He shrugged. 'There was a chance he was alive. I kept hearing stories that he might be. It wasn't likely, but I had to try to find him.'

'What made you give up?'

'I didn't. I still have contacts in Russia who will tell me if they hear anything.' He lifted his cup to his lips. 'But after the government toppled, and Pavski was put on the undesirable list, the odds were that Sergai would have surfaced if he was still alive.'

'You must have cared for him if you risked your life by staying in Russia.'

'He would have done the same for me. Family feeling is very strong among us Russians.' He met her gaze. 'And among you Americans. It's a trait we share. It's clear you loved your brother very much.'

'Enough to resent the hell out of you and Bradworth playing games with our lives.'

'And so you should. That was a terrible night.' He looked down into his cup. 'I tried to get to him and save him. I was too late. I had to make a choice.'

She stiffened. 'Choice?'

'More coffee?' He gestured to the waitress to refill the cups. 'We should get back to the sub. I want to spend more time in the turbine room.'

'Choice?' She stared at him as memories of that night rushed back to her.

Icy water. Drowning. Drowning.

Stop fighting me. I'm trying to help you.

She whispered. 'You were the one who pulled me out of the water that night.'

He shrugged. 'You were unconscious. You would have drowned.'

'So you let Conner die instead.'

'I wasn't sure your brother would be killed. I knew you'd die. There are always choices to make in situations like that.'

'You should have gone to Conner.'

'Probably. I might have saved him and kept the plates from Pavski. Since I'm such a self-serving bastard, that choice amazed me later.' He looked her in the eye. 'But I didn't do it, and there's no going back.'

She could feel the tears sting her eyes. 'No, there's no going back.'

'But we can move forward. Revenge is sweet. Take it from someone who knows.'

Her lips twisted. 'And you know that emotion very well, don't you? How many people have you killed, Kirov?'

'Not as many as Pavski.'

'That's no answer.'

'That's all you'll get from me.' He threw some money on the table. 'Let's get back to the sub. I want our search over before Pavski figures out how to bypass Bradworth's men to get to me.'

'You believe he's watching us?'

'Of course. Bradworth and Pavski both. You're the magnet that draws all of us. Pavski evidently found the plates to be incomplete and thinks that wonderful memory of yours may give him something else to work with. Bradworth and I need you to draw him out in the open.'

'Then why do you think Pavski wants to get to you as well as me?'

'Because I stand in the way.' He stood up. 'I've stood in his way for a long time, but I've never let him get this close before. When I decided to come to you, I put myself in the spotlight instead of in the shadows. It makes me more vulnerable.'

She rose to her feet. 'Then why did you do it?'

'Because you're more valuable to me right now than anonymity.' He smiled. 'Choices, again.'

'Well, this particular choice may have been a bust. We're not finding anything on the Silent Thunder.'

'We'll give it the rest of the night. Then we move on.' He headed for the door of the cafe. 'If one door closes, then you open another.' He glanced at her. 'If you choose to go along with me. It's up to you.'

'You're damn right it is.' She paused. 'And what door do you plan on opening?'

'I have a few contacts who might help us locate Pavski. But we'll have to lose Bradworth. If you consider him a safety net, that's too bad. My friends aren't fond of the CIA.'

She thought about it. 'My experiences with Bradworth haven't been very reassuring. But if we're being watched by him as well as Pavski, how do you intend to do that? It's a very small town.'

He smiled as he opened the door for her. 'Then we'll just have to go to a bigger town, won't we? Will you have breakfast with me tomorrow morning?'

'What?'

'I've done a little research about the town since the Silent Thunder arrived here. I think you'll find a little restaurant called Mrs. Finley's Kitchen very interesting.'

You lost her?' Bradworth said between his teeth into the phone. 'How in the hell did you lose her?'

Agent Teague stammered. 'It was the restaurant. That Mrs. Finley's kitchen. I didn't know-I didn't read the back of the menu until later.'

'What the hell are you talking about?'

'I stationed Willis at the back entrance and I watched the front. I thought that would be enough, but it-'

'How did they get away, dammit?'

'The restaurant has a secret underground exit that lets out in a shed about half a block away. It's been there since the Revolutionary War days.'

Bradworth couldn't believe what he was hearing. 'A secret exit.'

'Not so secret, actually. There's a whole write-up about it on the back of the menu. I talked to the manager, and she says Ms. Bryson and Kirov went in back and asked to walk through it.'

'How long has it been since they flew the coop?'

'Forty minutes. We're in the car now, scouting the area.'

Forty minutes. Kirov would have a plan and an escape route, and forty minutes was more than enough time for him to implement it.

'Shit!'

NEW YORK CITY

4:48 P.M.

What makes you think this friend of yours can help us?' Hannah asked Kirov as they walked down East 51st Street, past Lexington Avenue, and into a charming neighborhood of brownstones and small boutiques.

'Eugenia Voltar was one of the youngest and sharpest agents in the KGB's history.' Kirov gaze was on the address on one of the buildings they were passing. 'If anyone can help us, she can.'

'KGB?'

He nodded. 'However, she was never popular with the higher-ups there because she possessed the dangerous trait of speaking her mind. She was pushed out in the general downsizing, when the KGB became the FSB, and she eventually ended up here.'

'She's a spy?'

'Not anymore. In the last few years, she's become quite wealthy by helping Western corporations move into Russia. She knows just which palms to grease to make anything happen.' He cast a sideways glance at Hannah. 'There was an arms trader I'd spent years searching for, and I finally found him with Eugenia's help.'

'And what did you do when you found him?'

He didn't answer.

She hadn't really expected a reply. Kirov disclosed only what he chose to reveal about his life. In the past days she had found that sometimes he was surprisingly open, and at others he was completely uncommunicative. Just enough information to pique her curiosity and interest. Oh, yes, she couldn't deny the interest. He was a totally fascinating man, and every minute with him was a challenge. Yet she also was beginning to feel a strange sense

Вы читаете Silent Thunder
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату