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    The Spandau Phoenix wwi-2

    Page 32
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      Hans's mouth went dry. For a moment he stood speechless, his face a

      graven image of horror. Then he howled from the depths of his soul.

      "You fucking swine! I'm coming for her! If she's harmed you'll die

      like pigs under the knife so help me God!"

      Funk grinned, pleased by the suffering of the young man who had caused

      him so much trouble. "Tell Hauer," he growled, "tell him to remember

      Sippenhaft."

      The line went dead.

      With shaking hands Hans set the receiver back in its cradle and turned

      to Natterman. "They have her," he said hoarsely. "And they want the

      Spandau papers. Where are they, Professor?"

      "Hans," Natterman said uncomfortably, "you can't make such a decision in

      a fit of anger. You must take time to think."

      . Hans's eyes had glazed. His mouth worked silently. "Just give me the

      papers," he said finally.

      With a desolate sigh the old historian dug the foil packet from his

      trouser pocket and turned it slowly in his hand.

      "They killed another policeman," Hans said in a robotic voice.

      "Ilse said they cut his throat right in front of her."

      Hauer's big hands were balled into fists.

      Hans reached out to Natterman for the papers, but as he did a simple,

      terrible realization struck him. The men who had kidnapped Ilse were

      the same men who had gouged the Star of David into Erhard Weiss's chest

      with a screwdriver.

      His stomach clenched in agony. Never until this moment had he known

      true fear.

      Hauer's lips had begun to tremble. His jaw muscles flexed furiously.

      "Wilhelm Funk is a dead man," he vowed. "I swear that by Steuben's

      children. "

      "I'm afraid that won't solve your problem," Natterman observed, backing

      up a little. "Hans, please, you've got to try to think this thing

      through rationally. What do these men want you to do?"

      Hans stared unseeing at the old man. A single vision floated behind his

      eyes, a searing memory of a Berlin dawn, two years before.

      A kidnapped girl ... lithe and blond like Ilse ... the daughter of a

      Bremerhaven shipping magnate. They'd fished her out of the Havel in the

      gray morning light, her naked body bloated and lifeless, her sightless

      eyes wide, her pubic hair matted with river slime. The kidnappers had

      thrown her alive into the river with her hands tied behind her. The

      thought that Ilse could end up like the wretched girl ...

      Hans hadn't eaten a full meal for almost twenty hours, but his stomach

      came up anyway. He bolted for the door, tripped over the dead

      Afrikaner, and fell retching on the floor. Hauer tensed himself against

      the smell, hoping Hans would feel better after relieving his nausea. He

      didn't. He rose slowly, wiped his mouth on the back of his sleeve, and

      stepped toward Natterman, his hand outstretched.

      Natterman looked down at the foil packet, backed away a little.

      Hauer edged closer. He had seen the flash of hysteria behind Hans's

      eyes, and he knew that at this moment Hans was capable of anything.

      He had moved just in time.

      "Give me those papers!" Hans screamed. He lunged at the professor with

      both hands extended, his eyes white with fury. Hauer hesitated, timing

      his blow. As Hans's head surged past, he fired off a right jab that

      caught him on the point of the chin, spinning him round.

      Hauer grabbed him as he fell, easing him stomach-down onto the floor.

      Before Natterman could speak, Hauer had handcuffed Hans and sat him up

      against the bedroom wall.

      "He went mad!" cried Natterman, his eyes wide. "He'd have killed me

      for those papers!"

      "Do you blame him?" Hauer asked, breathing heavily. He touched Hans's

      bruised chin softly. Hauer felt a strange tightening in his throat.

      "He'll come to in a minute, " he said, and he coughed to cover the catch

      in his voice. "Just lay the papers on his lap. You won't have to worry

      after that."

      Natterman obeyed, but he looked unconvinced. "Where did you get those

      handcuffs?"

      "I always keep them with me. They're the most underrated tool in the

      police arsenal." Hauer looked Natterman dead in the eye. "Now, I'd

      like you to leave me alone with my son, please."

