bannerbanner
Diktat: Fractured Reflection
Diktat: Fractured Reflection

Полная версия

Diktat: Fractured Reflection

Язык: Английский
Год издания: 2025
Добавлена:
Настройки чтения
Размер шрифта
Высота строк
Поля
На страницу:
2 из 3

Volkov’s smile did not waver. He set his glass down on the polished surface of a map table. For a moment, Sineus saw the general’s reflection in the dark wood, and beside it, his own. The image was distorted by the varnish, his face wavering, splitting into two overlapping visages that did not quite align. A fractured reflection. He looked away, focusing on the map of Stalingrad.


– I did not bring you here for commendations, Commander, – Volkov said, his tone shifting. The warmth receded, replaced by cold purpose. – I brought you here because we have a problem. A matter of the highest state security.


He let the words hang in the air. This was the true beginning. The pleasantries were over.


– One of our most vital assets has been compromised, – Volkov went on. He paced slowly in front of the maps, his hands clasped behind his back. – A man. Dr. Viktor Sokolov. Perhaps you have heard of him.


Sineus had not. The name meant nothing. He remained silent.


– He was one of our most brilliant physicists, working on a project of immense strategic importance. Two days ago, he defected. He killed three Directorate agents and vanished.


Volkov stopped pacing and turned to face Sineus directly. His blue eyes were hard as chips of ice.


– He did not leave empty-handed. He took with him the entire project’s research. Everything. We are calling it the Sokolov Cipher.


Volkov was building a frame. A simple, severe matter of treason. Sineus felt his own deep-seated distrust of men who fought wars from quiet, warm rooms. The general’s words were meant to impress upon him the magnitude of the loss. They did.


– We need him found, Commander. We need that data back before it falls into the wrong hands.


Sineus felt the trap closing. This was not a military operation. This was a manhunt. This was NKVD work.


– General, – Sineus said, his voice level. – With respect, this sounds like a matter for the People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs. My men are riflemen, not investigators.


The challenge was laid. A question of jurisdiction. A test of his own.


Volkov smiled again, but this time it held no warmth. It was the smile of a man who holds all the cards.


– The NKVD is a blunt instrument, Commander. They would put a bullet in Sokolov’s head from a hundred meters and call it a victory. I need the cipher. And I need Sokolov alive, if possible. But more than that, I need a man who can think like the enemy. A man with… unique instincts.


He let the word hang in the air. Instincts. The same word he had used to describe the premonition at the rail junction. Volkov knew. He did not know how he knew, but he knew. The realization was a jolt of ice water in Sineus’s gut. He was not chosen for his service record. He was chosen for the anomaly in his head, the one he himself dismissed as shell-shock. The price of his strange gift was this unwanted attention. This leash.


– Sokolov is not just a traitor, – Volkov added, his voice dropping lower. – He is a commodity. And there is another buyer in the market. The Ahnenerbe Occult Bureau is also looking for him.


The name sent a chill through Sineus that had nothing to do with the winter outside. The Ahnenerbe. The Nazi’s own secret directorate, a nest of fanatics and occultists who dabbled in things far stranger than politics. The war he knew, the one of artillery and trenches, was a thin crust over something much deeper and darker.


– The Germans cannot get that data, – Volkov stated. It was not an opinion. It was an absolute. – If they do, the advantage they gain will be catastrophic. This is now a race.


He walked back to the table and picked up a sealed oilskin file. He held it out to Sineus.


– Your orders are simple. Find Sokolov. Retrieve the cipher. You will be given a small team, including your Sergeant Major. You will have priority access to all transport and resources. You will answer only to me.


He paused, his eyes locking with Sineus’s.


– Find him. At any cost.


The order was absolute. The weight of it was immense. To refuse was impossible. It would mean a tribunal, a bullet, or a slow death in a camp. His noble birth would be a death sentence. To accept was to become this man’s personal hound, sent on a chase he did not understand, using an ability he did not trust. He was being moved from a soldier’s ignorant loyalty to a state of knowing servitude.


Sineus looked at the file in Volkov’s hand. He gave a single, sharp nod.


He had made his choice. He had to.


