Scorpion Winter

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Scorpion Winter Page 24

by Andrew Kaplan


  Still talking, Korobei led them to an elevator. They went down to a large basement studio where people were busily working. Korobei introduced them around, then to Tetyana, the star of the show, a buxom brunette in a low-cut top who sat on a stool as a cosmeticist applied her makeup. She and Iryna air-kissed cheeks and talked like they were old friends, the two of them preening and eyeing each other like fighting birds. Scorpion studied the layout. There were three cameras pointing at the stage set designed to look like an upper-class living room with a backdrop view of the Saint Sophia Cathedral.

  They went into the control room. One of the men—Scorpion assumed it was the director—spoke in Ukrainian to Iryna.

  “They want the video,” she said, turning to Scorpion, who opened his backpack, fished in the pocket and pulled out the DVD.

  The director handed it to one of the men sitting by a monitor with lots of dials, and after a moment it came on. There was Shelayev sitting at the farmhouse table by the light of a lone candle, the image not crystal clear but unmistakably Shelayev.

  “How did you find me?” Shelayev said.

  “Something Alyona said,” he heard himself say, which brought it all back to him, the cold and the terrible isolation of that radioactive place.

  Everyone watched the video intently. He glanced over at Iryna. She was as engrossed as the others. She’s seeing it for the first time, he reminded himself. There were gasps when he told Shelayev that Alyona had been tortured and Shelayev screamed and banged the table. And a buzz of conversation when Shelayev talked about wiring the C-4 in the Mercedes to a cell phone. The murmurs continued, but there was only stunned silence when Shelayev quoted Sherchenko and stuck the knife in his mouth and killed himself. The video captured him toppling over, the blade sticking out of the top of his skull, then went blank.

  “Isus Khrystos!” Jesus Christ, someone said.

  There was a long moment, then everyone started talking. The director said something to Iryna. She turned to Scorpion, her eyes glistening.

  “He said up till now, he thought like everyone else that we were guilty. He said this changes everything.” One of the men said something to the director and he repeated it to Iryna.

  “What did he say?” Scorpion asked.

  “He said it’s not good television, it’s great television!” She smiled.

  There was an excited buzz on the set. People were whispering to each other. One of the men showed them where he and Iryna would sit and which camera would be on them. Scorpion was surprised to hear that, and as soon as he could, he pulled Iryna aside behind the cameras.

  “What the hell’s going on? They don’t expect me to be on camera, do they?”

  “Yes,” she said. “They think it’s an important part of the story. Tetyana wants to ask you some questions. Is it a problem?”

  “I don’t go on TV. I don’t have my picture taken. Ever. It would destroy what I do,” he told her.

  “Of course,” she said, looking into his eyes. At that moment, the hair rose on the back of his neck. He had the feeling she was falling in love with him. “I’ll tell them.”

  She went over and talked with the director and Tetyana. They spoke for some time before Iryna came back.

  “You have to be on. You’re the one on the video talking to Shelayev. They’ve suggested a mask. Is that all right?”

  “Not if it shows half my face,” Scorpion said.

  Iryna had another conference and came back. “You’ll wear dark glasses and have the rest of your face covered, plus it will be digitally obscured. Your voice will be electronically disguised. Ilko—”

  “Who?”

  “The director,” she said, indicating the man talking to Tetyana, “he thinks the disguise will make it even better. More believable. Okay?”

  Scorpion nodded. He checked his watch. They would be taping in half an hour. Still plenty of time for him and Iryna to catch the Krakow train, although he wasn’t sure she would come. Watching her now, the center of attention, the TV cameras getting ready, he wondered if she was ready to give this up for him. Why would she? he asked himself. Why would anyone?

  An assistant led Scorpion to a small room offstage, where he tried on the dark glasses, a workman’s cap, and a wraparound mask and voice device. He looked at himself in the mirror. He looked like a terrorist. If he were a viewer, he thought, he wouldn’t believe a word out of his mouth. Then Iryna joined him and studied him critically, tilting her head.

  “Ilko’s right. It’ll make it better,” she said.

