Love Is for Tomorrow (17 page)

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Authors: Michael Karner,Isaac Newton Acquah

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thriller & Suspense, #War & Military, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Spies & Politics, #Espionage, #Thriller, #Thrillers

BOOK: Love Is for Tomorrow
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Rose shook her head.

“Gamma ray,” Rose ordered.

The feed switched. The truck was now a pale ember, glowing faint but visible.   

She stared at it in disbelief. They had found it.

It hadn’t gone to St. Petersburg. It went right to Grozny, into the heart of Chechnya and the Chechen leader’s stronghold.

“What are you going to do with it?” she mused aloud.

Rose followed the truck. What she would have given for an authorized drone-strike or a collaboration with the Russians. But with FSB agents working against them, she couldn’t know how deep this was going. She could just lock the satellite with the vehicle and see where it ended up.
There was a prison complex just outside Tsentaroy. It was surrounded by minefields. She prayed they wouldn’t take the bomb there. Anywhere else and they had a remote chance of reaching it, but not there.

“Who do we have in the field?” she asked Bekkend.

“Our ground team is still in Georgia,” he answered, after a quick glance onto his datapad. “Should I delay their flight back?”

Rose’s shoulders sagged. They were just coming from a mission and had lost another truck. Rotation would be on order. But they were the only ones close enough to do anything. Rose looked around and considered her options.

“I will talk to them,” she said. “We need a second team...and a third. Tell the pilot to make the jet ready. Mobilize every asset.”

“Where to this time?” Bekkend asked.

“Chechnya.”

 

***

 

Tblisi, Georgia

 

“Ground team, we have intel incoming,” Rose opened the channel to Antoine’s radio transmitter.

“Good to hear from you, what’s on the menu?” he replied.

They were just heading to the plane.

“We will have to reroute you, team,” Rose said.

Antoine stopped, biting back a comment about how he liked the sound of that.

“We found the bomb.”

The others stopped.  

“Where is it?”

“Relaying it to your portable devices,” Rose said.

Antoine looked at his display and saw a satellite image of a truck. “We lost contact with the truck, but this was the last known position,” Rose said.

“How was satellite contact lost?” Antoine asked.

“Well, the truck simply disappeared,” Rose answered. “This was the last image we got. Then… see for yourself.”

Antoine kept his eyes glued on the screen. He saw the whole truck swallowed from an invisible field from one second to the next. The satellite view zoomed out, to take up pursuit frantically, trying to get the bead back on. The vehicle was simply gone.

“Plastic wrapped buildings, to shield them against satellite surveillance,” Antoine said. “I’ve seen it used in nuclear facilities in Iran. Whatever they’re doing there, they don’t want us to know.”

“Which is exactly why we need to get in there fast,” Rose said, “before they have a chance to relocate the bomb.”

Antoine let out a sigh. “Going in fast without enough surveillance… not a good idea.”

“We don’t have any other choice,” Rose told him. “The FSB got played. And an ex-FSB agent is behind this. The last net of security has broken down
.
“I’m sending you the coordinates,” Rose said. “It’s in Chechnya.”

“Great. I heard it’s beautiful this time of the year.”

“Alright,” Kovac said. “How shall we play it?”

“This is the end-game,” Antoine said. “We can end this right here. We can deactivate the bomb, single out the assassins and neutralize them.”

Kovac scratched his neck.

“Time is not on our side,” he said. “But we don’t have the equipment or manpower to take on a fortified base.”

“That’s why we have a single man infiltration ahead.”

Kovac nodded, then suddenly had a look of dreaded surprise on his face.

“Hey, why are you all looking at me?” he protested.

“You are the most natural choice,” Priya stated the obvious.

“Which is why he is not going,” Antoine said.

“His Russian is unmatched and looks-wise he would blend in the most,” Priya said.

“Tanya has his face,” Antoine said. “So does the CIA.”

“Whoever goes in, if he gets captured, it’s game over.”

“Then let’s keep that chance as small as possible, by not sending in a face they know,” Antoine replied.

Kovac grabbed his shoulder.

“You still have something to lose,” he said.

“No chance.” Antoine shook his head and his friend’s hand off him. “Don’t worry, I’m not doing it for you.”

“I never thought you would do it for me. I just have a problem that you plan to do it without me,” Kovac said.

Antoine glared at him, knowing it was do or die. He knew he would take it personally. “For my wife and my son,” he said. “Sometimes you get thrown into a situation and you have to take responsibility. Otherwise no one else will.”

“I lost the chance to be with my girl in this lifetime, Antoine. I want to prevent that happening from you. For me it’s too late. My girl is waiting for me in heaven.” He paced away from Antoine. He turned back, his eyes were red. “On top of that you have part Jamaican in you, it’s a bad idea you infiltrate Chechens.”

“Kovac, there are nearly sixty different ethnic groups living in the Caucasus,” Antoine said. “I’m sure there will be some that look similar.”

Kovac shrugged. “Yeah, but look at the percentages.”

 

***

 

Tsentaroy, Russia

 

Tanya was about to dismantle her phone before going into the Chechen compound. She had just opened the back lid when it vibrated. She swiped the screen to take the call. She said nothing, just listened.

