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    The Spandau Phoenix wwi-2

    Page 58
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      that had been forgotten by everyone in the room but him. "I propose

      something quite different," he said solemnly. "I am offering you an

      aircraft-deliverable nuclear weapon with a forty-kiloton yield,

      completely assembled with fissionable core, ready for detonation."

      in that moment the air in the conference room seemed to turn to water.

      Although the Arabs knew their leader would not view the videotape for

      many hours yet, they also knew that the words spoken by the old man in

      the wheelchair were for him alone. Their presence had become

      irrelevant.

      Horn spoke softly to the humming camera. "I can offer you a weapon of

      the implosion or the gun-assembly type, and, subject to certain

      conditions, I can continue to provide these weapons at the rate of one

      every forty days."

      Major Karami's black eyes glittered as he fumbled for another cigarette.

      At length Jalloud asked softly, "Are you serious, sir?"

      Horn's single burning eye was answer enough.

      Major Karami regained his composure first. "And what is the price of

      this great gift?" he asked warily. "There are only so many billions of

      diners in our treasury."

      "Not a single piece of gold do I desire," Horn rasped.

      "What then?" Jalloud asked, puzzled. "Oil?"

      "My price, Herr Prime Minister, is control. I will provide you with a

      single weapon. You will not stockpile it and wait for more weapons. You

      will use it-and against a target specified by me." Horn raised a

      spindly finger. "Only then will more weapons be provided."

      "That's ridiculous!" Major Karami exploded. "Why not use it yourself.?

      We have our own targets and we'll use our weapons as we see fit! Your

      price is too high!"

      "One moment, Ilyas," Jalloud cautioned. "What is your target of

      preference, Herr Horn?"

      "Thank you for asking," Horn said softly. "It so happens that the

      target I want destroyed coincides with the one your leader has

      unsuccessfully tried for years to destroy-the State of Israel. To be

      exact, Tel Aviv."

      Ilse let out a short gasp from her chair behind Horn.

      "Tel Aviv!" Karami exclaimed, unbelieving. He turned to Jalloud.

      "Does he speak the truth?"

      "Do you?" the prime minister asked.

      "Tel Aviv," Horn murmured. "I want the Jews wiped from the face of the

      earth."

      "As do we!" Jalloud retorted. "But what good is one weapon to us? If

      we have to wait forty days for another, we will be annihilated.

      The Zionists have two hundred nuclear bombs."

      Horn smiled. "Yes, they do. But think for a moment. I assume you do

      not want Palestine rendered permanently unin habitable. You merely wish

      the Jews pushed into the sea, yes?

      Tel Aviv is the first step on the road to reclaiming Jerusalem.

      If skillfully managed, your attack could even be made to appear as an

      Israeli nuclear accident."

      Major Karami seemed to be debating with himself. "Herr Horn," he said

      hesitantly, "Israel's air defenses are the toughest in the world.

      Even with the best of luck, it would be difficult to guarantee that a

      single plane carrying this warhead could get through to Tel Aviv. And

      even if it did, we would have no chance to mask our responsibility for

      the attack."

      Horn saw that admitting this weakness had cost the Libyan major dearly.

      "I appreciate your frankness," he said. "If you would prefer, I could

      'arrange to deliver a slightly smaller, warhead-a thirty-kiloton

      yield-that could be fitted with a timer and concealed inside a large

      crate. It would not be nearly as compact as the American SADM-the

      famous "suitcase bomb"-but it could fit easily inside a small truck."

      Prime Minister Jalloud started to speak, but Major Karami restrained

      him. "I believe we can do business," he said hoarsely, trying to

      maintain some semblance of composure.

      "Are there any other restrictions?"

      "Time," Horn replied. "I want Tel Aviv destroyed within ten days."

      Stunned, Major Karami sat back in his chair. Horn's words coursed

      through his veins like a powerful narcotic.

