would a former—he checked—lieutenant colonel in the Third Chief Directorate of the KGB go out of his way to kill a pimp? Was not Sergey Golovko an equally likely target for the killing, and would that not also explain the murder of the two supposed killers, for eliminating the wrong target? The detective lieutenant opened a desk drawer for a bottle of aspirin. It wasn’t the first headache this case had developed, and it didn’t seem likely that this would be the last. Whoever Suvorov was, if Golovko had been the target, he had not made the decision to kill the man himself. He’d been a contract killer, and therefore someone else had made the decision to do the killing.
But who?
And why?
Cui bonuo was the ancient question—old enough that the adage was in a dead language. To whom the good? Who profited from the deed?
He called Abramov and Ustinov. Maybe they could run Suvorov down, and then he’d fly north to interview the man. Provalov drafted the fax and fired it off to St. Petersburg, then left his desk for the drive home. He checked his watch. Only two hours late. Not bad for this case.
General Lieutenant Gennady Iosifovich Bondarenko looked around his office. He’d had his three stars for a while, and sometimes he wondered if he’d get any further. He’d been a professional soldier for thirty-one years, and the job to which he’d always aspired was Commanding General of the Russian Army. Many good men, and some bad ones, had been there. Gregoriy Zhukov, for one, the man who’d saved his country from the Germans. There were many statues to Zhukov, whom Bondarenko had heard lecture when he was a wet-nosed cadet all those years before, seeing the blunt, bulldog face and ice-blue determined eyes of a killer, a true Russian hero whom politics could not demean, and whose name the Germans had come to fear.
That Bondarenko had come this far was no small surprise even to himself. He’d begun as a signals officer, seconded briefly to Spetsnaz in Afghanistan, where he’d cheated death twice, both times taking command of a panic-worthy situation and surviving with no small distinction. He’d taken wounds, and killed with his own hands, something few colonels do, and few colonels relished, except at a good officers’ club bar after a few stiff ones with their comrades.
Like many generals before him, Bondarenko was something of a “political” general. He’d hitched his career-star to the coattails of a quasi-minister, Sergey Golovko, but in truth he’d never have gone to general-lieutenant’s stars without real merit, and courage on the battlefield went as far in the Russian army as it did in any other. Intelligence went further still, and above all came accomplishment. His job was what the Americans called J-3, Chief of Operations, which meant killing people in war and training them in peace. Bondarenko had traveled the globe, learning how other armies trained their men, sifted through the lessons, and applied them to his own soldiers. The only difference between a soldier and a civilian was training, after all, and Bondarenko wanted no less than to bring the Russian army to the same razor-sharp and granite-hard condition with which it had kicked in the gates of Berlin under Zhukov and Koniev. That goal was still off in the future, but the general told himself that he’d laid the proper foundation. In ten years, perhaps, his army would be at that goal, and he’d be around to see it, retired by then, of course, honorably so, with his decorations framed and hanging on the wall, and grandchildren to bounce on his knee ... and occasionally coming in to consult, to look things over and offer his opinion, as retired general officers often did.
For the moment, he had no further work to do, but no particular desire to head home, where his wife was hosting the wives of other senior officers. Bondarenko had always found such affairs tedious. The military attaché in Washington had sent him a book, Swift Sword, by a Colonel Nicholas Eddington of the American Army National Guard. Eddington, yes, he was the colonel who’d been training with his brigade in the desert of California when the decision had come to deploy to the Persian Gulf, and his troops—civilians in uniform, really—had performed well: Better than well, the Russian general told himself. They’d exercised the Medusa Touch, destroying everything they’d touched, along with the regular American formations, the 10th and 11th cavalry regiments. Together