      The professor retreated into the bedroom without a word.

      CHAPTER FIFTEEN

      2.-07 A.M. Soviet Sector East Berlin, DDR Harry Richardson woke to the

      sound of men shouting. His head still throbbed from the Russian's

      pistol blow. Most of the duct tape had been removed from his body, but

      his hands and mouth were still bound. Unsure of the position of his

      captors, he kept his eyes closed. He soon realized that the voices were

      coming from an adjacent room. There seemed to be three men arguing,

      possibly four. He opened his eyes.

      Nothing. Then he discerned a thin horizontal line of dim light-beneath

      a door, he supposed. He recognized none of the voices, but they all

      spoke Russian. One man seemed to be having a great deal of difficulty

      speaking it.

      "He can't stay here any longer," said the man with a heavy German

      accent. "Not an American. And certainly not this one. I know him.

      He's one of Rose's agents."

      "Relax, Goltz," said a Russian voice. "This is the East, isn't it?

      Ost-the heart of friendly territory. What can happen?"

      Goltz. Hariy recognized the name. Axel Goltz, East German Stasi ...

      "If you consider East Berlin friendly territory," Goltz said, you should

      spend a day on the street here. The people hate us even more than they

      hate you."

      "You and your Stasi sisters have been letting things slide for too long

      over here," Rykov said with contempt. "You don't have the balls for

      anything rougher than blackmail."

      "You are a fool," Goltz -said with surprising venom. "I command here-in

      this house at least-and I say the American goes. Take him to Moscow. if

      you wish, just get him out of Berlin. There are too many sharp eyes

      here for him to stay invisible."

      Rykov, thought Harry, finally making the connection.

      Rykov was the Russian captain from Klaus's house. Suddenly the night's

      events came rushing back to him. Klaus's suicide, the silenced bullets

      thwacking into the wall beside the door, the argument between the young

      KGB officers about what to do with himA door hzid slammed in the next

      room. The squabble ended instantly. "Where is the American?"

      asked a gruff voice.

      "In the next room, Comrade Colonel. He's unconscious."

      "Bring him in."

      Behind the wall, Harry tensed. Colonel, he thought. Which colonel? But

      as soon as he asked the question, he knew the answer.

      Who but Ivan Kosov-the colonel he'd seen early this morning at Abschnitt

      53? A bright vertical bar of light stabbed his eyes.

      "Wake up, Major!"

      Harry got to his knees, then made an effort to stand.

      Rykov helped him.

      "You hit me anyway, you bastard," Harry muttered.

      "Nothing personal. Just easier."

      Rykov seemed to be having difficulty walking. When Harry's eyes sought

      the floor for balance, he spied a bloody tear below the knee of Rykov's

      trousers, his souve
    nir from the checkpoint crossing.

      Harry looked up as he passed into the next room, and he immediately

      recognized four of the five men who awaited him. The gruff-voiced

      colonel was Kosov. He lounged in a comfortable chair opposite a

      portable television. Between Kosov and a door that Harry hoped led to

      the street stood a hard-looking young man dressed from head to toe in

      black.

      Axel Goltz, the Stasi agent, sat behind a deal table next to Andrei

      Ivanov, the corporal from Klaus's house. Goltz had restless eyes and

      dark hair cropped close against his skull.

      "The major needs a chair," said Kosov. "Misha?"

      The black-clad Russian moved lithely to the table, lifted one of the

      armless wooden chairs and placed it opposite Kosov. Rykov shoved Harry

      into the chair, then ripped the tape from his mouth. The sudden pain

      brought tears to his eyes, but passed quickly. He held out his hands to

      Misha, who looked questioningly at Kosov.

      "No!" Rykov objected. "He doesn't need his hands."

      "One gentleman to another," said Harry, his eyes on Kosov.

      Kosov chuckled, then nodded to Misha, who broug it out his stiletto and

      cut through the sticky mess like tissue paper.

