"You think he'll be there?" she asked, eyes glued to the wondrous sight of dawn's approach.
"Pillonel? Yeah, I think so. He's got a place outside of town where he grows his own grapes. Each year he sends over a case of his wine as a Christmas present. Not bad stuff. Anyway, he's always going on about coming out to visit his winery. I figure if it's decent weather, odds are he'll be playing the grand vintner."
"What makes you think he'll talk to us?"
"I can be persuasive when I have to be. Besides, we've got plenty of help. Luca's last letter and that fax to the FBI won't hurt. A guy like Pillonel's got a heck of a lot to lose if he gets caught. He's got to be feeling a little nervous already."
"And you'll play on his guilty conscience?"
"Yeah. And if that doesn't work, I'll beat the living tar out of him."
"Ah, a diplomat."
Gavallan bridled at her dismissive tone. In case she'd forgotten, they'd passed diplomacy a ways back, somewhere after Graf Byrnes had been kidnapped and before Ray Luca had taken a bullet in the head. "Whatever works."
"You sound like Alexei."
"Ah, the mysterious Alexei."
"You're mad I never told you?"
"Shouldn't I be?"
Cate glanced up, her eyes red and swollen. "You can be mad, but don't be unkind. I don't want to cry again for a month."
"I'm sorry."
Cate dropped her eyes to the floor, hiding her hands in the ends of her sweater. "I had to identify his body. Seeing him like that, so damaged, I wanted to die myself. I had urged him to go to the police. I'd hugged him and told him he would be a hero for exposing Kirov. It was my fault. Alexei wasn't a fighter. When he heard me talk about Kirov stealing from his country, breaking the laws that men like him had just made, he adopted my anger as if it were his. He joined my armchair rebellion. It was his way of showing that he loved me."
Still on his knees, Gavallan reached out a hand and touched her cheek. "You can't hold yourself responsible for someone else's actions. Maybe you asked him to go to the police, but he made that decision himself."
"Maybe, but still…" Cate shuddered. "I never realized how bad I might feel. Even now." She reached for his hand, intertwining her fingers with his. "I see now I should have told you. I'm sorry, Jett. Forgive me?"
He nodded, filled with affection for her. Not a sexual yearning, but a stronger, deeper emotion, an encompassing happiness simply that he was there with her.
The cockpit door opened and the pilot stepped into the cabin. "We're an hour out," he said. "Weather looks fine in Geneva- a few clouds, otherwise it should be a sunny day in Switzerland. Mr. Dodson, you have any idea when you'll want us to be ready to take off again? We'd be appreciative if you could give us some idea of our destination ahead of time. We're required to file a flight plan, even if we don't stick to it."
The relationship was strictly business, mercenary all the way. Once they were airborne, Gavallan had bribed him with ten crisp hundred-dollar bills. Ask no questions and he'd tell no tales.
"Be fueled up and ready to go by four. I'll give you a call later this morning to let you know where we're headed."
"That's fine. Couple hours are all we need."
The pilot left. Gavallan took off his watch and reset it for Geneva time. "An hour to go," he said. "Think this bird's got a decent shower?"
Cate pointed to the rear of the aircraft. "Give it a shot. Might as well get your money's worth."
He headed to the shower, but pulled up suddenly, hoping she might be getting out of her seat to join him. "Cate…" he started, but she was still seated, her eyes not on him but glued to the window, staring into the orange dawn.
He could only wonder what she was thinking.
38
You are happy, my friend?" asked Aslan Dashamirov.
"Relieved," Konstantin Kirov replied. "I slept better knowing there was no longer a risk of someone slipping our papers to the police. It was a difficult business. I'm glad we've solved the matter."
It was a cold, rainy Saturday morning. The two men walked arm in arm across the muddy field outside of Moscow where Dashamirov had set up one of his used-car lots. A row of crapped-out automobiles ran next to them. Fiats. Ladas. Simcas. None with less than a hundred thousand miles on them, though the odometers showed no more than a quarter of that. Scruffy pennants dangled from a line strung overhead. A ways back, tucked conveniently amongst a copse of baby pines, stood a blue and white striped tent where prices were negotiated and payments made, often in tender as suspect as the cars themselves: televisions, refrigerators, stereos, cigarettes, narcotics, women.
"I'm not so sure," said Dashamirov.
"Oh?"
"No one talked. Not one of them admitted to working with Baranov or with Skulpin. Only the innocent are so brave."
"You didn't give them the chance." Kirov hated himself for playing up to the Chechen. He was a brigand, really, an uneducated hood.
Dashamirov looked at him as if he were a wart on his finger. "I am thinking we did not find the right person."
So that was why his krysha had called the meeting, thought Kirov. He should have known the man wouldn't be so easily put off. Of course, Dashamirov was right. He was always right. This time, though, Kirov had beaten him to the punch.
He'd put his finger on the traitor, a young securities lawyer working in-house on the Mercury deal, and had taken care of the problem himself. Quickly. Neatly. Quietly. A single bullet to the man's brain delivered in the comfort of the traitor's own flat. None of this barbaric business with a hammer. Imagining the fierce blow against the skull, Kirov shivered, a spike of fear running right through him to the pit of his belly.
He stared at Dashamirov. The mustache, the crooked mouth, the eyes at once dead, yet so magnificently alive. The man was a beast. But a smart beast. He was correct in his assumptions. Only the innocent were so brave. The lawyer had spilled his guts after a few threats and a bloody nose. Had Dashamirov pressed him for details about the money missing from Novastar, it would have been Kirov getting the hammer yesterday morning.
The hammer.
He ground his teeth.
"What's important," said Kirov, "is that Mercury will go forward without any further problems. For that I have you to thank."
"I was thinking rather about Novastar," said Dashamirov, dropping his arm to his side, quickening his pace as the rain picked up. "The question of the missing funds haunts me, my friend. Where there is one rat, there may be more. Perhaps someone in your organization is stealing the money from the airline. A hundred twenty-five million dollars is too large a sum to take lightly."
"Perhaps," replied Kirov thoughtfully, "though that would be difficult. I alone have signature power over the airline's bank accounts."
"Yes. You are right. Perhaps it would be wise to study the books." He opened his slim, spidery hands in a gesture of conciliation. "If, of course, you do not mind."
It was not a request, and both men knew it. Kirov looked around. A dozen of Dashamirov's clansmen loitered among the cars. Vor v Zakone. Thieves of thieves. God knew they were wealthy, but look at them. Standing around in the pouring rain, hair wet, clothing as sodden as the omnipresent cigarettes that dangled from their lips. In four days' time, Dashamirov stood to take home 15 percent of Kirov's billion- a neat $150 million dollars. The next day he would be here, or at one of the other fifty lots he ran in the northern suburbs of Moscow, standing in the rain, drinking filthy coffee, smoking.
"I will speak to my accountant immediately," said Kirov. "He is in Switzerland. It may take some time."