46
Eleftherios Venizelos International Airport
Athens
Hellenic Republic (Greece)
February 21, 2013
Dressed in jeans, a soccer shirt, and tennis shoes, Sergay Linko sat at a bar inside the terminal and watched as new arrivals filed through customs. He had been there for two hours, watching the early morning passengers leaving and arriving, but looking only for Anna Cherkshan.
At a quarter after eleven, she walked from the security area and headed to the front of the terminal.
Linko picked up the disposable phone he was using to keep in contact with the FSB agents backstopping his operation. Plugging the earphone into his ear, he used speed dial to call his driver. “She is here. Bring the car around front.”
“Yes. I am on my way.”
Everything was coming to a head now. Lourds and Anna Cherkshan were both here. He knew where the young woman was, but he had yet to find Lourds. As it turned out, the American linguist had many friends in Athens. With his limited manpower, finding all of them was difficult, and even FSB computer intelligence was drawing a blank.
He followed Anna easily. She talked rapidly on the phone and even looked a little relieved. Something was going well for her. That was too bad. Because things were about to be the worst they would ever be for her.
Linko dropped a hand into his pocket and took out a ballpoint pen. The pen was one of the most lethal things he’d ever carried. Lead lined its inner workings, protecting the carrier from the low but deadly dose of radiation contained in the rice-grain sized pellet of Polonium 210. Irradiated as it was, the pellet—once implanted—would cause sickness and major organ failure within twenty-four to thirty-six hours. There was no cure.
The crowd of arrivals bunched up at the front of the terminal.
Timing his move judiciously, practiced from past experiences with the delivery system, Linko closed on Anna, keeping only an elderly woman between himself and the young woman. A moment later, he kicked the woman’s left foot behind her right as she took her next step. As expected, the woman squealed, knowing she was falling, and reached instinctively for Anna.
When the woman grabbed her shoulder for support, Anna turned to help her. “It’s okay. I’ve got you.”
She spoke in Russian, and Linko was fairly certain that the elderly woman didn’t understand. While Anna supported the woman, Linko stepped in from behind, unseen, and poked her with the ballpoint pen just hard enough to inject the pellet into her shoulder near the woman’s hand.
Anna didn’t notice. Her attention was solely on the woman who was clasping her shoulder.
A uniformed airport worker trotted over to help as the elderly woman started apologizing profusely.
Linko kept walking, staying ahead of Anna and offering her only the back of his head for identification. He felt confident she wouldn’t recognize him. He had let his beard grow and dyed his hair peroxide blond. He didn’t look much like the man she had seen at the dig outside Herat anymore.
He kept track of her in the windows of the shops they passed, then in the windows lining the front of the building. He passed through the door and walked by the stand, where a taxi manager stood assigning drivers and passengers.
Yamadayev sat in their car nine spaces back from the taxi stand. Linko slid into the passenger seat and glanced back at the front of the terminal.
“There she is.” Yamadayev spoke quietly, and he did not point. He was Spetsnatz, Russian military special forces, and currently assigned to the FSB. He was not yet thirty, a lean killing machine with soft eyes and a distant manner.
“I see her.” Linko waited impatiently, knowing that the ticking bomb inside the young woman was already counting down.
***
The taxi driver spoke to Anna as he looked into the rearview mirror.
Anna smiled. “Do you speak Russian or English?”
The man smiled back and nodded. “English.”
Anna switched to that language. “Can you take me to the Museum of the University of Athens?” That was where Lourds had told her he was.
“Of course.” The driver flipped on the meter and pulled into the flow of traffic leaving the airport.
Anna’s arm still stung from where the older woman had grabbed it during her fall inside the terminal. She rolled up the sleeve of her blouse and saw the scratch that marred her skin. She took her purse from her carryon, then located a tissue and wiped away the dot of blood, hoping it didn’t stain the blouse. She pressed the tissue against the wound to help stop the bleeding.
The woman must have been wearing a ring. That was the only thing Anna could think of that would account for the small wound. After a moment, she removed the tissue and saw that the bleeding had stopped.
All better.
