Prototype
By Jason Dean
()
About this ebook
Having just completed a complex recovery assignment, covert salvage specialist Korso is in no mood to take on another job so soon, but he has little choice when he’s contacted by Cole Ashcroft, an ex-colleague who’s calling in a debt. An official at the US Embassy in Bulgaria has approached Cole with a well-paying salvage job, but only if he can persuade Korso to plan the whole operation.
A chemist for a pharmaceutical company has secretly developed a revolutionary glaucoma pill, one with an unexpected side effect that could make it the discovery of the century. But the chemist has since been found dead, and the prototypes are missing...
Aware that ownership of these pills could shift the balance of military power overnight, the embassy man offers to pay Korso handsomely to locate and recover them using any means necessary. But with a job this big Korso also knows he’ll have to assemble a team to help him, and that brings its own set of problems. Because with potential profits in the billions, can he really trust anyone...?
A full-throttle thriller that will keep you guessing to the very end, perfect for fans of Mark Greaney, Ben Coes and Adam Hamdy.
Jason Dean
Jason Dean spent much of his professional life as a graphic designer before deciding what he really wanted to do was write the kind of international thrillers he’s always loved reading. The James Bishop series was the result. He is now working on the next book in the Korso series. Jason lives in the Far East with his wife and their dog.
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Prototype - Jason Dean
For Jeevan Rai,
fellow film aficionado
ONE
‘Do you know what’s about to happen to you, Darian?’ the man with the small eyes asked. ‘Specifically, I mean?’
Darian Yanev shook his head in mute terror. It was the only part of his body he could move. Naked from the waist up, his arms, torso and legs were strapped tightly to a steel gurney that was angled slightly downwards, with his head at the lower end. Underneath his head was a large plastic bucket, full of water. Yanev’s puffy face was still bleeding from the beating he’d just taken, the left eye swollen up until it was almost completely shut, while a kaleidoscope of bruises covered his chest and stomach area.
‘Well, I’ll tell you,’ his interrogator said, grabbing a thin towel from a nearby table. Another older man, dressed in a dark, expensive three-piece suit, stood in one corner or the small, windowless room, watching the proceedings. ‘First thing we do is place this damp towel over your face, and then I fill that jug over there with water and slowly pour it over your nose and mouth. You’ll try holding your breath, but adrenaline will take over and your heart will be pumping a mile a minute, so you’ll be forced to let it out, and then when you inhale you’ll be taking in pure H20. The wet towel will clamp tight against your nostrils and mouth, and you’ll choke uncontrollably. You’ll get spasms in your larynx and won’t even know if you’re breathing in or out, which will feed your panic even more.’
‘Please…’ Yanev began.
‘Now they say waterboarding simulates the effects of drowning, but that’s wrong. You actually are drowning. With your medical background you must know how painful that is, with your lungs heaving violently as they try to take in oxygen that’s no longer there. So my question is, are you really going to force us to go through with this, or can we just cut straight to the part where you give us what we want?’
Yanev’s breathing was becoming short now. He also looked terrified. ‘My pills…’ he mumbled in a thick voice.
‘That’s right, Darian,’ the other man said. ‘Just give us the formula for those pills of yours and all this will be over in seconds. We’ll untie you and treat your wounds, and then we’ll draft up a legal agreement whereby we can all profit from this. I’m a fair man, and that’s all I’ve ever wanted, so why not make it easier for yourself and just tell us?’
‘My pills,’ Yanev said again. He took a deep breath, and swallowed. ‘My pills…’
‘Christ, this is useless.’ The older man gave a weary sigh. ‘Okay, get on with it.’
‘Yes, sir,’ the first man said, and carefully arranged the damp towel over Yanev’s face until it was completely covered. Yanev whimpered helplessly underneath, his breath still coming in short rapid gasps, while the interrogator grabbed the empty jug from the table and filled it with water from the bucket on the floor. Then he raised the jug eight inches above the man’s head and began to pour.
