Bridgett lifted her chin, indicating Alena's reflection in the rearview mirror.
“She
wouldn't.”
I expected Alena to offer a retort, or at least a confirmation, and when none came turned my head to see that the reason she'd become so silent was because she'd fallen asleep. Either that or she was avoiding participating in the conversation by pretending to fall asleep. I brought my attention back to the road.
“Maybe not, but she appreciates what you've done for us. I do, too.”
“Good, you should.” She sounded satisfied. “You know where you're going next?”
I shook my head. “Haven't had much time to think about it.”
“You could come back to the States. It's a big country, I'm sure you two could find a nice quiet corner to hide in for happily ever after.”
“You think?”
“Like I said, it's a big country.”
“No, the ‘happily ever after’ part.”
Bridgett grunted. “Fuck if I know. You two and baby makes three.”
I thought about that, didn't speak. Thinking about the future, at least outside of the immediate future, wasn't something I'd devoted time to in years. When we'd lived in Kobuleti,
the days had all seemed alike, and even as they passed, time felt like it was standing still. That was until Bakhar had died, until Tiasa had been taken, and in that, it seemed, our life there had been revealed for the purgatory it had been.
I was still thinking about it, lost in my thoughts, when the headlights burst into the car, shining much too close and much too bright. They appeared suddenly, no warning at all, and whoever was behind the wheel had been driving with them off, and as I realized that, I realized we were in trouble.
Bridgett knew it, too, managed to say “What the fuck?” and then followed it with an emphatic “Shit!” as the car behind us tried to clip our rear bumper. The Ford swerved, and she fought it back into line, accelerating. The road stretched straight and thin ahead of us as far as the headlights could see, no turnoffs, no buildings, just field on either side. From the backseat I heard Alena start awake. I twisted in the seat, got rocked a second time as the car following collided with us again.
“Stay down,” I told Alena. She was wearing her seatbelt, which reassured me somewhat.
“Who are they?” Alena demanded.
“No fucking idea,” I said. “Don't suppose either of you have a gun?”
“Talk to her,” Alena snarled.
“I told you, it's Ireland,” Bridgett snapped back, her eyes dancing between the view out the windshield and the view in the mirrors. “They don't like people having guns here!”
“Let's hope whoever's trying to drive us off the road had the same problem,” Alena said.
“I hate you,” Bridgett told her.
Behind us, the car was coming up for another try. As it swung out, I saw a new set of headlights revealed behind it, a second car, following close on the first.
“Now there are two of them,” I remarked.
“I can see that!”
“Don't you think you should lose them?”
“The fuck you think I'm trying to do?”
The Ford rocked again, and I heard something crack on either our car or theirs, and suddenly our wheels broke with the road and we were spinning and sliding. Headlights seemed to flash from impossible angles, Bridgett swearing a blue streak, and I heard the engine scream in agony as she tried to treat the automatic transmission like it was a manual. We flipped around, facing the opposite direction, still moving, now in reverse, and the motor was shrieking like it was about to burst.
“Try to PIT me, motherfucker?” Bridgett said, and wrenched the wheel again, stomping pedals and yanking on the shifter. The Ford flipped around in a J-turn, once more heading the right direction, and then there was a gunshot, and just as suddenly, instead of being on the road we were off of it. The suspension bounced us like kernels in hot oil, and I realized we'd lost a tire to a blowout. The car slewed crazily in soft earth, and both pairs of headlights were still coming after us.
Whoever it was, they had demonstrated their sincerity, even if they lacked skill. The PIT—precision immobilization technique—as Bridgett had called it, was used mostly by law enforcement to immobilize a target vehicle during a pursuit. When executed properly, the fleeing car would be nudged just enough out of line to force a spin that would bring it to a halt. When executed improperly, any number of things could happen, normally beginning and ending with the word “crash.”
Which was exactly what happened to us next.
