The room was as I'd left it, except that the maid service had come, and all of Kekela's things were gone. None of my belongings looked to have been disturbed, and it surprised me a little bit. It wasn't that I'd expected Kekela to rob me; but given how we'd parted company, and how bad the situation had looked for me, at least to her eyes, I wouldn't have blamed her if she had. Dead men don't need laptops, after all.
Whether she'd left my things alone out of respect for the departed or in the hope that I'd come to collect them, I had no way of knowing. It was unlikely I ever would. I wouldn't be seeing her again.
While I was settling the bill, the concierge presented me with the reservations he'd been able to find, apologizing profusely. The best he'd come up with was a flight from Dubai to
Tbilisi, via Istanbul. That was workable, though not ideal. What was even less ideal was that the flight departed Dubai at a quarter of three in the morning. I thanked him, headed to the airport, where I confirmed that the earliest I'd be leaving the UAE for Turkey was at two forty-five. I booked a new connection from Istanbul, this time directly to Batumi. I spent the next eight hours checking my phone for messages and worrying, which had turned into the same thing.
I managed about an hour of sleep on the flight to Turkey. I didn't manage any on the flight to Georgia.
The journey from Dubai to what had once been my home took nineteen hours. It wouldn't have mattered if it had taken nineteen minutes.
I had arrived too late.
For a long time, I don't know how long, I stood in the rain, trying to get myself to move, to do what had to be done.
I just couldn't do it.
At some point, I found myself standing in what remained of the studio, looking at myself in the blurry and broken mirror. The heat had made fractures in the glass, including a major one that bisected my reflection, splitting my head into two broken pieces, out of alignment, out of proportion. The fissure ran down, tearing off a portion of my neck before jinking again, cutting neatly across my chest. As a visual metaphor, I thought it was spot-on.
Vladek Karataev's phone was ringing.
I took it from my pocket, stared at the display telling me that some Unknown Caller wanted me to answer. One of Vladek's business associates, maybe, calling to gloat. A wrong number.
I keyed the phone to answer, put it to my ear.
Her voice came soft and anxious, her strange mutt accent of all the languages the Soviets had made her learn. She was speaking English.
“Are you all right?” I had no voice to answer, and she asked it again. “Atticus? Are you all right?”
“I am now,” I told Alena.
CHAPTER
Eighteen
Kobuleti's chief of police, Mgelika Iashvili, lived by
himself in a sweet-looking cottage off the town's main street, facing the beach and the Black Sea. In daylight, it was a brightly painted, almost garish, domicile, in baby blue and pine green with bright orange trim, colors meant, I presumed, to foster a sense of joyful beach festivities. At night, in the rain, it was monochrome and ugly, a gingerbread house that had been robbed of its treats.
I parked my rental across the street, killed the engine, and eyeballed the block. Most of the houses along the beach were rented to tourists during the summer season, now at its height. Lights burned in a few of them, including at least one in Mgelika
Iashvili's home. By the clock in the car, it was three minutes to one in the morning, and the rain had finally stopped.
I got out, made my way across the street. There was nobody about, and the only thing I was hearing was the rustle of the Black Sea. A weak dome of light rose up from the south, where the clubs and cafés kept their doors open all hours. When I strained for it, I could catch an occasional thread of music through the noise of the tide coming in. With the departure of the rain, the summer warmth tried to return. If I hadn't been soaked to the skin, I might've been comfortable.
His car was parked out front of the house, rainwater dripping slowly off the fenders. I squatted down and took a look beneath, and the ground below seemed as wet as everywhere else. I put a hand to the hood, felt it cool, though it might've been the rain as much as time that was responsible for that.
I went to the door and raised my hand to knock, then saw it was already slightly ajar. I checked the street again, and nothing had changed, and I didn't see any vehicles parked nearby other than my own, and I didn't know what to make of it. Paranoia and common sense began to wrestle around in my skull.
