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Mackintosh realised that there was a second person waiting in the corridor. Sommer stepped out of the way so that they could come in, too. It was a woman. She stepped forward into the light and Mackintosh saw the blonde hair and the white face.
Oksana stood close to Sommer. The general could barely disguise his delight.
“Did you really think I would betray my country?” she said.
Mackintosh spat on the floor at her feet.
“Feisty to the end,” said Sommer. “I’m going to leave you now, but I’ll be back soon. We do need to have that talk. I won’t lie: it’s not going to be pleasant, and I’m going to punish you whether you cooperate or not. You are going to tell me where I can find the soldiers who killed my men. And, when I find them, I’m going to bring them here and make them wish that they had never been born.”
50
Jimmy had dinner and went back to his room to change. He put on a sweater and his leather jacket and went downstairs. Oksana was waiting at the front door. She made a show of greeting him—there was a man sitting in the lounge area and Jimmy had the distinct impression that he was there to watch—and then fell into line with him as they left the hotel. There were few people on the street. Two parked cars opposite the hotel were occupied. The men inside watched them both, seemingly relaxed about giving themselves away. Jimmy was happy to let them watch.
Oksana led the way to her car and they both got inside. He looked over at her; she hadn’t said a word since they left the hotel, and her face was pinched, perhaps even a little paler than usual.
“What is it?” he said.
“Just a little nervous,” she said.
She started the engine and pulled away from the kerb. They drove over the Spree via the Rathausbrücke, passing the Town Hall and then turning right onto Grunestraße. The traffic was a little heavier here, with a line of cheap cars chugging sullenly through the snowy night. Oksana said that it would take them twenty minutes to reach Sommer’s building, and Jimmy spent the time looking out of the frosted windscreen. The city looked as if it was beaten. The West still had life, a vibrancy that had not been occluded by the construction of the wall that encircled it. The East, though, looked resigned to its fate: a torpid economy, no prospects, its inhabitants occupied with a slow trudge that would end in the grave.
Oksana indicated and turned off the main road, sliding the car against the kerb.
Jimmy looked around. “Are we here?”
“No,” she said. “There’s something you need to know.”
She switched off the engine and turned to look at him.
“What is it?”
“Mackintosh has been abducted by Sommer,” she said. “They went to his flat the day you crossed the border and took him.”
Jimmy felt a shiver of panic. “I don’t understand,” he said. “How is that possible? Sommer just took him? How? I don’t—”
She spoke over him. “I told Sommer where to find him.”
Jimmy gaped. “You did what?”
“Mackintosh wanted it to happen. It’s his idea.” She raised her hands to forestall Jimmy’s questions. “Sommer killed someone who was important to Mackintosh. He insisted that he wanted to confront him himself. This whole plan—you, me, everything—it’s designed to put him and Sommer into a room together.”
“You’re going to have to explain that a little better.”
“Mackintosh knows he wouldn’t be able to get to Sommer any other way. He never leaves the East. And, even when he’s here, he rarely leaves his building. But Mackintosh knows he’s greedy. He knew there was a good chance that he would take a meeting with you if he thought that was something he might profit from. He knew the meeting would be at the Pfarrhaus, and he knew that would be where Sommer would take him. Everyone would be together in the same place at the same time.”
“But if Sommer did something to Mackintosh before we met?”
“That was a risk. I assume he thought it was one that was worth taking.”
Jimmy cursed under his breath. Mackintosh was insane. “So what does he want me to do?”
“You meet Sommer, just as we planned. There’ll be an opportunity to overpower him. You take it, and then we get him to take us to Mackintosh and the two of them can settle their differences.”
“And Schmidt?”
“Oh, he still wants Schmidt. And so do I—getting him out of East Germany is why I’m up to my neck in this mess. As soon as we’ve found Mackintosh, that’s what you need to do. The chances are that they’re both being held in the basement.”
Jimmy stared at the flakes of snow that were settling on the icy windshield.
“Why didn’t he tell me any of this?”
“I said that he should have done, if that’s any consolation.”
“So?”
“So he decided that he didn’t want to give you something else to worry about before you met Sommer. He wanted you to focus on the story you had to sell them. I suppose I can see why he thought that.” She laid a hand on his shoulder. “But you need to decide whether it changes anything for you. Whether you still want to go through with it. This is the only chance you’ll get to change your mind. Once we get there, we’re committed. There won’t be any choice then.”
