10. Kolya
KOLYA
Two days. I had managed two days of not being in a room with her, which in a house we now shared was a feat of engineering.
I took my meals when she did not take hers.
I used the corridors she did not. I called it discipline, and it was cowardice wearing discipline's coat, and I knew the difference, because she had named it for me in my own kitchen with another man's blood still under her nails.
You do not forget the night a twenty-four-year-old nurse looks at you and sees, on the first try, the thing you have spent two decades hiding even from yourself.
Galina noticed, of course. Galina takes the temperature of a room before she has fully entered it.
She had begun setting two plates at the far ends of the long table and saying nothing, which from her is a sermon.
The second evening she set a bowl in front of me, looked down the length of polished wood at the empty chair a dozen seats away, and said only, "The coward's portion," and left.
I ate every spoonful, because she was right, and because it was very good soup, and because a man should take his verdicts where he finds them.
I am not in the habit of wanting things.
Wanting is a door, and doors are how they reach you.
I had spent my life bricking up every door I could find, and I had been the best in the family at it, and then a woman who steals her roommate's yogurt and fights with paperwork walked clean through a wall I had not known was load-bearing.
I want to be precise about the thing, because imprecision is the other way men die.
This is not a young man's feeling, the bright and stupid kind that burns clean and leaves nothing behind.
I am forty-one. I buried the bright kind a long time ago.
This is the late kind, the kind that arrives after a man has decided he is finished arriving, and it does not burn.
It settles. It moves in. It rearranges the furniture of a life you believed was already furnished, and it never once asks whether the room can take the weight.
Lebedev I could plan for. Lebedev wanted things I understood, my death, my suffering, the closing of a debt written in his brother's blood, and a man who wants those things moves in ways I have spent my life learning to read.
The wanting in my own chest moved in no way I could predict.
It made me check a locked window twice. It made me listen, in a house full of dangerous men, for one particular voice in all the noise.
It walked me, twice in two days, halfway to the east wing for no reason my training would ever sign, and then turned me back, and I despised myself for both halves of the trip.
That was the first time in twenty years I had failed to find the weak place in a thing, and it frightened me more than any enemy ever had.
The alert came at the hour the body least wants to be woken.
Not the alarm, which is loud and obvious and built for amateurs.
A text. Maks, two words. Perimeter cold.
A sensor that should have been alive had gone silent, and a sensor does not go silent on its own.
It is made silent by someone who knew it was there.
I was dressed and down the stairs before the second message landed.
We swept the grounds the way we drill it, in pairs, no lights, the cold dark closing over us as we moved.
The compound runs to nine acres behind a wall most armies would treat with respect, and I know every meter of it the way I know the backs of my own hands.
Which is how, within minutes, I understood that whoever had come knew it too.
He had come over the wall at the one place where the camera arcs leave a thin blind triangle, a flaw I had logged years ago and ruled too small to matter.
He had crossed forty meters of open ground without waking a pressure line that has never once failed.
Petya found the rope on the north face, or what was left of it, a length of black climbing line cut loose and left behind, the kind a man brings when he does not plan to leave the way he arrived.
We stood over it in the dark, six of us, the best the family has, and not one of us had heard him come or go.
It is a particular feeling, that, standing on ground you would have sworn you owned and learning that for some stretch of the night you had not owned it at all.
The men felt it. I watched them feel it, the way their hands drifted to their weapons for comfort and found none waiting there.
We held the grounds for an hour after that, because someone who gets in once can get in twice, and because standing watch is the only prayer my sort of men know how to say.
The dogs found nothing. The thermal saw nothing.
He had come and gone inside a window of perhaps four minutes, and in those four minutes he had learned everything he came to learn and handed us back nothing but the cold fact that he had stood where we now stood.
I have hunted men my whole life. It is a strange and ugly thing to stand on your own lawn in the dark and understand, in the body and not the head, exactly what it is to be the hunted instead.
And he had stood a while beneath the east wing.
I found the place, and I crouched where he had crouched, and from there the angle was exact.
You could see the third window from the corner and nothing else, not the door, not the drive, not a single camera.
He had not chosen a place to attack from.
He had chosen a place to watch from. The east wing is where I had put Ruby.
Of course it is. He had stood in my garden and looked up at her window and let the cold settle into him for as long as it took, and the patience of that was worse than any weapon, because a man who can be that patient has already decided how the story ends.
They had been on my grounds. The walls I built to keep death out now had her sleeping inside them.
"Lebedev?" Petya asked, low, when we came back together at the breach. He wanted it to be Lebedev. Lebedev we understood. Lebedev had soldiers and a grudge and a face.
"No." I read the cut sensor in the dark, the clean surgical work of it, the tool and the patience that a crew of soldiers never carries.
"Lebedev would have brought men, and noise, and a message nailed to the gate.
This was one man. He did not come to kill.
He came to look. He came to stand under her window and prove to himself that no wall I raise can keep him from her. " I stood. "This is the other one."