The effects were immediate. As soon as the liquid made contact with the man’s nasal cavity, Yanev’s chest hitched violently and he arched his body off the gurney as far as it would go. He gagged and coughed and spluttered, his head twisting from side to side in a pointless effort to escape the onslaught, while the other man continued pouring water onto the shroud over his face. As the seconds passed, Yanev’s struggling became more strenuous, and his hacking more violent.
Finally, after another twenty seconds, the man in the suit said, ‘Enough.’
The first man stopped pouring, and yanked the drenched towel from Yanev’s face. His back still arched, Yanev’s chest continued to jerk and hitch as his lungs tried to take in the necessary oxygen. It took another two minutes before his breathing became even close to normal.
‘Well?’ the interrogator asked. ‘You ready to talk now?’
‘My pills,’ Yanev said, in a hoarse voice. ‘My—’
‘Again with this.’ The interrogator shook his head. ‘Looks like we’ll have to take another dip.’
‘Wait.’ The other one stepped forward, leaned in closer to Yanev. ‘He keeps saying the same thing. What about these pills, Darian? Are you saying you’ve already taken the next step and synthesised some, that you’ve actually developed prototypes?’
Yanev nodded his head. He coughed again, and said, ‘Yes, but—’
‘I knew it.’ The man in the suit turned to his subordinate with wide eyes. ‘I just knew it. The answer to all our problems and it’s right here in front of us.’ He turned back to Yanev. ‘Forget about the formula, Darian. Just tell me where you hid those pills, and this will all be over in seconds.’
‘My pills,’ Yanev croaked. ‘Please…’
‘Just tell me where you hid them, godammit.’
Yanev opened his mouth, as though about to speak, and then his eyes widened and his body suddenly started jerking spastically as he frantically tried to take in air again.
‘What the hell?’ the interrogator said, backing away.
‘Dammit, he’s having a coronary,’ the other one said. ‘That must be what he was talking about. His heart pills.’ He quickly patted Yanev’s trouser pockets, but found nothing. He turned to his subordinate. ‘His shirt and jacket. Where are they?’
‘The room at the end of the hall.’
‘Get them. Move.’
As the interrogator dashed from the room, the man in the suit held Yanev down as he struggled frantically against his bonds, his head twisting from side to side, his eyes bulging from their sockets. Spittle flew from his mouth as his movements quickly became even more frenzied. The interrogator returned in less than half a minute, out of breath, and holding two small tube containers.
‘Found these,’ he said. ‘Digoxin and beta-blockers.’
‘Give them to him. Quick.’
The interrogator unscrewed the cap of the first tube, and was dropping several pills into his palm when Yanev let out a long, piercing scream that sounded anything but human. He froze for a moment, every muscle stretched to its limit, and then suddenly collapsed back onto the gurney like a rag doll. He didn’t move after that.
‘No, no, no, no.’ The man in the suit placed his fingers against Yanev’s carotid artery, then pressed his ear against the man’s chest. He stayed there for at least twenty seconds. Finally, he rose up again, and shook his head. ‘No pulse at all. He’s gone. Shit.’
‘You’re sure?’
The man in the suit just looked at him with contempt. ‘A man with a weak heart. I don’t suppose you thought to check his medical history before putting him through all this?’
The interrogator looked pained. ‘Things kind of escalated before I had a chance to think about it.’
They looked down at the corpse on the gurney. The seconds passed in silence.
‘So what now, boss?’ the interrogator asked finally.
‘Now?’ The older man gave another deep sigh. ‘We keep going, of course. This is far too big to let go. It just means we’ll have to do things the hard way. The formula’s died with Yanev, but those samples of his have to be somewhere. And nothing’s going to stop me from finding them. Nothing.’
TWO
Korso carried the man’s body into the small cubicle and set him down on top of his unmoving partner, who was already slumped over the toilet seat. They were both big men, and Korso was starting to sweat under his tuxedo from all the heavy lifting. But nothing in life came easy. If you wanted something bad enough, you had to make the effort.
