Battlefield 3: The Russian

Home > Mystery > Battlefield 3: The Russian > Page 31
Battlefield 3: The Russian Page 31

by Andy McNab; Peter Grimsdale


  ‘What’s it to be, Whistler? You don’t want to be the guy who did nothing while New York was wiped off the map?’

  He didn’t respond.

  ‘Paris is probably burning already. Walk me out of here, you could be the man who helped save your city. Unless you’d rather be found dead in a black ops torture chamber.’

  After the institutional greys and khakis of the various rooms he had been incarcerated in, the frenzy of glitz and flashing colours was an assault on Blackburn’s senses. He stood at the north end of the square, a few yards from the red ‘M’ of the subway entrance, wearing nothing but the tunic he had been flown to New York in – under the biker kit Whistler had ridden to work in that morning. Whistler had been a good choice of accomplice. He had enough imagination – just – to give Blackburn the benefit of the doubt. That was generous, since Blackburn knew he could still fail. What did he expect – to find the second shiny suitcase parked next to the Good Morning America studios? The zipper news crawl on the side of the building made no mention of Paris.

  He made another tour of the area. It was full of people: tourists, shoppers, commuters, families with children. He thought of his first visit – as an eight-year-old with his parents. His mother had steered him away from a doorway below a lit-up picture of a girl in a bikini holding a cocktail. He’d thought she looked pretty. Now the doorway and the whole block had been replaced by the M&Ms store. It was getting towards rush hour. He would stay here till midnight and beyond if necessary.

  A half hour passed. The stream of people heading for the subway was getting bigger. Through the throng of departing office workers a giant clown waddled towards him, leering madly. Blackburn moved to the left. Whoever was inside the suit thought it would be funny if he moved the same way. Blackburn turned away and the clown mimicked his move a second time. A little girl giggled and pointed. Wired to snapping point, Blackburn felt like punching him to the ground. Instead he turned a full 180 degrees just in time to see a familiar figure pause at the top of the 40th and Broadway subway entrance in front of Citibank. Their eyes locked briefly. Blackburn scanned the face, the black eyes, the high cheekbones and the heavy brow.

  And then Solomon dived down the stairs into the darkness.

  100

  Paris

  Dima still had no plan. And just five minutes left. Just keep going, keep going, and thinking. The Seine now on his left. He could ditch in there if he could get to it – but the barriers – he’d have to find some kind of ramp. Quai Saint-Exupéry now, passing Pont d’Issy-les-Moulineaux. Barges moored along the river. A police Peugeot in the mirror closing in on him. They wouldn’t risk firing, there was too much traffic. A round slammed into the rear window. Wrong.

  He wove between cars and trucks, came up on the nearside of a transporter laden with Toyotas. The cop Peugeot was on the other side of it. Dima floored the accelerator as far as it would go, got ahead then jammed on the brakes. The transporter driver swerved to the right, his trailer jack-knifing across the carriageway and tipping its load on to the road, one of the Toyotas smashing on to the cops’ roof.

  The Quai du Point du Jour turned into the Quai Georges Gorse and curved west following the river’s tight turn at Ile Seguin, once the site of the Renault factory – the whole crescent-shaped island given over to the plant. Five thousand workers had churned out cars day and night. Now it was deserted, the factory walls flattened. A connecting bridge was coming up – no intersection. Dima threw the Transit into a right which took him north, then a left, and then another. Ahead now was the bridge to the island, with gates across it. At least that meant nobody was home. He braced himself and charged at the gates, bouncing over them as they burst and fell – then headed for what he guessed was the centre of the island and slammed to a halt.

  Five minutes left. Five minutes to live. Five minutes to try and stop it. He opened the rear doors, climbed in, and with all his force pushed the copier out on to the dirt. It fell on its side, bursting the casing and exposing the device. No detonation. He kicked the shards of the copier away, then grabbed the electrician’s tool bag: now concentrate, Dima, and get to work.

  All his emotion was shut down now – his mind just a processor, making choices, decisions, not even thinking about Adam Levalle.

