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Fallout (2007)
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Текст книги "Fallout (2007)"


Автор книги: David Michaels


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Текущая страница: 12 (всего у книги 16 страниц)

"What time is it?"

"Six."

"A few hours. Couldn't sleep."

"Join the club." Lambert nodded at Omurbai's frozen face on the screen. "Not a good image to have in your head when trying to nod off."

Fisher took a sip from his coffee cup; it was cold. "You know what he's got planned, don't you, Lamb?"

Lambert nodded and sat down in the next chair. "There are still a lot of ifs. We don't even know if that stuff is what we think it is. Or if they've managed to enhance it. That's what they needed Stewart for. Something wasn't working, something they couldn't get right. The question is, did they fix it?"

"Good question. I've also been thinking about Carmen Hayes," Fisher said. "She's gotten lost in all this."

"And Peter."

"Him, too. But at least now we know why they grabbed her in the first place."

The biggest hurdle Omurbai and the North Koreans would have with Manas was deployment: how to introduce it where it would have the biggest impact and spread the quickest. Fisher assumed they'd long ago broken Carmen down and that she'd been cooperating. She'd been gone four months–plenty of time to study the subterranean rivers and streams beneath Kyrgyzstan and its neighboring countries, then map the points where they intersected the oil fields and tell Omurbai exactly where to drop Manas.

Like a virus in the bloodstream,Fisher thought.

"You have any thoughts on the North Koreans?" he asked Lambert.

"I do. There are three reasons for them getting involved, I think: one, a sword to hang over our heads; two, a preemptive move for an invasion of South Korea."

"And the third?"

"Kim Jong-il is nuts, and he just feels like wreaking havoc."

"I've got a fourth scenario," Fisher said. "It's a little bit out there, but it may fit."

"Tell me."

"North Korea's found its own oil reserves, but as long as they're a pariah, they've got no chance to exploit them. Then along comes Omurbai. Somehow, somewhere, he's gotten ahold of this very interesting fungus that does a very interesting thing: It eats oil, which just happens to be the devil's own invention. He wants to use the fungus, but as long as he's an outcast from his homeland, he can't.

"So the North Koreans help him retake Kyrgyzstan, which happens to sit smack-dab on top of one of the world's greatest deposits, then sit back and watch as Omurbai releases Manas and destroys three hundred billion barrels of untapped oil. The world panics. North Korea announces it just happens to have found its own reserves."

Lambert considered this for a few moments, then said with a grim smile, "Any other country or leader, and I'd say that's an exceedingly implausible scenario. Well, since we're playing doom-and-gloom, try this: North Korea watches Omurbai release Manas in Central Asia, then they secretly do the same elsewhere–in the Middle East, in Africa, in Russia–but North Korea's fields remain untouched. Omurbai gets the blame, and suddenly they've got the only surviving oil source on the planet."

Fisher caught on, finishing the scenario. "Because, while they were working on Manas, they also found a neutralizing agent for it."

"You got it."

Fisher squeezed the bridge of his nose between his index finger and his thumb. "And right now, we've got nothing. No leads, no clues, no idea where Manas is–nothing."

Lambert gave him a weary smile, then stood up and placed a hand on his shoulder. "Sam, we've had less than that before and still come through the other side."



REDDINGarrived twenty minutes later, poured himself a cup of coffee, and joined them at the table. "Who wants to know how Omurbai probably found out about Chytridiomycota?"

Fisher raised a weary finger.

"Remember Oziri, Wondrash's man Friday?"

Fisher and Lambert nodded.

"Well, Grim asked me to do a little genealogy detective work. Here's the short version: Oziri was the grandfather of Samet, Omurbai's right-hand man and second-in-command of the KRLA. My guess, Oziri knew what Wondrash was looking for and had bragged or blabbed to a family member before they headed to Africa."

"Which means Wondrash had had some inkling of what Chytridiomycota was capable of even before he found the source," Fisher said.

Redding nodded. "That's part two. Quantico was able to restore most of Wondrash's journal you found aboard the Sunstar. He doesn't describe how they found the cave in the first place, or how he got onto the trail of the fungus in the first place, but he talks about the night they spent inside there. Evidently, some of the stuff must have rubbed off on their gear. The next morning they woke up, and everything made of rubber or plastic had dissolved."



