Gabriel clicked the STOP icon and looked at Eli Lavon.

  “Sounds to me as if you’ve got him,” Lavon said

  “Maybe,” replied Gabriel. “Or maybe Gennady’s got us.”

  “It can’t hurt to meet with him.”

  “It might hurt,” Gabriel said. “In fact, it might hurt a lot.”

  Gabriel slid the toggle bar of the audio player back to the beginning of the conversation and clicked PLAY again.

  “I know who you are. In fact, I know everything there is to know about you.”

  He pressed STOP.

  “Figure of speech,” said Lavon. “Nothing more.”

  “You’re sure about that, Eli? You’re one hundred percent sure?”

  “I am sure the sun will rise tomorrow morning and that it will set tomorrow night. And I am reasonably confident Mikhail will survive a drink with Gennady Lazarev.”

  “Unless Gennady serves him a glass of polonium punch.”

  Gabriel reached for the computer mouse, but Lavon stilled his hand. “We came to Copenhagen to make the meeting,” Lavon said. “Now make the meeting.”

  Gabriel picked up his phone and dialed Mikhail’s mobile. The bleating of his ringtone came back at him from the speakers of the computer, as did the sound of Mikhail’s voice when he answered.

  “Do it tomorrow night,” said Gabriel. “Control the venue to the best of your ability. No surprises.”

  Gabriel hung up without another word and listened while Mikhail dialed Gennady Lazarev’s number. Lazarev answered immediately.

  “I’m so glad you called.”

  “What can I do for you, Mr. Lazarev?”

  “You can have dinner with me tomorrow night.”

  “I have something with Viktor.”

  “Make up an excuse.”

  “Where?”

  “I’ll find some place out of the way.”

  “Not too out of the way, Mr. Lazarev. I can’t be out of pocket for more than an hour or so.”

  “How’s seven?”

  “Seven is fine.”

  “I’ll send a car for you.”

  “I’m at the Hotel d’Angleterre.”

  “Yes, I know,” said Lazarev before severing the connection. Gabriel switched the audio source of the computer from Mikhail’s phone to the transmitter in Gennady Lazarev’s room at the Imperial. The three Russians were laughing uncontrollably. Surely, thought Gabriel, they were laughing at him.

  44

  COPENHAGEN, DENMARK

  The second day of the forum was a tired rerun of the first. Mikhail remained loyally at Viktor Orlov’s side throughout, smiling with the overbright air of a man who was about to commit adultery. At the cocktail reception, he once again clung to the festive embrace of the Brazilians, who seemed crestfallen when he turned down their invitation to join them for a romp through some of Copenhagen’s livelier nightclubs. Taking his leave, he extracted Viktor from the clutches of the Kazakh oil minister and herded him into the back of their hired limousine. He waited until they were a few blocks from the D’Angleterre before saying that he hadn’t the strength for dinner. He did so in a voice that was loud enough to be picked up by any Russian transmitters present.

  “What’s her name?” asked Orlov, who already knew of Mikhail’s plans for that evening.

  “It isn’t that, Viktor.”

  “What is it then?”

  “I have a catastrophic headache.”

  “I hope it’s nothing serious.”

  “I’m sure it’s only a brain tumor.”

  Upstairs in his room, Mikhail made a few phone calls to London for the sake of his cover and sent a naughty e-mail to his secretary to let the cybersleuths of Moscow Center know that he was human after all. Then he showered and laid out his clothes for the evening, which proved to be more of a challenge than he first imagined. How does one dress, he thought, when one is betraying his ersatz employer by meeting with executives of an oil company owned and operated by Russian intelligence? He settled on a plain suit, Soviet gray in color, and a white dress shirt with French cuffs. He decided against a necktie for fear it would make him appear overeager. Besides, if it was their intention to kill him, he didn’t want to wear an article of clothing that could be used as a murder weapon.

