The Vault Page 14
He dumped his bag on the bed and sat down next to it. A wave of lethargy washed over him. He realised that he had been mainlining adrenaline for the last couple of days, and that this was the comedown. Mackintosh’s antics had taken it out of him.
He heard a quiet knock at the door. He opened it and saw Oksana standing outside. She put her finger to her lips and came inside. Jimmy frowned, and then remembered where he was; she went to the window and opened the French doors so that she could go out onto the balcony. Jimmy followed her. It was cold outside, the wind whipping the drapes. Oksana shut the door behind him.
He cocked an eyebrow as if to ask whether it was safe to speak.
“We’re fine out here,” she said.
“But the room’s bugged?”
“Of course. Audio only, though. I had a colleague stay here last night. He’s very good at finding devices. The bedside lamp, the telephone, the light fitting in the bathroom—they’ve all been tampered with. But no cameras, and nothing out here.”
He put his forearms on the stone balustrade and gazed into the dismal street below.
“What a dump,” he said with a long sigh.
“Welcome to the East. And well done, by the way. You did well.”
“It wasn’t straightforward. They had me out of the car.”
“I saw.”
“You were watching?”
“I was behind you. And it happens. I told you—they’re unpredictable. But you’re here.”
“I am. Any idea how I’m going to get back?”
“We’ll deal with that later.”
“What now?”
“You should rest.”
“I could sleep for a month,” he admitted.
“Then sleep. Remember what I told you to do tomorrow?”
“Go to a Reisebüro office and arrange for an extension.”
“And?”
“Ask the hotel to register me with the Volkspolizei.”
“And?”
“Change Deutschmarks into Ostmarks.”
“Very good,” she said, and smiled.
“When am I meeting Sommer?”
“Eight o’clock. Spend the day in the city. I’ll come and get you at seven.”
Jimmy let her out. He unpacked his bag, took out his spare cash, stuffed the notes into a sock, and put the sock on the top of the wardrobe. He realised he was hungry. He picked up the phone and dialled for room service. There was a menu by the phone.
“I’d like a steak, please.”
“I’m afraid steak is off the menu,” said the man on the other end of the line.
“No steak?”
“We have tomato salad.”
“How about the chicken?”
“We do not have chicken. The tomato salad is––”
“The lamb, then.”
“The lamb is not available––”
“What have you got?”
“We have tomato salad.”
Jimmy cursed under his breath. “I’ll have that, then, seeing as how I’ve heard so much about it.”
He put the phone down and looked around the room. There was a TV in the corner. He switched it on and watched a man giving a speech in German, then, bored, he switched over. There were four channels. Three of them were showing the same speech. The fourth channel showed a documentary that seemed, to Jimmy’s untrained ear, to be about the rise of socialism. He turned off the TV.
There was a knock at the door.
Jimmy opened it to an elderly man in a tuxedo pushing a serving trolley. In the centre of the trolley was a plate hidden beneath a silver cloche. The waiter took his time to set the table with a faded linen tablecloth, a stained linen napkin and scuffed silver cutlery. He invited Jimmy to sit. Jimmy sat down while the waiter poured iced water. He put the plate on the table in front of Jimmy, and, with a flourish, removed the cloche.
Carefully arranged tomatoes covered the chipped porcelain. A single lettuce leaf, browning at the edges, had been placed at the side together with a few slices of raw onion.
“Enjoy your meal,” said the waiter.
44
Dawn broke, sending grey light in through the dusty panes of the window in the bedroom. Jimmy had been lying in bed, awake, for almost an hour. He was thinking about his family, about how Isabel and Sean were. Were they snuggled up in bed together? Were they worried about him? What had Isabel told his son?
He got up, showered and changed. He wore a black t-shirt under a thick black woollen jumper, black Levi’s and his Dr. Martens laced up to the top. He left the room and went downstairs for breakfast. He saw the menu, remembered the meal last night, and decided that maybe he could get a better breakfast in one of the cafés that he had seen as he had driven in from the crossing last night. It was coming up on seven now, and the streets were beginning to get busy. The proprietors of the cafés were setting out their boards on the street. Jimmy entered the largest one he could find and sat down to look at the menu.
Another diner was eating sausages. Jimmy went to the counter and pointed at the man’s plate, then pointed to a large urn that steamed with fresh tea. He sat down and watched the city come to life through the window. The food was delivered and Jimmy demolished it, sending the plate back and asking for another. He ate this a little more slowly, enjoying the sausages and washing them down with the tea.
He paid the proprietor and went outside. The other pedestrians were scanning the shop windows, reading the signs tacked up outside or the writing on the windows. There didn’t seem to be much food or choice of clothes in any of the shops or cafés. Times were evidently hard. The fabric of the buildings was similar to the West, but this was very much a poor cousin of its counterpart on the other side of the wall.
