Dedicated to the men of the Secret Services of the United States of America
Prologue
Wind-driven snow howled around the eaves of the buildings in the vast compound. It was late night, and the temperatures had already plunged well below zero in the Siberian outpost. Far on the other side of the camp, enclosed within a high steel mesh fence, the guards slept in safe isolation. Out in the open, where there were no guards at night, no fences, only the cold weather and thousands of miles of frozen terrain, it was no-man’s land. This was a labor camp for some of the worst, most hardened criminals in the Soviet Union. Murderers, rapists, bombers. Russia had them all, though it was never publicized.
A tall, powerfully built man dashed from the comer of one of the buildings into the shadows behind the next. He was oblivious to the cold. His survival that night would depend upon his complete concentration. He could make no mistakes. And to fail would be the biggest mistake of all.
“His name is Balachev. Big man with a scar on his right cheek,” the mission-master explained.
“What did he do?”
“He’s a nice fellow, let me tell you, Arkadi. He killed his mother, raped and killed both of his sisters, then strangled his father — who was a steelworker and no small man himself — after which he cut them all into little pieces and threw them into the Moscow River. How do you like that?”
“He sounds sick.”
“In camp he’s known as ‘the enforcer.’ Already he’s killed six men.”
“Why hasn’t he been taken out of there and shot? Why play games with someone like that?” Arkadi Konstantinovich Ganin asked. He and his mission-master sat in a warm office in the town of Krasnoyarsk.
“He serves two purposes, and so has been too valuable to execute. He has kept order in the camp. If anyone gets out of line, he simply kills them.”
“But that has ended?” There was a hardness to Ganin, but a natural curiosity, too. He held the KGB rank of colonel.
“Unfortunately yes. We are moving the camp away from there. The work has been done. There is a new project. Balachev would be a disruptive element.”
Ganin nodded. He had an idea what might be coming, and he didn’t like it. He was a killer. A highly trained assassin, the best in the Soviet Union. But like most professionals, he was not a wanton criminal. When he had a job to do, he did it with skill and dispatch.
“There was a second reason you mentioned,” Ganin prompted.
“Ah, yes, of course, comrade. The second purpose Balachev will serve will be for your training.”
Ganin sat up. “What are you saying?”
“Your orders are to go into the camp — tonight — and kill Comrade Balachev.”
Ganin’s dark eyes narrowed. This was stupid. More than that, it was outrageous.
“Without weapons, Arkadi Konstantinovich. You will be unarmed.”
“What is the purpose of this assignment?” Ganin asked. His mission-master, whose name he did not know, was a hard man who had trained him well. But he didn’t like this at all.
“If you fail, you will be dead, and we will simply shoot poor Balachev in the head to end his misery. If you succeed, you will be assigned to something new out of Moscow. Something that would involve much travel. Overseas travel.”
“Yes?”
“It is called Komodel — Komitet Mokrie Dela — the State Committee for Wet Affairs.”
“There is a Department Viktor in the KGB—” Ganin started, “but his mission-master cut him off.”
“This is special, Arkadi. This is run by Kobelev himself.”
The name Kobelev kept running through Ganin’s mind as he studied Barracks A from where he was concealed in the shadows. Atop every fifth building was a strong light that illuminated a wide section of the compound. The one atop the A building flickered intermittently with the wind. Balachev was in that building. Waiting for him. On parting, Ganin’s mission-master had informed him that the entire camp knew that someone would be in there to try for the killer. It made the assignment that much more interesting, on Kobelev’s orders.
No one would be protecting Balachev; at least Ganin didn’t think there would be. But the camp was filled with a thousand pairs of eyes and ears. Balachev would have his watchers. They would be reporting to him on any movement outside.
On the way out to the camp Ganin had devised a dozen plans, scrapping each after a few minutes’ reflection. Going up against one man with any kind of stealth would be impossible with all the watchers. In the end it would come down to one thing: a man-to-man fight. One-on-one. Ganin’s skill against Balachev’s.
Ganin stepped out away from the building behind which he had been crouching and approached the barracks. He could sense that he was being watched. Even the wind died for a moment.
A light atop the building flickered with a gust of wind, the metal cage over the bulb rattling.
