So we cruised on until we were within about five ks of base. Out in the country the rain was heavier, the air murkier. We'd just gone under the outer ring-road when everything went ballistic.
âLook out,' said Pav. âThere's a flashing blue light up ahead.'
At the same moment Whinger came on the radio with, âI think we've got a tail.'
I glanced in my mirror and exclaimed, âJesus! I think we have one too. There's a police block up ahead as well. Listen, Whinge. We're being pulled in by the GAI. Get off the road and wait out.'
In the road ahead, beside the vehicle with the flashing blue lamp, a man was waving us down with one of those white-ended batons. As I braked, I saw in the mirror that the car behind us had swung in close on our tail.
âShit, Pav,' I said. âLooks like the GAI are having a purge. What do we do?'
âBluff our way. Stop â if he tells us to â for Charist's sake. Don't piss him off â otherwise we'll be in the nick for resisting arrest.'
A man in grey GAI uniform, with the red stripe down the side of his pants, was guiding us in towards the verge. As I pulled up, another man appeared beside the window and said, â
Dokumenti
.'
I reached down under my seat for the package Anna had made up for each car and handed it to him. He took it, but motioned for me to go with him to a hut at the edge of the highway. Then he started saying, â
Klioucha, klioucha
,' and making twisting movements with his hand.
âKeys,' said Toad. âHe's after the keys.'
âSuspicious bastard,' I said. âHe thinks we're going to try and drive off.'
âAh, fuck it!' exclaimed Pavarotti. âShall I deal with him?'
âIt's all right,' I said. âI'll go. You two sit tight.'
I took out the ignition key and handed it through the window. I was on the point of getting out when I remembered the Rat. Better leave it in the car, I thought. Then, measuring the distance to the hut by eye, I thought, No â that isn't a hundred feet. It'll be OK.
As I stepped out of the car I glanced into the back, and was reassured to see that the component beside Toad was covered by an old blanket.
I started to follow the GAI officer. He pointed towards the hut, gesturing to me to carry on. Then he turned back to the Volga.
The hut was set just off the tarmac, down a bit of a bank and on the edge of the wood. At first my main concern was that I wouldn't understand what the cops were asking, and I wished to hell my Russian was better. Then, second by second, step by step, I began to get the feeling that something was wrong. The hut didn't look like one of the regular GAI stations, which were lit up like little guardrooms. This thing was only a roadsmen's cabin, and dark. Besides, the other cars parked by it weren't GAI vehicles, but ordinary saloons. Worst of all, there were at least five men standing in the shadows, not in GAI uniform, but wearing leather jackets that gleamed when the headlights of a vehicle went by on the road. There was something odd about their body language; their postures unnaturally rigid and alert.
At that instant I suddenly heard, through my earpiece, Pavarotti call, âCONTACT!' Before I could react, the guys in front of me started to move in my direction. I glanced over my shoulder at the Volga and saw two men with sub-machine guns closing in from either side.
I jabbed my pressel switch and said sharply, âContact! Contact! Whinger, in here! Get in! Get in!'
âNegative,' came his answer. âWe can't. We're in a contact too.'
Over the radio I heard a rattle of shots. An instant later the shots came live, through the air.
The five men on the edge of the forest were in a ragged group only ten feet from me. They started moving towards me. Instinctively I pulled out my pistol and dropped the nearest one with a single shot to the forehead, which jerked his head violently backwards.
I looked back at the Volga. Rounds cracked past my head. As I went down on one knee. I could see that the pseudo-policeman was at the driver's door. A second guy was trying to force his way into the back seat. Another burst ripped past me. I felt a sharp tug and a stab of pain in my left shoulder. The impact spun me round, only to find one of the others almost on top of me. Automatically I fired a double tap into his chest, and he went down, but he was so close that his impetus carried him past me, and he narrowly missed me as he fell. I then emptied my magazine into the area where his three remaining mates had suddenly taken cover, and sprinted the last few yards for the safety of the woods.
