by Brad Thor
“Now place your hands behind your head and get down on your knees.”
Harvath didn’t like the “get down on your knees” part. The cop was either going to cuff him or put a bullet in the back of his head.
“Do it,” Johansson ordered.
Clasping his hands behind his head, slowly Harvath lowered himself to his knees.
He heard something being scuffed out of a leather case, and then the rapid, unmistakable click-click-click of handcuffs being prepared.
But then, suddenly, as if Johansson had changed his mind, there was the sound of a pistol hammer being cocked.
Johansson, though, carried a Glock. And Glocks didn’t have external hammers.
CHAPTER 45
* * *
“Very, very slowly,” said Jasinski, who was holding one of the team’s Sig Sauer pistols. “I want you to holster your weapon. Do it now.”
Johansson did as she instructed.
“Lock it closed and snap the retention strap.”
He did that as well.
“Now drop the handcuffs, kick them back toward me, and place your hands on the back of your head.”
Once the police officer had complied, she told Harvath he could stand up.
“Nice to see you,” he said to her. “Just out for a walk?”
“You’re welcome,” she replied.
“For what?”
“Saving your life.”
“I guess that makes us even,” he said with a smile. Approaching Johansson, he got right in the man’s face and said, “There’s only one thing I hate more than the Russians.”
“Really?” the man foolishly replied. “What’s that?”
“A dirty cop,” said Harvath, driving his knee into the officer’s groin.
As the air rushed from his lungs, he dropped to the ground, doubled over in pain. Harvath then punched him behind his right ear, laying him the rest of the way out.
Collecting the handcuffs from Jasinski, he cuffed Johansson and used an outdoor extension cord to bind his ankles and hog-tie him.
“Check his phone,” said Harvath as he removed the man’s duty belt and cast it off to the side. “I want to know everyone he has called or texted over the last two hours.”
Patting him down, she found Johansson’s iPhone in his coat pocket. “It’s locked,” she said.
Grabbing the man’s right index finger, Harvath bent it back so far and so fast it almost snapped. “Here,” he said, as the man cried out in pain. “Try this.”
She placed his finger on the sensor pad and the phone unlocked. “I’m in,” she said.
Scrolling through the call logs, she could see that he had talked with someone named Dominik twice in the last hour. The most recent call was ten minutes ago. She shared the information with Harvath.
“What should we do?” she asked.
Harvath duct-taped both men’s mouths and replaced Sparrman’s hood. Picking up the radio, he hailed Haney via his call sign and told him that they had received a visitor and to get down to the shed with an extra hood on the double. Then he motioned for Jasinski to follow him outside.
Once they were out of earshot, he said, “We’re going to have to pack up. We can’t stay here. It’s not safe.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Johansson probably didn’t give this location to his dispatcher, but I’ll bet he gave it to the cell leader.”
“Is that the one from Johansson’s phone?” she asked. “Dominik?”
“According to Sparrman, his full name is Dominik Gashi. Probably an alias.”
“GRU?”
“That’d be my guess,” said Harvath.
“So what do you want to do?”
“I want to get the hell out of Sweden, but first I want to get my hands on this Dominik character.”
“How are we going to do that?”
“We’re going to have to ask for help,” he replied.
“From who?”
“The local police.”
• • •
When Harvath rolled up to the wrecking yard in a Swedish police car, Chief Inspector Nyström’s first instinct had been to draw his pistol. He didn’t, deciding instead to honor his promise to hear the American out.
Opening the gate, he allowed the car to pass through and then closed and locked it behind him.
“Where’s my officer?” Nyström asked once Harvath had stopped and gotten out.
“He’s safe.”
“That was going to be my second question. This is Johansson’s vehicle. Where is he?”
“He’s not far,” said Harvath.
“What’s this all about?”
“I think Johansson should tell you.”
The moment Harvath’s hand went inside his coat, the Chief Inspector went for his gun.
“Easy,” cautioned Harvath, showing him the phone. “Everything’s okay.”
“Keep your hands where I can see them,” Nyström ordered, uncomfortable with all of the subterfuge.
“Chief Inspector, you’ve got a very dangerous cell of Russian operatives here on Gotland. The cell includes a contingent of Russian Special Forces soldiers. Of the six Swedish nationals who are members of the cell, your officer, Magnus Johansson, is one.”
Nyström wasn’t quite sure how to respond. “Johansson? He’s an exemplary officer. You had better have some very strong evidence.”
“I do,” said Harvath as he played back a portion of the audio from the equipment shed.
The Chief Inspector listened in disbelief. He wanted to say that it wasn’t Johansson; that it couldn’t be, but the voice on the recording was unmistakable. It was Johansson, and he had incriminated himself by admitting to the unthinkable.
“I’m sure you recognize his voice,” said Harvath.
Nyström nodded. “Yes, that’s him. Where is he?”
Harvath walked back to the squad car and popped the trunk. Coming to join him, the Chief Inspector looked inside. There, still hog-tied and hooded, was Johansson in his uniform. Harvath pulled the hood from his head so Nyström could be certain.
