Ekaterina (3 page)

Read Ekaterina Online

Authors: Susan May Warren,Susan K. Downs

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense

“I’m an American. I have rights.” Her voice sounded like it wanted no part of her words, the tone feeble and ready to race for the border.

He smiled, just enough to annoy her, or perhaps frighten, and motioned to a chair. “Please, sit down.”

She looked behind her. He’d closed the door. A slit of a window high above her illuminated the dust clinging to the walls and ceiling, but did little to penetrate the cement room’s murky shroud. She steeled herself against an involuntary shudder and wrestled in a deep breath. “Why am I here?”

“I just want to talk to you. Please sit down.” The officer sat down, folded his large hands on the table, and again smiled.

She narrowed her eyes. If he was trying the Good Cop/Bad Cop routine, she wasn’t buying. The man might have incredible blue eyes and a bevy of solid power and strength poorly hidden under that ill-fitting gray jacket of his but, under the circumstances, those qualities weren’t at all appealing.

In fact, right now those blue eyes felt as cold as a Siberian winter as they pinned her down. She rubbed her hands on her arms, and took a calming breath, feeling anger knot her chest. “I’ll stand, thanks.”

The jerk pursed his lips, so arrogantly calm she wanted to slap him. Except, she wasn’t sure that, in reprisal, he wouldn’t just slap her into handcuffs and ship her off to the nearest gulag.

Did they still do that?

Her knees suddenly surrendered, and she reached for the chair. The officer smiled, as if in victory. “You don’t have anything to fear from me, Americanka.”

Yeah, right. She’d feel safer with a scorpion.

“You know English,” she said, finally latching onto her Russian. Somehow, speaking in another language felt like a barrier between her and reality.

One edge of his mouth tweaked, and his eyes held a hint of amusement. “Da.”

He took off his cap and ran his hand through a swatch of short black hair, cut short on the sides, unruly and curly locked on top. It made the planes of his high cheekbones and angular face seem that much sharper, dangerous. “Would you feel more comfortable speaking in your native tongue?”

“I’d feel more comfortable on my way to my hotel, thank you,” she snapped in Russian. “What is this about?”

He shrugged out of his jacket, which looked about two sizes too small, and crossed his arms over his black turtleneck. His bulging muscles made him appear every inch like a Russian mobster, ready to slice out her tongue.

“Let’s start with your friend, Ivan Grazovich. How do you know him?”

She frowned, scraped her mind for any remnant of understanding. “Who?”

His brow pinched, his eyes darkening. “Do you think I’m stupid?”

Oh, how the latent rebel in her wanted to jump all over that comment. She bit back a reply and shook her head. “I have no idea who you are talking about.”

He narrowed his eyes. “Why did you come to Russia?”

Kat exhaled a breath that felt like it started in New York. For the better part of two months, she’d been answering that question from various factions in her life—from her grandfather and her ex-boyfriend to her coworkers at the Heart-to-Heart adoption agency.

Even now, her answers felt unwieldy, slippery. To track down her identity? To unlock secrets that might account for a lifetime of deception? To unravel the riddle of her foggy ancestry?

To figure out who she was?

The answer to that question didn’t seem so difficult at the moment—she could clearly identify herself as an in-over-her-head thirty-year old teetering on the edge of tears, if not hysteria.

Under different circumstances, she might welcome the opportunity to spill her guts. She wasn’t opposed to the truth, but the bully just might find sadistic pleasure in sending her home if he knew how desperation drove her. “I’m a tourist.”

“Hmm. . .” he said, his eyes narrowing. She did him the pleasure of raising her chin and meeting his glower. She might possess the courage of a field mouse, but he didn’t have to know it. Her recent escape from Matthew’s hovering had taught her the value of masking her fear.

“Stay put.” The man rose, stalked toward the door. “I’ll be right back.”

Oh, joy. Kat folded her hands between her knees as the door clicked shut.

