It wasn’t only the city that was waiting for something to happen. Petrovitch pushed his hands up inside his T-shirt sleeves, and hurried along to Hyde Park corner.
Marchenkho wasn’t there, and Petrovitch had no watch or phone to tell him the right time. He could be late, or early. The only thing he was certain of was that he had the right day. So he stood under the Wellington Arch while a dozen vaguely human-shaped piles of bags and blankets slept around him, making the most of the shelter.
In the distance, he heard the sound of bells ringing the half-hour. Now Marchenkho was late. He jumped up and down and swung his hands around, both trying to keep warm and wishing to evaporate the cold sweat that had broken out across his body. He shivered.
In the distance, coming up Grosvenor Place, was a line of black cars. At first, he thought it another strange computer-directed aberration, but then he saw more clearly. The cars, six of them, circled the monument once, and then parked up against the curb.
People, Slavs like himself, slowly emerged into the dawn air, well wrapped up to conceal their firearms. Petrovitch made sure both his hands were on show as he approached.
“Hey, Yuri.”
Grigori narrowed his eyes and raised his chin. “Petrovitch. I lose, then.”
“What?”
“I bet fifty euros you wouldn’t show.” He leaned against his limousine and knocked on the rear window. It slid down.
“Dobroe utro, tovarish.”
Petrovitch peered in. “Yeah. I can’t believe you have a Zil.”
“Why not?” said Marchenkho. “Zil is a good car. Reliable. Armor plated.”
“Parts must be a bitch.” Petrovitch ran his hand across the polished, waxed roof, leaving a trail of sticky fingerprints.
“With money, anything is possible.” Marchenkho stroked his mustache. “Are you armed?”
“You don’t bring a knife to a gunfight.”
“This is good. What do you need?”
“Nine millimeter for the Norinco. Point three two for the Beretta.”
Marchenkho nodded to Grigori, who went to the boot of the car and opened it, revealing neatly labeled cartons and long cases. “Petrovitch, aren’t you cold?”
“I’m freezing my tits off, truth be told. My jacket got incinerated by the Paradise militia.”
“What did you do to them, that they would set your clothing on fire?”
Petrovitch stamped hard on the ground. “It’s a long, and probably pointless story. They weren’t after me, anyway.”
“Getting caught up in other people’s battles again? I thought you were supposed to be a smart man.” His mustache twitched as he smiled mirthlessly. “So many enemies for one so young.”
Grigori handed him two small cardboard cartons, heavy with bullets. He watched as Petrovitch tried to find somewhere on him to put them, then shrugged off his long black leather coat.
“Here,” he said.
Petrovitch looked blankly at him. “I can’t do that,” he said when he finally realized.
“I have more coats, more clothes, suits, shoes, jeans, than I can ever wear. Take it. Look on it as an example of socialism in action.” Grigori draped it over Petrovitch’s shoulders. The collar smelled of cologne.
“You look fit to be in my company now,” said Marchenkho. “Get in.”
Petrovitch dropped a carton into each of the side pockets of his coat, and pulled it around him as he slid onto the long backseat.
There were three people opposite him: two men and a woman, each cradling a Kalashnikov.
“Leon, Valentina, Ziv. This is the kid I told you about.”
“Yeah. Whatever he said was a lie.” Petrovitch slid the Beretta from his sock and sprung the clip.
The woman called Valentina shook her ponytail. “He said you were fearless.”
Petrovitch looked across at Marchenkho. “Does that mean you like me?”
“It means I have decided not to kill you. This is good, no?” Marchenkho glanced down at the little pistol Petrovitch was busy reloading. “Your peesa is very small.”
“That’s what the other guy said, just before I killed him.”
Marchenkho shook with laughter. “See? See how he looks like a kitten but roars like a lion.”
The driver’s door slammed, and Grigori started the Zil.
“Tell me,” said Marchenkho. “What happened to your American friend?”
“Sorenson? I don’t know. Oshicora screwed him over, and then Inspector Chain did the same thing, only worse.”
“But Oshicora is dead.”
“Sorenson won’t know. If he’s gone feral, he’ll never find out. He’ll spend the rest of his days hiding from someone who no longer exists.” Petrovitch tucked the Beretta in his pocket, and reached around for the Norinco. “I guess I might know what that’s like.”
“Perhaps you can find him, when we have done what we came to do.” Marchenkho nodded to dour Ziv, who tapped Grigori on the shoulder. The car pulled away and started down Piccadilly.
“Did you have any problems this morning?” asked Petrovitch. He fed fat bullets into the Norinco’s magazine.
“Why? What do you know?” Marchenkho stroked his chin, and leaned over, resting his solid bulk against Petrovitch’s shoulder. He radiated menace.
Petrovitch slapped the magazine back home and rested the gun on his knees. He chose his words carefully. “Something’s happening. I don’t know what. I can’t say I like it.”
And just like that, the Ukrainian changed moods. He rumbled deep in his chest. “My mobile refuses to connect. My computer cannot talk to others. My breakfast is accompanied by white noise, not the news. This is not good. But the streets are clear. The cameras are off. Even if this is for just one day, it could not be better. We are the Lords of Misrule, and there will be no one to see the mischief we make. Once we are done here, Oshicora has other operations in the East End that we wish to see closed down.”
Grigori was slowing, making a big U-turn in front of the Oshicora Tower, the other cars blocking the road in front and behind, screeching tires, disgorging people.
A shabby figure in a brown trenchcoat looked balefully at them from the curbside.
“Yeah, should have mentioned this earlier.” Petrovitch waited for the Zil to stop, then opened the door. “Chain might have overheard us talking.”
22
Chain frowned as guns and people spilled out onto the pavement. He turned to Petrovitch with an expression like a cross tortoise. “You don’t think you’re going to get away with this, do you?” he said.
“As has been pointed out,” said Petrovitch, “today is the only day we’ll get away with this.” He swirled his coattails and admitted that it did look pretty cool. “Do you think you can stop us?”
“I came to try.”
“Yeah,” grinned Petrovitch, “you and whose army?”
“Oh very droll. I appreciate you’re resourceful but it won’t save you.” Chain fished around in his pockets and found his own gun. “I should arrest you right now.”
Petrovitch reached behind him for the Norinco. “Maybe you should, but you can stand to wait until later.”
“I suppose I could,” admitted Chain with a shrug. “Perhaps it’s time I cut you some slack.”
Marchenkho stood beside Petrovitch and slapped him hard on the back. “All friends now? This is good.”
“About all this,” said Chain, “I don’t have the manpower to rescue Sonja Oshicora: you know that, don’t you?”
“We do,” said Petrovitch.
“So, let’s get on with it.” Chain patted his pockets for his police card. He flipped it open and tucked it facing outward from his top pocket. “Has one of you got a plan?”
Marchenkho looked at Chain, then at Petrovitch. “Of course,” he growled. “What sort of half-assed organization do you think I run?”
Petrovitch shrugged. “I had the idea that I was just going to walk up to the front desk and start the revolution from there. If it goes pizdets, we do it the old-fashioned way: straight down the middle, lots of smoke.”