Afew minutes later, Lambert's cell phone trilled. He picked it up, listened for a moment, said thanks, and disconnected. He walked to the nearest computer workstation, tapped a few keys, and one of the monitors glowed to life. The DCI's face filled the screen.

"Morning," he said. "I've got Dr. Russo's report in front of me. She's confident that Chytridiomycota is a type of petro-parasite."

Lambert told the DCI about Wondrash's journal and Omurbai's link to Oziri.

"Then I'd say that's proof enough," the DCI replied. "Russo also sent along a computer simulation. Worst-case scenario. I asked her to make some assumptions–namely that Manas has been enhanced for longevity and reproduction. Take a look."

The DCI's face disappeared and was replaced with a computer-generated Mercator projection of the earth. The camera zoomed in until it was focused on Central Asia, then paused. A clock graphic in the right-hand corner appeared and, beside it, the notation, DAY 1. A red dot appeared in the center of Kyrgyzstan, then expanded, doubling in size. The clock changed to DAY 5. The red dot expanded again, doubling again, and then again, and again, until the whole of Kyrgyzstan was covered, and the clock read DAY 11.

Fisher and the others continued to watch as Manas spread beyond the borders of Kyrgyzstan, north into Kazakhstan, east into China, south into Tajikistan, then India . . .

Thirty seconds later, half the globe had turned red, and the area was still increasing in size.

The clock read DAY 26.

Grimsdottir pushed through the door ten minutes later and stopped short as she saw the three of them sitting around the table. "Did I miss a memo?" she asked.

Lambert shook his head. "The Insomniacs' Club."

"Sign me up," she said, then poured her own cup of coffee, sat down, and powered up her laptop. Lambert briefed her on their discussion so far. She paused a few moments to take it all in, then said to Fisher, "Sam, you're sure that Stewart died at Site Seventeen?"

Fisher nodded. "Either there or in the water a few minutes later."

"Then we've got a mystery on our hands. I just heard from the comm center. Stewart's beacon is still active, and it's transmitting from Pyongyang, North Korea."

36

PYONGYANG, NORTH KOREA

FISHERhad gotten up at dawn and taken the Metro train to the Rungnado station, where he got off, stopped at a street kiosk to buy some green tea, then walked to a park and found a bench overlooking the Taedong River, which ran through the center of the North Korean capital. Beyond the river's opposite bank, Pyongyang's skyscrapers and gray cinder-block Soviet-style buildings spread across the horizon.

The sun was bright, glistening off the dew-covered grass. A hundred yards away, a group of thirty or so teenage boys and girls were practicing hapkido under the watchful eyes of North Korean People's Army officers. They barked orders, and the students answered "Ye!"Whether the teenagers were bothered by the rigorous early morning training, Fisher couldn't tell. Each teenager wore the same expression: thin-set mouths and narrowed eyes. Their collective breathing, which itself seemed to have a disciplined rhythm to it, steamed in the chilled, early morning air.

One of the officers barked another order, and the group bent at the waist, en masse, and picked up their rifles, old World War II-era Soviet Mosin-Nagant carbines, and began a drill routine.

The future of North Korea,Fisher thought. And, if Omurbai's Manas plan succeeded, perhaps the future of the world. Since Lambert had suggested the scenario, Fisher had been trying to wrap his head around the idea of North Korea as the world's only oil superpower. It was a frightening thought.

From the corner of his eye Fisher saw his escorts, a pair of plainclothes State Security Department officers, which he'd dubbed Flim and Flam, enter the park's west entrance and take up station at the railing along the river's edge.

Good morning, boys,Fisher thought. Like clockwork.

Since his arrival two days earlier, the SSD had thoroughly, if not imaginatively, watched his every movement. The pair that had just walked into the park was the day shift; the night shift came on at six p.m.

So far, every prediction he'd received about North Korean's security agencies had been proved true.



FIVEdays earlier and just two hours after Grimsdottir's revelation about Stewart's still-active beacon (which, Fisher suspected, Stewart had planted on Chin-Hwa Pak during the chaos aboard the Site 17 platform), he, Lambert, and Grimsdottir had been ordered to report to Camp Perry, the CIA's legendary training facility outside Williamsburg, Virginia. Waiting for them in the main conference room was Langley's DDO, or deputy directorate of operations, Tom Richards. Fisher knew Richards from the Iranian crisis the year before.

"I'll get to the point," Richards said. "We don't have any field people in North Korea, which puts us in a pickle."

