Authors: Brian Freemantle
8
âDead!'
âYes.'
âHow?' There was a report, as stiffly formal as the colonel standing before him, but Malik wanted more, much more. He wanted
everything.
âI responded immediately to your telephone instructions,' recited Panchenko, monotone. âBut it was evening, as you know. It entailed going to the Comrade Director's home â¦'
Malik sighed, curbing the impatience. It was as if the man were reading from the inadequate report he had already submitted. Malik said: âHow did you know Agayans would be at home?'
âI did not,' said Panchenko. âI learned by telephoning the duty registration clerk here that Agayans had already left. The garage said the journey was logged to his home, on Gogolevskiy Boulevard â¦'
Unimpeachable police work, acknowledged Malik. He said: âWas any indication given that you were coming?'
Panchenko allowed himself a frown. âTelephoning ahead, you mean?'
âYes.' His broken shoulder ached, like it often did, always an unnecessary intrusion. He resisted massaging it.
âThere was no prior contact,' insisted Pancheno stiffly.
Malik wondered if the man slept in an attitude of permanent attention. He said: âHow many men were assembled?'
âA squad. Four men besides myself,' said the security chief.
âWere the four with you at Gofkovskoye Shosse?'
âI telephoned the department here, instructing they should be assembled.'
âSo you returned here to pick them up?'
âNo. We arranged a meeting point at Verdandskovo.'
âSo there was no possibility of Agayans being aware of any security men gathering outside his home?'
âNone whatsoever,' assured Panchenko. He thought the other man's disability made him appear ominous and threatening.
âContinue.'
âThe Comrade Director answered the door himself. He was a bachelor, as I have said in the report. He lived alone.'
âThe door opened at once?'
âYes.'
Malik inferred the colonel's impatience at being taken entirely through an episode he believed already properly accounted for. Further to irritate the impatience, Malik said: âYou haven't set out in the report what his attitude was at being confronted by you.'
Panchenko hesitated, then said: âSurprise.'
âSurprise would have been obvious,' said Malik. âWhat about fear?'
âNot until after we entered the apartment.'
âBefore which there was some conversation?'
âYes.'
âWho spoke first?'
Again there was a pause, as if for recall. Panchenko said: âWe practically spoke together. The Comrade Director asked what we were there for as I announced I had orders for his arrest.'
âWhat was Agayans' reply to that?'
âHe asked for what offence. I told him I did not know.'
Malik isolated Panchenko's mistake and decided to wait to use it to undermine the stiff-backed attitude later. Hurrying on to prevent Panchenko realizing it, Malik said: âWhat then?'
âHe asked upon whose authority â I said yours,' recounted the security chief. âHe said he had done nothing wrong and asked if he could get dressed: that's how he got to the bedroom.'
âDressed?' queried Malik.
âWhen we got to the apartment Agayans was in bed,' reminded Panchenko. âIt's in the report.'
âWhat time was this?'
âApproximately nine.'
âHe was wearing nightclothes at nine o'clock at night?'
âAnd a robe.'
âAt once,' prompted Malik.
âI do not understand,' complained Panchenko.
âYou told me earlier that when you knocked the door was opened
at once
by Agayans,' said Malik. âIf he had been in bed â and before answering the door had to put on a robe â there should have been a delay.'
âI â¦' started Panchenko and stopped. Then he resumed: âIt appeared to me that the door opened at once: I agree now there would have been some slight delay.'
âSo that part of your report is wrong?'
âYes,' conceded the colonel tightly.
âYou agreed to his getting dressed?'
âAlthough he was under arrest upon your orders I did not think I should detain a Comrade Director in his nightclothes.'
âYou said Agayans showed fear, after his initial surprise,' prompted Malik. âSo far I don't get any impression of fear. It seems almost a normal conversation.'
âThe request to get dressed was made very subserviently,' insisted Panchenko. âIt was anything but a normal conversation.'
