Chapter 4
Pustovalov looked over their heads, at the checkpoint door, then his gaze shifted to the dark window. Once more, looking around the top of the gate, he bit his lip and stared at the Mercedes parked against the concrete wall.
The strange arrangement of cars, the shadow behind the container and the behavior of the Yasinsk sixes began to take shape.
They entered the compact, uncomfortable hall. The only guard pointed in the direction of the elevator and ordered to go to the fourth floor.
- Wow. Basurov said quietly while they were waiting for the elevator.
Pustovalov said nothing, quickly looking around the surrounding space and thinking about what to do next.
He knew that there was one person at the checkpoint. Another one was behind the container. The other two sat in the back seat of the Mercedes. The front seats were empty, and the rear seats are not visible due to the tinting.
The hall was as cold as a swimming pool. The walls are painted purple. On the floor - dirty beaten tiles like in the old factory canteen. From the elevator channel, a wide corridor led into the darkness at a strange angle, to the right of which a black flight of stairs loomed. The old building has been converted into a warehouse. The metal door opposite the stairs was closed with a heavy deadbolt.
Pustovalov had already guessed that the light had been switched off here for a reason, and he was almost sure that there was a guard standing on the stairs.
“They have problems with electricity everywhere here,” Basurov said, entering the dimly lit elevator.
Unbuttoning his down jacket, he pulled back the collar of his sweater. A sharp smell of sweat was added to the aroma of woody cologne.
On the fourth floor, a security guard met them and led them down an equally dark corridor to a leafy metal door, then let them through.
They entered and immediately saw a man on a snow-white sofa. Pustovalov, who was well versed in clothing brands, realized that none of the clothes he wore had been bought in Russia. The man didn't even look in their direction - he was busy giving instructions to a short man who was sitting on a special stool at the man's feet and rubbing one of his shoes with velvet for shoes. At the same time, the long leg of the man was located on a special pillow right on his knees. Pustovalov had never seen such shining shoes. They shone not just like a mirror, but literally dazzled like a real Milanese chandelier.
“Hello, Yasin,” said Pustovalov.
Basurov echoed the greeting, but the man did not react to it.
“The right side is darker,” he said slowly, phlegmatically shaking the servant with his sausage finger hanging in the air.
Pustovalov was not at all embarrassed by such a reaction. He looked around the room, which was a former workshop converted into a "room" of about a hundred square meters in the "art deco" style. Heavy polished cabinets made of expensive woods lined the walls, leather furniture predominantly in creamy beige and snow white, sculptural and crystal lamps, and velvet drapery of large ribbon windows. The leather cushions in incredible quantities scattered on armchairs and sofas shone as if oiled. There was even a working fireplace in the room.
Among the abundance of furniture, Pustovalov noticed another man. He sat in an armchair by the fireplace, leaning forward. The man was large and broad-shouldered, like a basketball player, with a face of an intellectual, rather unusual for such dimensions, framed by a professor's gray beard, and staring blankly into nowhere.
Considering the situation, especially handmade carpets and parquet inlaid with marble, Pustovalov came to the conclusion that nothing threatened them here.
Meanwhile, Yasin drew attention to them - cast an indifferent glance at Basurov, and delayed him a little longer at Pustovalov. Then he slowly got up, put on his thin glasses, which hung on a gold chain, and went close to Pustovalov.
Pustovalov saw a large well-groomed face, a lazy half-open mouth, and the same lazy look in bright eyes.
Having done the same ritual with Basurov, without saying a word, Yasin went behind a massive table, sat down in an armchair and began to look at the wall with a frustrated look.
Basurov looked inquiringly at Pustovalov. Pustovalov waited, hands clasped on his stomach. Finally, Yasin barely noticeably moved his finger and a short servant appeared near the guests. Judging by the gestures, he suggested that they take off their outer clothing. While Pustovalov and Basurov took off their jackets and gave them to the servant, Yasin looked at them with an expressionless look.
"Sit down," he finally said, referring to the white chairs in front of the table.
Basurov, tired of uncertainty, took this as a signal. Sitting down in a chair, he, apparently remembering Pustovalov's advice, started a dull monologue about his impressive contacts in committees and bodies, not forgetting to hang labels on "careless" bosses, whom he supposedly knew from the position of a senior comrade.
Yasin, who had been silent all this time, again made a barely noticeable sign and the servant poured a glass of water from a small bottle to the owner, after which he jumped up to Basurov and began to gesture, in a theatrical way, quite convincingly, offering him something to eat or drink. Basurov looked contemptuously and frightened at the antics of the servant and shook his head.
“So you got a guard, Colonel?” Yasin asked, nodding at Pustovalov.
- This is my assistant.
- Sportsman? Yasin looked at Pustovalov's developed shoulders and smiled.
- Former, - answered Pustovalov.
- Boxer?
- Gymnast.
Yasin continued to examine Pustovalov with interest, sipping water from a glass.
- So, about our mutual friend ... - Basurov began, but Yasin suddenly abruptly crushed the plastic bottle and Basurov immediately fell silent.
“Koni Nakazari,” Yasin suddenly said, stretching out the sounds, “a bottle of water costs four hundred dollars,” Yasin shook the crumpled bottle, “it is mined near the island of Tokelau, from a source at a depth of two thousand meters. The resulting water goes through the desalination process and is packaged in emerald-colored bottles. They say that it relieves excess weight and enhances brain function.
Basurov began to overcome restless leg syndrome.