      After endless years of cowering beneath the Zionist nuclear threat,

      Libya would finally possess the means to strike back!

      Karami clenched and unclenched his fists in anticipation of wielding the

      deadliest sword ever to fall into Muslim hands.

      Theti he went still.

      "How do we know that you actually have access to such weapons?"

      he asked. He was almost afraid to hear the answer-afraid that his heady

      dreams of, conquest would disappear like smoke from a tent fire.

      Horn smiled. "Because I have one in the basement complex of this house,

      ready for Dr. Sabri's inspection. If you gentlemen will follow me ..."

      Gasps went up around the table. The Arabs began shaking each other's

      hands and talking rapidly among themselves.

      The interpreter did not even attempt to translate the effusive

      congratulations that filled the room.

      s

      In the corner behind Horn, Ilse's face had gone slack. After Luhr's

      drugs and the horror in the X-ray room, witnessing this nightmarish

      conclave had pushed her over the edge of endurance. As the Libyans

      filed out of the room behind Horn's motorized chair, she slid awkwardly

      to the floor, tiny beads of cold sweat sparkling on her bloodless

      forehead.

      730 Pm. Burgerspark Hotel, Pretoria

      In a small room on the fourth floor of the Burgerspark Hotel, Jonas

      Stern reviewed his interception plan with his men.

      Gadi Abrams lounged on one of the hotel beds. Professor Natterman sat

      in a chair by the window, wearing a bulky bulletproof vest beneath his

      tweed jacket. Stern himself sat on the bed opposite Gadi. Yosef Shamir

      stood in the lobby four floors below, listening through a hand-held

      radio.

      "Thirty minutes until the rendezvous," Stern said.

      "Where's Aaron?"

      Just then they heard a key in the door. The young commando stepped in.

      "The elevator control box is in the basement," he said.

      "I can stop the elevator wherever you want it."

      Stern nodded. "What about the radio?"

      Aaron frowned and pulled a small walkie-talkie from his pocket.

      "I could hear you, but there's static. And you were only on the fourth

      floor. With eight floors between us, I'm not so sure."

      "We'll check it when we get up there." Stern consulted a drawing he had

      made on a piece of hotel stationery. "All right, here it is.

      I've taken a second room on the eighth floor of this hotel. The closest

      I could get to suite 81 I-the room 9 .

      where Sergeant Apfel is registered-was 820. It's down the hall, past

      the elevators, and around the corner. Gadi and I will be in that room.

      Yosef will be watching the lobby.

      Aaron will be in the basement. Professor Natterman will wait here."

      Stern tugged at the flesh beneath his chin. "Before we intercept Hauer

      and Apfel, I intend to let the kidnappers make contact in whatever way

      they choose. I suspect that they will call suite 811

      and instruct our German friends to meet them at a different place.

      If they attempt to seize
    or kill the Germans, however, we will

      intervene.'5

      Stern looked over into the corner. There, in a large open suitcase, lay

      the fruits of onle of the telephone calls he had made from Natterman's

      Wolfsburg cabin. A Jewish arms dealer of Stern's long acquaintance had

      had the suitcase ready when Stern arrived at his Johannesburg home this

      afternoon. In the suitcase lay five short-barrelled Uzi submachine

      guns, four silenced .22 caliber pistols, two of five walkie-talkies,

      silencers for the Uzis, and a small hoard of ammunition.

      "Obviously," said Stern, "Professor Natterman must make our initial

      contact with the Germans. Of the five of us, Captain Hauer knows only

      him. Hauer is likely to shoot anyone else who exposes himself too soon.

      Ideally, the professor will make the contact by telephone. When Yosef

      sees the Germans enter the lobby, he will radio Gadi and me in room 820.

      Gadi has already bugged suite 811, so we will be monitoring what

      transpires after Hauer and Apfel get inside. After the kidnappers have

      made their contact, we will call Professor Natterman here.

      Professor, you will immediately call suite 811. If you reach Hauer or

      Apfel, you will give the little speech we went over together."

