by Ben Coes
On the South Lawn of the White House, the rotors of the Sikorsky S-76C were already slashing the air in anticipation.
He dialed Chalmers as he climbed into the cabin and the chopper flew into the dark sky above Washington.
“Hector,” said Chalmers.
“Is she still alive?” asked Calibrisi.
“Yes,” said Chalmers. “We bandaged her wrists. She’s stable.”
“Where are you?”
“We land in Moscow in fifteen minutes. You should know we’re being met by Russian authorities. They’re meeting us on the tarmac.”
“Which airport?”
“Domodedovo,” said Chalmers, referring to Moscow’s largest airport.
“Tell your pilot to take the plane into Ostafyevo,” said Calibrisi. “We need a few minutes before the cops take Katya away.”
“Why? I read the Interpol tear sheet. You stopped the bomb.”
“We stopped one of the bombs. There’s another one. We’re down to our last out here.”
“She’s in bad shape,” said Chalmers. “She cut both wrists. She lost a lot of blood.”
“You said she feels guilty?” asked Calibrisi as he glanced out the window at the Washington Monument, already lit up in red, white, and blue for the Fourth of July. “Tell her she’s already saved at least a hundred thousand lives. Thank her on behalf of the American people. Then tell her she’s going to get the chance to save ten times that number.”
“Will do.”
A minute later, the chopper swooped down to the roof of the National Archives building. Katie and Tacoma were waiting, Tacoma holding a cardboard box filled with files. The door to the helicopter opened. They climbed aboard, then the door shut and the chopper quickly took off.
“You find anything else?” asked Calibrisi.
Katie nodded.
“Guess who one of the case officers was who witnessed Vargarin’s murder?” she asked.
“Josh Gant.”
“How did you know?”
Calibrisi stared at Katie but said nothing.
“Let’s table that discussion for later,” he said. “Right now, we have a nuclear bomb in a Hinckley Talaria that we have to stop. I want you to call Igor. Give him the make and the model on the boat and see if there’s anything he can do.”
Katie pulled out her cell.
“What do mean, ‘anything he can do’?”
“Some sort of variation on facial recognition technology. I want whatever ad hoc software he develops to be live on every possible video feed and security camera from Providence to Washington, with an obvious focus on New York.”
“Is that where we’re going?”
“Yeah,” said Calibrisi. “I might be wrong, but I have to believe that’s where the final target is.”
* * *
Dewey stepped over to Cloud. His eyes were shut. He was unconscious. Dewey felt his neck for a pulse. It was weak, but it was there. He was still alive. Dewey lifted him up onto his shoulder, fireman style.
The voices from the elevator shaft were becoming louder now.
“We have to move,” said Malnikov.
He followed Malnikov to a set of stairs. They climbed up three flights, emerging at the top floor of the skyscraper. Wind ripped across the unfinished concrete, drenching them in rain.
The sky was starting to turn a silvery gray as dawn approached. The Moscow skyline was dimly illuminated in sporadic cuts of light from other buildings. Twin ribbons of steel jutted up from the concrete, arched in curvilinear black against the sky.
Blood from Cloud’s wound covered the right side of Dewey’s coat and pants. Dewey could feel the wetness, warmer and stickier than the rain.
Malnikov clutched his shoulder as he searched the sky for Stihl.
“Pull it aside,” said Dewey to Malnikov, nodding at his blood-soaked shirt.
“No,” said Malnikov. “It hurts too much.”
“Pull it aside.”
Malnikov paused.
“You’ll have to do it,” said Malnikov.
Dewey reached his hand out and gently ripped Malnikov’s shirt away from the left side of his chest. The bullet hole was visible—a small black opening that continued to ooze dark blood. Dewey pulled the shirt down, then looked at Malnikov’s back. It was covered in blood. But there was no exit wound.
“It’s still inside you,” said Dewey. “It didn’t hit your heart, but it needs to be removed.”
Malnikov nodded.
“You’re not going to like what I have to say,” said Dewey.
