Walking Dead (9 page)

Read Walking Dead Online

Authors: Greg Rucka

 

“Maybe.”

 

“You're being like that with me? Don't you trust me?”

 

“I trust you completely, Arzu Bey. It's the people around you I don't know that I don't trust.”

 

“Just us here in the car.”

 

“Kuwait,” I said.

 

Arzu laughed. “You're worrying about bullshit!”

 

“That's easy for you to say. I'm the one who's got to move them. You'll already have my money.”

 

“Just bribe someone, David,” Arzu said, starting the car rolling forward again. “That's what I did with the last one I sent that way. You'd have liked her, she was young. Very pretty, not like these others. I should've kept her.”

 

“She went to Kuwait? You got someone I can deal with there? That would be very helpful.”

 

“I'm sorry, no,” Arzu said. “It was Dubai, she went with a couple of others. But no paper needed on any of them, just money put in the right hands, you know what I'm saying.”

 

“Dubai isn't Kuwait.”

 

“It's all the same, wherever you go. Europe, America, UAE, whatever. Always someone you can bribe.”

 

I thought about what he was saying, the likelihood that Tiasa was now in Dubai. “It can get expensive that way.”

 

“What's the saying, you have to spend money to make
money?” He laughed. “Most of these girls, once they've been taught, you can make the money back in a night, two at the most.”

 

“Speaking of money,” I said.

 

Arzu laughed again. “Okay, I'll give you a price. Say, twenty thousand.”

 

“That's not a price. That's a joke. Ten. Maybe.”

 

I caught Arzu's smile from the side, realized that he was pleased with my counteroffer, pleased that I was willing to play the game. That we were haggling over human beings the way I'd haggled over the Dnepr clearly bothered him not at all.

 

“David, you're trying to rob me! Perhaps I can do nineteen thousand.”

 

“Twelve.”

 

“Eighteen.”

 

“Fifteen.”

 

“Seventeen. No less, I just can't, even for friends.”

 

“Seventeen,” I agreed, and I thought about it, then. I didn't have nearly that much on me in cash, but I could get it. One call to Nicholas Sargenti and a wire transfer and I could put the money in Arzu's hand before tomorrow noon. In exchange, I would take possession of three lives.

 

Then what? Tell them to run for it? Give them a bundle of bills and wish them good luck and Godspeed? Send them to Georgia? To New York? London? Pay for them to make their way home? And all the time, let Tiasa get further away from me; all the time, let her hours of suffering increase.

 

Never mind the fact that I would be paying Arzu for three lives, putting money into his pocket for trafficking in slaves.

 

We'd pulled up outside the hotel, Arzu letting the engine idle. I unfastened my seatbelt.

 

“You want a wire transfer or cash?” I asked him.

 

“Cash is best, if you can do it.”

 

“You'll have the other girl by tomorrow?”

 

“Sure.”

 

“Call me when you're ready,” I told him. “I'll have the cash.”

 

He nodded, wished me a good night, and I got out of the car and headed into the lobby. He hadn't asked for any money in advance, and I understood that was because he didn't actually need it as security. Even if the deal we'd made fell through, he'd easily find another buyer.

 

A guy like Arzu would always find another buyer.

 

 

The Zorlu had a bar off the lobby, done up like an English pub, and I went inside and ordered myself a whiskey, a double, neat. I hadn't had liquor in almost five years, since before I'd taken up with Alena, and I'd never been much of a heavy drinker prior to that. In Kobuleti, we would occasionally share a bottle of wine, but even that was infrequent.

 

When my drink came, I slammed about half of it back, then took the remainder more slowly. By the time I'd finished, it had been twelve minutes since Arzu and I had parted company.

 

I paid and headed back into the lobby, checked with the concierge for the phone number I wanted, and then assured him it was not due to a problem with the Zorlu that I wanted it. Then I went outside, and pulled Vladek's BlackBerry from where I'd been carrying it in my jacket pocket. His SIM card was still in it, and I liked that irony.

 

I called the police. I spoke only in Russian. I gave them the address of the apartment building I'd left less than an hour earlier, and I gave them Arzu Kaya's name, and I told them there were two other men there, and that they were armed. I told them about the three women. When they asked me, I told them my name was Vladek.

