Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
tugged her toward the house. Oniony gusts of sweat, overlaid
with a yeasty smell, came from her. When Jane glanced back, the
men were clustered around the car trunk.
Inside, Jane was plied with tea, orangeade, cookies and raki,
a potent and raw grape brandy. When they walked back out half
an hour later, she noticed that the car sat higher. The men were
examining a stack of boxes, and she thought she saw the glint
of sun on metal. Then Bashkim stepped in front of her, blocking the view, and they left. Her mind afloat from drinking raki
on an empty stomach, Jane leaned back in her seat. She told herself to stay vigilant, but instead dozed off, waking an hour later
with a sour taste in her mouth, acid in her stomach.
They were in the mountains now, the tall, fierce peaks that
dominate Albania, leaving only a sliver of arable land. It was afternoon. Just ahead, a bridge spanned a deep chasm. As they shot
onto it, Jane looked and saw white water rushing down. She remembered Paul saying that the bridge was near the border. Then
for a while the road would skirt Lake Ohrid, a deep body of still
water that formed a natural border between Macedonia and Albania. Coming off the bridge, Bashkim executed a sickening
curve around a precipice without a guardrail. Hundreds of yards
below, Jane saw the rusting skeletons of cars that had misjudged
the turn. Jets of saliva shot into her mouth and she thought she
might be sick.
They were on a straightaway when Jane saw an accident ahead
and a man waving a white shirt tied to a pole. Bashkim swore
and slowed. As they drew closer, Jane saw it wasn’t an accident
but two Albanian army trucks, blocking the road. A pimplyfaced soldier with a rifle waved them over to the side. Bashkim
stared ahead with a fixed intensity. The car surged forward, and
Jane thought he meant to gun the accelerator and try to blast
through.
At the last possible second, he hit the brake. The cars behind him
careened into a ditch, bumping along on a cloud of dust and then
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accelerating past the roadblock. Jane wondered if the authorities
might give chase, but they seemed supremely uninterested.
A soldier walked up to Bashkim, rifle pointed at his head,
barking orders in Albanian. Jane saw the restaurateur’s knee
tremble but his voice stayed calm. She heard the words
Amerikane
and
Skopje
. More soldiers came, ordered them out of
the car. Jane felt unreal, stiff and jerky with fear. She’d heard
about Albanian bandits who set up roadblocks and robbed Westerners of cars, clothes and even shoes, leaving them stranded in
their underwear. In years past, tractor-trailer trucks had convoyed to the Yugoslav border without stopping. Jane thought
about offering the soldiers money.
She pulled out the cell phone, thinking she’d call Paul at the
U.S. embassy in Tirana. “Help,” she’d say. “We’ve been stopped
at a roadblock by Albanian soldiers and I think we’re in trouble.
Now aren’t you sorry you didn’t let me ride with the courier?”
The soldiers shoved Bashkim and screamed questions at him,
ignoring her. Jane took several steps away. Nobody noticed. She
drifted around one truck, moved along the tarp to the other, then
froze in disbelief.
In the cab, hunched over a laptop, sat Paul. Another embassy
guy with a crew cut that she remembered from a Tirana dinner
party leaned against the door, peering intently at Paul’s screen,
a cell phone pressed to his ear. Jane checked her first impulse to
dash over and throw herself, sobbing, into Paul’s arms. Instead,
she ran through all the possible reasons her lover might be sitting in this desolate mountain pass with a passel of Albanian soldiers, and why he hadn’t told her he was coming or offered her
a ride himself. The answers she came up with made her shrink
back into the shade of the tarp. But it was too late.
Sensing her presence, Paul looked up. “Jane,” he said. “Oh my
God. What are you doing here?”
Like it was a big surprise. She thought back on the argument
at the restaurant. Paul announcing in a loud voice that he
couldn’t allow the embassy courier to drive her to Macedonia.
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His look of near gloating—she now realized—when Bashkim had
offered a ride.
