The Lucifer Network (52 page)

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Authors: Geoffrey Archer

BOOK: The Lucifer Network
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He strode to the service counter and asked the official if he had international phone directories. The man handed him a CD and pointed to a PC next to the photocopiers. Sam loaded the disc into the machine and looked up the number of Sky News in London. He rang it from a booth and a couple of minutes later emerged grim-faced.

‘Greifswald,' he announced. ‘That's where the attack will be.'

Pfeiffer looked quizzical.

‘Sky News has been following an Albanian refugee family,' Sam explained. ‘The broadcasts have been shown all over Europe. Yesterday morning they filmed them settling into a hostel in northern Germany, a place already full of Balkan refugees. And the town was Greifswald – that's where Hoffmann was born, Herr Inspektor. No wonder this target's so important to him.'

The policeman got to his feet. More of his men were arriving. He ordered them to seal off the communications area and to keep the Internet connection open until specialists arrived from his headquarters. Then he turned back to Sam. ‘I will quickly contact my colleagues in Germany,' he told him. ‘And we will put out Hoffmann's description.'

‘How would he get to Greifswald?' Sam asked.

‘Why? You think Hoffmann goes there himself?'

‘In that e-mail he talks about dying. He told me once he wanted to end his days in Greifswald.'

The Inspektor stared at him.

‘Then I must warn the airport. He would first fly to Berlin.'

‘No.' Sam put out a hand to stop him. ‘He hates planes. Told me he never flies these days if he can help it.'

‘The train, then. Come. We will go to the Westbahnhof.'

Outside, Sam told his driver to return to the Embassy, then piled into one of the police cars with the Inspektor. With the blue light and siren going, they powered their way through the traffic, reaching the station in less than five minutes.

Sam and the policeman ran inside, checking the indicator board for trains to Nürnberg where, according to the phone conversation with rail enquiries which the Inspektor had had in the car, Hoffmann would pick up
a connection to Berlin and Greifswald. There was one leaving in twenty minutes.

‘Number seven,' the Inspektor grunted.

They hurried onto the platform. Several of the train doors were open and a few passengers were already boarding. Sam stepped into the first carriage with the Inspektor right behind him. He looked the length of it, checking faces, then passed swiftly through to the next.

It was in the fourth carriage he spotted him. Sitting alone at a table at the far end of an otherwise empty compartment. Günther Hoffmann began to rise when he saw Sam, but flopped back into the seat when the Inspektor thrust a hand under his jacket and pulled out a Glock pistol. Hoffmann's grooved cheeks seemed to hang loosely from his skull. As they closed in, he placed his hands flat on the table.

‘Aufstehen!' the Inspektor ordered, the gun sight levelled on the centre of Hoffmann's forehead.

The old spy rose, head held high, back straight, his eyes looking past them as if at some distant goal that he still intended to reach. The Inspektor told him to put his hands on his head then frisked him. There was nothing in his inside pockets other than a wallet and a pen.

‘Where is it, Günther?' Sam hissed. ‘Where's the smallpox?'

Hoffmann glared contemptuously at him. ‘You know me for too long time, Herr Packer, to expect me to answer your questions.'

‘You're an evil bastard,' Sam blazed. ‘Lucifer. The name suits you.'

‘It does. But not in the way you mean. You misunderstand, Herr Packer. To the Romans, Lucifer was the morning star. The bringer of light to the world.'

Sam saw a touch of insanity in his eyes. ‘And you
planned to emulate Lucifer by murdering people and creating a climate of fear . . .'

‘You cannot have morning light without first having the darkness of night,' Hoffmann rejoined, sitting down again stiffly.

‘The Sikhs and the Jews in London. The Turks in Sweden. Albanians in Germany.' Sam counted off the targets. ‘Vladimir Kovalenko . . .'

‘He had, as you say in English, passed his sell-by date,' Hoffmann interrupted, allowing himself a little smirk.

‘After providing you with the wherewithal to let loose a plague.'

Hoffmann pressed his lips together.

‘There'll be children dead in Greifswald,' Sam stressed. ‘Like in Golders Green. Only this time it'll be hundreds. Is that what you want?'