The trees were pines, fairly well spaced. By luck I went between the first few, then ran smack into spiky dead branches, ripping my face. I backed off, skirted left and kept going.
Behind me, pandemonium erupted. Men began yelling like lunatics. Engines started up and revved furiously. Tyres scrabbled and squealed as cars pulled away. Somebody cracked off a few more bursts from a sub-machine gun, and rounds came snapping through the trees, but by then I was a hundred metres into the woods, and relatively safe.
For a few seconds I lay prone, head-on to the road in line with a thick trunk, gasping for breath, more from shock than from exertion. âJesus!' I went. âWhat the fuck happened?'
Out on the highway everything had gone quiet. I jabbed the pressel of my radio and called, âBlack to Grey. Can you hear me?'
âGrey,' went Whinger. âWe've broken the contact. We're mobile.'
âWhere are you?' I gasped.
âHeading on in your direction. Where are
you
?'
âIn the forest behind the hut. Give me one minute. I'll come back to the roadside a hundred metres past the hut.'
âRoger.'
I tore through the trees, parallel with the road, with my left arm raised in front of my face to ward off branches. I had a stinging sensation on the outside of my left shoulder, and I could feel blood running down my side. But the arm was working, and the wound didn't feel bad. Already my night-vision was establishing itself, and I could see enough to make rapid progress.
I counted a hundred and fifty steps, then turned left, running back towards the road. I burst out of the trees and looked back, to the left. I was about the right distance from the hut. Through the rain I saw one car coming fast towards me. In my earpiece Whinger said, âOK, we have eyes on you.' I stepped farther out into the road, and the car swung in towards me. As it pulled up, I saw that windscreen and rear window had been shot out.
âGet in! Get in!' shouted Whinger. âWhere's the other Volga?'
âThey've got it.'
âJesus! The bastards went that way. Back into town.'
âAfter them!'
I dived into the back and slammed the door.
âWatch your hands on the glass,' yelled Johnny. âIt's all over.'
With a howl of tyres Whinger spun the car and screamed up to high revs in each gear. Wind came whistling through the cabin, fore to aft.
Johnny was trying to tell me something, but with the internal slipstream roaring it was hard to hear. Also, after the gunshots, I was slightly deaf.
In a few seconds we passed a car burning on the other side of the road.
âWho's that?' I shouted.
âThat was the lot that came for us,' went Whinger. âWhat happened to
you
?'
âRan straight into an illegal VCP. They had a man out in GAI uniform, waving us down. He demanded documents and keys. Made me go with him towards the hut. Then I saw all these other guys on the lurk. That was the moment you called “Contact”. What about you?'
âThis car came up behind. Somebody put a burst through the rear window. The rounds must have gone right between me and Johnny, on out the front . . .'
âSlow down!' I shouted.
We'd come round a bend. Through the murky dark we could see nearly half a mile up a long straight ahead. There wasn't a car in sight.
âEither they've got right away or they've pulled off into the forest. Look for side-roads. There! Just ahead. Stop!'
Whinger slid to a halt across the mouth of a dirt track that ran into the trees at a right angle to the highway. Johnny and I leapt out, flashing torches over the surface in search of fresh tyre marks.
âNothing doing,' I called.
We jumped back in and set off again.
âOH this fucking car!' Whinger groaned, exasperated by the lack of acceleration.
âKeep talking,' I told them.
âThe car that was harassing us,' went Johnny. âI dropped the driver with my Sig. That fucked them. They were struggling to get him out of the driving seat, so I cracked a couple more rounds off into the front of the car. Bit of luck â the thing blew up. Bullet must have severed a fuel pipe. The whole thing went
woof
â'
âTHERE!' I yelled.
Another small road had loomed up. Whinger hauled on the wheel and we squealed round. This track was surfaced and quite smooth â no point in looking for tyre marks. We followed it for a minute, scanning frantically for any spur or layby among the trees where the villains could have pulled in. Then I shouted, âThis is fucking useless. We've lost them. You're sure they turned back?'
