Authors: Daniel Silva
Tags: #Mystery And Suspense Fiction, #Fiction - Espionage, #American Mystery & Suspense Fiction, #Fiction, #Espionage, #Thrillers, #Intrigue, #Thriller
The Defector
By
Daniel Silva
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
PART ONE - Opening Moves
Chapter 1 - VLADIMIRSKAYA OBLAST, RUSSIA
Chapter 2 - LONDON: JANUARY
Chapter 3 - UMBRIA , ITALY
Chapter 4 - AMELIA , UMBRIA
Chapter 5 - AMELIA , UMBRIA
Chapter 6 - AMELIA , UMBRIA
Chapter 7 - VILLA DEI FIORI, UMBRIA
Chapter 8 - VILLA DEI FIORI, UMBRIA
Chapter 9 - VILLA DEI FIORI • LONDON
Chapter 10 - MAIDA VALE, LONDON
Chapter 11 - MAIDA VALE, LONDON
Chapter 12 - MAIDA VALE, LONDON
Chapter 13 - MAIDA VALE, LONDON
Chapter 14 - WEST LONDON
Chapter 15 - WESTMINSTER, LONDON
Chapter 16 - OXFORD
Chapter 17 - OXFORD
Chapter 18 - OXFORD
Chapter 19 - OXFORD
PART TWO - Anatoly
Chapter 20 - THE MARAIS, PARIS
Chapter 21 - MONTMARTRE, PARIS
Chapter 22 - MONTMARTRE, PARIS
Chapter 23 - LAKE COMO, ITALY
Chapter 24 - BELLAGIO, ITALY
Chapter 25 - LAKE COMO, ITALY
Chapter 26 - LAKE COMO, ITALY
Chapter 27 - LAKE COMO, ITALY
Chapter 28 - LAKE COMO, ITALY
Chapter 29 - LAKE COMO • LONDON
Chapter 30 - CIA HEADQUARTERS, VIRGINIA
Chapter 31 - GEORGETOWN, WASHINGTON, D.C.
Chapter 32 - UPSTATE NEW YORK
Chapter 33 - UPSTATE NEW YORK
Chapter 34 - UPSTATE NEW YORK
PART THRE - All Even
Chapter 35 - TIBERIAS, ISRAEL
Chapter 36 - BEN-GURION AIRPORT, ISRAEL
Chapter 37 - KING SAUL BOULEVARD, TEL AVIV
Chapter 38 - KING SAUL BOULEVARD, TEL AVIV
Chapter 39 - KING SAUL BOULEVARD, TEL AVIV
Chapter 40 - CHELSEA , LONDON
Chapter 41 - CHELSEA , LONDON
Chapter 42 - CHELSEA , LONDON
Chapter 43 - KING SAUL BOULEVARD, TEL AVIV
Chapter 44 - HOTEL BRISTOL, GENEVA
Chapter 45 - HAUTE-SAVOIE, FRANCE
Chapter 46 - HAUTE-SAVOIE, FRANCE
Chapter 47 - HAUTE-SAVOIE, FRANCE
Chapter 48 - HAUTE-SAVOIE, FRANCE
Chapter 49 - HAUTE-SAVOIE, FRANCE
Chapter 50 - ZURICH
Chapter 51 - ZURICH
Chapter 52 - ZURICH
Chapter 53 - BARGEN, SWITZERLAND
PART FOUR - Resurrection Gate
Chapter 54 - NORTHERN GERMANY
Chapter 55 - MAYFAIR, LONDON
Chapter 56 - PARIS
Chapter 57 - SHANNON AIRPORT, IRELAND
Chapter 58 - MOSCOW
Chapter 59 - GROSVENOR SQUARE, LONDON
Chapter 60 - HOTEL METROPOL, MOSCOW
Chapter 61 - KONAKOVO, RUSSIA
Chapter 62 - GROSVENOR SQUARE, LONDON
Chapter 63 - VLADIMIRSKAYA OBLAST, RUSSIA
Chapter 64 - VLADIMIRSKAYA OBLAST, RUSSIA
Chapter 65 - GROSVENOR SQUARE, LONDON
Chapter 66 - GROSVENOR SQUARE, LONDON
Chapter 67 - LUBYANKA SQUARE, MOSCOW
Chapter 68 - VLADIMIRSKAYA OBLAST, RUSSIA
Chapter 69 - GROSVENOR SQUARE, LONDON
Chapter 70 - VLADIMIRSKAYA OBLAST, RUSSIA
Chapter 71 - VLADIMIRSKAYA OBLAST, RUSSIA
Chapter 72 - VLADIMIRSKAYA OBLAST, RUSSIA
PART FIVE - The Reckoning
Chapter 73 - JERUSALEM
Chapter 74 - JERUSALEM
Chapter 75 - TIBERIAS, ISRAEL
Chapter 76 - JERUSALEM
Chapter 77 - SAINT-TROPEZ, FRANCE
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Acknowledgements
ALSO BY DANIEL SILVA
Moscow Rules
The Secret Servant
The Messenger
Prince of Fire
A Death in Vienna
The Confessor
The English Assassin
The Kill Artist
The Marching Season
The Mark of the Assassin
The Unlikely Spy
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Copyright © 2009 by Daniel Silva
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Silva, Daniel, date.
The defector / Daniel Silva.
p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-101-10435-4
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
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For Marilyn Ducksworth, for many years
of
friendship, support, and laughter.
And as always,
For my wife, Jamie, and my children, Nicholas and Lily.
If an injury has to be done to a man it should be so severe
that his vengeance need not be feared.
