“Dodgy, eh? Well, that says it all.”
The prime minister’s reply arrived within twenty-four hours, also in code, but the ambassador translated.
Dodgy are my favorite kind of people stop happy to assist if you arrange particulars.
And while they waited for his appearance, three days after receipt of the cable, the embassy buzzed with activity. Other cables came and went, and Harriman met with the British ambassador in Moscow. Mia was amazed at the running of the embassy, understaffed though it was, and was careful to stay out of the way. Her role as a representative of the White House was worn thin, and Alexia was an obvious liability.
But at the end of each day, the three preceding the prime minister’s arrival and the three while he visited, Mia and Alexia enjoyed a sort of honeymoon, hampered only by one immobilized arm and the need to talk in bug-resistant whispers.
“I like this,” Mia murmured into Alexia’s neck on one of the nights after passion had run its course. “It’s so much more exciting when it’s secret, forbidden, and silent. So when I touch you here and here, and you get all excited, you can’t make any sound.”
Alexia giggled. “Just imagine if we did. The NKVD men listening to us would get very excited and then go home to their wives. ‘Why, Boris,’” she mimicked. “‘Why this sudden passion when you come home each night from work?’”
Mia snickered but then grew serious. “Darling, I need to ask you something very important.”
“What’s that?”
“You’re really certain you want to come back with me? I know you agreed, but I also know you’re a patriot, and it must be like a leap into empty space for you.”
“It’s absolutely a leap. And I don’t really want to leave Russia. I still have a grandmother who doesn’t know where I am or even if I’m alive. But Russia doesn’t want me anymore. If Molotov didn’t have me killed, all that’s left is the Gulag, and when I came out of that, there’d be nothing much left at all. I think I’m forced to go, but at least I’ll be with you.”
“I love knowing you trust me so much, but there’s so much about me you don’t know. I’m afraid when you find out, you’ll pull away.”
“Tell me now and end the uncertainty. What could you possibly do that would make me love you less?”
Mia breathed for several long moments into Alexia’s hair, then leaned back and glanced away.
“I… uh… I killed my father.”
“What? How? For what reason?”
“Not with my hands, but with my words, by shaming him to death. I discovered that he’d seduced a woman who had been, briefly, my lover, and I called him a pig. He said, “We are both sinners, but I acted as a natural man while you are an abomination. I speak a father’s curse on you for it.”
Alexia covered Mia’s hand with her own. “How awful. What did you answer?”
“I laughed and said I spat on his pathetic curse. His words, ‘sinner, abomination, curse,’ were all magic words from his silly scriptures and couldn’t touch me. I could live with my ‘sin,’ but could he live with being a pitiful, hypocritical old fool? Our quarrel was overheard by neighbors, and that humiliation was enough to push him over the edge. Literally. He committed suicide by jumping from our roof.”
Alexia lifted Mia’s hand and brushed her lips over the back of it.
“Loyalty to the father, like to the homeland, runs deep in our souls, doesn’t it? When we withdraw it, we suffer a great guilt.”
Mia turned her hand and cupped Alexia’s lovely Slavic face. “Yes. It’s a Russian thing, I suppose. Even when they disappoint us.”
“Before I was a soldier, I was a teacher, and I believe in seeing things as they are, not what we wish them to be or what tradition tells us they are. Right now, I love only you and the comrades who fought with me at the front. All the rest is shadows.”
Mia could think of nothing to reply, and, like the Inquisitor’s prisoner, she responded with a kiss.
Winston Churchill and his secretary were already in the banquet room enjoying wine and hors d’oeuvres when Mia and Alexia entered. Harriman waved them over to join the group.
“Mr. Prime Minister, may I introduce Mia Kramer? And this is Alexia Mazarova, of whom I wrote you recently.”
Churchill offered his hand, the one that was not holding his wineglass and cigar. “Harry’s assistant, eh? I believe I saw you lurking behind him once or twice in Tehran. So, Harry sent you to Moscow but didn’t arrange for you to get home? And look at you. You’ve obviously been wounded in the line of duty. Shame on him.”
Mia chuckled, studying his square and slightly puffy bulldog face.
“Mr. Hopkins shouldn’t be ashamed. The mission took an unexpected turn, and he couldn’t know that I needed to return home at this particular moment.”