âYeah, yeah!' Whinger was emphatic. âJust after you'd called for the pick-up, a whole shower of cars went flying back towards Moscow. A dozen at least, going like the clappers.'
âWas the Volga in among them?'
âCouldn't tell. There was a Merc at the front. The rest were in a bunch. Really motoring.'
My mind was churning. Blood had reached my waist and was sogging round my belt.
âBack to base?' Even Whinger sounded temporarily defeated.
âI guess so.'
âWhat happened to Pav and Toad?'
âI couldn't tell. The last I saw of them they were both still in the vehicle, with an armed guy on either side of them. I tried to get back to them but I was taking fire from the car behind ours. I got a nick in the shoulder, as it was.'
âNot serious?'
âI don't think so. More of a burn, really. It's bleeding, though.'
As we drove the short distance back to camp, the scene ran through my mind again and again like a closed loop of film. Already I was blaming myself for making mistakes. Maybe I should never have got out of the car. Maybe I should have just driven off. But then, if I had, our lumbering vehicle would certainly have been cut out by one or more of the faster cars I'd seen lined up. But again, once I
had
got out â once I realised things weren't right â maybe I should have made a greater effort to get back to the Volga. But if I'd done that, I'd almost certainly have ended up getting shot dead. The guy in the back-up car couldn't have gone on missing for ever.
âWhere's the Rat?' Whinger asked suddenly.
âChrist!' I felt for it, on my belt. âI've still got it. It must have activated the bomb's alarm signal. The thing will be transmitting by now. I hope to hell the Yanks can track it.'
Before the lift my moral confusion had been bad enough: now it was acute. What the hell was I to tell Anna and Sasha? Obviously we couldn't conceal the fact that we'd lost two guys, or that they were probably in Mafia hands. Apart from anything else, we needed the Russians to launch a search.
The lads we'd left in camp were appalled by the news. As we compiled a coded message for Hereford, they got a brew on and we brought them up to speed on what had happened.
My shoulder wound turned out to be little more than a groove cut through the skin. Dusty got out his medical pack, swabbed it thoroughly, bombed it with disinfectant and smacked a wound-dressing over the top.
âYou'll live,' he pronounced. âBut you were lucky. A couple of inches lower and your shoulder would have been a mess.'
âIf it
was
Rick's whoring about that put them on to us,' I said, âhe wants to be well away from Hereford before we get back. If I see him I'll bloody murder him.'
âMaybe the Mafia have been doing better surveillance than we thought,' Mal suggested. âMaybe they'd got us marked down anyway. D'you think somebody slipped a hundred dollars to one of the guys on the gate, to shop us?'
âIt was that fucking hit on the flat that did it,' said Whinger savagely. âSomehow the bastards got wind of the fact that we were involved.'
âWhat if we got followed to the church?' said Dusty. âMaybe there was a dicker out, somebody who saw us going in and out of the Embassy.'
âPossible,' I agreed. âJesus â now I suppose we'd better get our arses back there and check the padlocks on the shaft.'
I thought for a moment and changed my mind. âCancel that,' I said. âThere's no way the Mafia could have known about Apple or Orange. Our security on that front's been one hundred per cent. Even if they got eyes on the cars going to and from the Embassy they couldn't have known what we were doing.'
âExtortion,' said Pete. âThat's what we were up against. They're after money. They've scented a chance of making a quick fortune. And now, in handing them Orange, we've given them the biggest fucking lever in the world. God alone knows what ransom demand they'll make: ten million? A hundred million?'
I said, âThe question is, will they go public, or will they do it under cover?'
âIf they go public we're buggered,' said Dusty. âIf they start honking about how they're holding two SAS guys, the whole operation's blown.'
âWill they realise what the components are?' asked Mal. âAfter all, they're not nuclear specialists.'
âNo,' said Dusty, âbut I bet they'll have access to someone who is. It won't be long before they find out. And anyway, they've got Pav and Toad to tell them.'