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Coercion




  Critical Praise for Tim Tigner’s thrillers

  COERCION

  “An entertaining thriller … with well-paced action, appealing characters and snappy writing.”

  –Kirkus (starred review)

  “Tim Tigner gives us a grand novel on a scale that has not been seen for a long time…”

  –William D. Curnutt of the Vine Voice

  “Taut Thriller. Highly Recommended.”

  –Randy Johnson of the Vine Voice

  “A brilliant, must-read thriller--as good or better than Tom Clancy & Robert Ludlum. Coercion grabbed me and wouldn't let go.”

  –John Mariotti, Author of The Chinese Conspiracy

  BETRAYAL

  “The prose snaps and pops with a fresh, nearly breathless energy reminiscent of Ludlum, Le Carre, Clancy et al.”

  –Kirkus Reviews

  “With the thrill of Vince Flynn, the craft of Daniel Silva and a whole combination of the best suspense/thriller writers, Tim Tigner is all Tim. Wow.”

  –Amazon Top Reviewer Gwendolyn Norcross

  “I like Tim Tigner's writing. He knows how to build suspense, ramp up the action, and keep it all rolling smoothly along. I was almost sorry to reach the end.”

  –Randy Johnson of the Vine Voice

  “Five Stars. Outstanding Political / Terrorist Thriller.”

  –William D. Curnutt of the Vine Voice

  FLASH

  “Not a moment goes by till the end of the book when readers won’t be shocked, surprised and delightfully entertained.”

  — BookPleasures.com

  “The action is non-stop. The premise is good. The writing is fresh, clean and detailed.” — William D. Curnutt of the Vine Voice

  Action, adventure, villains, good guys, interesting places and a love story. Get Flash and read it for a fun time you will tell others about! — John Mariotti, Author of The Chinese Conspiracy

  “This suspense thriller kept me on the edge of my seat, biting my nails reading with anticipation. I loved every second of this book, especially the characters witty personalities.” — StuffedShelves.org

  COERCION

  TIM TIGNER

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2013 by Tim Tigner

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Vontiv Publishing via vontiv.com

  Also available in Paperback and as an Audiobook in 2014.

  For more information on this novel or Tim Tigner’s other works, please visit timtigner.com

  ISBN: 978-162840467-8

  Cover design by Tim Tigner and Ralph Cavero

  Printed in the U.S.A.

  This novel is dedicated to my beloved wife Elena, whose support and sacrifices made it, as all things, possible.

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Chapter 72

  Chapter 73

  Chapter 74

  Chapter 75

  Epilogue

  Author’s Note

  BETRAYAL CHAPTER 1

  BETRAYAL CHAPTER 2

  BETRAYAL CHAPTER 3

  COERCION ENDNOTES

  Cast of Characters

  Akchurin: Chief Doctor at Academic City Hospital.

  Antsiferov, Leo: Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs.

  Demerko, Andrey: Chief of Staff for Minister Sugurov.

  Evans, Elaine: Engineer at United Electronics. Mother of Kimberly.

  Ferris, Alex: International Private Investigator.

  Ferris, Frank: Alex’s fraternal twin brother.

  Gorbachev, Mikhail Sergeevitch: President of the USSR.

  Karpov, Vasily: KGB General, head of Industrial Security Directorate.

  Knyaz: Name for Karpov’s inner circle.

  Knyaz AG: Karpov’s company (AG is the Swiss version of Inc).

  Lebed, (Comrade): Father of Anton.

  Maximov: KGB Major and Aide to Vasily Karpov.

  Orlov: Luda’s father.

  Orlova, Luda: Senior Accountant at SibOil.

  Petrov, (Professor): Frostbite patient of Dr. Anna Zaitseva.

  Ruslan: Anesthesiologist colleague of Dr. Anna Zaitseva.

  Shipilov, Sergey: KGB Agent working for Yarik.

  Stepashin, Igor: KGB General and head of the Guards Directorate.

  Stormer, Jason: Head of Stormer & Associates, Operations Consulting

  Sugurov, Pavel: Soviet Minister of Foreign Affairs.

  Titov, Victor: Deep Cover KGB mole. Karpov’s son.

  Vova: Male Nurse and colleague of Dr. Anna Zaitseva.

  Yarik: KGB General and Head of the Executive Action Directorate.

  Zaitsev, Kostya: Anna’s brother (deceased).

  Zaitseva, Anna: Doctor at Academic City Hospital.

  The Soviet Slide

  “Politicians and economists generally agree that at the core of the malaise is the accumulated damage of 70 years of central mismanagement.”

  Serge Schmemann, The New York Times, Page A1[i]

  Prologue

  KGB Research Facility, Siberia

  The door closed behind them with a hiss. General Vasily Karpov knew it was the hermetic seal, but he couldn’t help feeling that the room was scolding him for what he was about to do.

