In Kislovodsk, but had stepped out somewhere at that time. She also promised to tell him that we had called. After that, we agreed to call each other again in the evening, and then Timur and I went to the parking lot where the KAMAZ we had left was located.
Evening of the Same Day
Batchaev and I went back to the same call center and called Dekkushev's cell phone in Kislovodsk.
Adam himself picked up the phone and we told him that we were in Volgodonsk and waiting for him.
He promised to come the next day and we said goodbye.
Encounter with Police
Upon leaving the call center, we were stopped by a foot police patrol and asked to show our documents.
We showed our passports and, since we did not have registration in Volgodonsk, we were asked to go to the station, which was nearby.
At the station, our details were copied into some book.
During the conversation, in response to the police officers' question, we replied that we had brought potatoes to Volgodonsk for sale.
One of them (in my opinion, he was a major by rank, but I find it difficult to describe him) asked us for one sack.
We agreed and he, in his car (it seems to be a "Tavria"), drove us to the parking lot, where Batchaev filled a sack with potatoes from among those covering the explosives, and put it in the policeman's car.
The latter said goodbye to us and left.
Timur and I slept that night in the cab of the KAMAZ.
Next Day
Batchaev and I slept through the first half of the next day in the KAMAZ, and immediately after lunch, Adam Dekkushev arrived in a "Moskvich-Svyatogor" car.
We got into this car and drove to the outskirts of Volgodonsk in the direction of Tsimlyansk and there, near a monument in the form of a stele with an image of a girl, we sat and ate the food Adam had brought.
Then we returned back to the parking lot where we had left the KAMAZ vehicle.
Timur, Batchaev and I spent the night in the cab of the KAMAZ, and Dekkushev in the "Moskvich", which he parked at the same parking lot.