London Bridges
us.”
“He squeezes a rubber ball,” said Dowd, “A handball. Black.”
I didn’t follow at first. “I’m sorry, what?”
“One of his sons gave him a rubber handball before the boy died. A birthday present. In one of the notes we have, it says that Christyakov squeezes the ball when he gets angry. He’s also said to favor beards. He’s celibate now, according to the rumors, anyway. It’s all pieces, Alex. That’s what we have. I’m sorry.”
So was I, but it didn’t matter. I was going to get him.
He squeezes a rubber ball.
He favors beards.
His family was murdered.
Chapter 123
SIX WEEKS LATER I traveled to New York, my fifth out-of-town trip in a row. Tolya Bykov had been at or near the top of the Red Mafiya gangs in New York, specifically the Brighton Beach area, for the past few years. He had been a Mafiya head in Moscow and was the most powerful leader to come to America. I was going to see him.
On a sunny, unseasonably warm day, Ned Mahoney and I made the journey out to Mill Neck on Long Island’s Gold Coast. The area we drove through was heavily wooded, served by narrow roads, with no sidewalks anywhere.
We arrived at the Bykov compound with a dozen agents—unannounced. We had a warrant. There were bodyguards posted everywhere, and I wondered how Tolya Bykov could live like this. Maybe because he had to in order to remain alive.
The house itself was very large, a three-story Colonial. It had incredible water views across the sound all the way to Connecticut. There was a Gunite pool with a waterfall, a boathouse and dock. The wages of sin?
Bykov was waiting in his den for our talk. I was surprised at how tired, how old, he looked. He had small beady eyes in a pocked face rolling with fat. He was grossly overweight, probably close to three hundred pounds. His breathing was labored and he had a hacking cough.
I’d been told that he spoke no English.
“I want to know about the man called the Wolf,” I said as I sat down across from him at a plain wooden table. One of our agents from the New York office translated, a young Russian American.
Tolya Bykov scratched the back of his neck, then shook his head back and forth, finally muttering several Russian words between a clenched jaw.
The translator listened, then looked at me. “He says you’re wasting his time, and yours. Why don’t you leave right now? He knows ‘Peter and the Wolf,’ no other. Wolves.”
“We’re not going to leave. The FBI, the CIA, we’re going to be in Mr. Bykov’s face, in his business, until we find the Wolf. Tell him that.”
The agent spoke in Russian, and Bykov laughed in his face. The Russian said something, and the sentences mentioned Chris Rock.
“He says you’re funnier than Chris Rock. He likes Chris Rock, political comedians in general.”
I stood up, nodded to Bykov, then walked out of the room. I didn’t expect too much more from the first meeting, just an introduction. I would be back, again and again if necessary. This was the only case I was working now. I was learning to be patient, very patient.
Chapter 124
MINUTES LATER, I was leaving the large house, walking side by side with Ned Mahoney. We were laughing about the first interview—what the hell, might as well laugh.
I saw something, and did a double take—
saw it again.
“Ned, Jesus. Look.”
“What?” His head swiveled around, but he didn’t see what I saw.
Then I was running ahead on legs that felt unsteady.
“What? Alex, what is it?” Ned yelled behind me. “Alex?”
“It’s him!” I said.
My eyes were pinned on one of the bodyguard types at the compound. Black suit jacket and shirt, no overcoat. He was standing under a large evergreen, watching us watch him. My eyes dropped to his hand.
In the hand—a black ball, an old one. He was squeezing it, and I knew—I just knew—it had to be the handball given to the Wolf by his small son before he died. The man with the ball had a beard. His eyes looked at mine.
Then he started to run.
I yelled back at Ned. “That’s him. He’s the Wolf!”
I sprinted across the lawn, moving faster than I had in a while. I trusted that Ned was behind me.
I saw the Russian man jump into a bright red convertible; then he started it up.
Oh no, God, no!
I thought.
But I tumbled into the front seat before he put it into gear. I hit him with a short, powerful punch to the nose. Blood gushed all over his black shirt and jacket. I knew I’d broken his nose. I hit him
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