one-off, depending on the type of information you require.” He finished checking Logan and was satisfied. Then he looked ahead of him straight out of the car’s windscreen. “That’s my side. But before I commit to anything, I want something from you.” Taras kept looking straight ahead, as if he was embarrassed by what he was saying. And he supposed that he was. Despite the insincerity of the offer he was making to the American, he still felt dirty doing it. But now he turned and faced Logan. “That’s the deal, no negotiation, no questions, nothing—until you give me what I want. And I have to see the results of what I’m asking before I commit to helping you or Cougar. Either way, we don’t meet again. We set up a drop if we’re to do business.”

He sat back, realising his shoulders and back had been tensed as soon as Logan stepped into the car. He felt his back was rigid and a heat was coming from inside him. He didn’t know if the American was going to laugh in his face, if Halloran’s interest in him had never been about anything other than some lonely social reason. Maybe he was just a foreigner in Kiev, a spy with a knack for making contacts who might help him. Halloran’s background, Taras knew, suggested otherwise, however. For a moment, Taras didn’t understand why someone of Burt Miller’s calibre ever employed Halloran. He seemed a busted flush. So, either the American wanted something from him for his own reasons, some private game he was playing—and that was highly likely in Taras’s opinion—or he had been assigned by Cougar to befriend Taras and make an approach.

Logan sat in silence. The silence lengthened and Taras tried to remain cool, but he felt this heat inside him intensifying. He wanted to open the car’s windows, but he knew it had nothing to do with the temperature. He thought of Masha and the risks he was taking. He thought of what he would do even if he managed to free her. They would never let her go voluntarily, he knew that. And he knew the most likely outcome was that—once they’d gotten everything out of her they thought she knew—they’d make a deal with the Russians and hand her over. And then it would all begin again for his cousin.

“I can do that,” Logan replied languidly, at last. “Even if I don’t know what the answer you’re looking for is.”

He looked at Taras and Taras turned away, uncomfortable in the company of Halloran. It was going against all his better instincts to be talking to the American at all.

“If you don’t know, then it’s no deal,” he said. “If you don’t know, find out or get out.”

“You’d better ask me, then, Taras,” Logan replied, and smiled at the Ukrainian.

“What was Resnikov picking up in the Crimea in January? Outside Sevastopol?”

Logan was taken aback, but he sat completely still, maintaining an expression of relaxed calm. How did Taras know about Anna? Even he knew only because Theo Lish had told him. Logan had become closer to Theo since he’d begun to give the CIA chief some oddments about Cougar’s operations. “Blueprints,” he said. “Blueprints of extensions to the port of Novorossiysk.”

“Did she get them out of the country?”

“As far as I know, yes. Burt Miller seemed pleased that they showed the Russians weren’t serious about expanding the port sufficiently to take their Black Sea fleet.” Logan’s mind was racing. He felt a rush of power giving away this information. He felt it redressed some kind of balance he’d lost in Burt Miller’s considerations.

“Why was he pleased?” Taras asked.

“Because Miller has a theory the Russians are never going to leave Sevastopol. That Sevastopol is some kind of beachhead for their further encroachment into Ukraine.” Logan shrugged. “That’s not the American view,” he said. “The CIA view.” Logan was at the centre of power, giving Taras not just Miller’s but the CIA’s opinion. His face flushed with excitement in the dark car.

“She came into Ukraine a second time,” Logan volunteered. “I’m not sure for what. And I think she’s in the country again,” he added.

“Where?” Taras said.

Logan looked at him. “Come on, Taras, that’s information the Russians would pay a lot of money for. You don’t think that even if I knew I’d just give it away.”

“The Crimea?” Taras pressed him.

“Probably. That’s where Miller sees the Russians making their move. If they intend to make a move at all,” he added dismissively.

“What identity is she travelling under?”

“I don’t know. And anyway, if you want to hand her over to the Russians, why would I tell you?” Logan answered. “Whatever it is you can give me, it won’t be worth as much as that.”

“It doesn’t sound like you care one way or the other what happens to her,” Taras replied, and this time he turned and looked at Logan and didn’t like at all what he saw.

Logan sat with his hands in his lap, the fingers gently crossing each other. Did he care what happened to her? he wondered. For a long time, he’d been ambivalent about her.

“She’s already killed two KGB operatives in the Crimea,” he said. “I’d be careful of her, if I were you, Taras.”

“I know what she’s done.”

Taras felt a fury rise up in him. The American worked with this woman and evidently couldn’t care less what happened to her. It reminded him of Masha’s boss in Moscow, casually using someone to pass on highly dangerous information she knew nothing about. He felt the prospects of Masha hanging on to life diminish in the face of such cynicism.

“Tell Burt Miller,” he said, “that I know who his source is in Moscow. At any rate, the source who provided the blueprints. Tell Miller that I’ll reveal this source to the Russians unless I have his help. And unless I get to see Resnikov. Here. In Ukraine. Tell him I’ll leave a message for Resnikov at the drugstore on Ochakovstev Street in Sevastopol. If I don’t hear from her in three days, I’ll reveal his man in Moscow.” He looked at Logan and handed him a scrawled note. Logan read it, then screwed it into a ball and put it in his pocket. Instructions. He’d dispose of them later.

“Now get out,” Taras said.

27

THE FIRST THING LOGAN NOTICED from the launch as it crossed the harbour was that a surface-to-air missile system had been fitted to the stern deck of the Cougar. Burt Miller’s vessel lay at anchor—and apparently at peace—in deep water on the fringes of the port of Piraeus.

But as Logan stepped off the launch and onto some steps dropped specially for him, he noted that the crew appeared to be in a state of readiness to depart. He guessed the Cougar would be leaving before nightfall, as soon as his meeting with Burt was completed. Rumour on land at the harbour master’s office— which Logan had taken his usual meticulous care to discover before he stepped onto the launch—suggested that Istanbul was the vessel’s next port of call and from there, he assumed, it would be heading up through the Bosphorus and into the Black Sea. If that was the case, then Burt was breaking his agreement with Theo Lish.

As his ambitions grew and his formless resentment served as fuel for that growth, to Logan everything was information now, and all knowledge might—at some point—be used to his own advantage.

It was an unseasonably hot and sultry afternoon at the back end of April, but the sea breeze made the boat an infinitely pleasanter place to be than on land in the port itself. He came up the steps and arrived onboard the Cougar and looked across the blue haze that joined the sea to the sky. Logan paused on the deck, admired the gleaming missiles, observed the crew going about their business, sniffed the breeze as if there might be some useful message in that, too, and then descended stairs towards the operations room.

It was less than twenty-four hours since he’d made the meeting with Taras and the time for making a decision was running out. There were now just forty-eight hours before the Ukrainian said that he would hand Cougar’s Moscow agent to the Russians. But if Logan had anticipated Burt being in a state of anxiety at having a possible spoiler thrown in the works to upset his plans—whatever they were—he was proved wrong.

Now, from across the huge, polished wood desk in the deck-wide operations room of the Cougar, Burt stood, hands in the pockets of immaculately ironed white trousers, a cigar blowing its occasional, arcane signals from an anchor-shaped ashtray next to him, and with the air of a man who

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