Extreme Faction (6 page)

Read Extreme Faction Online

Authors: Trevor Scott

Tags: #Fiction, #Action & Adventure

BOOK: Extreme Faction
2.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“You have twenty minutes. I could throw on some pants.” Jake smiled.

She looked down at his underwear. “Then I wouldn't be able to see your nice butt.”

Now she had embarrassed him, which was hard to do. And her use of the word “butt” came out awkward with her accent.

“How about lunch?”

Jake was about to confirm, when he realized he had set up a time to meet with Tully. “I'm sorry. I can't. Dinner?”

She shook her head. “My boss wants us to discuss the conferences we attend over dinner. There's supposed to be an interesting talk on a new grass hybrid that grows quickly in arid climates.”

“Sounds fascinating.”

She gave him a smirk he hadn't seen before; something between disturbed and annoyed. “Like fertilizer.”

“Exactly. Maybe we could see each other after dinner for a drink.”

“Perhaps.” She started to leave, and then turned again. “Which conference will you be attending?”

He thought fast now. He hadn't planned on going to any of them. “I'm not sure. I might slip in and out of a few.”

She nodded and swept off down the hall, and he watched every swaying step.

●

Lunch would actually be the first meal of the day for Jake. It was a fairly nice day. A bit overcast, but no real chance of raining. Jake had walked ten blocks to the Pecheskato Cafe off of Deribasovskaya Street. It was eleven a.m.

Tully was already inside the crowded restaurant, sitting at the bar with a vodka sour in front of him and a cigarette hanging from the side of his mouth.

“You look like shit,” Tully said, shaking Jake's hand. “What can I get you?”

“A beer.”

Tully waved to the bartender and ordered a Czech Pilsner.

They ate a quick lunch at the bar, Tully washing his down with two more drinks. When they were done, Tully seemed a little uneasy.

“What's wrong?” Jake asked.

Tully lit another Marlboro. “I've got to get back to the consulate.”

“Did you send the tape off to Langley?”

Letting out a puff of smoke, Tully nodded. “Yeah, I've got to do that also. Could you do something for me. You know, if you've got time.”

“I have to meet MacCarty and Swanson at four,” Jake said. “I think they're both a little nervous after Tvchenko's death. They want me around until they head in for the night. After all, that's what I'm here for.”

“Right. This won't take long.” He scribbled something on a beer coaster and handed it to Jake.

Jake looked it over. It was an address. Not a great neighborhood, if he remembered correctly. Residences mostly. Cheap communist housing. “What about it?”

“Pick up a woman there. Petra Kovarik. Tvchenko's research assistant.”

“What about your own guys?”

Tully inhaled deeply and then slowly let out the smoke. “They're all inexperienced. Except for Quinn Armstrong, and he wasn't in yet this morning.”

Jake checked his watch. “I see you run a tight ship, Tully.”

“Fuck you. I had him out looking for her all night. After we almost got our asses fried, I figured we better bring her in.”

“She was working for you?”

“Yeah. Our main source on Tvchenko. She'll know what he was working on.”

“Why didn't she tell you before?”

Tully thought about that, finishing his cigarette and snubbing it in the ashtray. “I don't know.”

Jake smiled. “She was working both sides?”

“That's what I want to find out. Bring her in and we'll have a little talk.”

Jake agreed. He had some time to kill, and besides, he didn't like the idea of someone trying to blow him up. Maybe she had set off the bomb. Jake left Tully at the bar and wondered if he'd order another drink or go back to the office to work like he had said.

6

Petra Kovarik lived in a crowded, congested section of Odessa where immigrants from former Soviet republics like Bulgaria and Romania were cramped into tiny apartments. Many of the brick row houses and concrete slab buildings were occupied by wives of Black Sea sailors, who were gone most of the year and didn't seem to mind the squalor when they were there, for they had seen far worse in ports with names that most Ukrainians had never heard of.

Jake had taken a cab, paid the man, who was glad to leave, and stood on the sidewalk gazing two blocks to Petra Kovarik's apartment building. He figured it was better to get out early and walk a short distance to her building. Who knew if someone else might be looking for the woman?