âTell me about going into the bedroom.'
Panchenko swallowed and said: âHe walked directly from the main room into the bedroom. With my squad I remained in the living area. After a while it occurred to me that Agayans was taking a long time to get ready. I hurried into the bedroom. He was on the far side with the bed between us. The gun was already against his head. The moment I entered, he fired.'
Malik intentionally let the silence build up between them, all the time staring fixedly at the colonel. Panchenko remained rigidly to attention: Malik supposed the man would have learned to remain immobile like that on a hundred parade grounds. He said: âDoes the main living room lead directly into the bedroom?'
âNo,' conceded Panchenko.
âYou said he walked directly from the main room into the bedroom,' reminded Malik.
âI meant to convey there was no further conversation between us,' said Panchenko. âThere is a corridor leading to the kitchen, bathroom and bedroom.'
âSo without any further conversation between you, Igor Fedorovich Agayans walked from the living room, down the corridor and into his bedroom?' Malik was not sure but there appeared to be a sheen of perspiration upon the other man's forehead. Raising his voice to make the demand, he said: âThe corridor is straight, from the main living area? With the bedroom at its far end?'
âNo,' admitted Panchenko, in further desperate concession. âThe corridor bends, halfway along.'
âSo you did not know if Agayans had gone directly into the bedroom?'
âThere was only the bathroom or kitchen, as alternatives.'
âWhen you assembled your men on Verdandskovo you went at once to Gogolevskiy Boulevard?'
âYes.' In his caution Panchenko's stance broke, the man's head going slightly to one side in his effort to anticipate a new direction.
âWithout any outside reconnaissance of the block? Obtaining plans, even?' Like I did, Malik thought.
âThere was no outside reconnaissance,' conceded the security man.
âThere might have been a fire escape from the unseen bathroom into which Agayans could easily have gone!' said Malik. âA fire escape down which he could have fled. Is it normal for you, as an arresting officer, to allow a detainee to go out of sight?'
âNo,' said Panchenko, tightly again.
âDesperate enough, he could have returned instead to shoot all of you rather than shooting himself, couldn't he?'
âI walked with him to the beginning of the corridor,' blurted Panchenko.
âThat isn't in your report,' challenged Malik at once. âYou said: “I â and my squad â remained in the living room”.'
âI ⦠we ⦠did. I went with him to the commencement of the corridor: he went from there by himself.'
âWhy walk to the beginning of the corridor and then stop?' demanded Malik. He shifted, trying to alleviate the shoulder ache.
âHe said he wanted privacy to get dressed.'
âA detainee giving an order to the arresting head of security of the First Chief Directorate!' said Malik, allowing the incredulity.
âA mistake,' admitted Panchenko, collapsing further.
âTwice you've told me there was no further conversation after Agayans asked to dress,' reminded Malik. âThat was a lie, wasn't it?'
âIt was not a lie,' tried Panchenko desperately. Sweat was visibly leaking from the man now.
âBut you said nothing about the request for privacy.'
âIt did not seem important.'
âNot important!' exclaimed Malik, incredulous again. âIt allowed the most vital witness in an ongoing inquiry to kill himself! They were probably the most important words he spoke!'
âProbably,' mumbled Panchenko, his voice difficult to hear.
âIsn't it regulations, having once taken a person into custody, that that person shall remain at all times under observation, until placed in a cell?' persisted Malik relentlessly.
âAt that precise moment I did not consider I had taken Comrade Director Agayans into custody,' avoided Panchenko, attempting to rally. âI was not formally in possession of any specific charge.'
âDon't be pedantic,' rejected Malik impatiently.
âThat is the wording of the regulation,' said Panchenko, achieving a small victory.
Choosing his words carefully, Malik said: âHaving been dismissed by an arrested man, what did you then do? Remain at the corridor mouth? Or return to your squad?'
Panchenko's face burned. âReturned to my squad.'
âWas there any conversation between you?'
