Authors: Hugh Miller
âDid you know he was planning to eliminate Harold Gibson?'
Erika shook her head.
âYou don't have any control over this guy at all, do you?' Sabrina said.
Erika said nothing. Sabrina looked at the picture again. âUli Jürgen,' she said. âThat name rings a bell.'
Erika nodded. She pointed to the radio on the
corner of the worktop. âUli Jürgen. There was a bulletin. He was found dead earlier today.'
Sabrina caught Erika's gaze and held it, trying to communicate to her the seriousness of the situation. âListen, Erika, I want you to understand something. This situation that you have created has got much bigger than just your personal vendetta. Other people's lives are at risk and that could have serious implications for world security. So I'm going to ask you again, and I want a straight answer this time: what do you do if you need to contact Einar Ahlin?'
Erika paused, searching Sabrina's face. Apparently impressed with her gravity, she said reluctantly, âHe has a girlfriend. She passes messages between us, both ways.'
âWhat's her address?'
Erika took down a pad and pencil from a shelf above the worktop. âHer name is Magda Schaeffer.'
âRemember,' Sabrina said, âif the address is wrong, I'll be back.'
âIt's correct, you have my word.' Erika scribbled an address in Oranienstrasse. âIt's a one-room flat above a little nightclub. Magda works there, she's a stripper.'
Sabrina put the paper in her pocket. She looked at the photograph again. The name of the boy standing next to Uli Jürgen was Andreas Wolff.
âDo you have a scanner?' she said.
âWhat for?'
âFor these records.' Sabrina slapped the book. âI want copies. Quickly.'
âI don't think that's any part of our deal.'
Again there was no conviction. Sabrina felt the protest was a token.
âWhy did you let me know they exist, Erika? Why did you have them brought here?'
âI wanted you to see them, to understand their part in what we do.'
Sabrina shook her head. âYou wanted me to force an issue. You still want the Siegfried gang attacked, but you know damn well Einar's going to get caught long before he gets around to killing them all. And your chances of finding another Einar must be one in a million.'
âI know nothing of the sort.'
âPlease, Erika, credit me with a little intelligence. Your killer is an extrovert, he puts on the high profile every time he makes a hit. He'll get taken out before he's halfway through Emily's list.'
âWe have a mission -'
âYou know that pretty soon your only hope will be to let the law do the job for you, because your assassin will be a goner. And I think that after the fright you got today with Gregor, you want to draw back from the physical stuff sooner rather than later.'
Erika was silent for a moment, then jerked a thumb at the door. âThere is a scanner in my office along the hall.'
âCome and help me.'
Erika set up a word-processing program on the computer and Sabrina used the flatbed scanner to transfer copies of the book pages on to the screen. The completed copy file was very large.
âHow do you plan to get all that on to a disk?' Erika said. âThe high-capacity removable drive is broken.'
âI won't take a copy away with me,' Sabrina said. âI'll send it to a safe box. Let me use the keyboard.'
She called up the modem, made contact with her communications area and tapped in her UNACO password for Mailbox Access. The padlocked box came up. She put in her personal access code. The lid of the box opened. She addressed the
Jugend von Siegfried
file to C.W. Whitlock and uploaded it. The transfer took three minutes. When it was complete, she typed out a terse note, labelled it
MOST URGENT,
and addressed it also to Whitlock.
âAnd now I get out of your life,' she said.
âCan you guarantee that?'
âNo. But I've no desire to have anything more to do with you. Barring any sidewash, we're through with each other.'
At the door she said, âI understand your mission, Erika. But you haven't been cheated out of anything. It's true what I said, your executioner's luck can't hold.'
Erika flapped her hand, perhaps accepting that. âMy feelings about what has happened are -' She hesitated. âThey're complex. Mingled. To know
how I feel, maybe you would have to be a German
Jew.'
C.W. Whitlock was in the corridor outside UNACO's copy room. As he punched the red button on his mobile and dropped it in his pocket Philpott stepped up behind him.
