The Kremlin Device (27 page)

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Authors: Chris Ryan

BOOK: The Kremlin Device
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The contrast between the splendid buildings opposite and the sordid brutality of life in the gutter said everything about the way in which seventy-five years of Communism had brought a vast country to its knees.
We walked on. A second later we heard an engine and saw lights coming up behind us. I tightened my right hand on the butt of my Sig, just in case; but then the lights flicked up and down in recognition. Whinger called, ‘I have you visual,' the vehicle slowed, and a second later we were safe on board his Volga.
‘Good on yer, Whinge,' I said as we pulled away. ‘No problems?'
‘The whole place is lifting with drunks – but apart from them, nothing. How about you?'
‘We managed it, just about. The bastard's in place. Toad said he could hear the satellite talking to it, so we presume it's all set up. But I tell you – even if it isn't, I'm not going back down that fucking tunnel in a million years.'
‘You couldn't smell any worse if you did,' Whinger observed.
‘Thanks. And by the way – what made that fearsome racket?'
‘When?'
‘About an hour ago. It sounded as though an aircraft carrier went up the river.'
‘Oh, that. It was just a barge with a load of sand on board.'
‘Christ – it scared the shit out of us. We thought the tunnel was coming in.'
‘Oh, well.' Whinger sounded unimpressed. ‘It didn't. So that's it for tonight, is it? One down and one to go.'
ELEVEN
In the morning we felt, and looked, pretty shattered. When our students noticed some pale faces and started asking questions, we pretended we'd once again been on the piss. In fact we were rapidly gaining a reputation – quite unjustified – as leading piss-artists, and we claimed to have been so smashed that we couldn't remember the names of any of the bars we'd allegedly visited.
In fact we'd got back to barracks by 1.30 a.m., and I'd sent Hereford a coded message through the patrol radio to report the insertion of Apple. Late as it was, the lads were far too hyped up by the success of the operation to feel sleepy. As we had sat round the kitchen table with a brew, Pavarotti had croaked, ‘What the fuck have we done?' perhaps partly in amazement because we'd managed it, partly in alarm at the possible consequences. ‘That's put the frighteners on the bastards, anyway.'
‘Not yet it hasn't,' I'd corrected. ‘It may do at some time in the future, but they don't know about it yet.'
‘If that thing went off now,' Johnny had said, ‘what effect would it have on us here?'
‘Ask Toad.'
Toad, as usual, was hovering at a distance from the rest of us.
‘Eh, Toad!' Pav had shouted. ‘Would Apple do for us here, now, if it went off?'
‘Not immediately,' he'd replied. ‘We'd hear it, of course. We'd feel the shockwave. But the big danger would be the radiation.'
‘How long would that take to get here?'
‘Depends on the wind. An hour?'
‘Would we feel anything from it?'
‘Not until it was too late.'
‘Firekin ell!' went Whinger.
‘Duty, old boy. Must do your duty.' Rick could take off the CO to perfection.
We'd gone on shooting the shit till nearly 3.00, so it wasn't surprising that morning found us a bit jaded.
What brought me to my senses was an encrypted message that came in while we were having breakfast. Decoded, it read simply:
WEST END CONFIRMS APPLE PIE ORDER
. West End was Washington, and the rest was obvious. The Pentagon must have put out a test transmission and made contact with the SCR.
‘Can you believe it?' I said to Rick. ‘They're talking to the fucking thing, as if we'd buried a person there.'
‘I hope they're being polite to it,' he said.
The fact that Apple was up and running gave me a jolt. I suppose I'd been subconsciously hoping that somewhere along the line the system would fail, and that, through no fault of our own, the satellite would be unable to make contact with the bomb. In that happy event we'd be absolved from responsibility.
Speculation was cut off when Anna appeared at our back door proffering a small package.
‘I brought you a present,' she began.
‘Great! Come in. Have a cup of coffee. We've got a few minutes.'
Perching neatly on a chair in our mess-room, she said, ‘This is by way of saying thank you for your help the other day.'
‘Oh, come on. We got a big thank you anyway.'