The roads were busy with traffic and yet everyone seemed to be driving the same car: a Trabant. A friend in London had imported one, told him—after Jimmy had ribbed him about its appearance—that it was German and built to last. The roads here were full of them in both available colours: beige and black. Jimmy remembered looking at his friend’s car. It had a plastic body attached to a steel frame and was powered by a 500-CC engine. Jimmy had laughed, telling his friend that he had been ripped off, that he had paid a grand for a spark plug with a roof. His friend had demurred, arguing that the car would work for years because there were no real working parts that would break.
He glanced around as he walked, looking for tails. Would he spot one, if he was being followed? He wasn’t sure. He saw a man behind him whom he thought he remembered from before and decided to check. He crossed the road and took a quiet turning, heading into a residential area with less foot traffic. The man followed, seemingly unconcerned that Jimmy might have noticed him. Jimmy stopped; the man stopped. He started again, picking up his pace; the man picked up his pace, too. Jimmy was tempted to turn around and walk straight at him, maybe say something, but decided against it. What was the point? He turned left and left again, re-joining the main road. He saw a black car pull away from the kerb; the driver and his passenger eyeballed him dolefully as they went past.
Jimmy had noted down the address of the Reisebüro and walked across town to extend his visa. He found the office. It was dilapidated, and had evidently not been renovated since the war. The green paint was peeling off the walls and patches of brick showed through the plaster. There was a line extending out of the door with West Germans and international visitors seeking to extend their visas. Jimmy waited his turn, eventually reaching a desk inside that was staffed by a harassed and irritable clerk. There was a stack of forms to f
ill out—Jimmy didn’t understand them, and didn’t ask for them to be translated—and then he was issued with a fresh visa allowing him to stay for a week.
He folded the paper and slipped it into his pocket. A week. He hoped that wouldn’t be necessary. The place was alien and unwelcoming, with a sense of unease everywhere. People walked with their heads down, frightened to make eye contact, swallowed up by grey municipal buildings that all looked the same. He hoped that the meeting with Sommer happened tonight, as Oksana had suggested. He had no plan, other than to rely upon the fact that what Mackintosh had proposed was audacious and could not possibly be expected to succeed. He knew that he would have to adapt to the circumstances as he found them. If there was an opportunity to achieve the goals that had been set for him, he would take it.
He was nervous, but he was here now and what was the point in dragging it out?
He wanted to leave.
45
Jimmy did an hour of exercise—sit-ups and press-ups—and then took a bath. He dressed, made himself another cup of coffee, and then went down to the reception. He took a map from the concierge and set off to explore the city.
He went to a bank and, as Oksana had instructed, exchanged fifty Deutschmarks for fifty Ostmarks. East German marks were worthless outside of the country, and the government required foreigners to exchange a set amount of hard currency for every day of their stay. The minimum was twenty-five Deutschmarks per day, but Jimmy paid for two days so he didn’t have to come back tomorrow.
He followed the map to Alexanderplatz and the Fernsehturm TV tower that dominated the skyline. He went to the Palast der Republik and found himself gazing up at a canvas that covered one side of a building. It was a picture of Lenin, with men in Stasi and military uniforms marching in front of him. A woman with brown hair and a threadbare coat walked along the pavement below the sign. She glanced up at it, shook her head and kept walking. She looked like she was on her way back to work after a lunch break. Her shoulders slumped forward and she looked down at the ground. She looked beaten.
He continued to the Brandenburg Gate, walled off by the Berlin Wall. He walked to Karl-Marx Allee and found Kino International, the state-sponsored cinema, where he bought a ticket and took a seat in a sparsely populated auditorium for a film in German that he didn’t understand. He sat and let the images play out on the screen, breathing in the smells of the room—bratwurst, dust, hot celluloid, sweat—and eventually closed his eyes and allowed them to take him back to London and the cinema in Hackney where he and Isabel had gone to watch films before Sean’s birth made it more difficult to be spontaneous.
The film finished and he made his way out into the grim afternoon; a bank of cloud had settled over the city. It deadened the daylight and promised snow.
He had an early dinner in the restaurant near the hotel, and then went back to his room.
Oksana was waiting by his door.
“Where have you been?” she said.
“Went out to get dinner. Why?”
“You have a meeting to go to.”
“You said eight.”
“They brought it forward”
“Sommer?”
“No,” she said. “Not yet. Come on—I’ll tell you in the car.”
46
Oksana led the way to a car with diplomatic plates that marked it as the property of the Soviet Union. She got inside and Jimmy followed. Snow had started to fall, fat flakes that drifted down, suffused wit gold as they fell through the beams of the headlights.
She nodded up to the sky. “There’s going to be a blizzard. They’re forecasting a foot of it by tomorrow morning.”
