There would never come a day when his statues were tipped over and melted down for scrap. Indeed, he amused himself by imagining a statue large enough to replace the Washington Monument. A great towering Comrade Stalin to keep a stern watch over the liberated workers of the United Soviet States of Amerika.
“More tea, Comrade?” asked Poskrebyshev. “Before the others arrive?”
“No, I will need a bucket under the desk, if I drink any more.”
Stalin stretched his tired frame. A light dusting of snow lay on the cold stone laneways of the Kremlin, outside his window. He knew he would feel more secure once that white blanket was properly draped over the Motherland. Zhukov was doing wonders with the Red Army, now that he had time to train and equip his divisions properly. When the thaw came, no matter what the correlation of forces in the West, the Soviet Union would be safe behind an Iron Curtain.
That phrase, which Beria had taught him, was most appealing. Having faced annihilation at the hands of the fascists a few short months ago, Josef Stalin was much taken with the image of an iron curtain falling across the frontier with Germany, no matter who controlled it.
He suspected that it would be the Allies. Their industrial capacity supplied them with an advantage that would be nearly impossible to overcome. And now, augmented with the wonders of the next century, they would surely triumph over the fascists.
But he would not be helping them. Not if that support meant the eventual collapse of the revolution. Or the conquest of the Rodina by a— What was Beria’s phrase?
Of course, he’d been wrong about that. As it had turned out, those bastards had only picked up the table scraps, while the bulk of the windfall had gone to Roosevelt and his allies.
But that didn’t matter now.
Stalin placed his empty drinking glass on a silver coaster and leaned forward to pick up the model again.
The NKVD had retrieved it from the
Stalin wished for just a moment that the burdens of state didn’t have to lie so heavily on his shoulders. He would have loved to make the journey to the special facilities that were being constructed around the ship, just to see it with his own eyes. But such things were not possible.
Then he snorted in amusement. Was there anything that could be called impossible nowadays?
“Life amuses me, Poskrebyshev. Life, and everything about it. Tell me, are they here yet?”
“Yes. They are waiting outside.”
“Well, bring them in, bring them in.”
Poskrebyshev carried his narrow-shouldered, slightly hunched frame out of the room. He’d never really been the same since the NKVD had executed his wife. He had an impressively ugly countenance, which Stalin admired because it frightened visitors who came to the Little Corner. That countenance wore a perpetual scowl.
He reappeared, with Beria and Molotov in tow. The secret policeman seemed as chipper as ever, which was to say not at all, but at least relentless morbidity was his natural state of being. Molotov, like everyone in high office these days, looked as though the executioner stalked his every move.
They sat in hard wooden chairs in front of Stalin’s desk. He spoke first to Molotov. “So, Vyacheslav Mikhaylovich, we have acceded to the fascists’ request for assistance on this one little matter, and I can see that you are still not happy.”
“I doubt the British will see it as such a trifle,” said Molotov. “They are rather fond of Churchill, and will not appreciate the fact that we have helped the fascists to kill him.”
“Yet our involvement is quite deniable,” said Beria. “Our man should be able to get himself out to Ireland, and then home when he is done.”
Stalin, like his foreign minister, still was not sure.
Britain had come close to declaring war on Russia when he’d impounded the ships of convoy PQ 17 at Murmansk, just before signing the cease-fire with Germany. Their anger was quite reasonable, he admitted. With one backhanded sweep, he had done more to damage the Royal Navy than Hitler’s oafish admirals had managed in two and a half years.
The vessels were still there: thirty-five merchantmen and their escorts, including four destroyers, ten corvettes, two antiaircraft auxiliaries, and four cruisers. He had been scrupulously fair, refusing every German entreaty to turn the ships over to the
But it was important that he maintain the facade of neutrality, and that meant detaining the combatants. The materiel in the holds of the ships had always been meant for his country, so he kept the hundreds of tanks and bombers, the thousands of trucks and other cargo. The trucks, in particular, had been very useful, when it became obvious that the
The Nazis, with their pathetic attempt to deceive him with the Demidenko project, would have fainted dead away if they could see what Kaganovich and Zhdanov had built around the
The Nazis dismal efforts at
But as dialectical materialists, they would work with what was, not what he might wish to be.
“All right, Beria,” said Stalin. “Your man is cleared to help the fascists, but there must be no way of tracing our involvement. Do you understand?”
“I will take all necessary measures,” Beria replied.
HMS
“They’re coming,” said Halabi.
The giant battlespace monitor, which covered two walls of the
Thus most of the smaller contacts were simply tagged with a number and buried under layers of more pertinent data, such as the flight of hundreds of slow transports making their way across the air–sea gap between the eastern coast of the British Isles and a series of airfields in Norway.
The highest priority contact, however, was a formation of three blinking red triangles screaming across the French countryside from an originating point just north of a village called Donzenac.
They were hypersonic Laval GA cruise missiles, and the ship’s Combat Intelligence had calculated that they would impact somewhere in the U.K. in approximately four minutes. They were even curving around through Belgium and the Netherlands to put themselves well out of reach of any possible countermeasures she might have deployed. Not that there was any need. The