The Boy Who Stole From the Dead

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The Boy Who Stole From the Dead Page 12

by Orest Stelmach


  “Help me?”

  “Yes.”

  “With what?”

  “Anything.” Simeonovich glanced at the photos of his children. Turned back to Nadia. “Anything at all.”

  CHAPTER 21

  VICTOR BODNAR SMILED as the Sunday morning sun warmed his face in Tompkins Square Park in the Lower East Village. The Timkiv twins sat across from him eyeing separate chess boards. Victor was playing both of them at the same time.

  They’d proven themselves to be invaluable in Ukraine last year and he’d arranged for them to join him in New York. The Gun wore a tattoo on his right arm. It featured a gun beside the ace of spades, a bottle of vodka, a ten-ruble note, and the profile of a girl with serpents for hair. The Ammunition wore the same tattoo on the same arm but his featured three bullets instead of a gun.

  The tattoos were reminders the boys had spent time in Corrective Labor Colony Four. In Kyiv, the tattoos were a sign of strength. They generated fear and commanded respect. In New York City, they were liabilities. They drew attention to their owners and spoke of vanity, violence, and a life of crime. That is why Victor had instructed them to wear long sleeve shirts with collars the moment they arrived in the United States, six months ago. And now Victor’s prudence was the source of his problem. He couldn’t tell them apart.

  At least not on the street. In the park, it was an entirely different matter. He’d been teaching them chess since the grass had thawed. They were both quick learners. This was not entirely surprising since they were expert computer hackers. In personal style, they were quite different. The Ammunition loved the Queen’s Gambit. He sacrificed pawns for a stronger center and routinely exposed his king. He was bold and decisive. The Gun, on the other hand, preferred the Pirc Defense. He allowed his opponent to build an imposing center and turned it into a target for attack. He was patient and clever.

  In Victor’s experience as a thief and a con man, chess was a manifestation of a man’s likely behavior on the streets. Individually, the twins could be beat. Together, however, they were invulnerable. As long as their coach optimized their collective skills.

  Victor moved his knight and completed the Berlin Defense.

  “Checkmate,” he said.

  The Ammunition stared at the table and swore.

  Victor changed seats to face his brother. Twelve moves later he beat the Gun. The brothers had now lost a combined seventy-two consecutive matches.

  “Eventually, one of us is going to beat you,” the Ammunition said in Russian.

  “It’s only a matter of time,” the Gun said.

  “The day either of you beat me is the day you should leave me,” Victor said.

  “We’d like to make some money first,” the Gun said. “I know a guy in Brighton Beach who knows about a shipment of marijuana coming in through New Jersey. The protection’s weak. It would be an easy score.”

  “No it wouldn’t,” Victor said.

  “How do you know?” the Gun said.

  “If it was easy, the guy from Brighton Beach wouldn’t be asking for your help.”

  “I met a girl who works as the accountant in the home office of a big department store,” the Ammunition said. “She’s a user. She needs money. She has access to a database of credit cards. We could keep the upfront payment low. Pay her a back-end once we turn them over.”

  “Your final reward may not be to your liking,” Victor said.

  “Why do you say that?” the Ammunition said.

  “Because users inform on others when their habit lands them in jail.”

  The Timkiv twins rolled their eyes at each other.

  “You’ve got to let us work, Victor,” the Ammunition said.

  “Yeah, Victor,” the Gun said.

  Victor spread his palms over the chess tables. “You are working.”

  “Not chess,” the Gun said. “You’ve got to let us do something that’s going to put money in our pockets.”

  “Exactly,” Victor said. “I’m glad we’re on the same page.”

  The twins frowned.

  Victor’s cell phone vibrated. He stepped away for some privacy and answered it. When he heard his daughter’s voice, his heart soared, as always.

  “Anything new from Iryna?” Victor said in Ukrainian.

  “No,” Tara said. “Father, why did you ask Iryna to get involved with that boy? What’s so important about this locket you want her to find for you? It’s just a piece of jewelry his father handed down to him before he died, isn’t it?”

