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Kell put a team together inside two hours. Javed Mohsin and Nina flew direct from Istanbul to Odessa, taking rooms at a four-star hotel on Arkadia Beach, a resort area to the south of the city. To avoid a cluster of last-minute bookings appearing on the passenger manifest of a single airline, the seven other officers leaving London for Odessa took separate flights from Gatwick, Stansted, and Heathrow. Harold flew with British Airways to Kiev, Danny and Carol with Ukrainian Airlines. Kell connected through Vienna, Elsa and Jez via Warsaw. For the same reason, the team was distributed across several Odessa hotels, on standard tourist aliases. In the unlikely event that they were questioned by immigration officials, the younger members of the team were to express an interest in the city’s nightlife. Harold and Danny were to declare a lifelong passion for Battleship Potemkin and the films of Sergei Eisenstein.

“What about you, guv?” Harold had asked Kell.

“There are some catacombs under the city,” he replied. “I’ll tell them I want to go caving.”

Kell traveled under the Hardwick alias, rehearsing the legend as he flew east from Vienna, trying to think of every eventuality, every trick that would help his hastily assembled team snatch ABACUS from under the noses of the SVR. He pored over a street map of Odessa and learned whatever he could about procedures for passengers disembarking from ships at the port. Kell had left preliminary instructions in the drafts folder of a Gmail account to which all ten officers held the password, attaching mug shots of Kleckner and Minasian and arranging a meeting at a restaurant in the center of Odessa for eight o’clock on Sunday night. The team would otherwise have limited contact with one another, on clean U.K. cell phones, once they had passed through Ukrainian immigration.

Amelia had suggested using officers from the embassy in Kiev, both for local expertise and to bulk up the numbers, but Kell insisted on keeping the Station at arm’s length. If Minasian’s people were watching SIS personnel, that could lead the SVR right into the heart of the Odessa operation and blow it open.

*   *   *

Kell’s planes were delayed out of both London and Vienna. He arrived three hours late in Odessa. SIS had reserved a hire car for Chris Hardwick, but there was a further delay of forty-five minutes in the airport while the rental firm agent tried to locate it. (“No cars,” he said, in bored, spluttering English. “All gone.”) It was already past midnight by the time Kell was on the road, driving with a sat-nav through a grid of time-travel nineteenth-century boulevards into the heart of the old city. He hadn’t slept in almost two days, but managed several hours of rest in his room after receiving confirmation by secure e-mail that Rachel was “safe and well” in Istanbul. Amelia had pointed out the importance of Rachel maintaining cover; to fly her back to London would look like panic, merely confirming to the SVR that she had been working against ABACUS. Better that she remain in Turkey and continue to try to contact Kleckner. To that end, Rachel had sent two text messages to the American, as well as an e-mail, wondering why he was not responding to her calls. Amelia had instructed her to break off the relationship on Sunday morning (“I can’t BELIEVE you would mess me around like this”), thereby leaving Rachel free to return to London on Monday without raising greater suspicion.

Kell was woken at dawn by the rattling air-conditioning unit in his room. Mr. Hardwick had been booked into the Londonskaya, a pre-Soviet relic of Odessa’s romantic past with broad, high-ceilinged corridors and a sweeping staircase that led down into an ornate fin de siècle lobby. Kell planned to spend the morning walking around the port, then to meet up with Danny to discuss the best means by which they might grab Kleckner.

It was a humid morning in Odessa, smells of engine oil and sea air as Kell left the Londonskaya and walked east along a colonnade of plane trees toward a pretty Italianate square at the top of the Potemkin Steps. He continued south on foot, familiarizing himself with the grid of streets around Deribasovskaya, the main pedestrianized thoroughfare in the center of the city. Soviet-era Ladas bumped along cobbled streets under crisp sunshine, Ukraine’s famously beautiful women dressed at ten o’clock in the morning as if going to a wedding, teetering on high heels in curve-hugging dresses. Kell stopped for a coffee at a restaurant advertising sushi and shisha, then returned to the square.

