Cloak of Darkness (26 page)

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Authors: Helen MacInnes

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Espionage, #Suspense

BOOK: Cloak of Darkness
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“I’m Marchand,” he said. “I’ve been expecting you since our Friend Inspector Duval called from Geneva this morning. His description of you,” he told Renwick, “was accurate. I don’t think we need to use the word ‘Victor’, Colonel Renwick.” He bowed slightly. “Major Claudel.”

“We don’t use rank, either,” Renwick said, keeping his voice friendly, repressing both surprise and annoyance.

“Nor I,” agreed Marchand. “I hope I’m not interrupting your plans.” He paused, his eyes watchful.

You know damn well you are, Renwick thought.

“But,” Marchand went on, “I am curious why you’re here. We have no terrorists in Chamonix.”

Claudel said, “Let’s walk while we talk. I feel naked just standing around. Perhaps a drink somewhere? After all, you’re out of uniform.” But always on duty, he thought.

“Saturday,” Marchand said as if that explanation was enough, and opened the Renault’s doors. “It is quite comfortable,” he told them, noticing a slight hesitation. “No abduction, I assure you,” he added, “I’ll drive you to the inn where you are staying and save you a little walk. You’ve had enough exercise for one afternoon.”

Smooth, thought Renwick, smooth; and he probably is a cop. With a telescope trying to follow us ever since we started up this damned road? “Thank you, but we’ve some shopping to do in town. Didn’t bring a change of clothes with us.”

“I think you’ll find what you need at a place I know.”

Claudel climbed into the back seat; Renwick sat beside Marchand. That way—if Marchand weren’t Duval’s friend, if he did try to drive them to some remote house—they’d be able to control him more easily. Marchand just nodded at this small manoeuvre, as if he himself would have done the same thing. The shop he had chosen for them was excellent: a small establishment that sold ski clothes in winter, climbing and hiking outfits in summer; and the sign over its door was
ETIENNE
MARCHAND
. “My uncle,” Marchand said as he noted Renwick’s eyes on the name.

He waited in the car tactfully while they selected two warm outfits, both dark blue in colour, and made sure that there were deep pockets. Navy-blue sneakers came next. “Glad we don’t have to carry out a rolled-up mattress, even cot-size,” Claudel murmured, remembering the project of climbing over an eight-foot fence laced with barbed wire. No need for that now. They had seen Klaus, could identify him. The chalet with the shuttered windows took priority. Always the way, he thought: you plan one thing, and then something else pops up. Like Inspector Marchand.

Renwick added a couple of lightweight turtleneck sweaters to their purchases, one navy and one black.

“Will the expense account stretch enough?” Claudel asked slyly.

“Barely—after your extravagance today. Three postcards when we needed only one.”

“Couldn’t draw attention to—” Claudel began, and then realised Renwick was joshing. That’s a good sign, he thought. “Decided to trust our friend in the car?”

Renwick nodded. “What else?” As a friend Marchand would be helpful. As an opponent, difficult. The man was no fool; no small-town lackadaisical cop taking everything with a genial shrug, well that’s the way life is today, what can you do about it?

Marchand had the doors open for them, ready to drive away. He didn’t ask any questions about the packages, but he didn’t need to. He can easily find out what we bought, Renwick thought in amusement, when he picks up a phone and talks with his uncle.

The distance to the inn was short. Marchand had only time enough to say that he had heard about Interintell, in fact had discussed it with Inspector Duval. They had worked with Interpol, of course—a matter of dealing with criminals smuggling stolen diamonds out of Geneva into Chamonix.

“Why Chamonix?” Renwick asked. But at that moment they arrived at the inn. The garden was empty—too early yet for dinner to be served—just three thin waiters wandering around like stray ghosts as they laid out the place settings. Renwick saw one table near the trees, a sheltered spot, still bare of forks and knives and paper napkins tucked into thick tumblers. “Have you time for a drink?”

“Why not?” Marchand stepped quickly out of the car.

“What brings diamond thieves to Chamonix?” Renwick asked when three beers had been placed before them.

“A choice of exits.” Marchand hesitated, said, “Perhaps we should speak in English, no? I was a student in London and later in America.” He broke into English. “Our talk would go quicker. Right?”

Renwick, who had thought he was coping pretty well with Marchand’s French, only nodded. But he wondered if the use of English was to encourage him to talk more. “A choice of exits from Chamonix?” he prompted.

