by Alex Dryden
‘It’s just a standard issue,’ she replied.
‘I know, but you shouldn’t have carried it with you. Not into Ukraine.’
‘I’m glad I did. When the shouting started and the lights blinded me, I thought I was being attacked. It was an automatic reaction.’
Taras was silent for a moment, wondering how he could at least appear to be useful to his chief. Then he looked at her. ‘Before you entered the barn, did you see anyone else? Anyone around our farm, or on the land? Anyone near the barn?’ He stared at her, willing her to understand his meaning.
She watched his face and seemed to think deeply about his questions. Then spoke. ‘I saw a woman,’ she said. ‘She was walking along the road, up from the centre of the town, then she turned up through a gap between some houses towards where the farm is.’
That was good, Taras thought. She’d understood. The Russian officer had said, ‘It’s not her.’ So they’d expected a woman, another woman, and Masha had supplied him with a fictional one, but it was more than she’d said to the interrogators who’d come before him. It made Taras seem useful.
‘What was she like?’ he said.
‘I don’t remember much,’ Masha replied. ‘She was just a woman I happened to see.’
‘What was she wearing?’
‘A black coat. I remember that. And a wool hat, but I don’t remember the colour.’
That was good, a description, but not a description that suggested she was looking hard at anyone, that she was making an observation.
‘Did you see her afterwards?’
‘No. I just saw her turn up towards the farm. I was already on my way back, before I decided to look in at the barn.’
She’d helped him, Taras thought, and he hoped it was enough to justify another meeting with her.
As he walked back through the corridors of the hospital, he took care to thank the officer, so that he would remember him, on what he hoped would be another visit. When he was clear of the area surrounding the hospital he walked for a while, down towards the port. He saw a café and entered. He ordered a coffee. Then he went to a toilet which was lit by a wan light bulb and dropped the notebook from his sleeve and read what she’d written in the dim light. It was hard, not just because of the light, but because she hadn’t been looking at the pad when she wrote and her scrawl was bad, falling off the side of the paper twice. He made out a name, ‘Volkov ... my boss. He gave me a package.’ Then he finally managed to decipher the only other words. ‘A tree,’ it read. ‘400 metres above the barn.’ He tore the paper and flushed it down the toilet.
When he left the café he took a taxi to the centre of town. He decided to be open, on the assumption that they might be watching him. He took a bus up to the western end of town and then walked the route Masha had told him she’d seen the woman walking, until he came to the farm. He let himself in with a key and opened up the locked shutters and then the windows. In the kitchen he found an old jar of coffee and boiled some water and piled five spoons of sugar into a cup, before going outside and sitting on the porch in the sun, sipping the hot coffee where anyone could see him. When he’d finished, he put the cup down and walked towards the barn a quarter of a mile away. That would be normal.
He reached it. Surveillance and forensic teams had already turned the place over several times. He glanced at the door jamb where the single rotten door hung loosely and saw the lighter shade where the signal sight had been left in the form of a strip of adhesive tape. He walked around the barn and then turned to the left, heading up the hill behind him. He saw the tree, but sat down halfway to it and looked out over the bay and the Black Sea beyond, taking the sun in on his face as he lifted it up towards the sky. But all the time he watched for eyes.
He walked the remaining part of the way to the tree in a roundabout way, giving no hint that it was where he was heading. When he reached it, he swung his leg on to a knot in the trunk and hauled himself up into a crook and sat again, as if to get a better view of the town below and the sea beyond. But he noted the two sets of footprints that had been left when the ground was wetter. They’d stopped at the foot of the tree, then one set headed up the hill – the woman’s he supposed – and the other set – Masha’s led down the hill towards the barn. But there was nothing in the tree. The woman, whose steps he saw before they disappeared in the harder ground above, must have picked up whatever Masha had been carrying. Someone good, then; someone who could work out what a courier would do. Someone who looked at the possibilities and saw that a courier really only had one place to lodge a package while they reconnoitred the barn. Someone highly professional.
Back in the centre of town, Taras took a taxi to Simferol airport for the flight to Odessa. He turned over in his mind the scenario that seemed most likely to him. Masha had been asked to make a drop. Another woman had been making the pick-up. Two KGB officers had been killed on the same day, one in Odessa, the other on a remote road in the Crimean peninsula. Had the woman been the killer? He suspected so.
And then his mind went to where his chief’s hadn’t gone – not yet, in any case. If the Russians were sending something secret into Ukraine – which her boss, Volkov, evidently was – they wouldn’t have used something so obscure as a drop in a barn. Something so small that Masha could carry could and would have been brought in on a military vessel from the Russian side, and then handed over in a more straightforward way in the town. So that suggested to him that the woman making the pick-up wasn’t from Ukraine at all and that the message or whatever it was that was being trasnmitted from the Russian side was intended for a person or people or organisation outside Ukraine. Ukraine was just the drop. And if it was intended for someone outside Ukraine, that must mean it was intended for someone from the West. Her boss, Volkov, was sending something to the West. Was he a double agent, then? Everything suggested that.