 

Then I hung up, popped the battery out of the BlackBerry,
and pulled the SIM card. I broke it between my fingers, tossed it in the gutter, then went back inside and up to my room. Packing took all of four minutes, and within ten I'd checked out and was on the Dnepr. I headed to the Trabzon airport in search of another hotel, thinking about Tiasa, wondering how in the world I was going to find her in Dubai, if she was even in Dubai. Thinking about the three women I'd seen, and the little help I'd been able to give them.

 

It wasn't enough, not nearly enough.

 

But it was the best that I could do.

 

 

CHAPTER
Ten

I called Alena from Atatürk International Airport just
before ten the next morning, which put the clock approaching noon back in Kobuleti. We had long ago worked out a communications protocol to follow if we were separated, a system that had one or the other of us checking in every third day at a prearranged, but shifting, time, so we would know when to expect the call.

 

I was calling early, for two reasons. The first was that I'd be in the air en route to Dubai when the scheduled time came. The second was because I missed her.

 

The phone rang three times before she answered, saying, “This is Yeva.”

 

“It's me.”

 

“What's happened?”

 

“No trouble, I'm just going to be in transit later, thought I'd get the call in now.” I listened to her exhale. “Nothing to worry about.”

 

“Transit. Not coming home?”

 

“Heading to Dubai,” I said. “We're going to need a new motorcycle, I had to leave the Dnepr in Trabzon.”

 

“Dubai. You have a location?”

 

“No.”

 

“Where'd the information come from?”

 

“The guy who moved her.”

 

“He gave you specifics?”

 

“I was loath to question him directly.”

 

“That was probably wise. Turkey is not Georgia.”

 

“How're things there?”

 

I heard the hesitation before she answered. “We're fine.”

 

“Miata's taking care of you?”

 

“I'm taking care of him. How are
you?”

 

“I've been better,” I said. “I've been a lot better.”

 

“Then maybe you should come home.”

 

“I can't, not yet.”

 

“After Dubai, then.”

 

“Depends on what happens.”

 

There was another silence, and then Alena asked, “Have you really thought this through?”

 

“Probably not,” I admitted.

 

“Perhaps it's time you should.”

 

“Just say what you want to say.”

 

“Don't be angry at me. If you do not consider these things, I must.”

 

“I'm not angry at you. I'm tired and I'm frustrated, and neither of those things are your fault.”

 

“If you find nothing in Dubai. What then?”

 

“I keep looking.”

 

“Yes, but for how long? Another week? A month?”

 

“As long as it takes.”

 

“It might take never.”

 

“I'm going to text you a couple of numbers,” I told her. “I should be reachable through them if something comes up. I should get any messages you leave me. Otherwise, expect me to call according to schedule.”

 

“Come home,” Alena said again.

 

“I'll call you in a couple of days,” I said.

 

She was saying something as I hung up, but I missed it, hearing her too late, already killing the connection.

 

 

After lunch, I hunted up a place to plug in the laptop, then paid the fee to get online. I did some quick research on Dubai, using my David Mercer Amex to make a reservation at the Four Points Sheraton on Khalid bin al-Waleed Road. I booked for three nights, to make it look good.

 

Then I put my last clean SIM in the BlackBerry and dialed up an international dating service based out of London. The service was called Singles Internationale, and you could hear the “e” they put on the end. The recorded greeting was by a woman with a sophisticated English accent, and I bypassed her as quickly as I could, navigating the menus until I'd accessed the mailbox I wanted. It was for a fifty-seven-year-old bi-curious divorcée from Bristol whose username was “Alone & Anxious,” a profile that I was reasonably certain didn't get a lot of hits. I left my current number, asking for a call back. Then I hung up, stowed the laptop, and found myself an unoccupied corner of an empty gate to wait. I'd barely had time to start counting takeoffs and landings when my phone rang.

 

“Michael?” Nicholas Sargenti asked.

 

“Hello, Nicholas. Thanks for calling so promptly.”

 

“I do hope you weren't waiting.” He spoke in English, his accent slight, an odd mixture of French monotone married to Italian lilt. “It is only that the service notified me of the message in the box a few minutes ago, and I thought it best if I waited until I was somewhere quiet before returning your call.”

 

“Not a problem,” I told him.

 

“What can I do for you?”