He saw a flicker in the eyes. A reminder that despite Hoffmann's insane ambition his compassion might still be stirred by its consequences.

‘Little bodies aflame with blisters. Raging fever. No treatment possible that could stop their screams. You want
that
?'

Hoffmann wet his lips and sniffed. But his jaw was still defiant.

Sam remembered Peter's e-mail which Steph had faxed from London – the suggestion that he too had had to sacrifice a loved one.

‘Ilse . . .' Sam murmured, not quite believing what he was thinking.

The leathery head turned to look at him, eyes as lifeless as lead.

‘She found out about you. Was that it?'

There was no response. Sam realised he was looking at a monster.

‘You feared she would betray you . . . So you killed her. For the sake of your dream.'

The old German's eyelids drooped. He took in a breath deep enough to have been his last, then let it out again. He looked broken.

‘Well your dream is over Herr Hoffmann.' Sam placed his hands on the table and leaned forward. ‘But you can still stop it turning into a nightmare. The smallpox. Tell us where it is. Tell us who's got it.'

Slowly Hoffmann pulled himself up straight. It was clear he'd made a decision. ‘Give me some paper,' he croaked. ‘I will draw you a map.' He reached into his jacket.

Seeing the movement, the Inspektor raised the pistol again, then lowered it when the hand emerged with the pen. He produced a notebook from his pocket and passed it across.

‘I am like a painter or a poet,' Hoffmann declared wearily. ‘My only weapon is my pen.'

He held it in both hands then, staring into the middle distance, slowly unscrewed the lid. He shuddered involuntarily, like someone about to have his teeth pulled. Sam saw the eyes tighten. Then the pen stabbed downwards. Hoffmann plunged its tip into his thigh and pressed hard on its end. They heard the click of a spring being released and watched the lined face contort with pain as the needle fired its lethal charge into his leg muscle. Sam lunged forward, but the syringe had already emptied itself.

‘Shit!'

The Inspektor got on his mobile to call for an ambulance.

Hoffmann shook his head. ‘There is no point,' he breathed. ‘Three minutes and I shall be with my wife again.' He panted for breath, as if drained of all energy. Then he turned to Sam. ‘So . . .' he whispered. ‘Because
of you, I shall be like Caspar David Friedrich. I will not smell the sea again before I die.'

Sam seethed at his own powerlessness.

‘Damn you, Günther.' He grabbed the German by the shoulders. ‘Who's got the smallpox? Max Schenk?'

Hoffmann reacted as if he hadn't heard.

‘Tell me and save your sodding soul.'

It was pointless. Sam let go of him. Three minutes, he'd said. One gone already. He sat down in the chair opposite.

‘Was Schenk in this with you?
His
clinic you went to with your fake heart attack?'

Hoffmann frowned as if puzzled. ‘I don't know any
Schenk,
' he declared.

Sam read the man's eyes and drew a blank. Hoffmann's ability to claim black was white had been perfected over a lifetime. Impossible to tell if this was the truth.

‘Tell me about Harry Jackman, then. How much did he know?'

‘Harry. Poor Harry,' Hoffmann mocked.

‘Did he know what was in the flasks?'

‘Of course. He had to make special arrangements for the flights.'

‘And calling it red mercury . . .'

‘. . . was his idea.'

Sam saw a wince of pain as the poison began to bite.

‘Why did you have him killed?'

Hoffmann's face contorted and he clutched at his chest. Sam leaned forward.

‘Why did you kill Harry Jackman, Günther?'

Hoffmann shook his head, his wide eyes flicking from side to side as if no longer able to see. Indignation wrinkled his brow.

‘But I didn't kill him,' he protested hoarsely.

Then the eyes closed and his body sagged into the corner of the seat.

Three minutes. It had been less than two.

Other passengers were entering the far end of the carriage. The Inspektor shouted at them to leave. Suddenly the platform was full of uniforms. The assistance the policeman had called for on the way to the station had finally arrived. From somewhere not far away they heard a siren approaching.

Sam stood up straight, arms hanging limply by his sides, shaken to see the second of the instigators of this heinous plot die before his eyes.

