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With a shudder of hope, he found an opening barely wide enough to squeeze through. He handed his crossbow and quiver to Briggs, pulled himself about two meters through it, then reached back and accepted the weapons. Briggs pulled himself through, and Fisher helped him down. Small miracle. They’d bridged the tunnel collapse.

Yet they both coughed even more now, and the air seemed much thinner.

“I’m getting a headache,” said Briggs.

“Let’s go,” Fisher urged him, feeling his own head rage with drummers and cymbal crashers.

Briggs took a few steps forward, then thrust out his hand for balance, barely finding the wall before he fell. “Dizzy, too.”

Intel on the mine said that symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning included headache, dizziness, weakness, nausea, vomiting, chest pain, and confusion—all from an odorless, colorless gas, a silent and elusive killer, the chemical version of one Sam Fisher.

“We need to get out of here,” he cried. “Come on, run!”

They started forward, but not five steps later the ground quaked again.

Gasping, Fisher turned his gaze up to the ceiling, where a crack had opened and began splintering into more cracks, the webs threatening to pry apart the crossbars and buckle the supporting girders to their left and right.

The first explosion must’ve weakened the tunnel in this section. Fisher was no engineer, no seasoned miner, but he determined that if they didn’t reach the far end of the tunnel in the next few breaths, their deaths, wakes, funerals, and burials would occur with drive-thru expediency. At least Grim would save a few bucks on the flowers.

Briggs picked up the pace as shards of rock began plummeting behind them. The ceiling began to give way in a timpani roll of thunder that Fisher imagined would consume them whole.

Helmet lights were flashing at the far end, and Fisher picked up the pace, struggling up beside Briggs, who was beginning to falter.

“Almost there,” he urged the man, his voice strangely thin and unrecognizable.

With a terrific boom the rest of the ceiling collapsed, spitting forward a huge dust cloud that knocked both of them down onto their hands and knees.

The ground shook again, and Fisher tucked his face back into his parka for a few breaths.

When he glanced over at Briggs, the man was lying flat on his belly and unconscious. He tried to scream, but nothing came out. His cheeks caved in.

There were few feelings in the world that Fisher despised more than helplessness. Being in control gave him a sense of peace and security, a sense of place and purpose.

But damn it, they couldn’t fight if they couldn’t breathe. He fell forward, smiting a fist on the ground.

No, this couldn’t be it. Not here, not now, not like this.

He thought he would vomit, but the darkness came first.

* * *

“WHAT are you afraid of?”

Fisher wasn’t sure who was asking the question, but the voice sounded strangely like his own.

“I’m afraid that everything I’ve done with my life will mean nothing. I’m afraid of losing my daughter again. I’m afraid of being a terrible father.”

“What else?”

“Nothing.”

“What about death?”

“No. I’m only afraid for my friends . . . for Sarah.”

The sun was in his eyes, and he was no longer pinned against a mantle of stars. The world spun chaotically for a moment, and his head throbbed.

He gasped and bolted upright, his senses failing him at first. Then . . . the nausea returned.

Opening his eyes to slits, he stared at the woman floating over him, her face out of focus then slowly, inevitably, growing distinct. Wild black hair. Chapped lips.

The Snow Maiden.

23

MAJOR Viktoria Kolosov smirked at the two Americans she��d been tracking since they’d escaped from Sochi.

She’d been unable to find anything on the taller, older one, but there was some intel on the black man who’d shot her in the arm, a former CIA paramilitary spec ops officer, surname Briggs, thus it was no stretch to assume that the other operator was a spy as well.

Judging from the looks on their faces, they’d thought she’d given up. What did they know about her resolve? Her tenacity?

Very little back then. Very much right now.

She’d used Nadia’s chip to track them from Sochi to Bichvinta to Trabzon, and then back to Incirlik Air Base, where the signal from the chip had been cut off. It was there that she’d called upon an SVR agent operating within the base. He reported the transfer of a young woman from a C-17 to a private charter jet. That would be Nadia, whisked off to the United States, the chip removed from her back. She was a total loss now; however, the agents who’d captured her were, she believed, still on Kasperov’s trail, and she needed to follow them. That Nadia had been taken to the C-17 first instead of the base intrigued the Snow Maiden, and so she followed up on that aircraft.

Where was it headed next? She needed to review the flight plan, and yes its pilots would file one. No matter how clandestine the plane or its mission, clearances needed to be granted so that the aircraft wasn’t mistaken for a hostile and engaged by antiaircraft guns or attacked by fighter jets. The Americans could lie all they wanted about the plane’s true identity but not its course, especially if it planned to fly through other governments’ airspace.

The government of Turkey required a flight plan six hours prior to takeoff, although special permissions were granted for some military and diplomatic aircraft, allowing them to file just an hour or two prior, or even just after takeoff.

Using the C-17’s tail numbers, her contact at Incirlik had learned that a Diplomatic Overflight Permit had been issued to the C-17 by the government of Brazil. He’d also discovered that a similar permit had been issued to the same aircraft by the government of Peru. In fact, Peru required a Non-scheduled Overflight Permit and a Non-scheduled Landing Permit. That landing permit disclosed the plane’s ultimate destination: Juliaca.

The GRU was not without its own assets, and the Snow Maiden was able to catch a flight aboard a GRU owned and operated Gulfstream G650 out of nearby Adana Airport. While en route, she received help treating her gunshot wound from the attendant (clean entry and exit, no major complications). She arrived in Juliaca nearly two hours before the C-17 without refueling and flying literally on fumes. Following the agents up to La Rinconada had not been difficult. She’d hitched a ride aboard a mining truck that had left only a few minutes after the two men had departed in their pickup truck. She’d bought a Bible at the airport and clutched it as though she were a Christian missionary, a missionary with 9mm and .40-caliber pistols tucked under her arms and more than one thousand dollars in American greenbacks jammed in her pockets.

Her reports back to Izotov were fragmented. New lead, leaving Sochi. Following up. What about the girl, he’d asked. No reply . . .

If she reported Nadia’s loss, they’d come for her. Izotov’s assistants were already trying to reach her regarding the deaths of the FSB agents.

It was better now to overlook the losses and keep focused on Kasperov. If she brought him back, losing the girl would mean nothing.

She was close now. Closer than ever.

* * *

“SAM, we’ve got a corporate chopper taking off, heading up to the mine,” said Charlie. “Just the pilot and copilot on board.”

While the kid’s voice buzzed through his subdermal, the words seemed unintelligible at first as Fisher focused once more on the Snow Maiden, who was now holding a suppressed pistol to his head. He glanced over at Briggs, who was lying on his side. His eyelids fluttered open.