âThere's a communication for you from Berlin,' Philpott said, pointing to the door of the Secure Communications Suite. âShall we look at it?'
They went in and Whitlock sat down by the console. When he had ascertained the Mailbox file was from Sabrina, he punched in
DIRECT PRINT
and stood by to wait for the printout.
âCan you give me a running translation of the stuff coming out of the printer?' Philpott asked.
Whitlock nodded. For ten minutes without pause, he sight-translated from the sheet of paper unreeling on to the carpet. He read summaries of fraudulent transactions which had resulted in Jewish businessmen being ruined. He read gloating descriptions of evictions, midnight batterings, a gang rape of a Jewish woman and two murders. After the description of the second killing, Whitlock stopped.
âI think I want to take this stuff in smaller doses from here on,' he said.
âQuite.' Philpott started rolling up the ribbon of paper. âOur dear girl has struck gold of a particularly nauseating yellow. Let's get translators down here to deal with this. I'll fix a meet with the Federal German Legation.'
He glanced at the monitor. âWhy is that blinking, C.W.?'
Whitlock looked up. âDamn.' He hit the button marked
READ.
âIt's a separate communiqué. She probably meant us to read it first.'
Sabrina's message flashed on to the screen, short and to the point:
Wolff may be next on the list.
âTalk to her as soon as you can,' Philpott said. âThen alert Mike.'
âUli Jürgen,' Wolff said, repeating the name, his voice husky on the telephone. âI heard about the murder on the radio, and the name rang a bell then. Now you mention it, I believe a member of a group I met at a restaurant on Leipziger Strasse was called that. It was one of those occasions I was being shown off by Rudolf Altenberg. Jürgen was talkative, something of a showman as I recall.'
âHe was on the list,' Mike said. âHe was also standing next to someone with your name on an old photograph that the assassin works with. That's what I called to tell you. It's a picture of all the people on the list taken when they were boys.'
âIt occurs to me,' Wolff said, âthat maybe that group I met were the people on this list. All about the same age as myself, all acting as if they
weren't
a group. They didn't sit together, and they said nothing about being connected in any way, but at the same time they acted as if they hadn't seen each other in ages and were having trouble
concealing their pleasure. It's odd how a thing like that shows.'
âDo you remember anything else?'
âLots of photographs were taken. It was a charity affair, I think.' Wolff paused. âMy God.' He snapped his fingers, making a cracking sound on the line. âI had forgotten it completelyâ¦'
âWhat?'
âTwo different people, members of that coterie - if it was a coterie - told me I had the same name as a boyhood friend of theirs, now sadly dead.'
Mike groaned. âGood old mistaken identity.'
âOh no, they didn't think I
was
their friend.'
âNo, but the person who made up the list did.' Mike had no doubt Wolff was telling the truth. âYou're the right age to have been in the Hitler Youth.'
âOnly just.'
âThese men were the last of the chosen,' Mike said. âYou've been seen in their company and by a nasty coincidence you've got yourself lumped with them. That's bad for your reputation, but it's worse for your long-term prospects.'
âI find it hard, accepting that I am at risk.'
âWell, you'll have to. You could be high on the list by now. I want you to stay put and don't move far from the guys looking after you.'
âWhatever you say.'
Mike rang off, then he put through a call to Philpott in New York and told him about his conversation with Wolff.
âWe've been digging in the news archives since we got the records from Sabrina,' Philpott said. âWe found that a Berlin businessman called Andreas Wolff, born in Munich in 1934, died in a motoring accident in 1982. Significantly, a newspaper account of his funeral reported that among the pallbearers were Erich Bahr and Klaus Garlan.'
âWho are both on the list.'
âSo the real Wolff is dead and our man is being mistaken for him.' Mike heard muffled voices in the background. âC.W. is in the process of suggesting to the Austrian police that they double their efforts to protect Wolff,' Philpott said. âHave you contacted Sabrina yet - I assume you
are
in Berlin?'
âI'm in Berlin, but I haven't been in touch with Sabrina. I'm about to do that.'