“To the west you can reach Lyons, and south from there Marseilles. Or, if you go north from Lyons, quick access to Paris. If you prefer Italy, then the Mont Blanc Tunnel takes you east and you arrive in Milan. From there, Genoa or Rome. The roads are excellent and more difficult to watch than airports or railway stations. So many car changes are possible—wayside garages that can’t be observed all the time.” Marchand’s English was precise. Claudel was impressed. A good student, he thought, and glanced at Renwick. But Renwick’s mind wasn’t on accents or vocabulary at this moment.

A choice of exits meant a choice of entries, too. Take Rome, for instance, as the starting point for a journey to this part of France. By air, Rome to Milan was a three-hundred-mile flight. Then by car from Milan to the Mont Blanc Tunnel? Not as difficult as it sounded—trucks used that route all the time. The tunnel itself, right through the giant massif of Mont Blanc, was about seven miles long. A total, perhaps, from Milan to Chamonix of just over two hundred miles—not much more. And almost a third of that distance was on the plains of Lombardy where the giant highway from Milan would let a car stay within the speed limit at eighty miles an hour. In fact, thought Renwick, I’ve travelled that
autostrada
at ninety miles an hour. “Interesting,” he said.

Claudel was watching Renwick. Now what is he calculating this time? he wondered.

More waiters were arriving. Marchand waved away two who hovered near the table. “Later,” he told them, “later.” He turned again to Renwick. “Tell me one thing—why are you interested in Ruskin’s Chair? Or, rather why did you explore the woods behind it?”

“Your telescope couldn’t follow us in there?” Renwick asked blandly.

“Unfortunately, no. Is there something I should learn about the Chalet Ruskin?”

“There is. But, first, tell us about its owner. What do you know of him? Klaus—what’s his name? Renwick looked vaguely at Claudel, whose memory also seemed to have lapsed.

“Sudak,” said Marchand.

“Sudak?” Claudel repeated. “Where does he come from?” It sounded Czech, Polish, even Hungarian.

“Originally from Paris.” Marchand hesitated. Then he said, “A professor I know at Grenoble University—a specialist in Russian history—tells me there is a small village called Sudak on the Black Sea. Not far from Yalta.”

“Was he born there?” Renwick asked.

“I’ve never heard even a whisper of Russia. He is a French citizen, resident in Switzerland and completely neutral. Also, a most successful business-man. Now tell me why you are interested in his chalet. Or are you interested in Monsieur Sudak?”

“Yes,” Renwick said frankly. “Interested in him and in the firm he now controls—Klingfeld & Sons. Head office in Geneva, I think.”

“That’s well known.”

“Branch offices in Paris and Rome.”

“Oh? Klingfeld & Sons are an old established business, of course. No doubt their market is widespread.”

“Very widespread. Recently, Klaus Sudak has merged Klingfeld with an American firm, but secretly. He controls it, too.”

“Oh?” Marchand asked again but added no comment this time.

“That firm, Exports Consolidated, is now under investigation by the FBI. Also, I suspect, by several other federal agencies. Its business has been the illegal export of armaments. Recently, since its amalgamation with Klingfeld & Sons, it has been supplying weapons—and instructors—for international terrorists in certain Communist training camps.”

Marchand’s dark eyes stared at Renwick, then at Claudel.

“Yes,” Claudel said, “we have every reason to be interested in Klaus Sudak. And in his Chalet Ruskin. And in—” He hesitated, glanced at Renwick. Are we spilling too much? he seemed to be asking.

“And,” Renwick finished the sentence for Claudel, “in the little chalet opposite the path to Ruskin’s Chair. It’s apparently closed.”

“It is. It was bought recently by an Englishman, but he isn’t taking up residence until the winter season starts.”

“Klaus Sudak is occupying it.”

“Sudak?”

“We saw his Ferrari arrive there, along with a black Mercedes. There was a woman, a caretaker perhaps, who opened the chalet door for two men from the Mercedes. They carried a bundle of some kind. Klaus Sudak waited until one of the men returned. They spoke. The Mercedes headed downhill. Sudak then drove to his house. The small chalet is still shuttered, looks completely closed and empty.”

“But what—how—”

“We don’t know as yet. But we’ll keep you informed. If arrests are necessary, we’ll need your men.”

“You may need them before any arrests are made.”