      Natterman nodded attentively.

      "If you cannot reach them-because of a busy signal or anything else-we

      will go to the backup plan. Gadi and I will observe the Germans as they

      leave suite 811. If they take the stairs down, we will radio you here,

      whereupon you will walk immediately to the stairwell and wait for them."

      Stern smiled encouragingly. "You don't need to run, Professor.

      The stairwell is less than twenty meters from this room.

      Hauer and Apfel must cover four floors before they reach you.

      Natterman nodded again.

      "If they take the elevator down, however, it gets a bit more

      complicated. In that case Gadi will radio Aaron in the basement, and

      Aaron will stop the elevator.between floorshopefully between the fourth

      and third. I will radio you"Stern pointed his finger at Natterman-"and

      tell you to go to the elevator shaft. Yosef will be here with you. He

      will have come up from the lobby, after making certain that Hauer and

      Apfel are not being followed. He will pry open the elevator doors for

      you, and you will speak to Hauer while he is trapped below you. He'll

      probably be trying to get out through the roof anyway."

      Natterman looked anxious. "The elevator scenario seems rather

      complicated."

      "It's the only way we can insure contact without frightening Hauer away

      or getting killed ourselves."

      "Why can't I just wait in the lobby for them?"

      Stern sighed heavily. "Because we would then risk frightening the

      kidnappers away. And the kidnappers, Professor, are the men I came to

      South Africa to get."

      Natterman looked glum. "Can your men do All they're supposed to?

      The timing seems close."

      Gadi Abrams grinned. "We are sayaret matkal, Professor," he said

      proudly. "This is child's play for us."

      Stern shot him a dark look. "Hauer will not be child's play, Gadi.

      You boys have trained with GSG-9, so I shouldn't have to amplify that.

      Captain Hauer is an extremely dangerous man. Don't underestimate

      Sergeant Apfel either. He is under unimaginable pressure, and a man

      like that is capable of anything."

      Gadi nodded. "Yes, Uncle."

      Stern glanced at his watch, "Let's move. Twenty minutes to the

      rendezvous, and we still need to test the radio reception from the

      basement."

      As one, Stern, Gadi, and Aaron collected their weapons from the suitcase

      and moved toward the door. "Good luck, Professor," Stern said, then

      they went out.

      As Stern moved toward the elevators, Gadi fell back beside him and

      whispered, "I didn't want to alarm anybody, Uncle, but what happened to

      our body armor?"

      Stern grimaced. "Another buyer came along and offered more money."

      "But why give the Professor the one vest we have? You should be wearing

      it."

      Stern shook his head. "Natterman may have to stand in the stairwell and

      wait for Hauer and Apfel to come running down. There's a strong chance

      Hauer kvill fire a reflex shot before he even recognizes the professor.

      That's why he gets the vest."

      In room 401, Professor Natterman sat with the walkietalkie clenched in

      his hand. It was sticky hot inside the armored vest. He wanted to take

      it off, but he reasoned that if Stern had given him the only vest they

      had, he probably needed it. Setting the walkie-talkie on the table, he

      stood and stretched. His joints ached terribly from all the una( tomed

      exercise. He had been on his feet for less than a minute when the door

      slid open.

      Facing the professor stood a woman wearing an expensively cut red skirt,

      a white blouse, and a red hat. She carried a Vuitton handbag in her

      left hand. It took Natterman several moments to realize that she also

      held a gun.

      Swallow stepped inside the room and closed the door.

      "I'vd come for the Spandau papers, Herr Professor," she said in a crisp,

      low voice, her British accent unmistakable.

      "Would you be so kind as to get them for me?"

      "I ... I don't have them," Natterman stammered.

      "Stern has them?" Swallow asked sharply.

      Stunned by her knowledge, Natterman said, "Who are you?" ' Swallow's

      lips drew back, exposing her small teeth in a fierce animal glare. "Does

      Jonas Stern have the papers?"

