then?â
âNo. If thereâs ever going to be a time itâs now.â
âWe must be sure it hasnât been merely the warped judgment of old men living in the past. We need your young view. For Godâs sake do not patronize usâdo not humor us.â
âNo.â
âYou honestly believe it can be done?â
âIt could be done.â
Count Anatol said through his teeth, âRemember how the Bolsheviks did it twenty-three years agoâremember how few they were?â
Leon said, âVassily has formulated a military plan. I think it is time we heard it.â
Vassily inhaled. âIn outline we need three things. One, a distraction to occupy the Kremlin guard and the Red Army units in the area. Two, a major force to occupy the Kremlin and defend it while key commando squads neutralize the leadershipâStalin, Beria, Malenkov, Zhukov, Vlasov, perhaps a dozen others. Three, a cell of practical leaders prepared to take over the mechanisms of high government and the centers of communication and propaganda.â
General Savinov blinked owlishly in his chair. âExcellent,â he muttered. âSuperb.â
Alex said slowly, âHow large a force have you got in mind?â
âRegiment size,â Vassily answered promptly. âYou canât do it with less.â
âHow do you plan to get them into Moscow?â
âIt can be doneâthatâs all that needs to be said.â
âYouâre talking about a fairly large-scale combat operation then.â
âI am,â Vassily said flatly. âI can do it. But it will take a great deal of support and money. Preparation, intelligence, recruitment, training, planning, transport, ordnance, supply. And time. That is why it must be authorized right now without any further stupid debating. We have got to have it rolling before the Germans take any more ground. Even now we may be too late.â
Anatol said, âPutting us in the curious position of hoping that Stalin can hold out.â
Vassily ignored that; he was staring at Alex, âYou donât agree with it, do you?â
âNo.â
âWhy?â
The weaknesses he saw were as much in Vassilyâs character as they were in the plan itself. But what he said was, âThe time scale doesnât permit itâyouâve said it yourself. It could take six months to prepare it and launch it. I donât think weâve got that kind of time. The war in Russia will be decided by the end of the yearâeither Hitler will take Moscow and Stalingrad ahead of the winter or he wonât make it at all. He knows his Napoleonic historyâthatâs why the panzers are rolling so fast. Theyâve got a deadline and they know it. And that means weâve got a deadline too.â
Vassilyâs mouth hardened into a thin line. âHave you an alternative proposal?â
âNo. Right now? No.â
âGive me the authorization and support I ask for,â Vassily told the council, âand I will have the Kremlin within one hundred days. I give you that pledge on my honor.â
Anatolâs eyebrows went up in black arcs. âAlex, could you promise a faster result than that?â
He had to be honest. âNo.â
âThen it appears we must choose between Vassilyâs plan and none at all.â
13.
The assassin excused himself quietly and walked to the nearest door, some twenty feet from his chair. He stopped a servant and said, âWhereâs the lavatory, please?â The servant gave instructions with jabs of his finger. That much would be seen by anyone in the room who might have been curious enough to be watching. It would explain his abrupt departure and it wasnât likely the others at his own table would take much notice of his absence for quite some time.
He found himself in a narrow corridor that ran through the interior darkness of the villa. A turning brought him to a
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