coat sleeve, was a razor-thin, specially made thirteen-inch dagger.
One step back from the bodyguard’s rear, it swung up. The blade entered Bernie Lutcher’s back nearly six inches below his
left shoulder blade, grazed off one rib, then immediately penetrated his heart.
The old man gave it a hard grind and twist, a signature technique honed decades before, one he was quite proud of, tearing
open at least two heart chambers, ensuring an almost immediate death. In any event, the blade was coated with a dissolvable
poison primed to instantly decrystallize and rush straight into Bernie’s bloodstream. One way or another, he’d be dead.
Bernie’s eyes widened and his lips flew open. At the same instant, the old lady gave him a hard punch—an expertly aimed blow
to the solar plexus to knock the wind out of his lungs—and he landed heavily on his back, gasping for air and grasping his
chest, as though he was suffering a heart attack, which he surely was.
The two assassins immediately scattered, moving swiftly to the departure area for a flight to Zurich that left thirty minutes
later.
The first assassinations happened in the last three days of August 1992. The Summer Massacres, they were called afterward
by the thoroughly cowed employees of Konevitch Associates.
Andri Kelinichetski, bachelor, bon vivant, and very popular vice president for investor relations, ended up first in the queue.
A lifelong insomniac, he left his cramped apartment at two in the morning for a brisk walk in the cool Moscow air to clear
the demons from his head. He had made it three blocks from his apartment when three bullets, fired from thirty feet behind
his skull, cleared his head, literally. Andri stopped breathing before he hit the cement.
Five hours later, Tanya Nadysheva, divorced mother of two and a specialist in distressed companies, started up her newly purchased
red Volkswagen sedan for the drive to work, triggering a powerful bomb. Her head landed half a block away; she had been operating
her fancy new sunroof at the precise instant of detonation.
By ten o’clock that morning, six employees of Konevitch Associates lay in the morgue—one long-distance shooting, one short-distance,
a hand grenade attack, one car bombing, one very grisly slit throat, and a notably devout employee who was literally fed a
poisoned wafer as he stopped off at his local church for his habitual morning Communion.
Six victims. Six different types of murder. No failed attempts, no survivors, no witnesses. With the exception of the sliced
throat and the fatal Communion wafer, the killers—obviously more than one—had struck from a distance, safely and anonymously.
No forensic traces were found beyond spent bullets and bomb residue. The particles from the explosive devices were analyzed
on the spot by a veteran field technician. In his opinion, the devices were so coarse and simple, virtually any criminal idiot
could’ve built them.
A few hours later, a pair of special police investigators showed up, unannounced, at the headquarters of Konevitch Associates.
They flashed badges, announced their purpose with a show of grim expressions, and were ushered hurriedly upstairs. They marched
into Alex’s office, where they found him and several of his more senior executives assembled, making hasty arrangements for
the families of their dead friends and employees, plainly in shock over what had just happened. One executive, Nadia Pleshinko,
was blowing snot into a white tissue, unable to stop weeping.
One officer was fat, mustachioed, and late-middle-aged, the other surprisingly young, runway skinny, with a face that looked
glum even when he smiled. Laurel and Hardy, they were inevitably nicknamed by the boys at the precinct, a resemblance so glaring
that even they celebrated the epithet.
They were both lieutenants with the municipal police, they informed the gathering, here to discuss what had been learned or
not