The Blind Spy (45 page)

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Authors: Alex Dryden

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General

BOOK: The Blind Spy
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He looked carefully round the side of the jeep to where Eric was crawling up the hill behind the bank, then to the other side where Claude was similarly ascending the hill at a painfully slow speed, and decided that he would kill Laszlo first. Then he would take cover and shoot whoever put his head above the earth banks. Laszlo was ahead, crouching, then rolling, crouching again, and all the time his eyes were on the spot where they’d last seen Anna. He was now ten feet from the ambulance.
Logan gripped the pistol in both hands, got up into a crouch and then, with a swiftness that would have momentarily dazzled any normal observer, he whipped his body around from the rear of the jeep, arms locked in a V-shape with the gun in his hands at the end of them and levelled directly at Laszlo’s back.
But Anna was no ordinary observer. She had emerged from the rear of the ambulance and then crawled back underneath it towards the front. She’d seen Laszlo’s progress towards her, but couldn’t get a fatal shot from beneath the ambulance, only a wounding blow to a shin at most. But as she saw Logan’s sharp movement, only his feet and lower legs visible, she decided to act instantaneously. She rolled over twice and emerged on the right side of the ambulance, totally exposed and, without a pause, shot Logan through the heart.
At once, two short bursts of automatic fire which burst from behind the earth banks crashed into her consciousness. She saw Laszlo, confused at the sound of weapons he knew his people didn’t possess, turn for a second to the right, just as he’d seen her prone form on the road. Her second shot entered the side of his head, just in front of the ear and, travelling upwards from her position on the ground, blew his brains out.
‘Anna?’ It was Larry’s voice.
‘All dead?’
‘If you got two, yes.’
‘All dead,’ he said and was suddenly beside her.
‘Where’s Taras?’ she asked him.
‘He’s waiting.’
They left the two cars blocking the road from below. Their exit route was in the other direction. They left the bodies splayed on the road or contorted in death behind the earth banks, as Anna turned the ambulance and headed the remaining five hundred yards up the hill, with Larry, Lucy, Adam and Grant in the back.
Taras had heard the gunfire. He was already inside the hospital where there was sufficient mayhem from the sight of the ships ablaze and sinking down below in the harbour. His message had already been relayed to the guards inside. ‘A terrorist attack. Get down to the harbour.’
Some went, others refused to leave their posts without orders from a direct superior. As Taras emerged on to the front steps, he saw the ambulance approach, then swing around to the side of the hospital to the bay where the dead or wounded were admitted.
He tore back inside, shouting that he needed all the men they could get who remained to guard the front of the hospital. He himself went to the rear, down three corridors and across an instant surgery room, and swung the lever that raised the metal curtain between the emergency bay and the hospital’s rear entrance. The ambulance doors were open, he saw all five of them, Anna putting a new clip into the Contender. The others had reloaded, he half thought, with the dim, professionally automated sub-consciousness born in extreme moments of action. The ambulance was backed up right to the ledge where a trolley could be wheeled straight on to it.
The six of them took the service lift. Anna led, the only one of them with a silenced weapon. As the doors opened on the fifth floor, she shot dead two of the guards to the prison wing. Taras took the keys and they entered, racing through the empty ward. The two guards were bemused. One began to raise his gun.
‘Don’t shoot!’ Taras said. ‘There’s a terror attack down below.’
But the guard armed his gun and Anna dropped him with a single shot by the time Larry had punched the second guard and then struck him hard on the back of the head with his pistol butt.
They unlocked the second door, and this time only Taras ran down the corridor of cells. The others began to take up stations staggered outside the cells, in the ward, outside the lift and along to the end of the corridor, where another corridor joined it.
Taras fumbled with the keys, trying first one then a second.
He’d gone through five keys and the sweat was pouring off him by the time the sixth slid the lock and he pushed the door open. He crossed the room. Masha lay staring in horror at him from the cot.
He scooped her up.
‘It’s all right. It’s all right, Masha. It’s me.’
Then he heard a fire fight erupt from somewhere beyond the ward. He guessed it was from the end of the corridor. Adam and Grant were holding off a concerted attack. He lifted the emaciated body of his cousin from the cot and ran out of the cell, past the others and into the ward.