Volkov’s expression relaxed. He handed the file to Sineus. It was heavy, dense with papers.


– Good. Your team is being assembled. You leave in one hour. Dismissed, Commander.


Sineus took the file. He turned without a word and walked to the door. His hand was steady as he pulled it open. The aide was waiting in the corridor, his face impassive. The sounds of the headquarters – the distant clatter of a typewriter, the hum of electricity – rushed back in.


The air in the hallway was cold and smelled of dust. The warmth of the general’s office was gone.

The Noose

The file Volkov had given him was a cold weight in his greatcoat pocket. It felt heavier than the pistol on his hip. Sineus walked through the muddy, churned-up grounds of the rear echelon headquarters, leaving the warmth and the hum of the general’s command post behind. The air was sharp with the smell of coal smoke and frost. His goal was to reach the staging barracks assigned to him, to brief the men Volkov had chosen. His men. The thought was a lie before it even formed. They were not his men. They were Volkov’s. He was Volkov’s.


His head still throbbed, a dull, persistent ache behind the eyes. A souvenir from the fracture. He thought of the general’s words. *Your instincts are sharp.* Volkov knew. He did not know how, but the man had looked straight through him, past the uniform and the rank, and seen the flaw inside. The anomaly. He felt like a specimen pinned to a board, his strangeness noted and approved for use. The feeling was worse than the cold.


He found the barracks. A long, low wooden building smelling of wet wool and oiled rifles. Inside, the light from a few bare bulbs was yellow and weak. It was a world away from the glowing green maps and polished tables of the Directorate. This was a soldier’s world. Practical. Worn. Honest. Two men were waiting for him, standing by a rough wooden table. Sergeant Major Boris Kulagin, his face a roadmap of old campaigns, his presence as solid and dependable as the earth. And Political Officer Pavel Morozov, his posture rigid, his face clean and unlined, an observer sent to ensure ideological purity.


Sineus laid the oilskin file on the table. The sound was a flat, final slap in the quiet room. He did not open it all the way. He slid out a single sheet of paper with the mission objective typed in stark, black letters. He had decided on the walk over. They would get the what, not the why. Not the how. Not yet.


– We have new orders, – Sineus said. His voice was flat. He was a commander giving a briefing. It was a role he knew. A mask he could wear. – We are being detached from the front. Our objective is a man. A defector named Dr. Viktor Sokolov.


Kulagin’s eyes, which had been on Sineus, flickered to Morozov and back again. He said nothing. He was a veteran who knew the shape of a bad order when he saw one. Morozov, however, stepped closer to the table, his gaze fixed on the paper as if it were scripture.


– A manhunt, – Kulagin said. It was not a question. It was a diagnosis. The word hung in the air, smelling of back alleys and summary executions.


– This is a matter of state security, Sergeant Major, – Morozov stated, his voice crisp. He had not been asked. He was asserting his place in the conversation. His place above Kulagin. – The Party has deemed it a priority.


Kulagin ignored him, his eyes still locked on Sineus.


– With respect, Commander. This is NKVD work. – Kulagin’s voice was low, rough like gravel. – This is for men who count bodies in basements, not on battlefields. We are soldiers. This is a stain.


Morozov stiffened.


– The Party has determined this is a military matter, Sergeant Major. Your opinion on what constitutes a stain has been noted. – He made a small, deliberate motion toward the notebook in his breast pocket. The threat was unspoken but clear. – The Commander’s duty is to the State. Not to his personal comfort.


Sineus felt the two forces pulling at him. Kulagin’s loyalty, a shield forged in combat. Morozov’s ideology, a cage built from doctrine. He looked from one man to the other. He saw the trap Volkov had laid, now illuminated by the yellow light of this bare room. Refuse, and he was a traitor. A nobleman of suspect birth, insubordinate at a critical moment. He would be shot. Kulagin, for his open dissent, would be shot alongside him. Accept, and he became Volkov’s personal hound, leashed and owned, sent to do the work of the secret police he despised.


He thought of the hard right. The choice that costs. What was it here? To die with a clean conscience, and let his sergeant die for it too? Or to swallow the poison and live, to protect his man from the consequences of his own loyalty? His integrity for Kulagin’s life. His soul for his sergeant’s life. A simple trade.