âThere was some discussion about how the passengers would be split between two cars,' remembered Panchenko. âI said I would accompany the Comrade Director, with the driver and one back-up man and the other car should provide escort.' Panchenko appeared to relax slightly, feet touching safer ground.
âHow long did that discussion take?'
âTen minutes,' replied Panchenko at once.
âApproximately ten? Or exactly ten?'
âExactly ten.'
âHow do you know it was ten minutes exactly?'
âAs I walked from the head of the corridor I checked my watch. It was automatic to look again the moment I became concerned about Agayans.'
âYou went to the bedroom without saying anything to the rest of the squad?'
Panchenko's throat was moving. âI think I may have told them to stay where they were.'
âHow did you go to the bedroom?' picked up Malik. âDid you walk? Or did you run?'
âI walked quickly.'
âYou were wearing uniform?'
âOf course,' said Panchenko, almost truculently.
âThe regulation boots are comparatively heavy. Do you think Agayans might have heard you?'
âI have no way of telling.'
âYou didn't shout?'
âNo.'
âHaving respected the man's wish for privacy, you didn't call a warning that you were coming into his bedroom?'
âNo.'
âWas the door closed or open?'
âAjar.'
âDid you knock?'
âNo.'
âOr shout, finally?'
âNo.'
âWhat did you do?'
âPushed straight in.'
âPrivacy was completely unimportant now?'
âI was alarmed. With good reason.'
âVery good reason,' sneered Malik. âSo what did you see, in the bedroom that you finally entered?'
âAgayans was on the far side of the room. The bed was between us. He had the gun to his head. As I went into the room he pulled the trigger.'
Malik sighed once more. He said: âHow was he dressed? Still in his nightclothes? Or had he changed?'
âStill in his nightclothes.'
âSo for ten minutes he had stood in his nightclothes holding a gun to his head. Why do you think it took him ten minutes to pull the trigger?'
Panchenko shrugged. âIndecision, perhaps: he was choosing whether or not to kill himself.'
âThere was a moment, as you entered, before he pulled the trigger?'
âSeconds.'
âDid you say anything, in those seconds?'
âI shouted.'
âAt last!' mocked Malik. âWhat did you shout?'
âI think “Stop”. Maybe it was “Don't do it”.'
âYou weren't frightened he might turn the gun on you?'
âIt was against his head. It was obvious what he intended to do.'
âBut you couldn't get to him?'
âNot in time,' said Panchenko. âThe impact of the shot threw him against the wall, near the bedhead. His body overturned a side table. He fell half on and half off the bed.'
âYou checked he was dead?'
âThat wasn't necessary. A lot of his head was gone. The squad came running. I told them to call an ambulance.'
âNot a doctor?'
âIt was obviously too late for a doctor.'
âWhat about the civilian militia?'
âI am empowered to investigate and handle crimes affecting KGB personnel,' said Panchenko, quoting regulations again.
âIn those first few moments in the apartment you told him the arrest was upon my orders?' backtracked Malik.
âYes.'
âAnd all he said was that he wanted to change?' persisted Malik. âNo protests? Not something like “This is a mistake”?'
âNo.'
Abruptly, trying further to off-balance the man, Malik demanded: âNo insistence upon making a telephone call to see what it was all about?'
Panchenko blinked. âNone at all.'
It hadn't worked, Malik realized. Still hoping, he said: âWhat about names?'
âNames?'
The chance was getting away. Malik said: âTo what names did Agayans refer?'
âI have told you everything about the conversation between Agayans and myself,' insisted Panchenko. âThere was no reference to anyone by name.'
âNo further reference to me?'
âNo.'
âOr to anyone else?'
âNo one.'
He had not unsettled the other man as he imagined, thought Malik, disappointed. He needed time to analyse everything that had emerged. What more could there be from Panchenko? Malik said: âDo you consider from this meeting that your report was satisfactory?'
âI did not understand the importance of several things.'