“What is that? That I’m going to die?”
“No,” said Dewey. “Go back downstairs. Let the cops or whoever they are get you to a hospital.”
“No fucking way,” said Malnikov.
Just then, the black Eurocopter plunged from the clouds, knocked by the crosswinds, then cut toward the top of the building.
“Promise me something,” said Malnikov.
“What?”
“If I die, you will make Calibrisi live up to his end of the bargain.”
“You’re not going to die, Alexei,” said Dewey.
The chopper dropped down quickly as Stihl used the speed of his descent to counter the violent winds. The front of the Eurocopter was tilted forward. As it came closer and closer, it appeared it might slam nose-first into the slab. At the last second, Stihl pulled the chopper back, rear wheels hitting first, then the front.
Dewey and Malnikov moved through the rotor chop toward the door.
“Then the promise won’t cost you anything, will it?” yelled Malnikov.
“Fine,” said Dewey. “I promise.”
Dewey stepped inside the cabin and lay Cloud down on the steel floor. Malnikov followed him on, then the door slid shut behind them. Seconds later, Stihl lifted off.
Dewey went to the back and started pulling out drawers and opening compartments, searching for the trauma kit. He carried the steel case to where Cloud was lying. He pressed several large gauze pads against the wound. Cloud jerked from the pain, though his eyes remained shut. Dewey wrapped a large bandage around Cloud’s hip, as tight as he could, keeping the pads pressed to the wound.
He took another gauze bandage and moved to Malnikov. He pulled Malnikov’s shirt aside and pressed the bandage against the bullet hole, then wrapped a bandage across Malnikov’s chest to keep it in place.
“How do I know you’ll keep your promise?” asked Malnikov.
Dewey looked at Malnikov.
“I never break a promise,” said Dewey.
* * *
Chalmers’s Bombardier touched down at Ostafyevo Airport and came to a stop at the end of the runway.
Chalmers unbuckled and stepped to the cockpit.
“Take it over toward the terminal building but stay at least a hundred feet away.”
“Sure, Derek.”
Chalmers walked back into the cabin. He sat down across from Katya.
“Katya,” he said. “I need to talk to you.”
Katya was lying on the leather built-in sofa, eyes shut. She didn’t respond.
“The United States found the nuclear bomb,” he continued. “It was in Boston. They stopped it. They believe, had it been detonated, at least one hundred thousand people would have perished. Your information prevented that from happening. You saved a lot of lives.”
Katya remained still.
“But we need something more from you. There is another bomb. There were two bombs. There’s only one individual who knows where it’s going.”
Katya’s eyes opened, then tears came to her eyes and started to roll down her cheeks.
“I don’t know where it’s going,” she whispered, looking at Chalmers. “That was just a conversation I overheard. You must believe me. I don’t know!”
“But Pyotr does know,” said Chalmers.
“I don’t know where he is,” she protested. “What do you want me to do? He’s a monster. He wouldn’t listen to me.”
The faint din of
a helicopter hit the cabin, causing Chalmers to turn to the window. Katya’s eyes followed Chalmers.
“No,” she cried. “No!”
“He will listen to you,” said Chalmers. “I need you to be strong. One more time, then it will be over. You can do it. I see how brave you are. I know you can do it. Lives are depending on you.”
* * *
Dewey tapped Stihl’s shoulder as the chopper cut across the Moscow dawn.
“How long until we get there?”
“Five minutes.”
Dewey stepped back into the cabin. Malnikov was seated quietly. He looked weak. Dewey knelt next to Cloud and checked the wound. The bandages were soaked through and a small pool of blood was on the ground beneath his hip. Dewey felt his pulse. It was weaker than before. Dewey shook his shoulder, trying to revive him. It didn’t work.
He pulled out his cell and dialed Calibrisi.
“We’re about to land,” Dewey said. “Is she there?”
“Yes,” said Calibrisi. “Is he still alive?”
“Barely. He’s unconscious. I’m going to try and revive him. I’m not sure it’s going to work.”