The quiet that followed had weight, because the other one was supposed to be a lonely man with a camera and a sickness, a problem we would close inside a week.
Such a man does not find a private compound that sits on no map.
He does not beat a perimeter that has turned back professionals.
He does not pick the correct window on his first night in the dark.
"That isn't a stalker," Maks said, finally putting words to the thing none of us wanted said aloud. "That's tradecraft."
Petya, who is afraid of almost nothing, looked at the dark wall as though it might lean toward him. "So what do we do, boss?"
"We do not tell her how close he stood," I said. "And we stop sleeping at the same hour."
I had built my whole life on the belief that there is no safe place, only a place not yet breached.
I had let myself make the compound the exception, the one box in the world that held.
It did not hold. He had walked through it like a polite suggestion, and the only thing he carried out was the knowledge that he could, and he had left that knowledge for me to find on purpose, the same way he left the photograph, and the flowers before it.
For this man the proof was always the gift.
He was telling me that walls are my language and not his, and that he had learned to speak mine better than I do.
I made myself follow the thought to its end, because half-followed thoughts are how men get buried.
If he could reach the compound, he could reach anywhere.
The hospital, with its hundred doors. Her grandmother in Ponce.
Deysi behind two of my men in Jersey, men I had picked for loyalty and not for this.
There was no wall left to set between Ruby and the thing that wanted her.
And beneath that, colder still, the thought I would not let fully surface: that a man this good is a man who has been taught, and funded, and aimed, and that my two wolves might have begun, somewhere out in the dark, to circle the same fire.
I had no proof of it. I had the worse thing, the instinct that has kept me breathing in rooms where proof always arrives too late to spend.
I did not mean to go up to her. I had given the orders, doubled the watch, set Maks to taking the approach apart board by board for whatever the man had shed without meaning to, because even ghosts leave skin.
There was nothing left that a calmer man could not have done better.
But my feet carried me up the east stairs regardless, and I told myself it was to check the window, and I checked the window, and then I knocked, because the light was burning under her door, and because I am not, whatever she believes, built entirely out of stone.
She opened it already dressed, which told me she had not been sleeping either, that some animal in her had felt the house pull tight through two walls and a floor. She held a kitchen knife in one hand, held wrong, held like someone who had decided that wrong was still better than empty.
"Someone was here," she said. Not a question. "The whole house went strange. Tell me I imagined it."
"I wish I could." I have learned what my silences cost her, and I did not spend one now. "A man came over the wall tonight. We went over the grounds. He is gone."
"Was it him?"
"Yes."
She looked at the knife as if she had only that moment found it in her own hand, and set it on the dresser, and when she raised her eyes they were too bright, and her chin had started the small war it wages whenever she refuses to let it shake.
"You promised me this was the safest place in the world."
"It is."
"Then there's no such thing."
"No," I said. "There is not. There is only me."
She let that land, and I watched her decide whether to take it as comfort or as threat, and settle, the way she settles everything, somewhere defiant in the middle.
"That is not as reassuring as you seem to think," she said.
"I did not say it to comfort you. I said it because it is true."
"Do you ever say anything that isn't a knife?"
"No. I find the softer things waste everyone's time."
A sound came out of her that was half a laugh and half something giving way, and she pressed the back of her wrist to her mouth, and for a moment neither of us pretended she was not afraid. It was its own kind of nakedness, more than a kiss would have been.
"My abuela used to say fear is just love with nowhere to go," she said, to the dark window and not to me.
"I never understood it until tonight. I'm not scared for me.
I am, but that's not the part keeping me awake.
" She turned to face me. "I'm scared because somewhere in the last three weeks I stopped wanting to be anywhere you aren't, and that has to be the single dumbest survival instinct a person ever grew.
Falling for the man with the most enemies in New York. "
"You have not fallen," I said, because I needed it to be true more than I have needed most things. "You are frightened. The two wear the same face at three in the morning."
"Don't." Her voice was quiet, and it was steel. "Don't you dare hand me the safe version of it. Not you. You're the only one who's told me the truth this whole time."
She crossed the room. Not toward me, precisely, but the room was not large enough for the distinction to hold, and she stopped near enough that I could see the pulse running too fast in her throat.
"Two nights ago you called yourself a name," she said. "In the kitchen. And you let me walk away believing it."
"It was true."
"Was it, though?"
Here was the moment. I have walked into rooms full of men who wanted me dead and stood steadier than I stood in that doorway with a tired nurse and a knife on the dresser.
I could have lied. I am an excellent liar; it is most of my trade.
But she had asked me to my face, and she had stopped trusting a man's words and taught herself to read his hands, and my hands had already given me up by carrying me to her door.
"I am not a coward," I told her. "I am trying to keep you alive, and wanting you makes that harder than it has ever been."
She held my gaze. "Then keep me alive fast, Kolya. I'm not going to wait forever."
She told me to hurry. As if a man like me had ever been handed the luxury of time.
Neither of us slept.