Straightening up, he checked each man’s pulse one more time. Slow, steady, regular. The propofol dosage he’d used would keep each of them out of action for the next couple of hours or so. More than enough time. Through the thick walls, Korso could hear the muffled tenor of the legendary José Balotelli as he scaled the high peaks of ‘Que dit-il?’ from Act III of Verdi’s ‘Don Carlos’. Even muffled, the man’s voice was incredible. Pity he couldn’t enjoy it like the rest of the audience out there. But Korso knew this particular performance was also being recorded for posterity. He’d buy the digital version so he could listen to the whole thing later, but it wouldn’t be the same.
The little cubicle was very cramped now, and it took some manoeuvring until Korso was able to shut and lock the door from the inside. Stepping onto the chest of the man he’d just brought in, Korso hefted himself up and over the left-hand partition and dropped down into the adjacent cubicle, and then out again.
The restroom was still otherwise empty, and would likely remain so until the next intermission in twenty minutes time, but Korso didn’t want to push his luck. Anybody could come in at any moment, and the fewer people who saw him the better.
Korso stepped over to one of the mirrors and checked his reflection, straightening the creases in his tux jacket and making sure the bulge under his left armpit wasn’t too noticeable. Satisfied, he opened the door and the orchestra instantly became clearer and more forceful. He stepped out into the lushly carpeted corridor and looked both ways. Still nobody else in sight. Korso turned left and followed the curved hallway until he was standing in front of the door to Box 9 again. No guards, this time.
He turned the handle, gently pushed the door open a few inches, and then sidled in through the gap, quickly closing the door behind him. The box was dark, the only light coming from the stage out front. There were eight seats inside, but six were empty. A man and a woman sat in the two front seats, completely engrossed in the performance two tiers below them. It seemed neither had noticed him enter.
Reaching under his tuxedo jacket, Korso felt the weapon in his inside pocket. Eyes still on the two in front of him, he walked forward and slipped into the chair directly behind the man. His name was Gianni Accetta, and he was one of the most ruthless and successful arms dealers in all of southern Europe.
Korso waited. When there was a brief lull in the music, he coughed lightly.
Accetta turned at the sound. So did the girl. Wearing a backless designer dress, she looked to be in her late teens or early twenties, and was stunningly attractive, with long silky black hair down to her waist. The man was in his fifties, with a precisely trimmed goatee beard and dyed black hair artfully swept back over his head to cover the bald spot. He was also wearing a tux, just like every other man in the Teatro di San Carlo tonight.
‘You,’ Accetta said in perfect English. ‘What are you doing here? How did you get in? Where are my men?’
‘Occupied.’ Korso jutted his chin towards the performers down below. ‘Good to see Balotelli still on top form, isn’t it? He should never have retired.’ He turned to the girl. ‘Vi divertite, Francesca?’
‘Sì, molto.’ She gave him a puzzled smile. ‘Ti conosco?’
‘No, but Mr Accetta here knows me well enough, right?’
‘Okay, I’m impressed,’ he said. ‘You know my girlfriend’s name, you found out where we’d be tonight, and you even found a way past my bodyguards somehow. Where are they, by the way?’
‘In the restroom.’
‘Both of them? How?’
‘Trade secret.’
It hadn’t taken too much effort, really. Korso had simply waited in one of the cubicles until one of the bodyguards decided to take a quick bathroom break while everybody else was enjoying the second act. Since ‘Don Carlos’ was Verdi’s longest opera at four hours, Korso felt confident it would happen sooner or later. And he also knew how to move silently. A quick jab in the carotid artery and the first guard went out like a light. Inevitably, when he failed to return to his post, his partner soon came to investigate. Thirty seconds later, he was unconscious too.
‘It seems I’m going to have to find better help.’ Accetta furrowed his brow when he saw Korso’s right hand inside his jacket. ‘Or is too late for that?’
Korso just looked at him, and said nothing.
‘Gianni,’ the girl said, clutching her lover’s arm, ‘che succede? Chi è questo uomo?’
Accetta ignored her, and watched transfixed as Korso slowly pulled the weapon from his inner pocket. No doubt preparing himself for the worst. But before it was even halfway out, he could see it wasn’t meant for him. Or rather, it was, but not in that way. Korso gently laid the thing on the armrest and carefully unwrapped the protective cloth wrapping until the asset was displayed in all its glory.
