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Ghost - Into The Breach Part 21

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"He was really weird about it," Adams said, frowning. "Resigned, maybe. He just said that his fate would be decided. What's this I hear about him being sent off?"

"Isn't happening," Mike said. "They're talking about sending him off to the Legion and me hooking up with Gretchen. I'm putting my Kildar boot on that. He marries Gretchen."

"Ain't like you're short on p.u.s.s.y," Adams admitted.

"Eloquence, thy name is a.s.s-boy," Mike said. "But, to reiterate, p.u.s.s.y is not the issue. However, changing the subject, we may have helo pilots."

"That would be great," Adams said, nodding. "We're seriously f.u.c.ked without pilots. I mean the bad kind of f.u.c.ked. Not the f.u.c.king Gretchen kind of f.u.c.ked."



"Pierson said that quote some candidates end quote are on the way," Mike said, shaking his head at Adams' aside. He knew the approach, it was the specialty of the Teams. Call it "tough love." As in "go cry in somebody else's beer." On the other hand, Adams didn't actually have to deal with the management of the Keldara's morale. "So, so far the rest of us are on track. Sucks to be you, though," he added with a grin.

"You want this girl alive or not?" Adams grumped.

"Be nice," Mike said, taking another sip. "That's why I detailed you to it. But the most important thing is getting the package. And that means getting eyeb.a.l.l.s on the target and into commo with Katya."

"She in place, yet?" Adams asked.

"Should be."

Chapter Sixteen.

The first thing Dmitri told her was: "You're going to need to change clothes."

Katya didn't see what was wrong with her clothes. She'd carefully chosen them based on her cover as a new hooker in the trade: hip-hugger jeans, a tight, low-cut blouse, black patent leather high-heels and a fake fox coat. All of the clothes were well worn, the coat actually a bit ratty. Most of what she had packed in her small bag was the same.

"The Chechens, well..." Dmitri had sighed and shrugged. "They move the wh.o.r.es, they use the wh.o.r.es.

But if you look like a wh.o.r.e they're going to make your life h.e.l.l."

Katya didn't know what Dmitri's connection to Russian intel was. The one thing she'd insured was that he did not know she was "connected." Another agent had handed her off to him without any suggestion she was working for Russian intel. What she had come to realize was that he was an expert in the trade.

He'd treated her with polite disinterest, not even trying to cadge a "freebie." And he knew all the guards at the crossing points. So by the time they reached Gamasoara she'd changed.

Full coverage sweater, slightly tight but not even vaguely s.e.xual, a skirt she'd picked up on the road that hung to well below her knees, flats, the hardest to find. Her makeup was dialed way back. She looked...drab.

Looking at the women of the town, many of them in Islamic dhimmie scarves that covered their hair and ears with skirts that went all the way to the ground and heavy coats that gave little if any indication of their figure, she had to admit she looked more the part.

"You're not going to get as much for me looking like this," Katya pointed out.

"The buyers know what they're looking at," Dmitri replied as they pulled into the town. "This isn't a market, it's a trading point. You know you're headed for Turkey on this route, right?"

"Yes," Katya said then shrugged. "Turkey or Europe, what's the difference. A wh.o.r.e is a wh.o.r.e."

"With your looks you'd do better in Europe or the East," Dmitri said then shrugged in return. "But if you want to go to Turkey, that's nothing to me. I already have you contracted to Georgi Tors.h.i.+n so I'll just drop you and be gone."

Dmitri pulled the antiquated Lada to a stop in front of a coffee shop and gestured at the door. "Last stop. For me, anyway."

Katya was glad for the rest. The roads to Gamasoara had been atrocious and the Lada had apparently lost all of its springs decades ago. She felt as if her teeth had been rattled loose by the long journey. But they were finally at the area of operations. Now to see if she could find the target.

