Tarbell turned. 'I beg your pardon, Malcolm?'
'His name, damn it!' Malcolm cried, his knuckles going white as he clutched his chair.
Tarbell recoiled a bit. 'I — don't know. They make no mention of his name. Deliberately so, I would say.'
With one quick move of his arms Malcolm propelled his chair to the screen. He examined its contents for a moment, then grabbed Leon's shoulder hard. 'Gather everyone downstairs, Leon,' he said, trying to control the inner tempest that was obviously tossing his emotions about. 'Right away, please.'
Tarbell knew enough to comply quickly, and after he withdrew, Malcolm, eyes wide and empty, turned his chair away from the screen and rolled slowly back over to the transparent hull.
'Malcolm?' I eventually said. 'What is it?'
'You were able to break the encryption of those images?' he asked, in the same low voice.
'Max was, yes,' I answered.
Nodding for a moment, Malcolm murmured, 'He was very good at his job, your friend Mr. Jenkins…'
'Would you like Leon to bring the disc up?'
Malcolm held up a hand. 'Unnecessary. I have a complete version.'
As the situation began to clarify, I felt my gut ripple again. 'Then Price
'Yes,' Malcolm whispered with another nod. He paused for what seemed a long time, then went on, 'Well, Gideon, I'm afraid your Washington project will have to wait. If I'm right—' He lowered his head and placed his hands on either side of it. 'But I must not be right. In fact, we must pray, Gideon, that I am as mad as I sometimes seem…'
CHAPTER 27
Whether or not Malcolm was mad, he was certainly justified in his fearful suspicions about the mysterious Israeli communications concerning the Stalin images. When we'd all gathered at the table that did double duty for dining and conferring on the lower level of the nose of the ship, Malcolm showed us the completed version of those images and explained how they had come to be; and though just a few months earlier it might have been difficult for me to appreciate the dangers posed by such a seemingly random bit of visual documentation, I was now well versed enough in the power of cleverly packaged disinformation to know that we were faced with a potentially disastrous situation.
The images themselves were simple enough: they showed several separate shots of Josef Stalin touring various parts of the Dachau concentration camp sometime in the late 1930s (Dachau having been the first of the really large-scale, factory-modeled German extermination centers). The Soviet strongman was seen watching the laboring prisoners, their abusive guards, and the executions and corpse disposals with an approving eye, occasionally even chuckling as he pulled on his pipe and exchanged information and jokes with several high-ranking SS tour guides — including, in one shot, Heinrich Himmler. The implications were obvious: the Soviet government had been involved not only in its own domestic genocidal policies but, during the years prior to Hitler's invasion of Russia, in the Nazi Holocaust, as well.
'But what was the purpose of creating such an impression, Malcolm?' Jonah asked, deeply troubled by what he'd seen — as, indeed, were we all.
'The Russian government has degenerated from merely unstable to dangerous, even grotesque,' Malcolm declared, fists still tight atop the arms of his chair. 'Since taking power, the right wing has employed the same tactics that leveled Chechnya in four other rebellious regions. Nuclear weapons and technology, though admittedly crude, are being sold to whoever has the hard currency to pay for them. Virtual slavery is being practiced in factories and fields, and toxic and nuclear wastes are being dumped into shallow repositories in Siberia, which is why that region's separatist movement has become so violent. Each new problem only brings more vicious solutions from the central government, until it now looks as though Russia will be the black hole of the modern world, taking all of civilization with it when it collapses. Yet the rest of that modern world does nothing. Foreign investment in Russia is running at absurdly high levels, and no one can afford to tell the truth or to have it told — information and communications companies are, after all, among the most severely overextended in the Russian market. The argument that loans and investment will bring reform continues to stand as self-serving nonsense of a variety to match the Chinese model. Putting money into such a situation is simply throwing gasoline on a fire.' He caught his breath and sat back, his anger slowly giving way to regret. 'It seemed to me, in other words, that some kind of popular redefinition of Russia's place, in the world and in history, might be called for.'
'You could hardly have picked a more…
Malcolm nodded grimly. 'Or a worse person, as it turned out, to do the work. I hired John Price because none of us had his visual manipulation skills — but I always had reservations about him. It wasn't just that he was a freelance operator, though that did trouble me. But a freelance operator from a place where betrayal is the unspoken stuff of amiable meals in pleasant restaurants… It was my mother's world; that in itself should have kept me away. But I thought we could control him.'
'I thought we
'Sometimes, Larissa,' Malcolm said, 'death doesn't put an end to the dangers a person can pose.'
'And what do you think those dangers are?' I asked, looking around the table.
'I've studied the communications Leon intercepted,' Colonel Slayton replied. 'And putting them together with what
'A fanatic? 'Eli asked.
Malcolm nodded, self-recrimination all over his face. 'It's why I canceled the project in the first place, before even telling any of you about it. There are certain historical events, I've come to realize, that even we must never toy with — the violence of the emotions they unleash is simply too great. We're talking, now, about what is quite probably the blackest moment in all of human experience. Even the tortures and brutalities of the Dark Ages had nothing like the scale, the systematic insanity…' Malcolm shook his head. 'This man may have lost family in the Holocaust. Or he may simply have grown unbalanced contemplating it.' I felt a quick pang of dread at this thought: not only did it seem entirely plausible, even likely, but I'd dealt with similar characters before and knew what they were capable of. 'Whatever the explanation,' Malcolm continued, 'he has now joined the ranks of those whom the world should always fear most, those who were responsible for the Holocaust in the first place:
'The Mossad is full of them,' Colonel Slayton said, 'unlike most intelligence agencies. But they're being very careful not to use this character's name in communications that are not absolutely secure— they're determined to handle this internally.'
'That is understandable,' Fouche judged. 'Ever since they entered the Turkish civil war on the side of the Kurds, there has been enormous tension between America and Israel. It may be that the Israelis had no choice, now that they are dependent on water that flows from Kurdish territory, but this does not change the fact that Turkey remains an American ally.'
'I have checked CIA communications,' Tarbell said. 'To no one's great surprise, I am sure, they know less than we do. They are aware that the Israelis have a problem with one of their people but have no idea why. Still, they are interested. And when the CIA staggers blindly in the dark, well… unfortunate things have a way of occurring.'
'Not to our people,' Larissa said firmly. 'The real thing to worry about is this Israeli. Who is he? How the hell did he get hold of the images in the first place?'
'And what is he intending to do about it?' Malcolm added. 'These are all questions that