He touched his earpiece. “Anything?”
“No. They have not moved since they entered the courtyard in front of the main building. Do you see them?”
“Nyet.”
“They have to be close by.”
“Yes. They do.”
Zhomov took a step forward. He stopped when he heard a metallic tink. Tink. Tink. He tried to determine its location. He heard it again and stepped toward the sound, treading softly.
“Still—” Sokalov began.
“Do not speak,” Zhomov whispered. He wondered if perhaps the sound was from one of the buildings, a mechanical system, then dismissed the thought. The noise had no pattern, making it likely man-made. It stopped. He heard a creaking noise, again man-made. Again, he moved toward the sound.
He stepped around a row of bushes and trees and came to the southwest courtyard dominated by a central, dry fountain. His eyes searched the shadows and natural hiding places, again seeing no one.
“Anything yet?” he whispered into the headset.
“Nothing,” Sokalov responded.
They had to be here. Somewhere. He moved down a path toward the fountain and proceeded around it clockwise, looking left and right. No one.
Zhomov stopped. Listened. He did not hear anything, but something about one of the grates at the base of the fountain caught his attention. He moved toward it. The grate had been pulled open. A ten-centimeter bolt lay on the concrete. He felt scratch marks under the square head. It explained the tinking noise—someone prying up the bolt to free the grate. Carefully he leaned forward, holding out his phone, and used the light to look down into the darkness at a rusted ladder descending a shaft. His light was not strong enough to reach the bottom.
He pulled back and spoke into the headset. “They have gone underground. I am not far behind them and will follow. Have the center activate the cameras in the tunnels.”
“I don’t have time to explain, but there are no cameras in the underground.”
“Then take the car back to Lubyanka and pull up a map with points of entry and exit. Find out where the tunnel beneath the fountain in the southwest corner of the courtyard goes. They have to come back above ground somewhere. Alert the Moscow police.”
“Remember, I need Jenkins alive,” Sokalov said. “Kill Kulikova and leave her body below Moscow so I can think fondly of her each time I drive to Lubyanka.”
“I have no desire to be part of your fantasies, Dmitry. Do as I say. And do it now if you wish for me to succeed.”
Jenkins stepped off the final rung and used the phone light to illuminate an enormous underground bunker with multilevel labyrinths of tunnels and rooms. It reminded him of the tunnels beneath Oslo that he and Ponomayova had used to escape. Those tunnels had been built so leaders of Oslo could move around the city while it was under Nazi rule. But these tunnels were many times the size of those tunnels.
“What is this?” he asked, keeping his volume low.
“The underground city,” Kulikova said. “Ramenki-43. Built in the 1960s and ’70s to withstand a nuclear attack. It can house up to fifteen thousand people, some say for thirty years.”
Jenkins swore. “You people really are paranoid.”
“You have no idea. We need to move,” she said.
Jenkins followed. “How do you know this place? Do others know of it?”
“Some,” she said, moving down an arched brick tunnel, the light of her phone illuminating no more than a few feet in front of them. “In college a friend found this shaft. He brought me and others underground to explore the tunnels at night. When the Soviet Union collapsed, he created an organization called Diggers of the Underground Planet and gave subterranean tours. The tours stopped when Putin came to power.”
The ground was moist, slick, and uneven. Jenkins felt his shoes slip. “This is all in anticipation of a nuclear war?”
“Don’t sound so surprised, Mr. Jenkins. During the Cold War, Great Britain and your country also built special underground bunkers where their respective leadership could seek refuge. The Soviet Union built up its underground system far beyond what was built by your country or Great Britain, but as you said, we are more paranoid. Down here you will find bunkers, underground factories, even tank tunnels.”
“How big is it?”
“I don’t know. I have, however, seen the plans. There are twelve levels running beneath Moscow. A few of the passageways date back to the 1300s. Ivan the Terrible expanded the tunnels during his reign in the sixteenth century, fearing he might have to someday flee the Kremlin. The largest tunnel is an underground subway system, known informally as Metro-2 and officially as D-6. It has been an ongoing project since the 1940s and is used only by high-ranking government officials, all of whom categorically deny its existence. You will not find a map or a document to substantiate it anywhere except at Lubyanka and, because of me, at Langley.”
Jenkins’s foot slipped and he reached out to the wall to regain his balance. The wall, too, was moist, and unlike above ground, where Moscow was hot and muggy, the passageway was cool and musty. Jenkins felt a chill on his arms beneath his dampened shirt. He estimated the temperature to be no more than forty-five degrees Fahrenheit. Their breath hung in the light from his phone.
“How do you know so much about it?” he asked.
“Because an issue came up as to who should be responsible for the tunnels. During the Soviet Union, it was run by the Fifteenth Directorate. When the Soviet Union collapsed, the directorate in charge of the tunnels was renamed the Main Directorate of Special Programs of the President, or GUSP. GUSP’s sole purpose is to maintain and expand these tunnels and keep their absolute secrecy. Sokalov was at one time the director, but he is lazy. He had me study the map and provide him with the details. I was glad to do it.”
“Do you have a photographic memory? How do you know where we are going?” Jenkins asked. They had ignored multiple side tunnels.
“I am following the main communication cable.” She tipped her phone so Jenkins could see a series of cables, like tree roots, anchored along the brick wall. “It will lead us back to Moscow. From there, I assume you have a plan to get us out.”
“I had a plan to get us out,” Jenkins said. “At the moment I’m improvising.” He checked his cell phone but, as he suspected, he had no reception. “Are there security cameras or motion detectors we should be concerned about?”
“The government has tried, but the underground belongs to the Diggers and subterranean explorers, and they do not like the government. They have clashed over access to the tunnels. Cameras and motion detectors don’t last long down here. The government has given up spending the money. Walk behind me,” she said. “The passageway narrows.”