A bare-chested teenage boy was standing at the top of the Potemkin Steps, a giant eagle perched on his shoulder. Tourists were taking photographs of the bird, a young German girl gasping at the size of its beak and talons. Kell handed the teenager a ten-grivna note and took pictures of his own, firing off several shots of the area—including the entrance to a funicular railway that ran parallel to the Steps. A group of perhaps twenty tourists were standing beneath a statue of a man Kell identified from a Cyrillic sign as the Duke of Richelieu, a nineteenth-century French aristocrat evidently integral to some aspect of Odessa’s fabled past. He was dressed in the style of a Roman senator, a pigeon resting on his outstretched arm. Kell sat at the base of the memorial and looked south toward the Black Sea. There was a tall modern building in the center of the port complex, about half a mile away. Block capital letters on the roof identified the building as the Hotel Odessa. Kell was frustrated. Had the researchers at Vauxhall Cross realized that it was situated so close to the area where Kleckner’s ship would dock, they would have booked Danny a room. With a decent pair of binoculars, Aldrich could have tracked Serenissima’s approach from several miles away while keeping a discreet eye on possible SVR movement in the port. The lobby of the hotel would also have made a convenient meeting point for the team in the event of emergency. Such were the missed opportunities and complications of a last-minute operation. Kell would try for a room as soon as he reached the port.

He began to walk down the Potemkin Steps. Vendors sitting in the dappled light of shading trees were selling Russian dolls from plinths on either side of the Steps. As the heat of the day intensified, an elderly man paused to catch his breath halfway up, exhausted by the effort of climbing but still managing to smile at the passing Kell. Kell offered him a sip from a bottle of water, but the man declined, resting his hand on Kell’s arm and muttering: “Spasiba.”

Traffic was passing in both directions along a busy two-lane highway at the base of the Steps. Kell used an underpass to reach the pedestrian entrance to the port on the opposite side of the road. Within a few minutes he had reached a large square in front of the main terminal building, his view of the port dominated on either side by rusted cranes and distant container ships. Kell walked along the eastern side of the terminal as far as the entrance to the Hotel Odessa. To his surprise, he saw that the hotel had been boarded up: weeds had even sprouted at the base of a set of locked automatic doors. Peering inside, Kell could see time-zone clocks bolted to the wall behind an abandoned reception desk, plastic sheets laid out across the carpets. He remembered the office of Nicolas Delfas and thought briefly of Marianna Dimitriadis, wondering what had become of her. A number of people were walking in the area in front of the hotel: parents with their children; couples on a romantic stroll.

Kell carried on, walking around to the western pier until he had made a circuit of the terminal. He took photographs—of staircases, exits, walkways, and landmarks—that he would show to the team at the evening meeting. At one point, Kell passed within twenty feet of Javed Mohsin and enjoyed the fact that Mohsin was professional enough to avoid eye contact.

Kell went next inside the terminal itself, following signs directing passengers to the customs area. He was surprised by how easily he could move through the various levels of the building without being stopped or questioned by officials. It would be different in the morning, with any number of police officers and immigration officials present. For now, though, the environment was as open and as fluid as Kell could have hoped.

He spent the rest of the afternoon with Danny preparing the comms and vehicles. Earpieces and microphones had been sent by diplomatic bag to the British embassy in Chisinau, then driven across the border from Moldova by an SIS officer. Aldrich and Mohsin had rented Audis and would drive them to the terminal building in the morning, taking the slip road over the railway tracks running parallel to the highway. If the team could grab Kleckner off the ship and somehow bundle him into the backseat of one of the vehicles, so much the better, but neither Kell nor Aldrich believed that it would be that easy. At the very least, Minasian would have to be taken out of the equation. In a worst-case scenario, a phalanx of armed SVR officers would get ABACUS under control on the quayside and spirit him away within minutes. If that happened, Kell and his team would be going home empty-handed.