  He looked up at Yarik for support—the giant was a pro—but the steely stare coming back at him was somehow more disturbing than the images Vasily sought to drown out, and he looked away. Vasily appreciated Yarik’s point of view, and respected the enforcer’s binary code of ethics, but as a chess grand master he had a hard time reducing things to a simple them-or-us. He wanted to do better.

  In contrast, Igor’s face showed a calm, supportive resolve. It meant little
to Vasily. As a diplomat, Igor always reflected the appropriate emotion. To know his true state of mind you had to look deep. Vasily chose not to look. There was no sense muddying the waters. This might be a classic moral conundrum, but it was hardly a dilemma. The needs of the many did outweigh the needs of the few.

  Vasily felt compelled to demonstrate leadership, to make a meaningful speech about posterity and sacrifice, but there was no room in that sterile corridor for such big words. Instead, he looked down at the clacker in his hand and thought about the future—first the country’s, and then, with mixed feelings, his own. Murder changes a man…

  Vasily could not see or hear what happened after clack, but as the head of the KGB’s Scientific and Technical Directorate, he knew how Noxin nerve gas worked. The moment he closed the door he found himself picturing the scene. It was as though he were still in the room. Perhaps he sensed that a part of his soul always would be.

  The six scientists and engineers are shaking hands and patting backs, he imagined, congratulating each other on the successful completion and flawless presentation of the Peitho Pill. It is a feel-good moment and they are justifiably proud, having dedicated eighteen months of their lives to secretly developing their general’s audacious invention.

  Then a whiff of gas turns euphoria to hysteria with the shocking speed of a lighting strike. Adrenaline floods their systems like a tidal surge as their limbic minds register the alkaloid scent, but by the time the impulse travels to their conscious minds, it’s already too late. The crushing hyper-constriction of their diaphragms cannot be reversed. Emptied lungs will never fill again. Noxin will not be denied.

  Vasily bowed his head and clenched his eyes, but the images kept coming. The futile gasps, the grimaced lips… He opened his eyes and tried to focus his mind on the cascading numbers of his digital watch. He had known all along that this day would come. Fifty-eight, fifty-nine, sixty—sixty seconds since clack. By now Kiril has paired up with Dima, Oleg with Anton, and Vanya with Mark. They’re frantically pumping each other’s chests—desperate minds grasping at feeble straws. As professionals, they know it’s pointless, but as family men, what alternative do they have? They will keep at it until splintering ribs puncture starving lungs or exhaustion overtakes them…

  Vasily kicked the corridor’s stainless baseboard. “No matter. They’re martyrs now, even if only we three will ever know.” Yarik and Igor cocked their heads, but Vasily paid them no heed. He had not meant to think aloud.

  It was true, he thought. The sacrifice those scientists were making here today gave him the exclusive use of the Peitho Pill, and with it the power to heal their ailing nation. The Soviet Union was in desperate need of a viable economic system, and Peitho empowered Vasily to create one. What were half a dozen lives in comparison? You were born with the courage, you developed the plan, and now, damn it, you’ve acquired the tools.

  Vasily stopped pacing the corridor and checked his watch again. It would take another ten minutes for the laboratory’s advanced ventilation system to scrub the Noxin from the conference room’s air. Then the three general officers could reenter, retrieve all the Peitho Pill materials, and replace them with ones from the Noxin nerve-gas project. The cover-up would be as airtight as the conference room, and Peitho would be theirs alone.

  Igor interrupted the silence. “You’ve really outdone yourself, Vasily. You told us it was going to be huge, but this … this project is spectacular. The concept is simple and the presentation was clear, but I still questioned my ears. The opportunities Peitho presents are limitless. We’ll be able to control anyone, get anything—”

  “And do it secretly,” Yarik interjected. “Wish I’d thought of it.”

  Vasily stopped pacing and looked up. If his friends were not distracted by sentiment… He felt the fire re-igniting in his eyes, like the pilot light on a blast furnace. “I have the advantage of seeing a lot of gadget and gizmo proposals in the course of my job. One of them got me thinking. It was a special bomb, a bomb designed to blow up a car at the prompting of a radio signal. It was the size of a pea,” he held up his thumb and index finger in the tiny sign, “small enough to slip into a car’s gas tank. That was the mental trigger, the size of the thing. I reasoned that if you paired-up one of its miniature radio receivers with a drop of cyanide, you could then threaten to do the same thing to a person—terminate him at will, I mean.”

  A flash of understanding shot across Yarik’s face. “But we won’t use it for that, for termination, will we Vasily?”

  “No, we won’t.”

  They both looked at Igor. It took the diplomat a moment, but he got it. “Right… Like a nuclear device, the threat is what counts.” Igor began nodding his head. “Tell me, why Peitho?”