  A female assistant came in and brought them tea, then began to do Iryna’s makeup. Scorpion checked his watch again. He was getting antsy. It’s almost over, he told himself, but his instincts were telling him something was wrong. He heard sounds outside.

  “Chto eto?” he asked. What’s that?

  “They are just getting ready on the set,” the assistant said. She checked her watch. “Only five minutes.”

  Scorpion heard something, people outside the door. He started to reach for the Glock when the door burst open.

  Half a dozen SBU team members in full battle gear swarmed into the room, their weapons pointed at Scorpion and Iryna. Even if he reacted, Scorpion realized, there was a good chance that Iryna, if not both of them, would be killed. Two men grabbed him and forced him to the ground. Out of the corner of his eye he could see they had done the same to Iryna and the assistant. His body was patted down and someone kicked him in the ribs. Someone else ripped his Glock out of its holster as his hands were shackled behind him with tight plastic cuffs. Iryna was lying nearby, two SBU men on top of her, one of them with his hand between her legs.

  An SBU team officer holding a pistol walked into the room. Even from the floor, with a knee pressing hard on his neck, Scorpion could see who it was—the man’s cheek and broken nose still swollen and bruised from where he had kicked him.

  Kulyakov.

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Lukyanivska Prison

  Kyiv, Ukraine

  The screams echoed off the walls of the cell. Scorpion couldn’t tell where they were coming from or even whether they were from a man or a woman. They sounded barely human. They seemed to go on for hours, though he knew it might have only been minutes. It was part of the process, he thought. Time deprivation, sensory deprivation, loss of control of your own body, humiliation, pain. “Reports from subjects have repeatedly confirmed that the anticipation of torture is worse than the torture itself,” he remembered Sergeant Falco quoting from the KUBARK book, the CIA’s classified manual on torture. Buzz-hair-cutted, fat-faced, massive-shouldered, no-necked Sergeant Falco tapping the desk with a rubber hose. Scorpion had encountered him during his Level C SERE training at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, back when he was in JSOC’s First Special Forces Operational Detachment Delta Force. The rules for Level C SERE were that interrogators were allowed to break no more than one major and two minor bones. For five straight days and nights he’d had Sergeant Falco’s undivided attention.

  Not an easy man to forget, Sergeant Falco.

  The screams subsided. For a moment there was nothing. Suddenly, he heard a terrible piercing scream, louder, higher pitched, worse than anything he had heard before. A woman, he thought. Definitely a woman. Then he understood. They wanted him to think it was Iryna.

  Maybe it was.

  Scorpion was penned naked in a small cage, his hands plastic-cuffed behind him, in a squatting stress position. There was no room to straighten any part of him, and the pain in his knees and back, shoulders and neck, was becoming unbearable. In a little while he would fall against the side of the cage and it would be even more uncomfortable.

  The cell the cage was in was concrete and pitch-black and unbelievably cold. When they first brought him into the prison with his hands zip-tied behind him, Kulyakov had watched, smiling, as three SBU mussory took turns beating him with rubber truncheons. One of them got too close and Scorpion nearly took his head off with a Brazilian capoeira-style heel-kick th
at laid him out. He head-butted another and started to take the third man out, but Kulyakov had called for help and another three or four beefy guards piled in, swinging truncheons. One of them slammed his truncheon into Scorpion’s groin as he was kicking, bringing him down.

  His body ached all over from the beating they had given him, angry that he had hurt two of their comrades. But it was worth it, he thought, even as they were hitting him. It was worth it to let them know that they weren’t completely in control. The pain was bad though. It was hard to know which was worse, the bruises from the beating, the pain in his joints from the stress position, or the cold.

  The cold, he decided. He was shivering violently, approaching hypothermia, which he remembered starts when body temperature drops below 35 Celsius, 95 Fahrenheit. His breathing was becoming shallow. He needed to do his thinking now, he realized, while he still could, before the cold robbed him of his mind too.

  “Sooner or later you’ll break. Everyone does,” he remembered Sergeant Falco saying. It was a contest between interrogator and captive. Between Kulyakov and him. Kulyakov wanted confessions. If he didn’t get it from him, he would try to get one from Iryna.