Paranoia won, and I prodded the door open further with my foot, then slipped through as quietly as I could. The entrance dumped straight into a small living room, the layout not dissimilar to what my house had been. Nothing looked to be out of place, and it was clear that Iashvili had a taste for both the modern and the expensive.
I moved forward, passing the open door to the bedroom. Music was playing softly inside, some jazz fusion. When I looked I saw that the bed was unmade and empty. I held there for a second, listening for movement that wasn't my own, anything that would tell me if there was another body present, and nothing came back. He'd been here, had been here recently, but there was no sign of the man.
At the far end of the kitchen was the back door, ajar the way the front had been. An empty bottle of wine stood in the sink, along with a set of dirty dishes. Nothing was broken, nothing was stained with blood.
I went out the back, down a short run of stairs and onto the rocky beach, wondering if the chief of police had been expecting me to come calling.
“Where are you?” Alena had asked.
“Kobuleti.”
Her inhale was sharp in my ear. “It's not safe. Get out of there.”
I tried not to laugh, but the relief at simply hearing her voice made it impossible. I'm sure I sounded just shy of hysterical. “No kidding. Where are you?”
“Sochi.”
“Russia.”
“I had to take the ferry from Poti. I'm heading west tomorrow, I have a room booked at the Londonskaya, in Odessa, name Angelika Radkova.” She paused for breath, and I realized that tension was releasing for her much as it had for me. “Meet me there.”
“I will,” I said.
For a few seconds, we listened to the sound of each other breathing, the proof of life.
“What happened?” I asked.
“Men came. Three of them, just after sunrise yesterday. Iashvili called to warn me. He woke me up. Miata and I would have died in the fire if he hadn't.”
“He warned you?”
“Yes.”
“They weren't looking for you,” I said.
“Whether for me or for you, it doesn't matter. They came to kill whoever they found.”
“Either I owe Mgelika thanks, or he owes me an explanation.”
“Or both.”
I had stepped out of the ruined studio as we'd been speaking, now took another look around the place that had been our home for almost six years. I'd liked Georgia; I'd liked Kobuleti; I'd liked it enough that I'd been willing to spend the rest of my life here with Alena.
We'd never come back, I realized.
“I'll want an explanation before I consider gratitude,” I said. “He knew they were coming. He just as likely pointed them at you.”
“The Londonskaya,” Alena said. “In Odessa.”
“Tomorrow night.”
“Did you find her? Was she in Dubai?”
“No.”
“I'm sorry.”
“I'll see you tomorrow night,” I said.
“Yes,” she said. “Please.”
He was on the beach, maybe twenty meters from his home, and when I first saw him I thought he was dead, facedown near the edge of the tide.
Then I saw he was moving.
Then I saw the woman he was moving with.
She saw me first, but that was mostly because she was on her back, and by the time she noticed me, I was practically standing on top of them. When she saw me, she screamed.
Iashvili stopped mid-stroke, looking down at her, confused,
then up to see me. It was hard to make out his expression, but I was pretty sure alarmed was a good place to start. He scrambled backward, onto his haunches and then onto his backside. He still had the muscles of a weight lifter, the solid core, barrel chest, and girder-thick arms. The woman rolled, gathering the blanket she'd been lying on around her.
“Hi, Chief.” I spoke in Georgian. “We need to talk.”
“David! Jesus Christ!”
I turned to the woman, who'd succeeded in concealing most of herself with the blanket. It was hard to tell, but I put her in her forties, attractively so.
“Mgelika and I have some things to discuss,” I told her. “Why don't you go wait for him in the house?”
She looked at Iashvili, still sitting on his ass on the rocky beach. He hadn't taken his eyes off me. “'Lika?”
The chief and I stared at each other, and then he reached for his shorts, discarded nearby, saying, “Yeah, go back inside, Vicca. Open another bottle of wine, okay? I won't be long.”
Vicca looked at me doubtfully, then back to Iashvili. “You're sure?”
