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Officer Brovchenko became wide eyed as he realised the full cost of his error. “No I can’t!”

Snow slapped him in the face with his open palm, replaced the face cloth and dunked his face again. This time he held him for as long as he dared before tipping him back up. It took a whole thirty seconds for Brovchenko to recover enough to be able to speak. “Ruslan Imyets.” The name meant nothing to Snow and Brovchenko noticed this fact with shock. “Ruslan Imyets is a Verhovna Rada Deputy with the Party of Regions for Donbas.”

Snow nodded satisfied that he’d got all he needed. “Officer Brovchenko, were you responsible for the abduction of Brian Webb?”

Brovchenko saw a way out. “No. There were others involved.”

Snow nodded, the man had taken the bait. “Your group has made a serious error in kidnapping Mr Webb and attempting blackmail his wife. Now I understand that you perhaps are naïve enough to have been caught up in this, coerced into becoming part of this criminal group.”

“Yes that’s what happened.”

“So in that case I can offer you a deal.”

For the second time that evening Snow was asked “Who are you?”

“I am the person who if he wished could drown you here like a rat but I’m giving you the chance of a clean break.”

Obolon Rayon, Kyiv

An odd buzzing awoke the Ukrainian from a much needed sleep. He picked up his mobile and looked at the screen. The number was withheld. The average person may have ignored the call or let it go to voicemail but Vitaly Blazhevich was not an average person and his number was anything but public. The Ukrainian Intelligence Service (SBU) anti-corruption & organised crime operative pressed the accept button. “Allo?” His voice was thick from sleep and his mind still dulled but this instantly changed when he heard the English voice at the other end. “Aidan, where are you?”

“Left bank.”

“Kyiv’s left bank?”

“I’m not in Paris if that’s what you mean.”

Blazhevich sat up, looked at his clock and shook his head. It was just after Midnight, he’d been in bed for forty minutes. His wife groaned next to him and he wisely decided to leave the room to continue the call. The last time Blazhevich and Snow had ‘worked’ together they had prevented a terrorist attack. “Ok so I guess it’s important?”

“Important and personal.”

“Let me have it.” Blazhevich padded to the kitchen, poured a glass of water and then entered his own balcony. A new high-rise development in Kyiv’s Obolon district it too had a river view. He sat on a plastic chair as Snow re-counted the day’s events.

“Well?” Snow asked.

“Aidan you have an uncanny knack of walking into things. There is an on-going investigation into Deputy Imyets. If we can implicate him in this then I am sure even Dudka would be happy.”

“How is the old man?” Snow had a soft spot for the elderly SBU Director.

“Grumpy.”

Both men chuckled.

“So when can I expect you?”

“I’ll be there in half an hour.” Blazhevich replied.

Levo Berezina, Kyiv

Officers Brovchenko and Klyuyevs were both gagged. Brovchenko stank of his own urine whilst Klyuyevs stank of alcohol and fear. Snow had taken great pleasure in informing the senior officer that their operation was blown and that they were now the one’s in trouble. Neither of the Ukrainians knew quite what to expect but when Vitaly Blazhevich arrived it certainly was not the SBU. Both had watched in shock as the newcomer had identified himself to Webb’s wife as a member of the SBU’s Main Directorate for Combating Corruption and Organized Crime and then joked with the Englishman. They then felt their hearts sink even more when the Englishman produced a recording of their attempts at extortion. Although inadmissible, as all audio recordings were in Ukrainian courts, it could be leaked to the press and posted on the internet. In short unless they co-operated fully they either faced lengthy jail sentences or ran the risk of being ‘taken care of’ by their own group.

“I’ve checked the address you gave me. I thought it sounded familiar and as you would say it has ‘come up trumps’.”

“How?”

“It is the address of Ruslan Imyets’ new Kyiv ‘dacha’. If that is indeed where Mr Webb is being held then I can-not see how Deputy Imyets can deny his involvement.”

Katya had been sitting in silence and starring at the two Militia officers. She was one to hold a grudge and whilst Snow had been wondering if his interrogation technique had been too much she had told him it had been too little. Brovchenko had of course been the weaker of the two officers but that pig Klyuyevs had deserved to be drowned. She looked across at Blazhevich, a man who she had not met before but who seemed to be very friendly with Snow and asked. “When do we go and get Brian?”

“I shall have to ask my Director but there are two possible scenarios that come to mind. The first is that we get a warrant to search the address – but this will tip off Imyets the second is that we wait until Vickers has gone through his official channels. This is of course on the provision that Mr Webb is not released.”

“What about the third option?”

Blazhevich fixed Snow with a hard stare. “I know that it hasn’t stopped you before, but you are not here in an official capacity remember? We have an on-going investigation which we must not jeopardise.”

“So,” Katya asked again, “when do we go and get Brian.”

* * *

Snow sipped his coffee as Katya moved around the kitchen making breakfast. In the night an SBU team had arrived to take the Laurel and Hardy into custody. Snow and Katya had been left alone. They had shared the same bed but she had not made any more advances towards him and he was glad that his resolve had not been tested further. She was a beautiful woman, doubtless a great mother and propositions aside a good wife. Inside he felt a pang of jealousy for the normal life that he couldn’t have.

“Are you starring at my bum?”

Snow was. “Yes but I was thinking about something else.”

“Charming. Here’s your omelette.”

“Thanks.” He waited for her to sit and then ate in silence before speaking again. “Look, I know what Vitaly said about his department’s investigation but the longer Brian is held the higher the risk is that he may get hurt.”

“I agree.”

“So I’m going to check out the house myself.”

“Aidan you are not Rambo and besides didn’t Vitaly say they had an observation post set up nearby?”

“Katya, I can’t just sit here and do nothing. Vitaly is good at his job, his boss Director Dudka is a legend but the SBU is a state apparatus and as such by definition ponderous and prone to leaks.”

There was a silence as Snow ate. Katya broke it. “Aidan you really are a good friend. I feel bad that Brian and I weren’t here for you when your friend Arnaud was killed.”

Snow shrugged. “Thanks, but you were both in Odessa at the time, trying to make a go of it.”

“And look where it got us four years later.”

“I still think it’s a nice flat.”

“I still think you are at times too English.”

The bell at the front door chirped.

“That’ll be Vitaly.” Snow answered the door and Blazhevich entered.

“So I’ve spoken to Dudka.”

“How is he?”

“Even though you are the reason I had to get him out of bed, he is happy you are not yet dead Aidan. He asks that you call Vickers and tell him to hold off with his ‘complaint’. He says that we must preserve the investigation until we have 100% positive proof that Brian Webb is at the house. And then he says we can by all means ‘storm the place’.”