mistake. Victor grabbed the hand on the weapon before it could be withdrawn and elbowed him twice in the face, smashing his glasses and fracturing a cheekbone. Victor felt the strength go in the hand, tore the gun away, pushed the suppressor against his enemy’s stomach and fired twice, turned around again in time to see the man with the smashed nose retrieving the. 45 and swinging it in his direction.

Victor shot him three times in the chest.

The tall man screamed — no words — just an incoherent mix of fear, desperation and pleading.

‘No one can hear,’ Victor said. ‘That’s why you brought me all the way to this room, remember?’

The guy shot in the stomach slid down the wall, not dead but dying fast, his broken glasses hanging from one ear. Blood soaked his jacket. A smeared trail of exit-wound gore glistened on the wall behind him. He groaned quietly.

Victor stepped over the corpse on the floor so he could face the tall man. His angular features were warped — half pain, half terror. The skin of his face was white and sweaty with shock. The hand pinned to the table was pure red. Blood pooled around it and dripped from the closest table edge. His other hand, the left, was beneath his overcoat, struggling to get at the gun holstered under his left armpit. Not an easy thing to do at the best of times.

Victor pointed the. 45 at the guy’s face and he stopped what he was doing. With his spare hand, Victor reached over and took the gun out for him. He saw it was a Smith amp; Wesson like the one he already had and tossed it away.

‘ What do you want to know? ’ the tall man yelled. ‘ I will tell you anything.’

Victor picked up the chair from the other side of the room and placed it next to the table. He brushed off the seat and sat down perpendicular to the tall man.

‘I know you will,’ Victor agreed. ‘You can start by telling me who you were speaking to on the phone. Who’s coming?’

‘A Belarusian. My client. Danil Petrenko.’

‘Will he come alone?’

‘There will be men with him.’

‘How many?’

Victor rested a finger on the top of the glass shard. He didn’t have to move it. The threat was enough.

‘There are four more of us,’ the tall man blurted out. He was frantic, eyes wide and staring at the six-inch glass shard impaled through his hand.

‘Are you part of Petrenko’s crew?’

‘No, we are freelancers. Hired killers.’ He paused a moment, thinking. ‘But we were not going to kill you, my friend,’ he added, quickly. ‘Petrenko just wanted to talk to you.’

‘Try again.’

A desperate look passed over his face. ‘Okay,’ he said after a pause. ‘But I promise it was just business, nothing personal.’

‘It never is.’

‘You understand, I was merely following my orders, doing my job. You know how it is. You are just like me.’

‘I don’t see the similarity.’

‘Petrenko is the one you want, not me.’

‘So I don’t need you then.’

White showed all around the tall man’s irises. ‘Please do not kill me.’

‘How many targets said that to you?’

‘I… I do not know.’

‘I’m guessing a lot. But how many of those times did you spare them?’

There was a brief pause before he said, ‘Sometimes.’

‘Then you’re not very good at what you do.’

‘Please,’ the tall man begged. ‘I have told you everything I know.’

‘You have,’ Victor agreed, ‘but I said nothing about letting you go if you did.’

‘Please.’

Victor stood. ‘You really should have listened to my advice.’

‘Okay, my friend,’ the tall man said, hurriedly, desperately, ‘I have never spared anyone. I am an evil man. But you said it yourself, you are not like me. So do not be like me now. Do not become what I am.’

Victor stared down at him and said, ‘For the things I have done I know the devil saves a place for me in hell. So when I am to burn, what does one more sin matter?’

He angled the. 45.

‘ NO… ’

CHAPTER 33

Victor had the Smith amp; Wesson reloaded and tucked into his waistband. Two spare mags rested in one jacket pocket and the three dead men’s cell phones in the other. Pulling open the room’s door, he saw a young guy in the corridor beyond. He was in his early twenties, with long hair poking out from underneath a dirty cap, wearing overalls, a tool belt hanging from his hips, bobbing his head and mouthing lyrics as headphones blared out metal Victor hadn’t heard with the door closed. He was four feet away and already facing Victor, eyes widening and mouth falling opening at the sight of three dead and bloodied bodies in the room beyond the open door.

In less than a second the Smith amp; Wesson was out of Victor’s waistband and drawing a bead between the young guy’s eyes.

‘Do you want me to kill you?’ Victor asked.

The kid managed to shake his head.

‘Then throw me your wallet.’

His gaze never leaving Victor, he did as instructed. Victor opened it up and took out a driver’s licence. He held it up for the young guy to see, before slipping it into a pocket.

‘I’ll forget you. You forget me. Deal?’

He nodded, and Victor threw back the wallet. The kid didn’t even try to catch it. It bounced off his chest and fell at his feet.

Victor said, ‘You want to wait there for fifteen minutes before getting help, don’t you?’

Another petrified nod.

Victor stepped around him and used the map in his mind to make his way back along the maze of empty corridors. After a minute, he heard the sounds of the train station. Soon afterwards, he saw the metal door. The tall man had said they had five minutes before Petrenko arrived. That was three minutes ago.

The platform was crowded with commuters boarding the next train out. There had to be at least thirty men walking briskly along the platform in Victor’s general direction. None looked like the man Victor had seen ascend and then descend in the elevators at the Hotel Europe yesterday. He couldn’t see four hired killers either or the bald guy in the uniform.

He closed the metal door and moved further along the platform, using the commuters and a pillar to conceal him while he watched the door. He hoped Petrenko didn’t bring all of the shooters with him otherwise it was going to get very messy in that room.

A couple of minutes passed and Victor didn’t see anyone go near the door. It was possible that there was another way to get to the room where he’d been taken, but he didn’t believe this team had carte blanche access to the whole train station. More likely the bald train company employee had unlocked this one door for their use and told them the best place to do their business. Victor planned to thank him for that just as soon as the chance presented itself.

The people started to thin out on the platform as the train’s departure time grew closer, enabling Victor to see clearly along to where the platform joined the concourse. Still no sign of Petrenko, a group of assassins, and their guide.

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