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Authors: Brian Freemantle

BOOK: Run Around
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‘I need an equally sealed room,' demanded Zenin.

‘One is set aside,' said Lyudin. ‘But perhaps a little refreshment first? I have some excellent Polish vodka.'

‘It's ten-thirty in the morning,' reminded Zenin.

‘I waited for you before I began,' sniggered Lyudin, wanting the other Russian to accept it as the joke it was intended to be.

Zenin didn't, nor did he smile. He said: ‘There were some requests from Moscow: detailed information about Geneva?'

Lyudin's smile became hopefully broader at the awareness of Zenin's involvement. ‘Which I personally responded to. Myself.'

‘And personally made the surveys?'

‘Yes,' confirmed Lyudin. ‘I trust it was satisfactory.'

From a series of bars, guessed Zenin. It was easy to guess how Lyudin had gained the patriotic complexion. And why so much of the Geneva information had been inaccurate. The need for protest to Moscow was far more than personal now: such a man, particularly a man in a position of command like Lyudin, represented a positive danger to the entire
rezidentura
. But more importantly to the KGB itself. Zenin said: ‘I've decided upon my report to Moscow.'

‘I am grateful, Comrade Zenin,' said the other Russian, misunderstanding.

‘The sealed room and the container?' reminded Zenin.

Lyudin led the way further back into the
rezidentura
, to a chamber actually within the building, with no connection to any outside surface. It was so small Zenin was practically able to reach out sideways and touch either wall. There was harsh strip lighting around the four sides of the squared ceiling and it illuminated the entire area in a glare so fierce that Zenin had to squint against it.

‘This is the examination room: we were advised you would need to conduct an examination,' said Lyudin.

Zenin was curious at what other things at what other times might have been examined here: despite his profession he'd never been into a mortuary but imagined this must be very like such a place. There was just a metalled table, a single chair, metal again, and a wall-mounted telephone: there was even a smell of antiseptic cleanliness. He said: ‘This will do adequately.'

‘The container is in my personal security vault.'

‘I would like it now.'

For a moment Zenin imagined the man was going to suggest an alternative but instead Lyudin nodded acceptance and hurried from the room. Zenin found it oppressively hot – he supposed from the intense lighting – and claustrophobic, too. Zenin decided that such surroundings would quickly disorientate a person, particularly if that person were frightened: perhaps it was fortunate he was anything but frightened. Lyudin returned almost at once. The container appeared to be of some hardened plasticized material but Zenin knew it to be stronger than that, a specialized light-weight alloy at least capable of withstanding an aircraft crash and any engulfing fire that might have followed. On the outside was a large combination lock activated only by a first-time operation of the correct selection of numerals, which only he possessed, memorized. Any wrongly probed sequence, in an effort by an expert locksmith to discover the combination, would have automatically set off the phosphorus and then acid incineration of the contents; the container was hermetically sealed so the chemical reaction of phosphorus and acid would have made a gas sufficient to create a bomb capable of destroying everybody and everything within its fifty-metre radius. In addition to the explosion, the alloy under such pressure disintegrated into thousands of razor-edged shards: its destructive capability had been tested over an additional fifty metres against
gulag
detainees like Barabanov, against whom Zenin had been pitted at Balashikha. There had, of course, been some survivors: twenty, each so badly maimed they were shot on the spot because they could never medically have recovered to perform any further useful function. One hundred and fifty died outright, burst apart.

‘I thought at first it was a standard container, the sort we get all the time?' said Lyudin, enquiringly.

‘It isn't,' said Zenin.

‘Something unusual then?'

‘Get out, Yuri Ivanovich!' dismissed Zenin.

Zenin locked the door behind the departing Russian and turned back to the container, savouring its very appearance like a child knowing its most asked-for Christmas toy was beneath the wrapping. But there was no excitement shake in his hand as Zenin reached out for the combination, which moved without any perceptible click as the memorized numbers were engaged and discarded: he paused when the final one was released and then snapped open the catch. The container fell apart, either side opening like a giant mouth from its bottom hinges. It was a superbly packed Christmas toy.

