Pepe parked the heavily laden truck outside a restaurant in Dos Hermanas, a few kilometres before the start of the motorway heading south to Jerez de la Frontera. He'd had a beer or two with the guys from the building supplies depot. Now he was going to have an early dinner and wait for dusk. He kidded himself that the Guardia Civil didn't notice so much between dusk and night and only stopped cars later on, when people were more likely to be drunk. Vasili turned on his mobile phone for the first time that day at just after 11 p.m. He had resisted the temptation until he was through the tollgate on the last stretch of motorway to Seville because he knew what was coming. It had been a while since he'd spent a whole day on his own and he was bursting to talk. The first call came through in a matter of seconds and, as expected, it was from Alexei, his old fellow at arms.

'Are you alone, Vasya?' asked Alexei.

'Yes,' said Vasili, his lips thick and mouth slow from the vodka.

'I don't want you to get upset,' said Alexei, 'make a mistake while you're driving.'

'Have you called to upset me?' asked Vasili.

'Try this,' said Alexei. 'Leonid's back from Moscow.'

Silence.

'Did you hear that, Vasya? I'm not breaking up, am I? Leonid Revnik is in Marbella.'

'He wasn't supposed to be back until next week.'

'He came back early.'

Vasili opened the window a crack and sniffed the warm night air. It was pitch black, flat fields on either side. Only tail lights in the distance. Nothing coming the other way.

'What did Leonid have to say?' he asked.

'He wanted to know where you were. I told him you'd be at the club, but they'd just come from there,' said Alexei. 'They'd found your office locked and Kostya on the floor unconscious.'

'Are you on your own at the moment, Alyosha?' asked Vasili, suspicious.



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