Last Snow - Eric van Lustbader [89]
“WE DIDN’T kill Rochev’s mistress,” Jack said, waving the CCTV photos he’d found. “She was dead when we found her.”
Kirilenko, disarmed and bound to a chair with lengths of electrical flex Annika had found in a nearby utility closet, said nothing. They were in a spare office Jack had discovered, reluctantly but needfully, because they had an unconscious body that required a quiet place to rest and come around, which Kirilenko did when Annika slapped him sharply across the face. Now there was a red blotch there like a congenital wine stain. The space was a standard office with a desk, table, several wooden chairs. A filing cabinet stood against a wall. Old-fashioned venetian blinds obscured the single window.
“We went to the dacha looking for Karl Rochev,” Jack continued. “We wanted to talk with him, that’s all.”
Kirilenko, maintaining his silence, ignored Jack and Alli completely, his baleful gaze fixed on Annika leaning nonchalantly against a wall, her arms crossed over her chest, watching him like a hawk inspecting a snake.
“When we didn’t find him there we decided to leave, and that’s when we ran into your people.”
Kirilenko continued to glare at Annika, but with a smirk that made Jack think he was privy to information vital to them.
Apparently Annika thought the same thing because she came off the wall and smashed her fist into Kirilenko’s jaw. Blood spattered onto his suit lapels and his lap.
“That’s enough,” Jack said, grabbing hold of her right arm, which she’d already cocked for another blow.
“Someone had to knock that smirk off his ugly face.”
“And you’d be just the one to do it, eh?” Kirilenko said as he spat a thick wad of pink spittle onto the bare concrete floor. “Wild, short-tempered, out of control—in sum, a classic rageaholic—all the reports were right about you.”
Annika, pulling away from Jack, lunged at him with her head. “If by that you mean I’m impossible to control then you’re damn right.”
Alli interposed herself between the two, forcing Annika to look at her, not Kirilenko, and so throttling down on her anger level. After a moment of cooling Annika put a hand on her cheek and nodded her thanks.
For the first time Kirilenko looked at Jack. “What I can’t work out is why you’re with this very dangerous creature. She’s a murderer.”
“We’re all murderers here, Kirilenko,” Annika said.
“What about the girl?”
Jack leaned in beside Annika. “Leave her out of it.”
“Too late,” Kirilenko said. “From my point of view she’s as culpable as either of you.” He jerked his head away from Annika’s bared teeth. “She’ll pay the same ultimate price you two will, that’s a promise.”
Annika stood back, hands on hips. “You see, what did I tell you? There’s only one way to deal with a man like him.”
“Yes, by all means kill me,” Kirilenko said. “It’s the only way to stop me from taking you in, or killing you for your crimes.”
“We’ve committed no crimes,” Jack said.
“That’s what they all say.” Kirilenko shook his head. “Once, just once, I’d like to be surprised, but, no, you murderers are as sadly alike as crows.”
“There has to be another way,” Jack said, ignoring him. “It’s simply a matter of finding it.”
“Good luck with that,” Annika said. “I don’t know about you but I don’t plan to be here when security comes around to check all the vacant rooms.”
Jack took her by the waist and half dragged her into the far corner.
“Let’s stop this insanity,” Kirilenko said softly, conspiratorially to Alli. “Untie me and I’ll make sure you won’t be arrested or incarcerated.”
“You’re the one who’s incarcerated,” Alli said, “and it’s you who’s trying to bargain.”
She took a step toward Kirilenko, who was grinning at her like a monkey. He seemed sure he had taken the proper measure of her.
“I won’t be incarcerated forever and when I—”
“You think I’m the weak link, that you can somehow terrify me, but I’m not afraid of you.”
“Alli,” Jack said sharply, “please put your ear to the door. If you hear