‘Drink?’ Petrenko offered.
‘No, thank you.’
‘Or maybe something to eat? The food here is excellent and room service very brisk. You won’t have long to wait.’
‘No, thank you,’ Yamout said again.
‘As you wish,’ Petrenko said. ‘I take it you want to get straight to business.’
Yamout nodded. ‘I didn’t fly two thousand miles to fill my stomach.’
Petrenko smiled, but in a different way. His demeanour changed, hardened. The friendly host act had gone. ‘Good,’ he said. ‘I hate wasting time when we can be making money.’ He crossed his legs and slouched in the armchair. The leather creaked. ‘As I’m sure you have already been told, I have a large stockpile of small arms, both former Soviet and modern Russia army munitions. Assault rifles, machine guns, even rocket-propelled grenades. Everything.’
He took a briefcase from the coffee table and opened it. He removed a sheet of white paper and handed it to Yamout. ‘As you can see, my prices are very reasonable.’
Yamout spent a minute reading through the long list of weaponry and the accompanying prices. Then he spent another minute pretending to read while a scowl deepened on his face. He passed the document to Elkhouri, who performed a similar routine.
‘These figures are not what I had been expecting,’ Yamout said.
Petrenko adjusted his seating. ‘In what way?’
‘Your pricing structure is too high and doesn’t make a lot of sense.’
Petrenko’s calm persona vanished and Yamout glimpsed the hot-tempered man it was hiding. ‘ Doesn’t make a lot of sense. What the fuck does that mean?’
‘It means-’
The lights went out.
Elkhouri was up from the sofa immediately. There was a commotion in the adjoining part of the suite, anxious bodyguards made more anxious by not being able to see.
Petrenko exhaled heavily. ‘The hotel will have the power restored momentarily, I’m sure.’ He raised his voice to be heard throughout the suite. ‘Everyone stay where you are and keep calm. No one do anything stupid. It’s just a blown fuse.’
‘Maybe we should go,’ Elkhouri suggested in Arabic. He seemed uncommonly agitated.
‘When this idiot is selling guns for a third less than what Ariff would pay,’ Yamout said back, ‘we can afford to sit here for a few minutes.’
‘Everything okay?’ Petrenko asked.
‘My friend is afraid of the dark,’ Yamout replied drily.
‘He shouldn’t worry,’ Petrenko assured. ‘We’re perfectly safe here.’
CHAPTER 23
Victor had been waiting in the stairwell when the power went. With no windows, the space became almost completely black. He already had the thermal imaging goggles in hand and he fixed them in place and switched them on. Through the goggles, everything appeared as shades of pale grey. The cool walls were almost white. The hot light bulbs were black. Victor slipped off his shoes and removed the P90 from his shoulder bag.
He released the gun’s safety, left the bag on the floor next to his shoes and jacket, and pulled open the stairwell door, using his foot to stop it swinging back shut. Victor raised the gun in both hands and pushed the stock against where his chest met his shoulder. He set the P90’s laser designator to high and the needle-thin beam glowed across the space, flaring where it hit the far wall. He stepped through the door.
Artificial light from sources outside the hotel glowed through the glass cupola. Maybe enough illumination to spot him at five feet, but no further. The seventh floor’s open-sided corridor was long and narrow and formed an almost complete circle around the central space. The door to the Presidential Suite was twenty-two feet away. Two men stood outside it. One of Petrenko’s guys in jeans and sports, one of Yamout’s bodyguards wearing a suit. Their clothing appeared as dark grey through the goggles, with the cooler wall and door significantly lighter. Their heads and hands were black. They had handguns drawn, heads moving from side to side, unsure what to do, blind in the darkness. It had been six seconds since the lights had blown.
The end of the infrared beam glowed on the closest guy’s chest. Two 5.7 millimetre bullets hit him in the sternum. A third struck between the eyes.
The noise of the P90’s gunshots were barely audible clicks. The sound of the bullet’s penetrating flesh was louder. The P90 ejected the spent cartridge cases straight down and they clinked together on the carpet. Victor fully depressed the trigger and drilled a burst into the furthest man’s torso as he turned in reaction to the first dropping. He stumbled but stayed on his feet, his brain slow to catch up with what had happened to his body. Victor took a step laterally left to get the angle, squeezed the trigger halfway, and put another bullet through his forehead before he had a chance to cry out in surprise or pain. He fell on top of the other corpse. A neat pile.
Victor hurried to the suite’s door, working on the assumption that someone on the other side had heard the two guards go down and was preparing for him to breach. Unlikely, and even if they had, it was more unlikely still that they would have shaken off their shock in time to think about defending the door, but Victor had only stayed alive this long by preparing for the worst at all times.
He stood directly before the door, aimed the P90 slightly downwards for typical torso height and fanned a long burst through the door to spread the bullets over a wide arc across the room beyond. The chance of scoring a hit was minimal, but his aim was to distract and panic whoever was on the other side long enough for him to get through the door without taking a bullet. Victor put a second burst through where the handle and lock were located.
He angled the P90 back up, kicked open the door and charged in two steps, dropped to a crouch, looking immediately left, shooting the first man he saw in the chest. He fell on to the dining table, knocking over chairs.
Victor tracked right, saw another dark shape at the far side of the room, fired, watched the shape collapse into a dresser. Glass smashed.
A step forward and Victor glimpsed the top of something or someone crouched behind a sofa in the TV area. He put a burst through the cushions, heard a scream, and fired off another. No more screams. His gaze swept over the room a second time. No one.
The suite was large, absent of light but shades of pale grey through his goggles. Thick drapes shaded all of the windows along the far wall, which had prevented him using the rifle, but helped him now. Only the smallest trace of light from Minsk outside filtered through, and wouldn’t enable anyone to see further than a couple of inches. Glancing down, Victor saw that the fifty-round magazine still had maybe ten rounds left, but he released it anyway.
He was reaching for another when a door burst open to his left and a man rushed out. He wore suit trousers and a vest, his bare arms black like his face. The middle of the vest was dark with sweat. He was armed, a big pistol clutched in both hands, moving erratically, his head doing the same, eyes searching the darkness, failing to see Victor crouched no more than ten feet before him.
Victor drew the holstered USP into his left hand and shot the man with a double-tap to the head. The bullets blew out the back of his skull and left brain matter glowing black on the wall behind. Victor reholstered the HK and fitted a second magazine into the P90.
He stepped over the most recent corpse, through the dining area, and quickly into the suite’s master bedroom. It was less dark here, a two-inch-wide gap in the drapes letting in more light from the city outside. Empty. Victor stopped at the door to the adjoining bathroom, spread a burst through it, opened it fast, moved in faster. No one hiding in the shower cubicle or bathtub.
Two guys outside the suite, four guys inside. Six down. Five left: Yamout, Petrenko and three bodyguards. He checked his watch. Twenty seconds since the first shot fired. It seemed much longer. It always did.