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Authors: Brian Haig

BOOK: The Hunted
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But it was safe. Lots of important and famous folks made their nests inside this famous building—they demanded privacy and
good security, they paid out the nose for it, and they got it.

Elena adored its simplicity. The small space suited her fine—it was easy to clean. Alex felt cramped, squeezed, slightly claustrophobic.
He loved big, open spaces and frequently cursed Golitsin for stealing his home, for exiling him to an apartment that would
be swallowed by his old bedroom.

The contract for the co-op, their phones, their cars, their insurance—everything was registered under Elena’s maiden name.
The name Konevitch disappeared from sight. On Mikhail’s expert advice, to be on the safe side, every two months Alex flew
in and out of Chicago, brief trips where he liberally sprinkled the Konevitch name around Russian nightclubs and neighborhoods.
On the first visit he even signed up for local cell phone services with unlisted numbers. Maybe the bad people were still
hunting them, maybe not.

Safe beats sorry every time, Mikhail advised him.

Alex and Elena were one year into their new life, and their new careers were flourishing. The requests for political asylum
had come through ten months before. Their lawyer, Martie P. Jones, MP to friends, or to anybody, really, had been as good
as advertised. Better, in fact. MP had started his career laboring in the trenches as a lawyer in the stodgy legal office
at the Immigration Service. He knew exactly what buttons to push, with a Rolodex that would put the New York phone book to
shame.

A few calls to the right people and Alex and Elena’s request was stamped “expedite.” A few weeks later they were ushered into
a sterile room before a small panel of serious people, sworn to honesty, and asked to present an abbreviated version of their
sad case. The panel looked bored and impatient initially. That quickly changed. For starters, Alex opened his shirt and offered
a long, nauseating gaze at the hammer-and-sickle emblem fried on his chest. A minute later, out popped the photos of Alex’s
overall physical condition, blowups of the photos taken by the doctor two days after they landed at Kennedy International.
They were color and close up. MP accompanied the visuals with vividly horrifying descriptions—see, this is where the chair
broke on his leg; the bruised lumps here, well, those are fractured ribs; and so forth. The wounds were brutal. Several members
of the panel gasped and looked away. The verdict was returned promptly.

Approved, but only conditionally—welcome to America, land of the free and the brave—now go out there and make us proud you’re
an American.

Just one glitch: you must have a job—a place of permanent employment before permission to apply for full residency was granted.

Any job with a domestic corporation was also easily traceable, and therefore out of the question, so Alex immediately contacted
his old friend Illya Mechoukov. They had met four years before, when Illya was first toying with the idea of jumping into
mass-market advertising. No such thing existed in the Soviet Union, at least not in the same sense as in the West, where big
companies spent billions each year shoving their names out into the marketplace. Illya was young, only twenty-five, and seized
with the progressive idea that he would mimic the huge Western advertising firms. His business would explode quickly, he was
sure, and the money would pour in.

A great idea that instantly hit a brick wall. Illya was odd-looking, with a hooked nose, unbalanced features, long woolly
hair, and a thick black beard that looked revolutionary. But he was filled with brilliant concepts that poured out of his
lips in quick, nervous bursts. He was inventive and wildly creative; unfortunately, he was also far ahead of his time. The
former communists had no idea what he was talking about, or why it mattered. People went to stores. They grabbed the item
off the shelf. The very idea of spirited competition sounded confusing, possibly immoral. The notion of trumpeting your own
product struck them as haughty, self-indulgent, a blatant waste of money.

Three minutes into his initial pitch in Alex’s office, Alex leaned across his desk. “Okay, I’ve heard enough. Here’s the deal:
I’m buying you. Not just your advertising, you. I’ll fund your company, but you’ll service my accounts before all others.
I’ll be the chairman of the board, you’ll be the president, the chief of daily operations, and the brains. It’s your show
to run, and I expect great results.”

Illya tugged on his beard and briefly considered this remarkable offer. “You’re kidding.”

“Yes, it’s a joke. That’s why I am about to write a check for five million dollars. Buy the best film and printing equipment
on the market, hire good people, and call me if you need more.”

