion, sixty years old today, his white hair flowing like a mane. The bitter wife with the spider-web face. The beautiful young cellist, dressed in jeans. And Rokovsky, the secretary, gaunt, balding, serious, suspicious. Quite a little group we must make, eating like peasants in the kitchen of our fancy fenced-in ranch beside the sea.

'Hope you don't mind eating in the kitchen, Mr. Boyce. We Russians always speak more candidly in our kitchens.'

'I've had the pleasure of being received in many Russian kitchens, Mr. Targov. Little Moscow kitchens mostly. Never one like this.'

'A kitchen is a kitchen,' Irina said. And then in Russian: 'Do you think he'd like it better if it stank of cabbage?' Anna and Rokovsky laughed.

'I do speak Russian.'

'Please excuse my wife. She's often rude. And now some questions. How is it you Americans put it? Shoot!''

'As emigres-'

'Exiles. You see, Mr. Boyce, we were thrown out. Or, to be precise, we were allowed to travel and then, just as we were about to go back, they denounced us and stripped us of our citizenships.'

'They insist you made a deal to get out.'

Targov laughed. 'The KGB peddling trash. Their lies are so transparent, clumsy but dangerous. Very dangerous-don't you agree?'

'They're circulating-'

'I know. They've been showing it around for years. They'll try anything to discredit me, or anyone who dares to criticize. Have you heard their line on Solzhenitsyn? That he betrayed Vitkevich! They offer proof, a transcript. It's so laughable! From 1944!'

'Are you in touch with Solzhenitsyn?'

'Not anymore, but there was a time… His trouble, you see, is he has no charm. They invite him to Harvard, he decides to give them hell-believe me, I'm all for that! But then he botches it, puts on his stone face, thrashes his arms like a Cossack, and harangues them in Russian until they snore. I hope someday they invite me. I'll have a few things to tell them about their great and bountiful West. And maybe they'll listen because I won't make Solzhenitsyn's mistakes. For one thing, I'll address them in English. For another, I'll plunge in the needle where it hurts.'

'What are your main criticisms of the West?' Boyce held his pencil poised.

'Moral cowardice. An obsession with money and success. A total misunderstanding of art. The most successful people here, and I include the artists, remind me of the hacks who rule our artists' unions back home.'

'Yet you've been very successful here, Mr. Targov. And no one calls you a hack.'

'Perhaps I am. That's for others to say. Or perhaps I'm simply bitter. You see, Mr. Boyce, when you're sitting in your freezing hovel in Moscow, unable to work, unable to gain commissions because your style doesn't suit the bureaucrats and their stupid party line, you think: 'In the West they care! They know how we suffer! They're our friends! They're petitioning! For them we must survive!' Then, if you're lucky enough to escape, you discover no one gave a hoot. Not only were people here totally unaware of you, when they do finally meet you they find you tiresome. You're so serious. You complain. You bite the hand that feeds you. Their worst accusation is that you're ideological. Can anything be more boring than that?'

'Do you respect American artists?'

'I respect Noguchi. But as a sculptor I cannot speak ill of sculptors. Painters are a different story.' He winked at Boyce. 'Who are your painters?'

'Stella. Rauschenburg. Fischl.'

'Stella's a decorator. Clever, interesting sometimes, but I don't take him seriously.'

'Robert Rauschenburg?'

'A distinguished artist, yet I wonder if he really cares. As for Fischl-' he laughed. 'A puppy. Cute.'

It was hours before Boyce left. When he did, Targov was exhausted. Such a show he'd put on, so many ripostes. Being alternately cagey, brilliant, supercilious, and profound had used up all his energy. He went to his room, wrapped himself in his quilt, tried to sleep but without success. Later he searched for Anna but she and Rokovsky had gone out for a walk. He wandered through the house, then crossed the grounds to his studio. He hadn't been in it in a week.

Today of all days, he thought, I must enter and try to work.

He unlocked the steel door, entered the vast room. The first thing he saw was Anna's cello. She had spent the morning practicing, had left her instrument on the platform along with her stool and music stand.

Barrels of clay were arranged to one side. Scaffolding stood ready to be assembled. Tools were laid out like a surgeon's before an operation. Maquettes of earlier work sat on stainless steel shelves.

He moved to the big window, the great wall of glass that looked out over the sea. Trees had been cut to open up the view. The weather was closing in. Fog was moving down the coast, would soon conceal the rocks and spume below.

Sergei out. He drops a casual postcard from Vienna. On his way to Israel… Oh God!

He looked at the large photograph of his Chicago crucifix bearing his writhing, defiant Christ. 'I love the crucifixion in art,' he had told Boyce, 'the great ones are so controlled.' He had also repeated for the ninetieth time his maxim: 'I ask the clay what it wants to be and when it tells me I begin to sculpt.' A moment of weakness-he had said it too many times, and now he hated it; he knew it was meaningless and fake.

He picked up the phone, dialed the house, was pleased to find Rokovsky back. 'Send her to me in the studio,' he told him. Then he stood before the window and watched the fog close in.

She knocked before she entered, a polite young person, though he was horrified at the sweat shirt she wore, black with the name of some ridiculous rock group scrawled in silver across the chest.

'Sasha…' She came to him. He took her in his arms.

'Irina tells me you're leaving.'

She nodded. 'Tomorrow. I'm going to New York.'

'Tired of me?'

'Oh, Sasha.'

'The lion is sixty now. Too old. I understand.'

'Please.'

'I've tried to help you.'

'You have, you have.'

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