It took forty minutes to reach the branch.
Tucker returned to the cockpit and pointed to another spot a mile farther west.
“You are being very cagey,” Misha said. “I see a small cove. Is that our destination?”
“No. Call me when you reach the next waypoint.”
After another twenty minutes, Misha summoned him again.
With a smile, Tucker placed his finger on the small cove that Misha had mentioned before. “That’s our destination.”
“But you said—oh, I see. You are very untrusting.”
“It’s a recent development. Don’t take it personally. How long until nightfall?”
“To be safe, two hours. I will pull us into the undergrowth along this bank. It should shield us further as we wait.”
It turned out to be the longest two hours of his life. The others attempted to question him about what he was doing, but he only gave cryptic reassurances, allowing them still to believe the sub was parked underwater at some destination near Volgograd.
Finally, he ordered everyone to collect their belongings and disembark. With Tucker directing, they gathered in a clump of bushes on the shore of the cove.
Overhead, the dark sky hung with low clouds, turning the waning moon into a pale disk. Aside from the trilling of insects and the occasional croak of a frog, all was quiet.
Across the cove, a few hundred yards off, a trio of squat cabins hugged the water. A lone light burned beside the door of one. Moored to its dock floated a pair of small seaplanes.
That was their ticket out of here.
“This is not Volgograd,” Utkin whispered, scrunching his face. “The air smells too clean.”
Tucker ignored him and joined Misha alongside the sub. The two shook hands.
“This is where we say good-bye,” Misha said. He let go of Tucker’s hand but continued to hold out his open palm.
With a smile, Tucker understood. He pulled a wad of rubles from his pocket and counted out what he owed the sub’s pilot—then he added an extra ten thousand on top of that. “Hazardous duty pay.”
“I knew I liked you for a reason, my friend.”
“You’ll be able to get back to Volgograd safely?”
“Yes, I think so. And I hope you do the same—wherever you are going.”
“I hope so, too.”
“Because of the extra pay, I will wait here until you take off. Just in case you need me again.”
“Thank you, Misha. If I don’t see you again, safe sailing.”
With Tucker in the lead and Kane bringing up the rear, the group headed around the curve of the cove, sticking to the trees and taller bushes.
Once near the cluster of cabins, he called a halt, knelt by Kane, and pointed forward. “SCOUT AND RETURN.”
Kane skulked off and disappeared into the darkness.
Several minutes passed, then from back the way they’d come, a whispered call reached him.
“Tucker!”
It was Misha.
His heart thudding with worry, Tucker told the others to stay out of sight. He made his way back down the trail to where Misha was crouching.
“What is it?”
“This.”
He passed over a black plastic object roughly the size and shape of a narrow bar of soap. A pair of insulated wires dangled from either side, ending in alligator clips.
Misha explained, “I was cleaning up after you all left, straightening and doing a systems check while I waited as promised. I found this tucked beneath my seat in the cockpit. Those clips had been spliced into the sub’s antenna feed.”
“It’s a signal generator,” Tucker muttered, his belly turning to ice. “It sends out frequency-specific pulses at regular intervals.”
“Like a homing beacon.”
“Yes.” Tucker felt icy fingers of despair close around his heart. “That’s how the enemy was tracking us.”
He remembered Misha describing how he would surface the sub at regular intervals to get a GPS fix on their location, especially as they neared one of their ports of call. Each time he did it, the generator gave away their location, allowing the enemy ample time to set up an ambush once they figured out Misha’s routine.
“Who put it there?” Misha asked.
Tucker glanced toward the trio hidden by the cabins.
Who indeed?
He ran everything he knew through his head—then his whole body clenched with a realization.
It couldn’t be . . .
Misha read his reaction. “You know who the traitor is?”
“I think so.” Tucker stuffed the signal generator into his pocket. “I suggest you shove off right now and put as much distance between you and us as possible.”
“Understood. Good luck, my friend.”
Tucker returned to where the group sat crouched in the darkness. By now, Kane was waiting for him. The shepherd’s posture, the tilt of his ears, and the softness of his eyes told Tucker all was clear.
Like hell it was.
He crouched and draped an arm around Kane’s neck, struggling to keep his composure.
Now what?
How much information had already been funneled to General Kharzin?
Since surfacing here, he had to assume the enemy knew where they had stopped. Surely Felice was on her way.
He didn’t have the time to properly interrogate and break the traitor. That would come later. For now, by hiding his knowledge, he still had a slight upper hand.
He stared toward the seaplanes. The enemy didn’t want to kill Bukolov, and with their agent sitting next to him on the plane, they’d be even less likely to try to shoot the craft down once it was airborne. In that way, both men could serve as unwitting human shields, increasing the group’s chances of reaching the rendezvous point safely. But first he had to get them all into the air.
He also intended to keep a close eye on the traitor, an eye sharper than his own. He shifted next to Kane. Shielding his hand signals, he pointed and touched the corner of his own eye.
Keep a watch on the target.
Until Tucker lifted the order, the shepherd would be on close guard—watching his target for any aggressive movements or hostile actions, judging the tone of voice, listening for the cock of a hammer or the slip of a blade from a sheath. It was a broad tool, but Tucker trusted the shepherd’s instinct. If his target made the wrong move, Kane would immediately attack.