  “Peitho is the Greek goddess of persuasion.”

  “The Greek goddess of persuasion … divine coercion … clever ...” Igor stopped nodding and canted his head. “There’s still one functional aspect I don’t fully understand. If Peitho is to be used for persuasion, rather than assassination, then the victim has to believe that you truly have the power to kill him at will.”

  “Right…?”

  “But at the same time we all agree that Peitho has to be kept secret, so we can’t explain it to him. My question is this: Short of killing him, how do we convince our target we have that power?”

  “Ah, my friends,” Vasily said, as his eyes began to glisten. “That is where we have to get creative…”

  Chapter 1

  Eleven years later. Siberia

  A powerful gust of wind shook the helicopter and yanked Leo out of his contemplative trance. As his hand verified its grip on the bucking joystick, his eyes refocused their thousand-yard stare on the wild surroundings. The Siberian outback, with its craggy peaks and crinkled slopes, was breathtaking in the moonlight. Leo used to find peace while flying in conditions like these, but tonight his mind was as blustery as the weather. There were too many reminders.

  First, there was his passenger, Andrey Demerko. Sitting down in the gunner’s seat, Andrey was as perceptive as a man could be, yet ignorant as the rocks over which they flew. He had once been Leo’s good friend—in fact Andrey still believed he was—but Leo was no friend to him, not really.

  Then, there was the date. In three hours the sun would rise on the first anniversary of Leo’s enslavement. He found it hard to believe that the moon before him had come to full just eleven times since he was last a happy man, with a loving family, interesting work, and great prospects. Now he had dismal prospects, repulsive work, and an estranged wife. But little Georgy was still alive, so Leo had made a good trade.

  He switched the helicopter’s joystick to his left hand so he could wipe away tears with his right. Then he went back a year in his mind, playing over once again the dreadful night it all began. He was picking at the scab of a wound that would not heal. Like a penitent monk, Leo needed the pain—

  ~ ~ ~

  It had been a quiet evening. Only the thunderstorm raging outside hinted at the danger hidden within Leo’s home. Oxana was off visiting her sister, Maya and Georgy lay tucked in their beds, and his work was in order: check, check, and check. This combination gave Leo the ever-welcome opportunity to enjoy a good book the right way.

  He grabbed a bottle of vodka from the freezer, Crime and Punishment from the bookshelf, and sank into his favorite leather armchair. These stolen hours and his children’s smiles made Leo the happy man he was.

  Raskolnikov was drunk and Leo was somewhat adrift himself when the phone finally disturbed his cherished reprieve. It was midnight. He set down Dostoyevsky and picked up the cordless receiver, answering without preamble: “How was your trip?”

  “It’s not Oxana calling, Deputy Antsiferov.” The voice was cold and computerized, its tone commanding. “Listen to me very carefully. Go to Maya’s room.”

  Leo suffered a momentary mental delay something like a power glitch, then shock, fear, rage and panic all ran their course in a millisecond,
jolting his synapses and neutralizing the vodka that basted his veins. He pulled the phone away from his ear, clutching it like a venomous snake while his mind and body accelerated to combat speed. He ran to the master bedroom and retrieved his handgun from the lockbox under the bed. The Makarov felt oddly heavy in his hand, reminding Leo that his days in uniform were well behind him now. Had his reflexes atrophied along with his muscles?

  Leo arrived at the door to his daughter’s room just twenty seconds after the phone’s first ring. He found Maya peacefully asleep in her bed, but resisted the temptation to dismiss the caller outright. Instead, he stepped back to think. It wasn’t easy with his heart playing timpani on his eardrums. There was no place in the room for an adult to hide, and the window was twelve stories up… It was a long shot, but Leo looked out anyway: nothing but the full moon above and the empty road below. He let out a deep breath and Maya stirred, causing the moonlight to dance in her hair. She looked like an angel with a halo of curly blond locks—Leo froze. Little Georgy also had curly blond hair, and his mother kept it a little too long, perhaps … No!

  Leo ran to his boy’s room and popped around the doorframe ready to fire. He found … nothing. Georgy, too, was quietly asleep in his bed.

  Leo walked back to Maya’s room and sat on the edge of her bed. Only practiced, diplomatic nerves kept him in check as he picked up the receiver again.

  “I’m there.”

  “Good boy. Now, tell me today’s pass codes for the Ministry mainframe.”

  The Ministry the caller referred to was Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where Leo was one of six Deputy Ministers. Handing over the computer pass codes would be like tipping Russia’s hand at dozens of high-stakes international poker games. Other government organizations might have their books cooked for appearance’s sake, but negotiators at the MFA had to know what was of true strategic importance to Russia, and what was propaganda.