She got out, grabbing her bag, and, head down and posture slumped, followed Dmitri into the cafe. She still was cataloguing her surroundings. The cafe had a small stream behind it and a patio to one side. In fact, it was practically identical to the one in Allerso. However, the design was so common in this region it wasn't particularly surprising.

The town was a bit larger than Allerso, maybe a thousand people. She wasn't surewhat the local industry was but it didn't appear to be booming. Most of the people in the town seemed to be selling things to each other, most of it old and worn. There were two food vendors on the street and they didn't seem to be doing much business.

The interior of the cafe was hot and stuffy, the windows and doors closed against the late fall chill. All of the patrons were male and most of them watched her as Dmitri led the way to the back of the room.

They had the look that said "Islamic" to her, automatically. She had never really understood how you could spot an Islamic, or an American or a European, immediately. Jay had explained some of it to her.

Islamics followed certain laws that affected their dress and demeanor to a degree most of them didn't realize. For example, when you had to regularly take your shoes off for prayer it just made more sense to step down on the backs so you could slip them on and off like slippers. But when you did that you had to shuffle as you walked or they'd slip off. Thus Islamics tended to shuffle their feet and take small steps.

There were a thousand such minor cultural clues about personal behavior and body language that subconsciously, to most people, screamed what culture a person derived from. The job of a spy, or an actor, was to learn them and copy them slavishly.

"I will see where Georgi has gone to," Dmitri said as soon as she was seated. "He is usually in here this time of day. Talk to no one."

Dmitri went to the counter that served the cafe and it quickly became obvious that something was wrong. Not quite an argument but Dmitri was clearly unhappy when he came back to the table.

"Well, there is a problem," he said with a sigh as he sat down with two cups of strong coffee. "Georgi is dead."

"How?" Katya asked, wide-eyed. She was playing the biggest innocent a new wh.o.r.e might be and wide-eyed was the right reaction to sudden news of death.

"Heart attack," Dmitri spat. "There is a man called Yaroslav has taken over his business. He will come."

"Do you know him?" Katya asked, nervously. Again, the nervousness was right for the character. Of course, there was some true nervousness to it. Things were going wrong, which was always bad for a mission. The intermediary, Dmitri, and the primary, Georgi, had been carefully chosen. Georgi normally held his "girls" for a few weeks, setting up someone to move them to further down the line. He also was reputed to be easy with his girls' time as long as they brought in a few rubles while they were waiting.

Katyaneeded that time, and the freedom, if she was to have any chance of finding the target.

"No," Dmitri replied. "He's a sweetmeat vendor of all things. When Georgi died he bought all of his stock. He's trying to unload it now, but is willing to buy some more."

Katya didn't bother to ask where a sweetmeat vendor got the money to buy a string of wh.o.r.es.

Obviously he was more than a sweetmeat vendor.

Yaroslav, when he finally made it to the cafe, turned out to be a pig. The man was grossly obese. If she had to service him it was going to have to be from on top; the man would crush her otherwise. Short and at least two hundred kilos, maybe more. He wheezed his way across the cafe and collapsed in the chair, which creaked ominously, then leaned back, interlacing his fingers across the top of his huge belly.

"She is pretty," Yaroslav wheezed. "But I already have too many girls. I cannot afford to pay more than a thousand euros..."

Katya had gotten used to it a long time ago and now that it wasn't, at some level, real it was easier. But it was never fun to be bartered over. f.u.c.king men treated women like a piece of meat to be d.i.c.kered over.

Finally a price of five thousand euros was settled on and Yaroslav hoisted himself to his feet.

"I will return with the money," he wheezed, stopping to breathe deeply at the effort to get to his feet. "I of course don't carry that much on me. I will return. Soon."

"Well, if you decide to run you won't have much trouble," Dmitri said, bursting into laughter as soon as the door to the cafe shut.

It was much the same thing Katya had been thinking but she just shook her head.

"I won't run," she said with a shrug. "What do I have to run to?"

Besides, she had a mission to complete. There were men to screw over and, with luck, a few to kill.