She crumpled the napkin and put it inside a pocket in her purse to dispose of later. Looking out the window, she remembered other times she had visited the city. She had been to Athens eight times before. The country was so relatively close to Moscow, less than three hours by plane, that it seemed idiocy to not come down to enjoy the beaches and the islands occasionally in the summer when she could afford it.
She had told her parents about the islands, about the swimming and the historical sites and the nightlife. Her father had said he had no interest in swimming and that there were plenty of historical sites to see in Russia if he wanted to look at old things. He had refused to go even when Anna had offered to pay for everything. He had told her she was being too extravagant with her money to do such a thing.
But he hadn’t told her not to go.
She took her tablet PC from the carryon and opened up the file with her story about the Ukraine “reunification” and the coming coordinated terrorist attacks within Greece. She knew she didn’t have enough proof to put before any kind of court, and no one could try President Nevsky for anything he had done, but at least the story would make it possible for some of the right people to start asking questions and overturning stones.
President Nevsky wasn’t bulletproof. Someone, somewhere, would find a way to stop him.
And she intended to be the one to set that into motion.
***
Lourds sat in one of the folding chairs that had been brought in for the meeting with Anna Cherkshan. The young woman appeared tired, and she obviously had a headache, judging from the way she kept rubbing her temples.
“Are you certain you’re all right?” Marias seemed concerned as well.
Anna waved him off. “Merely a combination of not enough sleep and jetlag. Once I get this story to the media, I will rest. But for now we need to concentrate and pool our resources.” She switched her attention to Lourds. “My father had books on Alexander the Great in his personal library. I saw them. He has never had an interest in him before.”
Lourds still had trouble wrapping his head around the fact that the Russian president was behind Boris’s murder. He wanted to play devil’s advocate to shore up his own logic. “Your father may have taken an interest in Alexander the Great since you were working on the story with us.”
Anna cocked an eyebrow at him and smiled, obviously knowing what he was doing. “Oh, really? Then how do you explain the fact that my father bought those books before Professor Glukov had announced to the world that the tomb he’d found had anything to do with Alexander the Great?”
“How do you know when your father purchased those books?”
“The receipts were still in them. He keeps them to track his expenses for different accounts, and finding them later drives my mother crazy.”
Lourds grinned ruefully. Tina Metcalf used to voice the same complaint when she had been his GA. “All right.”
“My father would not have taken it upon himself to begin reading such a focused subject unless he was ordered to.” Anna paced slightly but appeared to be moving cautiously, as if she were somewhat dizzy. “The only person he answers to these days is President Nevsky. I am certain his newfound interest came from Nevsky.”
Lourds nodded.
Captain Fitrat and the two corporals listened attentively. There were no zombie remarks.
“I have a friend who is very good with computers, yes? He breaks into them on a regular basis. Very dangerous work. He is the one who got these plans on the ‘reunification.’ I had him access my father’s appointment book as well. He had his first face-to-face meeting with Nevsky at around the same time Professor Glukov was investigating the dig out in Afghanistan. He ordered the books that afternoon.”
“I see.” Lourds stroked his goatee thoughtfully. “Boris mentioned that his funding to work at the dig came through Nevsky.”
Anna took out her tablet PC and a stylus. “I did not know that. It will be one more thing I can add to the story at some point. I am certain I can verify that, no problem.” She put the tablet aside. “But I must ask you, Professor: Do you believe there is any merit to the story that Alexander’s weapons and his armor have any supernatural powers?”
Lourds shook his head. “It’s just a story.” Then he remembered how he’d read the words from the scroll to United States Vice President Elliott Webster and the man—or whatever he had truly been—had been defeated.
“It does not matter if it is true or not.” Anna looked at the men in the room. “Nevsky has his man, Linko, an FSB operative, out there looking for it, as we have plainly seen. So anyone connected to the search for the lost tomb of Alexander the Great is going to be in danger. Of this you can be certain.”
Marias tapped his journal with a pen. He’d been taking notes throughout. As Lourds remembered, the man was an excellent listener. “People—political leaders, athletes, common people—all have belief systems. They choose to believe in things outside themselves. That is why the mythology of the Greek gods and goddesses is so rich.”