‘Oh Dio.’ Accetta’s eyes widened at the sight. ‘Magnifico. Absolutely incredible. And it’s really…?’
‘…the fabled Arctic Wolf?’ Korso finished for him. ‘The one and only.’
Started in secret by the acclaimed American knife maker, Buster Warenski, during his final years, and completed by his most talented student, Cable Wrightson, after his death, the knife was a true sight to behold. Intricately embroidered on both handle and sheath, the dagger contained 15 ounces of 18K gold, 29 ounces of 95% pure platinum, and 77 diamonds totalling eight karats. It had always been planned to be the fourth in Warenski’s much-celebrated Legacy Knives series. The first, a faithful reproduction of the gold dagger found in Tutankhamen’s tomb, had taken Warenski five years to make. The second, The Gem of the Orient, took twice that, while the third, Fire and Ice, took another seven years. Each one was an absolute masterpiece of craftsmanship, and would easily reach seven figures if put up for auction. Possible eight.
The fourth knife was in the series was never named, but Warenski gave a few hints as to what it might look like once completed. He died before it could be finished, but rumours soon circulated that he had given Wrightson, his very first apprentice, verbal permission to complete the work according to his detailed specifications. In honour of his mentor, Wrightson never once revealed its existence to the public, not even after he finished it. In 2011, the dagger was allegedly stolen from a safe in Wrightson’s house and never seen again, although the legends surrounding it grew all the same. Nobody knew where the Arctic Wolf title originated, but it fitted the chilly appearance of the dagger perfectly. Under natural lighting, one could make out an almost bluish tint to the blade when it was tilted a certain way. It really was a work of art.
Since the Arctic Wolf wasn’t a ‘pure’ Warenski piece, it was hard to gauge how much the thing was really worth. And what with it being stolen property, the Warenski estate was unlikely to ever give it their official seal of approval either. But Korso knew there were a handful of collectors around the world who’d still pay through the nose for the knife should it ever materialise on the open market.
Accetta moved to touch the prized item.
‘Not so fast.’ Korso said, and covered it again with the cloth.
Accetta made a fist of his hand as he pulled it back, clearly embarrassed at exhibiting such blatant hunger. He glared up at Korso. ‘What are you doing here anyway? We were due to meet up in Milan tomorrow night for the exchange. Or did I get my dates mixed up?’
‘I decided to bring things forward a day instead. You’d be amazed at how many of my clients suddenly decide, once the salvaged item in question is physically back in their hands, that it would be far simpler to erase me from existence rather than pay me my agreed thirty-three per cent. It’s become an occupational hazard. That’s not to say you’d be anything but honourable, but I’ve found it’s better to prepare for the worst. I’ve a number of workarounds for any given situation. In this case, using the backdrop of a charity comeback performance by the most accomplished opera tenor of our age, at Naples’ historic Teatro di San Carlo no less, was too good an opportunity to pass up.’
‘Gianni, chi è?’ Francesca asked her man, more forcefully than before. Without looking at her, Accetta told her to be quiet and watch the show. She turned away in a huff.
‘She’ll make you pay for that later,’ Korso said.
‘Not if she knows what’s good for her. Tell me, where did you find the dagger?’
‘In the home of a very shady but highly influential businessman in Buenos Aires. He probably hasn’t noticed it’s missing yet. But then, I know for a fact he’s got a lot of other things on his mind at the moment. I made sure of it before I left.’
‘And would I know of this man?’
‘I dare say you’ve had business dealings with him in the past.’
‘Interesting. And he was the one who stole it from Wrightson’s safe in America?’
Korso shook his head. ‘He was at least two steps removed. I did discover that he stole it from the man who arranged the original robbery, though. After having him killed first, of course. But it’s here now, one step away from changing ownership again. Once we complete the financial arrangements, that is.’
‘And can I assume the original amount we agreed upon is still in effect? Or have you decided to get greedy now that you’re once more in the driver’s seat?’
‘A contract’s a contract, Mr Accetta, and I always keep my end of the deal. That’s why I’m always in demand. $1,500,000 was the agreed figure, which makes my percentage half a million. I assume you can transfer it to my account immediately?’
