Vadim Lyakhov from his youth was taught to save people, not kill them—even when the second is preferable. But this time, a full-fledged battle couldn’t be avoided, because the President’s “dacha” was attacked by forces far greater than its defenders, and the attackers’ goal was very clear and specific: seize the head of the country and destroy his supporters. Lyakhov couldn’t allow that. It didn’t fit the plans of the “Andreev Brotherhood”—a state coup and the loss of the President, the key figure of Operation “Malta Cross,” whose purpose was to unite Russia into a powerful state, part of the main historical sequence and its alternative counterpart. However, a battle is not a show; very often it unfolds according to an unpredictable scenario—or without any scenario at all. And that’s when courage, experience, mutual help, and above all faith that you’re fighting for a righteous cause become key. Lyakhov’s team was certain of this…