“What was that all about with Misha?” Anya whispered, drawing back his attention.
“He wanted more money. To stay silent.”
“And you paid him?” Bukolov asked, aghast.
“It was easier than killing him. And besides, we’re leaving now anyway.”
Tucker stood up and gestured for the others to remain hidden. He crossed to the lighted cabin and knocked on the door.
It opened a few moments later. Yellow light spilled forth, framing a young woman in denim overalls. She was barely five feet tall, with black hair trimmed in a pixie haircut.
Tucker tightened his grip on the Magnum concealed in his pocket, bracing himself for any attack.
“You are Bartok?” she asked in a surprisingly bold voice for such a small body.
Bartok?
He was momentarily confused until he remembered Harper’s mention of a code name.
“Yes, I’m Bartok.”
“I am Elena. How many come with you on plane? Costs three thousand rubles per passenger.”
She certainly didn’t waste any time getting down to business.
“Four and a dog.”
“Dog cost more.”
“Why?”
“He crap . . . I must clean up, no?”
Tucker wasn’t about to argue—not with this little firebrand. She sort of scared him. “Fine.”
“Get others,” she ordered him. “The plane is prepared. We are ready to leave.”
With that, she stalked toward the dock area.
Tucker waved the others out of hiding and hur
ried to keep up with Elena. She had stopped beside one of the planes. With one leg leaning on a float, she unlatched the side door and lowered it like a ramp onto the dock’s walkway.
The twin-engine seaplane, painted azure, stretched about seventy feet long, with gull wings and oval stabilizers at the tail. The fuselage was deep chested, with a bulbous cockpit.
“I don’t recognize this model,” he said as he joined her.
She explained proudly, her hands on her hips. “This is a Beriev Be-6. Your NATO called it Madge. Built the same year Stalin died.”
“That’s sixty years ago,” Anya noted, worried.
“Fifty-nine,” Elena shot back, offended. “She is old, but a very tough bird. Well maintained. Board now.”
No one dared disobey.
Once everyone was aboard, Elena unhooked the lines from their cleats, hopped inside, and pulled the door closed behind her with a resounding slam. She hurried forward to the cockpit.
“Sit down!” she yelled back. “Seat belts!”
And that was the extent of their preflight safety briefing.
Bukolov and Anya were buckled into the bench along the right side of the fuselage, Utkin and Tucker on the left. Kane curled up between Tucker’s feet, never letting his guard down.
The plane began drifting sideways from the dock.
Bukolov called over, “Tucker, you seem to have a proclivity for unorthodox methods of travel.”
“One of my many idiosyncrasies.”
“Then I assume we will be traveling to the United States aboard a zeppelin.”
“Let’s leave it as a surprise,” he replied.
From the cockpit came a series of beeps and buzzes, accompanied by a short curse from Elena—then the sound of a fist striking something solid. Suddenly, the engines roared to life, rumbling the fuselage.
“Here we go!” Elena called.
The plane accelerated out of the cove and into the inlet. Moments later they were airborne.
7:44 P.M.
“Bartok!” Elena yelled once they’d reached cruising altitude. “You come up here!”
Tucker unbuckled his seat belt, scooted around Kane, and ducked into the cockpit. He knelt beside her seat. The copilot seat was empty. Through the windscreen, he saw only blackness.
“Now tell me the destination. The person on phone said southeast. Said you would have the destination once in air.”
Tucker gave her the coordinates, which she jotted on her kneeboard.
After a few fast calculations, she said, “Fifty minutes. You know what we are looking for? A signal of some kind, da? The Caspian is big, especially at night.”
“Once we are there, I’ll let you know.”
Tucker returned to the cabin. The roar of the engines had faded to a low drone. Aside from the occasional lurch as Elena hit a pocket of turbulence, the ride was smooth.
Now is as good a time as any.
Tucker stood between the two benches. “It is time we have a family meeting.”
“A what?” Bukolov asked.
Tucker dove in. “Every step of the way, General Kharzin has been waiting for us. Until now I had no idea how he was doing it.”
Tucker paused to look at each of them in turn.
Anya shifted under his scrutiny. “And? What are you saying, Tucker?”
He drew the signal generator from his pocket and held it up for everyone to see.
“What is that?” Bukolov asked, motioning for a closer look.
Tucker turned to Utkin. “Would you like to explain?”
The young man shrugged, shook his head.
“It’s a signal generator—a homing beacon. It was attached to the Olga’s antenna feed. Since we left Volgograd it’s been regularly sending out a signal until I disarmed it a few minutes ago. A signal that Kharzin has been listening for.”
“You think one of us put it there?” Utkin asked.
“Yes.”
“It could have been Misha,” Anya offered. “He would know how to attach the device. It was his submarine.”
“No, Misha brought this to me.”
Anya’s eyes grew rounder. “Tucker, you’re scaring me. What do you know?”
Tucker turned to Utkin. “Is that your bag under your seat?”
“Yes.”
“Pull it out.”
“Okay . . . why?”
“Pull it out.”
Utkin did so.
