Korinsk, Yekteniya
Than Win took a drag off his cigarette and tapped some of the ash off the end. It was evening and the streets were quiet, most people avoided this area at night. Frankly, Than Win wished he could too. Every time he came here he felt like he was going to get jumped. He ducked into the nearby smoke shop quickly to get off the street.
Than Win approached the counter the same way he always did. The man who ran the store, a blonde man, glanced up from the newspaper he was reading behind the register. “Anything I can help you with, sir?”
“Do you have any Four Star Milds?* I’ve looked everywhere for them.” He replied as he snuffed out his cigarette in the tray.
The man behind the counter rolled his eyes, “Just what’s on the wall, sir.”
“You sure you don’t have anything in the back?” Than Win pressed.
The worker checked his watch and sighed. “Let’s check, shall we?” The man stood up from his stool and walked towards the back of the store. Than Win followed. Once the door to the storage closet closed behind them, the worker’s aloof demeanor dropped as he sat behind a small desk in the corner of the storage room. “So, Mr. Robin, what can I do for you today?”
Than Win didn’t even flinch at the usage of his supposedly secret codename. The man in front of him knew about any happening in the Yekteniyan underworld, his pseudonym was bound to leak to him at some point. “Well, Lloyd, my bosses have gotten word of what might be a new Junta agent in the city. You wouldn’t happen to know anything about that, would you?” He already knew the answer: nothing happened without the pseudonymous Lloyd’s knowledge. And still, somehow nobody knew anything about the guy. He was talented, probably trained by some intelligence agency. Than Win would’ve wanted to work with him more if the man wasn’t a freelancer.
Lloyd smiled and ran a hand through his blonde hair before leaning back in his chair. “I figured that’s what you might be coming to discuss. I’ve already prepared the data packet. Whereabouts, activities, the works. Once I get payment it’s yours, mate.”
Than Win raised an eyebrow, “He’s not been on the ground for very long. How did you get all this information so fast?”
Lloyd let out an exaggerated sigh, “The kid’s sloppy, mate. He’s been hitting brothels and bars almost every night for the last three weeks. I would charge you half price for this information if I wasn’t running a business here.” He reached down and pulled out two glasses and a bottle of vodka. He slid a shot across the table to Than Win. “I remember when I could charge double for Anmativedan agents. The Thhar’s run out of good ones by the looks of it.”
Than Win frowned and glanced at the shot in front of him. “I can’t tell if you’re implying that’s a bad thing.”
“It’s bad for business but good for the world. That’s the unfortunate reality of this line of work, what’s good for me is rarely good for anyone else.” He gestured to the shot, “It’s bad for business to kill one of your biggest customers, too. I’m a bit offended you’d think so low of me to do so.”
Than Win rolled his eyes and downed the shot before pulling out a wad of cash. “There’s your usual payment, Lloyd. The info can be sent to the same address.”
The info broker leafed through the Sodzh quickly. “Pleasure doing business with you, as always, mate.” As the two walked back towards the door, he passed two packs of Four Stars to Than Win. “On the house.”
The Next Day
Than Win was decidedly unimpressed with the Thhar’s new agent in Korinsk. From the information he’d been sold by Lloyd, the kid was indeed very sloppy. It was almost disgraceful that they thought this guy would be able to get away with it, he thought. Then again, given the poor state of the apartments they’d housed their agent in, it was likely the Thhar’s intelligence gatherers were right on cash. Than Win turned to the man walking behind him, slightly craning his neck to look the towering Yekteniyan in the eyes. “Are you ready for this, Sergei?”
“Da. The usual plan?” Sergei responded. He gestured to the duffel bag he was carrying with him. Than Win wasn’t entirely sure why the man ran with the Free Government of Anmativeda’s intelligence cell in Korinsk, but he was some very useful muscle with a local face.
Than Win nodded, “Yep. If it isn’t broken then there is no need to fix it, as the saying goes.” He pulled a notepad out of his pocket. “Apartment 214. This should be the one.” He knocked on the door calmly before stepping out of the way to let Sergei stand in his spot. The mountain of a man nearly filled the doorframe.
The door creaked open and an Anmativedan man’s face peered back. His nervous eyes behind thick, tape-repaired eyeglasses made him look almost pathetic to Than Win. The man spoke in heavily accented Yek, “Is there something I can help y-” His timid eyes suddenly went wide as Sergei launched a fist into the man’s torso. Than Win winced, a liver shot. He was all too familiar with how painful Sergei’s liver punches could be from their sparring sessions. The man- no, he wasn’t a man, the Thhar’s new spy was hardly more than a kid- doubled over in pain. A groan started to escape his mouth before Sergei pushed him to the floor and pinned the young spy.
