The Searcher

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The Searcher Page 1

by Christopher Morgan Jones




  ALSO BY CHRISTOPHER MORGAN JONES

  The Silent Oligarch

  The Jackal’s Share

  PENGUIN PRESS

  An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

  375 Hudson Street

  New York, New York 10014

  penguin.com

  Copyright © 2016 by Christopher Morgan Jones

  Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

  LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

  Names: Morgan Jones, Chris, 1971- author.

  Title: The searcher / Christopher Morgan Jones.

  Description: New York : Penguin Press, 2016.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2015044335 (print) | LCCN 2016001745 (ebook) | ISBN

  9781594205590 (hardback) | ISBN 9781101621844 (ebook)

  Subjects: LCSH: Business intelligence—Fiction. | Intelligence

  officers—Fiction. | Georgia (Republic)—Foreign relations—Russia

  (Federation)—Fiction. | Spy stories. | Suspense fiction. | BISAC: FICTION

  / Espionage. | FICTION / Suspense.

  Classification: LCC PR6113.O7483 S43 2016 (print) | LCC PR6113.O7483 (ebook)

  | DDC 823/.92—dc23

  LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015044335

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Version_1

  Contents

  Also by Christopher Morgan Jones

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  PART ONE ONE

  TWO

  THREE

  FOUR

  FIVE

  SIX

  SEVEN

  EIGHT

  NINE

  TEN

  ELEVEN

  PART TWO ONE

  TWO

  THREE

  FOUR

  FIVE

  SIX

  SEVEN

  EIGHT

  NINE

  TEN

  ELEVEN

  TWELVE

  THIRTEEN

  FOURTEEN

  FIFTEEN

  SIXTEEN

  SEVENTEEN

  EIGHTEEN

  NINETEEN

  TWENTY

  TWENTY-ONE

  TWENTY-TWO

  TWENTY-THREE

  TWENTY-FOUR

  TWENTY-FIVE

  TWENTY-SIX

  PART THREE ONE

  TWO

  THREE

  FOUR

  FIVE

  SIX

  SEVEN

  EIGHT

  NINE

  TEN

  ELEVEN

  TWELVE

  THIRTEEN

  FOURTEEN

  FIFTEEN

  SIXTEEN

  SEVENTEEN

  EIGHTEEN

  NINETEEN

  TWENTY

  TWENTY-ONE

  TWENTY-TWO

  TWENTY-THREE

  TWENTY-FOUR

  TWENTY-FIVE

  TWENTY-SIX

  For Rose and Luke

  ONE

  Hammer had seen riots before, and knew this was how they began. At the bottom of the hill, in the open square, stood a crowd of three or four thousand, not organized but with a rough air of purpose, waving banners he couldn’t read and singing with patchy enthusiasm. On the placards above their heads bobbed the horned head of a balding man with the bland expression of a politician, blood dripping down his chin from a pair of painted fangs. There was a tired anger in the air, and a growing impatience that matched Hammer’s own. In and out, this had to be. Find what he was looking for and go home.

  The driver slowed on the broken road, muttered something to himself, and, coming to a stop in a queue of cars, sat for a moment shaking his head and blowing out air, as if at some dreary but all too familiar difficulty.

  “Can you go back?” said Hammer, sitting forward.

  The driver shook his head and gave a full sigh. “Nit shansi,” he said, looked over his shoulder at the cars lining up behind, and shrugged.

  Somehow Hammer knew what he meant: this was Georgia. They were stuck, it was bad, and there was nothing to be done but wait.

  “We need to turn round,” he said, but the driver merely shrugged again. Hammer drummed his fingers on his thigh and wondered why they had come this way and how much time it was going to cost. On a case like this you needed a quick start, and he was already two days late.

  The sun was low but still strong, and in its stubborn heat the protesters were growing ragged and tetchy. Hammer stopped tapping out e-mails on his phone and from the cool of the car watched them for a while, took in their faces, the way they dressed, the hundred signs that made this crowd a Georgian crowd. The faces were dark, fine, handsome, Eastern and European at once. Caucasian, Hammer thought; of course, this was what it meant. A democratic group of men and women of all ages, though the front line was mainly men now, their expressions grimmer than the rest. Banners covered in a strange, curved script billowed in the wind and a hundred flags waved alongside them—red crosses on white, and in each quadrant a further red cross, flared and ancient-looking. For a moment Hammer imagined that he had landed in the middle of some forgotten holy war.

  A line of police in black carrying shields and long black truncheons contained the crowd. Hammer lowered his window and on the hot air came the sound of chanting, in this growly singsong language that he had hardly had a chance to hear. Beside him the whole front of a derelict town house had been papered with red-and-white election posters bearing another face—reasonable, impassioned, the same one that adorned half the T-shirts in the crowd.

  “This the new guy?” said Hammer.

  The driver twisted in his seat.