‘I know. But this is more important. Your security people in London may like to have it. MI5? Yes – MI5.'
‘What is it, then?'
‘Only a computer disk. But it contains full details of the Mafia organisation in London.'
‘In
London
?'
‘Yes. They've made rapid progress there lately. Drugs, banking, prostitution – all the usual things. The London network is spreading fast: links into Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam, Rome and other cities. This is a copy of a disk we picked up in the apartment after the raid. It's in Chechen, I'm afraid, but I'm sure your specialists will manage to translate it.'
‘Is Chechen different from Russian, then?'
‘Absolutely.' She saw me looking blank, and added, ‘All educated Chechens speak Russian, of course. But the languages are entirely different.'
As she talked, my mind was moving at speed. Another computer disk. Had this presentation got something to do with our own disk that had been destroyed? Was this supposed to be an apology for that accident?
‘Well,' I said. ‘As you know, that kind of crime isn't really our field. But I'm sure the guys in London will be grateful. Thank you.'
‘You're welcome. Please send it with the compliments of the FSB.'
‘Sure. I'll get it off today. The guys can take it when they go into town on the post run.'
A couple of the other lads were present at this informal meeting, but as Anna and I walked out and down the steps of the building she and I were alone for a few moments. Suddenly she said, ‘I'd like to offer you a more personal thank you as well.' She gave me a sideways, come-on look. ‘Will you come and have supper?'
The invitation took me by surprise. Until now she'd been so formal and so correct – so impersonal, although always friendly – that the idea of trying to take her out had almost faded from my mind. Still less had I imagined that she'd ever invite me. Apart from that brief walk we'd taken one lunchtime we'd never been alone. Now, for a moment, I was stuck for an answer.
‘You don't
have
to come. That wasn't an order!' She gave me that sidelong glance again and burst out laughing. She also started to raise her right hand, and I thought she was going to take me by the arm; but luckily at that moment Mal came running round the corner with a cry of, ‘Forgot my flaming notes.'
Once he'd passed, I looked back at her and said, ‘Terrific. I'd like that. When were you thinking of?'
‘One day next week, maybe? Friday?'
‘Fine.'
‘I'll come and pick you up at seven-thirty. I suggest that to avoid gossip, we say we've been summoned to see the Minister.'
In the mean time I was glad to keep our rendezvous with Sasha and his mother. Since he'd asked two of us, Whinger was my obvious choice as No. 2 – but that afternoon he had developed a filthy sore throat, and by the evening he was more or less speechless. So in his place I nominated Rick, first because of his Russian, second because, if he was with us, I'd know for sure that he wasn't shagging Mafia women.
Sasha came and collected us at 7.00, and for this excursion no subterfuge was necessary, so we went off openly, casually dressed in jeans and sweaters.
At first, Sasha was on a high. He had more information about the victims of the raid on the apartment, and it had emerged that one of the five at the table had been Ruslan Beno, another big player in the Chechen mafia.
‘You don't mean Keet?' I asked.
‘By no means,' Sasha replied quickly. ‘This Whale, Keet – I showed you, he was one. His name was Gaidar, one of three brothers, very notoriotous. Beno is also from Grozny, but younger man.'
‘I know which he was,' I said. ‘That dark young fellow who got dropped half-way to the door of the living room.'
‘Yes. That man.' Sasha turned to me with a big grin. ‘Fantastic creeminals, Chechens. They make fabulous amounts of money. For example the Lazanskaya gang, based on Lazania restaurant, here in Moscow – they got enormous riches from stolen cars. They operate very much in Brussels, stealing big cars from diplomats. Then, you know
avizo
system?'
I shook my head.
‘
Avizo
is promise note. A bank signs it, to say they will pay so much money. The criminal makes forged promise note in one city, gets it signed, takes it to another city and cashes it. Simple! By such means Chechen
avizovshchiki
made meellions. No – not meellions. Beellions! In early nineties, such kind of Chechen gang got sixty billion roubles.'
