Sitting next to him, Anastas Mouradian raised a thick, dark eyebrow. One of these days, the copilot and bomb-aimer aboard Sergei's SB-2 would end up in more trouble than he could hope to escape. An emotional Armenian, he couldn't keep what he was thinking off his face.

Enough propaganda. Just give us the mission and let us take care of it. Something like that had to be in Stas' mind. It was in Sergei's mind, too, but he had sense enough not to show it. What nobody saw wouldn't get reported to the NKVD.

Of course, the NKVD could haul you away and shoot you or chuck you into a camp north of the Arctic Circle with no excuse at all. But why make things easy for the Chekists? If you gave them a reason to jump on you, you were almost asking for it, like a girl in tight clothes that didn't cover enough of her.

"Our target is the railroad line that runs southeast from Wilno to Molodetschna," Colonel Borisov went on. Wilno to the Russians, Vilna to the Poles, Vilnius to the Lithuanians… one town with three names, depending on who was talking about it and who held it at any given moment. It was in Poland's hands now. Marshal Smigly-Ridz had refused to give it back to the USSR. The Lithuanians also wanted it again, though they hadn't ruled there for centuries.

Sergei didn't show annoyance, and he didn't show relief, either. Whether he showed it or not, he felt it. They weren't going to fly into East Prussia today. It wasn't that the Germans didn't have fighters and antiaircraft guns inside of Poland-they did. But they seemed much more serious about defending their own people than they did about protecting a bunch of Poles.

"Questions?" Borisov asked.

No one said anything. Borisov did not have a manner that encouraged queries. His face said, Don't waste my time. Not all questions did waste time, but the ones that didn't got asked no more than the ones that did.

After the meeting broke up, Sergeant Ivan Kuchkov asked his superiors, "Well, how are they going to fuck us over this time?"



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