But most of all though it was the pain in his head that really registered. It wasn’t even that sore. He’d had more pain in his limbs after a good work out. It was more that everything was not as it should be. One side of his head was swollen and even in this light his eyesight seemed to have diminished although maybe that was down to the fact his eye was bruised closed.
At first he’d thought it was his captors who kept waking him up. Maybe they were about to start the hard core water boarding or wire his nuts to a car battery after a spot of light sleep deprivation. But then he’d heard the soft female voice, talking to him in a soothing way in a language not his own as the side of his head was gently massaged and stroked with some kind of wet material.
The gag was gone. He tried to speak but at first she just said ‘shhh,’ and then later she seemed somehow different, voice at a slightly lower pitch though still talking to him in a foreign tongue.
Slowly the light began to stream through the crack between the big barn doors in front of them and it seemed as though someone had hit the room with a spotlight. He supposed it was all relative. He could now see there were more than one or even two girls but maybe ten all sitting in the dark like mushrooms or something.
“What is this?” he asked, as someone else took their turn at soothing his pounding temple.
He was shushed again. “You must keep quiet,” she told him in a whisper, “Or they’ll hear you and you don’t want them in here, trust me.”
She sounded young, about his age anyway, pretty not that he could see clearly but blonde, slight, Eastern European looking.
“What are you doing here?” he asked.
“Waiting,” she answered.
“What for?”
She shrugged her shoulders.
“You don’t know? How did you end up here?” he demanded, realising his voice had escaped more loudly than intended. He could make out her eyes glaring at him even in this light. “Where are you from?”
She replied something he didn’t understand before adding, “You call it Georgia.”
“Georgia? So what are you doing here?”
“Escaping,” she said.
“Looks like you’re doing a grand job. Why are you locked up here?”
“I don’t know,” she replied. “It is not my place to know. I pay them money to escape for a new life and now, we wait.”
“You paid them for this kind of accommodation?” he said, wishing that he hadn’t as she took her wet cloth and moved away from him. “I’m sorry,” he said, meaning it, unlike the majority of times he’d used the word in his short life. “Do you know what they’ll do with me?” he asked, knowing he probably didn’t want the response he was about to get.
She shook her head looking sad as far as he could tell. He could see that she was very beautiful and instantly decided the worst was likely to happen to her.
The address was one in Gorgie; a one bedroom hidden up a backstreet, entered by a distinctly rank smelling close. He buzzed and waited a good two minutes before buzzing again and getting an angry response. “What?” the voice on the intercom demanded.
“Oleg’s people sent me,” Giles volunteered. This was followed by a long pause before the buzzer finally sounded and the outer door was released.
Through the door inside emerged a grotesquely overweight figure wearing a grey tracksuit. He had lank greasy hair, spots and a beard that seemed to exist mainly on his neck despite obviously being in his thirties. “You don’t look like Oleg sent you,” the man mountain challenged.
“I am his lawyer,” Giles replied, sticking out his hand. “John Smith.”
The man laughed at this but shook his hand with a clammy paw and ushered him inside. “Jackie Chan. Best not to use our real names I suppose.”
The hall stank of damp and unwashed clothes. It was dimly lit and there was stuff everywhere; old computers, boxes of electrical items, seemingly unopened parcels from Amazon and in one corner a massive pile of train tickets. As they moved through to the living area which consisted of a kitchenette that had been at its height of design currency sometime around 1978 and more stuff surrounding a couch, there was at least some light provided by a bank of screens. On one screen there seemed to be various transactions in operation on another a spreadsheet with what looked like card details. A bigger screen ran rolling news bulletins and another showed a PlayStation game paused mid action. There were various printers and blank cards.
Jackie Chan saw him looking. “You’re not a cop are you?”
“No,” Giles replied, a little too quickly for his liking.
“Then what exactly are you?” Chan demanded, “Because I know you weren’t sent here by Oleg.”
“And how do you know that?” Giles replied, injecting as much indignation as he felt he could properly pull off.
“Well I suppose my main reasoning would be based around the fact that he bought the farm yesterday morning.”
“Really?”
“Really, although it’s not common knowledge of course. But I would expect you cops to know that.”
“Listen,” Giles began shakily. “I’m not a cop or anything like that. I work for a man called…”
“Victor Andreyevich,” Chan interrupted.
“Yes,” Giles replied, relief flooding into his vocal chords and everywhere else.
“I knew that,” Chan said. “I just wondered if you did.”
“Pardon?”
“Well, everything’s so subdivided, partitioned off, it’s hard to know who knows what.”
“I see.”
“You might, but not as much as those of us who know how to get in the back door do.”
“Eh?”
Chan motioned to his technological pile. “With this you can know it all, not to mention have it all.” He waved his arm round the room at all his ill-gotten gains. “Your boss however, allows me access to certain systems so that in return I provide him with a certain level of income and the odd favour now and again.”
“Of course,” Giles confirmed. It was news to him as right now he was on the Everest of learning curves, but no need to let the geek know what his precise security clearance was.
“Then you’ll know why I’m anxious to protect my investment.”
“Indeed.”
“What do you need?” the giant asked.
Giles did his best to explain and when he was finished Chan shook his head and laughed. “Childs play,” was all he said, which Giles was quite glad about as anything more would have been beyond his comprehension.
“I would offer you a cup of tea,” Chan said, gesturing towards the kitchenette where a sink overflowed with festering dishes blending almost seamlessly with used takeaway receptacles, “But we’re all out.”
Giles found himself wondering who the ‘we’ was and if it possibly included the bacteria who were clearly a permanent fixture in the property. There was a distinct possibility Chan’s clothes could actually walk him round the flat and a similar likelihood that the morbidly obese boffin would quite like that.
“I think I’ll leave you to it. Not like I’d be much use to be honest,” Giles admitted. “If I can ehm….” He stumbled.
“Ah yes. The filthy lucre,” Chan confirmed. “I wouldn’t be embarrassed about that Mr Smith. It is the stuff that keeps everything flowing.”
“It is.”
Chan handed him a greasy looking brown paper bag which at some point had played host to doughnuts or something similar. Giles accepted it awkwardly. Chan looked at him expectedly. “Well?”
“Well?”
“Aren’t you going to count it?” He demanded.
“Well, I…” Giles stumbled again. This wasn’t his forte.
“I certainly would.”
“OK,” he said, without actually explaining that he didn’t know how much he was supposed to check for. His fingers shook as he fumbled with the worn notes. He looked up to see Chan regarding at him with a look of bemusement.