“You planned this,” Jane said. “You set him up.”
“That’s ridiculous,” Paul said, but his voice was as hollow as
his eyes.
He glanced over her shoulder, and grim satisfaction spread
across his face. She turned and saw the soldiers unloading boxes
from the trunk of Bashkim’s car. They had found the machine
gun, too. Over to the side of the road, Bashkim lay spread-eagle
on the ground. One of the soldiers kicked him as he passed and
the prone man gave a strangled cry.
“Stop it, you bastard, we need him for questioning,” the crewcut man called.
Paul cursed and jumped out of the cab. He walked toward the
soldier and in the moments that followed, Jane saw a different
man than the one she had known. His bearing, even the tenor
of his voice, changed. He was self-assured, in charge, bristling
with power. The soldier cowered as Paul dressed him down in
perfect-sounding Albanian.
Jane listened, astounded. Paul had told her he was hopeless
with languages. Now this stranger walked back to her and said,
“I’m sorry, Jane. But you were never in danger. We were tracking you with the global positioning device.” He nodded smartly
at the cell phone, which she still clutched impotently in her
hand. “Led us right to the safe house.”
Realization bore down like an oncoming train that would
smash her into a thousand pieces. She had been the decoy. A
nicely turned-out Western woman. Each side had used her.
Something did break in her then. But to her surprise, when she
examined the sharp and deadly pieces, she found that they had
their own terrifying beauty and usefulness.
“What did Bashkim do?” she asked, willing her voice not to
tremble.
“Our pal over there is one of the biggest smugglers in Tirana.
Remember when the country rioted and looted the armories?
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He’s been trading machine guns to al-Qaeda for Afghani heroin.
We’ve been watching him for months.”
“We? Since when does the embassy track smugglers?”
“The embassy works hand in hand with Interpol.”
“You’re not some lowly attaché, are you, Paul?”
He ran his hands through his hair and looked away. He didn’t
say anything. He didn’t have to.
She felt that sanity was a thin membrane, stretching ever
tighter. If she moved even a fraction, it would snap and she’d slip
under. Yet she had to know one thing.
“Did you plan this? I mean, from the beginning? Because I
thought…it felt…”
She shook her head, blinking back tears. She had been played
for a fool.
A shadow crossed Paul’s face.
He licked his lips. “I never meant…” he began.
He didn’t get a chance to finish.
Two cars came roaring down the highway from the east, machine
guns blazing. As she threw herself to the ground, Jane thought she
recognized the vehicles that had peeled past the roadblock. Had
they also been in the convoy that had trailed them from Tirana?
Gunfire erupting around her, Jane clutched her head and crawled
on her belly toward the nearest truck, expecting at any second to
be hit and feel no more. Reaching the undercarriage, she rolled beneath it and listened to the shouts, the guns, then the groans of
dying men. She prayed no bullets would pierce the gas tank.
After what seemed like hours, the shooting stopped. For a long
time, there was silence. In the distance, a bird screamed, the exultant cry of a carrion feeder that spies dinner. Then she heard
footsteps. She cowered and curled herself into a ball, wishing she
might disappear. A shadow fell on the highway, and she saw a
polished leather shoe.
“Come out,” said an Albanian-accented voice in English.
Bashkim.
She didn’t answer.
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“If you don’t come out, I’ll shoot you.”
Still she stayed silent, wondering if he was bluffing. She heard
the crack of his knees as he squatted. A hand with a gun appeared, angling to and fro, then settling its muzzle blessedly far
from where she lay. Jane held her breath as he pulled the trigger.
One of the truck’s tires exploded with a loud pop and began to
deflate. She gave an involuntary scream.
“I knew it.” His voice was triumphant. “Last chance, Jane.
Next time I aim for your voice.”
“Okay,” she said. “Don’t shoot.”
She crawled out and they stared at one another.
“Please,” she said. “I didn’t know it was a setup.”