Reaching up, the Chief Inspector took hold of the lid and slammed it shut. “What is it you want?”
He was angry, and understandably so. Harvath needed to be very careful about how he threaded this needle.
“First and foremost, I believe I want the same thing you do.”
“Which is what?”
“For the Russians not to invade Gotland,” said Harvath. “For them not to invade anywhere. For them to be contained.”
“But that is not my job. That’s the job of the Swedish military, the government.”
“Have you seen their plan to protect Gotland?”
“No,” said Nyström. “I have only heard about it.”
“I’ve actually seen it,” said Harvath. “In fact, the entire American military has seen it and we have been begging Sweden to change it. Their plan is to wait for help, to wait for NATO to come and liberate Gotland.”
“I have always heard they would bring in more troops from the mainland.”
“How?”
“I don’t know, by boat I guess, or by air.”
“Russian submarines and Russian fighter jets will make sure those troops never arrive,” Harvath remarked. “This island is too important to them. If it’s worth invading, which it very much is to them, then it’s worth defending. I guarantee you, Sweden will only risk so much to take it back. They will decide it is better to wait for help.
“And during that time, what do you think will happen? What will happen to you and your fellow police officers? What will happen to the people of Gotland, to the business owners like your uncle? What will happen to them if they do not comply with the Russian occupiers?”
The Chief Inspector didn’t need to think about what would happen. He already knew. European history was all too clear on that subject. Sweden had dodged the horrors of Nazi attack and occupation, but only because it had declared itself neutral and had helped feed the Thi
rd Reich’s war machine by supplying it with much-needed iron ore, steel, and machine parts. It was an inconvenient truth if ever there was one.
“I still don’t understand what you want from me,” said Nyström.
“I want you to help me get Dominik Gashi—the cell leader.”
“I can’t do that.”
“What are you talking about?” Harvath replied. “You took an oath to protect this island.”
“I took an oath to uphold the law.”
Harvath shook his head.
“This needs to brought to the attention of the garrison commander,” Nyström continued. “This is a national security matter.”
“It’s bigger than that,” said Harvath. “It’s an international security matter. Do you know what happens if the military or the government gets involved? Dominik Gashi gets arrested. Then, he gets a lawyer. And at some point way in the future, he gets a trial. In the meantime, you saw what happened in Rome last night?”
“The bombing? Yes, it was terrible.”
“Well, that’s what Europe gets—attack after attack. Maybe even some right here in Sweden.
“I think you’re exaggerating,” said the Chief Inspector.
“I wish I was,” Harvath replied. “The fact is, the only link we have is Gashi.”
“How am I supposed to believe you? You lied to me. You told me you were here to meet Lars Lund to plan a pending military exercise.”
“Yeah, the most important exercise of all—the rescue of Gotland. That’s why I’m here. And no, I didn’t lie to you. As part of my assignment, I was supposed to figure out how to prevent a rescue from even being necessary. That’s why I was looking for Staffan Sparrman. If we could locate and identify the Russian cell, our job was to break it up.
“Then we were to take whatever we had learned and climb the ladder, go after the people on the next level. My job is to prevent a war. We’re trying to stop the Russians before they can launch any invasion. But make no mistake, they’re coming for Gotland.
“Now, maybe the Swedish military can repel their attack. I don’t know. Maybe Gotland can hold out until NATO comes to its rescue. But no matter what, people on your island, people you have sworn to protect, are going to die. I don’t want that to happen. I know you don’t want that to happen. And it doesn’t have to happen—if we can get to Dominik Gashi.”
The Chief Inspector put his fingers beneath his glasses and pinched the bridge of his nose. He then walked away from the patrol car in order to think.
Harvath watched as the man, torn, paced slowly up and down in the wrecking yard.
There were only two potential outcomes. Either Nyström was going to help, or he wasn’t. Harvath hoped he chose Option A, because if the man chose Option B, it was going to get very bad, very quickly.
Leaning against the car, Harvath watched as his breath turned to steam and rose into the night air. His Sig Sauer was tucked in his jeans at the small of his back, and the Taser—with a brand-new cartridge—was in his left coat pocket.
Finally, the Chief Inspector came back over. “If I help you,” he said, “I want the information about every single person in that cell, especially the locals.”
“Done,” said Harvath.
“And,” Nyström added, “whatever it is you need, it can’t appear to have any official police sanction, and it absolutely cannot appear to have come from me.”
Harvath understood the man’s position, but his conditions were going to be a lot easier said than done—especially with what Harvath had in mind.
CHAPTER 46
* * *
The FörsPak processing plant was a half hour north of Visby and just inland from the coast. Its owner had been born and raised on the island. He had spent his entire life there, except for a two-year period while serving in the Swedish military.
What had intrigued Harvath the most about him, though, was that a quick scan of Facebook revealed him to be a member of the Gotland Runners Club. Not only did Nyström know Martin Ingesson, but they were also friends. It was, the Chief Inspector admitted again, “a small island.”
Trying to hew as close to Nyström’s conditions as possible, Harvath had suggested that the Chief Inspector characterize their middle-of-the-night visit to Ingesson as personal. “Friends don’t wake friends up in the middle of the night,” was the man’s response.