The company was legally incorporated in Austria, close to Russia’s border and surrounded by cutthroat Western competitors.
Alex insisted on this. Rivalry was healthy. To survive, Illya and his people would be forced to absorb the best Western practices,
sharpen their own wits, and bring that state-of-the-art knowledge to the Russian market.

Better yet, Orangutan Media, as Illya had named it, was not technically part of Konevitch Associates. To get through the doors
of Alex’s competitors the firm had to be notionally independent. The only legal documents that evidenced Alex’s financial
interests were filed with the Austrian authorities. Thus, Orangutan slipped under Golitsin’s radar.

Alex now offered to represent the company in America, and the timing could not be better. The big American corporations were
floundering in Russia. All those years of a wall separating the two worlds left the Americans clueless about the local culture,
local wants, local psychology. What worked like magic in the good ol’ USA, resoundingly belly-flopped in Russia. The Pepsi
generation caused deep bouts of head-scratching; how could a generation be defined by some stupid soft drink? Doctors recommending
this pill or that antidote were unconvincing. Russian medicine was dreadful; anything they recommended was promptly blacklisted
from the family shopping cart. And as for all those sports stars hawking products, another bust; who cared what some muscle-bound
freak gobbled or drank or rubbed on his body?

Alex would make the rounds of the big American companies and sell them on Orangutan Media—an all-Russian outfit with a native
feel for how to pitch to a home audience.

Alex would work for commission only; he wouldn’t hear otherwise. Illya was gaining traction with Russian companies, but the
business remained an uphill struggle. Monthly payrolls were always uncertain. The costs of production in Austria were staggering.
Russian companies remained skeptical about advertising, and proved hard-fisted and stingy. They undervalued it as a matter
of habit.

Within six months Alex and Elena were bagging millions in new accounts. They opened ambitiously with all-out attacks against
certain large American candy companies and gargantuan consortiums that produced everyday household products, among other things.
Most signed on—small, hesitant contracts at first, but once the clients gained confidence in this no-name Russian start-up,
they couldn’t throw enough money at Illya.

To cover more ground, Alex and Elena split up. Weekends were reserved for each other: rarely, though, was a weekday spent
in the same town. She hit the big movie studios in Los Angeles, he bounced around the oil patch in Houston. The next week,
Alex trolled New York City; he signed fat contracts to serve as subcon-tractors for three large Madison Avenue firms who recognized
that their own efforts in Russia were failing abysmally. Two days later, Elena snagged a large Tennessee drug company with
a slew of dietary products. A day after that, she hooked a New Jersey luxury cosmetics outfit that was salivating to decorate
Russia’s new class of uninhibited wealth. And so it went, week after week. Illya was elated. He tripled his staff and shifted
the operation into an expansive new sixty-thousand-square-foot warehouse in Austria. It was expensive and risky, but what
the hell. Spend money to make money, he figured. He struggled to keep up with demands that seemed to double by the week.

Their new life in America was coming together nicely. Over a million in commissions that first year. Not bad, but not good
enough. The second year, they promised themselves, would be three million. With a little luck and more elbow grease, four
million. Elena was happy. Alex was restless as always, but that was his nature, and part of his charm.

It was Saturday, and they had just finished a leisurely lunch at an excellent Georgetown restaurant followed by a brisk stroll
along the lovely tree-lined canal to burn off the calories. Harold, the doorman, gave them a distressed look as they passed
through the entrance on the ground floor. “Hey, Mr. K,” he said in almost a whisper, “you got guests upstairs.”

“I’m not expecting any.”

“Yeah, well you got ’em. Guys in suits. They flashed badges and… hey, I tried, I swear I did. They wouldn’t take no. They
been up there about thirty minutes now.”

Alex and Elena exchanged horrified looks. A race for the elevator and Alex punched six. They sprinted down the hallway. Alex
gently pushed Elena aside before he stuffed his key into the door. No need, it swung open. He stepped through the entry, tense
and ready to swing.

What a mess. The couches were overturned and knifed open, their interiors gutted, drawers emptied on the floor, lamps broken,
books torn apart. The place had been tossed with cruel deliberation. The new furniture and furnishings Elena had picked out
with such loving care were ruined. Two men in gray suits loitered by the living room window, ignoring the glorious view of
the river while they admired their own handiwork. They took quick looks at Alex and Elena but didn’t budge.