‘Of course.’ Accetta pulled a phone from his trouser pocket and began swiping the screen.
Meanwhile, Korso pulled his own phone from his jacket and went straight to the password-protected website of his private Lichtenstein bank. After keying in his account number and fourteen-digit password, he went to his account page and waited. As he watched Accetta play with his own phone, he listened to Balotelli sing the final few notes of ‘Que dit-il?’ before the orchestra segued seamlessly into ‘Ce jour heureux est plain d’allégresse!’ This would allow Balotelli to get his breath back before Act III’s final ensemble piece, ‘En placant sur mon front,… Sire, la dernière heure,’ which would immediately be followed by the second intermission. Korso aimed to be long gone before then.
He noticed the girl had quickly rebounded from her earlier rebuff and was once again happily entranced by the performance below. Which showed a strength of character rarely seen in someone so young, and especially in one so beautiful. It seemed Accetta had better judgement in women than Korso gave him credit for.
‘There,’ Accetta said. ‘The money’s been deposited.’
Korso looked down at his own phone. After a few seconds, the figure of US$500,000 appeared in his credit balance. Almost immediately it disappeared again, having automatically been split into seven random amounts and wired to seven other untraceable accounts he held around the world. He logged out, pocketed the phone, and slid the asset across the armrest.
Accetta took the dagger and slowly removed the protective cloth again. Seemingly forgetting Korso was even there, he just stared down at his prize in a state of awe.
‘Small word of advice,’ Korso said.
Accetta looked up at him. ‘Yes?’
‘You may want to keep your ownership of this particular knife a very close secret. And I mean from everybody. I prefer live clients to dead ones, and this is starting to look like one of those artefacts that brings bad luck to anyone who possesses it. Like a Judas Coin.’
‘I’m surprised. You don’t strike me as someone who believes in luck, bad or otherwise.’
‘I don’t, but I do believe in circumspection where certain items are concerned.’ Korso shrugged. ‘Your choice. Do as you will.’
He smoothed down his tuxedo as he stood up. ‘Francesca,’ he said, and waited until she turned his way, ‘è stato un grande piacere conoscerti.’
She smiled at the compliment, and said, ‘Il piacere è mio,’ before turning back to the show.
Korso looked down at Accetta. ‘And if you want another piece of advice, you should hold onto this girl. It’ll be worth it in the long run.’
At the door he turned back to see Accetta whispering something in Francesca’s ear, Stepping out into the still empty corridor, Korso shut the door and left them to it.
THREE
Korso pressed his key card close to the reader, waited for the click, and pushed open the door to his third floor hotel suite. Locking it behind him, he stepped into the modern living room and set his vinyl bag down on the glass coffee table.
Out the windows, he could see the April sun slowly setting on the cityscape outside. He went over to open the French doors and stepped out onto the small balcony. The lukewarm breeze against his face felt refreshing, and he let the snatches of amiable chatter from the pedestrians and tourists below wash gently over him. He was currently staying at the five-star Hazelton Hotel, set in the heart of the leafy, upscale Yorkville district of Toronto. He had to admit it was an excellent hotel, with no shortage of amenities and first-class service all round. But the main reason he was staying there was its close proximity to the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library on St. George Street, where amongst other treasures they had a very rare copy of Shakespeare’s first folio on display.
Published in 1623 by two of Shakespeare’s friends and fellow actors, John Heminge and Henry Condell, Mr William Shakespeare’s Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies was the earliest collected edition of the bard’s works, and has since become one of the most sought-after items in world literature. Only 750 first folios were printed, and just 233 of those are known to have survived today.
One could only view the Thomas Fisher Library’s copy on request, under very strict supervision, and there was a very long waiting list. But Korso needed to visit in person so he could compare their first edition to his own notes taken over a decade ago from a similar edition. To complicate matters further, proofing corrections continued to be made during the initial printing process and no pages were discarded, meaning each copy was unique with its own typographical errors, and no copy contained all pages in their final state. This obviously meant that those copies that came at the end of the print run had far fewer typos than the very earliest printings.