Than Win reached into the discarded duffle bag and retrieved a handful of zip ties and a roll of duct tape. Sergei had placed the young man into a chokehold while using his body weight to keep his opponent from moving. Flailing arms and rosy cheeks gave way to pallor and a limp body. The kid’s glasses flopped unceremoniously onto the floor. Than Win watched as his partner rolled off of the unconscious spy. “You tie his hands and legs. I’ve got his head.” He tossed the zip ties to his Yekteniyan partner.
Now, Than Win produced from his bag of goodies a smaller black bag. He knelt next to the unconscious man and picked his head up. The roll of duct tape went around and around his head four times before Than Win ripped off the excess. Than Win inspected his handiwork. The youthful spy would be able to breathe but talking would be impossible. Next came the soundproof earmuffs. Then, the Free Government agent fitted the bag over his Thhar counterpart’s head and tightened it down. Not tight enough to choke the man but tight enough to prevent almost all light from entering. He picked the discarded glasses up off the floor and tucked them into his pocket.
He moved onto the man’s arms, Sergei had already bound them with zip ties. He flattened the excess and wrapped his duct tape around the man’s wrists and down to his fingers until the man’s hands looked more like a silvery cocoon. Then he moved onto the ankles and doubled up the zip tie restraints with yet more duct tape.
Than Win tossed the duct tape back into the bag and zipped it back up. “Now comes the hard part.” Than Win shouldered the duffle bag as Sergei hoisted their new kidnapee over his shoulder. “All quiet in your earpiece?” Than Win asked.
“Yes. We should be alright.” Unless their lookouts had been caught, the odds of the two men being caught by a homebody returning to their apartment in the middle of a workday seemed low. The pair descended the apartment block’s stairs with their precious cargo in tow.
Than Win popped his head out the door into the apartment building’s small lobby. As Sergei had suggested, it was empty. He motioned for his partner to follow him and waltzed into the second-rate establishment’s front room. Sergei made haste towards a rear exit as Than Win followed.
Sergei pushed open the door; an idling van was waiting for them behind the building. Sergei unceremoniously tossed their prisoner into the backseat before hopping into the passenger’s. Than Win flopped into the backseat and pushed a pile of dirty laundry on top of the unconscious enemy spy. “Alright, we’re good, let’s go!”
????, Yekteniya
That Evening
The small patch of forest was almost picturesque. Light from the setting sun filtered through the trees and leaves, reflected off the dapplings of the winter’s first snow. It was almost beautiful. The only thing holding it back was the out-of-place van and the two men who carefully double-checked their handiwork.
Than Win looked at the setup he and Sergei had made: two chairs facing each other, a third chair, and a table to the side. It wasn’t much but it would have to do for the time being. “Sergei, do you mind grabbing our friend?” He asked his colleague in his native tongue, Meng.
“I will retrieve him,” replied Sergei, also in Meng. Than Win was consistently impressed with Sergei’s Meng. It was very impressive.
He returned once more with their kidnappee in his hands. All the struggle seemed to have gone out of the hooded and restrained man as Sergei set him onto one of the seats and Than Win began duct-taping him to the folding chair. Then, Than Win settled into his own chair, across from his counterpart from the Junta. He mouthed to Sergei, “Showtime!”
The dark hood was ripped from the prisoner’s head and Sergei roughly removed the earmuffs beneath. Than Win would be the first thing he would have seen or heard in hours when he said, “Would you like your glasses? You can nod if you would like them.” The young man nodded slowly as he blinked rapidly to adapt to the sudden change in light. Than Win stood and produced the glasses he’d taken from the man earlier from a pocket. He gingerly placed them on the spy’s nose. “Okay, now hold still. I need to get this tape off of you so we can speak. It’s going to sting a little bit. I’m sorry about that.” Than Win did not feel particularly sorry for any pulled hairs from this Junta dog, in reality. But he needed to stick to his persona to establish trust.
The man took big gulps of air through his mouth as Than Win settled back into his chair. Sergei sat to the side, next to a table on which he had placed a tool bag. Than Win analyzed the spy in front of him: he was on the shorter side, underweight, young, perhaps in his early 20s, with short black hair with the faintest wisps of a mustache. He wouldn’t have looked out of place in the slums of Chianmei, or the poor Anmativedan diaspora in Korinsk, which was probably his goal. Than Win could sense the man was weak-willed and afraid. The Thhar really had not sent their best.