As he sat on the plane and watched the coast of the Crimea unfolding beneath him towards Odessa, he knew what he had to do. Check the entry points, the airports, the ports in southern Ukraine on that day, 16 January, and the days before, and identify a woman travelling on her own; a woman who had killed two Russian intelligence officers and then disappeared, presumably with the package.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
UP ABOVE THE city, in an area of desolate waste ground, there were signs of bulldozer tracks. Anna paused at the side of the earth road and looked at where they criss-crossed the landscape, gouging the earth and ending in piles of smashed wreckage that were once makeshift shanties. Then the tracks were reversed in order to continue their destructive work. She turned and gazed down the hill behind her from where she’d come. A solitary lark was singing above a green meadow immediately below the stripped landscape and a few brown and white cows grazed on a slope. Beyond the meadow, the city of Sevastopol lay in its long bay, with other bays that branched off it. The blue waters reflected the clear, deep colour of a cloudless sky.
She turned again and looked up ahead in the direction she was walking. There were green-tinted mountains rising beyond the waste ground that were topped with tooth-shaped crags. She was near the new shanty town now, and saw how hastily it had been erected after its predecessor had been destroyed by the bulldozers. The waste ground was dotted with the shacks and shanties made from odds and ends found in the city’s dumps or on the beaches. The scrawny habitations had an unmistakable impermanence about them. They looked like the scum and refuse left by a falling tide. The bulldozer tracks marked where the inhabitants of the shacks had last put up their bedraggled homes and where the homes had been unceremoniously crushed a few weeks before. Twelve weeks, she’d heard, that was how long the people here were left unmolested before the bulldozers arrived again. The length of time had nothing to do with leniency, it was merely the time the creaking bureaucratic machine of the Crimea parliament took to grind into its destructive action.
She walked on again and, as she approached the first of the shacks, she saw it was made up of mostly cardboard
boxes, a torn awning consisting of a plastic sheet that probably came from the city’s waste dump nearby or had been washed ashore from a freighter, and bits of twisted iron pipe that supported the rickety structure. Two dark-skinned boys were playing outside, rolling a metal wheel hub along with a stick. One of the boys was naked, the other wore a pair of torn and filthy shorts. There was no water or electricity up here on the detritus-strewn land. The inhabitants had to walk half a mile across the hill and take their water from a stream in plastic cans that had been washed up on the beaches. As a refinement of the bureaucrats’ cruelty, each time they bulldozed the shanties they moved them further from the water source. And it must get very cold up here in winter, Anna thought.
A woman stared at her from what passed for a doorway in the jumble of boxes and crates. There was no greeting, just a blank, narrow stare that concealed, perhaps, fear or suspicion, or both. Anna had the Slavic features of the persecutors who bulldozed the shanty town’s Tatar inhabitants from their homes. Unusually for children, the boys ignored her and she walked on. Perhaps they had learned to avoid the Slavs. The lark’s song rose above their shouts and cries as they beat the metal hub.
The density of the shanties increased as she approached the notional centre of the derelict habitation. They were all Tatars who lived here, it was a refuge for Tatars who continued to return from the lands of Central Asia and from Siberia where Stalin had exiled their forefathers. The sons and daughters, grandsons and granddaughters of Stalin’s slaves were returning to their own land and had been returning in fits and starts since 1991 when Ukraine won its independence. Their former homes in the cities of the Crimea had long-since been requisitioned or just stolen from them at the end of the Great Patriotic War in 1944. Stalin had chosen to ignore the contribution of the vast majority of Tatars who had fought in the Soviet Army and punished the whole group for the errors of the few who had joined the Nazis. They had done so in the forlorn belief that Hitler would give them an independent Crimea. Once a majority, the Tatars were now a disaffected, unwanted minority who were viewed with suspicion and hatred by those who’d stolen their land and property.
Anna came to a rough circle of shanties. Most had prayer mats laid outside them on the ground. In lieu of a mosque, this was their prayer centre where they turned towards the south-east and Mecca. A few cooking fires were burning, sullen men without work smouldered beside them. They stared blankly at her or continued to squat or whittle sticks – empty activities without a purpose. The women seemed to be inside the makeshift structures. There was a smell of stale coffee and vegetable waste that mingled together in the warm morning air.
Anna approached a group of men who were smoking and talking in low voices, leaning against a stripped World War Two truck. They looked at her with a mixture of hate and curiosity. A ‘white’ woman never came here at all, let alone unaccompanied.
‘I’m looking for Irek,’ she said.
‘Who shall I say is calling?’ one of the men said with an insolent pretence at formality.
‘A benefactor.’
The man laughed scornfully and drew on the last grains of tobacco from the cigarette that was clamped between his front teeth. He had a wild flame of black hair that fell across his face behind which the intense whites of his eyes glittered angrily.
‘What have you brought us? Bread and liberty?’ He laughed harshly again and threw the cigarette end to the ground.
‘Where is he?’ Anna said.