  “Candidate. Politician.” Hammer pointed at the posters.

  “Speak Russky?”

  “No.” Hammer smiled. “Just American.”

  The driver raised his eyebrows and from the seat next to him picked up a newspaper, black with strange characters and smudged where his heavy fingers had held it. As he passed it over he jabbed at the headline on the front page.

  Hammer took it and thanked him. For a moment he was distracted by movement in the square, where a young man with a shaved head had walked up to a policeman and was now theatrically tearing up a poster in front of him. When he was done he threw the last pieces at the policeman’s clear plastic shield, looked him in the eye, and, with a great nod, spat down at his boots. The policeman stepped back a pace but did not respond and the young man went back to his friends with a fist in the air.

  Hammer weighed the paper in his hand, felt a moment of fondness for the cheap ink that came off on his fingers, and took in the lead story, to the extent that he could. A single word in fat, round letters ran across all six columns and below it, extending beyond the fold, two photographs: one of a devastated building,
its front blown off, the other of the man whose fanged face was being brandished in the square. The words were unintelligible but Hammer had an idea of their meaning.

  “The president?” he said.

  “President,” said the driver, nodding and gesturing at the crowd. “Yes. Diakh.”

  “He’s the guy who started all this, huh?”

  The driver turned, his frowning face in profile, and shrugged. The shrug was expansive and seemed to say he didn’t understand the question, but it could have meant many other things: Who know who starts anything? or, Who am I to say what any of this means?

  Hammer shrugged back. He understood the gist of it, from the scant reports in English: a bomb had destroyed an apartment block in a Georgian town, killing people as they slept and sending the country into a spiraling whirl of accusation and conspiracy. It was Islamists; it was the Russians; it was the opposition. The latest story to break, and the craziest, was that to win votes the president himself had arranged the whole thing to look like a hellish Russian scheme—that to prove he was the only man capable of protecting his people against that ancient bogeyman he had sacrificed a few of them. Hence the fuss in the square. Hence the fangs.

  What a case it would make. The best kind—big, delicate, visible. Dangerous, no doubt. The kind he lived for. Hammer let his instincts play with the idea, plotted its course, drew together a team and a plan in his head, imagined the cast. The president was the obvious client—he had the most to lose, or to save—but perhaps some sort of cross-party commission might be set up, to investigate independently and allow the whole painful business to close. It could be done, for the right fee, but it wasn’t what he was here to do, and he had no intention of becoming involved. Besides, Karlo Toreli would have to take part, and Karlo was dead. What kind of case would it be without the man whose scoop had caused this whole mess in the first place?

  Hammer put the paper down and, taking a handkerchief from his pocket, cleaned the ink from his fingers. Ahead, cars were beginning to turn round in a mess of back-and-forth; some freed themselves and came back up the hill, dusty Ladas and worn 4 x 4s, but the narrow entrance to the square was soon hopelessly clogged, and horns began to overpower the chants. Space opened up in front of them. The driver swore, pulled out fast into the path of an oncoming taxi, and braked with a jolt before the two cars met.

  “Shevetsi.”

  An inch apart, the cars stared at each other. Hammer’s driver hit the steering wheel with the palm of his hand, waved his fist at the windshield, and pointed to the side street into which he wanted to turn. Expressionless behind the dust on its windshield, the other car stayed put. The driver leaned on his horn, adding to the chorus.

  “Use the sidewalk,” said Hammer, but the driver merely raised a resigned hand. “Use the curb.”

  In the square, activity again caught Hammer’s eye. Another of the protesters, an old man with his belly lazily showing through his unbuttoned denim shirt, had torn the board from his placard and was now sweeping the wooden pole in front of him like an uncertain swordsman finding his range. Others were doing the same, running skirmishes up to the line of police, who had begun to shuffle together stiffly. Before, there had seemed plenty of them; suddenly there did not.

  Hammer checked his watch. His plane had landed two hours ago, and it was all of ten miles from the airport to his hotel. This was eating up time he didn’t have.

  The driver swore again, threw his arm over the seat beside him, and, looking over his shoulder, began to reverse at speed up the hill. Hammer kept his eyes on the crowd. Three men were now beating the clear screens of the policemen’s riot shields, and it occurred to him that if everyone followed their lead they would take some holding.

  “OK. Time to get out of here.”

  The car braked abruptly, and in the relative quiet before the driver revved the engine Hammer heard a hard crack, like a stone on glass, and though he saw no one move, nor any gun, he knew without doubt that the protester who fell had been shot.

  “Shevetsi,” said the driver. He let the engine surge, found his gear, and darted with a lurch down a narrow street to his left. Hammer had a last glimpse of the downed man, his friends stopped around him, and heard a new roar of fury as the moment of shock passed.

  “Shevetsi,” the driver said, more than once. From behind them came two more shots.