“I won’t waste your time.” Than Win started in Meng. “We both know why you’re here.”
“Fuck you.” The spy croaked.
Sergei’s voice growled, low and predatory, “Do not interrupt him, may loe.**” The massive man stood and unzipped his bag. He began unpacking its contents: a water bottle, a rag, a pair of pliers, a rope, a knife, a hammer, a chisel, and finally his pièce de résistance: a suppressed pistol that Sergei loaded in dramatic fashion. The spy opposite Than Win watched the whole process like a deer in headlights.
Than Win continued, “Now, we can do this the easy way or the hard way. Cliche, I know. You can either tell me the full truth or…” He nodded to his partner, “I leave you in his care. I am averse to violence, I get queasy at the sight of blood, but he is not. I want to help you get out of this life but you need to help me first.”
His Junta counterpart had attempted to mask his fear during Than Win’s speech. Very poorly, thought the interrogator. Sergei wore a much more convincing mask; he had the calm, confident, intimidating demeanor of a practiced killer. “Let’s start with something simple. What is your name?”
The man hesitated and shot a momentary glance at Sergei. “Phyo Nyan.”
Than Win shook his head, “It’s rude to start a conversation with a lie, you know. Do you think I’m stupid? That’s the name on your forged identification papers. What’s your real name?”
The man swallowed nervously; his eyes darted to Sergei, his gun, to Than Win, back to Sergei, and then he hung his head. “Myo Naing,” came the faintest whispers of an answer.
“What was that?”
“My name is Myo Naing.” The man said while keeping his eyes locked to the ground.
Than Win turned to his partner, “Is that true?” Sergei looked at a notepad beside him and nodded. Than Win returned his gaze to the spy opposite him. “See? Was that so hard? You must be thirsty, you like some water?”
The man brought his gaze up from the ground, eyebrows furrowed. “You already knew my name?”
“We already know plenty about you and your operations, kid.” Than Win stated, flatly. This was a lie of his own though; Lloyd had been unable to find the spy’s true name. The spy stared back with an expression of confusion spreading over his face. Good, thought Than Win, you want him to be confused. He’ll give up information more readily. “The question still stands though: would you like some water?”
The man’s eyes shot back to Sergei. “Is this a trick question? Are you going to waterboard me if I say yes?”
Than Win stood and walked to the back of the van. “No. If I’m asking you, there will be no harm to you.” He fetched a bottle of water from its plastic container. “I’m afraid I will have to hold it for you though; we can’t cut your hands loose just yet.”
Than Win sat back in his chair following the arduous process of bottle feeding a grown man like a baby. He cleared his throat, “That is the cornerstone of this little agreement we have now. Good answers will get you a reward, bad ones will see you punished. It is in all of our best interests for you to be truthful with me, yes?” He leaned forwards and locked eyes with Myo Naing. “Now, we know you’re a spy. We also know you didn’t work alone. Who is your handler?”
A pang of fear crossed Myo Naing’s face. He stammered, “I-I don’t know! I’ve never met the guy… I don’t even know if it is a guy! I just got messages on my phone that told me to do things, honestly!”
Than Win watched the man closely. Nothing in his body language or speech indicated a lie, only fear. “That’s alright. That’s how it works with this stuff sometimes. Can you try to recall anything about them?”
The Thhar novice thought for a moment, “…I heard someone call the handler Sayadaw***. That’s it.”
Than Win nodded, “Okay. Just one more question and then I will give a reward again. I’m sure you’re hungry as well. But first, did you commit your crimes alone, or did you work with other members of the Thhar’s intelligence team here in Yekteniya.”
The answer came far too quickly. “No.”
“No? No, what?”
Myo Naing replied, “I did it alone.”
He’s lying, Than Win thought, it doesn’t line up with what we know. He answered too quickly. “Myo Naing, why are you lying to me?”
The Thhar spy went pale, “I’m not!” Than Win leaned forward again and raised an eyebrow. Sergei leaned towards his tools. “…there were some other men, sometimes.”
“Okay. Do you know their names? Their addresses? Their faces? Anything at all, really. I’m trying to get you out of this mess, kid. Help me help you.”
Myo Naing swallowed hard, “They never used their real names and I couldn’t tell you their fake ones. I’ve forgotten. I haven’t seen them in at least a month.” He once again glanced at Sergei.
