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Out of nowhere, a priest approached and smacked her in the head with a prayer book, sending her to her knees and her gun sliding under the nearest pew. She shook her head a little, trying to dissipate the sharp pain, and rubbed her hand against her temple, where the pain was worse. Her hand touched something warm and moist, with a strong metallic smell. Blood. Her own.

She turned while still on her knees and grabbed the priest’s legs, throwing him to the floor. Then she sprung on top of him, hitting him hard in the chest with her knee, and in the side of his neck with her fisted right hand.

She reached under the pew and grabbed her weapon. Smolin was nowhere in sight. She ran toward the iconostasis, hesitated a little, then entered the sanctuary just in time to catch a glimpse of Smolin making a clumsy run for the back door.

She holstered her gun then sprinted ahead, jumped, and clasped her hands around Smolin’s neck, coming from behind. Then she let all her weight on him, kicking the back of his knees. They fell to the floor, Alex on top of Smolin, and Smolin grunting and swearing, feeling the pain in his shoulder. Her hands still held tight around his neck, squeezing as hard as she could.

“Shoot me,” Smolin managed to articulate, in a strangled voice, probably trying to get her to release her grip.

“No,” she panted, “first you talk. Then, maybe I will.”

He suddenly rolled over on his left shoulder, catching her under his weight, crushing her. She gasped for air. He was massive, and still strong, despite his shoulder wound. She started kicking blindly from underneath him, and finally hit his crotch, while her fingernails dug deep into the skin of his neck, gripping and tugging at his Adam’s apple. He yelped and curled on his side, then threw himself against her as she was trying to get up, and slammed her into the wall.

A couple of icons fell off the wall and shattered, and she fell alongside the wall, landing hard. Smolin punched her with his left hand, almost missing, yet hitting her hard.

Her vision darkened, and she felt she was about to lose consciousness. She managed to pull her gun and shoot, getting Smolin in his left shoulder. He yelled in pain and fell to the floor, crouched and writhing.

She stood with difficulty, still pointing her Walther PPK at Smolin, and wiped the blood off her face, grimacing in pain. Her entire body hurt, and a sharp pain pierced her under her ribs every time she breathed. Her head was throbbing, and she was angry as hell.

“Now let’s see who’s gonna wipe your sorry ass, motherfucker,” she said, just as she heard in the distance someone yell, “Clear!”

“Ah… she’s got vocabulary too,” Weber said, as he entered the sanctuary with his weapon drawn and a couple of agents in tow. “Remove this piece of trash from here,” he said to the other agents, then turned to Alex.

“Are you OK?” he asked, then he replied to his own question. “No, you’re not. We need to get you to a hospital. Let’s go,” he said, putting his arm around her shoulder and helping her walk.

“Hey, Jer?”

“Yeah?”

“Did I just break the law of sanctuary?” she asked, feeling a little ridiculous for asking that question. “I chased a man and shot him in a church. I’m not sure how I feel about that.”

“And you cussed in a church too! Forgot that already?” Weber laughed. “You’ll have plenty of stories to tell your grandkids.”

His voice turned a little more serious, as he added, “The law of sanctuary was abolished centuries ago, and all it really stated was that the fugitive seeking sanctuary in a church couldn’t be killed, but would still have to be held accountable for his criminal acts.”

“Oh…” she said, suddenly feeling drained, as the adrenaline washed away.

“The churches weren’t meant to be havens for killers and rapists, you know,” he continued, speaking as if he spoke to a wounded, vulnerable child. “They were protecting people from political prosecution mainly, like running from an irate king, jealous of one’s land, or choice of fiancée. Plus, you didn’t even kill him, so you’re good.”

She looked at him with thankful eyes.

“How come you know so much about this?”

He cleared his throat before speaking and smiled briefly.

“Oh well… I chased and arrested someone in a church one time, and my mom gave me grief about it for weeks.”

“No Thanksgiving dinner for you that year, huh?”

“Something like that, yeah…” he laughed.

“OK, I feel a little better, thanks. I still feel weird about it, that’s all. You know, being in there with my gun drawn and all that.”

He helped her sit down on the rear bumper of the ambulance, as an EMT worked on her head wound.

“You wanna know what the punishment was for whoever broke the law of sanctuary in the 1500s?”

“What?” She smiled, wincing from the disinfectant applied to her cut temple.

“They had to pay 120 shillings. That’s about fifteen pound sterling, or twenty-three dollars. With inflation and all, maybe a couple hundred bucks would take care of it?”

“That much I can manage,” she replied, and they laughed together.

…77

…Thursday, June 9, 1:27PM EDT (UTC-4:00 hours)
…FBI Case # 174-NR-24578—Norfolk Division
…Norfolk, Virginia

Case # 174-NR-24578

Transcription Excerpt, Interrogation Session #5

[begin excerpt]

Interviewer: “Tell me, what kind of information have you been collecting?”

Evgheni Smolin: “I don’t have to say anything to you.”

Interviewer: “You risked your life to serve your country; don’t you want us to know why?”

Evgheni Smolin: “Whether you know or not, that is irrelevant. Everything I did and do is for my country, for Russia.”

[…]

Interviewer: “Who sent you? Who gave you your mission?”

Evgheni Smolin: “Are you actually expecting me to roll and start spilling everything to you, like the lowest of cowards? Then you’re bigger idiots than we thought.”

Interviewer: “Who’s a bigger idiot?”

Evgheni Smolin: “You. All of you, Americans.”

Interviewer: “Ahh… I see. Well, you might be right; we might be idiots. Why don’t you prove it to me?”

Evgheni Smolin: “Ha! Not worth my time.”

Interviewer: “You got plenty of time. You’re not going to get out of this alive, you know. We don’t trade spies anymore; that’s long gone.”

Evgheni Smolin: “I took my chances when I came here. I’m proud of what I did.”

[47 seconds of silence]

Interviewer: “Here’s what I think. I think you work for a bunch of old-timers, still nostalgic after the glorious times of Cold War and communism, some old farts with no idea what the future looks like. I think your country has become weak and cowardly, without its overabundance of slave republics you lost. I think you lost everything you could have been when the KGB fell apart. Guess what? We’re not afraid of you Russians anymore!” [brief laughter]

Evgheni Smolin: “Fucking idiots… Is that what you think? Good, keep thinking that, so you won’t see us coming!”

Interviewer: “Yeah, that’s what I think. And I think you are a little piece of leftover trash, still clinging to the idea that Russia could do any real intelligence work. Well, not anymore! We caught you on the double, didn’t we? And that’s because you work for some lame old farts who can’t conceive a half-decent intelligence strategy, that’s why.”

Evgheni Smolin: “I work for two of the smartest people to ever set military and intelligence strategy. What they’re planning for you, you’ll never see coming. Soon… soon you’ll remember my words. So what if you caught me? I’m just a small cog in the great Russian intelligence machine that we’ve resurrected back to life, and you didn’t even know about it! That’s how ignorant you are!”