  The shiny aluminium casing gave no apparent sign of a way in. No labels, no serial numbers, no clues of any kind. Inside would be a tube with two pieces of uranium. When rammed together by a detonator – that would cause the blast. With some sort of firing unit to do the business and a timer to tell it when.

  On one of the narrower sides he found a rectangular panel. He got a chisel from the tool bag and prised it open. He’d defused IEDs in Afghanistan but that was a long while ago. And he’d been trained to do it with the skill and patience of a watchmaker – but there was no time for craftsmanship. The timer was under the panel, an LED display –‘04.10’. Four minutes, ten seconds. Solomon – obsessed with timekeeping – no wonder the rest of the world had made him so full of hate.

  Three minutes, fifty seconds. He grabbed a claw hammer and tried levering out the timer. It wouldn’t budge. Solidly welded to an inner frame, it looked like high tensile steel. It might only be small, but even this size was enough to devastate the city and everyone in it.

  He thought about Blackburn: had they finally listened to him? If this went off maybe they’d believe him – but you never knew with Americans. Once they’d made up their minds about something, or someone, they didn’t like to change them.

  Okay, forget the timer: go for the detonator. He jumped back into the van. More tools – but nothing that looked useful. Wait – the van itself. He fell into the driving seat and turned on the ignition. Nothing. It was on a slight incline. He pushed his whole weight against the thing and moved it a few metres away, then set the van rolling, with just enough momentum to get over it. Push and steer, and just hope to God it worked. The rear wheels met the outer casing, dented it and split a seam. Good enough. He worked on that with the claw hammer for a full thirty seconds. Sirens now, a whole squadron, coming down the Rue Troyon. What took them so long?

  01.50. One minute fifty seconds on the LED. Get to the detonator now – fused solid to the tubes. Someone really didn’t want this tampered with.

  Out of the corner of his eye he saw a row of blue flashing lights. One or the other – not long now. At least he’d have company for the end. He got the claw hammer between the detonator and the tubes. It wasn’t moving though. Come on Dima! 00.48 now. One more idea. The cop cars were on the bridge. He looked down, and wondered if, just maybe, your focus gets that little bit sharper when you’re sure you’re going to die. He threw the hammer away, grasped the detonator in one bare hand, the rest of the device in the other, squeezed the detonator and twisted. 00.09, 00.08. Tighter! The whole detonator – it was attached like an oil cap on an engine – it turned a fraction, then some more. 04, 03, 02 . . .

  Game over. Dima thought he saw 00.00. A fraction of a second while the mechanism showed its deadly signal. Then the brightest, whitest flash. And a sensation of flying, but no landing.

  Epilogue

  In the Bois de Boulogne, the leaves were rustling in the breeze, which was pleasant. Several tables away a small dog was refusing to stop yapping. The more pieces of cake its owner fed it the more it barked. Vladimir let out a low groan.

  ‘I’m afraid I’m going to have to shoot her.’

  ‘Do something to take his mind off it.’ Omorova said, lifting her gaze from her iPad so Dima could read her lips.

  ‘I’m off duty,’ said Dima from behind his dark glasses. ‘It’s Sunday. I’m here relaxing in Paris. And since I can’t hear anything because my eardrums are still shot, I’m fine thank you very much.’

  He raised the binoculars again and scanned the promenading couples.

  ‘You know, you could be arrested for that.’

  ‘Whatever you think I’m doing, you’re wrong.’

  Under their coffee cups and Ri
card glasses was a Herald Tribune. Vladimir nodded at the headline. Marine Bomb Hero Cleared.

  ‘You think they made it up – so as not to be outdone?’ He read out the rest. ‘“Nuke terrorist slain after Subway chase.” Come on. One minute Blackburn’s in the slammer for icing his CO. Next he’s jumping the tracks chasing down public enemy number one on the New York Subway. Do me a favour.’

  ‘America has a free press. They don’t make stuff up. You have to believe they can do things like that. That’s why they run the world. Besides, I know my pal Blackburn is a man of infinite resource. That’s why I personally selected him for the job.’

  ‘Now you’re making stuff up. He’s the one told you it was Solomon.’

  ‘And you knew him for what – two hours?’