She heard sobbing, anger, desperation. It was Olga’s voice. “Tanya, how could you? If it gets out, my career is over. I trusted you.”

Tanya waited. She could have told her she had been set up or fed with wrong information, but it would have been a lie. Or she could have just hung up. It was too late to stop it now.

“I’m sorry,” Tanya replied. “But once it’s all over, you will understand.” She thought of a line she remembered from Olga’s dad when she was trained and told it to her. “Trust your first instinct. The heart is right, the mind jumps to conclusions based on what it sees as facts.”

She hung up and removed the battery.

The mansion on the hill was like a palace from Arabian Nights. Her Audi Q3 SUV drifted into the courtyard.

She lifted
Trahison des Images
in one hand, as she was searched, before being welcomed in the inner premises.  Of course, she was never allowed to move freely.

The Chechen leader, a man in his late-thirties with red hair and a reddened beard welcomed her with a genuine smile. He stretched his arms out and shook her hand, then embraced her and placed an implied kiss on her right and left cheek.

“Tanya,” he said, his eyes shining like the surface of a frozen lake. “What a long journey.”

Tanya nodded.

“I’m glad to be at its end.”

The leader shrugged and offered her a seat. The years were like tree rings on his young face. Of a rebel became a warlord, of a warlord became a leader.

He waved a servant over and whispered something in his ear. The man returned with a suitcase.

The Chechen leader put the suitcase on his lap and entered the multiple number key code, without letting Tanya see it. He took a peek into the inside then clapped the suitcase shut and shoved it towards Tanya.

“That’s all,” he said, “the second half of your payment.”

The atmosphere was tense.

Tanya looked down at the key combination. The smell of sweat and Shisha smoke hung in the air.

He held out a demanding hand.

“The painting. Please.”

Tanya laid her fingers on the frame and hesitated to give it to him fully.

“Forgive my curiosity,” she began. “I just have to ask. Why this painting?”

“A present to my wife. As a sign how much I love her. I could buy anything, but this here, there’s only one like it. Like my wife.”

“But you don’t want to be found with stolen artwork worth millions, if something goes wrong,” she told him.

The leader shrugged.

"We live in a fragile world. Everything is there for you to take, if you have the strength to do it. You are much like me.”

Tanya shuddered and wondered if it was true.

The Chechen took the painting and looked at it. Then he put it away, like an unwrapped Christmas present, already eager for the next.

“A nice painting,” he said. “I could take back my money, if you never made it out of here.”

Two laser sights circled in on Tanya’s body, stopping over her breasts, becoming one.

Tanya was surprised. She thought the Chechen leader was smart. He was widely known to covet a high post in Moscow. The idea made many in Russia’s elite nervous, not least of all the FSB brass.

Why throw all that opportunity away, when she presented it to him on a silver platter?

She remembered the chessboard back in the banker’s office.

“I don’t want that we both lose,” she said plainly.

She made a sign with her hand, as if flipping away a cigarette butt.

“I knew who I was dealing with.”

Another laser beam zeroed in from the yard. It hovered over the Chechen leader’s heart. Behind the Audi’s tinted glass, Khabib held an AK-12 assault rifle.

“Let us just hope our greater mission is more unified,” Tanya added.

The Chechen nodded.

“Yes it is,” he said. “Excuse my manners.” He ordered his men to withdraw. He stood up and walked Tanya to the door. “I just wanted to see what you are made of. Now I know.”

“And what am I made of?” Tanya asked.

“Fearless. There are only two types of people,” he said. “The ones who conquer their fear and the ones who let their fear conquer them."

 

 

 

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

 

MEN WHO BECOME WOLVES

 

“Any Mission, Any Time, Any Place.” - Spetsnaz Motto

 

Southeast of Grozny, Russia

 

Antoine entered a lake of yellow water. It smelled diseased and rotten. Everything around it was despoiled, the grasses scrawny. The few trees that had branches stood like abandoned telephone poles.

Between them, two men in outdated Russian military camo vests patrolled. They shunned the lake like every other living thing. Antoine stood in the lake, his trousers soaked just above the ankles. He crouched down until his bottom was just above the water. He hoped the patrol movements didn’t force him down further.

Everything Priya had told him about the location was true. There were no communities or authorities but plenty of paramilitaries starting about five kilometers from the compound. They were men of the infamous and disbanded Vostok battalion. There would be more of them the closer he got to his target. The two guards stayed on the east shore with their backs to him. He could hear them talking, laughing. They were relaxed. Too relaxed. Antoine knew the signs of having done patrol duty for months without incident. Why would anybody come here? Most people didn’t even know it existed. It was a perfect hideout for an ex-Spetsnaz unit gone renegade that dealt with a radioactive weapon.

Antoine shook off the urge to kill them, dump their bodies in the lake, and take a uniform. They’d never be found, but he was in for the long haul. Their absence would raise questions, ruining his chance to slip in.

One of them waved to someone just over the embankment. It was another patrol. 

Antoine approached along the west shore to circumvent them.

Fog settled over the lake as evening approached. The sun was red when it sank over a barren ridge.

 

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