He logged off the terminal and sat for a moment, feeling calm but not wholly relaxed. If his employers wanted to play games, so be it. He could play games of his own.
Only Victor wouldn’t be playing fair.
CHAPTER 16
Sixty miles south-west of Minsk, Belarus
It was cold in the back of the car. Xavier Callo sat with his shoulders hunched up and his arms tightly folded across his chest, hands buried beneath his armpits. It was Blout’s fault; he smoked roll-ups as he drove, keeping his window down so the smoke drifted outside. The incoming draught flowed straight over Callo. His captors had supplied him with a coat, which he wore now, but it only did so much. Abbot and Blout were both built like they could play pro football and seemed content enough with the window open and the cold air blowing in.
A flat green land rushed by Callo’s window. It was all empty fields, barely any signs of habitation, somehow dead. For a long time he didn’t even know which country he was in, only realising he was heading towards Minsk when he started to see signs for the city. They were in both Belarusian and Russian, and Callo knew a little Russian thanks to his business. He was hungry but didn’t say anything for fear of going back in the trunk.
When they had first started their journey Callo had spent a few hours in the back seat before Abbot had ordered him inside the trunk. Blout then held him down while Abbot taped his hands, feet and finally his mouth. He didn’t say why, but stressed if Callo didn’t keep quiet Abbot would rig up his own bollock-fryer and leave Callo to cook. He choked on gasoline fumes for about twenty minutes before he was let out, freed from his bonds and allowed on the back seat. No explanation was given, but Callo didn’t need one.
It was clear he had been stuck in the trunk while they crossed a border. After being kidnapped in Athens, Callo didn’t know where he had been taken. He had been on at least two planes and spent countless hours in car trunks. Based on the weather, he guessed he had been interrogated somewhere in Eastern Europe. Since he was now heading to Minsk, he must have been in one of Belarus’s neighbouring countries, most likely Poland.
His body clock was completely skewed and he had no idea how long it had been since he had been kidnapped. He managed to get a look at the clock on the car’s console, so he knew the time at least.
‘Why are we going to Minsk?’ he asked Abbot when he could no longer bear the silence or the not knowing.
Abbot had his arm resting on the window sill while he stared at the Belarus countryside. ‘Yamout texted your mobile. He wants you to meet him there.’
‘But I don’t have the money.’
‘You won’t need it, mate,’ Abbot assured him.
Callo tried to continue the conversation but Abbot didn’t speak back. Blout had said nothing at all to Callo. The silence was distinctly unpleasant and left Callo’s imagination too much time to work. He was scared of going to somewhere even more terrifying than where he had spent two hours hooked by the balls to a generator. Though, in truth, Callo couldn’t imagine anything worse than having his testicles electrocuted. Maybe this time he wouldn’t know the answers they wanted and they would actually flick the switch. He shivered and pushed his thighs together. He knew he was in over his head, but he also knew if these guys were going to kill him they could have easily done it already. There was no need to take him all the way to Minsk to do so.
He hadn’t seen the suited guy since the interrogation. After Callo revealed everything he knew about Ariff and Yamout, he had been taken back to his cell and left there for maybe twenty-four hours. Then Abbot had awoken him, and he’d been allowed to take a hot shower, with no one watching him while he scrubbed and cleaned. New clothes were waiting for him and he received some decent food, as much as he wanted.
Callo had dared to hope his release had been pending, but instead they were going to Minsk. He hoped they weren’t planning on using him as bait to kidnap Yamout. It wouldn’t work. Callo didn’t have the nerves to bluff his way through that kind of encounter. Plus, Abbot and Blout were sure to be outnumbered by Yamout’s bodyguards. But they must have worked that out for themselves. So what did they have planned?
No one had shown him any credentials or said who they worked for, but the bastard who’d interrogated Callo stank of CIA. The Brits were either in on the kidnapping or just mercenaries doing the heavy lifting. Bizarrely, no one seemed to care that the majority of Callo’s business was highly illegal, and in talking about Yamout and Ariff he had admitted his part in many crimes. He had fully expected to be charged with some smuggling beef at the least, but so far nothing. Maybe after he had done whatever it was that Abbot wanted doing in Minsk they would actually let him go. It wasn’t as if Callo was going to go to Amnesty International and complain about being frightened by a pair of glowing oranges.
‘Maybe another hour until we’re in Minsk,’ Blout said to Abbot.
‘Hear that, mate?’ Abbot cocked his head in Callo’s direction. ‘Not long now and this will all be over.’
Callo was happy to hear that.
CHAPTER 17
Minsk, Belarus
Victor had arrived in the city the night before after a relaxing flight from Austria to Minsk International Airport. He had no luggage with him except a carry-on bag holding a few effects that weren’t essential, but he preferred to fly with at least some luggage. Airport security tended to watch out for people with none. A thankfully silent taxi ride from the airport had taken him into central Minsk, where he’d performed counter surveillance before arriving at his hotel, the Best Eastern.
As Yamout was expected to meet with Petrenko around or after nine p.m. at the Hotel Europe the next day, and because of the potentially short duration of his stay, Victor would need to kill him at some point shortly after this time.
He’d taken the Minsk metro across the city and hailed a taxi to take him back into the centre. A second cab immediately after the first took him around the city centre for half an hour. Victor then re-joined the metro for another thirty minutes, changing trains twice before exiting and performing counter surveillance on foot. Finally, a third taxi had taken him to Passazhyrski train station.
He bought himself a large cappuccino with caramel syrup from a stunning Belarusian brunette at a kiosk and drank his coffee leisurely while he circled the concourse. He saw no sign of any shadows. May in Minsk tended to stay in the low seventies so Victor was without an overcoat but kept the jacket of his charcoal suit buttoned up. The cappuccino was especially good, or maybe it was just the memory of the brunette that enhanced the flavour.
In the basement level of the train station he found the left-luggage facility and gave the false name provided by his employer.
An old guy then dragged two heavy Samsonite suitcases to where Victor waited and dabbed the sweat from his forehead with a handkerchief. ‘What have you got in here, rocks?’
‘Guns,’ Victor replied.
The old guy laughed.
The tags on the suitcases showed they had travelled overnight from Moscow, but there was a good chance the contents had been switched somewhere along the way. By the weight of the suitcase in each hand, Victor knew exactly what they contained.
He took a cab back to the Best Eastern and entered his room. Victor wasn’t sure how the hotel came by its name, as there was nothing best about it. His room was bland and uninviting, the bed soft and lumpy. He closed the drapes and laid the suitcases on top of the bed so he could check the contents. The interiors had been stripped out and replaced with thick foam rubber sheets, cut to fit several items.