Jimmy gazed out of the window as he turned the news over in his mind. The news was unsettling, but he knew that it made no difference. Mackintosh was the only man who knew Jimmy was over here. If Mackintosh was killed, there would be no one to vouch for Jimmy. He would be left here, stranded in East Berlin, with no friends, no contacts, no record of entering the country and no reason to be here save for a classified story that could only be confirmed by one man. Mackintosh was the only way Jimmy would be able to have the charges against him dropped. He was the only way he had to get back to the life he had been living before Eddie Fabian sold him out. There was more, too. Jimmy didn’t trust Mackintosh and he wasn’t even sure that he liked him, either. But, as Jimmy looked out of the window at the men and women who slouched through the smog to the slums in which they were forced to live, he knew that Mackintosh was, at least, on the right side of things. Jimmy had no interest in politics, but he had always lived his life by the principles that had been laid out by his uncle.
Stick to your word.
If you say you’ll do something, do it.
Jimmy found that he was clenching his fists.
“Jimmy?” Oksana said. “We need to decide now. Do you still want to meet him?”
“I don’t have a choice. I have to.”
She nodded, took her hand from his shoulder and started the engine.
“There’s one thing,” he said. “He’s my way out. If something’s happened to him, I can’t get home. Would you be able to help me?”
She looked at him, thinking. “Yes,” she said. “The plan is to go back over the border at Checkpoint Charlie. I have diplomatic status. They wouldn’t normally try to stop us.”
“What if something happens and we’re split up? What do I do then?”
“Go north to Kühlungsborn. It’s on the coast, two hundred miles from here. The trains won’t be safe—you’ll have to steal a car and drive. There’s a café on the promenade run by a man called Burmeister. He works for the KGB. It’s sometimes necessary to get people out of the country without the Stasi knowing. Tell him that Oksana sent you. He’ll arrange a crossing into Denmark.”
“Thank you.”
She pulled out and continued into the administrative district. Jimmy looked out at the municipal buildings, most of which had been thrown up
after the war like so many of the buildings that had stood between the Red Army and its prey. These buildings, though, had not even been given the pretence of being anything other than what they were: boxy, bland, regimented hutches to accommodate the exercise of power.
Jimmy looked at them and felt newly daunted.
51
The snow was falling even more heavily when Oksana drove them into the Lichtenberg area of East Berlin. She followed a series of major streets, picking her way through them with the experience of someone who had been here before. They continued to the east for a minute and then turned onto Roedeliusplatz. There was an area of lawned gardens with a double-spired church in the centre. A narrow, cobbled road separated the church from the building that faced it. It was three storeys tall, and access was granted through a tall stone archway that led to a similarly impressive wooden door.
“Here we are,” she said. “The Pfarrhaus.”
The road to the vicarage was blocked by a barrier that was monitored by soldiers in a brick guardhouse. Oksana pulled up in front of the barrier and waited for the guard to walk over to them. The man was armed with a submachine gun and he spoke in abrupt German. Oksana replied, similarly curt, and handed over their papers.
The guard spent a long minute with their identification. He retreated to the guardhouse, where Jimmy saw him speaking on the telephone.
“How many men are in there?” Jimmy asked.
“Hardly any. He has no reason to feel threatened here. We’re in the heart of East Berlin, with Ministry buildings on all sides. You might think Mackintosh’s plan is eccentric—”
“Insane,” Jimmy corrected.
“Perhaps, but there’s no way that Sommer could anticipate it. I said no when he told me, but, the more I thought about it, the more I thought it could work. It all depended on you persuading Sommer to see you. Once we’re inside… well, it’s up to us, then. Here he comes.”
The guard returned and handed Oksana’s papers back to her. He said something, she thanked him, and he raised the barrier so that she could drive through.
There were cars parked on both sides of the road, their angles already smoothed down by an inch of snow. Oksana found an empty spot and reversed into it. Jimmy watched and assessed. The road was quiet, with just a single guard making his rounds. That was encouraging. Jimmy was looking at the guard when he saw a pair of women emerging from the front door of the building. The women ducked their heads against the snow as they made their way to the guardhouse opposite the one that Oksana and Jimmy had passed, and, after they spoke to the guard, the pedestrian gate was opened and they continued on their way.
Jimmy swallowed down a dry knot of fear that clogged his throat. He put his hand on the door handle, pulled it down and stepped outside.
He thought of Isabel and his son. Do this and he could go home.
*
They climbed a short flight of stairs to the front door of the building. Oksana knocked and then glanced up at a CCTV camera that was fixed beneath the portico overhead. The lock buzzed and the door jerked open a fraction; Oksana pushed it back and stepped inside. Jimmy followed.
The room beyond was a large lobby. It had been decorated extravagantly: the floors were marble, the ceilings were double-height, the walls had been decorated with gold filigree, and marble columns were spaced around. There was a single desk set back from the door with a man in Stasi uniform sitting behind it. He had a TV screen that, Jimmy guessed, he used to monitor the feed from outside.
The man got up and Jimmy recognised him. It was Müller.
“Fräulein Baranova,” he said, his face cracking into the most minute of smiles. “Herr Walker.”
“Oberstleutnant Müller,” Oksana replied.
Müller approached Jimmy. “Put your arms to the sides, please.”