“Who are you?” Alex demanded, making no effort to disguise his fury.

“FBI,” came the prompt reply. Two sets of identification were quickly flashed, then quickly put away.

“Why are you here?”

“Welcome to America, pal,” said one of them with a nasty sneer. “We had a tip you and the wife were harboring a fugitive.”

“That’s ridiculous.”

“Yeah? Seemed real enough to us.”

“Do you have a warrant?”

“What are you, a lawyer?”

“Show me your warrant or get out.”

They rocked back on their heels and laughed. Take a strike at us, their body language screamed. Look what we did to your home,
look at your wife’s horrified face, and do what any real man would do. Go ahead, run across the room—throw your best punch.
We’ll slap your ass in cuffs, cart you off like trash, and, as an undesirable, have your ass on the next flight to Moscow.

Alex was mad enough to do it, but at that moment a third man strolled out of their bedroom. Alex glanced in his direction,
and froze. The man was tall and thin, dressed in a rumpled trench coat, and wrapped in his arms was their home computer. He
looked, in fact, remarkably like his old friend Colonel Volevodz—but it couldn’t be. Not here, not now. This was America.

“Hello, Mr. and Mrs. Konevitch.” Amazing—he even sounded like Volevodz, right down to the clipped arrogance.

Alex drew a few heavy breaths and struggled to get himself under control. He felt a large lump in his throat. He snapped at
Volevodz, “I thought your friends in external security were territorial. What are you doing here?”

In Russian, Volevodz replied very coolly, “You’re a wanted felon. I’m here to take you back.”

“Then you’re going to be disappointed,” replied Alex in English.

“Am I?” Volevodz stayed with Russian so the Fibbies couldn’t understand a word. He had arrived two weeks before, after a call
from Tatyana to Tromble offering his services and expertise.

The Konevitches’ year of dodging and ducking was over. No more hiding behind his wife’s name. Nicky’s boys had been chasing
ghosts in Chicago for a year, cowering in an embattled outpost in a forlorn corner of the city, and coming up empty. What
they could not do, the FBI handled with speed and ease. A polite inquiry to the INS revealed the Konevitch address, working
situation, and immigration status. Another call to the IRS revealed the full details of their financial status. All information
the FBI gave Volevodz that he passed on to Nicky, via Tatyana. Hide-and-seek was over, a new game was about to begin.

One way or another, dead or alive, but on a plane to Russia, Konevitch was going to lose.

“I don’t think I will,” Volevodz countered, arrogance rising to full pitch. “You’ve tangled with the wrong people. There will
be no second chance, Konevitch. You’re a fool, you should have taken the deal.”

“Think again. I have political asylum.”

“I strongly advise you to come along willingly. This is inevitable, believe me. Make it easier on all of us.”

“Get out of my apartment. Now.”

A switch to English. “What will you do, Konevitch? Call the police? These are the police,” he said, nodding his sharp chin
in the general direction of the two agents by the window.

They smiled and waved. Real smartasses.

Elena bared her teeth and said to the two agents, “You should be ashamed of yourselves. Even in Russia, citizens aren’t treated
this way anymore.”

“How much did you pay for this place?” one of the agents asked without a trace of curiosity. It was a statement of fact, an
accusation, or, worse, a verdict.

“None of your business,” Elena shot back.

“Nine hundred and seventy thousand,” the agent replied, scowling. “Almost a million bucks. Lotta money. Cash, too. Where’d
it come from?”

Alex placed a hand on Elena’s arm—they were deliberately goading her. It would do no good to answer, so she stifled her reply.

“You stole it,” the agent said, directing a long finger at Alex. “You robbed your own investors. You fled with hundreds of
millions of dollars. You’re crooks who lied to the immigration board to procure your status. You’re nothing but lying thieves.”

Elena had passed the point of rage. She was going to have her say, no matter what. “That’s a lie. I don’t know what this man
told you, but he’s a liar. You’re stupid and he’s a liar. Get out.”

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