      Rykov laid a hand on the Skorpion machine pistol in his belt.

      "Now that you're comfortable," said Kosov in heavily accented English,

      "what have you to tell me?"

      "What do you want to know?"

      "What you were doing at Klaus Seeckt's house."

      "Routine debriefing," Harry said offhandedly. "Twice monthly."

      "He's lying!" Rykov snapped in Russian. "He almost broke down the door

      trying to get in!"

      Kosov looked to Corporal Ivanov for corroboration.

      "He's right," Andrei admitted grudgingly. "Nothing routine about it.

      The major also speaks excellent Russian."

      "You see, Major?" Kosov said. "There's no point in trying to deceive

      me. I regret that my men brought you here at all, of course.

      I asked for a German policeman, I got back an American major. An

      unfortunate accident. But now that the mistake has been made, I intend

      to use the opportunity to ask you a few questions. You would do the

      same, I think."

      Harry shrugged.

      "I simply wish to know the details of your relationship with Klaus

      Seeckt. Then I can make arrangements for your safe return to West

      Berlin."

      Harry almost laughed. Mistake or not, the Russians had kidnapped him.

      To return him now would be admitting it, and they wouldn't do that. Even

      if Colonel Rose had known he was going to Klaus's house-which Rose

      hadn'the would have no way of knowing Harry had been taken into the DDR.

      He might eventually suspect it, but by then the chances of getting Harry

      back would be.slim. And if the Russians moved him any father east, the

      odds fell to zero.

      This situation required desperate measures. Shock tactics.

      Looking straight at Kosov, Harry crossed his legs and began to speak

      flawless, aristocratic Russian.

      "You'd better write this down, Kosov. If you bungle this, Chairman

      Zemenek will have you back in the Fifth Chief Directorate so fast you

      won't have time to pack your shorts.

      You'll be chasing filthy Tatars for the rest of your life."

      Kosov started, both at the perfection of Richardson's Russian and the

      reference to his old job. "What do you know about me, Major?" he asked

      warily.

      "Only what's necessary. Which isn't much, I'm afraid.

      Ivan Leonidovich Kosov: Born Moscow 1943, entered service 1962, excelled

      at repression in the provinces-notably Azerbaijan-for the Second Chief

      Directorate. That and your father-in-law's influence got you

      transferred to Directorate 'K' in 1971, stationed Yugoslavia. A little

      more competent than the average K-man, you obtained a posting to the

      East Berlin Rezidentura in 1978, where you've performed @uately for the

      past ten years."

      "Leave us," Kosov told his men.

      Axel Goltz spoke up angrily. "But Colonel@' "Now!" bellowed Kosov.

      "Only Misha remains."

      When the others had left the room, Kosov said, "Your Russian is

      excellent, Major. You have a good memory. So what? You think I don't

      know as much about you?"

      Harry looked over at the predatory Misha standing motionless in the

      shadows. "No, Colonel, I don't. There is a gap in your ...

      'consciousness,' shall we say?"

      Kosov grunted. "What kind of gap?"

      "The fact that we occasionally work for the same team.

      Broadly speaking. I went to Klaus Seeckt's house tonight to deliver a

      message."

      "Come now, Major, I would know if you had any connection with KGB."

      Harry snorted. "You think you're made aware of everything that happens

      in Berlin? Perhaps you are a fool, Kosov."

      The Russian paled as he held up a hand to restrain Misha.

      'You speak confidently for a man facing death," he said softly.

      "I thought you were sending me bapk to West Berlin."

      Kosov grimaced. "Tell me, do you have any proof of this fantastic

      story? The rich American who secretly serves the worker's paradise?"

      Harry played out a little more bait. "I assume you, fare miliar with

      the Twelfth Department of your Directorate?"

      Kosov nodded almost imperceptibly.

      "My contact is Yuri Borodin. Klaus Seeckt was one of our conduits."

      Kosov blinked. "What can this fiction profit you, Major?

