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Chasing Ivan

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by Tim Tigner




  Chasing Ivan

  Also in the Kyle Achilles series

  . .

  Also by Tim Tigner

  . .

  Click cover to learn more

  Learn more about Kyle Achilles, get freebies, and be among the first to hear of new releases by signing up for Tim’s New Releases Newsletter at timtigner.com

  For Elena. Here we go again, my love…

  Chapter 1

  Hanging Out

  I LOVE CLIMBING. Give me a cliff face and a bag of climbing chalk and I’ll be whistling all the way to the top.

  But I had no chalk today.

  No cliff face either.

  I was 200 feet up one of London’s famous residential towers, clinging to the weathered stone in a dove gray business suit.

  For the last eight weeks, I’d been tailing a couple of people while waiting for a legend to strike. That legend was a Russian criminal mastermind known as Ivan the Ghost, a man so skilled in the art of invisibility, his very existence was in doubt.

  The CIA’s new director had learned that Ivan was planning to rig the upcoming London mayoral election by forcing the leading candidate to withdraw. Director Rider was eager to exploit this rare intelligence coup to score political points and eliminate Ivan. Permanently and covertly. That was where I came in, as a member of the CIA’s Special Operations Group.

  Ivan didn’t use guns or gangsters, and he never left a trail or trace. He concocted elaborate schemes — traps that caught his victims unaware and kept them silent. Creative coercions and invisible operations were his trademarks, his sources of pride and fame.

  We expected Ivan to strike at the mayoral candidate through one of two relatives, either his daughter Emily, or his brother Evan. But that was just a guess. Still, we were thrilled that for once, for the first time, we just might be one step ahead of The Ghost.

  “Have you got eyes on him yet?” Oscar asked.

  Oscar Pincus, my control back at Langley, was sporadically monitoring the situation via my earpiece. Oscar had just joined the Agency. A pet placed in a plum role by a new director more concerned with influence than competence.

  Oscar and I had both become excited when our electronic surveillance picked up Evan lying to his office manager about an appointment we knew he didn’t have. Our hearts really started racing when he slipped away to an apartment on the nineteenth floor of the luxury residence to which I now clung. Our hope and expectation was that his clandestine meeting was part of a cleverly construed trap arranged by Ivan. “I made it up to nineteen. Now I just have to climb over to unit B.”

  “So that’s a no. Ivan’s finally about to strike, and we’re blind.”

  I didn’t reply. I didn’t have time for Oscar right now. My current position was more than physically precarious. The British government didn’t know I was here. In fact, I’d be screwed if they found out. Indoctrination into the SOG came with the warning that the US government will disavow agents to avoid embarrassment.

  Disavow.

  What a term.

  It’s the grown-up equivalent to shrugging. But then that’s politics, which resembles espionage, in that it revolves around lies. The difference, incidentally, is that spies don’t smile while lying.

  I got a grip on the rail of the nineteenth-floor balcony, and began sliding left, hand to hand. I kept my legs raised out to the side as I went. That way, the residents of the eighteenth floor wouldn’t see them dangling while enjoying the view over afternoon tea.

  It was a clear day, so from that altitude I could see the city skyscrapers to the south, and the sun reflecting off The Regent’s Park boating lake to the west. Theoretically, that meant millions of people could see me as well. Good thing I was wearing gray.

  With forty meters to cover and not a second to spare, my hands slipped into a familiar climbing rhythm. Quick but cautious. As a free-solo enthusiast, I was used to climbing without ropes or tools. The business suit, however, was working against me. It bottled in heat, which brought on the enemy. It wasn’t only job interviews where sweaty palms could be deadly.

  The fresh pigeon poop wasn’t helping either.

  I’d just rounded the corner when crescendoing screams from the balcony below shattered the still air. “Oh my God! Oh my God! Oh my God! William! William!” Looking down as my heart regained its normal rhythm, I saw that the afternoon sun had cast my shadow in the wrong place at the wrong time. A silver-haired woman stared back at me, her mouth agape and her eyes bugged wide, watering the floor rather than her geraniums.