“Balachev!” Ganin shouted again. “You are a motherless whore! A killer of weak people! Come outside and meet your match!”
For several long seconds there was no sound, no movement, and Ganin was about to shout again, when the barracks’ door crashed open and a monster of a man burst outside in a blur, bellowing in rage, a long, wicked-looking butcher knife raised over his head.
Ganin was just barely able to feint to the left, then slide right as Balachev charged, the knife swinging in a long, deadly arc, slicing open Ganin’s left sleeve.
Suddenly there were hundreds of prisoners pouring out of the barracks, forming a circle in front of the building. Either way the fight went, it would provide entertainment, and some relief. If Balachev won, it would be their blow against the state. If, on the other hand, Ganin should win, it would provide them relief against the monster’s tyranny.
Balachev had spun around in the snow, surprisingly light on his feet for his size, and he immediately charged again. This time the knife was in his left hand, and he held it low, so that he could slice upward.
Ganin had only a split second to regain his balance, and he leaped up, kicked out with both feet, catching Balachev square in the chest, and fell back, twisting out of the way as he went down. His movements were hampered by his heavy clothing, however, and he was an instant too late. Balachev buried the knife in the meaty part of Ganin’s left thigh, the pain shooting throughout his entire body.
A roar went up from the crowd of prisoners.
Balachev, sensing an early, easy victory, smiled insanely and leaped at the same moment. With superhuman effort, Ganin yanked the knife from his leg, rolled over, and brought it up, stiff-armed, the blade burying itself to the hilt in the big man’s chest.
Nikolai Fedor Kobelev stood at the window of his third-floor office looking out across Dzerzhinskogo Plaza toward Lubyanka Prison and the downtown building that headquartered the KGB. His Department Viktor office had been over there at one time. But the place was a madhouse. One hand had no idea what the other was doing. He had often maintained that the KGB’s downfall would come not because of Western coups; it would collapse of its own ponderous weight.
“Fools and opportunists, more interested in licking their superiors’ boots than doing a creative, intelligent job,” he muttered.
A knock came at his door.
“Come in,” he snapped.
His secretary Ivan Stanovich came in. “We have gotten word from Krasnoyarsk, Comrade General.”
“Yes?” Kobelev barked without turning around.
“Balachev is dead.”
“Ganin was successful, then?”
“Yes, Comrade General, although he was wounded.”
“Seriously?” Kobelev demanded.
“No, sir. A leg wound. He will be fit for duty very soon.”
“Good. I want him here within thirty-six hours.”
“Sir,” Stanovich snapped, and he departed.
Kobelev went back to his thoughts. Ganin was very good, the best in the Soviet Union at the moment. His little test in Krasnoyarsk would be nothing, however, compared to the real thing that would come very soon. Kobelev could almost taste the sweet victory that would be his when, at long last, like Balachev, Nick Carter, of the ultrasecret American intelligence agency AXE, was buried in the ground, his heart stilled forever.
One
The big 747 arriving from Phoenix, Arizona, touched down a few minutes before ten on a cold evening at Washington’s National Airport. Nick Carter, a tall, dark-haired, well-built man, limped from the first-class section, through the boarding tunnel, and out into the main terminal. As far as he was concerned, he’d been too long recovering at AXEs rest and rehabilitation facility outside Phoenix. It was time for a change of scenery.
For more years than Carter wanted to count, he had worked for AXE, which, under the guise of Amalgamated Press and Wire Services, was a highly specialized intelligence gathering and special action agency. Anything too tough or dirty for the CIA, the National Security Agency, or the individual military service intelligence establishments was taken on by AXE. And among his peers within AXE, Carter was simply the best. He carried an N3 designation, which meant that when on assignment he was licensed to kill, authorized to carry out what the Soviets called mokrie dela, or wet affairs — assassinations.
As he threaded his way through the crush of late-night passengers in the terminal, he walked with a pronounced limp. He had just come off an assignment during which he had very nearly been killed. The bullet had hit low, doing some damage to the thigh bone in his right leg. AXE doctors, who were some of the best anywhere, had taken him apart and put him back together again, as they had so many times before. It would be months before he regained complete use of his leg, but for now, at least he was ambulatory.