It was all very confusing, but that was part of the challenge.
In between salvage assignments, Korso spent a good portion of his time tracking down some of the world’s rarest first editions for a select roster of clients. Since he’d always loved the written word, this was less work to him than it was a hobby. Also a very lucrative one, since he commanded a finder’s fee for any successful transaction between buyer and seller. But more than anything else he took pleasure from the detailed investigative work involved, and could lose himself completely for days when he was deep into the hunt.
Currently, he had a very rich Asian client who was considering purchasing a first folio from a private collector in Oxford, England, whom Korso had met at an exclusive invitation-only sealed-bid auction six months previously. This collector had told Korso he’d only consider selling if the right offer came along. Korso had managed to view the folio himself and was fairly sure it was the genuine article, but ‘fairly sure’ wasn’t good enough in these instances. Hence, this trip to Toronto only five days after the completion of the Italian job, followed by today’s visit to the library, which he’d actually arranged two months previously.
But the wait had been worth it, since he now knew beyond doubt that the collector’s copy was genuine. And since it contained more typos than usual, that meant it had come fairly early in the printing process – somewhere in the late seventies was Korso’s estimate.
Grabbing a Coke from the mini-bar, he unscrewed the cap and took a long swig from the bottle. Then he removed his laptop from his bag and sat down at the small office desk by the window. He logged onto the hotel’s Wi-Fi network and went straight to check his highly secure email account.
Since Korso rarely used a phone more than once before destroying the sim and trashing it, email remained his principal means of contact. He had a wide range of forwarding services to guide incoming and outgoing messages so that none could be traced to his IP address. And he also used a very exclusive proxy VPN – designed for him personally by MD Dog, a skilled hacker whose services he employed on a fairly regular basis – which added that extra level of security.
In Korso’s line of work, one could be never be too careful.
Once the page loaded up, he saw a new message in his inbox. It had been sent the day before. The sender was IVOSEC, his secure mailing service in Lichtenstein. They were very expensive, but completely trustworthy in all matters. With the kind of exclusive clientele they attracted, reputation mattered more than anything else, which meant they had to be above reproach. So far they’d never let Korso down.
He opened the email. The message was brief and to the point:
‘Dear sir – We have just taken possession of a package addressed to you.
Please advise at the earliest opportunity. Kind Regards, IVOSEC.’
For all its brevity, it was an interesting communiqué. For a start, he wasn’t expecting any package. Added to which, he knew of only three people who were even aware of this particular mailing address. And in each case, he’d advised the person in question to only use it as a last resort.
From his bag, he pulled out one of the prepaid phones he’d picked up at Toronto Pearson Airport two days ago and keyed in a number from memory. After four rings, a male voice said in perfect English, ‘Good afternoon. May I take your account number?’
Korso gave it to him.
‘Thank you, sir. Ah, yes, we emailed you yesterday about the arrival of a package under your name. Would you like me to give you the details over the phone?’
‘Not yet. What kind of package is it?’
‘A postcard.’
‘Any message on the back?’
‘No, but there is a 21-digit number written there.’
‘Can you scan each side at a high resolution and email the PNG files to me?’
‘Certainly, sir. They’ve already been scanned in readiness and I’m sending them as we speak. Is there anything further?’
‘Yes. If I don’t call you back within the next hour, I want you to shred the postcard and delete the scanned files.’
‘Of course. I’ll take care of it personally.’
‘Thank you. Goodbye.’
‘Goodbye, sir.’
Korso saw a new message had arrived in his inbox. As before, there was no header. He opened it up, downloaded the two untitled PNG files to his hard drive, and logged out again. He double-clicked on the first file, and the image opened up.
The front of the postcard showed a shot of the Kuala Lumpur skyline at sunset, with the Petronas Twin Towers as the main centrepiece. Which immediately told him who’d sent it. Of the three people he’d given this mailing address, there was only one who’d worked alongside Korso in the Malaysian capital before. It had been a long time ago, and Cole Ashcroft had helped Korso out of a very sticky situation when it would have been far more sensible to just walk away. Korso had given Cole the Lichtenstein mailing address and told him that any time he needed the favour returned, just send word.