  “Maybe,” Victor said. “Maybe not. It’s best not to get into details right now.”

  An old friend had bought a watch on the street from a desperate-looking man for twenty dollars, thinking it was gold. When he scratched the back of the face, however, it turned out to be gold plated. Beneath the gold were a man’s initials. When Victor saw this, he wondered. What if the priceless formula for a radiation countermeasure was etched on Adam Tesla’s locket beneath the gold plating?

  “The fact the boy never let Iryna touch the locket after a month of dating tells me something,” Victor added. “Especially given she asked to take a look at it while it was hanging around his neck. And he refused.”

  “What does it tell you?”

  “That I’d like to have a look at it myself.”

  “But how could a piece of old jewelry be so valuable you’d want to steal it?”

  “Your father is a thief, sweetheart. Always was. Always will be. Beyond that you don’t need to worry yourself about anything. Know that I’m doing my best to leave you and my grandson as big a fortune as humanly possible.”

  “Yes. I know that.”

  Victor could hear the excitement in her voice. Money had that effect on even the purest conscience. “That locket must be in prison with the boy’s other possessions. Tell Iryna not to bring it up anymore but to stay vigilant. Tell her to keep listening. And remind her how much she enjoys America compared to her prior life milking cows in the breadbasket of Europe.”

  Victor said good-bye and hung up.

  Thieves-in-law, members of Voroskoi Mir such as Victor, were not allowed to have families or children. But this was America, not Ukraine or Russia, and most of the old thieves were dead. Who cared if his casual affair with a baker in New York produced a child twenty-eight years ago? He cared. That’s who cared. His discovery that he was a father—and now a grandfather—thirteen months ago was nothing less than a rebirth. He had passion again. He had a purpose again.

  And it was a more powerful motivator than anything he’d ever known.

  CHAPTER 22

  NADIA RETURNED TO New York on Sunday night. On Monday morning, she visited her elderly friend, Paul Obon. His Duma bookstore in New York’s Lower East Side catered to English-speaking people of Ukrainian descent from all over the world.

  Obon had immigrated to America with Nadia’s father. She’d known him her entire life. Nadia had called ahead and asked him to see what he could dig up on Ivan Valentin. She also wanted to learn more about Russian oligarchs in general. To better understand Ivan Valentin and discover his son’s connection to Bobby, she thought it would be beneficial to know his world. And she’d be learning more about Simeon Simeonovich as well.

  They stood at the front desk drinking tea.

  “The oligarchs gained their wealth in two stages,” Obon said. “First, when Yeltsin succeeded Gorbachev in 1991. The Soviet Union had collapsed. The Russians couldn’t feed their people. There was a global recession. They couldn’t trade their resources, couldn’t generate cash. So Yeltsin’s cabinet came up with a voucher scheme. The government offered the population vouchers to buy shares in privatized companies in exchange for cash. Mostly agricultural and service companies.”

  “Free enterprise,” Nadia said.

  “The average Russian spent a month’s wages to buy a future stake in a p
rivate company. But most didn’t understand what they owned. A few did. Hustlers set up kiosks that traded vodka and cigarettes for vouchers. Stalls popped up outside farms and factories. Former KGB agents encouraged people to part with their stakes.”

  “If you’re a first generation American and your parents lived behind the Iron Curtain, hearing that is no surprise.”

  “It was the same in Ukraine and the other Soviet countries. Yeltsin sold one hundred forty-four million vouchers. That represented half of the entire Russian economy.”

  “For how much?”

  “Twelve billion dollars.”

  “Most large American companies are worth more than that.”

  “And that was Yeltsin when he was sober. By 1995 he was drunk and barely in control of the country. There was money laundering, corruption. A group of businessmen made a backroom deal with Yeltsin. They offered to lend him cash if he put up shares in the other half of the economy as collateral.”

  “The other half of the economy being natural resources.”

