“Don’t worry about me, Colonel,” Susic shouted. “I’ll meet up with you right away.” Even though he had been going downstairs, Susic was exhausted — too much deskwork, too little exercise, too much maraschino, Kazakov decided. If they made it through this night, he’d have to—
Kazakov’s attention was diverted to the sound of another string of noisemakers going off — close enough this time to smell the acidy gunpowder. “My God, not again.” He removed his radio from his belt to ask for a report …
… when suddenly he saw a bright yellow flash of light from inside the section of fence just east of the security building. He knew instinctively what it was. “Captain!” he shouted, turning toward Susic, then dodging away. “Move! Move!” But he knew it would be too late — the bullets were probably already in flight.
They were. The entry wound was less than the size of his little finger, but the exit wound tore the back of Susic’s head off.
Kazakov threw his legs out from under himself just as a bullet plowed into the pavement behind him. He rolled and rolled until he landed in the street, then leapt to his feet and dove behind a dark lightpost. A sniper! Probably KLA, but close enough to the fence to get a good shot off at lone figures at night. This was the first time something like this had happened in the Russian compound.
As his mind raced to assemble a plan of action, he found himself thinking the weirdest thoughts, such as: Damn, this sniper is good. The time delay between the bullet hitting Susic in the head and the gunshot sound was considerable, meaning that the shot had been done over a very long distance, at night. Remarkable men, those snipers. Training one took years and perhaps millions of rubles for a really good rifle and …
More fireworks, just a few dozen meters away — he heard them slap the pavement in front of him just before they popped off. Kazakov wished he had his armored staff car just then — that sniper was still out there, using the noisemakers as cover for his attacks. He pulled his radio from his web belt: “Apasna, apasna, this is Alpha, snipers along the fence line east of Blue, all personnel man your duty posts and prepare to repel attackers! Repeat, snipers on the fence line, Charlie is down. Full nighttime challenge. All stations, report status to security control!”
“Alpha, gdye vi? Say position!” It was the duty sergeant. “Take cover! Units will respond to your location. Say position from Blue.”
A tremendous explosion made Kazakov duck. It was a direct antitank rocket hit on the security building near the main gate. He had obviously underestimated these Kosovo Liberation Army thugs — they must have very good weaponry to strike that building from far away.
“Blue has been hit! Blue is hit!” Kazakov shouted into the radio. He swept his AKM-74 assault rifle across the slowly clearing billowing smoke around the security building. There were armed men jumping across the damaged walls and structures, silhouetted against the fog of blasted concrete and dirt, but from fifty meters away Kazakov couldn’t tell if they were Russians or KLA. But they were jumping from the outside in, so Kazakov assumed they were enemy KLA rebels. He fired at a couple of them who were clustered close together, then immediately rolled left several times, got to his feet, and scampered in a low crouch behind a concrete street signpost. It was a good thing he’d moved — seconds later, the spot from where he had fired was cratered with bullets.
There was nothing he could do here, Kazakov thought grimly. He hated the idea of turning his back on any surviving perimeter guards, but the invaders had the upper hand, and he was alone. Better to retreat, find help, and organize a counterassault in force.
Kazakov had just started running back toward the headquarters building when he saw his command car speeding around the corner, a gunner manning the gun turret, its headlight slits in place to mask its approach. He waved, and the vehicle veered toward him. The command car held four armed infantrymen along with a radio operator, aide, driver, gunner, and security man. If it was fully manned, it might be enough to mount a good counterassault until more troops moved into—
Kazakov was so busy planning his next move that he failed to notice that the command car was heading right at him. By the time he realized something was wrong, it was too late. The armored car plowed into the colonel at over thirty kilometers an hour.
His thick winter battle dress uniform and helmet saved his life, but Kazakov was knocked near unconscious by the force of the impact. All he could register were excited, now jubilant Albanian- speaking voices, and flashlight beams sweeping across his face.
“Dobriy vyechyeer, Colonel Kazakov,” one of the Albanian voices said in very good Russian. “Good we should bump into you like this. We were on our way to visit you when your men informed us you were inspecting the security posts.”
“S kyem vi? Who are you with?” Kazakov muttered. “What unit?”
“You know who, Colonel,” the man replied. “We are your sworn enemies. We have vowed to do everything in our power to force you to leave our homeland. You are invaders, trespassers, and murderers. The penalty for murder in Kosovo is death. Your sentence will be carried out immediately.”
“You have already murdered many Russian soldiers,” Kazakov said. “Reinforcements are on the way. Leave me and save yourselves or you will all be slaughtered.”
“I would have preferred it if you simply begged for your life, Colonel,” the man said. “But you do bring up a good suggestion. We should withdraw from here immediately. Das svedanya, Colonel Kazakov. Spasiba va vychyeer Thanks for the wonderful evening.”
“Idi v zhopu, pizda,” Kazakov cursed.
The flashlight beam shined directly into Kazakov’s eyes, and the man’s face moved close enough that he could smell the alcohol, cordite, and blood on the man’s uniform. “You want to inspect the security posts, Colonel dirt-mouth? Kharasho. Allow me to take you there.”
Kazakov’s legs were chained to the back of the command car, and the rebels dragged the colonel’s body through the streets of Prizren, firing into the sky in jubilation. Kazakov remained conscious for several blocks until his head hit the debris of a destroyed truck and he was mercifully knocked unconscious. His last thought was of his wife and his three sons. He had not seen them in so many months, and now he knew they would never see him again: they would never permit the family to see a corpse as bad as he knew his was going to look.
At the front gate to the Russian security zone, the colonel was hung upside down over the entry control point road, stripped naked, then riddled with machine-gun fire until his body could no longer be recognized as human. The rebels were long gone before United Nations reinforcements arrived.
ONE
Zhukovsky Flight Research Center,
near Bykovo, Russian Federation
Even with many high-intensity lights ringing the area, it was almost impossible to see the big transport plane through the darkness and driving snowstorm as it taxied over to its parking spot. Its port-side turboprop engines, the ones facing the terminal building, the honor guard, a small band, and a group of waiting people, had already been shut down, and as soon as the plane was stopped by ground crews with lighted wands, the other two engines were also shut down. The ramp suddenly became eerily quiet, the only sound that of a long line of hearses’ wheels crunching on snow. On one side of the transport plane’s tail, seventeen hearses waited; on the other side were seventeen limousines for the family members, plus several official-looking government vehicles. From the official vehicles, two men surrounded by security guards alighted and took places beside the honor guard.