inflammables in the hangar that causing the fire would be no problem. Fire was one of the plans he had outlined to the others — now he would tell them of his final decision in its favour.

Baranovich spent no time wondering whether Gant would survive the flight. He would show up on no radar which meant the Russians would need a visual sighting before they could loose off infra-red or proximity missiles, or send aircraft after him. He glanced towards the tail where Semelovsky was supervising the fitting of the special tail-unit, his own project from first to last, on which Kreshin had worked as his assistant — the tail-assembly that provided Gant's most effective anti-missile system and ECM gear. Semelovsky said it would work, but it had only been tried on an RPV — that day, it would be a part of the weapons-trials and a man would have to use it. Gant would need it, he knew.

It was all a question of timing, he decided. The First Secretary's aircraft was scheduled to arrive at nine. Before that, he knew, he and the others would be placed under arrest. Their work would be completed by six-thirty at the latest. This meant that six-thirty was the latest time for the diversion, and the take-off. He would have to arrange the time-table with the others at their next coffee-break, which was at five.

The security was so tight that when he had visited the toilets at the other end of the hangar an hour earlier, a guard had detached himself from the wall, and followed him inside, making no effort to relieve himself, but merely contenting himself with observing Baranovich. Grosch should find that damaged power transistor within the next few minutes, he thought, which would helpfully lengthen the final checks.

He was suddenly, oddly, assailed by memory, a memory that was akin to his present situation, but removed from self-concern. He was in the same overalls as now, but those in his memory were oil-stained, uncleaned. The temperature was well below zero, and his hands were numb. He was bending forward into the cockpit of a Mig, an old wartime Mig. He was in a hangar at the Red Army air base outside Stalingrad. Because he was a Jew, he was an army mechanic, nothing more glorified than that.

He shrugged off the memory. The past was an intrusion, an interference in what he had to do, had to plan. He thought of the gun beneath his armpit. He had not been searched on entering the gates. The gun, he realised, with the kind of shock of cold water on the drowsy skin, meant that he had accepted that this was the end. He did not expect to live through the day.

Baranovich smiled as Grosch found the malfunctioning circuit-board, and looked up into his face. Grosch held up the extracted plastic square, with its thirty-seven gold-plated tags, into his face.

'Looks like the power transistor, Comrade Director Baranovich,' he said. Baranovich smiled. Grosch was being obsequiously civil. He, too, then understood that it was the end.

'Mm.' Baranovich turned the square of plastic over in his hand, nodding. Then he handed it back to Grosch. 'Scrap it, then. I'll get another.'

'From the experimental technical stores, Director?' Grosch queried with a smile.

'Yes, Grosch. But you won't have to get out of that comfortable seat to accompany me. The guard will take me.'

Before Grosch could reply, he began to descend the ladder, with a light, youthful, untroubled step.

'You incompetent bloody fool, Stechko — he's dead! You've killed him!' Tortyev exploded. He rounded on Stechko, and the big man stepped back, a look of confused, abashed defeat on his face. Tortyev rose from his haunches where he had squatted before the sagging, lifeless form of Filipov, and glared at his subordinate. The beatings had been too regular, too vicious, too hurried — he knew that now. In his desperate effort to make the man talk, he had allowed Stechko and Holokov to kill him. He ground his teeth and clenched and unclenched his fists in the fury of impotence.

When he turned to Priabin, the KGB lieutenant was already on the telephone. His indifference seemed to anger Tortyev further. He crossed the room to confront Holokov who was sitting on a hard chair, astride it, watching the body intently as if for some sign of life. Tortyev stood before him, and Holokov's intensity of expression became transformed to doubt.

'You stupid fat shit,' Tortyev breathed, his eyes blazing. 'You incompetent lump of dogshit!'

'You pressed us…' Holokov began, and then recoiled as Tortyev slapped him across the cheek with the back of his hand. He reached for his cut lip, in surprise, inspected his fingers, and the smear of blood on them in some state of shock.

'He knew nothing.' Tortyev heard Priabin speak quietly, and turned on him. Priabin was holding one hand over the receiver, and smiling. His smile irritated Tortyev.

'What the hell do you mean by that?' he said.

'He knew nothing — hell, he'd have told you long ago if he had anything to tell.'

'You clever bastard — what's the answer, then? Your precious bloody aircraft is still in danger, or had you forgotten that?' Tortyev wiped the saliva from his lip.

Priabin continued to smile irritatingly, and waggled the receiver in Tortyev's direction.

'Why do you think I want to talk to the computer?' he said mildly.

Tortyev looked at the clock, and said: 'You'd better get a bloody move-on! It's four-thirty, or hadn't you noticed?' There was a sneer in his voice, a returning self-confidence. He had done his part. Now it was up to Priabin.

'Hello?' Priabin said into the receiver. 'Priabin. What news?' He listened for a while, and then said: 'How quickly are you checking out the whereabouts of these people?' Irritation crossed his face. 'I don't care — the information's in that machine's guts somewhere, and I want it!' He slammed the telephone down, and saw Tortyev smiling at him.

'What's the matter — less than miraculous, is it, that machine?' he said.

Priabin ignored him, thought for a moment, and then said: 'We couldn't do it any faster — a lot slower, in fact.' He looked across at the body and said: 'Get that out of here, you two — now.' Holokov looked at Tortyev, and the policeman nodded. The two detectives hoisted the body to its dragging feet, and took it through the door.

The break seemed to calm both men. When they were alone, Tortyev said: 'What are they checking out?'

'They've got a list of less than a dozen top aeronautics experts in America and Europe, young enough and fit enough to be our man. But they're checking current whereabouts of all of them, and it's taking time… too much time,' he added quietly, his voice strained. 'They've linked into the First Directorate's computer, whose banks have constant monitor-records, as you know, on thousands of useful or important public and scientific figures in the West. The answers are coming…'

'But they might be too late.'

'Too true.'

Priabin left his desk and began to pace the room, his hand cupping his chin, or pulling at his lower lip. It was minutes before he spoke again. Then he said: 'I can't speed up the process. We'll either get the information in time, or we won't. In which case, I prefer not to think about it. But, what else can I do — what else can I ask that bloody machine to do at the same time as it's processing these people?' He was standing before Tortyev, a look of appeal on his face.

Tortyev was silent for a moment, then he said: 'Anything to do with aircraft. Check everyone and everything, Dmitri.'

'How?'

'Check on every file of every person we know to be connected with the American or European aerospace programmes, or who ever has been connected…' Tortyev's face seemed to illuminate from within. 'They sent a young, fit man — with brains. Why not an astronaut? One of our own cosmonauts would know what to look for, know how to analyse information received from someone like this Baranovich, wouldn't he?'

Priabin was silent for a moment. 'It seems unlikely, doesn't it?' he said, wanting to be convinced.

'Well — is it, though? Think of it. You're looking for a man in his thirties, fit, intelligent, elusive… you thought he was an agent, at first. He has to possess some of the qualities of a commando, and of a scientist. The NASA astronauts are the mostly highly-trained people in the world. Why not?'

Priabin seemed still reluctant. 'Mm. I wonder?'

'You don't have too much time in which to wonder, Dmitri,' Tortyev reminded him.

'I know! Let me think… I wonder how many files there are relating to astronauts and to air force pilots, and the like?'

'Hundreds — perhaps thousands. Why?'

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