  “The loan for shares program gave the businessmen the right to acquire those companies if the government defaulted on the repayment of the loans.”

  “Which was inevitable.”

  “An auction was held. Only select businessmen were allowed to participate. The apparatchiks controlled the bidding process. It was a complete sham.”

  “How much did the loan for shares scheme raise?”

  “In the range of fifty billion dollars.”

  “For all of Russia’s natural resources.”

  “No. For all of Russian’s natural resources, metal industries, and telecommunications businesses.”

  “That’s less than one third the value of General Electric.”

  “A man should never sell state assets and drink vodka at the same time. Loan for shares gave birth to the oligarchs. When the world economy and commodity prices recovered, they joined the ranks of the richest men in the world.”

  Nadia handed Obon another book. “Was Simeon Simeonovich one of them?”

  “No. He bought his businesses one at a time from the others.”

  “I’m surprised. If they were good businesses, why did they sell?”

  “Because Putin told them to.”

  “You’re kidding me.”

  “No. There was an epic meeting among the oligarchs and Putin on July 28, 2000. By all accounts it was like something out of The Godfather. The oligarchs had gotten out of control. The conspicuous consumption, the arrogance. The population was sick of them. They were sheltering their income, avoiding taxes. They were complaining about corruption and inside dealing. Demanding social change.”

  “To protect their money.”

  “From the same lawlessness they used to earn their fortunes. Putin ordered the oligarchs to report to him regularly. As penalties for inappropriate behavior, he would demand certain businesses be sold from time to time. Otherwise he told them they could keep their gains if they paid their taxes, gave back to the community, and stayed out of politics.”

  “And what if they didn’t?”

  Obon grunted. “Let me put it this way. There’s an old Russian joke. Stalin’s ghost appears in a dream to Putin. He asks advice on how to lead the country. Stalin says, ‘Round up and shoot all the democrats, then paint the interior of the Kremlin blue.’ Putin frowns and says, ‘Why blue?’ Stalin smiles. ‘Ah,’ he says. ‘I knew you wouldn’t have a problem with the first part.’ ”

  “I read that Simeonovich is close to Putin. Like Abramovich.”

  “That’s why he’s been a beneficiary of some of the forced sales. He’s a Cossack. He loves Russia. He invested hundreds of millions to improve living standards in Siberia. And Putin has a soft spot for him for this reason.”

  “If you were me, would you trust him?”

  “You’re doing a job for him. It’s he that must trust you. Still, he’s not the worst of the lot. I’d put more faith in his word than Ivan Valentin’s, that’s for sure.”

  “What did you find out?”

  “An apparatchik. An agent of the Soviet apparatus. A lifetime communist bureaucrat. Born in 1940 in Kotelniki outside Moscow. Went to college at the Branch Kotelniki University of Nature. Got his start coordinating schedules for sanitation runs in Kootenai in 1967. Graduated to running the entire sanitation department in 1974. Promoted to second-in-command in Moscow in 1979. Credited with introducing the garbage compactor to the Soviet Union. Became head of sanitation in Moscow in 1981 and guest lecturer at Moscow University on the same topic. Moved to the Ministry of Atomic Energy in 1985 and became a member of the Ecology Committee. That was his post when the Soviet Union dissolved.”

  “Atomic Energy? A sanitation worker?”

  “He was in charge of nuclear waste disposal at Krasnoyarsk. A plutonium production site. Still a repository today for over a million and a half liquid curies of nuclear waste buried several hundred meters deep. They supply the local population with water out of storage tanks buried right next to the nuclear waste.”

  “Nuclear waste?” Nadia’s ears perked up. No place had more nuclear waste than Chornobyl, Ukraine, where her uncle lived and Bobby visited. “Where is Krasnoyarsk?”

  “Siberia.”

  “Siberia.” Chornobyl, however, was a long way from Siberia. “His timber company is in Siberia.”

  “A classic case of an old red director getting an inside deal in the loan for shares scheme.”

  “But where would he have gotten the cash for the loan?”