The pickle to which Richards was referring was Fisher himself. Lambert had already pitched Third Echelon's plan directly to the president, who had approved it and ordered the CIA to act in a support role.

Accomplished as he was at covert operations, Fisher's expertise was of a more military nature, and despite his recent graduation from CROSSCUT, his bona fides as a field intelligence operative were nonexistent. For Fisher's part, his head was already in North Korea. A covert operation was a covert operation; the nuts and bolts of how Third Echelon and the CIA's DO did their jobs might be different, but the mind-set was the same: Get in, do the job, and get out, leaving as few footprints as possible.

"Sam, you'll be completely on your own."

Fisher nodded. "I know."

"You get caught there, you're done. You'll either end up with a bullet in your head or living out the rest of your life in a windowless underground cell. The North Koreans don't do prisoner exchanges, and they don't PNG people," Richards said, referring to persona non grata, the official process of expelling suspected spies from First World countries. "North Korea is true Indian country. In a lot of ways they're worse than the Soviets ever were."

Fisher smiled at Richards; there was no warmth in it. "Gosh golly, Tom, are you trying to scare me?"

"Yeah, I am."

"Consider your job done."

"Just want to make sure you've got your head right for this."

"I do."

"Okay." Richards shrugged and said, "I'm going to turn you over to a familiar face. You've got just two days to prep; they'll get you as ready as they can." Richards turned to Lambert. "Irv, if you and Ms. Grimsdottir will follow me, I'll show you what we've got for you."

Thirty seconds after they filed out, a door on the opposite side of the conference room opened, and a man walked in. Fisher did in fact recognize the face: Frederick, one of the watchers who'd dogged him during his final CROSSCUT field exam.

"Hi, Sam. Heard they were tossing you to the sharks already."

"So it seems."

"Well, let's see what we can do about bite-proofing you."



AND,despite the narrow time line he'd had to work with, Frederick did just that, spending eighteen hours a day taking him through his paces, from the details of his cover, to communication protocols, to what he could expect from the myriad North Korean counterintelligence agencies.

Though predictably Frederick admitted nothing, it was immediately clear to Fisher that the man had had a lot of time in Pyongyang, and as the U.S. had no official diplomatic presence there, it meant he'd survived "naked"–without cover or backup–and come home to tell about it.

On the final day, just hours before Fisher was to enter the pipeline, Frederick proclaimed him as ready as he would ever be and sealed it with a handshake. "If you remember only one thing," Frederick said, "it's this: Always assume. Assume you're being watched; assume they know exactly who and what you are; assume they're going to pluck you off the street any second."

Fisher smiled. "Fred, if this is your version of a pep talk, it needs a little work."

"It's my keep-you-alive talk. I tell you to assume these things for two reasons: one, because it'll all be true; and two, they're going to be assuming the same thing about you: that you need to be watched; that you're an enemy agent; that you're probably doing something that deserves arrest."

"And if they do?" Fisher asked.

"Arrest you?"

Fisher nodded.

"Then God help you. My advice . . ." Frederick paused. "If it were me going back there . . . I'd go to ground before I let them get their hands on me. If you know they're coming for you, run."



NOW,sitting on the bench, watching the two SSD officers watching him, Fisher realized he agreed with Fred's advice. However steep the odds against success, he'd go to ground the second they made a move for him.

After ten more minutes of watching the soldier-students, Fisher stood up, tossed his Styrofoam cup in a nearby trash barrel, and set off down the sidewalk. He didn't look back, and he didn't need to. Before he got a hundred yards, either Flim or Flam would be digging his cup out of the garbage for later examination.



FISHER'Scover was that of a photographer from the German newspaper Stern, a choice that was based partially on Fisher's fluency in German but also because of Stern's often anti-American slant and for decrying what it called the United States' "Bully Administration." Moreover, Sternhad for the last few years been courting the youth of North Korea, who were starving for a connection with their European counterparts. North Korea's leaders had decided Sternmight be a safe way to satisfy that craving and perhaps make political inroads with European countries that oftentimes adopted a contrarian outlook to cultural affairs: If America thinks you're bad, maybe you're worth a second look to us.

And so Fisher, speaking nearly flawless German and hailing from a country that had little love for the current American administration, received only a cursory questioning upon his arrival at Pyongyang's airport. Even so, his passport had been collected at the hotel, and he'd been assigned an SSD shadow detail. How long it would last, he didn't know, but Frederick had felt confident the two-day rule would likely be in effect: If after two days the SSD decided you weren't there to topple the government or foment antisocial behavior, they would scale back the surveillance–or at least the overt surveillance.