Carter was a man unlike other men, in that within him his sense of survival, his sense of self-preservation, was very much stronger than usual. On more than one occasion he had completed his assignment half dead from wounds or exhaustion. Where other men tried and failed, Carter never failed.
At times he was bored during the gaps between assignments. But at other times, such as this moment, he was looking forward to the next thirty days.
Enforced R&R, it was called. Coming off such an assignment as he had, it was required that he rest for a month or so. Once he was released from the hospital, however, there was no real reason for him to remain in Arizona, so he had signed himself out back to Washington, and had returned. But he wasn’t planning on staying in town very long.
He took the escalator down to incoming baggage, where a few minutes later he retrieved his two leather suitcases and then swung out to the passenger pick-up area.
His timing was just right. A brown Mercedes 450SL, its convertible top up against the chill fall air, pulled up, and the trunk popped open.
Smiling, Carter tossed his bags in the back, slammed the trunk lid, and climbed in the passenger seat, into the arms of a tall, auburn-haired beauty with large, liquid brown eyes and warm, sensuous lips. They kissed deeply for a long moment, until a cab behind them beeped.
They parted, and Sigourney Veltman looked into Carter’s dark eyes. She smiled wanly and shook her head.
“You look like hell, you know,” she said. Her voice was soft, gentle, and held an upper-class Connecticut accent.
Carter grinned. “Not exactly the first words I thought I’d hear,” he said.
“I’ll fix that.”
“Promise?”
“Promise,” she said, laughing. She put the car in gear and pulled smoothly away from the curb, accelerating down the long ramp and out the main airport exit.
Carter lit one of his custom-blended cigarettes, his initials stamped in gold on the filter, and sat back in the thick, soft leather seat. He had to admit to himself that he was tired. The day before, against doctor’s orders, he had taken an exploratory run through AXE’s very difficult desert confidence course. His time was one of his slowest ever, and he had been angry with himself. The course master, however, had been amazed.
“Slow my ass, Carter,” he had shouted at the end. “An ordinary man would have been dead halfway through. What the hell are you trying to prove?”
“I just want to stay alive the next time, Roger,” Carter said.
“Won’t be a next time if you keep this up.”
Carter and Roger Caldwell went back years. The thick-necked, beefy confidence course instructor had at one time been a crack AXE agent. A particularly difficult and dirty assignment had left him with one arm missing, the bones in both of his legs shattered, and only one kidney. They had taken him off active-duty assignments, but his recovery had been nothing short of miraculous. These days he was a tough man. Carter had a great deal of respect for him.
“Get some rest, soak up some sun, drink a little, and get hold of a sweet-talking woman who won’t raise your blood pressure. Then come back in a month and we’ll see if you can challenge the course.”
“I think I’ll do just that,” Carter had said. “And I’ve got the perfect lady in mind to do it with.”
Sigourney was the divorced daughter of Karl Stearnes, a special adviser to the President on security matters. Her ex-husband was a West German. He worked as an attaché at the German embassy in Washington. They weren’t really meant for each other, and the marriage didn’t last long, but they were still friends. The man was now married to a pleasant, down-to-earth Bavarian woman, and they had two children. Sigourney had once told Carter she felt almost like the children’s aunt. It was very strange.
On occasion she did contract work for AXE. With her beauty, her poise, and her obvious intelligence she was a natural at any foreign embassy party, where she could easily gather needed information.
She and Carter had met at one of those functions — which he usually hated — and had immediately clashed. She’d be damned if any man was going to tell her what to do.
Months later they were again on an assignment, and this time the sparks flew even more. Somehow, though, by the end of the evening he had ended up at her apartment and they had made passionate, almost violent love. He always supposed she had been trying to prove something to him that night: that she wasn’t just some empty-headed, convenient woman to be used simply for adornment.
“A penny,” she said, breaking him out of his thoughts.
He looked at her. “I was just thinking back to when we first met.”
She laughed out loud. “Oh, boy, what a bastard you were. Couldn’t tell you a damned thing. You were king of the walk... at least that’s how you tried to set yourself up.”
“You know, I damned near turned you over my knee right there in front of the Belgian ambassador and spanked you.”
“If you had tried, I would have gouged your eyes out,” she shot back.
They both laughed again.
“I’m glad you could break free on such short notice,” he said softly.
