“We’ll find out.”
Top took a toothpick from his pocket, put it between his teeth, and chewed it. He didn’t say a word for the rest of the flight.
Chapter Seventy
Aleksey Mogilevich, nephew of Semion Mogilevich, who was the lord of the Red Mafia in Budapest, looked at the name on the screen display of his phone and smiled. He waved away the redhead with the platinum nipple rings and flipped open the phone.
“Hello, my good friend.” He never used names on the phone and preferred calling everyone “friend.” Repeat customers were always his “good friends.”
“Hello, and how is the weather?” asked Otto Wirths. The question referred to the security of the line and any prying ears where Aleksey was.
“Fine weather. Not a cloud in the sky. I hear that you’ve used up all the products I sent.”
“Yes. Unfortunate.”
“There are always more.”
Of the twenty ex-Spetsnaz operatives leased to Otto by Aleksey only one was still alive, but as he was merely a coordinator his value was negligible. Neither Aleksey nor Otto was very broken up over the losses. Assets were assets, to be used and either disposed of or replaced depending on need.
“I’m glad to hear you say that,” said Otto, “because I do need more.”
“How many and how soon?”
Otto told him, and Aleksey whistled. The two girls sunbathing topless on the forward deck of the Anzhelika looked up, thinking that he was signaling them, but he shook his head. He got up and walked along the rail and gazed out into the vastness of the sea.
The yacht was an elegant 173 footer with a 37-foot beam, built by Perini Navi of Italy. The first time Aleksey had been aboard it had been a charter for which he’d paid $210,000 for a single week. He liked it so much he bought the boat after the trip was over. It had a crew of eleven, and though it was slow — twelve knots — Aleksey never needed to be anywhere fast. His business was conducted by satellite and cell phones and computer.
The Anzhelika currently floated in the wine dark waters thirty miles off the coast of Cyprus.
“Can you supply those assets?” asked Otto.
“There is a surcharge for overnight delivery, you understand.”
“I understand.”
“Then… yes. I have assets in Florida who will do nicely.”
“If the assets fulfill my patron’s needs, Aleksey, I’ll send you a five percent bonus on top of that.”
“Ah, it’s always heartwarming to know of the generosity of my good friends.”
They discussed a few details and hung up.
Aleksey watched the beautiful water and the pure white gulls and thought about how wonderful it was to be alive. Then he sat on a deck chair and made calls that would send several dozen of the most vicious and hardened trained killers he knew to the rendezvous point with Otto Wirths. As Aleksey made the calls he never stopped smiling.
Chapter Seventy-One
The chopper from the Ark Royal flew just above the waves and put us down on the far side of the island. We jumped out and faded into the green shadows of the trees until the chopper was far out to sea. We were in full combat rig, with all of the standard equipment plus a few special DMS gizmos. We crouched behind a thick spray of ferns until the jungle settled into stillness. Ambient sounds returned as the birds and bugs shook off their surprise and resumed their perpetual chatter. We waited, ears and eyes open, weapons ready, watching to see if anyone came to investigate.
No one came.
I switched on my PDA and pulled up a satellite image of the island. There was a cluster of buildings on the other side and nothing but dense rain-forest foliage wrapped around a terrain so rough and broken that it looked like an obstacle course designed by a sadist. Gorges, cliffs, broken spikes of old lava rock, ravines, and almost no flatland. All of it sweltering in 102-degree heat and 93 percent humidity. Fun times.
I dialed my radio to the frequency the kid gave us but got nothing but static. Then I tapped my earbud for the TOC channel.
“Cowboy to Dugout, Cowboy to Dugout.”
“Dugout” was the call sign for the TOC. Immediately Church’s voice was in my ear. The fidelity of our equipment was so good it felt like the spooky bastard was right behind me.
“Go for Dugout. Deacon on deck.”
“Down and safe. No signal yet from the Kid.” Not an imaginative call sign for the boy who’d contacted us, but it would do.
“Our friends from abroad wanted me to remind you of their offer of support.”
The Ark Royal and its attendant craft could invade and take a small country, and if we got into a real jam I had no problem calling on them for support.
“Nice to know. Tell them to keep the fires lit, Deacon.”
“Satellite feeds are updated on five-second cycles. Negative on thermal scans. Too much geothermal activity.”
“Copy that. Cowboy out.”
Bunny said, “Wait… I thought this was a dead volcano.”
“No, I said it hadn’t blown up for a while.”
“Swell.”
We set out, moving in a loose line, mindful of the terrain and wary of booby traps. The rain-forest foliage was incredibly dense, and I could see why it would draw the attention of biologists and whoever wanted to hide from prying eyes. There were hundreds of different kinds of trees and thousands of species of shrubs, and I swear there was a biting bug or stinging insect on every single goddamn leaf. I must have lost half a pound of meat and a quart of blood in the first three miles.
“This is some serious bush,” muttered Bunny. He was the only one of us who hadn’t been jungle trained, and he was streaming with sweat. His entire term of service had been in the Middle East. He was also carrying a lot more mass than Top, who was a lean and hard 170, or me at 210.
I kept my radio tuned to the Kid’s channel, but by the time we were five miles in there was still no answer.
Then suddenly the static changed to a softer hiss and a shaky voice said, “Is this Mr. Deacon?”
“Not exactly, Kid. But I work for him. Who are you?”
“How do I know that you work for him?”
“You don’t, but you dealt the play.”
“Tell me something,” he said.
“You first. Say something to let me know I’m talking to the right person.”
After a moment the Kid said, “Unicorn?”
I muted my mike. “Talk to me, Top.”
He was looking at his scanner. “Definitely originating from the island, Cap’n. Three-point-six klicks from here.” He showed me the compass bearing.
With the mike back on, I said, “Okay, Kid.”
“Now tell me something,” he said. The Kid was a quick study.
“Anyone listening?”
“No.”
“Okay… you sent the hunt video from a cybercafe in São Paolo. Second video was from this island.”
“Um… okay.”
“How do you know Deacon?” I asked.
“I don’t. I just know the name. From an old file I stole a look at. Otto and Alpha really hate that guy, so I figured if they hated him that much then he had to be their enemy.”
“The enemy of my enemy is my friend,” I suggested.
“Old Arabian saying,” the Kid said without pause. “Though it could be Chinese, too. They say it as ‘it is good to strike the serpent’s head with your enemy’s hand.’ ”