  “From his friends. Other apparatchiks. They’re all part of one cabal or another. He married twice. Divorced the first wife. One child. Ivan, born 1981. Moved to London in 1999 but kept homes near Krasnoyarsk and in Moscow. First wife died a few years ago during a trip back to Russia. No record of the cause of death.”

  “But he was never posted in Ukraine.”

  “No. But as a member of the Ecology Committee he was in charge of the clean-up of the Chornobyl nuclear plant disaster.”

  Chills shimmied down Nadia’s spine. “Do you know if he travelled to Chornobyl?”

  “That level of detail wouldn’t be found in the Politburo archives. You’d have to go to Kyiv and search the Central State Historical Archives yourself.”

  Memories of her week in Kyiv flitted in and out of her mind. “I may do just that.”

  CHAPTER 23

  LAUREN SAT ACROSS from her boss, Richie Glass, in the Italian restaurant’s rustic dining room. The spices from the Tuscan steak exploded on Lauren’s tongue. The red wine tasted like the nectar of the gods. The kind and merciful gods. The ones who watched over her in jail cells in Big Diomede, Magadan, and Moscow. The ones who delivered her alive and in good health back home to Connecticut.

  “When you said you were taking me to Toscana on a Monday night for early dinner I was touched,” she said. “I thought you’d be furious. I was afraid you’d fire me as soon as I walked in today.”

  Richie lowered the glass from his lips. “Don’t be ridiculous. You know I respect you too much to do that.”

  “I’m halfway there, Richie. He didn’t grow up in Alaska. He’s not from Kotzebue.”

  “Who?”

  “Bobby Kungenook. Who else?”

  “Oh, right. Then where’s he from?”

  “He entered the U.S. via Little Diomede Island and he crossed Big Diomede to get there.”

  “I thought you said he’s not from Alaska.”

  “He’s not. I didn’t say he was from Diomede. I said he entered the country via Diomede. Because he was coming in from Russia.”

  “Russia?”

  “Yes. He’s fluent in Russian and Ukrainian. And he entered the country via Little Diomede. What’s close to Little Diomede? Big Diomede. That’s Russian soil. Beyond that? Siberia. I think he might be Russian.”

 
“Russian? How did a kid named Bobby Kungenook end up in Russia?”

  “I don’t think Bobby Kungenook is his real name.”

  “Why not?”

  “The real Bobby Kungenook vanished as a child. No one wants to talk about him. He doesn’t feel real.”

  “What about his parents?”

  “Supposed parents. They died eight years ago.”

  “Maybe that explains it. There’s a big Russian influence in the Arctic Circle. Maybe he went to live with family in Russia. Or Ukraine. Or wherever.”

  “No. If that was the case there’d be nothing to hide. There’d be no reason for a cop to threaten my life in Kotzebue, or show up on Little Diomede and send me on a one-way trip to Russia.”

  “Right.” A shadow of doubt passed over Richie’s face. “Tell me how that supposedly went down again?”

  Lauren told him about her experience on the snowmobile and how she ended up a Russian prisoner. She’d told it to the FBI agents so many times it didn’t sound ridiculous to her anymore. She hadn’t done anything wrong. She was the victim.

  “And why was there alcohol on your breath?” he said.

  “A woman forced me to have a drink with her.”

  “That’s funny.”

  “Why is that funny?”

  “You’re not exactly the type who gets forced into doing anything she doesn’t want to.”

  “She tricked me into thinking I was bonding with her,” Lauren said. “It would have been rude to say no once she poured the shots.”

  “And your wallet? Your passport? Why would you leave those behind if you were going on a joyride on the Bering Strait?”

  “It was not a joyride.”

  “So, you admit it. It was a calculated move. You did it on purpose.”

  “What?”

  “I know you. You have poor self-control when you’re obsessed with a story. You wanted to see what you’d find out on the Russian island so you decided to just show up, thinking you could convince them you were there by mistake, and that they’d let you go.”

 

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