Читать книгу Resurgence - Don Pendleton - Страница 13

CHAPTER SIX

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Kombinat, Tirana, Albania

Rahim Berisha hated to receive bad news. That quality didn’t set him apart from any other person on the planet, but his temperament and reputation made his various associates leery of breaking news Berisha might not wish to hear.

Killing the messenger, for him, was more than a cliché.

Still, problems had to be recognized, examined—and, if possible, resolved. The first step toward a solution was admission that a failure had occurred.

Berisha slept till noon most days, as a concession to his night-prowling lifestyle. Most days, his business was concluding as the sun rose, driving the nocturnal folk back into hiding.

Pimps and whores. Drug addicts and compulsive gamblers. Thieves and smugglers.

All were creatures of the night. Berisha’s people.

No. They were his subjects.

In the afternoons, he dealt with daylight dwellers: politicians and police, judges and lawyers, so-called “honest” businessmen who came to him with hats in hand and open palms outstretched for money.

Everyone Berisha knew craved something. It was human nature, and the failing of his race. That understanding had already made him rich beyond his childhood’s wildest dreams.

And in the months to come, he would grow richer still.

Unless someone spoiled it for him.

That was always possible, of course. Berisha might be rich and powerful, a cunning strategist and ruthless fighter, but was not superhuman. He couldn’t be in two places simultaneously, much less several hundred places, supervising every transaction carried out by his subordinates.

A leader had to delegate authority, which meant he had to trust the people he had placed in charge of different tasks and territories. Those subordinates had to fear him more than they feared loss of cash and status. More than they feared prison.

More than they feared sudden death.

His servants had to be constantly aware that failing him, betraying him, would bring about worse punishment than anything their adversaries could devise—a screaming death that might go on for days.

Berisha understood, therefore, how Zef Kaceli felt when he came knocking on the study door and said, “There’s another call from the United States.”

Kaceli added an apology and said, “Line one, sir.”

“Thank you.”

Berisha braced himself as he picked up the telephone, depressed the lighted button for line one, and said, “Hello.”

He didn’t recognize the voice that answered him, wasn’t expected to, in fact. The caller introduced himself as Ali Dushku and the name clicked instantly. Dushku was Arben Kurti’s chief lieutenant in the far-off territory of New Jersey, U.S.A.

“What is it, Ali?” Berisha asked, taking pains to keep it casual, while he was calculating time zones. Half past noon in Tirana made it 6:30 a.m. along the eastern seaboard of America.

Dushku made a pathetic gulping sound, as people did sometimes to clear their throats before delivering dire news. And well he might, since this news was the very worst.

Arben Kurti was dead, along with Lorik Cako and at least two dozen of their soldiers. Federal agents and police were picking up the pieces, questioning whatever stragglers they could find. A second large, expensive property had been destroyed by unknown enemies who came and went as if they were invisible.

“What of the clients?” Berisha asked, all business to the bitter end.

“Missing,” Dushku replied. “Most likely dead. The house burned down. They may have been inside it.”

“And the merchandise?”

“Recovered by police.”

Of course. Perfect.

“I’m sorry,” Dushku blurted out. “Arben insisted I remain in Newark. If I’d been there, sir—”

“Then you would be a corpse,” Berisha interrupted him. “I would be learning of your death from someone else.”

Dushku fell silent then, waiting.

“Avoid contact with the police if possible,” Berisha ordered. “If they find you, tell them nothing. Since you weren’t with Kurti, you can’t tell them what became of him. As for the customers and merchandise, you know nothing.”

“Nothing. Yes, sir.”

“Give me your cell-phone number.”

Dushku did as he was told. Berisha memorized the number, as he had so many others. An eidetic memory was priceless in the world of crime, where written records were a threat to liberty or life itself. Albania had ratified Protocol Number 13 of the European Convention on Human Rights in 2007, forbidding capital punishment under any circumstances, but life in prison was no life at all.

Control of evidence and witnesses was critical.

Resurgence

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