The inside had been machined and socketed perfectly to receive and hold every part of the dissembled rifle and each variety of its ammunition. It occupied one entire side of the container, laid out for inspection. Which was what Zenin did, counting off from another memorized list the components which made up the 7.62 mm American M21 sniper's rifle upon which he had been so diligently trained at Balashikha. It had been reconstructed especially for him by the KGB's Technical Division, measured to the millimetre to his arm length and shoulder dip, and modified further beyond the standard hand-constructed US model. The walnut and epoxy resin stock had been replaced by a skeleton metal rest to balance the weight of the other adjustments. The most important of these was a series of attachment clasps for the elaborate harness which went far beyond the usually fitted elbow-twist strap. The harness was again made-to-measure and of the best graded leather, once more identifiably American. It was a complete vest, the main part encompassing his body from waist to shoulders, across which went the thickest of the straps. There were four others which attached to special clasps, effectually welding the rifle to his body. The magnified sight maintained the standard design of two stadia on a horizontal graticule but because the range was beyond the designed three hundred metres there was a heavy power ring to increase the sighting distance and this had been allowed for by strengthening the mounting. There had also been another weighting allowance for the final modification. At the bottom of the rifle side of the container was a rectractable three-legged tripod upon which the weapon was to be locked by a grooved screw-nut device, which, together with the harness, made the assembly absolutely rigid. When completely tightened to fix the rifle on to the tripod the screw-nut became parallel with two-minute spring-repressing lines which compensated for the minuscule recoil. That, too, was a modification, even though the trigger pull had been taken up from its 2.15 kg to 1.15.

Zenin felt out, running his fingers at random over the sound suppressor and the primed gas cylinder and the piston, a craftsman encountering the favourite tool of his trade.

The Browning parabellum automatic was on the opposite wall of the case and assembled, except for the empty butt clip, which was fastened alongside. Again there were two varieties of bullets, the Israeli hollow-nosed in a separate holder from the solid test bullets. In this section, too, was the bradawl and screws to fasten the tripod to the floor, adjoining the sockets in which were held hard metalled screws and a screwdriver.

There was a metal bar upright in the centre of the container and from it, in separate plastic bags, were suspended the suit and shoes for Zenin to change into to alter his appearance for his departure from the embassy. At the very bottom was the duplicate bag.

Zenin stripped off the overalls, this time folding them neatly on the table beside the container, and placed the work boots next to them. The suit was intentionally light coloured, beige, to be as opposite as possible from what he had worn when he entered the embassy. When he finished dressing Zenin transferred the rifle parts and the pistol to the bag, hefting it in his hands as a reminder of the weight which he had also rehearsed carrying at Kuchino, and then put the work clothes back into the container, which he closed and resealed against its specialized interior being seen by Lyudin.

The
rezident
was waiting expectantly in an opposing office when Zenin opened the door. He said: ‘Was everything satisfactory?'

Zenin considered the question ridiculous and the man further incompetent for not making the demand he should have done. He said: ‘What else could it have been?'

‘That drink now?'

It was still almost an hour before the lunch-hour when more people than usual were arranged to make the exodus in which Zenin planned to be concealed. He said: ‘Why not?'

Lyudin led the way to a more spacious office further along the corridor furnished with chairs and a couch. The bottles were set out upon a tray on top of a wall-bordering cupboard. The man splashed neat vodka into two tumblers, offered one to Zenin and made an arm-outstretched toast. ‘Russia!' he declared and sank the drink Soviet fashion, in one gulp.

Zenin did not bother to respond and only sipped at his drink. He said: ‘Haven't you forgotten something?'

‘I need a formal receipt,' remembered Lyudin. He produced the form from his pocket and Zenin completed the bureaucratic necessity. As he did so Lyudin refilled his glass and made to top up that of Zenin, who covered the rim with his hand.

‘And something else?' prompted Zenin.

From another pocket Lyudin withdrew the key to the corner apartment overlooking the Palais des Nations and said: ‘I hope you will be comfortable there.'