He slowly walked off toward her place. It was closing in on noon and the streets were fairly vacant. Two young boys were having a stick war along an iron fence, and they didn't seem to notice him pass. Cars that were parked on both sides of the street were mostly old Volgas or Trabants, the communist answer to the Volkswagen.

Kovarik's building was a four-story concrete monstrosity with balconies enclosed by metal railing that were currently being used as clothes lines. The steps leading to the front door had chipped away already, even though Jake suspected the apartment building was no more than thirty years old.

Inside, Jake checked the mailboxes in a foyer area. Above each box was a button, where, supposedly, guests would call up to an apartment and the occupant could decide whether to buzz the person in. The problem was, someone had bashed in the speaker and ripped the electronic lock from the glass door that was now opened wide.

There was a P.K. on the box for room 222. Jake headed up the scuffed wooden stairs. At the top, he noticed the hallway was dark. The far wall was a bank of glass blocks that had somehow been darkened and now let in very little light. The ceiling paint was peeling and chips scattered about on the wooden floor. The overhead lights were either off or burned out. He checked a switch. Nothing.

Jake started down the passageway, wondering if he should draw his Makarov. He thought of the kids playing down the street and imagined more were probably lurking about. He left the 9mm in its holster, but unzipped his leather jacket.

Since the even numbered rooms were on the right, Jake realized that Petra's room would be the last one on the right. As he got closer, he thought about Tully. He had seemed extremely strange, or nervous. Jake didn't really know him well enough to understand which.

As he reached the door, he could hear movement inside. It wasn't just a woman's feet crossing wooden floors, though. Things were flying and ripping, and now he thought about Tvchenko's apartment. Had the Kurds beat him to the place?

He slid his hand to the Makarov and started to draw it, when the door burst open and a startled figure smashed into him, knocking him back across the hallway to the door on the opposite side.

Jake scrambled to recover. Pulled the gun.

Two men had passed him and were sprinting down the hall.

Jake took aim in the darkness and hesitated. He didn't know who they were. They hadn't tried to shoot him.

By now the men were around the corner and taking the steps downstairs by twos or threes.

He peered toward the opened door, but couldn't see much. He stepped inside and closed the door behind him, his gun still drawn. The light switch didn't work.

Thinking about Tvchenko's place again, he sniffed the air. Nothing.

He bumped into something. A sofa? Now he suspected he was in the middle of the living room. The windows were covered with shades that let in tiny strips of light between them.

Suddenly, there was movement and the gun flew from his hand. Then a kick to his stomach.

Jake swung around in the darkness with a high roundhouse kick, connecting on some body part. A face? There was a thud to the floor, and Jake was immediately on top of a body. He grabbed for the neck with his left hand and punched twice at the face rapidly with the right.

The man below him settled.

Jake crawled across the floor to a small table, groped around, found a small lamp, and clicked it on. Then he found the Makarov on the floor by the sofa leg.

Lying on the floor behind him was a man in his early thirties, perhaps younger. He had dark hair just off his shoulders and he needed a shave, much like Jake. He wore faded blue jeans and a black sweatshirt. The man seemed around five-ten, medium build, but it was hard to tell with him sprawled across the carpet. Then Jake noticed the Nike basketball shoes.

He searched the man for I.D. Nothing. He rolled him over, checked him for weapons, and found an empty leather holster under his left arm, but no gun. The jeans were Levis, hard to come by in Odessa. Shit. He had to be an American or a Brit. Jake rolled him back. He had blood coming from both nostrils and a reddened left ear, probably from his kick.

Jake slapped the man a few times and he started to come around.

In a moment, the man raised himself to his elbows. He was having a hard time breathing. He blew out through his nose and dislodged a blood clot into his hand.

“Who the fuck are you?” the man asked in Russian.

Jake realized he had the Makarov pointed at the man. He aimed it away. “I thought I'd ask you that question,” he said in English. “Since you hit me first.”

The man rose to a sitting position and wiped his nose on his sleeve. “You're American. You don't look it.”

“You do,” Jake said. “Who are you?”

The man hesitated.

Jake pointed the gun at him again.

“Quinn Armstrong.”

“Shit.” Jake reached down for the man's hand. “I'm Jake Adams. Tully sent me.”

