“Hey, Navy,” said Nuri.
“You’re Jupiter?” answered the SEAL.
“Yeah.” Nuri thought the code word was funny, and gave a little self-deprecating laugh.
The man retrieved a small ballistics case from his kit. “Here you go.”
“Thanks. The command post is that large building up there on the left,” said Nuri. “Someone’ll find you food and arrange for a pickup.”
“Thank you, sir.”
Nuri started away.
“Tell me, if you don’t mind — what exactly is it that I just brought you? They rushed me special here from Italy and flew me on my jetliner. I never seen such a fuss.”
“Bottle of vodka,” said Nuri.
The Russian was just finishing his dinner when Nuri entered the tent. A small card table had been placed in the middle. The guards had removed his hand restraints, but were watching him carefully from the side.
“You can wait outside,” Nuri told them. He put down the case and pulled out the empty chair.
“How was dinner?” he asked Kimko in English.
“All right.”
“You prefer English or Russian?”
“Your Russian is horrible.”
“Ready to talk?”
“I have said everything necessary to say.”
“I think you have a lot to say.”
Kimko smiled and shook his head. “Nuri, you are young yet. You do not know how this game is played.”
“No?”
Kimko laughed. “You waste your time. You are Mr. Nice Guy. Before, when you threaten me with the gun — that was more effective. Then you feed me. Mistake. You should make me wait. Hunger pains do much.”
Nuri reached down and opened the case. He removed the two glasses from the cushioned interior and set them down. Then he took the bottle of vodka and opened it.
Kimko said nothing.
“I know all about you, Milos. You have no secrets.”
Nuri put a finger’s worth of the liquid into the one closest to him. MY-PID was recording the session through a video bug planted in the far corner of the walls near the ceiling; it analyzed the Russian’s facial features and what physiological data it could deduce about how he was reacting to Nuri’s interrogation tactics. It gave Nuri a running update on the data as it watched.
But he didn’t need MY-PID to tell him that Kimko really wanted the vodka.
Nuri picked up the glass and swirled it: it was all very dramatic and over the top, but he had a captive audience, and hamming it up only helped.
“I know you work for SVG,” he told Kimko. “I know who your supervisors are. I know every stop in your career. I know how you got shafted. Because your boss wanted to sleep with your wife. It was an injustice. They screwed you. You should be a supervisor by now. Or a rich man. A very rich man.”
Nuri took a small sip from the glass. He hated vodka.
“I can help you,” he continued. “With my help, you can get out of Africa. I can help get you promoted. I can make you rich. And most of all, I can help you get revenge.”
Kimko’s pupils dilated ever so slightly; Nuri didn’t need MY-PID’s nudge to tell him he had just scored big. He paused, hoping Kimko would talk, but he didn’t.
“You can talk to me, and I can help you a lot,” said Nuri. “You don’t like being assigned to Africa. That’s clear. I can give you information that will get you out. And no one will know where it came from. Except you and me.”
“You are more clever than I thought.”
“No. I just have all the cards. But I can share.” Nuri gestured at the bottle. “Why not use them to get yourself out of this shit hole.”
“It is a shit hole,” agreed Kimko.
“Talk to me about the UAV. Who else knows about it? Who wants it?”
“You claim to know everything and you don’t know that?”
As an intelligence agent, Kimko presumably knew the basic interrogation technique called for starting with questions one knew the answer to, so the subject’s truthfulness could be tested. He was parrying, trying on his side of the table to determine what Nuri really knew.
Nuri changed direction.
“Tell me about Li Han. Why would SVG want to deal with him? The man is a criminal. Despicable. A sociopath.”
“We all have our faults,” said Kimko dryly.
“What’s yours?” Nuri took another sip from the glass.
“I have many, many faults,” said Kimko, casting his eyes downward.
“I can help you get out of here,” said Nuri. “You don’t want to be here. It’s a rat hole.”
“You’re here.”
“Oh, I get to leave.” Nuri laughed. “They just sent me back for you. Who are you selling to? Sudan First? They’re psychotic.”
Kimko shook his head.
Nuri tried a different tack. “Who do you think was your competition to buy the UAV?” he asked. “Was it the Iranian?”
The suggestion of the third party — who of course didn’t exist — took Kimko by surprise, and it took him a moment to recover his stony face.
“You were my competition, I would suppose,” he told Nuri, leaning back. The shift in posture told MY-PID — and Nuri — that he was unsure of himself.
“You didn’t know about the Iranian?” Nuri asked. “So you don’t know why he was here?”
Kimko waved his hand.
“You’re not telling me an Iranian smoked you, are you?” asked Nuri. “You didn’t know he was with Girma? Are you kidding? Was your boss right — are you washed up?”
Kimko’s eyes flashed with anger. For a moment Nuri thought he would grab and fling the vodka bottle. He’d already decided that he would let him do that, let the bottle break — the smell would only make Kimko more desperate once he calmed down.
But Kimko didn’t. He hunched his shoulders together, physically pulling himself back under control.
“You’re a salesman,” said Nuri. “Why would you want to buy the UAV?”
“Who says that I am buying this thing?”
“Come on. You were prepared to deal. But how did you know what you were buying?”
“I was not going to deal. No buying.”
“Li Han isn’t a buyer. He’s a seller. And a worker bee for whatever slimeball will stick a few million dollars into his account. Right? I’m surprised you would deal with him,” added Nuri. “Considering that he helped the Chechens.”
Kimko raised his head.
“You didn’t know? You guys don’t know that?” said Nuri. This part was easy — he wasn’t lying.
“You’re a liar. You don’t know nothing. You’re a child.”
“In 2012—the bomb in the Moscow Star Theater. Used an explosive initiated from a cell phone. That’s common. There was wire in the bomb with lettering. You traced it to Hong Kong. Our friend was there a few weeks before the bomb was built. There’s other evidence,” added Nuri, who had gotten all the background from MY-PID and its search of the files and data on Li Han. “Maybe I’ll give it to you, if it will help. Of course, if your boss knew that you were dealing with someone who helped the Chechens — that probably wouldn’t be a good thing. I guess it would depend on how the information came out. Who shaped it. We call that a slant in America.”
“I had no deal,” said Kimko harshly. “I despise the man.”
“Feelings and business are two different things,” said Nuri. He rose, leaving the bottle and glasses on the table. “I’ll be right back.”
Kimko stared at the vodka.
He was beyond starved for a drink.
But if he reached for that bottle — where would it take him?
He knew nothing of value. His contacts among the Africans were probably well known by this Nuri. As for the UAV, he had already told him everything he knew.