The man looked at her, studying her without speaking, surprised at her assurance in so hostile an environment. Then he snapped some words to a boy playing nearby, some instruction spoken in their language, and the boy raced off up the hill and disappeared behind the irrational turmoil of the shanties. Anna made no further attempt to communicate. She sat down on the ground, removed her pack and crossed her legs. She was hot. The sun was climbing and by midday the temperature looked set to rise to a summer heat up here on the hill. By adopting this submissive position, she guessed the men would relax and ignore her.
In a short while, the boy returned and spoke to the man who’d given him instructions. The man turned to her and switched to speaking Russian, telling her to follow him. Three other men joined him and as she got up from the ground they surrounded her and walked like a guard escort, shielding whoever they were taking her to meet at the top of the camp.
They reached a traditional, tent-like structure which had a few rugs laid out on the bare earth and two poles that supported several plastic sheets. It was a larger place than the rest of the shanties. One of the men went inside, bending beneath the low, plastic sheet that served as an entrance. From inside, Anna heard the Tatar twang, its Turkic origins dating back from when the Huns swept west and assaulted the Roman empire. Finally, the man emerged from the tent and beckoned to her.
When she entered, she saw there was an attempt at making a home of sorts. Cushions were strewn around a rug that was frayed and eaten with holes. An ancient radio that looked like it had been salvaged stood on an upturned fish crate. A couple of metal pots and some cooking utensils hung from a string. But only the old man who sat on a cushion facing the tent’s opening didn’t have a temporary look about him.
‘Selam,’ Anna said and Irek motioned to her to sit on a cushion facing him. With his other hand he irritably waved away the men grouped by the entrance to the tent.
‘Selam,’ he replied.
Anna watched his expression closely. Irek, the senior man in the community, had fierce dark eyes set deeply in a face that was nut-brown and lined in generous gouges of flesh that stretched tightly over high cheekbones. His cropped hair was grizzled and grey and his ears stood out from his head unnaturally large against the veined and shrunken skull.
It was true, he must be ninety years old, Anna thought. That was what she’d been told in the briefing, although there was no record of his birth.
Nearly every trace of Tatar culture in the Crimea had been erased by the Russians after the Second World War. Ancient texts and even Marxist-Leninist tracts in translation had been burned. Mosques and cemeteries were destroyed, records obliterated and whole villages were razed. All the Tatar place names in the Crimea had been changed. Irek was one of the oldest of a people who had been brought to the brink of extinction, both literally and culturally, and one of the few still alive from those times. He had been crammed into a cattle truck in 1944 and sent on a ten-day journey without food and barely any water, to be left with the less-than-half of his people who survived the journey. They were simply thrown out of the cattle trucks on to the winter steppes of Kazakhstan to fend for themselves. He’d had four sons and four daughters, as far as she knew, half of whom died in infancy and the rest in the years of brutal hard labour and starvation.
‘You are Russian,’ Irek stated.
‘I’m an American now,’ she replied.
‘Russians … Americans … what’s the difference? You say you are a benefactor. Neither are our benefactors. We are a hounded people.’ He shrugged. ‘What brings you here?’
A thin plastic curtain inside the tent was pushed aside and a large woman in a single piece of shapeless brown clothing that reached to her ankles entered carrying a plate of biscuits which she laid on the rug between them as if it were a rare speciality. A tea urn bubbled in the background and when the woman returned she brought two tin cups with a leaf tea the aroma of which Anna didn’t recognise.
‘I’ve come with a request,’ Anna said when the woman had gone, ‘and an offer of help.’
He lifted his mug of tea and indicated for her to do the same.
‘Giving and taking at the same time, is that it?’ Irek said, but without acrimony. ‘First, what are you offering? What justifies your claim to be a benefactor?’
She watched the shrewd eyes watching her and sipped from the tin mug. That he had seen her at all was a testament to how desperate these people were. But she knew he would examine what she had to say carefully and reject it if he had no trust in
her.
‘The people I represent believe they have uncovered a conspiracy,’ she said quietly. ‘It concerns an organisation called Qubaq.’
She saw him stiffen. ‘What about it?’ he said sharply.
‘There are people who wish to implicate it in terrorist acts,’ she replied. ‘The bomb at the nightclub in Odessa, for example. Back in January. These people wish to hide their own deeds by blaming Qubaq for them.’
He didn’t reply. He reached his arm behind his back without turning and brought out a hookah pipe that had been hidden from her. Without responding to what she’d said at all, he began to flake a sweet-smelling tobacco into the bowl and lit a small piece of charcoal which he then placed over it. He fitted a mouthpiece over the pipe and drew the smoke through the water deeply. Then he replaced the mouthpiece with another and offered it to her. As she smoked, he began.
‘We are not extremists,’ he said. ‘The Tatars have never been extremists for Islam. We are like the Turks, a Turkic people. We do not share the aims of the extremists. What we want, quite simply, is justice. We are not looking for the restoration of our property, we are not looking for financial compensation for the evils of the past. We want a new start. We want political freedom in the parliament of the Crimea, within Ukraine, not separation. We are too worn down to be used for anything by anybody.’
‘You will be made the scapegoats,’ Anna replied. ‘That is the conspiracy. Your weakness is no defence against that. It simply invites it.’