The lift was waiting, its doors jammed open with a trolley. Taras saw a body at the far end of the corridor. It was Adam’s, he thought fitfully. Suddenly a loud explosion ripped the plaster from the walls of the corridor and splintered shrapnel at four hundred feet per second into the body of Grant. He fell immediately.
They couldn’t risk the lift now and they began to run down the stairs, Anna ahead, Taras holding his cousin in the middle, while Larry and Lucy brought up the rear. They cascaded down the steps, rather than ran. It was a pell-mell hurtling of bodies broken only by Larry who crouched at each turn and trained his gun back up the stairs, firing at will at their pursuers. They reached the bay, descending five floors in under a minute. By the time the ambulance pulled away, they were all present apart from their two dead comrades and the metal curtain had been jammed shut behind them.
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
T
HREE AND A half miles offshore from the flat coast north of Sevastopol, the navigation lights of the ancient, twenty-six foot wooden fishing vessel
Lyubimov
were comfortably anonymous among the lights of a pack of other small commercial fishing boats strung out along a two-mile stretch of water. On the fourth night after the full moon, the red and green and white lights bobbed in the lazy current that drifted along the coast and the swell was gentle, unremarkable.
Balthasar leaned against a guard rail on the starboard side of the vessel facing northwards, the boat’s prow pointing out towards the Black Sea. A small sail at the stern kept the fishing boat pointing upwind. Already he sensed that things were moving as they should. But he knew too that people had been lost. He felt Anna on the wind and in the salt smell of the sea. He felt her approach. He felt the invisible lines that linked him to her. The darkness was his favoured time. He felt the darkness as much as he felt the light, though neither made any difference to him. For the benefit of the rest of the world, in the pocket of his fisherman’s jacket, he held his orders from Department S that were the proof the world needed. He also kept in the same waterproof package the minutes of meetings that started at The Forest back in January, the last time he’d seen – or would see – his father, as well as the notes from his briefing sessions with both his father and the GRU boss. The rest of the world needed to see, he thought with amusement. They needed to see because that was their impoverished version of knowledge.
He turned away from the rail and walked along the deck to the wheelhouse. A nineteen-year-old boy was reading a rock magazine in the thin light from the ceiling and listening to the radio.
‘We need the channels open now,’ Balthasar told him, and he heard the music stop as the boy tuned the radio to the Open channel. ‘Start the engines,’ Balthasar told him. ‘We’ll be heading further out in a short while.’
This time he walked to the stern of the vessel and heard the steady hum of an engine half a mile away. It was them. But he’d sensed that too, long before the sound became public.
The small motorboat nudged alongside the
Lyubimov
and Balthasar already had the gate open in the guardrail to receive them. There were five of them, two were missing, as he’d known.
Larry lashed the motorboat to the side of the
Lyubimov
, Taras carried the inert form of Masha into the wheelhouse and laid her on a thin bed, while Anna and Lucy walked to opposite ends of the vessel and leaned against the rails. Anna stood next to him at the stern. They didn’t speak. Behind them they heard Larry ordering the boy to set a course of 180 degrees. Then he took the wheel and they heard the old engines grind up to full throttle.
The
Lyubimov
pushed through the black swell for another three miles towards the open sea where the lights from the fishing pack were left behind them and finally lost. Nobody spoke. Anna and Balthasar stood at the stern, Lucy and Taras with her now, at the bow, while Larry pulled back the throttle and cut the engines again. The silence was complete. Only Larry’s footsteps as he came out of the wheelhouse broke it briefly before he, too, stopped and scanned the sea.
It seemed a long wait to the tense party, but it was no more than twenty minutes at most. Only Balthasar seemed completely at ease. He didn’t even turn when the submersible emerged four hundred yards off their port bow and wallowed sluggishly in the rolling water. Larry walked back into the wheelhouse and called for him.
‘What about the boy?’ he said.
The nineteen-year-old was staring at the black shape in astonishment, then fear. He looked at Larry now and decided it was finished with him. Larry’s face was set in grim determination. But Balthasar smiled at the boy and put his hand on Larry’s shoulder.