  I always tried to smile in the face of adversity. In this case the smile was literal. “It’s okay, luv,” I said, invoking a gentlemanly British accent. “I slipped, but caught myself.”

  I pulled myself up onto the balcony above her with a couple of quick, fluid moves, and then peered back over to reassure her. “No worries. I’m quite safe now, luv.”

  As I ducked back, I heard her speaking to somebody. Then an elderly male voice said, “I’m calling the police.”

  Bloody hell. The response time to an intruder alert at a posh place like this would be minutes.

  I dropped to the balcony floor and began a rapid low-crawl toward unit 19-B. Looking over my right shoulder through the glass wall of the flat I’d just invaded, I spotted a pigtailed girl playing with colorful figurines.

  She was seated facing the kitchen, where her mother was busy chopping vegetables. If her mom looked up, the police would get another frantic call and I’d likely end up playing aerial hide-and-seek with a helicopter.

  I made it to the wall that separated my current location from Evan’s without drawing her eye. While that was good news, the barrier before me was not. The architect had made it virtually impossible for even the bold and the brave to use the balconies to hop between flats.

  I was going to have to go back over the rail and shimmy along the edge again. But I’d have to do it between floors nineteen and twenty this time since the couple on eighteen was likely watching their window, anxiously anticipating more excitement.

  Still praying that the girl’s mother wouldn’t look up from her knife, I climbed onto the balcony rail, braced myself with my left hand against the wall, and mapped out my jump. To reach the lip of the balcony above, I was going to have to spring up about two feet and back about one.

  The vertical jeopardy that jump presented would paralyze most people, but competitive climbers are a different breed. We’re born with the ability to disconnect the acrophobia circuit and operate in the air as if on the ground. Put another way, a jump from a ledge is just a jump, if one doesn’t think about the drop.

  I gave my palms a good wipe on my thighs. Then I crouched down, breathed deep, and rocketed up, my arms swinging into it and adding momentum as my legs exploded and my eyes locked on target.

  Oscar’s voice sounded in my ear. “Whom were you talking to?”

  The jolt knocked me off balance, just a bit, but enough that correcting it cost me power. My grasp came up a quarter-inch short of the ornamental lip, with my fingertips barely grazing its edge.

  Now I was thinking about that drop.

  As my upward momentum began the rapid transition to a downward plummet, I seesawed my shoulders, thrusting my right arm up while dipping my left. This practiced move added precisely two-and-a-quarter inches to my extension, enough to get the last digit of two fingers over the lip in time. The moment they touched, I cleared my mind of all other thought. I became those two fingertips, rooting in and holding fast. I remained in that meditative state until the rest of my body stabilized like a coat hanging from a hook. Then, with a slow and steady exhale, I brought my thumb up to crimp the hold, and pulled my left arm up beside its twin.

  “Hold on, Oscar,” I said, hoping he’d appreciate the need f
or my focus to be elsewhere.

  That wasn’t a given.

  Oscar had about as much experience in the field as I had managing public relations. Zero.

  After a couple of deep breaths, I resumed the hand-to-hand swinging shuffle toward 19-B, still focusing on my fingers but with my ears also primed for the sound of sirens. A few seconds later, I swung my legs forward and dropped onto the proper balcony, relieved and ready for more conventional action.

  A fortuitous gap in the bedroom’s beige curtains beckoned, and I advanced with caution. I peered through at waist-level and saw them immediately. Evan and his secret date were naked on the bed.

  Bad news.

  Even in her state of undress, I had no problem identifying the petite redhead. Sarah Simms was a weather girl at one of the local TV stations.

  Crap.

  This wasn’t Ivan’s trap. There was no leverage here. Evan was divorced, and Sarah had just appeared on one of the social rags’ Most Eligible lists.

  “False alarm,” I said to Oscar.

  “Not a teenage boy?” Oscar asked.

  “Or a Mafia wife.”

