“I do you better than bonus,” Fedoseev offered. “You become part of my team. Permanent part. I am generous. Your dog will eat steak every night. He would like that, yes?”
“Ask him yourself.”
Fedoseev’s gaze flicked toward Kane, then he smiled and wagged his finger at Tucker. “Very funny.” He tried a different angle. “You know, these two suka may have had a helper. If he is still around—”
Suka was one of Fedoseev’s favorite slang terms. Roughly and politely, a suka meant scumbag.
Tucker interrupted. “If you’re right, I’m sure Yuri will find anyone else involved in this attempted assassination.”
Especially with one of the attackers already in custody.
Up here, torture was as common a tool as a knife and fork.
Fedoseev sighed. “Then your answer is?”
“I appreciate the offer,” he said, “but my contract’s up in two days. Past that, I’ve got somewhere to be.”
It was a lie, but no one called him on it.
The truth was he had nowhere to be, and right now he liked it that way. Plus Yuri and his team were all ex-military and that background infused everything they did and said. He’d had his fill of them. Tucker had done his time in the military, and the parting had been less than amicable.
Of course, he’d loved his early days in the army and had been contemplating going career.
Until Anaconda.
He reached for the abandoned glass of vodka as the unwanted memory of the past swept over him. He hated how the cubes rattled against the crystal as he lifted the tumbler. PTSD. He considered it merely a piece of psychic shrapnel lodged near his heart.
He sipped at the liquor, letting the memory wash through him.
Not that he had any choice.
Tucker again felt the pop of his ears as the rescue helicopter lifted off, felt the rush of hot air.
He closed his eyes, remembering that day, drawn back to that firefight. He had been assisting soldiers from the Tenth Mountain Division secure a series of bunkers in Hell’s Halfpipe. He had been flanked by two partners that day: Kane and Kane’s littermate, Abel. If Kane had been Tucker’s right arm, Abel was his left. He’d trained them both.
Then a distress call had reached his team in the mountains. A Chinook helo carrying a team of Navy SEALs had been downed by RPG fire on a peak called Takur Ghar. Tucker and his squad were dispatched east and had begun the arduous climb to Takur Ghar when they were ambushed in a ravine. A pair of IEDs exploded, killing most of Tucker’s squad and wounding the rest, including Abel, whose left front leg had been blown off at the elbow.
Within seconds, Taliban fighters emerged from concealed positions and swarmed the survivors. Tucker, along with a handful of soldiers, was able to reach a defensible position and hold out long enough for an evac helicopter to land. Once Kane and his teammates were loaded, he was about to jump off and return for Abel, but before he could do so, a crewman dragged him back aboard and held him down—where he could only watch.
As the helo lifted off and banked over the ravine, a pair of Taliban fighters chased down Abel who was limping toward the rising helo, his pained eyes fixed on Tucker, his severed leg trailing blood.
Tucker scrambled for the door, only to be pulled back yet again.
Then the Taliban fighters reached Abel. He squeezed those last memories away, but not the haunting voice forever in the back of his mind: You could’ve tried harder; you could have reached him.
If he had, he knew he would have been killed, too, but at least Abel wouldn’t have been alone. Alone and wondering why Tucker had abandoned him . . .
Back in his own skin, he opened his eyes and downed the rest of the vodka in a single gulp, letting the burn erase the worst of that old pain.
“Mr. Wayne . . .” Bogdan Fedoseev leaned forward, his forehead creased with concern. “Are you ill? You’ve gone dead pale, my friend.”
Tucker cleared his throat, shook his head. Without looking, he knew Kane was staring at him. He reached out and gave the shepherd’s neck a reassuring squeeze.
“I’m fine. What were we talking—?”
Fedoseev leaned back. “You and your dog joining us.”
Tucker focused his eyes on Fedoseev and on the present. “No, as I said, I’m sorry. I’ve got somewhere to be.”
Though it was a lie, he was ready to move on, needed to move on.
But the question remained: What would he do?
Fedoseev sighed loudly. “Very well! But if you change your mind, you tell me. Tonight, you stay in one of the suites. I send up two steaks. One for you. One for your dog.”
Tucker nodded, stood, and shook Fedoseev’s hand.
For now, that was enough of a plan.
11:56 P.M.
The chirp of his satellite phone instantly woke Tucker in his room.
He scrambled for it, while checking the clock.
Almost midnight.
What now? With nothing on Fedoseev’s schedule for that evening, Tucker and Kane had been given the night off. Had something happened? Yuri had already informed him earlier that the Vladikavkaz Separatist taken into custody had broken and talked, spilling everything.
So Tucker had expected a quiet night.
He checked the incoming number as he picked up the phone: a blocked number. That was seldom good.
Kane sat at the edge of the bed, watching Tucker.
He lifted the phone and pressed the talk button. “Hello?”
A series of squeaks and buzzes suggested the call was being filtered through a series of digital coders.
Finally, the caller spoke. “Captain Wayne, I’m glad I could reach you.”
Tucker relaxed—but not completely. Suspicion rang through him as he recognized the voice. It was Painter Crowe, the director of Sigma Force, and the man who’d tried to recruit Tucker not so long ago after a prior mission. The full extent of Sigma’s involvement in the U.S. intelligence and defense community was still a mystery to him, but one thing he did know: Sigma worked under the aegis of the ultrasecretive DARPA—the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
Tucker cleared the rasp of sleep from his voice. “I assume you know what time it is here, Director?”
“I do. My apologies. It’s important.”
“Isn’t it always? What’s going on?”
“I believe your contract with Bogdan Fedoseev is almost up. In two more days, if I’m not mistaken.”
Tucker should have been surprised that the caller had this information, but this was Painter Crowe, who had resources that bordered on the frightening.
“Director, I’m guessing this isn’t a casual call, so why don’t you get to your point?”