It seemed today might be the day to repay that debt.
He closed the image and opened the second file. On the right-hand side of the postcard was the Lichtenstein mailing address, written by hand in neat caps. There was a US postage stamp in the upper right-hand corner, with a California postmark dated a week before. On the left side of the card was a handwritten line of numbers:
099518515453930259017
He remembered the simple code sequence. It wasn’t hard to crack, but it wasn’t meant to be. Korso picked up the phone again. Ignoring the second digit, the fourth, the sixth, and so on, left him with 09155 590507. He keyed in the number, made the call and waited. It was finally picked up after the seventh ring.
‘So you’re still using that mailing service,’ the familiar voice said, the faint East Coast accent still recognisable after all this time. ‘I was hoping you would.’
‘Hello, Cole.’
‘Good to hear your voice again. Uh, what do I call you now, by the way? Or are you still using your old handle?’
‘No, I discarded that one shortly after the Malaysia thing. These days I go by Korso.’
‘Korso, huh? Though I doubt it’s your real name, right?’
‘Not even close. It’s just a brand, as good as any other.’
In fact, Korso hadn’t used his actual birth name in over twenty years and probably never would again. To prove the point, he possessed three completely ‘genuine’ passports under different aliases, two of which were currently housed in separate safety deposit boxes – one in Helsinki, the other in London. Each passport had cost him somewhere in the mid-six figures, although he would have willingly paid twice that amount if necessary. The peace of mind they brought him simply couldn’t be measured in financial terms.
‘Answer a question for me,’ Korso said.
‘Shoot.’
‘You remember that civil engineer you bribed in Kuala Lumpur? We found out he had a serious allergy to something. What was it again?’
Cole snorted. ‘Jesus, that guy. Couldn’t stand the smell of fish, could he? Didn’t matter if it was cooked or raw, the slightest whiff would send him into a major panic attack. Even talking about it brought him out in hives. That satisfy you?’
‘It does. So what’s the purpose of this call? You finally calling in that favour?’
‘Kind of. What it is, I been out of play for the past few years and I need a stake again. To make things worse, I got in hock to some people recently and they’re not the kind of folks you wanna owe for very long, not if you value your health. And they’re starting to put some real pressure on me to pay my debts, like fast. Now you know my skills are kind of specialised, so I’m looking for a certain kind of job with a payday that’ll wipe out my debts and tide me over for the foreseeable future. And there aren’t many of those around for someone in my field, at least not semi-legit ones. And I was never much of a planner, so it’s not like I can dream something up from scratch like you can.’
Korso sat back in his seat, looked out the window. ‘So either the perfect job’s come along, or you’re hoping I’ve got something going with a space in it for you.’
‘It’s the first one. Now I won’t say the job’s perfect since I don’t know too many details about it yet, but I’ve been assured the payday’s somewhere in the high six-figure range, and that’s enough for me. It’s also as close to being legit as these kinds of jobs ever get, which is a real bonus.’
‘And where do I fit in?’
‘Well, that’s the interesting part, see. The only reason I even got to hear about this job was because of my past association with you, even though it was just on that one project, which barely lasted a week. But while I been away, it seems you’ve built up a solid rep as the number one go-to guy for finding things that can’t be found. The embassy guy who contacted me said you call yourself a covert salvage specialist
now. That right?’
‘It’s close enough. What guy? Which embassy?’
‘The American Embassy in Bulgaria. The guy’s name is Todd Belmont. He’s some kind of high-flyer over there, more likely chief assistant to one of the bigwigs in the place. But he’s got something major in mind, and he can’t go through normal channels. So he contacted me because he heard that I knew you. Apparently, you’re not an easy guy to get hold of. Anyway, whatever this thing is, he wants you in on it. Me too, but only if you’re part of the equation. So now you see why I connected with you after all this time.’
Korso picked up the Coke bottle and took another slug. Placing it back on the desk, he gently turned it between his fingers as he mulled over Cole’s words. Something he’d said was still niggling at him.
‘Hey, Korso, you still there?’
‘When you say you’ve been