CHAPTER
Thirty-seven
There was an air bag in my face when I came back, the
dust from broken safety glass in my eyes and nose and mouth, and I didn't understand why. Then I did, and I started, felt pain in my right knee and lower back and head. The car was at an angle, its nose tilted down, and Bridgett groaned behind the wheel. I pushed at my door, got it open, but couldn't understand why I was having such trouble getting out. Then I remembered my seatbelt.
“Out,” I said, and then, louder, “Out, get
out!”
The soil beneath my shoes was soft and wet, and I went for the rear door, but Alena had already kicked it open. The back tires were in the air, the whole car canted like a javelin thrust
into the earth, and as I pulled her free, the headlights found us again, both sets of them. I turned, keeping a hand on Alena, and with the light from the approaching cars could make out the field ahead and around us, sheep bleating and scattering in fear. The Ford had gone front-first into a creek, a four-foot drop, maybe ten feet across.
“Run,” I told Alena, but I needn't have bothered; she'd read the terrain the same as I had, and was already moving.
I rushed around to the driver's door, met Bridgett as she toppled out of the car. Headlights made the blood on her face shine, where it was flowing from above her right eye and her nose. She was unsteady as I helped her to her feet, and she managed two steps, then went down to a knee. I pulled her up, got an arm beneath hers, and dragged her with me down into the water. It was cold and moving fast, and the first part, at least, seemed to revive her, so that by the time we'd crossed to pull ourselves up the opposite embankment, she was shrugging me off, saying she was fine.
I made it up before her, then turned back to see the two cars were still closing, but slowing. Bridgett pulled herself to her feet beside me, and together we ran after Alena, trying to make for the deeper darkness. Whoever was behind us, the creek would stop them as it had stopped us, force them to follow on foot.
We'd covered maybe twenty meters when they started shooting at us, two short bursts from automatic weapons. I didn't look back and I sure as hell didn't stop. Unless they were exceptionally talented marksmen, there was no way they were going to hit us at this range, certainly not with submachine guns, and if they were using assault rifles, we'd have been shot dead already.
We kept running, and the light behind us ran out, and out of the darkness ahead, I could see Alena, and she had veered off
to the left, and after another second I saw why. An old barn resolved out of the night, ghostly pale stone and wood. By the time we'd reached it, Alena had already managed one of the two doors on the side, and I followed after Bridgett, again turning to spare a look at our pursuers. They'd left their headlights on, and now I could see there were only two of them, silhouettes making their way patiently toward us.
I pulled the door closed behind me, feeling along the wood in the deeper darkness until I found the locking bar. It resisted me, and I had to force it free before it would slide into place.
“Yeah, this is
so
much better,” Bridgett muttered from somewhere to my left.
“There are two of them,” I said. “Submachine guns. We've got maybe a minute before they reach us.”
I heard motion off to my side, the sound of metal clattering on metal. Alena cursed. There was absolutely no light in the barn, nothing coming in from above. After another second, I heard metal on stone, knew that Alena had found the bolt on the other door and thrown it.
“Light,” I said. “Matches, lighter, anything.”
Bridgett laughed bitterly.
“Start feeling around,” Alena said. “There must be something here we can use. A tool, something.”
I put my hand out to the wall, feeling the stone cold beneath it, using it as a guide, fumbling like a blind man. My left foot hit something hard and I reached out with my free hand for it, was rewarded with the feel of cold metal, thinking of the old joke about the five blind men trying to describe an elephant. Behind me and to the side there was another clatter as either Alena or Bridgett knocked something over. I tried getting a grip on whatever it was I was feeling, found an opening at the top, managed to lift it up with one hand. It felt heavy and ungainly,
and I couldn't imagine what it was. Maybe a milk can. Too awkward to use as a weapon. I let it go.
“Got something,” Bridgett whispered. “Tools, I think.”
“Keep talking,” I said, coming off the wall and trying to find her by sound alone.
“Wooden handle, two wooden, no, three, four wooden handles … rake, one's a rake, think I've got a shovel, too, feels like it… maybe an axe. Something else.”
