a final butt stroke across the back of the neck as Kropodkin folded over in agony. Randi was careful to pull the finishing blow so it would not quite fracture the spine.
Kropodkin dropped like a dynamited bridge.
Dropping to her knees beside the Slovakian, Randi first checked his breathing, then yanked his arms behind his back, applying a fresh set of disposacuffs.
"Help me get him back onto the bunk, please, Doctor."
Trowbridge just stared down at her and at the graduate student, sprawled bloody-faced on the floor.
"I can't believe it," he mumbled. "I can't believe that anyone could kill so many people so casually."
"There are more of them around than you might expect, Doctor." Randi rubbed her eyes, suddenly very tired. "You've been sitting in a room with two of them."
Chapter Thirty
The Misha Crash Site
Gradually Jon Smith became aware of dawn growing beyond the overhead astrodome. He also became aware of an imbalance in the warmth surrounding him, a comfortable emphasis favoring his left side. Then came a very definite snuggle.
The congealed frost of his breath rasped on the cover of his Jaeger sleeping bag as Smith lifted his head to look around the radar-observer cabin. A second occupied Jaeger bag was nestled firmly against his. Valentina Metrace, in her catlike connoisseurship of comfort, had burrowed close in the night.
Smith couldn't help but cock an eyebrow. Randi had been right. Where there was a will, there was most certainly a way.
Female companionship had not been a major factor in Smith's life for some time. At first, in the direct aftermath of Sophia's death, the concept had been too painful, too much a breaking of a faith. Then, afterward, emotional relationships had seemed an added complication in an already overly complex life. But now this particular female seemed to be making it clear in a hundred subtle and not so subtle ways that she intended to make herself a factor.
Exactly why was beyond Smith's comprehension. He had always viewed himself as a fairly prosaic individual. Any romance that might cling to him was only a reflection of his careers, and likely a misunderstood one at that. He had always felt very fortunate to have gained the love of one beautiful and intelligent woman. To have this second bold, enigmatic and decidedly attractive female move deliberately into his orbit was an unexpected phenomenon.
He felt Valentina's head lift, and she shook free of her sleeping bag's hood and face flap, peering into his face from a range of a few inches. "I would cheerfully and without a moment's hesitation kill," she murmured, "for a long, hot soak in a bathtub, and a change of lingerie."
"I could loan you a spare disinfectant towelette," he replied.
"Your counteroffers are growing steadily more pathetic, but I suppose I'm stuck with it."
She rested her head on his shoulder, and for a few moments they lay together in the bizarre little pocket of intimacy they had found on the ice-slickened deck of the ancient bomber. The wind outside had subsided to only the faintest intermittent whisper. In the crew's cabin aft, they could hear Gregori Smyslov snoring softly in his bunk.
The night before, Smith had been careful in the way he had arranged their gear to make sleeping room on the deck. He'd propped his loaded packframe in the hatchway between the compartments, stacking his snowshoes atop them, rendering a silent access to the radar-observer space impossible. The necessity of that action and the angular feel of his sidearm under the wadded bulk of his parka pillow pushed his momentary nonprofessional musing about Valentina Metrace into abeyance.
"What is it, Val?" he said under his breath. "What are the Russians hiding? You have some ideas, don't you?"
She hesitated; then he felt the shake of her head, her soft hair brushing his chin. "Not that I'm prepared to say, Jon. The historian in me is appalled by the concept of providing poor history, and the spy, of giving poor intelligence. But we've got to find the survival camp. If there are any absolute answers to be found, we'll find them there."
"I can understand that. But that's only one set of answers. The Russians are only one factor of what I'm coming to see as a three-point equation. The other two points are who is on the island now and who may be coming for the anthrax. I left Randi hanging back there as bait for whoever may be here now."
"Shouldn't worry, Jon. Anyone who endeavors to gulp down our Ms. Russell is going