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The Concubine's Secret Part 50

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'Another few miles,' Igor offered from the front seat. There were beads of sweat on the back of his neck. He was nervous.

Alexei gave Lydia a nod. 'This route will take longer. But it's safer.'

She said nothing. She'd been silent since they set off, hunched into her corner, unresponsive and mute. It annoyed Alexei. He'd had to stand his ground with Maksim to win her this place in the car and a little politeness wouldn't have gone amiss. Sometimes, like today, he couldn't work her out. Shouldn't she be pleased, maybe even impressed - and certainly grateful at the prospect of where he was taking her this afternoon? But no. Silent and sullen. Tawny eyes refusing to meet his. All she did was cling to the side window with a fixed stare, as though memorising the route. Maybe she was. That thought worried him.

Or was it fear? It surprised him that he hadn't thought of that before. Was his sister frightened? He felt an odd rush of tenderness towards her despite her withdrawn manner, because he knew fear was something Lydia would never admit to. She'd rather bite her tongue off first.

'Lydia,' he said in an attempt to draw her out of her isolation, 'the truck took the prisoners to the hangars early this morning. It hasn't returned yet, so we believe Jens is actually there right now.'

She dragged her face from the window and frowned at Maksim. 'Did your vory vory men follow it?' men follow it?'

'Da, of course.'

'What if they were spotted?'

'Hah! They were not spotted.'

'But if they were, there will be soldiers and police waiting for us.'

He laughed, a rich amused sound that warmed the chill interior of the car. 'My men are vory vory. Thieves. Harder to trace than shadows in snow. You understand?'

She nodded. But Alexei was not sure she did. She didn't realise exactly how these men functioned or that they were outside the normal margins of society. To her they were just criminals. It was clear she didn't trust them and he was surprised she hadn't insisted on dragging that oaf Popkov along too. When it came to watching her back, that filthy Cossack was the one she relied on, G.o.d only knows why.

'No action today,' he reminded her. He was wary of what she might do. 'We're going out there to observe. Nothing more.'

'I know.'

'Just don't expect too much.'

'I expect nothing.'

'That's a good place to start,' Maksim chuckled.

She turned her attention back to the window. They had left the city streets behind, pa.s.sing the foul-smelling Red Hercules rubber factory some time back, and were driving north of Moscow. Huddles of wooden izbas izbas, peasant cottages with a cow tethered at the front and dense rows of vegetables at the rear, popped up at intervals and broke the monotony of the flat and featureless landscape. The road ran straight as a prison bar across it. At one point a group of women were was.h.i.+ng their bed sheets in the river and looked up with a moment's interest. Otherwise there was nothing, not even other traffic, just the spiny edge of the pine forest blocking out the horizon on both sides.

The car stopped.

'Out,' Igor ordered.

They all climbed out into the empty windswept landscape except the driver, and the car swerved off the deserted road on to a patch of rough ground, where he promptly began to remove a wheel.

'Now what?' Maksim demanded.

'Over there.' Alexei indicated a darker shadow tucked among the trees. It was a small, covered army truck.

This was a point where the pines looped close to the road and a single-track dirt trail cut through the tall willowy trunks. The track was obviously well used and heavy wheels had gouged deep ruts into its frozen surface.

Maksim's eyes narrowed into slits. 'This is as far as I go.'

Alexei nodded and draped a rug over the older man's shoulders, then climbed into the Soviet army vehicle he had stolen the previous night. He tried the engine and it started first time. Satisfied, he gunned it to full throttle.

'You can wait here if you prefer,' he called out to Lydia.

'No.'

'Then get in.'

She scrambled up beside him on the front bench and Igor jumped up after her. Alexei kicked the truck into gear.

49.

'Relax, Lydia, enjoy the ride.' He gripped the steering wheel as it almost jolted out of his hands and the truck bounced its way across a narrow ditch, making Igor grunt.

'Don't they have guards on patrol?' Lydia demanded. 'Snipers in the trees?'

'Of course. That's why we're in an army truck. No one will take any notice of it.'

'And what happens when we get there?'

'We're not driving up to the front door and knocking on it politely, if that's what you mean. Don't worry.'

'I am worried.'

Alexei glanced at his sister's face. This wasn't the Lydia he'd travelled halfway across Russia with. That Lydia would have been br.i.m.m.i.n.g with excitement.

'What's the matter with you?' he asked quietly.

'Chyort! What do you think is the matter with me?' She blinked hard and stared ahead through the windscreen. 'It's this insane driving.' What do you think is the matter with me?' She blinked hard and stared ahead through the windscreen. 'It's this insane driving.'

'You said you wanted to see the layout of where Jens Friis is working?'

'Yes.'

'Then hold on tight.'

At that moment he swung the heavy wheel, both arms working hard, and abandoned the gravelled track.

'This way,' Igor indicated off to the right.

