Part of the whole thing was going to depend on luck but I found enough steering to take the Skoda through the gap between the other vehicle and the sand bin — there was a lot of blinding light as we closed up and I think I heard a shout, he hadn't been expecting this and I suppose it worried him. We missed a total head-on thing but the sand bin was solid and the Skoda ricocheted to a certain extent and tore a door away from the other car and smashed quite I a lot of glass and I felt the sudden drag of deceleration and the Skoda [span half round and I saw the other car swinging much too wide and I much too fast, and one of the wheels came spinning past me as his front stub-axle sheared and he hit the wall of a building and bounced back and then went into a slow roll with the engine screaming and the bright red of a flame popping from inside the engine compartment as a fuel line was torn apart and a spark from the ignition found it.
The engine went on screaming until the fuel in the injectors gave out and then there was silence of a kind and when I hit my door open it raised an echo in the narrow confines of the street. He was still inside, the tracker, sitting there like a crash-test dummy with blood coming bright from a head wound, seeping across his face. Black smoke was rolling from underneath the car as spilled engine-oil took fire and I went for his seat-belt but it had snapped at the buckle so that was what the head wound was all about. I dragged him out of the car and across the snow and pushed him into the front of the Skoda on the passenger's side and got in and span the rear wheels to get the chains through the snow and finally got moving and started looking for cover as we drove, any sort of cover where I could pull up and talk to this man, I wanted information.
'Can you hear me?'
He didn't answer, just keeled over a bit, that was all, so that I had to push him upright again. I had time now to realize that his head was a mess and by this time most of his face was covered in blood. Lights washed across the buildings from behind but there'd be no traffic coming this way: the burning car was on its side and blocking the street.
'Can you hear me?'
Nothing, only the metallic smell of his blood filling the car.
The warehouse we'd passed coming the other way had a wide entrance and I pulled in there, cutting the engine and feeling for the carotid artery in the man's neck, finding it and sensing, shifting my fingers and trying again, finding no pulse-beat, trying again, watching his face, seeing how pale it was now between the streaks of blood, moving my hand inside his coat and sensing again over the heart, shifting and sensing and finding nothing, nothing at all There was mostly sand on the ground where they'd cleared the entrance way and I got him out as gently as I could and laid him on his back and held one hand behind his neck to tilt the head and put my mouth over his and began breathing for him, his blood sticky on my face, sticky and cold now, dear Jesus I wanted information out of this man.
Lights again and a pick-up truck rolled past the warehouse, no chains, the tyres crunching across the ruts as the driver slowed, seeing the wreckage ahead of him along the street.
Breathe one… two… three…
Heel of the hand on the chest.
Someone was running down the street, boots clumping across the snow, two people, two youths, their voices excited, breathe one… two… three… and press on the ribcage… the sound of an engine, the pick-up truck reversing, couldn't get through, his mouth cold against mine, the man's mouth, two… three… Come back, you bastard, I want to talk to you… press on the chest, his blood glutinous now and pulling at my mouth as it congealed, I want information, two… three… as the pick-up truck went crawling past the entrance in reverse, the smell of its exhaust gas on the air, don't go yet, you bastard, I want to talk to you… the back of his neck cold now under my hand, his eyes open, a pair of black buttoned boots behind his head, standing there on the snow and I looked up at the old woman, dumpy in her shawls, her eyes staring down at us, at our faces, at the blood.
'Babushka,' I said, 'go and phone, get an ambulance, babushka!'
The black boots turned quickly, scattering snow.
Press on the ribcage and breathe… two… three, but I believed now that I was wasting my time. I would have liked to leave him there but they might have some basic resuscitation gear on the ambulance so I kept going, using deeper breaths, deeper and slower as he watched me, two… three… as he watched me perhaps from a little distance, puzzled by my efforts and already wishing not to be pulled back to it all by this busy stranger, press on the ribcage until at last I heard the ambulance klaxon echoing between the buildings and felt for his wallet and found it and straightened up, lowering his head gently and going down on my hands and knees like a dog at a water hole, scooping up snow to wash the blood off my face and rinse the rich salt taste out of my mouth.
I went back to the Skoda and got into motion and reached the end of the street and did a skid turn and gunned up through the gears as the ambulance arrived on the scene with the blare of its klaxon filling the night with alarm.
Chapter 19: CHRISTMAS
Night and silence.
I stood in shadow, smelling the river smell.
Ice drifted on the water, breaking away upstream and floating down through the channels gouged by tugs and dredgers and coasters big enough to make headway. The ice made soft xylophone music as the floes touched and bumped together.
I had left the Skoda half a mile away, buried under an iron roof that had slid at an angle when the walls of a shed had collapsed some time ago, perhaps under the weight of snow, to lie like a broken box in the thickets of weeds. It was almost invisible, the Skoda, but I had no illusions. That was a hot car. It had been under extensive surveillance ever since Roach had blown his cover and got into it and picked up a tracker without knowing it. I'm not blaming him. Support people don't get the training they give the shadow executives at the Bureau, though some of them apply for the higher echelons and graduate.
Dark shapes moved as I watched: a small high-decked freighter with coal smoke curling behind it on the motionless air, to lie in skeins along the water; a truck on the far bank, sliding among the wharves, its diesel rattling. Nearer to where I stood, nothing moved, but I had no illusions about that either. Watchers keep still. The motor-vessel Natasha lay in her berth some sixty or seventy yards distant from the stack of rusted freight containers that I was using for cover. I needed to know if the Natasha were being watched.
The sensible thing to have done would have been to phone Ferris and ask him to send someone out with another car, leave the Skoda back there in the side street and take over whatever they brought me. But the time for doing the sensible thing had run out now because Meridian was compromised, and the new car they brought me could be hot too, the subject of undetected surveillance. I would think that Yermakov had been the only man tracking the Skoda, and that it was therefore safe to use for the moment. It was still hot, because it could be recognized later, but it could only be by chance, and that chance I was ready to take.