âAs soon as anything happens, for good or ill, let me know.'
Mike went directly to a bar off Kantstrasse, near the Kurfürstendamm. Sabrina was waiting, sitting alone at a table by the door. Her hair was combed down, touching her shoulders. She wore a dark blue linen dress with a flared skirt; around her shoulders she wore a silk shawl.
âGoing somewhere special?' Mike said, sitting down.
âI made an effort to look civilized, that's all.' Sabrina poured him a glass of wine from the carafe on the table. âThat's
Scheurebe Kabinett.
Not bad.'
âWhy did they want you to stay in Berlin?' he said. âDid somebody think maybe I couldn't cope on my own?'
âKeeping me here is like parking a car handy to where you might need it. C.W. thinks Philpott wants the case resolved within the next twenty-four hours. If it comes to a showdown rather than a routine arresting of guilty parties, I suppose it makes sense to have us both where the action's likely to break out.' She sipped her wine. âCare to bring me up to speed?'
Mike told her about his conversation with Wolff. âWhat's the lead you have on the assassin?'
âIt's his girlfriend. Magda Schaeffer. She's a stripper at a club in Oranienstrasse. I've bought you temporary membership. The show doesn't start until eleven.'
âEven if we corner this guy, he isn't going to throw up his hands and tell us we've got him fair and square,' Mike said. âThat's way too low key. If he goes down, he'll be fighting all the way.'
âHe won't be the first one.'
âI had a dream about him,' Mike said. âIt was jumbled, but he had just blown away somebody, in a fairground. I was going right up to him and he was standing there with the gun still smoking in his hand. I was getting ready to put an armlock on him. He turned and he had this terrific smile. I smiled back, completely won over in spite of myself, and he brought up the gun and shot me in the heart. The pain woke me up.'
âThis is no time to talk about death-dreams,' Sabrina said.
âAre there good and bad times?'
âIt's what my friend Pratash believes.'
âPratash. I don't think I've had the pleasure.'
âHe's a mystic. Or I think he is. I met him in Calcutta. He told me he was drawn to my emanations.'
âWhich always look nice when you wear light clothing.'
âHe wasn't coming on to me, he was serious. A little, old, deeply serious man. He believes the world is a great big mistake and that the Creator will one day realize this and start it all over again from scratch. In the meantime, we should keep our heads below the parapet. One way of doing that, he told me, is never to think of danger, or dwell on dreams of jeopardy or death, at a time when real danger is likely to occur. He says such behaviour stimulates disaster.'
âI suppose we all have our spiritual authority,' Mike said. âI haven't settled on mine yet, but Ralph Waldo Emerson might just fit the throne. Here's an example. You know I love speed.'
âReal speed. Not chemical speed.'
âReal speed. I use speed as recreation, but I also use it to tune myself for challenges that come up in the job. I believe that life rewards those who move fastest, and that speed is sometimes a kind of magical cloak. Emerson said, “In skating over thin ice, our safety is in our speed.” Now
how's that for a guru tuned to my own needs, huh?'
âI'm sure he'll serve you well.' Sabrina held up her glass. âTo Ralph Waldo.'
Mike picked up his. âAnd to Pratash.'
They drank, watching each other over the rims of their glasses. Sabrina was caught by the moment's warmth, the clarity of good feeling between them.
âTell me something honestly,' she said. âAre we really friends? At heart, beneath all the top show?'
âI would say so, yes.'
Sabrina could not bring herself to ask any more.
âAnd I'll tell you something else,' Mike said. âJust this one time. The past hasn't finished with me yet. But one day it will. I'll be liberated, if that's the word. And when that happens, maybe you'll detect a change or two.'
âYou mean that one day we won't automatically bunch our fists at the sight of each other?'
âSomething like that,' Mike said.
They smiled again. So did the woman behind the counter.
In theatrical terms, the on-stage act performed by Magda Schaeffer contained plenty of conflict and a good measure of tension, but it was entirely lacking in imagination.