“You need to know something,” said Calibrisi. “It’s about his father.”
“His father?”
“He was a nuclear scientist. Before the breakup of the Soviet Union, we recruited him. He was going to defect. He had second thoughts.”
The chopper arced forward and right, descending. Dewey glanced out the window. He could see the small airport in the distance.
“Can this wait?” asked Dewey.
“An agent named Roberts shot his father and mother in front of him. He was five years old.”
Dewey stared at Cloud.
“What’d we do with the agent?”
“The Agency put a sanction on him, but he escaped. I don’t know if he’s still alive.”
“Understood.”
Dewey hung up. He went to the trauma kit. In a compartment on the side of the case were several small bottles of drugs, including painkillers and antibiotics. He found a bottle labeled EPINEPHRINE. Adrenaline. Dewey took a syringe from the kit, removed it from its sterile packaging, and filled it. He left the loaded syringe in the case and stood up.
He glanced out the window. The tarmac was visible in the distance. A light blue jet was parked. Running and cabin lights were visible.
“Put it next to that plane,” said Dewey.
Stihl banked left and descended. A half minute later, the chopper stopped and hovered just a few feet above the ground. Its wheels lowered, then the Eurocopter settled smoothly onto the tarmac.
Dewey opened the side door and crossed a thin stretch of tarmac to the jet, whose cabin door was now lowering. He climbed the stairs and stepped into the cabin.
Looking right, he saw Chalmers, seated, legs crossed.
“Hi, Dewey,” said Chalmers.
Dewey’s eyes moved to Katya, who was seated across from Chalmers.
“Let’s go,” said Dewey.
Katya glanced at Chalmers, who stood up and extended his hand.
“It’s time,” Chalmers said.
Dewey led Katya and Chalmers down the stairs and across the tarmac. Halfway to the helicopter door, Chalmers took Dewey’s arm at the elbow.
Dewey shot Chalmers a look.
“She tried to kill herself,” said Chalmers, out of Katya’s earshot. “Make this quick. She needs to get to a hospital.”
“I’ll do my best, Derek. But right now, I only care about one thing.”
Dewey opened the door of the helicopter and climbed inside, followed by Katya. Chalmers paused at the door, then followed, sliding it shut behind him.
Katya searched in the dimly lit cabin, her eyes finding Cloud. She dropped to her knees beside him. A horrified look crossed her face as she registered his right leg, cleaved of its skin below the knee. Then she saw Cloud’s hip, the dark red bandage, the blood on the floor.
She looked at Dewey. As much as Cloud’s actions horrified her, Katya’s expression showed an even stronger reaction. Her eyes betrayed revulsion at what Dewey had done to him.
She looked back to Cloud.
“Pyotr,” she said. “Pyotr, it’s me.”
Cloud’s head remained limp.
Behind Katya, Dewey removed the syringe. He knelt next to her.
“This is adrenaline,” said Dewey. “I’m going to try and bring him back. Let me speak first.”
Katya nodded.
Dewey pulled the collar of Cloud’s shirt down, exposing his chest. With his left hand, he felt Cloud’s chest, locating the breastplate. He kept two fingers pressed to a specific spot almost directly in the center of the chest, then placed the end of the needle between his fingers and pushed the needle in. Blood spurted from the puncture. He moved the needle in several inches, then pressed the plunger and pumped adrenaline directly into Cloud’s heart.
Cloud’s eyes opened up, then shut. A moment later, he screamed. He said something in Russian, repeating it over and over.
“What’s he saying?” asked Dewey.
“Kill me,” said Malnikov.
“Pyotr, listen to me,” said Dewey.
Cloud continued to scream. His eyes again opened. He turned and looked up at Dewey.
“I know what they did. What we did,” Dewey told him.
“You couldn’t know,” whispered Cloud.
“We killed your father. Your mother. I know about it. But the man who did that was a killer. One man. He was slated for termination because of what he did.”
“You lie!”
