The Defector
her life. And he was now walking toward her desk, hat in one hand, briefcase in the other. And, somehow, Irina was now on her feet. Smiling. Shaking his cold, tiny hand. Inviting him to sit. Asking how she might be of assistance.
“I need some help planning a trip,” he said in Russian.
“Where are you going?”
“The West.”
“Can you be more specific?”
“I’m afraid not.”
“How long will you be staying?”
“Indefinitely.”
“How many in your party?”
“That, too, is still to be determined. With luck, we’re going to be a large group.”
“When are you planning to leave?”
“Late this evening.”
“So what precisely can I do?”
“You can tell your supervisor you’re going out for coffee. Make sure you bring your valuables. Because you’re never coming back here again. Ever .”
64
VLADIMIRSKAYA OBLAST, RUSSIA
A RUSSIAN DACHA can be many things. A timbered palace. A toolshed surrounded by radishes and onions. The one at the end of the narrow track fell somewhere in between. It was low and stout, solid as a ship, and clearly built by Bolshevik muscle. There was no veranda or steps, just a small door in the center, reached by a well-worn groove in the snow. On either side of the door was a window of paned glass. Once upon a time, the frames had been forest green. Now they were something like gray. Thin curtains hung in both windows. The curtain on the right moved as Mikhail slid the Range Rover into PARK and killed the engine.
“Take the key.”
“You sure?”
“Take it.”
Mikhail removed the key and zipped it into a small pocket over his heart. Gabriel glanced at the two sentries. They were standing about ten feet from the dacha, guns cradled across their chests. Their positioning presented Gabriel with something of a challenge. He would have to fire at a slight upward trajectory so that the rounds didn’t shatter the windows upon exiting the Russians’ skulls. He made this calculation in the time it took Mikhail to pick up a cylindrical thermos flask. He had been making such calculations since he was a boy of twenty-two. Just one more decision to make. Which hand? Right or left? He had the ability to make the shot with either. Because he would be climbing out of the Rover on the passenger’s side, he decided to fire with the right. That way there would be no chance of banging the suppressor against the fender on the way up.
“Are you sure you want them both, Gabriel?”
“Both.”
“Because I can take the one on the left.”
“Just get out.”
Once again, Mikhail opened the door and climbed out. This time, Gabriel did the same thing, parka unzipped, Beretta at the seam of his trousers. Mikhail approached the sentries, thermos aloft, chattering in Russian. Something about hot coffee. Something about the Moscow traffic being shit. Something about Ivan being on the warpath. Gabriel couldn’t be certain. He didn’t much care. He was looking at the spot, just beyond the Rover’s right-front tire, where he was going to drop to one knee and end two more Russian lives.
The guards were no longer looking at Mikhail but at each other. Shoulders shrugged. Heads shook.
And Gabriel knelt on his spot.
Two more flashes. Two more Russians down.
No sound. No broken windows.
Mikhail leaned the thermos against the base of the door and quickly retreated several steps.
The birch forest trembled.
Silence no more.
ON THE back side of the dacha, three men rose in unison and advanced slowly through the trees. Navot reminded them to keep their heads down. There was about to be a lot of lead in the air.
CHIARA SAT up with a start, hands cuffed, feet shackled, dust and debris raining down on her in the pitch-darkness. From above, she could hear the hammer of footfalls against the floorboards. Then muffled gunshots. Then screams.
“Someone’s coming, Grigori!”
More gunshots. More screams.
“Get on your feet, Grigori! Can you get on your feet?”
“I’m not sure.”
“You have to try.”
Chiara heard a moan.
“Too many broken bones, Chiara. Too little strength.”
She reached her cuffed hands into the darkness.
“Take my hands, Grigori. We can do it.”
A few seconds elapsed while they found each other in the gloom.
“Pull, Grigori! Pull me up.”
He moaned again in agony as he pulled on Chiara’s hands. The instant her weight was centered over the balls of her feet, she straightened her legs and stood. Then, amid the gunshots, she heard another
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