- I'm wondering, - Yasin looked at Basurov attentively, - has anyone thought to check this? Hire experts and conduct a chemical analysis?
Basurov smiled tightly.
“I love professionals,” continued Yasin, “this water is no different from the deshmani that is sold in Ashan. But those who sell it are professionals. I pay four hundred dollars for a beautiful story. Because the sellers of this water are professionals. But when I order an eXn thousand...
Basurov turned pale.
“…I don't need stories.
- Yakov ... Yasin, listen, we too ...
- What did you agree with my assistant?
“We have everything according to plan, everything is in force ...
Yasin lazily shook his brush - shut up, they say. And Basurov shut up.
- What did you agree on?

Latest Chapter
Epilogue
From the panoramic window, Victor can see the San Francisco Bay, but the waters no longer impress him. He still can't get used to the Golden Gate, but the views are much duller in his research center. Somewhere out there, beyond the countryside, he discovered Sunnyvale Pond. This place reminded him of the Moscow region at all. However, this is rather a minus, Victor is too young to be nostalgic for his homeland.Out of habit, everything comes surprisingly easily to him. A psychologist friend said that there was nothing extraordinary in his phenomenon, he just pulled out a lucky lottery ticket called "beautiful parents." Victor won an international competition, and while still a student, he got a job at the Ames Research Center, and on Sunday he met the daughter of emigrants from Lithuania who work in Los Angeles. Dimon without exaggeration would put "ten". Victor never gave grades to girls. Dimon knows that Victor was born with a golden spoon in his mouth and tries to reach for him. Vi
209
An old photograph, hitting the slimy walls, slowly spinning like an autumn leaf, slowly falls into a deep well. The well is so deep and bottomless that the round hole at the top has long turned into a bright dot, and is about to completely disappear. And the photo keeps falling and falling. It depicts three boys, three of them are twenty-nine years old. One of them, dark-haired, with curly hair, stands in the middle, hugging his friends. It is slightly lower and seems to hang slightly on their shoulders. All three are smiling. The photo is old, you can see it not only in the crumpled corners, scratches and faded palette, but also in stretched sweaters and old-fashioned shirts with rolled up sleeves.The photo keeps spinning and spinning, and in one of the turns, the image on it changes. Now there are only two boys. They also hug each other and look into the camera with smiles, but the black-haired man standing between them is no longer there. It's like it never happened. Maybe it's a
208
The old man, Makarov, rushed after him, and only after them did the special forces pour out.Still running up, Boris saw a square hole in the center of the site - not at all like what he saw on the day of his last visit to the plant. Perfectly smooth, carved into cubes that were stacked near the tractor. Next to them lay a completely black device, which he saw in the photographs sent by the Special Metals Research Institute.Boris was the first to run up to the edge of the hole.Below, he saw what he had seen before - the shaft of the mine, only at the bottom of the bowl there was now a well. There was absolute bedlam going on: corpses, blood, weapons, overturned chairs, pieces of collapsed stairs and galleries. He did not immediately notice living people, but when he saw a figure crawling away from the wall, he immediately recognized it, although he had never seen it alive.- Daria! he shouted. - Daria Afanasyeva!The girl raised her head.Makarov, running up, heard Vindman's scream,
207
Before saying goodbye to life, Dasha managed to become a witness to strange events that replaced each other with kaleidoscopic speed. First, something flew from above right in the center and with a disgusting thud plopped behind the makeshift spectator box. Dasha could not see anything in such a short time, but for some reason she was sure that this was a human body. More terrible than the blow itself were the frightened cries.And here is how a deaf-mute worker jumped from the upper gallery, and with inhuman speed slipped somewhere into the darkness, she saw very well.Just then, a strange movement began. On the right, something overturned with a crash, and someone very frightened shouted something in an incomprehensible language. Apparently it was a command, because right there from the depths of the hall there was a coordinated stomp of feet.Dasha saw four of the six burner paws, above her, the other two were located on either side of her head. From above, the bright light of hang
206
Only one person directly looked at her - a stern, gloomy old man from the gallery on the second floor. She had seen him before, I think in the ninth block - an ordinary mute worker with the right of free movement. He seemed to her out of his mind, but in his current “hawkish” look there was some kind of repulsive meaningfulness, without a hint not only of compassion, but even of curbed hatred. He looked at her just like a log, dissatisfied with the fact that the log was too thin and would not give the required warmth. There was no life in that look, only cold. This is how a dead man who managed to challenge life itself would look.However, all this, even the dumb old man, she saw fragmentarily, as in a painful dream, and then completely disappeared, only the darkness above her head remained - real or in her imagination. She stopped hearing conversations, footsteps, and the creak of the wheels of the gurney; only dull pops were heard in her head, reminiscent of explosions of a gas-air
205
- Stole?Boris nodded, pointing to the picture.- On the day of the visit to Novikov, Colonel Basurov, a well-connected former member of the procurement commission of the Ministry of Defense, was with Pustovalov. Most likely, he played the role of an intermediary. He went missing that day. Since Pustovalov himself is a ghost and it is impossible to track his movements, we tracked Basurov's movements before he disappeared in the warehouse. And through him they came across a certain Dementiev. We interrogated him. Dementiev is a professional safecracker, it was he who helped Pustovalov steal the installation. He also said that there were two installations. That is, one working sample, and a spare case without filling - in fact, a dummy. But it looks like the real one. He confirmed that Pustovalov was going to sell the unit to Yasin after learning that he was behind her order on the black market. In addition to Basurov, another person went missing that day, previously in contact with Pus
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