Zenin wondered what the fool imagined he would be using the place for. He said: ‘How long have you been on station?'

‘Here in Bern for two years,' said Lyudin. ‘I am hopeful of getting Washington, upon reassignment.'

Hope in vain, thought Zenin. He said: ‘I wish you luck.'

‘There have been no other instructions from Moscow,' said Lyudin, ‘but if there is any sort of assistance you require, I am, of course, at your disposal.'

The man spoke like an official report, thought Zenin. He said: ‘Nothing. Thank you.'

‘What is Moscow like under the new regime?' asked Lyudin.

‘It has not affected us,' said Zenin. ‘We are beyond government whims.'

‘Of course,' accepted Lyudin, hurriedly. ‘I meant among the general public.'

‘I have no idea what happens among the general public,' said Zenin. He was bored, wishing the time would pass. Lyudin proffered the bottle again and this time Zenin accepted.

‘Is there any communication you wish transmitted to Dzerzhinsky Square?'

‘You've been instructed to advise them of my being here?'

‘Yes.'

‘That's all.'

‘Nothing more?'

‘I would have told you if there were.'

‘Do you wish me to go with you from the building?'

‘Don't be foolish,' rejected Zenin, at once. ‘If Swiss counter-intelligence have identified you and we were observed leaving the embassy I would be linked by association, wouldn't I? I want no KGB officer among the group at all.'

‘Do you want to establish any contact procedure between us?'

‘No,' said Zenin.

‘It is almost time,' said Lyudin.

Zenin sighed, relieved. He said: ‘There are to be no introductions or explanations.'

The diplomats and other normal embassy staff were already assembled when they reached the vestibule. As noon struck the group moved
en bloc
towards the exit and Zenin eased himself into the middle, not bothering with any farewell to the other KGB man. He carried the bag in his right hand, so it would be shielded by the people around him. The majority went to the left when they emerged on to Brunnadernain and Zenin stayed with them, not splitting away until he was about three hundred metres from the building. Having separated Zenin moved quickly to distance himself, cutting through side alleys and minor roads until he got to Marktgasse. There he caught a tram again because an attempt to follow any sort of stopping and starting public transport is more obvious than a continuously moving vehicle, like a taxi. Zenin positioned himself on a rear seat, convinced after the first hundred metres that he was not being pursued. Back at the garage he removed the tripod, the fixture screws, the harness and the handgun that he did not need for the test he intended, stacking them neatly in the corner, beneath a piece of canvas discarded by a previous occupant. The bag he put into the boot of the Peugeot, thrusting it as deeply as possible into the cavity created by the wheel arch.

Zenin drove hard but always within the legal limit towards the Oberland, the road running parallel with the river Aare. At Thun he skirted the lake to the south but at Interlaken swung north around the Brienzersee lake. At Brienz he put the car in a public park, took the bag from the boot and strode through the old, wooden-housed part of the town, knowing from the Kuchino instruction that it was the most direct route to the deepest of the forests.

At first the trails were wide and Zenin was concerned at the number of people who appeared to be using them. He cut once and then a second time on to smaller paths, pushing deeper among the trees, at times so tall and thick he had no sight at all of the towering Jungfrau mountain. He climbed steadily for over an hour, transferring the bag from hand to hand as the weight of the rifle began to tell, alert more to the possibility of climbers or hikers than to the sort of testing place he wanted. Zenin was high above Brienz before he found it, an abrupt clearing that overlooked a small, tree-surrounded valley.

Zenin crouched, his back against the trunk of a fir, making no immediate attempt to assemble the rifle at his feet, listening and looking for people. There was some noise from rarely seen birds and an occasional murmur of insects but that was all. Around him the forest was dark and thick and apparently empty and at last he switched his concentration.

The assassination was calculated for him undetectably to be able to fire a maximum of five shots and Zenin isolated a clump of trees ideal for the target. He carried the bag with him, unwilling to risk leaving it unattended while he set up the markers.

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