  At Gabriel’s instruction, he left every light in the room burning and hung the DO NOT DISTURB sign on the latch before making his way to the elevators. The lobby was a sea of delegates. As he headed toward the door, he saw Yossi, newly minted reporter for the nonexistent Energy Times, interviewing one of the tieless Iranians. Outside a gritty snow was blowing like a sandstorm across the expanse of King’s New Square. A black Mercedes S-Class sedan waited curbside. Standing next to the open rear door was an eight-foot Russian. If his name wasn’t Igor, it should have been.

  “Where are we going?” Mikhail asked as the car shot forward with a lurch.

  “Dinner,” grunted Igor the driver.

  “Well,” said Mikhail quietly, “I’m glad we cleared that up.”

  The Russian driver did not hear Mikhail’s remark, but Gabriel did. He was behind the wheel of an Audi sedan, parked on a side street around the corner from the hotel’s entrance. Keller was beside him, a tablet computer on his knees. On the screen was a map of Copenhagen, with Mikhail’s position depicted as a blinking blue light. At that instant, the light was moving rapidly away from King’s New Square, headed toward a section of Copenhagen not known for its restaurants. Gabriel turned the key with no sense of urgency. Then he looked at the blue light and followed carefully after it.

  It soon became apparent that Mikhail and Gennady Lazarev would not be dining in Copenhagen that evening. Because within minutes of leaving the hotel, the big black Mercedes was headed out of town at speeds that suggested Igor was accustomed to driving in snowy weather. Gabriel had no need to match the car’s reckless pace. The blue light on Keller’s computer screen told him everything he needed to know.

  After clearing Copenhagen’s southern districts, the light moved onto the E20 motorway and headed southward, into the region of Denmark known as Zealand. And when the highway turned inland toward the ancient market town of Ringsted, the light detached itself and floated toward the coastline. Gabriel and Keller did the same and soon found themselves on a narrow two-lane road, with the black waters of Køge Bay on their left and fields of snow on their right. They followed the road for several miles until they came upon a settlement of summer cottages huddled along a rocky, windswept beach, and it was there the blinking light finally stopped moving. Gabriel eased to the side of the road and increased the volume on his earpiece. He heard a car door opening, footfalls over snowy paving stones, and the pile-driver beating of Mikhail’s restive heart.

  The cottage was among the finest of the lot. It had a small U-shaped drive, an open-sided carport with a red tile roof, and a terraced front garden framed by manicured hedges and stout little brick walls. Twelve steps rose to a veranda with a white balustrade; two potted trees stood like sentries on either side of the paned-glass door. As Mikhail approached, the door swung open and Gennady Lazarev stepped onto the veranda to greet him. He was wearing a roll-neck pullover and a thick Nordic-style cardigan. “Nicholas!” he called, as though to a deaf relation. “Come inside before you catch your death of cold. I’m sorry to drag you all the way down here, but I’ve never felt comfortable doing serious business in restaurants and hotels.”

  He offered Mikhail his hand and pulled him across the threshold, as though he were dragging a drowning man from the sea. Then, after closing the door too quickly, he relieved Mikhail of his coat and spent a moment carefully regarding his captured prize. Despite his power and riches, Lazarev still looked like a government scientist. With his round spectacles and furrowed brow, he had the air of a man who was forever struggling to solve a mathematical equation.

  “Did you hav
e any trouble getting away from Viktor?” he asked.

  “None,” replied Mikhail. “In fact, I think he was happy to be rid of me for a few hours.”

  “It seems you two get along quite well.”

  “We do.”

  “But you came in any case,” Lazarev pointed out.

  “I felt that I had to.”

  “Why?”

  “Because when a man like Gennady Lazarev asks for a meeting, it’s usually a good idea to take the meeting.”

  Mikhail’s words were obviously pleasing to Lazarev. Clearly, the Russian was not immune to flattery.

  “And you didn’t tell him where you were going?” he asked.

  “Of course not.”

  “Very good.” Lazarev clamped his delicate hand on Mikhail’s shoulder. “Come and have a drink. Meet the others.”

