The fluorescent lights of Terminal D at Borispol Airport cast a cold glow on the polished floor. Passengers on the last flight from Istanbul stretched tiredly through customs, their suitcases rattling on the tiles. Officer Taras Kovalenko, a man with dark eyes and a slight limp, watched as his partner, a German shepherd dog named Zorya, carefully sniffed the line.
Zorya, with her glossy black-and-red hair and keen eyes, was the star of the customs service. In three years of service, she had never once disobeyed an order – until this night. It all started with a sudden movement.
Zorya, normally calm and methodical, suddenly jerked her head toward a woman pushing a baby stroller. Her ears perked up, her body tensed, and before Taras could tighten the leash, she rushed forward. “Zorya, come to me!” – shouted Taras, but the dog did not listen.
It leaped toward the stroller, its front paws struck the edge, and the woman, shrieking, recoiled. The stroller rocked, the blue blanket slipped to the floor, exposing a crying infant. And something else.A service sheepdog HIT the baby stroller at the airport. What was in it made everyone’s hair stand on end…..
The metallic gleam beneath the child made Taras freeze, the woman went pale, her eyes widening. “Weapons! Everybody on the floor!” – shouted an officer nearby, and the terminal exploded with panic. Passengers scattered, phones dropped, voices merged into a rumble.
What began as a routine check turned to chaos, revealing a secret that would change the lives of many.
Taras Kovalenko had not planned a career in customs. A military veteran, he suffered a knee injury during a training exercise that put an end to his military career. With a titanium pin in his leg and a sense of loss, he searched for a new vocation until he found it at the Boryspil Airport Border Guard and Customs Department.
His partner, Zorya, was not the type to be chosen at first sight either. Found abandoned on the side of the road near Kiev, she was skinny and wary-looking. Other canines had shunned her, but Taras saw a spark in her. “She has flair,” he told his superior, Officer Shevchenko, when he asked to take Zorya. Three years of their work together proved him right.
Zorya didn’t just find contraband, she sensed lies….