‘We leave him with the motorboat,’ he said. ‘No radio, enough fuel to get to shore. And some money,’ he added, and took out another waterproof package from a pocket of the jacket. ‘You did well,’ he said to the terrified boy. ‘If we hear you’ve kept your mouth shut, in a week you’ll receive the same amount again.’
‘We can’t let him go,’ Larry said through gritted teeth.
‘I already have,’ Balthasar said.
Larry started the engines and took the
Lyubimov
with great care a hundred yards from the submersible and downstream from the current and the swell and Lucy untied the motorboat and held the lines tightly so that it still kept closely to the sides. Taras carried Masha first into the motorboat then the others climbed in, Larry keeping hold of the boy’s arm tightly. He frisked him to make sure there was no hand-held radio concealed anywhere, found nothing, and cursed under his breath at Balthasar’s methods.
Balthasar descended to the engine room of the
Lyubimov
and opened the seacocks and heard the seawater slowly flooding the scuppers and felt it overlap his feet. Then he climbed back up the ladder and down into the motorboat. By the time they reached the submersible the
Lyubimov
was wallowing low in the water and would disappear altogether in half an hour. On the submersible a hatch was opened and, to the astonishment of everyone, Burt’s bare head appeared.
‘Reminds me of Cam Ranh Bay, 1969,’ he said cheerfully. ‘But that time it was the Russians under our ships.’
Anna smiled at him, despite her low-level anger. She didn’t believe that Burt had ever been anywhere near Cam Ranh Bay. But Burt’s mythologising of himself was, as ever, for his own personal entertainment. He required nobody to believe it.
Inside the submersible there was room for six, eight at the maximum. Burt’s presence didn’t exactly help the seating arrangements, but at least he seemed to have realised that it wasn’t de rigueur to smoke on submarines. Balthasar was the last to descend. He pushed the boy away from the submersible and told him not to start the engine for twenty minutes after the sub disappeared.
‘Remember what I told you,’ he said. And he felt the wave of relief in the boy’s smile. ‘We’ll look after you well,’ he said. Then the hatch was shut and the chambers began to fill with water for the descent.
The sub was based on an old model, but reworked by Cougar’s scientists into a piece of equipment Burt proudly stated was a stage beyond anything any nation possessed. It was designed for infiltrating frogmen on to enemy shores and for small-scale assaults into enemy territory. Data systems took up nearly all the space, there was real time imagery and advanced sonar, high precision echo sounders, as well as optronic masts carrying thermal pictures of their surroundings. The sonars could listen up to a thousand miles.
‘Even the US navy has nothing quite like this,’ Burt boasted. And then he frowned briefly, like an actor remembering his lines. He said, ‘The others?’ He was looking at Anna now.
‘They’re not coming back,’ she replied. ‘And neither is Logan,’ she added.
Burt seemed uniquely stumped by this information. But there was nowhere to pace in the confined space and, for once, he had to face an unpleasant situation without covering it with any histrionics.
‘How do you know Logan isn’t coming back, Anna?’ he said finally.
‘Because I saw my shell going into his heart,’ she replied brutally.
Burt suddenly looked stunned. He was speechless. His thick, pudgy hands flickered at the fingertips and finally came to rest at his sides as if he were trying to stand to attention. His face was white.
‘Why, Burt? It’s the question we’re all asking, not just me. Why did you let it happen? If you’d listened to any of us –
any
of us – Logan wouldn’t be dead but maybe running one of his own nasty little operations out of harm’s way.’ She stared at Burt’s face and saw he couldn’t meet her eyes. His face was losing its paleness and taking on a livid red colour. ‘Logan is dead because he teamed with some French intelligence officer from Kiev and the accompanying thugs to kidnap me. Again. A second time time, Burt! You let it happen. You endangered all our lives. For what? You’re smart, Burt, but in this you were a fool. Why?’
In the confined space, the only sound was Burt’s harsh breathing. Everyone but Balthasar was staring at him. Finally it was Balthasar who spoke. ‘Why don’t you just tell them?’ he said. ‘It’s finished now.’

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