  Lazarev escorted Mikhail into a great room with windows looking onto the sea. Two men waited there in the sort of uncomfortable silence that usually follows a quarrel. One was pouring a drink at the trolley; the other was warming himself in front of the fire. The one at the trolley had the shadow of a heavy beard and dark thinning hair combed close to his scalp. Mikhail couldn’t see much of the man at the fire because his back was turned to the room.

  “This is Dmitry Bershov,” Lazarev said, indicating the man at the trolley. “I’m sure you’ve heard the name. Dmitry is my number two.”

  “Yes, of course,” said Mikhail, accepting the outstretched hand. “It’s a pleasure to meet you.”

  “Likewise,” intoned Bershov.

  “And that man over there,” said Lazarev, pointing toward the figure at the fire, “is Pavel Zhirov. Pavel handles corporate security and any other dirty deed that needs to be done. Isn’t that right, Pavel?”

  The man at the fire rotated slowly around, until he was staring directly into Mikhail’s face. He wore a black woolen sweater and charcoal-gray trousers. His gray-blond hair was cut short; his face was angular and dominated by a small, rather cruel-looking mouth. Mikhail realized instantly he had seen the face before. It was in a photograph of a luncheon that had occurred on the island of Corsica, a few hours before Madeline Hart’s disappearance. Now the face came toward him out of the firelight, with the small mouth formed into something like a smile.

  “Have we ever met?” Zhirov asked, grasping Mikhail’s hand.

  “No, I don’t think so.”

  “You look familiar to me.”

  “I get that a lot.”

  The smile faded, the eyes narrowed. “Did you bring a phone?” Zhirov asked.

  “I shower with my phone.”

  “Would you mind switching it off, please?”

  “Is that really necessary?”

  “It is,” he said. “And take out the battery as well. One can never be too careful these days.”

  Thirty seconds later the blue light on the tablet computer was extinguished. Gabriel removed his earpiece and frowned.

  “What just happened?” asked Keller.

  “Mikhail went behind the moon.”

  “What does that mean?”

  Gabriel explained. Then he drew his mobile phone from his coat pocket and rang Eli Lavon in the safe flat. They spoke for a few seconds in terse operational Hebrew.

  “What’s going on?” Keller asked after Gabriel severed the connection.

  “A couple of SVR hoods from the Copenhagen rezidentura are searching Mikhail’s room at the d’Angleterre.”

  “Is that a good thing?”

  “That’s a very good thing.”

  “You sure about that?”

  “No.”

  Gabriel returned the phone to his pocket and stared out the window at the windblown waves lapping against the frozen beach. The waiting, he thought. Always the waiting.

  45

  ZEALAND, DENMARK

  A table had been laid with a sumptuous all-Russian buffet. The origin of the food was unclear, for there was no evidence of anyone else in the house besides the three executives. Mikhail wondered how they had secured the property on such short notice. They hadn’t, he decided. Surely it was an existing Volgatek safe house. Or maybe it was an SVR safe house. Or maybe it didn’t matter. Maybe it was a distinction without a difference.

  For now, the food remained only a decoration. A drink had been placed in Mikhail’s hand—vodka, of course—and he had been deposited in a chair of honor with a fine view of the black sea. Dmitry Bershov, the company athlete, was pacing the edges of the room with the determined slowness of a man about to enter the ring. Pavel Zhirov, keeper of Volgatek’s secrets, kidnapper of Madeline Hart, was staring at the ceiling as though calculating how much rope to use for Mikhail’s hanging. Eventually, Zhirov’s hard gaze settled on Gennady Lazarev, who had claimed the spot by the fire. Lazarev was staring into the flames and pondering a question that Mikhail had posed a moment earlier: “Why am I here?”

  “Why are you here?” the Russian replied finally.

  “I’m here because you asked me to come.”

  “Do you always accept meetings with the enemies of the man who signs your paycheck?” Lazarev turned slowly to listen to Mikhail’s response.