The man looked at him reluctantly, and finally took Jake's hand and pulled himself up. He was still a bit shaky, so he took a seat on the sofa. “I thought you were a lot older.”

“Who told you that?”

“I don't know. The way Tully talked, you were some legend. He spoke highly of you. Now I know why.” He rubbed the side of his head.

Jake didn't know what to say. Finally he asked, “Where's Petra?”

Quinn shook his head. “I have no idea. I checked her normal hang-outs last night. She's not into the night club scene, but she goes to a few Jazz joints for the music. What the hell did you hit me with?”

Jake looked down at his brown hiking tennis shoes. They weren't much to look at, but they were comfortable to walk in and held up nicely against a man's head, or any other body part. “Sorry about that.”

Quinn shrugged and continued. “I've been hanging around here since late last night. I must have fallen asleep on the couch. When I heard the door open, I got up to meet Petra. But it wasn't her. Two guys burst in and the biggest one cold-cocked me. I came around and saw a figure at the door. I took a swipe at the gun, and here we are. What do you mean Tully sent you?”

“Which word don't you understand?”

“It's just that he told me about you a few days ago,” Quinn said. “Said you were old Agency, had worked covert ops, former Air Force Intel, the whole spiel. Said you went private a few years back, and were babysitting a couple of Bozos from Portland. Hardly the kind of thing you'd expect, considering your background.”

“Did he also say I liked to kick the shit out of smart asses?”

“Afraid not. If you're referring to me, I'm not feeling really smart right now.”

“Hang on a minute.” Jake went to the kitchen and found some ice cubes, which he wrapped in a small towel and brought to Quinn. “You've got a helluva bruise forming under your ear. Put this on it.”

Quinn took the ice reluctantly and set it against his upper jaw. “Did you get a good look at them?”

“No such luck. They plowed into me on their way out, but the hallway was too dark. The first one out was big, but he moved like a much smaller guy. Like a linebacker. He wasn't Ukrainian or Russian. I'm guessing he was one of the Kurds that ransacked Tvchenko's apartment.” Jake looked around the room, which was destroyed much like the scientist's place had been. “He does a good job.”

Quinn glanced about. “What were they looking for?”

“Other than Petra? I'd guess whatever she and Yuri Tvchenko were working on. You were her runner. Did she talk to you about their work?”

Armstrong had his eyes closed, in obvious pain. “She had her suspicions. She was a decent lab technician. Did what Tvchenko told her to. That's it. She said he was extremely secretive. Would only tell her what she needed to know to complete her experiments.”

“You believe her?”

Quinn opened his eyes and glared at Jake. “Of course. I trust her.”

“Where is she then?”

“I don't know,” he yelled. Quinn mulled over the question for a moment and then settled down. “Maybe she heard about Tvchenko's murder last night and got scared. She said he had changed a lot lately. So the guy gets himself killed, she starts thinking it had something to do with the research, and she goes into hiding. So, Tully sent you. Why are you involved?”

Jake wasn't sure about that himself. He had taken on the job watching over MacCarty and Swanson because that's what he did now, take care of people who didn't think they could do it themselves. It was true that the complexity of those assignments were usually less than exciting, but what the hell, it was a living. Every now and then over the past three years he would get a case that seemed easy at first but quickly turned into something else. Maybe this was one of them.

Looking the room over again, Jake finally said, “Who knows why we do the things we do? Did Tully tell you about last night? At Tvchenko's apartment.”

“Yeah.”

“Well, I guess I don't like people trying to dismember my body,” Jake said. “I'm not ready for that yet.”

“Makes sense.” Quinn looked at the gun in Jake's hand. “Is that the Makarov Tully gave you?”

“Yep.”

“It's a piece of shit,” Quinn said. “I'll try to get you something better.” He felt for his own gun, and not finding it, he said, “I guess we both need a new one. Those bastards took my brand new Glock 19.”

Other books

Larken by S.G. Rogers
Blackwater by Eve Bunting
The Disinherited by Steve White
Year of the Golden Ape by Colin Forbes
The Long Way Home by Dickson, Daniel
Carlota by Scott O'Dell
Positive/Negativity by D.D. Lorenzo