He looked at a smear of grease on the table, a dark, irregular shape. His own reflection stared back, distorted and broken. A fractured image of a man caught between two impossible choices. He saw the commander he was, and the hunter he was being asked to become.


He made the choice. The price was his freedom, paid in full. He would become the tool. He would wear the stain. But Kulagin would live.


– Your concerns are noted, Sergeant Major, – Sineus said, his voice devoid of emotion. He did not look at Kulagin. He looked at the map spread on the far wall, at the red lines pushing west. – But the orders are clear. Morozov is correct. Our duty is to the State.


The words tasted like ash in his mouth. He had moved from enduring the war to actively participating in its dirtiest secrets. The tension in the room did not break, but it changed. It was no longer a debate. It was a hierarchy.


Kulagin gave a single, sharp nod. His face was stone. He had argued. He had lost. He would obey. That was his code.


Morozov allowed himself a small, tight smile of satisfaction. The system had won. Ideology had proven stronger than a soldier’s sentiment.


– We will need equipment, transport, and clearance, – Sineus said, turning his attention fully to the operational details. He was a commander again, planning a mission. It was safer ground. – Morozov, your directorate can provide the necessary authorizations. I want them within the hour. Kulagin, prepare a list of supplies. Standard reconnaissance loadout. We travel light.


He was giving orders. He was in command. But he knew it was an illusion. He was a prisoner of the mission, and Morozov was his warden.


– There are additional papers, Commander, – Morozov said. He slid a thin folder from the main file. – Standard acceptance of special assignment protocols. They require your signature.


Of course they did. A final turn of the screw. A formal acknowledgment of the leash. Sineus picked up the pen beside the folder. The ink was black. He thought of the black mark Kulagin had earned in the hospital, the one Morozov had so carefully noted. Now he would have his own. A much larger one.


He signed his name on the line. The motion was fluid, practiced. The signature of a nobleman, taught by his father decades ago. The last remnant of a dead world, signing itself away in service to the new one. He pushed the folder back toward Morozov.


The deed was done.


The air in the room was still and heavy. The only sound was the faint hiss of the wind outside.


Sineus picked up the mission file. He turned to a fresh page.

The Silent Safe House

The town was a ghost. It was a collection of grey, concrete-block buildings huddled against the cold, a place for rear-echelon clerks and quartermasters to wait out the war. The address Volkov had provided was for one of these anonymous apartment blocks. Number seventeen. A place meant to be invisible.


Zoya Koval moved toward it. She was the partisan guide assigned to them, a woman as quiet and grim as the winter landscape. She flowed through the deepening twilight, less a person walking than a shadow detaching itself from other shadows. She reached the door to the third-floor apartment and stopped. She did not knock. She produced a thin strip of metal from her pocket and went to work on the lock. There was no sound. Only a faint click as the tumblers gave way. She pushed the door open a few centimeters and froze, listening.


Sineus stood two meters behind her, his hand resting on the grip of his pistol. His goal was simple. Find Sokolov, or find a trail. Everything else was noise. Kulagin was a solid presence to his right. Morozov, the political officer, stood slightly apart, an observer by nature and by trade.


Zoya gave a slight nod. The apartment was silent.


Sineus moved past her, through the door. Weapon first. The air inside was stale, thick with the smell of cold tobacco and dust. It was a standard Directorate safe house. Functional furniture. A table, three chairs. A map of the region pinned to one wall.


Three men were in the room. All of them were dead.


They were Directorate agents, dressed in the same plain clothes as the clerks in the streets below. One sat at the table, a half-full glass of tea in front of him. Another was in an armchair, a book open on his lap. The third stood by the window, as if looking out at the street. There were no signs of violence. No overturned furniture. No blood. They looked like they had simply stopped.


Kulagin entered behind him, his submachine gun held low. He took in the scene with a single, sweeping glance. His eyes, accustomed to the brutal mathematics of the battlefield, searched for the cause. He found nothing. Morozov followed, his face pale in the dim light. He stopped just inside the doorway, his hand going to his mouth.


– Check them, – Sineus ordered, his voice low.


