The dark and confined space is most likely to provoke unease in the heart, especially when sitting across from you is a KGB agent, with a grim expression, staring at you without saying a word.
This kind of scene would unsettle not just an ordinary person; even if placed a hundred years ago in all of Europe, maintaining a calm expression would require the mindset of the top of the top.
For Karelinna, there's now one good news and one bad news.
The good news is that the KGB disbanded eighty years ago, just like the photo behind this agent that should be hanging in the interrogation room.
The bad news is that the Soviet Petrochemical Security Bureau, which replaced the KGB, doesn't believe the documents she reported, and they executed a large-scale memory restoration on her. Setting aside issues of loyalty and enthusiasm, their methods of torture are absolutely no weaker than the KGB.
They would not hold back, even when dealing with their own people.