Now what? She heard nothing but her heart, beating a pathway to her mouth. The smell of her own sweat and the taste of fear repulsed her. Hadn’t she scoffed at her grandfather’s warnings of danger? Told him she could take care of herself? After all, she was the granddaughter of a World War II hero, the recipient of his gusty genes and her mother’s passion for truth.

C’mon, heritage of courage, kick in.
Kat stood, crept toward the door, and tried the handle. Locked.

She slapped her palm against the metal door, furious, her bravado dropping to her knees. She had the sick feeling that whatever Mr. Military had left to do, it wasn’t going to work nicely into her plans.

The door opened and Kat jumped, leaving her heart behind.

Wide, Dark, and Menacing entered the room. Kat shrank back, suddenly giving merit to the Bad Cop routine. This version of Russian militia held her backpack in his meaty grip. Easily six-foot-four, with a black stocking cap, dark glasses, and enough body-builder bulk to match every KGB nightmare, he grabbed her upper arm in his bullish grip and yanked her into the hall.

Okay,
now
she was ready to spill her guts. Why had she played games? Where was Good Cop when she needed him? “Where are you taking me?” she asked on a wisp of voice.

He glowered at her, and she clamped her mouth shut. Her heart in a pile of ash, she followed her arm down the hall, stumbling. Tears blinded her at his burning grip. Cop Number One had been downright gentle in comparison.

“Where are you taking me?” The words came out again in English, but this time her abductor ignored her. They cruised down the hall, toward a door, and Kat’s feet dragged. A cell? Oh, why hadn’t she listened to Matthew? She’d drop to his feet in apology the next time she saw him.

The thug stopped. Opened the door.

The gray tones of the overcast morning dove into the dank hall. “
Ooidti
.”

Leave?

She stared at Large and Mean, blinking. He shoved the backpack into her arms, then pushed her out the door.
“Beg
-
ee!”

Run!

Okay, yes, she could do that. Her legs moved before her brain could engage. She streaked along the shadow of the building, to the chain-link fence rimming the parking lot. Without a thought, she threw the backpack over and nearly vaulted the fence. She heard her pant leg rip as she straddled the top but didn’t care. Freedom burned her lungs, pumped her heartbeat into her ears.

She landed with a thump, then took off for the parking lot, feeling like she’d just escaped from Attica, wondering how soon it would take the hounds to track her down.

And what they’d do to her when they did.

-

Vadeem stood in the empty interrogation room, his suspicions multiplying like fruit flies on overripe apples.

She’d escaped. He flung the can of Sprite across the room—the one he’d purchased hoping to woo her into unloading her secrets—and sprinted down the hall toward customs control. He skidded up to one of the militia. “Did she come by here?”

The man’s blank look drove Vadeem to want to hit something, hard.

How had she escaped? He sprinted back to the room, glanced up at the window, then down the hall. The door at the end of the corridor hinted at her escape strategy. Palming his cell phone, he dialed. Ryslan picked up on the first ring.

“She’s gone. Alert airport security.”

“Who?”

“The American.” He deliberately kept his voice low. “She snuck out while I was getting her a. . .” he grimaced. “Nothing. Just call security.” He snapped the telephone closed and clenched his fist around it.

Sneaky, stubborn woman. Even if she wasn’t a suspect before, she was now. And to think he’d been nursing feelings of pity. Something about the way she held in her fraying composure with a chin-up glower sparked his respect. And her eyes, the color of dark honey, had him second-guessing his gut feeling that she was hiding something.

Until now.

His telephone shrilled. “
Slyshaio
,” he snapped.

“Security hasn’t seen her, but they’re on alert,” Ryslan reported, then added without pause, “We’ll find her.”

“Anyone watching Grazovich?”

“Denis has him. He just picked up his bag.”

“I’m there.” Vadeem slammed shut his phone and stalked toward the exit, following the sick feeling that, once he’d found his smuggler, the renegade Americanka wouldn’t be far behind.