My outstretched hand touched her body, and I felt her own hand take my arm, guide it to what she'd been feeling. It was, as described, a wooden handle, worn and smooth, and when I lifted it, the weight on the end was solid and familiar. With my other hand, I felt for the axe head, found it. The edge was dull. Not that it would matter if I got the chance to use it.
The handle on one of the doors rattled, checking it, then stopped. The darkness was disorienting, but I guessed it was the same one I'd locked.
Then a voice came floating in from outside, muted by the stone and wood, speaking in Russian.
“I know you're in there, David.”
It was Arzu Kaya.
“I've been waiting for you, watching your women,” he said, switching to English. It was the first time I'd heard him speak the language, and he spoke it well, and I wondered why he was using it, until he continued and I realized it was for Alena's and Bridgett's benefit, as much as my own. “You have very pretty women, David, even if they are too old to be worth anything.”
His voice seemed to fall and rise irregularly, bouncing between soft and loud as it was deflected by the stone. None of us inside our darkness moved, each of us trying to get a fix on his position by sound.
“The redhead,” Arzu said. “The one you were kissing at the
airport, she's pregnant, isn't she? Your wife, David? I know a few who pay extra for pregnant.”
Carefully, I started sliding my feet forward, back toward the door I'd locked when I'd entered, hoping I wasn't heading straight toward it, and hoping more that Arzu didn't just decide to open up and spray the wood with his submachine gun. Behind me, metal scraped stone as one of the women took up another of the farm implements.
“Who is the other one, the dark-haired one? Some bitch to fuck when your wife says no?”
I half expected Bridgett to respond to that, but she didn't. One of them was moving, though, I could hear her, but with Arzu's voice outside and the acoustics inside, I was having difficulty fixing her position.
“Don't you have anything to say, David?”
I had a lot to say, but I wasn't going to say it right then. My foot hit the wall, and with my free hand I reached out, feeling for the edge of the door. I'd come in close to it, within a foot, and used that as a guide to get my back against the stone wall. I took the axe in both hands, wondering who in the world I was trying to kid. Unless I could get around behind him, by the time I had managed to raise and swing it, Arzu would have shot me a dozen times.
“Then I will say it.” Arzu's voice seemed closer now, as if he was just outside the door. “You and your bitches locked in an old barn, and I am outside. If you had a gun, you would have used it already, so you have no gun. So you have no defense. But I have a gun, and if you make me come inside for you, David, not only will I kill you, I will kill your women, too. I will kill your child. But if you come out, I will let them live. You understand me?”
“You should have let it go,” I said.
“Let it go?” Arzu's voice crackled with anger. “How do I let it
go? The Russians, the Americans, everyone is looking at me because of you! They think I'm Bakhar, now, just like Bakhar! You did this, not me! You made this!”
“You'll let them live.” I made no effort to hide my contempt.
“Yes, I will,” Arzu said. “Or maybe I keep you alive long enough to watch what I do to them. Make you watch when I carve your baby out of the bitch's belly.”
He went quiet, and the silence inside the barn weighed like lead. Then, just as emphatically, it broke.
From the opposite side of the barn came the sudden sound of wood snapping, and a door I hadn't known was there flew open, and a silhouette filled it, large and lean. Theunis Mesick from Amsterdam with a submachine gun in his hands, and whether he could see me or not I didn't know, but he had his weapon pointed straight at me, and I had nowhere to go and no move to make.
The sub came up to his shoulder, and then Alena slammed him in the face with the shovel she'd found, and Theunis Mesick staggered backward, finger heavy on the trigger, muzzle flash as a strobe light as bullets whined wildly off the stone walls and pierced the roof above us. She hit him a second time, knocking him to the ground, then brought the blade of the tool down and into the back of his neck.
I grounded the axe as Alena scooped up the submachine gun, caught it when she threw it to me, pivoting in place. It was an old Sterling, and I tucked it against my side. Arzu was shouting Mesick's name, trying to figure out what had happened, and when no response came, he threw a burst at the door he'd been standing outside, and I stepped away from the wall and returned it with one of my own. The sound of gunfire echoing inside the barn was ferocious.