  The street was lined with parked cars, each one half on the pavement, half on the pitted tarmac of the road, and though the Mercedes barely fit, the driver took it as fast as he could, the tires squealing as they touched the curb. Despite himself, Hammer started as the car clipped a wing mirror on his side.

  Halfway down, an alley led back to the square. He glanced to his right and saw people running toward him, a man stumbling and another helping him up, heads turning to check behind them. A young woman, her hair tied in a flowered scarf, stopped for a moment to take a brick from a crumbled wall and hurl it in a high arc back onto the shields of the police.

  This was what a riot looked like—Hammer recognized the mixture of zeal and fear in the eyes, made out in the distance the ones who were enjoying themselves, felt the panic of those running in his direction to get away. Forgotten instincts began to guide him. Best to leave the car and run with the rest, try to look as angry or as scared as everyone else. Cars got stuck in riots. Or take your camera out, make them think you’re a newsman. More often than not they’d leave you alone.

  But he had no camera, and in these clothes would never pass for a protester. He had packed his least conspicuous things but the truth was that he liked quality and could afford to pay for it. In every fiber he was wearing he was a world apart from the people in the square. The old instincts no longer served. They were for a young man, less respectable than he’d become. Someone without his money, and his luggage, and his briefcase, and the general air of comfort.

  “Fast as you can,” he said, and shifted in his seat to watch the road behind.

  The first protesters appeared and, without stopping, turned in his direction. First came a group running, keen to be gone, but the mass of people emerged into the street in confusion, stumbling ahead, shouting behind them, raising fists, picking up whatever they could find and turning to throw it. Wooden poles swayed like pikes. They were a frantic, angry troop, and Hammer was happy enough to be leaving them behind.

  The car braked sharply and the driver let out some grand Georgian oath. Ahead of them an ancient red Nissan, unconscious of what was closing on it, had pushed out into the road, discovered that it hadn’t enough room to get its nose past the car in front, and was now inching serenely backward before making another attempt. Hammer’s driver pummeled his horn. The first protesters were now level with them, and as Hammer looked back the street was full of people churning in his direction, smashing the windows of the parked cars with bricks and poles. He raised the window but the yelling and the chanting seemed to remain inside the car.

  “You need to go round, OK?” shouted Hammer, leaning forward to touch the driver’s shoulder and point at the curb. “Go round!”

  The driver understood, began to roll the car onto the high curb, and was blocked by the Nissan, which juddered into the road again, taking its time.

  “We need to fucking go,” said Hammer, locking his door and doing the same on the other side of the car. The noise dulled, for an instant; then the small space filled with a crash of sound. Hammer recoiled, his hands behind his head, forearms tight against his ears. Another crash. He stole a glance. Two men were beating the back windshield, which splintered and sagged.

  “Go!” he screamed, but there were people all around now, rocking the car, banging on the windows, pressing their faces up to the glass. Through them he saw the Nissan driving off ahead, and a rock bouncing off its bumper. His driver had shrunk into his seat, arms up round his head.

  Ben, I’m going to wring your fucking neck when I find you, thought
Hammer and braced himself.

  TWO

  The man sitting across the table had come on his own, with no sign of an entourage, and had requested that Hammer do the same. That was surprising, and so was his appearance. His suit, though expensive, was too big and sat clumsily on his shoulders, which were lightly scattered with dandruff, and his glasses looked as if they hadn’t been cleaned for days. He was mousy in coloring—a little mousy generally, in fact—and somewhat stiff in his greeting, so that if Hammer hadn’t seen his photograph and read the headlines he would have found it hard to imagine what was generally held to be true, that this was the richest man in Poland. The head of the risk department of a provincial manufacturing firm, perhaps, or a tax partner in some calcified City law firm, but no ruthless entrepreneur or clear-eyed oligarch.

  Still, he had to have something. Such people didn’t rise by chance.

  From a cheap-looking metal case the man produced a card, slid it across the table, and, while Hammer inspected it, looked down at London, bright and jumbled below them. The view was quite something from up here, or so Hammer had been told, but he took it in calmly, almost blankly, as one might a menu or an invoice. Milek Rapp. Just the name on the card—no company, no phone number.

  Hammer passed him his own card in return.

  “Welcome, Mr. Rapp. Beautiful day.”

  “My lawyer says I can trust you.”

  His voice was deeper than Hammer had expected, and more commanding, like the sound of a tuba coming from a penny whistle. When you heard it, it was easy enough to imagine it being obeyed.

  “Then you’re well advised.”

  “This is a sensitive matter.”

  “I don’t doubt it. Most are.”

  So there would be no small talk, which was a shame; as a rule it was rather more revealing than the big talk. Rapp took a moment to consider the man in front of him, seemed to approve of what he saw, and continued. Behind the smeary lenses of his glasses his eyes were wary and quick. In the main he kept them on Hammer, but he was also checking out the details, just as Hammer was: the cut of his clothes, the lines in his face, the clues in his manner.

 

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