-

Ilyitch stood on the upper concourse overlooking the parking lot, his legs wide, arms behind him as if in soldier stance, wishing all his ops played out with such precision. Miss America stood out like neon in the crowd, her red jacket screaming, “Bull’s eye!” as she stalked through foot traffic, trying to flag down a taxi. If it weren’t for the fact that the general already had her in his sights, Ilyitch might entertain a spur of worry about the FSB agent hot on her tail. But the general knew his trade.

Ilyitch watched as the general’s taxi cruised up, and the passenger door opened. Ilyitch imagined her surprise, perhaps even her smile as she greeted him, and yes, accepted his ride.

She slid into the cab without hesitation. Ilyitch shook his head, his chest only slightly tight, knowing she had just, with a sigh of relief, embraced the devil.

A feeling he understood.

Chapter 3

 

 

Kat sat on the day train, the hard woode
n bench scraping away the last vestiges of her co
mposure with every rhythmic jerk. She felt as if she’d been beaten like one of those floor rugs she’d seen some old
babushka
attack as they’d rolled through the last village. Still, her hard knot of terror in her chest eased with each passing kilometer. Who knew that angels dressed in black trench coats and spoke with an accent? God had sure been working overtime this morning. The Almighty must have activated a small battalion of unseen holy soldiers to yank her out of the grip of the customs officials.

Don’t smile, and don’t carry brass keys in your pocket.
Any travel book worth its salt would have included that, along with a list of pointers as to how to escape the clutches of the local militia.

Then again, who knew that angels came dressed not only in six-foot-four black, but in the garb of a friendly professor.

“Stopped shaking yet?” Professor Taynov turned around from the seat in front of her and smiled, the spidering lines around his eyes adding years to his youthful aura. Indeed, the history professor from Prague University, as he introduced himself moments after scooping her into his taxi, mocked the definition of middle aged, despite his graying hair. He had wide, strong hands, and his shoulders and arms filled out his trench coat. Even his energy, as they fast-walked through the Moscow train terminal, hinted at youthfulness. It wasn’t just the hair tint and wrinkles, however, that stretched his age. . .it was his eyes, as if they’d been plucked out of a battle weary soldier and transplanted into his wide, chiseled face and youthful body. Eyes that looked right through her and made her shiver.

Of course it was only a guess. She’d only known the man for four hours. But after conducting home studies and interviewing prospective adoptive parents for the past five years, she measured herself a pretty good judge of character. The fact that he’d also stopped his taxi and marched back into baggage claim to rescue her suitcase only confirmed the fact the man resembled a bona fide angel.

“Yes, I’m doing much better, thanks to you,” she answered. She tightened her ankles around her suitcase, wishing she’d packed as light as the other travelers around her. She already felt like some sort of pampered movie star, attracting attention as she wrestled the bag onto the train. “Why did you intervene?”

Professor Taynov gave her a look of surprise. “Because you looked like you needed rescuing. Besides, I know that a woman with such a beautiful smile can’t be a danger to Mother Russia.” He winked, and Kat’s eyes widened.

“Thank you,” she stammered, wondering suddenly about his motives. Was the man really traveling to Pskov on happenstance, or had she suddenly found an admirer expecting more gratitude repayment than she would produce? She rubbed her arms and stared out the window, wishing again her grandfather had consented to travel with her. Of course this joint-jarring rhythm would play havoc on his eighty-year-old bones

She curled her hands around the backpack on her lap and instinctively checked for the brass key in the front pocket. Her heartbeat still jumped every time she glimpsed someone in black entering her airspace—a painful regularity in Russia. She kept conjuring up a posse of the FSB regulars like the ones she had encountered at the airport. She hoped the man who’d freed her had also talked the passport officials into a full pardon. Who did they think she was, anyway? James Bond’s latest hottie?

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