“I like Berlin more and more,” he said.
They pulled out.
“What did you do today?” she asked him.
“Explored the city.”
“And?”
“And I’m really looking forward to leaving.”
“It’s worse than it’s ever been,” she said. “There’s no money. No jobs. The system doesn’t work. The people are suffering.”
Jimmy turned to look at her. “I thought you were KGB,” he said.
“That doesn’t mean that I think the old way is the only way. There are people in Russia who would like to see a change. Here and at home.”
“Gorbachev?”
“Yes, and others. There are many people who support what he is trying to do.” She stared darkly through the windshield. “Many who oppose him, too.”
There was a junction up ahead and Oksana braked carefully, rolling to a stop next to the red light.
“Can I ask you something?” Jimmy said.
“Of course.”
“I heard that Sommer has a vault. Is that true?”
“He does.”
“Why would he have a vault?”
She glanced over at him. “Have you heard about Nazi gold? They looted valuables during the war. The Stasi did it, too.”
“What kind of loot?”
“Think about it: you had East Germans who crossed before the Wall went up, thousands of Jews who were deported to the camps or fled and never came back. They left safe deposit boxes, vaults, and safes, and the Stasi emptied them all. It was state-sanctioned mass theft. I’ve heard of rooms full of jewels, gold and silver, antiques, sculptures, paintings. Savings books. Life insurance policies. Cash. They loaded it all into trucks and drove it all away.”
“And Sommer has something like that?”
“I know he has a vault, I don’t know what’s in it. But he’s greedy. It wouldn’t surprise me. And money’s one thing, but he’s always been interested in information, too. Those boxes they opened wouldn’t just have held things with financial value. Letters between secret lovers. Compromising photographs. Evidence of crime. Sommer lives for that. For secrets. Things he can exploit.”
Jimmy thought of what Geipel had said, and the plan of the building that he had drawn. He wondered whether he should say anything else, but decided against it. Oksana didn’t need to know. What good would that do?
“So I’m not meeting him tonight?”
“No. One of Sommer’s deputies. His name is Müller. You’ll need to persuade him that you are serious. He decides whether you see Sommer or not.”
“And how do I do that?”
“By being convincing. Remember your legend: you’re a member of the Irish Republican Army. You’ve dealt with men like Müller before—he might try to browbeat you, but you mustn’t show that you are worried.”
“Easier said than done,” Jimmy said. The uncertainty of what he was being asked to do was not far from the front of his mind.
“You’ll need that bag,” she said, nodding to the sports bag in the footwell.
“What’s inside?”
“Fifty thousand Deutschmarks. Sommer will want something as a sign of good faith. A down payment. Give it to Müller when he asks for it.”
“Just like that?”
“It’s not your money, Jimmy. Mackintosh provided it. He can deal with the consequences if it goes missing.”
Oksana indicated and pulled over, parking next to a bar. It couldn’t have looked any more different to the bars and nightclubs that Jimmy had seen in West Berlin. On the other side of the Wall it was all designer clothes, cocktails and neon-lit marble with the latest avant-garde electronica blasting so loud you couldn’t hear the bartender asking for a week’s wages in exchange for a vodka martini. This bar could have been an illegal shebeen back home. A low, single-storey building that
had been built within the empty footprint of a building that must have been torn down after the war, it looked as though it was entirely constructed from concrete breeze blocks, haphazardly attacked with a brush and white paint. There were four windows that were so dirty that Jimmy doubted they had been cleaned in years. The wooden entrance stood open.
“Müller should be waiting. Inside, at the back. He knows what you look like.”
Jimmy opened the door and stepped outside.
“Good luck,” Oksana said.
Jimmy nodded an acknowledgement and shivered in the cold.
Good luck.
That was right.
He was going to need luck, and a lot of it.
47
A doorman stood outside the bar in a leather jacket and leather gloves with a woollen hat pulled down tight over his round head. They called those hats “jolly begs” in Belfast, and the memory made Jimmy smile. Isabel hadn’t understood it, and Jimmy had to explain that “bag” was pronounced “beg” there. She still didn’t get it, and, in fairness, neither did Jimmy. He had no idea why they were called that, but he liked the idea of having a familiar name for things. He liked that even in the cold of East Berlin, a place so alien to everything he knew, so different from the sum of his experiences, there were still things that could remind him of his past and an innocent laugh that he had shared with the woman who would one day, he hoped, become his wife.
The doorman clapped his hands together and rubbed them for warmth. His breath came in a mist as he said something to Jimmy by way of a greeting. Jimmy didn’t understand, but nodded in response as he stepped up onto the pavement and approached the entrance.
The doorman stepped across to block his way.
“I’m here to see a man,” Jimmy said.