FISHERspent the rest of the morning touring the city's landmarks: the Arch of Triumph, a grander replica of Paris's Arc de Triomphe; Mangyongdae Hill, Kim Il-sung's birthplace; Juche Tower; the Korean Workers' Party Monument; and Namsan Hill, also known as the Grand People's Study House. These would be expected stops of any tourist and certainly the kinds of photo opportunities a Sternphotographer wouldn't forgo, Frederick had told him.

By late afternoon Fisher was back at his hotel–the Yanggakdo–having an early supper. Ten minutes before Flim and Flam were to be relieved by the night shift team, Flip and Flop, Fisher had retired to the hotel's bar overlooking the Taedong to enjoy a cup of coffee, as he had each night since arriving.

Right on time, at six o'clock, Flim and Flam, who were seated inside near a window, stood up and disappeared. Fisher watched and waited. Five minutes passed, then ten, then fifteen. Usually by now either Flip or Flop would have made an appearance, either walking to the railing and watching the river for a few minutes or actually taking a table and enjoying a meal while Fisher finished his coffee.

After thirty minutes, Fisher realized no one was coming. He called for the waitress, signed his tab, then went through the lobby and out onto the sidewalk, where he turned left and started walking. He strolled along the shop fronts for the next hour, stopping occasionally to price gifts, ducking into and out of doorways, hailing taxis, then riding only a block before getting out. Satisfied that Frederick's prediction about the two-day rule had been accurate and that he was no longer under close surveillance, he walked back to the hotel and took the elevator to his room.

Inside, he picked up the phone and asked for an outside line. The number he dialed, though prefaced by Germany's country code, 49, and Berlin's city code, 30, in fact took him to an NSA monitoring and intercept station in Misawa, Japan.

Grimsdottir answered in German on the third ring: " Stern, how can I help you?"

"Extension forty-two nineteen," Fisher replied in German.

"Wait, please." Ten seconds later, Lambert, who'd undergone his own crash course in German, picked up the line. "Kaufmann! How is Pyongyang?"

"Fine. The weather is what you'd expect," Fisher replied. "Did some tourist sites today; tomorrow I hope to get some street interviews."

"Outstanding! Keep us posted."

Fisher hung up.

The conversation was scripted, and it told Lambert three things: one, Fisher had encountered no complications; two, the SSD was behaving as expected and surveillance had been scaled back; and three, tomorrow he was going after the RDEI agent, Chin-Hwa Pak.

37

FISHERstepped backward into the alley, ducked behind a garbage can, and watched, breath held, as the jeep rolled past him at a walking pace. Sitting in the back of the open vehicle were three soldiers, one on either side shining flashlights along the sidewalks and a third standing behind a mounted .50-caliber machine gun. They passed Fisher's alley, then rolled to a stop at the next intersection, brakes squealing softly in the darkness. In the distance, toward Kyonghung Street, he could hear disco music.

After a few seconds the jeep rolled forward and turned left out of sight. Fisher let out his breath. He ran both hands through his sweat-dampened hair, then checked his watch: two a.m. He'd been moving for two hours. He was within a quarter mile of his destination.

He'd left his room just before midnight and taken the elevator to the parking garage, where'd he'd tucked himself in the shadows behind a concrete pillar and waited for the garage attendant shift change. When the replacement showed up, both men stepped into the adjoining security room, leaving the barrier arm unguarded. He'd watched this changeover process six times since he'd arrived at the hotel and never more than thirty seconds passed before the two attendants emerged from the security room.

When he'd heard the door click shut, he stepped out from behind the pillar and walked, shoeless, up the ramp, then ducked down and crab-walked below the security room's single window, then around the barrier's post. He stood up, glanced left then right and, seeing nothing, walked straight across the street and around the corner.

