“Nice shoes,” Kowalski commented.
The man glanced to his polished black oxfords and frowned at the unexpected assessment of his wardrobe.
“Well, they are,” Kowalski said with a note of defensiveness.
The newcomer’s eyes shifted to Gray. “Dobraye utro, Commander Pierce. If you’ll come with me, we have some business to discuss and not much time.”
Gray remained where he was. “Not until you tell me where the two women—”
A hand waved dismissively. “Elizabeth Polk and Dr. Shay Rosauro. Both fine, I assure you. In fact, their accommodations are a bit more refined. But we had very little time to prepare. If you’ll come this way, please.”
The six soldiers with pistols diminished the politeness of the invitation. Led out into a hallway, Gray studied his surroundings. Cells lined both sides, plainly an abandoned jail. Through some of the open doors, he spotted standing water, rusted overturned beds, and refuse piled high into corners. It made their cell’s accommodations seem generous in comparison.
The hallway ended at a guard station. It had a view across an overgrown, weedy jail yard. In the distance, off by the horizon, Gray noted the tall ventilation tower that marked the Chernobyl reactor.
Closer at hand, a chair squeaked with an almost nervous sound.
Gray turned. A table stood in the middle of the room. Masterson sat behind it, straightening in his seat, again dressed all in white, looking well rested and smug. Gray had to refrain himself from leaping over and snapping the bastard’s neck. But he needed some answers, and cooperation seemed the best way of obtaining it.
Forced to a chair on the opposite side of the table, Gray sat down. A gun remained pointed at the back of his head.
Another stranger waited in the room. She stood behind the table. Her black hair framed a smoky face, stoic and unmoving. She was also dressed in a black suit, a close match in style to that of the man who had led Gray here. The stranger crossed to the table and sat down, barely acknowledging Masterson.
The man folded his hands atop the table. “My name is Senator Nicolas Solokov. Perhaps you’ve heard of me.”
Gray said nothing, which caused the man’s mouth to quirk with disappointment.
“No? Well, that will be changing,” he responded. He waved to the slim woman. She crossed to Gray, moving with a stiff grace. She sank to a knee beside his chair, tilted her head, and reached toward his hand. Before she touched him, she cocked an eyebrow, inquiring permission.
Gray shrugged. She gently lifted his hand and rested her palm beneath his. Her fingertips tickled the underside of his wrist. Her eyes stared deeply into his.
“We’ve already had a conversation with Elizabeth Polk,” Nicolas said.
“Dr. Polk’s daughter informed us of your discovery in India. Truly amazing. That information alone was worth transporting you all here. It’s fascinating to contemplate that our heritage extends all the way to ancient Greece, to the famous Oracle of Delphi.”
Gray cleared his throat. “Your heritage?”
He waved to the woman. “And Elena’s. We’re all from the same genetic bloodline.”
Gray remembered Luca’s story. “From the lost Gypsies.”
“Yes. Dr. Masterson has informed me that you were told about the unfortunate, but necessary acquisition of those children. In fact, my father was one of those Gypsy children. And I believe you’ve met another of our extended family. Little Sasha. A girl with a special talent.”
Gray knew to whom he must be referring, but he kept his features bland, feigning ignorance.
Elena turned to Nicolas and spoke softly in Russian.
The senator nodded. “So you have met Sasha. Please do not trouble yourself to lie.” He motioned to the woman at his feet. “Elena is quite—well, perceptive, shall we say. Her touch is very sensitive, measuring the heat of your skin, your pulse. She is also keyed into your pupils and breath. Nothing escapes her. She is my personal lie detector.”
Nicolas pointed to his ear. Elena turned, and with her other hand, she parted her hair behind her ear. Gray spotted a familiar curve of surgical steel. The same implant as the girl’s. The woman was the adult equivalent of Sasha, only with a different savant talent.
“She is quite remarkable,” Nicolas growled, his words warmly proud, but with a hint of something darker beneath.
Gray studied the man, noticing something missing. “So then where is your implant?”
Nicolas’s eyes narrowed back upon him. Gray enjoyed the flicker of irritation on his face, plainly a sore point. The man’s fingers combed over his right ear in a self-conscious gesture. “Such a course was not my path, I’m afraid.”
Gray’s mind tracked the implication. If Nicolas wasn’t augmented, then he must have been born without any savant talent. Yet someone had placed him in a position of power in Russia. Why? What was the endgame here?
Nicolas continued, “Back to Sasha. From all the turmoil going on in Washington, we’ve been having trouble gaining clear intelligence on her whereabouts. That was the main reason you were brought here from India.”
Versus being shot on the spot like Abhi Bhanjee.
“We are concerned about Sasha’s welfare and want her returned. So first of all, we’d like to know where she is and who has her.”
Gray stared straight at Nicolas. “I don’t know.”
At his side, Elena shook her head.
“Would you like to try again? I’m attempting to keep this civil. But we do have four of your friends here.”
“I can’t say for sure,” Gray answered. “The last I saw her, she was in the care of our organization.”
Nicolas glanced to Elena, who nodded. It was the truth.
“And I assume you do not work for John Mapplethorpe, since the traitor attempted to assassinate you and Dr. Masterson at the hotel in Agra.”
“No, in fact, we’re fighting to keep the child away from him.”
“Wise. That man is far from trustworthy. So then perhaps we truly can negotiate. Especially since we now have something worth trading.”
“First, what do you want with the girl?” Gray asked.
“She belongs here. With the rest of her family. We can care for her much better than anyone in your country.”
“Perhaps so. But why do you want her? To what end?”
Nicolas stared at Gray, studying him with shrewd eyes. Gray sensed a depth of cunning, along with a hard conceit, someone seeking recognition, compensating perhaps for a lack of talent elsewhere.