Kulagin moved to the man at the table. He was a professional. He checked for a pulse at the neck. Nothing. He lifted the man’s eyelid. The pupil was fixed and dilated. He sniffed the glass of tea. He shook his head. He moved to the second man, then the third. The process was the same. Efficient. Clinical.


– No marks, – Kulagin reported. His voice was a quiet rumble. – No wounds. No signs of a struggle. Their skin is cold. They have been dead for hours.


Morozov finally found his voice. It was thin, strained.


– It must be poison. A nerve agent. Something in the air. We should not be in here.


Sineus ignored him. He knew the smell of poison gas. He knew the look of a man choked out by chemicals. This was not that. This was something else. This was silence. This was absence.


He felt a familiar pressure begin to build behind his eyes. A dull throb that started small and grew, a tightening vise. It was the same headache from the rail junction. The same pressure from the Fracture. He fought against it, focusing on the room. On the details. The dust motes dancing in the weak light from the window. The way the pages of the dead man’s book were slightly curled from the damp.


He saw his own reflection in the grimy window pane. A tired, hard face staring back. For a second, the image doubled, a second face overlapping his own, its mouth open in a silent scream. A fractured reflection. He blinked, and it was gone.


– The windows are closed. The door was locked from the inside, – Kulagin said, his voice pulling Sineus back. – If it was gas, the killer would be dead, too.


– Sokolov is a scientist, – Morozov insisted, his need for a logical, state-approved explanation overriding the evidence. He wanted a report he could file. A box he could check. – He could have designed a poison with a delayed reaction. He could have an antidote.


Sineus walked deeper into the room, the pressure in his skull now a sharp, splitting pain. The air grew colder. He saw it near the center of the room. A place where the light seemed to bend wrong. It was a shimmering, vertical line, no wider than his hand. It looked like a flaw in glass, a heat haze that did not move. It buzzed, a low, insistent sound like a fly trapped behind a window.


A memory-wound.


The headache became a roar. The room dissolved. The sounds of his own men faded, replaced by the low buzz. He saw the room as it had been hours ago. The three Directorate agents were alive. They were talking. One was pouring tea.


Then he saw Sokolov.


The scientist was not there in body. It was an echo. A ghost of action impressed upon the world. Sokolov stood where the shimmering cut now hung in the air. He was calm. His movements were economical, precise. He was not a panicked academic. He was an operator.


In his hand, he held a blade. It was not steel. It was a piece of polished darkness, a sliver of obsidian that seemed to drink the light. It did not reflect. It only absorbed. A memory blade.


The echo of Sokolov made a single, precise cutting motion in the air. A motion like a surgeon making an incision. The buzz intensified for a second, then stopped.


The three agents stopped. The man pouring tea froze, his hand outstretched. The man reading the book stared blankly at the page. The man at the window went still. Their life, their momentum, their memory of being alive – it was all just… cut. Severed from them. They were not dead. They were erased.


The vision collapsed. Sineus was back in the room. The three dead men sat in their silent tableau. The shimmering wound in the air remained. Kulagin was looking at him, his expression concerned.


– Commander?


Sineus raised a hand, steadying himself against the table. The wood was cold. Real. He focused on the grain, on the solid fact of it, pushing the phantom images away. The debate was over. They were not hunting a simple traitor. They were hunting a man who could wield the fundamental forces of their world as a weapon. A man who could kill without leaving a mark.


– He was here, – Sineus said. His voice was rough. – He did this.


Morozov stared at him. – Did what? There is nothing here.


Sineus looked at the political officer. He saw a man willfully blind, a man whose entire existence was based on denying the truths that did not fit the doctrine. There was no point in explaining. You could not describe color to a man born without eyes.


The apartment door creaked. Zoya stood there. She had been outside, circling the building, reading the ground the way Kulagin read a battlefield.


– Trail, – she said. One word. It was all that was needed. – Heading west. Toward the marshes. It is fresh. Maybe four, five hours old.


Morozov stepped forward. – We must report this. We must secure the scene and wait for a full investigative team from the Directorate. That is proper procedure.