Anna grinned at him and massaged her temple. “Are you so sure all of those things are myths?”
Marias smiled. “I am satisfied that they are myths and nothing more. Otherwise, why wouldn’t the gods and goddesses have manifested before now?” He sat forward in his seat. “Still, the problem remains, as you said, that Nevsky believes in the power of Alexander’s armor and weapons. One of the best ways we might undermine his current position—on a personal level—is to find those things and take custody of them.”
“I agree. I can hit Nevsky on the political front. The story I will be breaking should start an avalanche of investigations. But if that is followed up by the story of your discovery of Alexander the Great’s lost tomb, that should provide the proverbial nail in the coffin. To use a fitting analogy.”
Anna looked more sharply at Lourds and Marias. “How close do you think you are to finding the tomb?”
Lourds sighed. He hated that question, as he’d been asking himself the same thing all day. “According to Callisthenes’s scroll, Aristotle took Alexander to the Oracle of Delphi. Once he received the pronouncement he expected, he took Alexander to get the weapons.”
“Where?”
“It doesn’t say. But there is a symbol we haven’t figured out yet.” Lourds waved to Marias, who promptly brought up the symbol on the computer screen.
Anna looked at the symbol. “Where did you find this?”
“Thomas did, actually. We only just discovered it in the scroll.” Marias pulled out the Oracle scroll, as they’d started calling it, and flipped it over. “If you run your finger along the back of the papyrus, you’ll feel those raised points where Callisthenes talks about Alexander acquiring the weapons.”
Anna ran her hand along the back of the scroll. She shook her head and grimaced, but continued. “I would have thought they were just indentations from the writing.”
“That’s what I thought, until I matched the indentations with the writing.” Lourds looked at the symbol on the screen again and sighed. “I was pretty excited at first, but it appears that whatever the clue is, it’s beyond us right now.”
Anna took a deep breath, then checked her watch. “I have to go. I have an editor to convince to let me run this story. In the meantime, you two need to figure out where that tomb is.”
Lourds nodded. “We will. But you be careful. You certainly won’t make any friends with your announcement.”
Giving him a wan smile, Anna approached him and gave him a hug. “No, but we are not going to let Nevsky get away with killing Boris, are we?”
Lourds hugged her back and looked at her. “No, we’re not.”
“Good. And when the time is right, invite me to the wedding. I would like to be there.”
Lourds smiled at her. “Then consider yourself invited.”
That caught Marias’s attention at once. “Wait! What wedding?”
The Oracle Code
Charles Brokaw's books
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- Before the Scarlet Dawn
- Between the Land and the Sea
- Breaking the Rules
- Escape Theory
- Fairy Godmothers, Inc
- Father Gaetano's Puppet Catechism
- Follow the Money
- In the Air (The City Book 1)
- In the Shadow of Sadd
- In the Stillness
- Keeping the Castle
- Let the Devil Sleep
- My Brother's Keeper
- Over the Darkened Landscape
- Paris The Novel
- Sparks the Matchmaker
- Taking the Highway
- Taming the Wind
- Tethered (Novella)
- The Adjustment
- The Amish Midwife
- The Angel Esmeralda
- The Antagonist
- The Anti-Prom
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- The Astrologer
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- The B Girls
- The Back Road
- The Ballad of Frankie Silver
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- The Barbarian Nurseries A Novel
- The Barbed Crown
- The Battered Heiress Blues
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- The Blood That Bonds
- The Blossom Sisters
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- The Book of Madness and Cures
- The Boy from Reactor 4
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- The Crown A Novel
- The Dangerous Edge of Things
- The Dangers of Proximal Alphabets
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- The Dark Road A Novel
- The Deposit Slip
- The Devil's Waters
- The Diamond Chariot
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- The Emerald Key
- The Estian Alliance
- The Extinct
- The Falcons of Fire and Ice
- The Fall - By Chana Keefer
- The Fall - By Claire McGowan
- The Famous and the Dead
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