Meaning what? Renwick wondered. Marchand offering to help in our search, or Marchand giving a polite warning that we don’t break the law? Suddenly the little coloured bulbs above their heads were turned on although daylight was as yet strong. “We can take a hint,” Renwick said, playing on words, and rose.

They walked back to the Renault to pick up their packages. Renwick said, “I needn’t add that all this is definitely in strictest confidence. We aren’t the only Intelligence agency who has become interested in Klingfeld & Sons.”

“Strictest confidence,” Marchand agreed. “But I should inform Duval.”

“Agreed. But inform him quietly. Very quietly.”

“We do exchange top-secret information.” Marchand’s serious face relaxed into a small smile. “About jewel thieves. Not about terrorists.” The smile faded. He stared again at Renwick, then at Claudel. “Can all this be possible? A reputable business-man like Sudak?”

“Not only possible but true. Tell me one thing. Why did he use the name Ruskin for his chalet?”

The question was so unexpected that Marchand actually showed astonishment. “It’s always been used—ever since the first chalet was built there, one hundred and thirty years ago. It burned down, was replaced. That one also burned. Then three adjoining chalets were grouped on that site. The name has always remained the same. In fact, when Sudak bought the chalets three years ago and had them converted for his use, the people here would have been scandalised if he had not kept the Chalet Ruskin name. It’s part of the history of that hillside. Sudak understood that.”

“He was told? Politely, of course.”

“Yes. And he listened. He wishes to please, shall we say?”

Which made it all the more difficult for a young police inspector to deal with this situation, Renwick thought as he shook hands and thanked Marchand for his patience. Claudel put it more bluntly but in his admirable French accent it sounded almost diplomatic. “We’ll be glad of any assistance you can render us, direct or indirect.”

Marchand nodded, looked at the packages they carried, and reached into the glove compartment of his car. He produced a hand-size transmitter. “This will find me wherever I am. Within five miles of course. It’s set on the wavelength I use.”

“We’ll keep it there,” Renwick assured him.

“Remember, any difficulty at all, any problem...” Marchand shrugged, got into his car.

“We’ll remember.”

Claudel had taken out his note-book and pencil, was scribbling rapidly. He tore the page loose, gave it to Marchand. “Number of black Mercedes. Zurich registration.” Marchand raised an eyebrow, but he slipped the page into his pocket. The car left.

Early diners, footsore and cold, were trickling into the garden. On the road outside, a line of excursion buses moved into place, reminding those on a package deal they would be leaving within the hour. There was a blare of rock-and-roll from hidden loudspeakers, a dazzle of little lights strung among the trees.

“Wild night life,” Claudel said as they approached the inn. “We’ll bribe a waiter to bring us hot food in the dining-room. Chilly out here.” And it would be colder on the hillside. “Wonder if we’ll be alone tonight,” he speculated once they had reached the privacy of their room. Everything, he noted, was in place; nothing disturbed.

“Marchand won’t be far off.” Renwick was busy setting up communication with London.

“We surprised him. He didn’t expect to be told so much. Too much?” That worried Claudel.

“We need his help, and he needed to know. Don’t believe in treating an ally as if he were the enemy.”

“You’re trusting him a lot, Bob.”

“He’s trusting us.” Renwick pointed to Marchand’s neat little transmitter, all set and ready to go, now lying on top of the bureau.

“He must have known we had a couple of our own,” Claudel speculated, then added, “But not on his wavelength.” He left to take a shower in the bathroom at the end of the hall. Renwick was already in contact with London.

***

“Good report?” Claudel asked when he at last came back into the room. “No shower. I soaked in the tub instead, with one arm held high.” He had removed its sling.

Renwick finished packing the transceiver into its leather case. “Mixed.”

Something’s wrong, Claudel worried. “You had plenty to tell them.”

“That, yes.”

“Any news of Erik?”

“Reported seen in Rome, in Naples, in Milan. Take your pick.”

“And William Haversfield?”

“In Rome. Under surveillance for two hours. He dodged it.”

Expert, thought Claudel: we’re dealing with a real professional here. “Then Erik was in Rome, too. Disguised as a priest. Or perhaps a nun?”

Even that didn’t raise any response from Renwick. “How’s Washington?” Claudel’s voice was as casual as possible.

“Grable is hanging around.”

The supply-room clerk... “Where?”

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