seemed possible. Did they think he was a spy in their midst? A visitor from Moscow? Maybe from a family they disliked-this was still the old world, and family animosities went on and on.

Or maybe it was his face. Unscarred, inexperienced. He stroked his sore, scratched skin. Maybe they hated to see how far they had come from their own honest boyhoods.

It was well into morning when he realized-late, it seemed to him-that he was the only one without a typewriter. His white paper was lined up evenly with the corner of his desk, useless and clean.

“Supply room?” he asked the air. “Anyone tell me where it is?”

The tired answer of bald scalps and messy heads of dense hair. The snap of typewriter keys.

The security officer’s stone face turned from the wall to meet his gaze-Emil could read nothing in those heavy, sleepless eyes-and nodded in the direction of the door.

Light reflected in the corridor, footsteps ricocheting, and up ahead a white-scarved woman dragged a damp mop. Uniformed Militia stood in pairs, talking and laughing-their shoulder patches matched the one on his dress uniform at home: the red hawk with head in profile, wings folded, on a field of yellow.

This was another world. Some smiled at him as they passed, and a few even nodded cursorily. He read what was stenciled on each door s translucent glass: accounts and external and munitions and toilet and interview. A mousy secretary coming out of the interview room with a notebook to her chest smiled at him. Her eyes twinkled.

The corridor turned left, then right, and at the far end, upon cracked glass, was supplies. He rapped with a loose knuckle, then entered.

A thin, tanned man wearing blue coveralls leaned back in a chair, reading The Spark — yesterdays afternoon edition- drowsily. His sockless, pale ankles were crossed on the counter, his black shoes polished. Behind him, seven overflowing, gray shelving units led to the dim far wall.

“Comrade,” said the thin man as he dropped his feet. “You are to be congratulated. Says right here that the murder rate in the Capital has plummeted fifty percent in the last three months.” He slapped the paper with the back of his hand. “It thanks you.”

Emil closed the door. “Me?”

His smile was rich with yellow teeth. Emil couldn’t place the accent. The man’s bloodshot left eye remained trained on the small side window. “You, yes! Figuratively, at least. All the Comrade Inspectors of the People’s Militia.”

This sudden end to the silence stunned him. He opened his mouth. The end of the silence and its form: a deeply creased, tanned face with a lazy red eye. “Not this inspector,” said Emil. “Only my second day.”

“Then don’t send the rate back up.”

Emil propped himself with wide-set arms against the counter. He was acclimating to conversation. “Do you have a typewriter?”

“Your very lucky day.” The supply clerk smiled, wiping sweat out of his day-length beard. He wandered back into the darkness-his slight limp was apparent beside the hard, vertical lines of the shelves-and returned with an old monstrosity, weaving a little, gasping as he dropped it on the counter. “Beautiful,” he said, and swallowed. “No?”

It looked less like a typewriter than a cumbersome piece of steel furniture.

“You cant go wrong with a classic. German. Weimar, no less.”

Emil touched it timidly. “It works?” It was cold.

“Mostly, sure. Except the J, and the apostrophe. And, if I remember-” He pressed a button that clattered loudly, then squinted his strong eye at the black impression on the black roller. “Yes-the B.”

Emil exhaled. “You have something that works?”

A cool look of judgment filled the clerk’s features. “I shouldn’t do this.” He moved with exaggerated labor, his limp almost a stumble, back into the gloom. One hand fondled his chin, and the other held his backside as he frowned at shelves.

Emil wandered to the muddy, face-high window that looked down on a concrete courtyard, thinking again what he’d thought when he returned after the war: This is a nation of cripples. Dirty officers’ children played soccer in the courtyard, their shouts muted by glass. A cool tickle of sweat drew down his back. Then something hit the counter.

This typewriter was small, virtually new, and all its keys were intact. The clerk tested them with a light finger.

“Is better?”

“Significantly.” Emil lifted it easily with two hands.

“Is worth something, no?”

He set it down again, and waited.

“The last one that went out,” said the clerk, his brown features paling in the square of light from the window, “went for, I believe, five koronas.”

“Five?”

“But you’re new, right? And, after all, this one used to be at your desk.” He talked a quick retreat. “Sergei’s replacement, correct? I thought so. Exactly. Must be fair,” he said, then gazed at the scratched counter. “Poor Sergei.”

The other cadets had eagerly told Emil the rumor of the man he was replacing: Sergei Lvonic had been shot by a 7.62mm Tokarev. A Red officer’s pistol. But like most things that occurred just after the Liberation, it was never investigated.

“What about you?” asked Emil. “Can I know who you are?”

The clerk shrugged. “Roberto.”

“Spain?”

“Everyone thinks that.” He shook his head. “I get points for the Franco martyrs-the girls think I’ve lost my family to the fascists. But no. Argentinian.” He placed a hand over his chest and intoned: “My parents knew the way of their hearts.” The hand dropped and he winked.

Emil leaned closer. “So you know who I am?”

“Who doesn’t? Brod, Emil. Homicide.”

“Then maybe you can explain it to me.”

“Explain what, Comrade?”

That word dropped a curtain between them, as though Roberto had suddenly reached the limits of his affability and was backing up again. “The men,” said Emil. “They hate me. I don’t know why. They don’t speak to me, and there’s been some violence.”

Roberto snorted, impressed. “Violence?” He wiped his damp cheek with a thumb and settled into his chair. “Sergei was loved. You can be sure of that.” He took a pack of Czech cigarettes from his pocket and shook one out. “There weren’t many like Sergei.” He puffed as he lit up. “Don’t worry, they’ll get over it. What they are are…victims of melancholia.”

“After two years? This is melancholy? Someone hits me in the balls, and that’s just melancholy?”

Roberto shrugged in his tired way; none of this was news to him. “Just wait until you see those men really angry.”

The typewriter was, Roberto assured him, a steal at only four koronas, and he included The Spark as a gift. But when Emil returned with his new possessions, he was deep in the silence again. They could not know it had been broken already, so they persevered, keeping their eyes to their desks as he set the typewriter down. He tested the chair with a hand, then settled down and experimented with a few keys. The silence had been broken, whether or not they liked it, and with time it would necessarily dissipate.

Again, that hereditary hope.

He got up and gazed over the big typist’s head at the bulletin board. Poorly printed faces of convicts and escapees, letters from appreciative citizens, and memos with stamps that proved they were words sent down from levels as high as the Central Committee. The memos outlined new laws controlling how the inspectors should go about their jobs: which buildings they could enter without authorization and which they could not; the limits of interrogation methodologies; when a case had to be handed over to state security for reassignment.

The typewriter stopped, and the big inspector-whose name, Emil knew from the files, was Ferenc-glanced at

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