  “Is that what this is about?” Mikhail asked after a moment. “Are you recruiting me to spy on Viktor?”

  “You seem familiar with the language of espionage, Nicholas.”

  “I read books.”

  “What kind of books?”

  Mikhail set down his drink deliberately. “This is beginning to sound too much like an interrogation,” he said calmly. “If you don’t mind, I think I’d like to go back to my hotel now.”

  “That would be a mistake on your part,” Lazarev said.

  “Why?”

  “Because you haven’t heard my offer yet.”

  Smiling, Lazarev collected Mikhail’s untouched drink and carried it over to the trolley for refreshing. Mikhail looked at Pavel Zhirov and returned his lifeless stare. Inwardly, though, he was exchanging Zhirov’s dark woolen clothing for the bright summer costume he had worn to lunch at Les Palmiers restaurant in Calvi. When the drink reappeared, Mikhail wiped the image from his thoughts like chalk from a blackboard and looked only at Lazarev. His brow was furrowed, as though he were struggling over an equation with no possible solution.

  “Do you mind if we conduct the rest of this conversation in Russian?” he asked at last.

  “I’m afraid my Russian is only good enough for restaurants and taxicabs.”

  “I have it on the highest authority that your Russian is rather good. Fluent, actually.”

  “Who told you that?”

  “A friend from Gazprom,” Lazarev answered truthfully. “He spoke to you briefly in Prague when you were there with Viktor.”

  “Word gets around fast.”

  “I’m afraid there are no secrets in Moscow, Nicholas.”

  “So I hear.”

  “Did you study Russian at school?”

  “No.”

  “That means you must have learned it at home.”

  “I must have.”

  “Your parents are Russian?”

  “And my grandparents, too,” replied Mikhail.

  “How did they end up in England?”

  “The usual way.”

  “What does that mean?”

  “They left Russia after the fall of the tsar and settled in Paris. And then they came to London.”

  “Your ancestors were bourgeoisie?”

  “They weren’t Bolsheviks, if that’s what you’re asking.”

  “I suppose I am.”

  Mikhail appeared to weigh his next words carefully. “My great-grandfather was a moderately successful businessman who didn’t want to live under communism.”

  “What was his name?”

  “The family name was A
vdonin, which he eventually changed to Avedon.”

  “So your real name is Nikita Avdonin,” Lazarev pointed out.

  “Nicolai,” Mikhail corrected him.

  “May I call you Nicolai?”

  “If you wish,” answered Mikhail.

  When Lazarev spoke next, it was in Russian. “Have you ever been to Moscow?” he asked.

  “No,” replied Mikhail in the same language.

  “Why not?”

  “I’ve never had a reason to.”

  “You’re not curious to see where you come from?”

  “England is my home,” Mikhail said. “Russia is the land my family fled.”

  “Were you an opponent of the Soviet Union?”

  “I was too young to be an opponent.”

  “And our current government?”

  “What about it?”

  “Do you share Viktor Orlov’s opinion that our president is an authoritarian kleptocrat?”

  “This might surprise you, Mr. Lazarev, but Viktor and I don’t talk about politics.”

  “That does surprise me.”

  Mikhail said nothing more. Lazarev let it drop. His gaze moved from Bershov to Zhirov before settling once again on Mikhail. When he spoke next, it was in English again.

  “I assume you’ve read about the licensing deal we reached with the British government that will allow us to conduct drilling operations in the North Sea.”

  “Two newly discovered fields off the Western Isles,” Mikhail said as though reading from a prospectus. “Projected output at maturity of one hundred thousand barrels a day.”

  “Very impressive.”

  “It’s my business, Mr. Lazarev.”

  “Actually, it’s my business.” Lazarev paused, then added, “But I’d like you to run it for me.”

  “The Western Isles project?”

  Lazarev nodded.

  “I’m sorry, Mr. Lazarev,” Mikhail said deferentially, “but I’m not a project manager.”

  “You did similar work in the North Sea for KBS Oil Services.”