  Scorpion tried to calculate if she could resist. How bad would they go on her? Would they sexually abuse her? Probably, he thought. How did he feel about that? He didn’t want to think about it, he realized. Well, you better, because they’re going to do it. If they survived—and realistically, for him at least that was almost an impossibility—would he take her back? Even if he would, would she let him? You’re in a dream world, he told himself. It’s the cold. It’s the cold and the pain and the screams doing the thinking. Not me, he decided. He would take her back no matter what they did. And even if Iryna didn’t break—she would try not to, he knew that about her—Kulyakov also had Alyona. He’d get his confessions.

  So what weapons did he have? Kulyakov had two limitations. First, he knew that Kulyakov couldn’t afford to let him die. He needed to parade him for the Russians. And second, a confession from Iryna alone wouldn’t do. Kulyakov needed a confession from him too. They would likely try to use him and Iryna against each other.

  “It’s about fear and pain,” Sergeant Falco told them in that mock prison camp that was way too real. “At some point, there’s only pain. It’ll blot out everything. Your wife, your mother, your country, your god. You think it won’t, but it will. You need to hold onto one idea. Only one. My job is to get past that. Believe me, I will,” Falco said, smashing the rubber hose on the desk with a loud thunk. “Before I’m done with you, the only thing you’ll believe in is me.”

  That would be his one idea. Kulyakov didn’t want him to die.

  Was someone screaming again or was it in his mind? He wasn’t sure and tried to move his head. Cell by icy cell, his brain was beginning to shut down. The cold doesn’t matter, he told himself.

  He remembered once, when he was a boy, Sheikh Zaid sent him out wearing only a thawb robe and a knife, to be alone in the desert for three days; part of his education in what it was to be a man of the Mutayr. It was winter and the temperature in the northern desert dropped 100 degrees from daytime to night. He remembered laying on the sand looking up at the stars like ice crystals in the sky. It was bitterly cold and he shivered in the robe, unable to sleep. There was no one, nothing, for as far as the eye could see anywhere. He was hungry and utterly alone. The nearest source of light were the stars.

  “How should I deal with the heat and the cold?” he had asked Sheikh Zaid before he set out.

  “Be patient,” Sheikh Zaid replied. “Remember, Allah is merciful. The pain always ends. Either you die, or if Allah wills, you will see the sun, but either way the pain ends.”

  He looked up in the darkness of his cell and saw stars. His mind was beginning to blur, he thought. He fought to keep it clear. There were plenty of unanswered questions. What had happened with the war? He had heard no explosions or air raid sirens, so maybe his YouTube video had been seen or Akhnetzov had gotten through. Or maybe the city was under attack right this second and he was buried so deep behind Lukyanivska Prison’s thick walls he couldn’t hear it.

  What had happened to Alyona? And Iryna? Would she give him up? How had the SBU found them at the TV station? He was certain they hadn’t been followed. Was it Akhnetzov? Or someone at the station? Or even Kozhanovskiy? Someone had tipped the SBU about the upcoming broadcast. Who was it? Who stood to gain from stopping the video from getting out?

  Gorobets? Gabrilov and the SVR? But how could they have known about the broadcast or where he and Iryna were? Because they knew. Kulyakov had come himself with the SBU team to the TV station because he knew they would be there. But how? It was almost as if there were another agent, an invisible player in the game. But how could that be?

  He heard footsteps and the door unlock, and then a blinding light came on. It hurt his eyes and he had to squint to see. It was Kulyakov. This time he came with four big guards. They had learned to take him seriously, he thought with a tiny touch of satisfaction. The battle had been joined.

  “So Kilbane aka Peter Reinert aka Scorpion. Ready for a little chat?” Kulyakov said.

  Jesus, where’d he get “Scorpion”? he thought in panic. Then he remembered, Akhnetzov knew it. Possibly Boyko too. And Iryna. He’d told her that night in the apartment in Zaporozhye.