When they arrived at his home, the lights were on and Ingesson was up waiting for them. Hearing the car pull into the drive, he met them at the front door.
Martin Ingesson looked like a Viking. He was at least six-foot-four with blue eyes, blond hair, and a big blond beard. His chest and arms were twice the size of Harvath’s. The man could have passed for a competitor in the World’s Strongest Man contest. It wouldn’t have surprised Harvath in the least if he spent his lunch breaks dragging truck tires around a parking lot.
Ingesson invited them inside and led them back to the kitchen where he already had coffee ready. It was a modest home, paneled in blond wood, with ceramic masonry stoves in several of the rooms they passed. The hallway was lined with family photos.
Nyström made the introductions and they kept their voices low so as not to wake Ingesson’s wife and children.
“Anders tells me you’re with NATO?” the big man asked.
Harvath nodded. “And he tells me you were in the military. Which branch?”
“Army. K4.”
“Noorland’s Dragoons,” Harvath said, respectfully.
Ingesson was impressed. “You know it?”
He did. They were Sweden’s crack Ranger battalion—expert light infantry trained to carry out missions behind enemy lines.
“I started out with SEAL Team Two,” said Harvath. “We cross-trained with K4 in Lapland. Up until that point, I had thought Alaska was the coldest place on earth.”
The big man grinned. “SEALs are excellent warriors. But I think the cold water eventually breaks you. That’s why you retire to places like Florida and Texas.”
Harvath laughed. “In addition to nice weather, those states also have no income tax, are good places to raise a family, and don’t mind if you own guns.”
“Fair points,” Ingesson conceded, as he poured coffee and pushed a plate of pastries forward. “So, what are we all doing in my kitchen?”
Nyström had made the introduction. That was as far as he was prepared to go. “I’m going to take my coffee into the living room.”
Harvath waited until he was gone and then began speaking to his host. “I wanted to talk with you about one of your employees.”
“Which one?”
“Dominik Gashi.”
“He’s one of my best employees. What about him?”
“How well do you know him?” Harvath asked.
“He’s smart. He works hard. And he’s always on time. What else should I know about him?” asked Ingesson.
“What about his background?”
The big man thought for a moment. “From what I understand, he’s from a small village in Kosovo. His family, most of whom are dead, were in the butchery business. That’s about all I know.”
“Have you ever met any of them?”
“No, I have not.”
“Have you ever heard him speak Albanian or Serbian?” asked Harvath.
“No.”
“Have you ever seen him reading any books, magazines, or anything else in Albanian or Serbian?”
Ingesson shook his head.
“Have you ever heard him speaking Russian?” Harvath asked.
“Is that what this is all about? You think Gashi is Russian? Not Kosovar?”
“Yes. In fact, we think he’s GRU.”
Ingesson’s eyes almost popped out of his head. “Russian military intelligence? Gashi? That’s impossible.”
“Why?”
“It just doesn’t fit.”
“Really?” replied Harvath. “You were K4. You were trained to conduct reconnaissance and sabotage behind enemy lines. If you were Russia, a
nd you were going to place a deep-cover operative on Gotland, exactly what type of person would you choose?”
“Probably a man just like Dominik Gashi,” he finally admitted after several moments of thought. “I’d take advantage of Sweden’s soft spot for immigrants, especially from conflict-torn countries. And I’d place him in an industry few people want to know anything about, much less be part of, like animal processing.”
“There you go,” said Harvath.
“Of all people, I should have seen it.”
“If there was nothing suspicious about him, there’s no reason you should have suspected anything.”
“So you think he’s here as part of some GRU operation. To do what?”
“We think he’s running a cell responsible for gathering intelligence and conducting sabotage, in advance of a Russian invasion.”
Again, the big man shook his very big head. “I knew it.”
“You knew what?”
“I always suspected the Russians had operatives here. It just makes sense. Strategically, they need Gotland. Nobody, though, has ever been able to catch them.”
“Well, they’re here,” said Harvath. “And part of the cell includes a contingent of Spetsnaz soldiers.”
“I’m not surprised,” he replied. “That’s exactly the kind of thing K4 would do. But if you know all this, why hasn’t Anders arrested them?”
“That’s why I came to see you,” said Harvath. “How do I put this appropriately? The way some of the intelligence was gathered makes it difficult for the Chief Inspector to use in court.”
Ingesson nodded knowingly. “I am assuming, based on how it was gathered, that it would be difficult for any Swedish authorities to use this intelligence as well.”
“Correct. That’s one of the reasons I was brought in. My team and I allow Sweden to keep its hands clean.”
“I think Americans call it plausible deniability.”
“Correct again,” replied Harvath.
“What do you wish to do with Dominik Gashi?”
“We just want to talk with him.”
Ingesson laughed and repeated the word “talk,” with air quotes.
“He may not want to talk with us,” said Harvath, “but he doesn’t have a choice. We believe he is part of an overall operation to weaken NATO and prepare the battlefield for an ultimate Russian invasion of the Baltic States.”