Pyongyang's nightlife was scarce and confined to only a few pockets of bars and dance clubs around the city, so most of Fisher's journey was done on vacant streets and empty sidewalks, which had turned out to be both a blessing and a curse: the former because he felt more in his natural element; the latter because he would quickly draw attention if spotted. A Caucasian, walking alone on the streets at three in the morning . . . The police would snatch him up without so much as a question and deposit him at the nearest SSD office for questioning. Of course, the same curse that applied to him would apply to any watchers on his tail. Unless they were very, very good, they would be easy to spot. The playing field was even. Or at least he hoped so. TWENTYminutes later he was lying in the undergrowth bordering the governor's residence, studying the street through a pair of miniature binoculars. As bad luck would have it, Pak's four-story apartment building, which sat on the opposite side of the street and fifty yards to Fisher's right, was located in a Pyongyang neighborhood reserved for established North Korean politicians, military officers, and civil servants. Fisher was now in one of the most protected single square miles of the capital. From where he lay he could see the mayor's residence, three semiprivate banks reserved for party luminaries, an antiaircraft battery, an ammunition depot, and the barracks for the seventy-seventh Infantry Regiment, all illuminated by floodlights and guarded by somber, rifle-toting soldiers, both roving and stationary.

There was an upside, however. As well-guarded as the area was, most of the protection was focused on private residences. Pak's building, two blocks from the barracks, sat on a relatively dark and quiet street surrounded by dogwood trees and lilac hedges. Whether Pak was at home Fisher didn't know; all he knew was Stewart's beacon was there, probably still attached to the clothing Pak was wearing aboard the platform.

Fisher checked his watch again.

Patience, Sam.



HEforced himself to lie still for another hour, watching the comings and goings of the guards, looking for that one defect, that one gap in coverage he could exploit. And, as he'd expected, when he finally spotted his opening, it came not from flawed logistics or training but from individual idiosyncrasy. One soldier, a boy in his late teens, was a chain-smoker, and he clearly lacked the self-discipline to wait for scheduled breaks.

On every third patrol around the block that encompassed the governor's and mayor's residences, as well as Pak's apartment, the boy would stop, duck behind a tree, and greedily smoke a cigarette before completing his round. It gave Fisher an extra two minutes to do what he needed to do.

Fisher watched the soldier stroll past his hiding spot, then turn the corner and start back toward the mayor's residence. Then, like clockwork, he stopped, furtively glanced around, then stepped behind a tree and lit up.

Fisher rose to his knees and padded, hunched over, across the street, moving diagonally away from the smoking soldier until he was behind the screen of lilac hedges that bracketed the covered walkway that led to the door to Pak's building. Fisher slipped along the wall to where the walkway and front wall met, then turned around and pressed his back into the corner. Now he would see if his daily exercise routine, which included seven hundred single-leg squats for just such occasions as this one, would pay off.

He took a deep breath, planted the rubber sole of his left shoe against the wall, and pushed hard. He leaned to the left, shifting his weight, and pressed his shoulder into the wall. Next he braced his right foot against the adjoining wall, coiled his leg, and pushed again, lifting himself off the ground. He was now in what's called the chimneying position. Used by mountaineers and rock climbers to navigate right-angle outcroppings and vertical rock chutes, chimneying took patience, stamina, and brute strength, but it came as close to defying gravity as one could without the aid of pitons and carabiners.

Luckily for Fisher, he had to cover only twelve vertical feet, which he did in forty seconds, pulling himself level with the walkway's roof. He reached out with his left hand, hooked his fingertips in the eaves trough, then froze.

Beyond the hedge he could hear footsteps echoing on the sidewalk and coming this way. Over the top of the hedge he saw the peaked cap of his smoking soldier glide past the apartment's walkway gate, then continue down the sidewalk, where he eventually disappeared into the darkness.

Fisher shifted some weight to his left, testing the eaves trough. It groaned softly, sagged slightly, but held. He pushed off with his right foot, swung it upward, hooked his heel on the trough, then boosted his body onto the roof. He spread himself flat and went still and stayed that way for a few minutes until certain he'd attracted no attention.

He was now within arm's reach of the building's first-floor hallway, which in a curious break with the communist gray architecture that seemed to dominate most of Pyongyang's older neighborhoods, circumnavigated the building. Bordered on the exterior side by a waist-high railing and arched openings, and on the interior side by apartment doors, the style was more Mediterranean than Soviet-industrial. Beside each apartment door was a wall sconce, a lengthwise-cut cylinder of brushed stainless steel that cast light on the ceiling. Whatever else Pak had done for the RDEI, he must have succeeded; in North Korea, apartments of this quality were reserved for political stars. This was luxury, North Korean style.