“Show me your playing cards.”
“My what? I don’t see why—”
“Show me.”
Having noted the hardness of Tucker’s tone, Kane stood up and fixed his gaze on Utkin.
“Tucker, my friend, what is going on? I do not understand, but fine, I will show you.”
He unzipped his duffel and began rummaging around. After a few seconds, he froze, glanced up at Tucker, and pulled out his two boxes of playing cards. One empty, one full. Utkin held up the empty one.
Tucker read the understanding in the young man’s eyes.
“But it . . . it is not mine,” Utkin stammered.
Tucker grabbed the box, slid the signal generator into it, and resealed the flap. It was a perfect fit. Earlier this morning, during his search of the group’s belongings, he’d found the empty box of playing cards in the young man’s duffel.
Utkin continued shaking his head. “No, no, that is not mine.”
Anya covered her mouth.
“Is it true?” asked Bukolov. “Tucker, is this true?”
“Ask him.”
Bukolov had paled with shock. “Utkin—after all our time together, you would do this? Why? Is this tied to that past gambling problem of yours? I thought you had stopped.”
Shame blushed Utkin’s face to a dark crimson. “No! This is all a mistake!” He turned to Tucker, his eyes hopeless with despair. “What will you do to me?”
Before he could respond, Anya blurted out, “Tucker, do not kill him, please. He made a mistake. Perhaps someone forced him to do it. Remember, I know these people. Perhaps they blackmailed him. Isn’t that right, Utkin? You had no choice. Tucker, he had no choice.”
Tucker looked to Bukolov. “Doctor, how do you vote?”
Bukolov shook his head. Without looking at his lab assistant, he waved a dismissive hand. “I do not care. He is dead to me either way.”
At this, Utkin broke down. He curled himself into a ball, his head touching his knees, and started sobbing.
Tucker felt sorry for Utkin, but he kept his face impassive. The lab assistant had almost cost them their lives—and he might still. Felice could already be on her way here.
That fear drew him back to the cockpit, leaving Utkin guarded by Kane.
“Can we circle?” he asked Elena. “To check our tail?”
She frowned at him. “You think we are being followed.”
“Can you do it?”
Elena sighed. “Two hundred rubles extra for fuel.”
“Deal.”
“Okay, okay. Hold on.”
She turned the wheel and the Beriev eased into a gentle bank.
After a lazy ten-minute circle above the Volga delta, Elena said, “I see no one. Easy to spot in the dark. But I will keep watching.”
“Me, too.” Tucker took the empty copilot’s seat.
In the green glow of the instruments, he glimpsed a dark shape against the lower console between the seats. It was a machine gun, attached to the console with Velcro straps. It had a wooden stock and a stubby barrel. Just ahead of the trigger guard was a large, cylindrical magazine.
“Is that an old tommy gun?” he asked.
Elena corrected him. “That is a Shpagin machine gun. From Great Patriotic War. It was my father’s. American gangsters stole the design.”
“You’re an interesting woman, Elena.”
“Da, I know,” she replied with a confident smile. “But don’t get any ideas. I have a boyfriend. Okay, three boyfriends. But they don’t know about each other, so it’s okay.”
As they
neared their destination coordinates, everything still remained dark and quiet in the skies around them.
“What now, Bartok?” Elena asked.
“An island lies dead ahead at the coordinates I gave you. We’re supposed to rendezvous on the eastern side, where there is a narrow beach. Once you land on the water, taxi in as close as you can, and we’ll wade ashore. After that, you’re done.”
“Whatever you say. Best to strap in now. Touchdown in two minutes.”
Tucker relayed the message to the others, then buckled in next to Elena.
“Beginning descent,” she said.
The nose of the plane dipped, aiming for the dark waters below.
As they plummeted, Elena prepared for landing: flipping switches, adjusting elevator controls, tweaking the throttle. Finally, the plane straightened, racing over the water, until the pontoons kissed the surface. The Beriev shook slightly, bounced once, then settled. The seaplane’s speed rapidly bled off, and the ride smoothed out.
Tucker checked his watch. They had made good time and were twenty minutes early.
“Very shallow here,” Elena announced as she swung the plane’s nose and headed toward the island’s shore.
“Again, just get as close as you can.” Tucker unbuckled and stood up. “Thanks for the ride. I—”
Over Elena’s shoulder, out the side window, a dark shape appeared out of nowhere. Disoriented, Tucker’s first thought was rock. They were passing some storm-beaten shoal sticking out of the water.
Then a strobe of navigation lights bloomed, hovering there, revealing its true nature.
Helicopter.
Tucker shouted, “Elena . . . get down!”
“What—?”
As she turned toward him, her forehead disappeared in a cloud of red mist.
26
March 17, 8:47 P.M.
The Caspian Sea
Tucker dropped to his knees, then his belly. He felt wet warmth dripping down his face and swiped his hand across it.
Blood.
He turned his head and yelled through the cockpit door. “Everyone flat on the deck!”
Kane came slinking toward him, but Tucker held up his hand, and the shepherd stopped.
“What’s happening?” Anya called out, sounding terrified.
“The pilot’s dead. We’ve got company.”
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