  “Drugs?”

  “I can’t be certain without breaching, but I think we can assume that Evan is purely testosterone driven. She’s hot. A local weather girl.”

  “I dated a weather girl once,” Oscar said.

  As he continued with a sexual pun, my phone vibrated an alert. I heard a simultaneous beep on Oscar’s end. “What is it?” I asked him.

  “Tonight’s the night of Emily’s big date, right? Her first encounter with the mysterious Andreas she won’t stop talking about?”

  “That’s right.”

  “Well, her phone just went dead.”

  Chapter 2

  Foreplay

  EMILY YELPED as her cell phone flew from her grasp and sailed out over the boating lake. Rubbing the back of her hand while the oblivious bike messenger zipped on to some northwest London business address, she watched her phone land flat on the still water.

  For a joyful second, it looked as if it was going to float, but as Emily plunged in after it like a Labrador chasing a stick, her phone went under. By the time she’d snatched it from the lake the display had gone blank. Probably not a good sign, she figured.

  Still standing thigh-deep in murky water, she pulled off the protective cover and began shaking it like a maraca, trying to expel water from the speakers and ports, while passersby looked on sympathetically.

  “Don’t turn it on!” a red-haired boy of middle-school years yelled from the path. “Give it a couple of days to dry out first. Maybe you’ll get lucky.”

  “Bake it on low in the oven,” his freckled friend added. “That will help.”

  She gave them a kind nod. “Thanks.”

  Would Jen think she’d hung up on her? Emily wondered. Possibly.

  They’d been at it again over Andreas.

  Her best friend had been cautioning her for the hundredth time not to get her hopes up, while Emily reasserted her certainty that he wouldn’t turn out to be a gold digger like the others.

  Emily had argued that Andreas didn’t know her last name. Therefore, he didn’t know who her father was, and thus he wouldn’t have any ulterior motives. Plus, he just felt different. He felt perfect — as if he’d been designed with her tastes and interests in mind. In any case, she’d find out for sure in just a few hours. After two months of online dating, of long emails, and shared secrets, and rising expectations, they were finally going to meet.

  She’d been thinking about little else for weeks.

  Emily was determined not to let either Jen’s cautionary words or a ruined phone spoil her mood. Life only gave you so many magical moments. No sense ruining them with mundane worries.

  She slipped the phone and cover into her purse, and continued her walk north across the park toward her favorite grocer. Her soggy sandals slapped the pavement with each step, while the water soaking her yoga pants slowly worked its way up toward her crotch. She’d wash both as soon as she got home to get the lake smell out.

  Her block of flats, Palace Place, wasn’t nearly as regal as its name, but it did have a nice lobby. Comfortable chairs in a window alcove. Decent original oils on the walls. Various English seascapes painted by widow Cooper in 3B. The white cliffs of Dover. The beach at West Wittering. Sunset over the Isle of Wight. Mrs. Cooper had been updating them over time as her skill increased, and now the familiar sight of them was as welcoming as a wink and a smile.

  Emily winced as the shopping bag shifted while she reached for the handle on the lobby door. The back of her hand was tender where the messenger’s backpack had whacked it. She hoped it wouldn’t bruise and look ugly for Andreas.

  “Let me help you with that,” came a voice from behind as a long arm reached past and opened the front door. “After you.”

  For a second Emily thought the gentleman might be Andreas, his earliness expressing the eagerness she felt. Dressed in a summer-weight gray suit, he was tall and athletic and about thirty. Check, check, and check. The thick, dark hair wasn’t styled the same as in her suitor’s profile picture, but hairstyles changed. This man’s eyes were the same sparkling blue that had captured her attention. He also had the high Slavic cheekbones. The match was six for six when a distinct chin dimple ruled the gentleman out. She felt a stab of disappointment, but said, “Thank you.”

  Emily checked her postbox while he brushed past with a bow of his head before disappearing up the stairs. She was sure he wasn’t a resident. Probably Justine’s latest.

