Another dark figure started crawling out on to the ladder.
With a double weight on it, the aluminium sagged horribly. The second man reached the feet of the stationary Misha, who was frozen in a face-down attitude. The back-up guy began talking, first in a low voice, then louder. When bollockings had no effect, the newcomer turned physical. From the blurred movements it looked as though he had started thumping Misha with his fist on the backs of his knees.
Still there was no reaction.
The wind and rain were hitting our faces so hard that, even from close range, it was impossible to tell exactly what happened next. It looked to me as though the second guy had tried to crawl over Misha's prostrate body. He was right on top of him when there came a sudden eruption of movement. I saw a flurry of limbs, much faster than men crawling, as if the two were wrestling.
An instant later one of them was falling. Without a sound he dropped away into the dark.
Jesus! I thought. Too low for his chute. But of course he had no chute.
He went straight down, 150 feet on to concrete.
I grabbed the press el of my radio and hissed, "Red leader. Wehave a casualty. One guy's fallen."
"Roger," came Anna's unemotional voice. She said something else in Russian. Then, "Can you recover him?"
"Not a chance. He's gone right to the ground."
"Proceed, then."
"Roger."
The guy who'd survived the mid-ladder encounter reached us.
Not Misha. It was Volodya from the Blue team. Misha was written off Peering over the edge of the roof, I could just make out a little dark heap splat ted on the deck. At least the controllers knew what had happened. It was up to them whether or not they made any move to help him. I was pretty certain there'd be no point. No way could he have survived that impact, especially with the weight of the weapon on his back, the ammunition in his pouches and all his other gear. All I could think, selfishly, was, I hope to hell nobody saw him go past their window.
The rest of Blue team quickly came across, Whinger last. He gave me a strained look, but never said a word about the setback just a quick "Idyomr to his guys, and they were gone, round the end of the lift-housing to the point where the emergency stairs reached the roof.
I led the two surviving members of Red team along the roof to the far end and round the corner, until we were positioned above the target windows. There we quickly laid out our ropes. We found ideal anchor-points in the form of a strong metal rail that skirted the raised top of the lift shaft, and in a couple of minutes we were ready to descend.
"Red leader," I called.
"Can I have a sniper report on the windows? Are all curtains drawn?"
Anna instantly passed the request. I heard Green come in: "Da, da. Vsyo," and in a second I got, "Yes, all curtains closed."
My watch said 9:24. "Red leader," I reported.
"Starting descent now."
Abseiing down a building in the dark is never a picnic. Still less is it easy in a high wind. The longer your rope, the more you swing about, and the greater the danger of accidentally bumping against a window. But it was no good pissing about. I stuck my arse into space, walked backwards over the edge of the roof, and started down.
Luckily the shape of the building was kind to us. All the doors and windows were set back about a metre inside the balconies, so that as we came past each floor there was very little chance of any accidental contact with the inner wall of the building.
Inches at a time I tip-toed down the wall and dangled in space above the top half of the first balcony. On down past the metal rails. Sixteen done. Fifteen the same. Slowly on past fourteen.
My two guys were doing OK, to the right and left of me.
Between fourteen and thirteen a terrific gust of wind swung us so violently that all three of us bumped against each other.
Luckily the windows were closed and curtains drawn all the way down, courtesy of the wild night.
My boots touched the top rail of the twelfth-floor balcony. I eased myself down gently until my backside was on the rail, then got my feet on the floor of the balcony itself. I'd landed in front of Window Two. The greenish curtains were drawn tight, but light was shining out round the edges.
The second I was out of my ropes I turned to guide Igor in.
By 9:28 all three of us were in our prearranged positions: myself crouching beside the door, Nikolai on my right, Igor on my left. Even in the relative shelter of the balcony the wind was blustering loudly, and there was no need to keep my voice down when I reported in.
"Red leader, on target. Blue, report your state."
"Blue, preparing charge," came Whinger's voice.
"Wait out."
"Red, roger." My heart was going like a hammer. I imagined Whinger deftly taping a length of det cord down the centre of the door. I glanced either way at the dark, helmeted faces beside me and gave a reassuring twitch of my head. The lads had heard Whinger in their earpieces, but naturally hadn't understood what he said, so I made taping motions round our own doorway. Both got it, grinned back and nodded.
But I was wrong. Suddenly I heard Whinger say, "Blue. We have a problem. I can see through a glass panel in the fire-escape door. There are two guards sitting outside the apartment, in the corridor. Wait one."
I made an instant decision.
"Red. You'll have to drop them.
I'll use your shots as the signal to go."
"OK," said Whinger softly.
"Ready when you are.
"Red. Roger. Control is Black on schedule?"
"Da, da. Chyornii goto vi came Anna's voice. I could tell that the excitement was getting to her as well because for a moment she forgot to translate. Then she said, "Yes. Black ready."
"Red. Starting countdown now. Sixty, fifty, forty…" I imagined the Black team wagon speeding towards the Mafia entrance, silenced weapons at the ready. The gale was certainly going to help mask any noise they made.
"Twenty.. ten.
Jesus, I was thinking, I hope this goes our way, because we shouldn't be anywhere near here.
"Ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five… Stand by, stand by. GO!"
The hammer of rounds going down in the corridor came clearly through to us. With my charge held flat to the glassed upper half of the door, I knelt with my head tucked down, away from the blast, and squeezed my clacker.
BOOM! The blast made the inner wall shudder. I raised my head. The entire glass panel had vanished. Through the hole I lobbed a stun grenade and ducked again, eyes averted.
BANG! A sharper, louder explosion. I came upright again.
Pieces of glass were tinkling down. The lights in the room had gone out.
"Poshli!" I shouted at Igor.
"Go!"
In he went with a wild yell, head-first through the gap. I heard a thud as he hit the floor and scrabbling noises as he scuttled sideways. Then Nikolai was at the opening, hammering long bursts into the room with his Gepard. He was screaming obscenities too.
Hardly had he opened up when there came a second explosion as Whinger blew the door from the corridor. More rounds started going down inside the flat bursts of seven or eight. Too long to be properly selective.
Empty cases cascaded on to the floor of the balcony beside me. Nikolai threw down an empty magazine, smacked home a full one and continued to fire. For a moment I felt a bit of a prick, lying there against the safety of the wall while guys were risking their lives inside.
Then the bursts of fire died away. Single shots cracked out one, two, three, four. I knew what they meant: the assaulters were using their pistols to pop rounds into the heads of their victims, making certain they were dead.