“Awfully nice chap, that Harry, but he should keep a better eye on you. No telling the things that can happen to a young lady alone in Moscow.”
Churchill turned finally to Alexia. “And this is the dodgy companion.” He stepped back, obviously scrutinizing her uniform. “I must say, you left out some important details, old fellow. I had no idea she’d…”
Harriman shushed him with a finger to his lips and a glance toward the ceiling.
Churchill nodded and changed course. “…that she’d be so attractive.”
“So, Mr. Prime Minister, you are scheduled to depart tomorrow at noon. Do you foresee any obstacles to your departure… as discussed in your cable?”
Churchill puffed on his cigar. “No, we’ve made our plans and shall stick by them. Unfortunately, Mr. Stalin has invited me to a festive dinner this evening, and you know how that always ends.” His mouth flattened out into a rubbery smile.
Mia translated his banter into Russian for Alexia’s benefit, though she, too, seemed frustrated by the apparent small talk and by the impossibility of discussing the escape plan.
Harriman was doing his best. “Miss Kramer would like to attend the departure. I’ll be giving a brief speech, about the promising future of Anglo-Soviet relations, and I expect you will have a few words to say yourself. Who will accompany our young lady?”
Churchill squinted for a moment, obviously trying to extrapolate from the remark the real information being requested, then seem to grasp it was merely a question of “How do we get the women past Soviet security?”
Again the prime minister puffed on his cigar, apparently formulating a coded reply. “Don’t worry about it, old fellow. General Ismay has a charming adjutant, Captain something or other. I’ll see to it that she’s well taken care of.”
Mia made a note of the information. She knew Ismay was a general in the prime minister’s delegation, and apparently his adjutant, who was a captain, would be the one to guide them onto the field. The captain’s name would probably emerge later in the dinner conversation. Things were moving along.
Mia and Alexia spent the rest of the luncheon following the group surrounding the prime minister and then eating a meal far superior to what they’d been given before. All of it was marked by superficial banter and political gossip. The escape plan the next day never came up again, nor did the aforementioned captain.
“I’m sorry. I have no idea what’s going on,” Alexia said when they were alone after the luncheon.
Mia bent toward her and whispered, “I think you aren’t supposed to. It’s all small talk and false leads to confuse anyone listening. I have confidence the ambassador will tell us what to do tomorrow.”
“You trust your politicians?”
“This one I do.”
The morning of the departure of the British delegation, Harriman suggested one last walk in the garden. Once they were some hundred feet from the door, he said, “Churchill’s man is Captain David Laughlin. He’ll meet our car upon arrival, and while the prime minister and I are giving our little speeches, he’ll escort you to the airplane.”
“Anything special we have to do?” Mia asked.
“Yes.” He turned his attention to Alexia. “You must change out of that uniform and into some of Miss Kramer’s clothes again. A Red Army soldier will never get past the guard. You must pass as one of the British delegation. A secretary, perhaps.”
“Anything else?” Mia asked.
“Keep in mind that since Molotov has not provided an exit visa or official military discharge, what we’re undertaking will be a grave offense to the Soviets. It is critical that the prime minister, or my office for that matter, not be compromised at this critical time, so if anything goes wrong, if you’re stopped or recognized, we must disavow you.”
It was an ominous warning, but the alternatives had run out. “I understand.”
The driver brought the embassy car to a stop in front of the main terminal, and a young officer with a rather bland English face stepped toward them to open the rear door. As Mia struggled out, he offered his hand.
“Captain Laughlin?” she asked, shaking it. “Yes, ma’am,” he said, repeating the gesture with Alexia. “I’ll escort you to the prime minister’s plane while he’s addressing the public.”
“Who are we going to say we are?” Mia still hadn’t gotten the whole picture.
“You’ll be yourself. But this young lady will be Catherine Dunn, one of the prime minister’s secretaries.” He handed over an envelope of papers.
“Cassrin Don.” Unaccustomed to the “th,” Alexia repeated the name awkwardly.
“However. If she’s identified and blocked from entry, we will say the forgeries are Russian and that we do not know her. The prime minister is willing to appear taken advantage of but not complicit.”
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