He needed a remedy, a cover.
After a bit of thought, Tucker rummaged through the tool chest and found a spool of wire. He clipped four short pieces and, using duct tape from his rucksack, sculpted the pieces into a crude equivalent of a teenager’s orthodontic mouth guard. He slipped the construction between his lower lip and gum, packing it in tightly. He checked himself in the room’s grungy mirror, fingering his face.
To the casual eye, it would appear Nerchinsk’s latest visitor had a badly broken jaw. It would give him an easy excuse not to talk.
“Time to see a man about a plane ride,” Tucker said, testing out his contraption. The sound he emitted was barely intelligible.
Perfect.
Next, he donned the dusty greatcoat from the wardrobe and tugged his ushanka cap back on. He pulled its brim lower over his eyebrows.
“You stay here,” he ordered Kane. “Out of sight.”
The shepherd, fed and warm, didn’t argue.
Tucker climbed back down and slipped out the church’s front door. With his shoulders hunched, he shuffled toward Nerchinsk along a road of slush and mud. He adopted what he hoped was the posture of a man who’d spent his life in the gray, frozen expanse of Siberia. The weather made that easier. The temperature had plummeted another twenty degrees. His breath billowed thickly in the air, and the icy mud squelched under his boots.
By now, the streets were empty. The yellow glow of life shone through a few dirty windows, along with the occasional flicker of neon signs, but nothing else. He made his way to the corner where the soldier had been smoking earlier. He did his best to trace the man’s steps until he was a block from the helicopter.
He studied its bulk surreptitiously.
It was certainly a military aircraft: an Mi-28 Havoc attack helicopter. He knew such a craft’s specs by heart. It had racks and pods enough to carry forty rockets, along with a mounted 30 mm chain gun.
But this Havoc’s exterior bore no Russian roundels or emblems. Instead, it had been painted in a jagged gray/black pattern. He didn’t recognize the markings. It could be the FSB—formerly known as the KGB. But what would such a unit be doing out here, in the back end of nowhere?
Tucker knew the most likely answer.
Looking for me.
Two figures stepped out from behind the chopper’s tail rotor. One was dressed in a uniform, the other in civilian clothes.
Tucker retreated out of sight—but not before noting the shoulder emblems on the uniform. A red starburst against a black shield.
He had been wrong.
These men weren’t FSB, but rather GRU. Glavnoye Razvedyvatel’noye Upravleniye served as the intelligence arm of the Russian Ministry of Defense. For covert operations, the GRU relied almost solely on Spetsnaz soldiers—the Thoroughbreds of the already-impressive Russian Special Forces stable.
If they’re after me . . .
He hurried down the street, knowing his departure from this region was even more urgent—as was his overdue call to Ruth Harper.
7:55 P.M.
Tucker wandered the streets until he found a lively tavern. The neon sign above the door was in Cyrillic, but the raucous laughter and smell of beer was advertisement enough for the establishment.
This was as good a place as any to start.
He took a moment to make sure his mouth prosthetic was in place, then took a deep breath and pushed through the door.
A wall of heat, cigarette smoke, and body odor struck him like a fist to the face. A babble of country Russian—punctuated by loud guffaws and scattered curses—greeted him. Not that anyone paid attention to his arrival.
Tucker hunched his shoulders and wove his way through the mass of bodies toward what he assumed was the bar. With a bit of jostling and occasional grunting through his prosthetic, he found himself standing at a long, knotty pine counter.
Miraculously, the bartender noted his newest customer immediately and walked over. He barked something that Tucker assumed was a request for his order.
As answer, Tucker grunted vaguely.
“Eh?”
He cleared his throat and mumbled again.
The bartender leaned forward, cocking an ear.
Tucker opened his lips a little wider, exposing his mouth guard, then pantomimed a fist striking his jaw, ending it with a tired shrug.
The bartender nodded his understanding.
Tucker jerked his thumb toward a neighboring mug of beer. A moment later, a glass was pounded down in front of him, sloshing froth over the rim. He passed over a wad of rubles and pocketed the change.
Tucker felt a wave of relief. Providing no one else demanded a higher level of exchange, this might just work.
Clumsily sipping beer through his mouthpiece, he began scanning the bar for soldiers. There were a dozen or more, all army, but from the state of their clothes, none of these were active duty. In Russia, many veterans kept and wore their uniforms after leaving service, partly for necessity and partly for economic leverage. It was common practice for citizens to slip a former soldier a coin or pay for a drink or a meal. This was as much for charity as it was for insurance. Having impoverished or starving killers roaming the streets was best avoided.
Satisfied the bar was free of GRU operatives, he returned his attention to his primary interest: getting out of this place and reaching Perm. He searched for anyone who might be connected to the neighboring air base, but he spotted nothing overt. He might have to do this the hard way and—
“Your dog is beautiful,” a gruff voice said at his shoulder. He spoke passable English, but heavily accented. “German shepherd?”
Tucker turned to find a short man in his sixties, with long white hair and a grizzled beard. His eyes shone a sharp ice-blue.
“Eh?” Tucker grunted.
“Oh, I see,” the stranger said. “Let me guess, you are a traveling prizefighter.”
Tucker’s heart pounded as he glanced around. None of the other patrons seemed to be paying attention.
The man crooked his finger at Tucker and leaned closer.
“I know you are not Russian, my friend. I heard you talking to your dog at the church. You’d best follow me.”
The older man turned and picked his way through the crowd, which seemed to part before him, the patrons nodding deferentially at him.
Nervous, but with no other choice, Tucker followed after him, ending up at a table in the bar’s far corner, beside a stone-hearth fireplace.
With the table to themselves, the man stared at Tucker through narrow eyes. “A good disguise, actually. You have mastered the Siberian stoop—you know, the hunched shoulders, the lowered chin. The cold grinds it into you up here, bends you. So much so, if you live here long enough, it becomes one’s posture.”