Müller frisked him quickly and efficiently, running his hands along his arms, down his trunk, around his waist, between his legs and then down to his feet. Jimmy saw the pistol holstered on Müller’s belt and, with his chin just an inch or two from his knee, Jimmy had to fight back the urge to strike him, relieve him of his weapon and then find Sommer.
Müller stood and straightened out his uniform. “This way, please. The general is waiting for you.”
52
Müller led them to another lobby with two lifts. One of them looked as if it needed a key to operate. Müller pressed the button for the other one and invited them to step inside. He followed and pressed the button for the fourth floor. Jimmy stood at the back of the car, his fists clenching and unclenching, an emptiness in his belly, adrenaline buzzing in his veins.
The elevator took them up, the doors opened and they stepped out into a plush corridor. The carpets were thick, there was polished oak panelling on the walls and subtle lights were housed in recessed sconces. There were several doors along both sides of the corridor, but only one of them was open.
“Through there,” Müller said, indicating the open door.
Oksana started toward the open door. Jimmy followed, his boots sinking into the carpet. They went inside. The office beyond was as opulent as might have been expected from the corridor. There were bookshelves on the walls, full of leather-bound books. There was a blood-red Chesterfield, a marble fireplace that accommodated a roaring fire, and a polished oak desk that was seven or eight feet across. A man was sitting behind the desk; he stood as Oksana and then Jimmy approached.
“Hello, Oksana,” he said.
“General.”
The man embraced her, kissing her airily on both cheeks, before releasing her shoulders and stepping to the side so that he could step up to Jimmy.
“I’m Karl-Heinz Sommer.”
“Jimmy Walker.”
“It’s a pleasure to meet you, Herr Walker. Müller has told me all about you. Could I get you something to drink?”
“I’m fine,” Jimmy said.
Sommer continued as if he didn’t hear him. “How about some vodka? I have something especially good.” He went over to an antique sideboard, opened it and took out a bottle that had been lavishly decorated with gems and crystals. “This is Iordanov—it’s made in one of the oldest distilleries in Koblenz. They use wheat grain and water from the Vogelsberg Highlands for the distilling. I had some experience with our Russian friends at the end of the war. I developed a taste for it then. It’s lovely. Don’t you agree, Oksana?”
“I haven’t tried it, General.”
“Well, we must set that right.”
Sommer took out three glasses and set them out on the desk. He unscrewed the top from the bottle and poured out three generous measures. He handed one to Oksana, one to Jimmy and kept the third for himself. He held his glass up and reached across to touch it against Jimmy’s and Oksana’s.
“Zum Wohl,” he said. “To your health.”
Jimmy put the glass to his lips and tipped the vodka back. It was smooth and drinkable, and he felt the familiar sting at the back of his throat.
Oksana finished her drink in similar fashion and set her glass back down on the table. “Thank you for seeing us, General.”
Sommer waved it away. “I can always make time for my friends from the KGB.”
“I’m grateful, too,” Jimmy said.
“And for my Irish friends. We can certainly help you.”
“You know what I want?”
“Indeed.” He nodded to Müller. “The lieutenant colonel noted it all down.”
“But he didn’t tell me the price.”
&nb
sp; “You’ve paid fifty. It will take another hundred.”
“That’s fine,” Jimmy said.
“No bartering?”
“What’s the point? It’s in your best interests for me to be happy. If the goods are acceptable, and we feel the price was fair, we’ll come back—this is a small order compared to what we might eventually want.”
Sommer smiled and tapped his finger against the desk. “In that case, I’ll drop the price to seventy-five, all in. You’re right, of course—I want you to be happy.”
“Thank you.”
“You want to see what you’re buying, I believe.”
“I do.”
“Is it ready, Müller?”
“Yes, sir. I’ve laid it out downstairs.”
Sommer stood. “Come, then. I will show you.”
53
Sommer led them out of the office, down the corridor and to the elevator. Müller brought up the rear, with Jimmy very aware of the man’s presence behind him. They rode the elevator back down to the first floor and got out. Sommer took a key from his pocket and pulled back the metal flap on the wall next to the second elevator. He put the key into the keyhole that was revealed, waited for the door of the car to open and then ushered them inside. There were two buttons on the wall, and the general pressed the one marked KELLER, the lowest; the doors closed and the lift began to move. Jimmy noted it all: access was restricted to the basement. He would need that key to get around the property unimpeded.
The doors parted to reveal a corridor, although this one was much less impressive than the one that led to Sommer’s office. It was finished in bare concrete, with naked bulbs hanging from the ceiling at regular intervals. Jimmy looked left and right: there were a series of three severe-looking metal doors to the right. To the left was a more substantial door, also made from metal but this time reinforced with heavy metal straps. A circular handle was positioned in the middle of the door. Jimmy recognised a vault door when he saw one.