Bashkim’s lips pursed. He looked at where Paul’s body lay, eyes
staring glassily at the sky. Near his head was a pool of blood. All
around her were other crumpled bodies. One of the cars that had
shot at them lay on its side, smashed and burning. She looked
for the other.
“It went over the edge,” Bashkim said. “They couldn’t have
survived.”
“Wh-who were they?”
Bashkim grimaced.
“My bodyguards. Don’t you know it’s dangerous to travel in
Albania?”
“Jesus,” she said, seized with an uncontrollable bout of
shivering.
Bashkim stared at her, and Jane thought he might be trying to
decide whether to kill her now or later. They both knew she’d
seen too much to live.
“He betrayed me, too, you know,” Jane said.
He examined her indifferently. “So I heard.”
He walked to where her cell phone had fallen and smashed it
with his heel, grinding it into the asphalt like a cockroach.
“Don’t kill me,” Jane said. “I’ll help you. I’ve got an American
passport, money.”
“Yes,” Bashkim nodded. “With your passport, we’ll breeze
through.”
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He prodded her with the gun, back to the Mercedes. All the
tires had been shot out, and smoke was rising from under the
hood. She wondered if it might catch fire while they stood there.
The trunk stood open, white powder seeping out of bullet-riddled boxes.
More boxes were scattered along the road, next to Bashkim’s
machine gun, which had been reduced to twisted metal. Bashkim
told her to empty her backpack and hand over her passport and
wallet, which he put in his pocket. Then he made her tear open
the boxes and fill her backpack with the sacks of white powder.
Pulling an old rucksack from his trunk, he ordered her to fill that,
too. Then, he loaded her up like a pack mule and marched her
off the highway, into the rocky countryside to a dirt trail pounded
hard by animals.
“The border’s about ten miles away. We’ll have to stay off
the road.”
They set off, moving like ghosts through the denuded landscape.
“Let’s stop here and rest a moment,” he said when they reached
a rock outcropping. His tone deliberate and unsettling. Bashkim
eased himself down. He stared at her and she looked away, thinking about escape and when she might make a break for it. She
needed cover. Bashkim stood up, laid the gun on a rock. He
walked toward her as she scrambled to her feet. Suddenly he
flung himself at her, knocking her to the ground. Jane tried to
wriggle free but he was strong and his weight pinned her. She
saw the look in his eyes. Perhaps the day’s events had awakened
something atavistic in him. Perhaps it had always been there. But
she knew she was of no consequence to him anymore. He was
going to kill her once they crossed, so it didn’t matter what else
he did in the meantime.
“Get off me,” she panted.
He shoved a hand down her pants and tugged.
“Fucking get off.”
“Fucking. Yes, that’s what all you American girls like. I knew
it the first time I saw you.”
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“You’re wrong. Get off.”
She tried to brace one hand against the dirt so she could twist
aside and knee him. Instead, her fingers glanced off a large rock.
She groped for it. It grazed the edges of her fingertips, just out
of reach. Bashkim unzipped his fly.
Jane squirmed backward and flexed her fingers toward the
rock. Her fingers nudged it, slid along the rough, granular edges,
searching for where it might taper, afford a grip. There. Her hand
closed tightly.
Bashkim tore at her underwear and rose up, wedging her legs
open with his knee. A bloodlust burned in her. She’d get only
one chance. The rock was in the air. Jane shoved her knee into
his groin and screamed as she brought the rock down hard
against the base of his skull.
He gasped, then was still. She rolled the inert body off of her,
scrabbled up. Bashkim was unconscious. Bleeding. She looked
at him and felt only a mounting need to zip up her jeans and flee.
She still held the rock, now slick with blood. Forcing her fingers to relinquish it took awhile. Jane panted shallowly, and the
enormity of everything that had happened overwhelmed her.
Leaning over a thornbush, she retched, cursing her weakness. She
had to get to the border before night fell, stranding her. Already,
the temperature was dropping. She knew the road below led to