Why should she run?

"This is...where you...will be sleeping," Yaroslav wheezed, gesturing at the room.

It wasn't...yes it was. This was definitely the worst place she'd ever been bedded down in her long career as a wh.o.r.e. The stone building was one large room, about the size and general shape of the Keldara homes, but open and filled with beds lining the walls. The beds were springs, no mattresses, and the room was unheated. Cracks in the walls let in drafts that were virtually gales in themselves. The floor was packed dirt, so stained with unnamed fluids and garbage that it brought a new meaning to "dirt."

Arguing or complaining had never gotten her anywhere, though.

"Is there a blanket?" she asked, meekly.

"I will try to find you one," Yaroslav said. "I am doing this practically out of the goodness of my heart.

When my good friend...Georgi died his ladies were left with no protector." He paused to breathe deeply and wiped at his eyes as if there were tears. There weren't. The pause indicated that he'd had to dredge the name of his "good friend" from unsure memory. If he wasn't such a slob, Katya would have suspected him of offing a compet.i.tor just to buy up his stock at a discount. "It was from the goodness of my heart that I took you girls in. I will have no complaints as to the quality of the lodgings."

"I'm not complaining," Katya said, hastily. The man might be a pudge-monster, as the Kildar would put it, but he could still probably smack the h.e.l.l out of her. And in her current cover, all she could do was try to move so it didn't hurttoo much. She'd have to take the punch with barely a flinch.

"All the other girls left yesterday," Yaroslav said, puffing. "I had hoped to return to my simple life of a sweetmeat vendor. Then you were dropped on me. So you must make the best of it until I can find someone to take you on to Azerbaijan." Pause. Wheeze. "There may be some blankets the girls left behind." Pause. Wheeze. "Check the cupboard. I must return to my money-making ventures. I do not have time for this."

"Yes, sir," Katya replied. "Should I work?"

"Ofcourse you should work!" Yaroslav thundered. "There is little enough money to be made in this town, I cannot afford idle hands, or p.u.s.s.ies in your case. Get out there and make my money!"

"Yes, sir," Katya said, smiling nervously. She so wanted to givethis p.r.i.c.k a heart attack.

"I may have another job for you, besides on your back," Yaroslav admitted, more gently. "Not that it pays anything but nothing in this town does. The Chechens have a woman they are keeping. They, of course, cannot defile themselves with dealing with her. They had hired one of the girls to tend to her needs. Perhaps you can do that."

Katya kept her face puzzled but let nothing else showed. But what went through her mind was:It can't be that easy . There was only one girl that could possibly match that description. Surely she wasn't being handed the f.u.c.king target on a platter.

It wasthat easy. f.u.c.k.

It was Marina Arensky. From what Katya could see past the blindfold anyway. And the small scar on the chin was a dead give away.

The girl was tied to a chair, a padded one Katya noticed, blindfolded but not gagged. Nonetheless she was silent as if shehad been gagged.

The men holding her weren't Chechens, either. They were Russians and if she hadn't been on this mission for a specific reason she would have wondered what Russians were doing in a Chechen held town. There were quite a few of them, too. The building was much larger than the barn for the girls with several rooms off a corridor. The doors of most of the rooms had been open as she and Yaroslav pa.s.sed and there were men, heavily armed, in all of them.

Marina was held in a room at the very back of the building. It backed on a rock wall; there was no entrance at the rear and no windows. Conceivably the a.s.sault team could come through the wall if they used enough explosives. That wasn't for her to figure out, though. All she had to do was look around as they walked through and make sure the video was going to the, unfortunately small, memory chip installed in her skull.

"This is the new girl," Yaroslav wheezed. "All my other girls I had to sell. I will sell this one as soon as I can. Then we are done."