“Roberts,” said Dewey. “That was his name. He did it. The people you’re planning on killing, the people in Boston you tried to kill—they didn’t kill your parents. One man did. An evil man.”
“Lies,” Cloud groaned.
Dewey stood up and moved toward the front of the cabin.
For the first time, Cloud saw Katya.
“Oh, God,” he said in a pained whisper. “I’m…”
“Pyotr,” she said as she began to cry, “you have to tell them.”
Cloud looked away from her, shutting his eyes.
“You have to tell the Americans where the bomb is going. It’s not fair. It’s not right.”
“There’s no such thing as fair, Katya,” he said. “Don’t you see that?”
“You’re going to kill a million innocent people. What they did was wrong, but God will judge the man who did that.”
“I was innocent too. My mother was innocent. My father, he was innocent.”
He stared into Katya’s eyes. He was blinking rapidly, trying to hold back his emotions.
“Tell them,” Katya pleaded. “Please, for me.”
Cloud stared at Katya.
“Do you love me?” she asked.
“Of course I love you.”
“And if I was there? If I was in the place where you are sending the bomb? Would you tell them? Or would you let me die?”
“I would tell them,” he whispered. His eyes moved to Dewey, then back to Katya. “But you’re not there.”
She leaned over him, her head just inches from him, her lips nearly touching his.
“Pyotr,” she whispered. “Please show them the person I know. Show me the person I love.”
Dewey took a step back. He leaned into the cockpit. Stihl turned and looked at Dewey.
“Take us up,” Dewey said.
104
BENEATH THE 145TH STREET BRIDGE
HARLEM RIVER
NEW YORK CITY
Faqir steered the boat up the Harlem River, away from New York harbor. The running lights were off. Over his head was a pair of night optics. He had the Talaria moving slowly, its engine barely above a whisper, as he cut north.
The logical approach to the Statue of Liberty would be from the sea. The authorities would not be looking in the Harlem River or the Hudson. And if they were looking—if they did find him—Faqir possessed the ultimate backup plan: detonate the bomb. As soon
as he entered the Harlem River, he had the ability to level untold acres, to bring down building upon building, to kill hundreds of thousands.
He stared up at the green steel of the bridge as he purred north. That was the moment he realized that he’d already won. There was nothing the Americans could do now. All he had to do was press the red button on top of the device.
Faqir pulled out a drawer next to the steering wheel. He picked up the detonator. Ever so lightly, he rubbed his index finger across the button. Then he placed it on the teak table that adorned the center of the deck.
Suddenly, the door to the cabin opened. Naji stepped onto the deck. His hands and clothing were spotted in white paint.
“I painted above the waterline, as you asked,” said Naji.
Faqir held a finger to his lips as an angry scowl came to his face. He motioned for Naji to come closer. He pushed the optics to his forehead so he could look into Naji’s eyes.
“First,” Faqir whispered, “shut the fuck up. Look around you. We’re in the belly of the beast. They could very well be looking for us.”
“You heard the radio,” Naji whispered. “Their own president thinks they stopped us.”
“Unless they’re playing a game,” said Faqir. “The Americans are not very smart, but even a blind squirrel finds an acorn every once in a while. So do us both a favor, shut the hell up.”
Naji nodded.
“Yes,” he said. “I’m sorry. I finished painting the hull. That’s all.”
“Good. How does it look?”
“Like Rembrandt.”
“We’ll drop anchor here for a few hours and let it dry.”
Faqir steered close to the west side of the river, so that the boat was now hidden by a combination of the bridge and the riverbank, a concrete wall that arose thirty feet into the air above the water. He pressed a button that controlled the anchor, dropping it from a built-in compartment at the bow. When he felt the anchor hit the riverbed, he let go of the button and looked at Naji.
“It’s important you understand what I’m about to tell you,” said Faqir, barely even whispering, eyes casting about. He nodded at the detonator.
“We’re now free and clear. It is July Fourth. We did it. So if they catch us, press the button.”
“I thought the Statue of Liberty is our target,” said Naji.
“It is. But if somehow they find us before we get there—”