Fisher was about to reach for the railing when he stopped. Cameras. He pulled back and spread himself flat again. Almost slipped up, Sam. In his earlier surveillance of Pak's building, he'd seen a doorman sitting behind a desk in the lobby. Judging from the flickering glow Fisher had seen reflected in the doorman's glasses, he'd been watching a small, unseen television. But what kind? Regular, close-circuit security, or both?

He pulled his DARPA-enhanced iPhone from his pocket and scrolled through to his Images folder, typed in the password, and called up the blueprint of Pak's building. It was incomplete and partially speculative, cobbled together by Grimsdottir using a collage of sources: satellite imagery, tourist photos, electrical grid maps, similar buildings in other parts of the country . . . She'd used it all to give Fisher at least a sketch of what he'd be facing.

Looking at it now, his best guess put the elevator directly behind the wall at his back. He looked up. The wall, ten feet wide–typical of an elevator shaft–extended all the way to the roof. If there were cameras in the building, the first place he would likely find them would be on each floor, facing the elevators.

After waiting for his smoking soldier to pass by once again, Fisher rose into a crouch, then reached up, grabbed the railing, chinned himself up, scanned the hall for cameras and, seeing none, rolled over onto the floor, where he pressed himself flat against the elevator shaft's wall and sidestepped up to the corner.

He heard the whirring of the camera before he saw the camera itself. He stopped short, went still.

Long before his days with Third Echelon, Fisher had dealt with more than his fair share of surveillance cameras using only his ears and his good timing. Faint though they were, camera motors had a distinct aural signature, especially at their range stops, the point at which a rotating camera reaches its panning limit to the left or right. It is at this point, as the motor pauses then reverses the camera's direction, that a well-tuned ear can detect the barely perceptible strain on the motor. And it was this sound Fisher was listening for as he stood motionless, back pressed against the wall, eyes closed . . .

There . . . there . . . there . . . there. Twelve seconds from range stop to range stop. Which stop was which–facing left or facing right–didn't matter. With no other cameras in the hall, this one would be calibrated to full rotation so it could see down the length of each hall. It was at this point when the camera's blind spot was most accessible. Stand directly beneath the camera's mount, and you're as good as invisible.

Fisher waited, listening and counting, then stepped out from the wall and centered himself under the mount. Above him, the camera, which had been panning right, reversed course and started coming around. Fisher looked left and counted doors. Pak's apartment number was 9, the third door down. The trick would be reaching that door and getting inside in the time it took the camera to complete a full pan.

Suddenly, Fisher's decision was made for him.

Pak's door opened, and Pak himself stepped out.

38

PAK,juggling a bag of garbage in each hand, leaned back into his apartment, trying to get the door closed.

Fisher glanced up. The camera was pointed directly at Pak. It paused, then started panning in the other direction. Fisher counted One one thousand, two one thousand,then pushed off the wall and sprinted, hunched over, straight at Pak. He covered the distance in less than three seconds, but at the last moment, either sensing Fisher's presence or hearing his approach, Pak spun to face him.

Fisher's earlier hunch about the man's physical condition and training was dead-on. In the blink of an eye, Pak, still holding the garbage bags, lashed out with a front heel kick. It was perfectly aimed and delivered, a strike that could easily snap a neck or crush a skull. But Fisher, having registered Pak's slight shifting of weight to his back leg, was ready for the kick. Still moving at a sprint, he dropped his shoulder, somersaulted beneath the leg, caught the raised heel with his right hand, then rose up and caught Pak squarely in the chin with a short jab. Pak stumbled backward into the apartment, stunned. Fisher didn't give him a chance to react but kept driving forward, raising Pak's leg until he toppled over sideways, sliding back-first down the wall and landing with an "Umph"on the floor. Fisher twisted Pak's foot, flipping him onto his stomach, then dropped to one knee, grabbed a handful of his hair, and slammed his head against the floor once, twice, three times. Pak went limp.

Fisher grabbed him by the foot again and spun his limp body around and dragged him farther into the apartment, then shut the door. He pulled a pair of plastic flexicuffs from their hiding place in his jacket's lining and bound Pak's wrists and ankles, dragged him into the living room, laid him face-first on the floor, then picked up a nearby coffee table and placed it over his body. He found a narrow-based vase and placed it on top of the table. The rudimentary early warning system would give Fisher a few seconds' notice should Pak regain consciousness and get frisky. Knowing now how dangerous the North Korean was, Fisher wasn't going to give him even the slightest advantage.


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