"We don't need her for long," the man said. He was a cold one, Katya could tell. About 175 centimeters, cold gray eyes, slim face. She ran through the dossiers she'd been shown and tried not to blanch. Kurt Schwenke, the former Stasi agent and terrorist. She was going to have to bevery careful around this man. He was a trained agent which meant that anything she did out of character was going to give her away. She instantly decided she was going to switch roles as soon as Yaroslav was gone. Just enough that Schwenke would catch it. It was a fine line to run. She had to show her hard side without in any way making him think she was an agent.

"I go now," Yaroslav said. "She will work for you. She is very biddable."

After Yaroslav had waddled out of the room Schwenke walked around her, looking her up and down.

"Biddable?" the German finally scoffed. "Is he blind?"

"Most men are," Katya said, coldly.

"I am not, b.i.t.c.h," Schwenke stated, stopping in front of her and then slapping her, hard.

With the change in demeanor Katya could have, would have, avoided the slap as much as possible. She couldn't have used a trained block, that would give too much away. But she could have lifted her arms, turned away, flinched, something.

If she'd had time. The man was faster than a snake. All she could do was spin away from the powerful slap and try to remain conscious.

She found herself on the floor, propping herself up with her hands and trying to breathe just before a boot crashed into her side.

"I am not," Schwenke said, just as coldly. "So let us not play games, yes? What are you?"

"A wh.o.r.e," Katya said, curled on her side. "I was born in an orphanage in Novy Birsk. I was raped by a man like you when I was eight. If I could press a b.u.t.ton and kill every man on earth I would. But I know better than to cross you. Good enough?"

"Perhaps," Schwenke said, kicking her. "And perhaps too pat. Why are you here?"

"Because I killed my last pimp," Katya spat. "Veniamin was a b.a.s.t.a.r.d. But he has friends. He knew too many of the men in the Balkans trade and too many in Russia. If I stayed, I'd be as dead as the pig.

Turkey, though, there I could disappear. So kill me or beat me or f.u.c.k me, I don't care. But if you p.i.s.s me off too much, you'dbetter kill me."

Schwenke paused and then laughed. Shrilly.

"Better b.i.t.c.hes than you have tried to kill me," he said, still chortling. "But I like your spirit. Feel free to try. We can make a game of it, yes? You try to kill me, I try to kill you. Nothing obvious. Shooting you, beating you to death with a lead club, these would be too easy. Fun but too easy. Poison? Do you know poisons? I know thousands. Shall we play the poison game, b.i.t.c.h?"

"Teach me a few and I'll gladly give you a b.l.o.w.j.o.b that will curl your toes," Katya said. It was pure honesty and that shown through.

"Perhaps," Schwenke said. "Perhaps. But you would probably not enjoy bedding me. I am a master of pain."

"I have been hurt," Katya said. "Plenty of men have beaten me."

"Who said anything about beating?" Schwenke asked. "I prefer to simply give them a little c.o.c.ktail. That way they scream and scream in pain as a f.u.c.k them. Then the pain pa.s.ses and they are sograteful . Until I brew the next c.o.c.ktail. I make them watch as I prepare the syringe. They begin to scream before the needle even touches them. Would you like to scream?"

Katya was stunned. She'd run into some real b.a.s.t.a.r.ds, absolute s.a.d.i.s.ts, as pimps. But this guy was just f.u.c.kingnuts . More around the bend, if possible, than Katya herself.

"I've screamed until I was hoa.r.s.e, plenty of times," Katya said. "But if you'd settle for fake screaming and just teach me your recipe, Ipromise you won't know the difference."

"Oh, but Iwould ," Kurt pouted. "But for my recipe, would you take my little c.o.c.ktail? Voluntarily?"

"I don't know," Katya temporized. "How much am I getting paid? I'll f.u.c.k you for the recipe. For the pain...seven hundred euros. And Yaroslav doesn't find out. For that much pain I'm not going to cut in the pimp."

"What adelightful child you are," Schwenke said. "We'll talk about it, yes? In the meantime, you've been hired for other reasons."

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