 

“I'm traveling on business, heading to Dubai. I'm meeting a couple of colleagues at the Four Points Sheraton on Khalid bin al-Waleed. David Mercer, Danil Joshi, and Anthony Shephard.”

 

“David Mercer, Danil Joshi, and Anthony Shephard,” Sargenti repeated, and I knew he was committing the names to memory rather than writing anything down. “You've spoken of Mr. Mercer before, but these other two, this is, I think, the first mention you've made of them, Michael.”

 

“Danil's a Georgian,” I said. “I think he's from Tbilisi, but I'm not sure, to be honest. Anthony's out of Montreal.”

 

“Hmm. Have you known them long?”

 

“No, not long at all. Anthony gets around, though. Danil's not much of a traveler.”

 

“I see. Both gentlemen are aware they need an entry visa to visit Dubai, I take it?”

 

“Anthony's already taken care of his. Danil might have some difficulty, being from Georgia.”

 

“I'd think he can get in on an EU provision. I'll look into it, if you'd like.”

 

“That would be very helpful, thank you,” I said.

 

“And you're meeting them when?”

 

“My flight doesn't get in until after midnight, so I doubt I'll
be seeing them until late tomorrow. Morning of the day after at the latest.”

 

“If either of them needs my help, I hope you'll consider mentioning my name.”

 

“Goes without saying. There's one more thing.”

 

“Of course.”

 

“Elizavet talked to you about freeing up some funds. If you can earmark two hundred or so for this trip, that'd be great.”

 

“I'm sorry?”

 

“Shouldn't need more than that,” I said.

 

“No, no, that will pose no problem,” Sargenti said. “What did you say about Elizavet?”

 

“You saw her last week.”

 

“We spoke, yes. I've seen neither of you since we were in Prague together, at the end of March.”

 

“Sorry,” I said. “I meant call, not saw. Jet lag, you'll have to forgive me.”

 

“Of course. I remain, as always, at your service.”

 

“Which we both appreciate.”

 

“Please give my regards to Messrs. Mercer, Joshi, and Shephard. I hope your business with them brings much success, Michael.”

 

“Yeah,” I said. “You and me both.”

 

I hung up, went back to watching the planes taking off and landing. It was a bright day outside the airport, a vivid blue sky and heat distortion rising off the tarmac. After a while, I swapped out SIM cards again, and then sent a text message to Alena's mobile, with the phone numbers I'd promised. Less than a minute later, she sent a reply.

 

RECEIVED.

 

That was all. That was all there should have been. Certainly nothing more, certainly nothing sentimental. Certainly no
explanation as to why she'd deceived me about meeting Nicholas in Tbilisi, where she'd really gone, what she'd really done. No justification for lying to me.

 

 

At twenty-three minutes past midnight, after ninety minutes in line, I cleared customs and entered the United Arab Emirate of Dubai.

 

 

CHAPTER
Eleven

The second night, for nine hundred dirham, I brought a
hooker back to Danil Joshi's room at the Marina Palais Royale Hotel, which was as luxe an establishment as the name implied. I walked her openly past the security guard at the door the same way I'd seen countless other male guests do. We didn't touch, and we kept a reasonable distance between us, and no one looked at us twice, even though everyone on the staff knew what she was and my intentions with her, and never mind that sex outside of marriage was against the law. I was a business traveler, she was my guest, and in the end, weren't we only helping the economy?

 

Her name was Kekela, which means “beautiful” in
Georgian, and it suited her. She was tall, almost Alena's height, tanned and fit, with black hair that dropped in a glossy cascade to only a few inches above her hips, held away from her face by a pair of pearl-inlaid hair clips. Her features were sweet, even innocent, and she knew how to apply makeup for best effect, highlighting her cheekbones and drawing out her auburn eyes so they shone with anticipation and passion.

 

Once inside my room, Kekela went straight to the couch, kicking off her high heels on the way. The shoes were black and shiny, part of her nightclub ensemble. I fixed the locks on the door, and when I turned around again she was already lounging, one long leg extended on the cushions, the other curled beneath it. The pose made her skirt ride up, revealing the top of one stocking and the elastic from the garter belt that held it secure. The stocking was black and sheer, the garter belt black and lace. With her right hand she pulled the clips from her hair, tossing each onto the coffee table, while her left worked the buttons on her blouse, unfastening them one after the other. As I watched, she teased her top open. Her bra matched the garter belt.

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