  Emily hoped Justine would see Andreas when he arrived. Let her be the jealous one for once.

  The knock came as Emily was putting the last of her purchases in the refrigerator. Again her mind leapt to an early arrival. She reached for her cell to check the time only to be greeted by a black screen. The clock on the microwave showed 1:48. Andreas wasn’t due to pick her up for another four hours.

  She slipped off her soggy sandals and crept to the peephole.

  The man on the other side of the door doffed a chauffeur’s cap with a white-gloved hand as she darkened the lens.

  What in the world? Was her father up to something, or more likely, his slippery campaign manager?

  She opened the door. “Yes?”

  “Hello, Emily. I’m Michael. Andreas sent me.”

  She wasn’t sure how to respond to that, and Michael continued before she decided.

  “I’m afraid he won’t be able to make it this evening.”

  Chapter 3

  Carpe Diem

  EMILY FELT her eyes start to tear as her heart sank.

  Not again.

  Not Andreas too.

  Every time she got her hopes up, they were dashed. Every time.

  Andreas had seemed so different, but Jen had been right. Well, at least it was a classy letdown. She didn’t know he was wealthy — on top of everything else. More salt for her wound. “Thanks for letting me know.”

  The chauffeur didn’t move.

  Was she supposed to tip this guy?

  “Andreas was hoping you could join him instead.”

  “What?”

  “He’s stuck out of town. He’d love you to join him. He’s really been looking forward to meeting you. Honestly, I’ve never seen him so smitten.”

  Emily felt her chest reinflate as a smile lifted her cheeks to the sky. “Where is he?”

  “About three hours from here. We’ll need to leave right away. The limo is out front.”

  The limo is out front. How many times had that phrase passed through her fanciful mind as a schoolgirl imagining her Prince Charming? What was this guy’s name? Had he said Michael? Feeling disoriented but brushing aside her own queries for now, she said, “I’m nowhere near ready. Look at me.”

  “You look lovely, and besides, you’ll have plenty of time to get yourself together on the plane.”

  “The plane?”

  “Just grab your passport. Andreas has arranged for ev
erything else.”

  “What does that mean?” She spoke without thinking, and immediately feared that she’d sounded rude.

  In response, Michael just smiled.

  She began to wonder if the bicycle messenger had hit her head as well as her hand. Perhaps she was in a coma, dreaming all of this. If she was, she hoped she’d make it to the happy ending before waking. If she wasn’t, would she be crazy to consider this extraordinary proposition?

  She knew what Jen would say.

  Jen would bring up all kinds of horror stories about murders and kidnappings. Emily didn’t want to hear it, but figured she should at least let Jen know what was happening. She’d make it a quick call.

  Reaching for her phone, she again remembered the lake. She didn’t have a phone, or even a number without access to her electronic address book.

  As she was contemplating this twist to her unbelievable predicament, Michael raised his left hand, presenting a small pizza box made of black leather. He held it there for a second to let her suspense build, then he pulled back the lid to reveal a necklace that glowed like a spring morning. A magnificent golden sun pendant on a platinum rope. The ends of the rope fed through a large platinum moon clasp, and wrapped around a matching pair of earrings — a golden sun, and a platinum moon. “Andreas said you’d know the significance.”

  She did. It was her favorite line of poetry, a line he’d referenced in one of their early emails. Tears started streaming down her cheeks as she recited the line. “Tell me the story about how the Sun loved the Moon so much he died every night to let her breathe.”

  She reached out with both hands to lift the necklace from the box, fearing that she was about to pop the illusion. It was heavier than she’d expected, and by far the most beautiful piece of jewelry she’d ever touched. Clearly a different caliber from anything else in her modest box. She wasn’t even certain how to work the fancy clasp.

  “May I assist you?” Michael asked, holding out his free hand.

  “Why don’t you come in,” Emily said, backing into her woefully humble flat. Michael followed and she turned her back to him, lifting her chestnut ponytail while watching him in the wall mirror beside the door.

 

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