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Gletkin is reading through the list of charges brought against Rubashov, which include the accusation that Rubashov plotted to have No. 1 murdered. Now that the interrogator is Gletkin instead of Ivanov, the tone of the examination has shifted. There’s no sense of banter or intellectual conviviality between Gletkin and Rubashov, nor does it seem evident to both parties that this is a performance that needs to happen rather than a deadly serious accusation with a real, historical basis.
Rubashov is struck by this difference, especially given what he considers to be the absurd claims leveled against him. He finds…