The side window was caught by a low branch and Lydia flinched at the crack it made. She was jumpy as h.e.l.l. For half a mile Alexei concentrated on nothing but wrestling the d.a.m.n truck through the trees, avoiding gulleys and mounds of packed snow that formed traps which wouldn't melt till spring.

'What's the matter, Lydia?' he asked again when he struck a stretch where the terrain grew smoother.

Her hands were huddled like little corpses in her lap, unmoving and stiff. 'Let's focus on our father,' she murmured in a low voice. 'And this crazy ride.'

'If that's what you want.'

'It is.'

'Are you all right? Has something happened?'

'I'm fine.'

One of her gloved hands crept off her lap and settled in the valley between his thigh and hers. It curled up there as if needing warmth. He stamped on the brake pedal to avoid a jagged stump and jinked the truck so its wheels slid into a sideways skid. One wing brushed along the length of a bough that was draped in icicles and gave off a noise like the rattle of buckshot.

'Alexei, do you have any idea where the h.e.l.l we're going?'

For a split second their eyes met and he knew she wasn't talking about the forest.

'How about to the top of the tree?'

She smiled.

He looked away quickly and just missed crunching into a blackened pine trunk.

'Is this it?'

'Yes. This is as far as we go, the rest is on foot.' Alexei was pus.h.i.+ng to move on fast.

They clambered out of the truck, the air bone-white with a mist that twisted in and out of the trees like beckoning fingers. Igor threw a canvas pack on his back.

'It's just up ahead,' he said.

They moved off in single file, keeping close to the dark trunks. In this mist it would be easy to lose touch. The remnants of the snow were heaped into hunched shapes by the wind, and underfoot the cracking of brittle pine needles betrayed their movements. Alexei slipped the gun out of his pocket.

'Sentries?' Lydia whispered.

He nodded. 'They patrol the forest in pairs. But the guards are cold and bored and after months of tedium they expect to find nothing, so they pay scant attention to what is in the forest. They spend more time patrolling the complex itself.'

'Alexei, why did Maksim come? It's a bitterly cold day and he looks ill. Even back there in the car it could be dangerous for him if he's found and questioned. It wasn't necessary.'

'Yes, it was. To remind his vory vory who is their who is their pakhan pakhan.'

'To remind the thieves? Or to remind you?'

'Does it matter?'

'Yes.'

It wasn't a question he chose to answer. Instead he silenced her by placing a finger to his lips, so that they crept forward more cautiously, Lydia right on his heel. Igor watched the rear. The forest ended abruptly, switching within the s.p.a.ce of ten paces from its own private twilight to an open expanse of slippery white sky. An area the size of a village had been flattened within the heart of the forest; an efficient clearing of timber had carved out a rectangle which was hidden from view by a brick wall erected around its perimeter. Ten metres high and topped with razor wire, while around its base more strands coiled like a sleeping, spiny serpent.

'Not very welcoming,' Lydia whispered in Alexei's ear.

He grimaced. 'It's not meant to be.'

'So how do we get in?'

'We don't.'

'I thought we were here to observe the complex they've built. That's what you said.'

'That's right.'

'But the wall hides it all from view. I can't see anything.'

He leaned back against one of the pine trunks, merging his silhouette with its rough bark. 'You will,' he promised.

'Time to go, Lydia.'

Alexei looked up. His sister was still peering intently through Zeiss binoculars high up in one of the pine trees, a good fifteen metres off the ground. She looked small up there in the shadows of the canopy, and he could tell by the concentration on her face how much she wanted to stay.

'Lydia,' he said quietly, aware of how sound carried in the heavy damp air.

She removed the binoculars with reluctance. 'Bring me down.'

Igor played out the rope and dropped her down from her perch so fast that Alexei was surprised her legs didn't break as she hit the ground. She handed the binoculars back to Igor.

'Spasibo,' was all she said.

She'd been surprised by Igor. By the way he'd looped a strap of leather between his ankles and around one of the narrow trees that was set back from the forest's edge. Using the foot strap and another one between his wrists, he s.h.i.+nned up the trunk as fast as a polecat, his plump stocky legs pumping away with unexpected strength. Lydia had watched, mouth open, astonished. Alexei had smiled. He'd seen it before in the streets of Moscow at night. That's how Igor scaled the drainpipes of apartment houses. Once up in the canopy he'd hooked a rope from his backpack over a branch and rigged up a sling on a simple pulley. So now Lydia had seen over the wall, exactly as Alexei had promised.

'It's a hangar,' she said, keeping her voice low.

'A ma.s.sive one.'

'What's in it?' Her eyes were huge, s.h.i.+ning with the excitement he'd expected to find earlier. This was more like Lydia. 'And what do you think all the sheds are for?'

'The sheds are for storage of equipment. We've watched them haul machinery on trolleys over to the hangar.'

'There are some big containers outside it. What are they?'

'They look like petrol tanks to me. And the brick shed over to the right is the guard house.'

She nodded, her hat tumbling off. She jammed it back on. 'I spotted that, the soldiers coming and going in and out of it. Dogs as well.'

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