“No. I sound like a man who was taking precautions. One of those bags has a ski jacket for you. The sleeves may be a bit long and it may be a bit loose in the waist, but it will keep you warm if we have to spend any time outdoors.”
“But most negotiations take place indoors, don’t they?”
Simmy smiled. “Like I said. I’m an optimist by nature. But even an optimist takes precautions. Especially in Siberia.” He checked his watch. “They have an hour and a half to two hours’ head start. But they stopped to shop, and they are approaching by foot. Probably from a considerable distance. That gives us a chance to catch up.” He patted the front seat. “Let’s go, let’s go.”
The driver gunned the engine.
They took off toward Lake Baikal and Listvyanka.
CHAPTER 43
Light spilled from the castle onto the ice in the distance. Bobby guessed they were three hundred yards away. Luo had turned off his head light when the castle had come into focus, and Bobby had done the same. The ice in front of them was still black, but now that the castle was in sight they couldn’t risk detection.
Bobby glided along the ice at a fraction of his top speed. Luo was a decent skater, but he wasn’t seventeen years old or a professional hockey prospect. Bobby could hear him inhaling through his nose and exhaling through his mouth. He could sense the older man’s lungs straining. But he persevered. There was an aura about him, a sense of determination. Much as Bobby knew he shouldn’t trust anyone, he found himself drawn to the man.
The skating revived Bobby’s body, mind, and soul. He felt most comfortable on the ice. Always had. Perhaps this was a function of his speed. He could separate himself from any human being on ice, in a way he couldn’t at school when he was being bullied or ridiculed. Or maybe it was a function of the ice itself. It was cold, hard, and impenetrable, the way he’d needed to be in Chornobyl and Korosten. The way he’d need to be to rescue Eva.
Fifty meters away, Bobby and Luo skated to a tree by the side of the lake. They stopped, rested, and looked. The Swallow’s Nest sprang from the top of a hill overlooking Lake Baikal. It was rectangular in shape with four levels. The highest point was a circular tower, built in the shape of a rook. The tower hung above the water on the edge of the cliff. The other three levels of the castle beyond the tower dropped to successively lower depths. Bobby guessed that the lowest floor was at ground level, but that part of the castle was too far inland to see.
A vibration startled Bobby. Something in his pocket was moving. It vibrated again.
It was Luo’s phone. Bobby realized he’d never given it back. He glanced at Luo. Another reason to trust him, or to be seduced into doing so.
“Answer it,” Luo said.
Bobby took off his gloves, removed the phone from his pocket, and glanced at the screen.
“It’s a voice mail,” Bobby said.
“It has to be for you. I didn’t give that number to anyone.”
Bobby listened to the voice mail. It was from Nadia, confirming she’d received his message and informing him she was in Irkutsk. Bobby gave Luo the details.
“She’s on her way here with her rich Russian friend,” Bobby said. “And other men. She said to wait until they get here.”
“You can try calling her,” Luo said. “There’s cell service here for sure. We’re close to Listvyanka. And the billionaires would make sure there were towers. But we’re not waiting. Every minute counts. We can’t be sure Eva will be alive when they get here. And I don’t trust men I don’t know.”
“But you trust me, right?”
“I’ve spent some time with you. I know your heart.”
Bobby tried calling Nadia. He got a signal immediately, but the call rolled to voice mail.
“She’s on the road from Irkutsk,” Luo said. “Out of signal’s reach.”
Bobby left a message with his current location.
Luo pulled a pair of night binoculars from his knapsack.
“We know the guards will be focused on land,” he said. “After all, the lake is frozen. No boat can gain access. That doesn’t mean they don’t patrol. I’m sure they patrol. But that’s not where they’ll concentrate their resources. We need to watch, wait, and see.”
They stood in place for what seemed like an eternity. Bobby skated small circles behind Luo to keep his legs warm. Thirty-three minutes later Luo dropped the binoculars to his side.
“Fifteen minutes,” he said. “A guard walks around and checks the lake side from the deck surrounding the tower every fifteen minutes. In twelve minutes — give or take — the guard will make his way toward the front. He takes stairs down to the third level. It’s a massive structure so once he’s on the other side of the building he’ll be out of earshot. And the wind will be whipping pretty good up on that hill. That will help us with any incidental noises we make, too.”
“So we’ll have fifteen minutes to skate the last hundred meters, change into shoes, and scale the tower.”
“No. We’ll have less than fifteen minutes to skate the last hundred meters, change into shoes, and disappear inside the observation tower. And that’s assuming it’s open. I can only see a bit of the third level beyond the tower. There’s a window and room behind it, but if we go down the stairs in that direction we risk being seen.”
“At this temperature, I doubt someone left a window open.”
“Probably not. The tower is our best bet. But if it’s locked, we’ll have no choice. We’ll have to look for glass to break. Or pray that some other door is open on a lower level. I’m less worried about entry than I am about the surveillance cameras. The first twenty feet of the cliff can be scaled, but the next thirty are a near-vertical drop, so we’ll be out of sight on the wall. But there are cameras on the observation deck beneath the tower.”
“How can we disable them?”
Luo told him his plan. Then he let Bobby take a look through the binoculars. The ascent from the lake to the castle’s foundation was as Luo described. Steep but not vertical. Stunted trees, shrubs, and grasses covered the initial ascent. From there the climb would turn vertical, with the railing around the observation deck adding another four feet. Bobby focused the binoculars on the castle’s observation tower. He found the two cameras pointed at the deck and tried to picture himself racing past them.
The guard appeared on schedule. He wore a suit and tie and carried a gleaming black rifle over his shoulder. His mouth was moving as though he were speaking to someone. When he shifted to the side, Bobby could see a wireless microphone wrapped around his ear. He peered over the tower and around it. Three minutes after arriving, he sauntered to the other side of the tower, down the stairs to the third level, and out of sight.
Bobby and Luo raced to the bottom of the castle. The final fifty meters took them less than a minute.
The lights from the castle were pointed at the lake at a forty-five-degree angle. They cast a glow twenty yards out onto the lake and provided just enough light for Bobby and Luo to be able to see what they were doing.
They changed into their shoes and their rope-climbing gloves. They left their skates and ski gloves near Bobby’s knapsack close to the ice. They didn’t need the extra weight on their backs, and they wouldn’t need the skates until they retraced their steps with Eva. Once their shoes were secure, they climbed up the cliff to the base of the Swallow’s Nest. Bobby put the principles of hockey to work to negotiate the steep wall. On ice, he was less concerned with where the hockey puck was now, and more focused on where it would be next. On the cliff, he employed the same strategy, looking beyond his next step at all times toward his final destination at the bottom of the tower.
Still, by the time Bobby ascended at the point where the cliff turned vertical, Luo was already pulling the climbing rope out of his knapsack. The old man had beaten him up the hill. Unlike Bobby, he didn’t need to visualize anything. He knew the optimal path through sheer instincts.