“That’s alright. Would you like some food?” Myo Naing nodded and Than Win retrieved a can of curry from the van. “We’re going to cut your hands loose now. Don’t try to do anything foolish, now.” He slashed through the Thhar spy’s hand restraints and pulled the duct tape off. A plastic spork and the curry were placed in Myo Naing’s hands. He began eating hungrily with what limited range of motion he had been afforded. Once again, Than Win returned to his chair. He watched the enemy spy eat ravenously. A pack of cigarettes appeared from his pocket and a lit Four Star hung from Than Win’s lips soon after. He outstretched his arm in offering.
Myo Naing answered between mouthfuls of curry, “No thank you.” The cigarettes returned to his interrogator's pocket.
Than Win took a long drag from his cigarette and exhaled. “You know, you’re pretty young for a spy. How old are you, Myo Naing?”
“20.” Small specks of curry came out of his mouth alongside the answer. He scraped at the bottom of the can as he continued to eat.
Than Win raised an eyebrow; this was new information for him. Lloyd hadn’t been able to confirm Myo Naing’s age either. “20? You weren’t even an adult when the Thhar seized power. When did you get recruited?”
The novice spy discarded his spork and now nearly spotless can. He looked back to Than Win, “About three months ago, I think.”
“Three months ago?” Than Win was now quite curious about the circumstances of the man before him. “That’s not that long.”
Myo Naing nodded. “Yeah. I think I talked to the recruiter guy about two weeks before I went to training. Then I spent a month and a half there and then a month and a half here in Korinsk, more or less.”
Than Win was offended and surprised. This kid had spent six weeks in training before being sent off into the world. Than Win had spent over a year in Skanda when he had undergone his intelligence education. “A month and a half? Kid, I do not think the Junta has your best interests in mind here.” The Thhar was desperate. Every other spy he’d interrogated had had at least double that. Even that had been an accelerated program. A month and a half.
“What?” Myo Naing said defensively, “Of course they did! They trained me well! They said I was an asset.”
The FGA spy shook his head, “No, they don’t. I trained for two years. My partner did too. You are expendable to them. Nobody is coming to rescue you.” Than Win softened his tone, and a hint of genuine concern for his enemy crept into his voice, “Myo Naing, they tricked you.” That was a lie- he’d only trained for just over a year- but it sounded more impressive than the truth.
Than Win could tell that the Thhar’s operative knew his reality, but that he couldn’t accept it. “No. They told me I would just be running errands in Korinsk. That it would help defeat the communists in the Free Government. No!”
“Kid, I spent four years fighting the Communists before you were born. I want to help you get out of this, I’m being honest.” He puffed on his cigarette. “Help me out a little bit here. Can you tell me anything?”
Myo Naing hung his head again and was quiet for a while. The internal struggle was obvious to both Free Government agents. Finally, he looked up again, “I’ll tell you everything I know, alright?” He exhaled hard. “I already told you everything I know about the handler. One of the guys I met on one of the missions, had this stupid mustache. It was big and bushy, like his eyebrows. And he was white, Yekteniyan.” He inhaled again, “In Little Chianmei there’s a computer repair shop that they sent me to a few times. I don’t know what they had me pick up but it looked tech-y.”
Than Win grinned, everything was coming together now. Myo Naing continued, “There’s some supply officer at the Korinsk garrison, he’s super corrupt. He sells us all sorts of stuff.” He thought for a second longer, “My rent usually came from one bank account. I don’t know whose it is but they paid my rent so it’s probably a government one. Oh, and there’s a smoke shop where the owner is some sort of blonde super spy or something because he knows everything. Or so I’ve heard, I never went there.”
Than Win nodded slowly, his grin widening. “That’s very good, Myo Naing, very good! I think we are done for now. We will take you back to our facility and they will debrief you more there. Thank you for your cooperation!” He stood and added, “Would you like some more water? There’s plenty in the van.”
Myo Naing nodded his approval of the drink and Than Win went to the van a final time. He pulled out a water bottle and unscrewed the cap. This time it would have a fun addition as he poured a white powder of crushed medicine tablets into the water. The FGA operative walked back and handed the bottle to his young Thhar counterpart, who took it and began to drink. As the bottle emptied, Than Win commented, “Just so you know, there was melatonin in that drink. It’s just a precaution. I’m sorry.”
Despite his initial panic, slowly the drugs got the better of Myo Naing as he drifted off to sleep. Than Win turned to his partner, Sergei, and said, “Alright then. Let’s get packed up and get out of here.”
*Four Star is an Anmativedan cigarette company, it has decreased production since the civil war started
**may loe, literally: mother fucker
***Sayadw is an honorific used for senior monks