giving Wilkins a Saturday morning and for what she knew was an unreasonable anger toward the boy, wishing, for a dark second, that he had finished the job — her Shakespeare class would be much easier to teach.
As they emerged from the wooded area onto the grassy knoll, she was thinking how Shakespeare wasn’t necessarily a civilizing influence. What he did was to tear the wrappings of civility aside.
“You must understand,” Richard was saying, “the boy was — I should say
Oh my God, thought Rosemary. It
When they reached the house, she saw Georgina at the window as they started up the crazy stone path. Richard saw her, too, as she left the window to open the front door.
“Now,” Richard cautioned Rosemary, “don’t you two start, for goodness’ sake.”
Georgina was the picture of sisterly concern. It was genuine — which made Rosemary feel worse. If she was pregnant — the thought of telling her parents mortified her. Besides, with a world at war, she wasn’t sure anyone should have a child. But then, she didn’t see how she could ever bring herself to—
“Rose!” It was her mother, holding one hand over the phone, looking frightened from the kitchen. “A Mrs. Wilkins wants to talk with you. She sounds terribly upset.”
“Oh Lord—” said Georgina sympathetically. “Tell her she’s not here, Mother.”
“Well I
“Hello,” she said, unknotting the head scarf as she took the phone. “Mrs. Wilkins—” Georgina saw her sister pale.
CHAPTER SIX
In Leningrad’s immaculate and cream-colored Nakhimov Secondary Naval Academy, whence he could smell the cold freshness of the harbor and see the historic cruiser
Sitting by the second-story window facing the Neva, Brodsky had taken a break from signing the latest authorizations for merit-earned transfer for able-bodied soldiers and sailors who, after distinguishing themselves at the front, had been recommended for entry into the elite Fleet Air Arm.
One such applicant was Sergei Marchenko, a tank battalion commander whose leadership in the surprise, and massive, Soviet breakthrough at the Fulda Gap on NATO’s central front had earned him high marks, as did his later performance when the “river of Soviet T-90s,” as the Western press had called it, split into two, one stream heading south toward Munich to link up with the armored spearheads rumbling west from Czechoslovakia along the fertile Danube Valley, the other stream wheeling to the right of Fulda, racing toward Germany’s Northern Plain. Here the Soviet divisions had smashed through to Schleswig-Holstein, capturing the vital NATO ports of Bremen, Hamburg, and Antwerp, and were presently closing the pincers about the trapped British Army of the Rhine and elements of the U.S., German, and Dutch armies. To Brodsky’s displeasure, Sergei Marchenko’s name had been submitted to Brodsky by his father, Kiril Marchenko, a senior advisor to the Politburo, and there was no doubt that on the surface the applicant clearly deserved the chance to join the air arm. But Brodsky had refused. There had been the problem of a slight deficiency in the vision of his left eye. Despite the fact that he wore corrective contact lenses, which had obviously been more than adequate for duty in the tanks corps, the Fleet Air Arm demanded twenty-twenty vision. Kiril Marchenko had appealed the decision, using Politburo letterhead, brusquely pointing out that if Adolf Galland, Nazi Germany’s top air ace, could fly with only one eye, surely the Fleet Air Arm could accept a man with two!
Brodsky refused. Now Marchenko’s father had written Brodsky again, a little more contrite, saying that the operation to correct his condition was available in Moscow’s famous
Brodsky moved away from the window and returned to his desk. He paused, gold Parker in hand, his aide, a captain, entering the office impatiently but stopping abruptly when he saw the pen wavering above the authorization form. Kiril Marchenko was a powerful main, twice denied. Then again, the captain knew the admiral was right not to sign anything without ruminating on it. You could end up as latrine inspector in Mongolia, signing things in too much of a hurry; a general, or rather ex-general, whom both of them knew had lost his dacha in the forest of Nikolina Gora outside Moscow because he’d hastily signed requisitions for three large American freezers and four hundred pairs of imported British shoes for a unit that didn’t exist.
When Brodsky did sign the authorization, he added a rider that, as per regulations, his permission for Sergei’s transfer to Fleet Air Arm school was conditional upon written confirmation from the eye clinic that not only had the operation been performed, but it was
Brodsky wrote slowly, as if, the captain mused, he were creating a work of art for the Leningrad Museum.
The admiral sat back, admiring his work and recapping the pen. “No more transfer requests, I hope. Someone has to get NATO dirt in their contacts.”
The captain smiled dutifully, though he didn’t get the connection. Nor did he care; the message just decoded from the
“What class?” asked Brodsky.
“Sea Wolf Two, I think, Admiral. We’re not positive, but time/speed calculations make it possible it is an American submarine out of Holy Loch.”
Brodsky pressed him on this, for while the
The aide unrolled the chart of the North Atlantic. “We’ve dispatched three Hunter/Killers to the area,” he assured Brodsky.
“In two hours it can be a hundred miles away in either direction,” said Brodsky, waving his arm, the weak afternoon sun reflecting off his sleeve’s four gold rings.
“The
The admiral grumbled, grateful for small mercies. If the
“A long-range Badger with fighter cover, sir. The only plane available at the moment. Later today we might be able to request—”
“No — we can’t wait,” said the admiral, putting out his hand for the
“Yes, sir.” The captain had already done this, knowing he could always rescind the order if the admiral hadn’t agreed.
Brodsky’s heavily lined face beneath the thick, black hair that belied his age became a scowl as he read the message, jaw clenched. “Where were—?”
The aide handed him a sheet of the buff-colored top secret forms listing all RBU antisubmarine warfare rockets and drum charges as a batch originating from one of the armament factories in Tallinn, the Estonian