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seemed to have a certain power over women. He knew Gala loved him with every fiber

of her being, and she wasn’t the first one. Now this slim tomboyish dyevochka, hard-

bitten, downright nasty when she needed to be, had fallen under his spell. Which meant

he had the handle on her he was searching for.

“How many times have you been to Eskisёehir?” he asked.

“Enough to know what to expect.”

He sat back. “Where did you learn to answer questions without revealing a thing?”

“If I’m bad, I learned it at my mother’s breast.”

Arkadin looked away. He seemed to have trouble breathing. Without a word, he

opened the door, bolted outside, stalking in small circles like a lion in the zoo.

I ca

his word. At Icoupov’s villa where Arkadin was installed, his host provided a young man.

But when, a week later, Arkadin had beaten his companion nearly into a coma, Icoupov

switched tactics. He spent hours with Arkadin, trying to determine the root of his

outbursts of fury. This failed utterly, as Arkadin seemed at a loss to remember, let alone

explain these frightening episodes.

“I don’t know what to do with you,” Icoupov said. “I don’t want to incarcerate you, but

I need to protect myself.”

“I would never harm you,” Arkadin said.

“Not knowingly, perhaps,” the older man said ruminatively.

The following week a stoop-shouldered man with a formal goatee and colorless lips

spent every afternoon with Arkadin. He sat in a plush upholstered chair, one leg crossed

over the other, writing in a neat, crabbed hand in a tablet notebook he protected as if it

were his child. For his part, Arkadin lay on his host’s favorite chaise longue, a roll pillow behind his head. He answered questions. He spoke at length about many things, but the

things that shadowed his mind he kept tucked away in a black corner of the deepest

depths of his mind, never to be spoken of. That door was closed forever.

At the end of three weeks, the psychiatrist handed in his report to Icoupov and

vanished as quickly as he had appeared. No matter. Arkadin’s nightmares continued to

haunt him in the dead of night when, upon awakening with a gasp and a start, he was

convinced he heard rats scuttling, red eyes burning in the darkness. At those moments,

the fact that Icoupov’s villa was completely vermin-free was of no solace to him. The rats

lived inside him squirming, shrieking, feeding.

The next person Icoupov employed to burrow into Arkadin’s past in an attempt to cure

him of his fits of rage was a woman whose sensuality and lush figure he felt would keep

her safe from Arkadin’s outbursts of fury. Marlene was adept at handling men of all kinds

and kinks. She possessed an unca

from her, and provide it.

At first Arkadin didn’t trust Marlene. Why should he? He couldn’t trust the

psychiatrist. Wasn’t she just another form of analyst sent to coax out the secrets of his

past? Marlene of course noted this aversion in him and set about countering it. The way

she saw it, Arkadin was living under a spell, self-induced or otherwise. It was up to her to concoct an antidote.

“This won’t be a short process,” she told Icoupov at the end of her first week with

Arkadin, and he believed her.

Arkadin observed Marlene walking on little cat feet. He suspected she was smart

enough to know that even the slightest misstep on her part might strike him as a seismic

shift, and then all the progress she’d made in gaining his trust would evaporate like

alcohol over a flame. She seemed to him wary, acutely aware that at any moment he

could turn on her. She acted as if she were in a cage with a bear. Day by day you could

track the training of it, but that didn’t mean it wouldn’t unexpectedly rip your face off.

Arkadin had to laugh at that, the care with which she was treating every aspect of him.

But gradually something else began to creep into his consciousness. He suspected that



she was coming to feel something genuine for him.

Devra watched Arkadin through the windshield. Then she kicked open her door, went

after him. She shaded her eyes against a white sun plastered to a high, pale sky.

“What is it?” she said when she’d caught up to him. “What did I say?”

Arkadin turned a murderous look her way. He appeared to be in a towering rage, just

barely holding himself together. Devra found herself wondering what would happen if he

let himself go, but she also didn’t want to be in his way when it happened.

She felt an urge to touch him, to speak soothingly until he returned to a calmer state of

mind, but she sensed that would only inflame him further. So she went back to the car to

wait patiently for him to return.

Eventually he did, sitting sideways on the seat, his shoes on the ground as if he might

bolt again.

“I’m not going to fuck you,” he said, “but that doesn’t mean I don’t want to.”

She felt he wanted to say something else, but couldn’t, that whatever it was was too

bound up in what had happened to him a long time ago.

“It was a joke,” she said softly. “I was making a stupid joke.”

“There was a time when I would’ve thought nothing of it,” he said, as if talking to

himself. “Sex is unimportant.”

She sensed that he was speaking about something else, something only he knew, and

she glimpsed just how alone he was. She suspected that even in a crowd, even with

friends-if he had any-he’d feel alone. It seemed to her that he’d walled himself off from

sexual melding because it would underscore the depth of his apartness. He seemed to her

to be a moonless planet with no sun to revolve around. Just emptiness everywhere as far

as he could see. In that moment she realized that she loved him.

How long has he been in there?” Luther LaValle asked.

“Six days,” General Kendall replied. He was in his shirtsleeves, which were turned up.

That precaution hadn’t been enough to protect them from spatters of blood. “But I

guarantee that to him it feels like six months. He’s as disoriented as it’s possible for a

human being to be.”

LaValle grunted, peering at the bearded Arab through the one-way mirror. The man

looked like a raw piece of meat. LaValle didn’t know or care whether he was Su

Shi’a. They were the same to him-terrorists bent on destroying his way of life. He took

these matters very personally.

“What’s he given up?”

“Enough that we know the copies of the Typhon intercepts Batt has given us are

disinformation.”

“Still,” LaValle said, “it comes straight from Typhon.”

“This man’s very highly placed, there’s no question whatsoever of his identity, and he

knows of no plans moving into their final stages to hit a major New York building.”

“That in itself could be disinformation,” LaValle said. “These bastards are masters of

that kind of shit.”

“Right.” Kendall wiped his hands on a towel he’d thrown over his shoulder like a chef

at the stove. “They love nothing better than to see us ru

our tails, which is what we’ll be doing if we put out an alert.”

LaValle nodded, as if to himself. “I want our best people to follow up on it. Confirm

the Typhon intercepts.”

“We’ll do our best, but I feel it my duty to report that the prisoner laughed in my face

when I asked him about this terrorist group.”

LaValle snapped his fingers several times. “What are they called again?”

“The Black Lesion, the Black Legion, something like that.”