Redemption (Amos Decker #5)(119)



Childress slowly straightened up, still gasping for air.

Miller stepped forward. “Not in all my forty years behind a badge have I seen anything like this. You’re a disgrace, Childress.”

“But you can make amends,” said Decker. “By helping us.”

Childress slowly shook his head. “This is a lot bigger than you think, Decker.”

“All the more reason to stop it.”

Childress said to Lancaster, “I want protection inside. I mean it.”

“What are you scared of, Childress?” asked Lancaster.

“You all should be scared,” said Childress. “Every last one of you.”





Chapter 76



AS CHILDRESS WAS LED AWAY, Bogart said, “He might be right about that.”

“Why?” asked Lancaster.

“We got back a report on those fingerprints you took of Bill Peyton.”

“We couldn’t find anything on him in the databases we had access to,” said Lancaster.

“Well, we have access to a few more. Including some international ones, actually. And not the typical ones. But it was still very difficult for us, and that’s what took so long. We actually had to turn to our friends at Mossad to score this information.”

“The Israelis?” said Decker. “So I take it his name isn’t Bill Peyton?”

“Not even close. His real name is Yuri Egorshin. And the general physical description given by the Israelis matches what you told us about Peyton.”

“Let me guess—Russian,” said Decker dryly.

“He was actually born in East Germany when the Wall was still up but came to the United States for college under a special program in place at the time. He went to Ohio State, same as you, Decker.”

“How does that make sense?” asked Lancaster. “That a guy from that part of the world can just come here like that and go to school?”

“Well, he didn’t come in announcing himself as a spy, and maybe then he wasn’t technically one. He was a student with all the proper credentials and visas. And it showed him coming in from West Germany, not East Germany. Don’t know how they managed that, but they did. He graduated and returned home. Sometime after that is when we believe he became associated with the KGB, or at least Mossad believes that.”

“No, he was probably recruited by them before he came here for school, just so he could spy on us,” said Jamison.

“That may be. Anyway, after the Wall came down, he officially became part of the FSB, the KGB’s successor. He apparently worked very closely with a lot of the upper-echelon players there. Then he vanished. So, for the last twenty-odd years, no one knew where he was.”

Decker said, “Well, he ended up in Burlington running a restaurant, and has for the last fifteen years. That would tie in with a Russian oligarch bankrolling Rachel Katz.”

Lancaster said, “He didn’t sound Russian when we met with him. He seemed pretty American to me. Whatever that means,” she added.

“That’s the point,” said Decker. “They don’t all sound like villains from James Bond films. They’re supposed to blend in and seem just like everyone else. And his time in the U.S. allowed him to do that. It made him very valuable.”

Bogart said, “It’s more than that, actually. We dug deeper and found out that Egorshin’s mother, interestingly enough, was American. She was a defector after World War II. She sought asylum in Moscow and married a Russian, Anatoly Egorshin. He was an officer in the Russian army during World War II and afterward worked for the Soviet regime in East Germany.”

“Like father, like son. And his mother could have taught him American ways and speech then,” said Decker. “And that probably helped him adapt when he came here for college, and also when he returned to Burlington to operate the spy ring.”

“I’m sure all of that made him even more valuable to the Soviets, and then the Russians,” added Bogart.

“Have we made any progress on all the people they’ve placed over the years?” asked Lancaster.

“It’s complicated. There were no records of those people at the Grill, just the ones they were still ‘processing.’ And they’ve all vanished, as have the kitchen staff. We’ll interview the other wait staff who weren’t part of the operation. They may be able to tell us something that will help us track them down. And we do have an opportunity, though, in that Gardiner placed a lot of these people. We’re going to reach out to as many places as we can to determine if they hired any of his recruits.”

“If they’re still there,” said Decker. “They may have all made a run for it.”

“That could be. If so, at least we’re rid of them, which is something. But we’ll reverse engineer this thing as best we can. Even if we can’t locate these folks, we can at least assess the damage they might have done at their jobs and try to turn that around.”

“It’s a long shot, but it’s all we have right now,” conceded Decker.

Natty said to Decker, “Now I know why you took my gun. I would’ve shot the sonofabitch.”

“I know.” Decker took out Natty’s pistol and handed it back to him.

“Why would Childress have done this?” asked Natty.

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