Dead and Gone

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Authors: Andrew Vachss
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yes?”
    “Yes.”
    “So he had many opportunities. Dmitri has military training, but he is no master tactician. If he had been paid—paid enough —to risk a homicide, he would have acted on it when he had the chance, not given you so much time to ascertain his intent.”
    “Is he an enemy of your people?”
    “Perhaps once.” The man shrugged. “If he was paid to be so, perhaps again. But all Dmitri wants now is money. A pogrom would not bother him morally, but he would not participate unless he was paid. And now in Russia there is no one to pay him. Afghanistan was their Vietnam. But, unlike America, they never recovered.
    “The IMF had to bail the Kremlin out after it defaulted on its own bonds, and devalued the ruble. There is no ‘Russia’ anymore. And what shreds are left would not, could not spend the time or the resources to keep our people imprisoned. A little corruption, a little bribery, yes. After all, Russia was once the ultimate bureaucracy. But there is no government policy preventing our people from coming home.”
    “Still, you know a lot about him.…”
    “We know a lot about many people. They are not our people, but they could be of use, someday. In our trade, today’s enemy is tomorrow’s asset.”
    “Would you know who his second-in-command is?”
    “They are no longer military, Mr. Burke. No more chain of command. He has fellow thugs, that is all. He is the boss, not the general.”
    “So if he were to step down …?”
    “Hah! Dmitri would never step down. Ever. And should he be … removed, there would be the usual scramble for power. An orderly succession is highly unlikely.”
    “But, eventually, no matter who took over, you would know, right?”
    “Yes. They have no secrets from us. Some we buy, some we … acquire. But all we get, eventually.”
    “Thank you. For all this. I know the value of information. If I can ever be of service to you …”
    “You are with our brother,” the man said quietly, for the first time including the Mole in his glance. “This is for him, not for you.”
    I had to play it as if the Israeli’s info was gospel. And I had to play my lone ace very carefully. You only get one chance to take advantage of someone believing you’re dead.
    I took another ten days to set up a meet with Dmitri. The prelims were handled over pay phones. I was a guy who knew a guy who knew a guy, voice-filtered. The “buyer” was a crazy old man with maybe six months to live—advanced aplastic anemia. He wanted some surface-to-air missiles so he could bring down one of the camouflaged helicopters ZOG kept sending over his compound. That way, he could show the whole world the kind of covert surveillance the Jewocracy was conducting against patriotic Americans.
    Not only that, the old man was psycho enough to pay retail. A sweet score for Dmitri. Ten points to me for the steering, talked down from twenty-five.
    But Dmitri wasn’t moving from his restaurant. Dealing with strangers, that was the only place he’d do business, no exceptions. The guy was in a wheelchair, too fucking bad—they could just wheel him in. And no problem about an interpreter—Dmitri was proud of his English.
    “N o,” I said, flatly.
    “They’d never—”
    “No,” I told Michelle again. “If this doesn’t work out, it’s going to be messy.”
    “And you think I can’t—?”
    “It’s not for you,” I said. “That’s the end of it.”
    “Because …?” she insisted.
    “Because they won’t recognize me . I won’t look like this forever, but, for now, I’ll get right past their screens,” I said, wondering even then if I was being honest with myself. “But anyone would know you again, honey.”
    Michelle loved to shop, but she wasn’t buying any of my lame flattery that night. “Who, then? You think Max is going to be able to disguise himself. As what? The Mole? Sure! And don’t even think about the Prof or Clarence; the last time a black man was in that

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