MACHIAVELLI
PART ONE
Opening Moves
1
VLADIMIRSKAYA OBLAST, RUSSIA
PYOTR LUZHKOV was about to be killed, and for that he was grateful.
It was late October, but autumn was already a memory. It had been brief and unsightly, an old babushka hurriedly removing a threadbare frock. Now this: leaden skies, arctic cold, windblown snow. The opening shot of Russia’s winter without end.
Pyotr Luzhkov, shirtless, barefoot, hands bound behind his back, was scarcely aware of the cold. In fact, at that moment he would have been hard-pressed to recall his name. He believed he was being led by two men through a birch forest but could not be certain. It made sense they were in a forest. That was the place Russians liked to do their blood work. Kurapaty, Bykivnia, Katyn, Butovo . . . Always in the forests. Luzhkov was about to join a great Russian tradition. Luzhkov was about to be granted a death in the trees.
There was another Russian custom when it came to killing: the intentional infliction of pain. Pyotr Luzhkov had been forced to scale mountains of pain. They had broken his fingers and his thumbs. They had broken his arms and his ribs. They had broken his nose and his jaw. They had beaten him even when he was unconscious. They had beaten him because they had been told to. They had beaten him because they were Russians. The only time they had stopped was when they were drinking vodka. When the vodka was gone, they had beaten him even harder.
Now he was on the final leg of his journey, the long walk to a grave with no marker. Russians had a term for it: vyshaya mera, the highest form of punishment. Usually, it was reserved for traitors, but Pyotr Luzhkov had betrayed no one. He had been duped by his master’s wife, and his master had lost everything because of it. Someone had to pay. Eventually, everyone would pay.
He could see his master now, standing alone amid the match-stick trunks of the birch trees. Black leather coat, silver hair, head like a tank turret. He was looking down at the large-caliber pistol in his hand. Luzhkov had to give him credit. There weren’t many oligarchs who had the stomach to do their own killing. But then there weren’t many oligarchs like him.
The grave had already been dug. Luzhkov’s master was inspecting it carefully, as if calculating whether it was big enough to hold a body. As Luzhkov was forced to kneel, he could smell the distinctive cologne. Sandalwood and smoke. The smell of power. The smell of the devil.
The devil gave him one more blow to the side of his face. Luzhkov didn’t feel it. Then the devil placed the gun to the back of Luzhkov’s head and bade him a pleasant evening. Luzhkov saw a pink flash of his own blood. Then darkness. He was finally dead. And for that he was grateful.
2
LONDON: JANUARY
THE MURDER of Pyotr Luzhkov went largely unnoticed. No one mourned him; no women wore black for him. No Russian police officers investigated his death, and no Russian newspapers bothered to report it. Not in Moscow. Not in St. Petersburg. And surely not in the Russian city sometimes referred to as London. Had word of Luzhkov’s demise reached Bristol Mews, home of Colonel Grigori Bulganov, the Russian defector and dissident, he would not have been surprised, though he would have felt a pang of guilt. If Grigori hadn’t locked poor Pyotr in Ivan Kharkov’s personal safe, the bodyguard might still be alive.
Among the lords of Thames House and Vauxhall Cross, the riverfront headquarters of MI5 and MI6, Grigori Bulganov had always been a source of much fascination and considerable debate. Opinion was diverse, but then it usually was when the two services were forced to take positions on the same issue. He was a gift from the gods, sang his backers. He was a mixed bag at best, muttered his detractors. One wit from the top floor of Thames House famously described him as the defector Downing Street needed like a leaky roof—as if London, now home to more than a quarter million Russian citizens, had a spare room for another malcontent bent on making trouble for the Kremlin. The MI5 man had gone on the record with his prophecy that one day they would all regret the decision to grant Grigori Bulganov asylum and a British passport. But even he was surprised by the speed with which that day came.
A former colonel in the counterintelligence division of the Russian Federal Security Service, better known as the FSB, Grigori Bulganov had washed ashore late the previous summer, the unexpected by-product of a multinational intelligence operation against one Ivan Kharkov, Russian oligarch and international arms dealer. Only a handful of British officials were told the true extent of Grigori’s involvement in the case. Fewer still knew that, if not for his actions, an entire team of Israeli operatives might have been killed on Russian soil. Like the KGB defectors who came before him, Grigori vanished for a time into a world of safe houses and isolated country estates. A joint Anglo-American team hammered at him day and night, first on the structure of Ivan’s arms-trafficking network, for which Grigori had shamefully worked as a paid agent, then on the tradecraft of his former service. The British interrogators found him charming; the Americans less so. They insisted on fluttering him, which in Agencyspeak meant subjecting him to a lie-detector test. He passed with flying colors.
When the debriefers had had their fill, and it came time to decide just what to do with him, the bloodhounds of internal security conducted highly secret reviews and issued their recommendations, also in secret. In the end, it was deemed that Grigori, though reviled by his former comrades, faced no serious threat. Even the once-feared Ivan Kharkov, who was licking his wounds in Russia, was deemed incapable of concerted action. The defector made three requests: he wanted to keep his name, to reside in London, and to have no overt security. Hiding in plain sight, he argued, would give him the most protection from his enemies. MI5 readily agreed to his demands, especially the third. Security details required money, and the human resources could be put to better use elsewhere, namely against Britain’s homegrown jihadist extremists. They bought him a lovely mews cottage in a backwater of Maida Vale, arranged a generous monthly stipend, and made a onetime deposit in a City bank that would surely have caused a scandal if the amount ever became public. An MI5 lawyer quietly negotiated a book deal with a respected London publisher. The size of the advance raised eyebrows among the senior staff of both services, most of whom were working on books of their own—in secret, of course.