  ‘I’ve had romances shorter than that.’

  Omorova looked at Vladimir, a trace of disgust in her otherwise sphinx-like expression, then smiled at Dima.

  ‘You proved one thing wrong – about us Ruskies always being the bad guys. In fact, it would be a good starting point for your memoirs. Could be a bestseller.’

  ‘Except I’d have to make up the last bit. I don’t remember a thing about it.’

  ‘The detonator blew, the rest didn’t because you’d detached it. You saved Paris.’

  ‘Yeah, but the French aren’t too happy with our role as their saviours. That’s why they majored on all the damage we did on the way.’

  Dima found what he was looking for, put down the binoculars, grabbed his stick and heaved himself up from the table.

  Omorova wagged a finger. ‘Steady now, we don’t want to have to scrape you off the tarmac a second time.’

  ‘Where’s he off to?’ asked Vladimir.

  ‘Unfinished business, I think,’ said Omorova.

  Dima hadn’t worked out anything about what would happen as he struggled forward, the cast on his broken leg chafing. He hadn’t prepared a speech. He opted just to go with the flow, see where the conversation went and maybe – or maybe not. And that was just as well because what he had failed to spot as he tracked Adam Levalle and his girlfriend through the binoculars was the older couple not far behind.

  ‘Hey!’

  Adam waved when he spotted Dima.

  ‘Well, this is a surprise.’

  He grasped Dima’s hand, shook it hard, then embraced him. His girlfriend smiled.

  ‘Natalie, this is Dima – Mayakovsky.’

  Adam turned to the older couple behind him, who were deep in conversation.

  ‘Dima, please – let me introduce you to my parents.’

  ‘Hey Mom, Dad – meet the Saviour of Paris. And my new hero.’

  But Dima could find no words.

  FIN

  Also by Andy McNab

  BRAVO TWO ZERO

  IMMEDIATE ACTION

  SEVEN TROOP

  SPOKEN FROM THE FRONT

  REMOTE CONTROL

  CRISIS FOUR

  FIREWALL

  LAST LIGHT

  LIBERATION DAY

  DARK WINTER

  DEEP BLACK

  AGGRESSOR

  RECOIL

  CROSSFIRE

  BRUTE FORCE

  EXIT WOUND

  ZERO HOUR

  DEAD CENTRE

  WAR TORN with Kym Jordan

  BOY SOLDIER with Robert Rigby

  PAYBACK with Robert Rigby

  AVENGER with Robert Rigby

  MELTDOWN with Robert Rigby

  DROPZONE

  DROPZONE 2: TERMINAL VELOCITY

  For more information on Andy McNab and his books, see his website at www.andymcnab.co.uk

  Also by Peter Grimsdale

  PERFECT NIGHT

  JUST WATCH ME

  AN ORION EBOOK

  First published in Great Britain in 2011 by Orion Books.

  This eBook first published in 2011 by Orion Books.

  Copyright © Orion 2011

  Battlefield 3™© Electronic Arts Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  ISBN: 9780857820693 eBook

  ISBN: 9780857820679 Hardback

  ISBN: 9780857820686 Export Trade Paperback

  Orion Books

  The Orion Publishing Group Ltd

  Orion House

  5 Upper St Martin’s Lane

  LondonWC2H 9EA

  An Hachette UK Company

  www.orionbooks.co.uk

  Table of Contents

  Title page

  Dedication

  Author’s Note

  Contents

  Prologue

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25

  26

  27

  28

  29

  30

  31

  32

  33

  34

  35

  36

  37

  38

  39

  40

  41

  42

  43

  44

  45

  46

  47

  48

  49

  50

  51

  52

  53

  54

  55

  56

  57

  58

  59

  60

  61

  62

  63

  64

  65

  66

  67

  68

  69

  70

  71

  72

  73

  74

  75

  76

  77

  78

  79

  80

  81

  82

  83

  84

  85

  86

  87

  88

  89

  90

  91

  92

  93

  94

  95

  96

  97

  98

  99

  100

  Epilogue

  Also by Andy McNab

  Copyright

 

 

 


‹ Prev