Sineus looked at the dead men. He looked at the shimmering wound in the air that only he could see. He looked at Zoya, waiting by the door. Proper procedure was a luxury. It was a tool for men who had time. Sokolov had a five-hour lead. By the time a team arrived from headquarters, he would be gone. The trail would be cold. The cipher would be lost.


He had to choose. The safety of the system, or the necessity of the hunt. The easy wrong, or the hard right. He thought of Kulagin’s words in the hospital. The choice was simple. He would trade the risk of the unknown for the certainty of failure. Abandoning procedure was the price. He paid it without a second thought.


– We move now, – Sineus said.


Morozov opened his mouth to object. – Commander, my duty requires me to insist—


– Your duty is to follow my orders, Political Officer, – Sineus cut him off, his voice cold steel. He turned to Kulagin. – Sergeant Major, strip the bodies of any documents. We take anything useful. We leave the rest.


Kulagin nodded, already moving. He understood. The hunt was still on. It had just become infinitely more dangerous. Zoya melted back into the hallway, ready to lead the way.


Sineus took one last look at the silent room. The dead men. The invisible wound hanging in the air. He was no longer a soldier following orders. He was a hunter on the trail of a monster, and he was five hours behind.


The wind picked up outside, rattling the window frame. It carried the smell of snow and damp earth.

The Marshland Truth

The marsh was a cold, grey hell. For four hours, they had pushed through it, following the trail Zoya Koval had found. The partisan moved like a wraith, a slim silhouette against the skeletal trees, her feet finding solid ground where there was only sucking mud. Sineus followed, his greatcoat heavy with freezing rain, the water seeping into his boots. Behind him, Kulagin moved with the steady, uncomplaining rhythm of a man who had walked through worse. Morozov, the political officer, struggled. His clean uniform was stained with filth, his face a mask of exhaustion and disgust. He was a creature of offices and meeting rooms, and the raw, physical truth of the world was an insult to him.


Sineus’s goal was simple. Find Sokolov. The man was a loose thread in the fabric of the state, and his job was to pull that thread tight. The thought was automatic. It was the logic of his profession. But the image of the silent safe house, of the shimmering wound in the air, kept returning. It was a piece of data that did not fit the equation. A stain, as Kulagin had called it.


The rain turned to sleet, sharp and stinging. Zoya stopped. She did not turn. She simply raised a hand, palm flat. The signal was clear. Contact. Sineus moved up beside her, his pistol already in his hand. Through the mist and the falling ice, he saw him. Fifty meters ahead. A figure stumbling through the waist-deep, black water of a bog. Dr. Viktor Sokolov.


The scientist was at the end of his strength. Each step was a monumental effort. He was not running. He was just moving, propelled by a will that had long since burned through his body’s fuel. Sineus gave a series of sharp, practiced hand signals. Kulagin moved to the right, a flanking maneuver to cut off any possible retreat. Zoya faded into the reeds on the left. Morozov stayed back, his hand near his own pistol, ready to observe and report.


Sineus advanced. He moved directly toward his target, the cold water rising up his legs, a brutal, numbing shock. He did not feel it. He was a commander closing on an objective. The world narrowed to that single point. The splashing of his own movement. The rasp of his breath. The dark shape of the man ahead.


He was ten meters away when Sokolov finally stopped. The scientist turned slowly, his face gaunt and pale, his eyes hollowed out by exhaustion and something else. Not fear. Resignation. He stood in the icy water, his shoulders slumped. He had nowhere left to run.


– It’s over, Doctor, – Sineus said. His voice was flat, carrying easily over the water. The pistol in his hand was steady.


Sokolov gave a weak, rattling cough. A thin smile touched his lips. It was a terrible sight.


– No, Commander. It’s just beginning.


– On your feet. You are coming with me.


Sokolov made no move to obey. He simply watched Sineus, his gaze unnervingly calm.


– I will. But first, you will see why I ran. You will see the proof.


– I have seen all the proof I need, – Sineus said, his mind flashing to the three dead men in the apartment. – Three dead agents.


– They were not agents. They were jailers, – Sokolov replied, his voice gaining a sliver of strength. – And they were not the first. They will not be the last, unless you see. Unless you understand.


Morozov called out from the bank.

На страницу:
2 из 3