      With a fool's courage Professor Natterman grabbed for the walkie-talkie

      on the table. Swallow destroyed it with a threeshot burst from her

      silenced Ingrain machine pistol.

      "Take off your clothes," she ordered. "Every stitch."

      When Natterman hesitated, Swallow jerked the Ingrain in his direction.

      "Do it! " While Natterman, pale and shaking, removed his clothes,

      Swallow began searching the hotel -room.

      CHAPTER THIRTY

      7,40 P.N. Horn House: ThO Northern Transvaal Deep in the basement

      complex of Horn House, Alfred Horn shepherded his Libyan guests through

      a maze of stainless steel and glass and stone. Huge ventilator fans

      thrummed constantly, forcing filtered air down from the surface one

      hundred meters above. An intricate network of cooling ducts maintained

      the silicon-friendly environment required by the formidable array of

      computers purring against the walls; the brittle air also extended the

      life of the manifold chemicals and weapons stored here. The Libyans

      surveyed the labyrinth of tubing, hoods, and pipes in reverent silence.

      Only young Dr. Sabri, the Soviet-educated physicist, found it hard to

      suppress his enthusiasm as he toured the lab. Most of the visible

      hardware had been produced by one or another of the various high-tech

      subsidiaries of Phoenix AG, but the man who controlled them all was

      about to reveal a product of very different pedigree. Horn gradually

      led the Libyans toward the rear of the basement, where something

      resembling a giant industrial refrigerator stood gleaming in the

      fluorescent light. Stretching from floor to ceiling and wall to
    wall,

      the aluminum-coated lead chamber awaited the men like a futuristic

      crypt. Three great doors without handles were set in its face.

      "Pieter," Horn said softly.

      The tall Afrikaner stepped over to an electronic console and flipped a

      switch. An alarm buzzer sounded briefly; then, with a sucking sound,

      the center door opened a fraction of an inch. A sickly orange-yellow

      light dribbled out of the crack. Smuts slipped a hand inside and

      pulled. When the door opened completely, the Libyan physicist gasped.

      "Go ahead, Doctor," said Horn, "have a look."

      Sabri looked shaken. "You don't store the weapon in halves?"

      "It's quite safe," Horn assured him. "The core has been temporarily

      removed. The weapon can be disassembled with the tools beside it. You

      may verify the soundness of the design at your leisure."

      Dr. Sabri stepped gingerly into the storage chamber and tiptoed around

      the weapon. The blunt-nosed cylinder stood menacingly on its tail fins

      like a blasphemous icon. Painted a gleaming black, the bomb bore a

      single marking, emblazoned on one of its fins: a rising Phoenix.

      The bird's head was turned in profile, its sharp, break screeching, its

      single fierce eye wide, its talons enjulfed by red flames. Sabri's left

      hand caressed the cool metal of the bomb chassis like a woman's thigh.

      Horn watched the Libyans with thinly veiled curiosity. Prime Minister

      Jalloud stood well back from the vault, his eyes on the physicist. His

      interpreter did the same.

      Major Karami stood rigid, his black eyes fixed unwaveringly on the

      upended weapon. "Where is the core?" he asked hoarsely.

      "The fissile material," Horn replied, "in this case plutonium 239-lies

      in a lead vault below ourfeet."

      "We must see it."

      "I'm afraid you can't actually see it, Major, not without more

      safeguards than are available in this room. But you can see its

      effects." Horn waved his right hand.

      Smuts pressed another button on the console. Instantly a section of the

      metal floor to the left of the storage chamber whirred out of sight.

      Beneath it lay a lead-lined vault conraining a wooden pallet stacked

      with orange fifty-five-gallon drums.

      "The plutonium is in those drums?" Jalloud asked, instinctively

      stepping back from the gaping vault.

      "They're lined with concrete," Horn explained. "We're perfectly safe.

     


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