Norimov found the phone and prised it from where it had been glued. He flipped it open.
‘Very good, Vasily,’ he said instantly.
‘How are you, Alek?’
Victor saw Norimov looking around, obviously trying to see where he was located, without luck. He even looked up to the building, but Victor had positioned himself such that anyone looking up from the parking lot would only see the glare of the sun in the sky above him. It was the reason he had chosen that particular time and position, where the sun was in the perfect place in the sky to disguise him.
‘So what happens now?’ Norimov asked.
‘Could your contacts decrypt the information?’
‘Yes, Vasily, they could. Everything went well.’
‘Thank you for this,’ Victor said.
‘What are friends for?’
Victor couldn’t answer. ‘Do you have it with you?’
‘In my pocket.’ He tapped his chest.
‘Under the ticket machine where you found the phone there is a padded envelope. Put it in there.’
‘Cute.’ Norimov fumbled under the ticket machine for a moment. ‘Hold on, I can’t reach. I’m going to put the phone down for a second.’
‘You’re getting old.’
‘I am old. You too will be one day.’
‘Not if I can help it.’
Norimov found the envelope and placed the drive inside. At least Victor hoped he had. Through the scope Victor saw that the blond man had stopped walking. He now stood maybe ten yards behind Norimov, acting as though he was waiting for someone. But not very convincingly. Clear wire spiralled from his ear to his collar. Victor frowned.
‘Don’t make any movement. There’s a man behind you with an earpiece. Smile, laugh as if I had told you a joke.’
Norimov did and asked, ‘What do we do?’ The smile still on his face.
‘They were waiting for me to show, but the phone’s confused them.’
‘How did they know?’
‘Whoever decrypted the drive either told them or was discovered decrypting it. They’ve probably got your bar bugged, your office. When you leave, they’ll follow you.’
‘I’ll lead them round half the country. See how they like that.’
‘Any victory, however small…’
‘Exactly.’
‘Head back to your car and drive away normally,’ Victor said. ‘When they realize I’m not going to show, they could bring you in.’
‘I’ll tell them you didn’t show. Which is true.’
‘They’ll make your life difficult if they can.’
‘Fuck them. I can take care of myself. I was thinking of moving anyway. The Caribbean maybe. I like the women.’
He spoke lightly, too lightly.
Victor’s jaw muscles flexed. ‘I’m sorry for getting you into this, Alek.’
Norimov was still pretending to smile. ‘There’s nothing to be sorry for.’
It was crowded and hot inside the back of the removal van, but no one complained. There were four men in total, aged between twenty-five and forty. All professionals, all experienced operatives for the SVR. They all watched the images of Norimov and the parking lot displayed on the seventeen-inch monitor. Colonel Aniskovach watched too. A directional parabolic microphone was covering Norimov, but it was too far away, and the ambient sound too loud to decipher Norimov’s words.
‘He’s definitely talking to him,’ an operative said. ‘Where the hell is he?’
‘He must be nearby,’ Aniskovach replied. ‘He’ll want to see Norimov with his own eyes to make sure he’s alone. He’s out there somewhere. When he is convinced everything is safe he’ll show to collect the package.’ Aniskovach grabbed a radio to speak to the men outside. ‘Do not move until the target is identified and I give the command.’
With less than an hour’s warning of where the exchange was taking place, Aniskovach hadn’t had the time to get snipers in position or a better plan put into action. Which was why, of course, the assassin had arranged things as he had. Aniskovach had to appreciate his cunning, but he had enough men in the area to trap him the second he showed.
On the monitor Norimov hung up the cell and placed it in his pocket.
Aniskovach spoke into the radio. ‘That’s it; they’re done talking. He won’t show until Norimov has left. Kill him only if you are forced to, wound him by all means, but I’d like him alive.’ Aniskovach turned to his men. ‘Be ready.’
Clouds obscured the sun. Victor closed the phone but kept watch over Norimov to make sure he was safe. It was the least he could do. Norimov strolled back to his car as if he had no care in the world. He moved to the passenger door and opened it. As he did so, Victor looked back to the blond man and saw he was talking, seemingly to himself. For a second the man glanced upstairs, straight at Victor.
The blond man must have eyes like a hawk. Victor took a breath, knowing he didn’t have long before they locked down the location and trapped him. But for the moment he was up here and they were down there. With both hands back on the rifle, Victor swung it towards the plain-clothes operative. He was already moving, knowing he had likewise been spotted, his right hand reaching to his belt.
Victor fired.
The bullet flew over Norimov’s shoulder and hit the blond man in the face. When his body struck the ground most of the head was no longer attached to his neck.
The Dragunov’s suppressor massively reduced the sound caused by the escaping gases, but the high-velocity round it fired created a sonic boom as it broke the sound barrier — unmistakably a gunshot. Victor watched the ensuing effect carefully. People in and around the parking lot ducked or flinched — shocked, scared, confused. All but two.
Victor killed the first with a bullet through the chest. The second, realizing what was happening, tried to run. He didn’t get far.
Norimov’s men pulled him into the car and the BMW’s tyres screeched as it reversed out of the parking space and headed towards the exit. Victor risked standing up to get a better view. They knew where he was now, anyway. He looked around. Below him there were screams, hysteria, people running back and forth. Where were the others?
To his right, he spotted a white removal van. The man behind the wheel had a frantic look on his face and a spiral of clear wire descending from his left ear. Immediately Victor crouched back down, grabbed the Dragunov, and swung it to the right. The reticule rushed over the parking lot.
The driver’s mouth was moving. Shouting something.
A small hole exploded through the side window, and the glass turned red.
Hearing the sound of breaking glass and a wet thunk, Colonel Aniskovach stopped barking orders and looked through the partition separating the driver’s cab from the van’s rear compartment. His mouth fell open at what he saw.
Bright gore plastered the front windshield. The operative behind the wheel was slumped to one side in his seat, his head split in two.
Aniskovach was already moving when he screamed, ‘EVERYBODY OUT.’
Victor let the magazine fall out of the rifle and slammed in the second mag. He worked the action, ejecting the previous round and loading an API. Through the sniper scope Victor watched the van’s rear doors swing open. He hovered the crosshairs over the fuel inlet.
A man leaped out of the back and ran. More boots dropped out of the back onto the road behind the first. Victor fired. The bullet punched a hole through the body work. Inside the van the incendiary charge ignited the traces of fuel in the inlet. Flames rushed through the fuel pipe, reaching the tank.
The van exploded.
It lifted off the ground, the force ripping outward, decimating it in a single instant. The fireball was huge, mushrooming upward, engulfing the operatives not fast enough to follow Aniskovach’s lead. The shock wave blew out the glass of the neighbouring vehicles.
Black smoke rose towards the sky.