The idea of Mafiosi making fortunes obviously excited Sasha as much as did the idea of knocking off big-time players, and he talked enthusiastically for most of our short journey. But then, as we drew near his flat, he fell silent. After a couple of minutes he said, ‘Zheordie – you must know. My mother – she is very simple woman. Not very educated. Peasant woman.'
‘That's OK,' I said. ‘I expect mine was too.'
‘You don't remember her?'
‘I thought I told you. I never knew my parents. I was brought up by my uncle and aunt.'
That seemed to ease his mind, and his cheerfulness returned.
‘Here is my house,' he announced as he pulled up outside a tower block. ‘Please, this way.'
We walked down an asphalt path between patches of grass, with a few young trees scattered about. Other tall blocks rose all round, at a reasonable distance. In the dark, with only a few lamps glowing here and there, it was difficult to judge the state of the area, but it looked run-down, with litter blown up against the walls of the buildings.
We entered a cavernous lobby with bare concrete walls, and took the lift to the eighth floor. As we went up slowly, juddering and jerking, I sent Rick a glance that said, ‘Might try the stairs on the way down.'
Sasha stepped out first, sifting through a bunch of keys, and ushered us towards a door – one of four on a small, dingy landing. Turning the lock, he led us in. ‘Please,' he said, ‘welcome to my house.'
His apartment was very small. That was my first impression as we stepped straight into the living room, which was cluttered with furniture and lined with shelves. Some held books and magazines, some vinyl albums. In one area Sasha's hi-fi equipment was stacked – Teac amplifier and turntable, dating (by the look of them) from the seventies. At the right-hand end of the room a table was laid for supper: blue-and-white check tablecloth, glasses, knives and forks, but only three place-settings. Beyond it a doorway gave on to a tiny cubicle of a kitchen, and in the opening stood a little old woman, rather bent, with her silver hair swept back into a bun, and wearing a shapeless dress of dark-blue covered in white polka-dots.
‘Here is my mother,' said Sasha, following up with a few words of Russian.
Rick, in the lead, did brilliantly, cracking off a ‘
Dobriye vecher
' (Good evening) and a couple more Russian phrases.
The broad old face – startlingly like Sasha's – creased into a smile, and the woman gave a little bob, inclining towards us. As we shook hands, I asked Sasha her name and he said, ‘She is Lyudmila.'
The first few minutes were pretty difficult. Sasha insisted that we sat down, so I perched in an armchair and Rick on a sofa.
Because the flat was extremely warm, I asked what powered the heating. The answer was that all apartment blocks in Moscow are centrally heated – that is, not from boiler rooms in individual buildings, but directly from power stations via underground pipes. Sasha said there was always plenty of heat in winter, even when the outside temperature was twenty below zero, but I noticed that there were no controls or thermostats on the old-fashioned radiators.
‘How many rooms d'you have?' Rick asked.
‘Living room, here. My mother's bedroom. Bathroom. Kitchen. And balcony.'
‘Where d'you sleep, then?'
‘There – where you are!' Sasha laughed and pointed at the sofa Rick was occupying. ‘I make bed.' He obviously sensed that we found the place rather small, because he added, ‘For Moscow, this is
good
apartment. Besides, I am not very much here: always I have been away in army – in Africa, in Afghanistan, in Chechnya. Not much time in Moscow.'
In spite of his protestations, I felt a pang of guilt at having accepted hospitality in surroundings as humble as these. The idea of living in such cramped quarters eight floors up also brought on a surge of claustrophobia.
Looking round, I realised that there was a huge ginger cat asleep on a shelf above a radiator – a welcome diversion.
‘What's he called?' I asked.
Back came the answer, ‘Tigr.'
Tiger the cat, Tiger Force. Of course. What other name could he have?
‘Isn't it awkward for a cat; living high up like this? I mean – how does he go about his business?'
‘No problem,' Sasha answered airily. ‘He has box on balcony. But two times every day, my mother takes him down in the lift for walk in the park. Also, he is very good hunter.'
‘What – mice?'
‘Birds. Here on the balcony. He can go for three flats along. He is very quick' – a swiping motion with one hand – ‘he catch many birds.'

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