She glanced at him, and reached out and touched his cheek with her fingers. “Weather’s been lousy around here lately. Where’d you say it was we were going?”
“St. Anne’s Island Resort. It’s a tiny private island in the Caribbean. In the Turks and Caicos. We’ll have it all to ourselves, and a small staff.”
“Sounds nice, Nick,” she said, and she glanced again at him, this time with a more critical eye. “You do look like hell. But we’ve got a month to make you all better.”
“Starting tonight?”
She nodded. “I’ve got most of your things packed, your apartment will be okay, and I’ve checked on your car, extending the storage contract.”
“You really are something. Thanks,” Carter said.
“Oh, yes, one last thing,” she added. “Hawk called this evening, just before I left for the airport. Said he wanted you to call as Soon as you got in.”
Carter sat up. David Hawk was the hard-bitten director of AXE. He had been a power in the old days with the OSS, and when AXE was created by special presidential order, he had been the logical choice to head it. During the years Carter had worked for the man, they had developed a relationship of mutual understanding and respect that at times bordered on a father-son intensity, although they rarely verbalized their deep affection.
When David Hawk called, Carter dropped everything and came running. He was the only man in the world who commanded such loyalty in N3.
“Did he say what it was about?”
Sigourney shook her head. “Not really. Just that it wasn’t something to worry about... for now.”
They drove the rest of the way to Carter’s new Georgetown condo near the university in silence, parked in the back, and walked upstairs.
inside, the table was set for two, white wine was chilling in a bucket, candles were ready to be lit, and the air was full of the aroma of something being kept warm in the kitchen. Carter remembered that in addition to Sigourney’s other attributes, she was an excellent cook.
She fixed him a scotch with one cube, then went into the kitchen while he went to the phone and dialed Hawk’s private number, which was answered on the first ring.
“I’m back, sir,” Carter said.
“I won’t hold you long, Nick. Sigourney tells me you two will be leaving first thing in the morning.”
“Yes, sir. But if there’s something...”
“Nothing to hold you, really. But Caldwell called and said you were pushing yourself. How do you feel?”
Carter’s first instinct was to lie. Tell Hawk he felt fit. But no one ever lied to David Hawk. Not for very long, at any rate. And when the lie was caught, the consequences were always swift and not at all good for the liar.
“I’ve felt better, sir.”
“I’ll bet. I don’t want you pushing yourself again. When you get back, you’re going into the hospital for a complete checkup.”
“Yes, sir.”
Carter could hear Sigourney in the kitchen. She was humming some tune he couldn’t recognize.
“Something has come up, Nick, that you should know about,” Hawk began. “Nothing we can do anything about at the moment, but I suspect before too long we’re going to have some trouble on our hands. So I want you to be on your guard. Don’t back yourself into any comers.”
Carter held his silence, but he was beginning to get a gut feeling that something very bad was coming down.
“We’ve just gotten the first bits about something new in Moscow. There’s been a split, it seems, within the KGB’s hierarchy.”
“Sir?”
“Department Viktor — the assassination department within the Komitet — has apparently been shut down. Lock, stock, and barrel.”
“That doesn’t make any sense,” Carter muttered.
“On the surface it doesn’t. But we think they’ve started up something new, something much better. From what we can gather it’s called Komodel — short for Komitet Mokrie Dela — the State Committee for Wet Affairs — and deals with terrorism and assassination.”
Sigourney came from the kitchen and placed a large cast-iron pot on a trivet on the table. It was bouillabaisse; he could smell the seafood and the saffron.
“Who is running it, sir? Who is the brains behind it?”
“That’s just it, Nick. We can’t find out. It’s a highly secret, very closed shop. It was only pure luck that we got any information at all. But we do know one thing.”
Carter waited. Sigourney was looking at him, a concerned expression in her wide eyes.
“Arkadi Konstantinovich Ganin is apparently connected with this organization.”
Ganin, Nick thought. He was the Soviet Union’s very best operative, bar none. A very tough and elusive man. No one who could provide his description had ever lived to pass it out. His existence was known through his terrible deeds. But there were no photographs of him anywhere in the West.
“If Ganin is on the loose, there will be trouble,” Carter said.
“You could be a likely target, Nick,” Hawk said evenly. “I want you to watch yourself.”