He was standing now, shorts firmly in place. He held out his hand to her, and she took it, allowed him to help her to her feet.
“I'm sure,” he said, and he kissed her cheek for good measure. “Won't be long,” he promised.
We watched as she worked her way back to the house, saw her silhouette pass through the doorway. She looked back at us once more before going inside, and Iashvili gave her a reassuring wave.
Only when she was out of sight did he turn his attention back to me.
“You going to kill me now?” Mgelika Iashvili asked me.
“You going to give me a reason to?”
He considered, then shook his head. After a half second, he gestured along the edge of the water, and I nodded, and we began walking, side by side.
“Before you went down to Batumi, I never had reason to fear you,” the chief said.
“And now you do?”
“I know what you did there. I know it was you. I can't prove it, I wouldn't even if I could. But I know you killed that fuck Karataev.”
“It was Karataev who bought you off?” I asked. “Paid you to say that Bakhar had killed himself and his family?”
“He gave me a choice.” Iashvili stooped, scooping up one of the wave-worn rocks from the beach without breaking stride. He threw it overhand out at the water. “I could take their money. Or they could kill me and make it look like I did it.”
“You're the police.”
“And who the fuck are you?” He glared at me. “Who the fuck are you telling me that? You killed four men in Batumi and fuck knows how many more wherever you've been. And you killed that other one, too, right? That one of Karataev's we found at Bakhar Lagidze's home when we found his family.”
I shrugged.
“So don't fucking condescend to me, David-Mercer-whoever-the-fuck-you-really-are. You're not from this place; you think you know, but you don't. People who do the right thing, you've seen what happens to them. People like Bakhar.”
The logic seemed circular to me, but I kept myself from saying so. We resumed walking.
“I did you a
favor,”
Iashvili told me. “They showed up, fucking put a gun in my mouth, asked where the fuck you lived, where David Mercer fucking lived. You don't lie to people like that. You lie to people like that, they come back and make sure you take a long time dying.”
“I know.”
“As soon as they left me, I called your wife, I called Yeva, to warn her. You know why I did that?”
“So you could sleep at night?”
“So this wouldn't happen, this thing right here, right now! You understand what I'm telling you? I did you a fucking favor!”
“For all the wrong reasons.”
“Jesus on the cross, you judge me? She's still alive, right? Yeva's still alive!”
“Who were they?”
“The ones your wife fucking killed?” He shook his head, morbidly amused. “Is that what you two do? Between teaching ballet and jogging through town, I mean, is that it? You go around killing people?”
“Sometimes I try to get in a little light reading. I like the works of Stephen Crane and Tim O'Brien.”
He didn't laugh.
“Were they friends of his?” I asked. “Of Karataev's?”
“Man like that didn't have friends. He had partners, he had colleagues, people he made business with. That's who they were. I told you when you left for Batumi that day, I told you that you had no idea who Lagidze was, what he was into. Now you know, but I think you still don't, not at all.”
“Which is it?”
He stopped again, turned to face me. We'd covered a fair stretch of the beach, his house lost behind us. The clouds had blown through enough to allow pieces of the night sky to sneak through. There was no moon.
“This isn't some American gangster movie bullshit,” Iashvili said. “There isn't some Don Corleone like that, someone sitting at the top, someone giving the orders. This is only about money, about business, that's all it ever is about.
Nothing else matters. Russian mob works with Albanians, Italian Mafia works with the fucking Roma. South Ossetians work with Georgians like Bakhar Lagidze, and Georgians like Bakhar work with Russians like Karataev. Doesn't matter who hates who, who wants to kill who, Muslims, Christians, new capitalists or old communists, doesn't matter. Everyone's involved if there's money, and the money is the thing keeping them together.
“You want me to give you a name or several names, it doesn't matter. You fucked their business, you've cost them their money. They don't allow that. So they come looking for you, to kill you, and while they're at it, they'll kill your wife and your dog and anyone you talked to if they can, they