  No, not Iryna, he told himself. He didn’t want to think they’d gotten it so soon from her or what they might have done to her to get it. Still, point for Kulyakov, he acknowledged. Good move and right out of the KUBARK playbook. Show the captive that you know more than he thinks you do and he’ll assume you know a lot more. The CIA, the SBU, the FSB, they all played by the same rules.

  “Khuy tebee v rod?” Scorpion said. With my dick in your mouth? His teeth were chattering like castanets from the cold, and one of the guards snickered. Hold onto one thought, he told himself as they took him out of the cage. Only one. No matter what, he can’t afford to let you die. Straightening his arms and legs was agony, but Scorpion forgot about it when one of the guards smashed him in the small of the back with a rubber truncheon, straightening him up.

  Two guards, one on each side, half dragged, half carried him down a long gray corridor lined with steel cell doors. The corridor smelled of urine and disinfectant. As soon as they heard footsteps, prisoners began catcalling from behind the locked doors. Calling out, “Skazhit im nichoho, brat!” Don’t tell them a thing, brother! And “Dopomozhit!” Help! And “Yob tvoiyu maty, mussor mudaky!” Fuck your mothers, cop bastards!

  The guards hauled him into a large room with a mirror that he assumed was a two-way glass and strapped him into a heavy metal chair bolted to the door. He was able to see implements on a bench and electrical wiring before they strapped his head so he couldn’t move it. It’s coming, he told himself, trying to keep his heart rate down as the adrenaline started pumping. One of the guards attached electrodes to his genitals. Just the clamps alone were painful. He started breathing shallowly and forced himself to breathe more slowly.

  Kulyakov came in along with a pudgy blondish man in a guard’s uniform, which he wore with the jacket open, a wrinkled shirt hanging out of his trousers. The man had a smile painted on his face like a doll’s. Scorpion wondered if he was a mental defective. He walked over to an electronic box connected to the electrodes. He touched it, almost caressed it, with his fingers, then licked his fingers with his tongue. Kulyakov sat in a chair facing Scorpion. Two of the guards left the room. The other two stayed behind Scorpion’s chair, ready to grab him if he tried anything.

  “The guards have gone to get their guns. You can’t get out of this room. Not till I say so,” Kulyakov said.

  Scorpion didn’t say anything.

  “I’ve been looking forward to this.” Kulyakov allowed himself a small smile.

  “I should’ve killed you in the Puppet Theatre,” Scorpion said.

  “Why didn’t you?”

  “I wanted to question you first.
Then Iryna needed help.” He tried to shrug, but was unable to move.

  “One of your many mistakes,” Kulyakov said. “You know why you’re here?”

  “An unpaid parking ticket?”

  “Good.” Kulyakov nodded. “You’re going to make this fun.” He smiled and looked at the guards, who began to laugh. The blondish man grinned and made a strange “uh, uh, uh” sound, showing wide gaps in his teeth. “You’re going to be tried and convicted of the assassination of Yuriy Cherkesov and the members of his staff who were in the car when you blew it up. You and your fellow conspirator, Iryna Shevchenko.”

  “If the verdict’s already been decided, why bother with a trial?” Scorpion said.

  “Tribunal,” Kulyakov corrected. “By the SBU.”

  “Of course. Less chance of anything resembling the truth sneaking in.”

  “You see,” Kulyakov said, turning his head toward the unseen watchers behind the glass. “This is good. We have a dialogue.” He gestured at the blondish man. “We should try out the equipment. Not too much.”

  There was the briefest electric hum before the pain hit Scorpion like a sledgehammer. His penis felt like it was pulverized and on fire. He gasped in the chair, jerking desperately against the straps. It seemed to go on a long time, getting worse by the second. When it stopped, despite the cold in the room, he was drenched in sweat.

  “That was a low setting. We can make it a lot worse,” Kulyakov said.

  Again, right out of the KUBARK manual, Scorpion thought. Create anticipation of greater pain by telling the subject how much worse you can make it. Begin the obscene intimacy between torturer and subject, where the subject comes to regard the torturer as his ally in a conspiracy to limit the pain.

 

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