There was a difference between the two men. Hoffmann had been proud of what he'd done to the end, whereas Harry Jackman had sought to distance himself from the crime. The claim of ignorance about the cargo's destination, the clinging to the myth of it being red mercury – the old gun-runner had lied even with his final breath. Had Hoffmann's last words also been a lie – that Harry Jackman's murder had been nothing to do with him? Instinctively Sam felt that at that last moment of his life the German had been speaking the truth. Why deny the charge after accepting responsibility for so many other killings?

Sam backed away as paramedics came pounding pointlessly along the aisle.
Someone
had hired Harry Jackman's killers. And he still wanted to know who they were.

He left the carriage and stepped onto the platform. The machinery of law and order had taken over now. Finding those planning to use the smallpox in Greifswald would be up to the police. Officially, his role was over. He'd delivered.

He stood back from the train watching the men in uniform doing their work and waiting for Inspektor Pfeiffer to tell him whether he could be of further service to him.

He knew that by rights he should be experiencing a sense of satisfaction at this particular moment, but he wasn't. Yes, they'd found their puppetmaster – but not all the puppets. Dr Max Schenk, virologist, had been doing business with Harry Jackman at a time when plans were being laid to create a biological weapons laboratory on Palagra. If it was a coincidence, then for Sam it was a coincidence too far.

Proving it, however, would be another matter.

23
London
Sunday

ON HIS RETURN
to London the next morning Sam was driven from Heathrow airport to a block of mansion flats on the south side of Hyde Park. Duncan Waddell met him in the entrance lobby and took him through a security door into the corridor where the lifts were.

‘Belongs to the Ministry of Defence,' Waddell explained. ‘Top brass live on the sixth floor, lesser mortals lower down. You're on the first. The flat happens to be empty for the next month, which conveniently gives you time to sort yourself out. Don't worry about security here. It's quite enough to deter your Ukrainian friends. Your stuff's been moved, by the way. There's nothing left at Brentford or at that flea-pit in Ealing. Your clothes and personal effects are here. Anything larger has been stored for you.'

‘How thoughtful.'

Waddell's glance said ‘don't take the piss'. Keeping him hidden was for their own sake as much as for his.

The MoD flat was furnished in the damask style that officer families felt at home with. Sam took a quick look round. One bedroom with twin beds, a living room, a bathroom and a kitchen. He searched a cupboard above
the sink and found that even his tea and coffee supplies had been installed.

‘Fancy a cuppa?'

‘Now you're talking,' Waddell rumbled. ‘Coffee, please. Milk, no sugar.'

They took their cups to the living room and sat in armchairs. The windows overlooked a well-maintained private garden. The flat had an impersonal lavender-waxed smell to it. The walls were hung with Constable prints and the floor was carpeted in an indefinable green. Sam resolved to move from the place as soon as the opportunity arose.

His controller was in bustling mode, eager to tie up loose ends and lay plans for the future.

‘You'll be glad to know the German police caught Hoffmann's death squad just outside Greifswald this morning,' Waddell said, ‘complete with a pump spray full of smallpox.'

‘Excellent. How did that come about?'

‘All thanks to some farmhand who'd been working the vines outside Vienna. Seems he'd become curious about a couple renting a little house on the outskirts of his village. Had the impression they were using it as a hideaway. Early on Saturday afternoon he saw their car drive up with a third person in it. A man. They went into the garage, closed the doors and a short while later he heard a yell. Like the chap was having his balls cut off, was the way he described it to the police. Then after another ten minutes, he saw the couple drive the car out again, without any visible sign of their passenger. He thought about it for a while, then rang the constabulary and gave them the car registration number.'

‘Brilliant. Hope he's up for a medal. And did they find the passenger?'

‘Not yet. They're working on the theory the couple
dumped him in a forest somewhere on the route north. Examination of Hoffmann's e-mail suggests the man could well have been Igor Chursin, delivering the smallpox.'

Sam's mind flashed back to Palagra and the terror on the Russian lab assistant's face when Willie Phipps had pulled his mask off. That man knew the lethality of the brew they'd developed.

‘How were they going to administer the stuff?' Sam asked.

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