      An extra hour of confusion? You are going to Moscow regardless of what

      you say here, and it's there your fate will be decided."

      Kosov sounded confident, but Harry had seen the doubt flicker into his

      eyes at the mention of the Twelfth Department. The Twelfth Department

      was an elite branch of the KGB-an all-star team recruited from veterans

      of other KGB departments who had proved themselves expert at moving in

      international society. Developed under Yuri Andropov, the Twelfth

      Department had more autonomy than any other branch of the service; its

      agents were allowed to pursue their chosen quarry anywhere in the world.

      Harry's personal history of wealth and privilege made him an excellent

      target for a man like Yuri Borodin; plus he had seen Borodin in the

      company of Klaus Seeckt. He thought his desperate story might stand up

      to perhaps an hour's scrutiny.

      "Tell me about this mysterious message, Major," said Kosov.

      My God, thought Harry. He's buying it. "Sorry, Colonel," he said

      gravely. "The message is for Borodin alone."

      "You had better tell me something," Kosov warned. "Or I may see fit to

      let Misha persuade you. He's most eager to do so."

      Harry gave a sardonic smile. "That's about what I'd expect from an old

      Second Directorate thug."

      Kosov came up out of his chair. He moved very fast for a big man.

      For a moment Harry thought he had carried things too far, but the

      Russian sat down again, albeit slowly.

      Harry didn't want to push Kosov over the edge@nly up to it.

      "I'm waiting," Kosov rasped.

      Here goes, Harry thought. In the past two minutes he had pieced

      together the most plausible story he could from the meager facts he

      possessed about the Spanda
    u case. Play out the bait, wait for the

      strike . . . "I can tell you this much, Colonel," he said, "U.S.

      Military Intelligence is fully aware of the content of the papers found

      at Spandau Prison. While your moronic thugs were kidnapping me, our

      State Department was considering a request from the British government

      to turn over an abstract of those papers to mI-5. My message for

      Borodin concerns those papers, and if you don't appreciate the

      sensitivity of that issue, it's your misfortune. So, why don't you get

      off your fat ass and verify my story before you sabotage what remains of

      your less-than-illustrious career."

      It was a shot in the dark, but it struck home.

      Kosov stood up and studied Harry. "An interesting story, Major.

      Tell me, how is our one-eyed friend these. days?"

      Harry felt a jolt of confusion. Kosov had blind sighted him.

      One-eyed friend? Did Kosov mean Yuri Borodin? As far as Harry knew,

      Borodin had two perfectly good eyes. Harry racked his memory for a

      one-eyed man, but all he could come up with was a black kid from

      Baltimore who'd lost both his eyes to shrapnel in the DMZ. Jesus- "I

      don't quite get you, Colonel," he said lamely.

      Kosov smiled. "Well, then, Major, how about the Spandau papers?

      Did they mention any names?"

      "Several. Hess, for one."

      "Naturally. Any others?"

      "None I'd care to mention," Harry said tersely, feeling the noose

      closing around him.

      "I'll mention a few, then." The Russian grinned. "Tell me if you

      recognize any. Chernov? Frolov?" Kosov waited.

      "No? How about Zinoviev?"

      Just the house wine, thanks, Harry thought crazily. He felt cold sweat

      heading on the back of his neck. Russian names?

      What the hell could they have to do with Spandau?

      "Well, Major?"

      "Zinoviev," Harry whispered.

      Kosov blanched. "Rykov!"

      The three agents rushed back into the room like hungry Dobermans.

      Kosov seized his overcoat from a rack by the door and issued orders

      while he pulled it on.

      "Hold the major here until I,return from headquarters. I need to call

      Moscow and I want a line the Stasi can't tap."

      "But Herr Oberst!" Axel Goltz objected, venting his anxiety at last.

      "We can't keep an American here! If Rose finds out, the reaction could

      be very severe. Why@' "Stop whining!" Kosov snapped.

      "Act like a German, for God's sake! You can manage without me for an

     


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