Authors: John Denis
JOHN DENIS
Alistair MacLean's UNACO
Hostage Tower
ALISTAIR MACLEAN'S HOSTAGE TOWER
Lorenz van Beck had three hours to kill. For a man to whom killing came easily, it was time enough. But on that fine, pastel-golden Paris day, van Beck had nothing to kill but time.
Van Beck wandered through the leafy shades of the Ile Saint-Louis and basked in the dappled darts of sunlight that sought out his square, unsmiling face beneath its cap of spiked grey hair. He was hatless, and dressed in a dark suit of heavy broadcloth, his waistcoat buttoning high to bunch up the small-knotted, unimpressive tie. He looked, unsurprisingly, like a businessman.
With a muttered sigh, van Beck turned to business, choosing the Musée Rodin and the Musée de Cluny for modern art, porcelain and glass. He noted recent additions, their placings and lighting, their security surveillance. He made jottings in a notebook: enter by this or that window; copy key to door 2, 9, 15; how big, how small, how friendly, the curator's guards;
proximity to sewers, access roads; MO â bombs? Gas?
Occasionally he wrote down a name, one of a thousand â ten thousand â thieves, killers, weapons men, explosives men, biologists, hit-men, stunt-men, drivers, pimps ⦠the freelance employees of Lorenz van Beck, international fence extraordinary. Against a particularly splendid loan collection of Venetian glass he set another name â a well-known name, titled, respected â a lady, you could say, of some quality. Not an employee, but a client.
Van Beck flipped back through the pages of the notebook to the diary section, and checked the client appointment he had fixed that day. He cast an eye at the gold watch chained to his waistcoat, sniffed the expensively musty air of the museum once again â what delicious odours wealth created! â and strolled to the car he had rented under a false name and driving licence at the Gare d'Austerlitz. He retrieved a shabby leather case with an obstinate clasp from the front seat, locked the car, and abandoned it. It would later, he knew, be reported missing, but the matter did not greatly concern van Beck.
He made his way by taxi to another car rental office in the Boulevard Haussmann, where the pretty secretary recognized him as Marcel Louvain, and drove to Rambouillet by way of Versailles, stopping at the palace to sit in the lengthening garden shadows and eat warm bread and rough Ardennes pâté. The Rambouillet bell-tower boomed the first chime of
six o'clock as Lorenz van Beck pushed open a creaking internal door and clumped into the darker silence of the church â¦
The bell notes reverberated through the empty nave. Van Beck peered into the gloom, grunted, and plodded to the second in a group of confessional boxes set in the furthest shadowy corner. He pushed through the dingy red curtain, lowered his bulk on to the chair, cleared his throat, and sniffed in the direction of the confessional grille. A polite cough came from the scarcely discernible figure on the other side.
âBless me, Father, for I have sinned,' van Beck mumbled.
âIn nomine Patris, Filii et Spiritus Sanc â' the priest began, and was rudely interrupted by van Beck's derisive chuckle.
âThis was your idea, Smith,' he said, âbut I'm a sensitive man, and play-acting becomes neither of us. Say what you have to say, and let me go.'
âI rely, as always, van Beck,' Smith returned in his dry, precise voice, âon your absolute discretion.'
âAnd I on your consuming lust for making money illegally.'
The vaguely outlined head nodded agreement. âThough you do me a small injustice,' Smith said. âI am fascinated more by crime than by money, as you well know. For me, stealing ten dollars from the coffee fund in the desk of the secretary to the Director of Fort Knox is worth all the jackpots in Las Vegas ⦠in the world.
âI have made crime my life's study, my life's work. It is the ultimate excitement, van Beck. No other physical experience can match it.'
âJa, ja,' the Bavarian sighed, âso you have said, so you have said, Mister Smith. So you're different from me ⦠huh? I can fence anything from the Mona Lisa to a uranium mine. I could find customers for the Taj Mahal or Beethoven's Tenth Symphony. I've even sold his own gold back to the Director of Fort Knox. But I'm a peasant. You're an artist. What do you want?'
âA team.'
âTo do what?'
âYou know better than that, van Beck,' Smith rapped.
âOK, OK.' Van Beck was silent. âHow many?'
âThree,' Smith replied.
Van Beck wrote the figure in his dog-eared notebook. âAny preferences?' he enquired.
âNone.'
âSo tell me.'
Smith's urbane voice dropped to a sibilant hiss. âOne â a weapons expert. The best. Tough ⦠resourceful ⦠professional.' Van Beck's blunting pencil stump dug into the cheap paper.
âTwo â a thief. Again, the best. I have to steal two and a half million rivets and somebody's mother.' Smith giggled. âThe best thief you know, van Beck. Daring, totally unafraid.'
âWhat's the going rate for scrap iron and old ladies?' van Beck enquired.
âFor this collection?' Smith said. âCould be thirty million.'
âRivets?'
âDollars.'
Van Beck whistled low, unmelodiously. âI can get a good team for a slice of that.'
âThen do it,' Smith whispered. âDo it.'
âThe third one?'
Smith hesitated. âSomeone ⦠inventive. Incredibly ingenious. Strong, and â again â afraid of nothing. Especially heights.'
Van Beck was thoughtful, rubbing his fleshy, prickly chin.
âThat apply to the other two as well?' he queried, blandly.
âWhat?'
âThe heights,' the German replied, trying to fit rivets in the sky into a recognizable pattern.
Smith was quiet, dangerously quiet. At length he said. âDon't push me, van Beck. Do what you have to do, but don't try your luck too hard. It may not last.'
Van Beck swallowed, and shuffled uncomfortably. âIt will be as you say.' He made to get up, but Smith's rasping command froze him.
âOne more thing. There is a new gun, a laser-gun, the Lap-Laser. The Americans have it for their army. I want some. The weapons man must get them. Agreed?'
âIt'll cost.'
âI'll pay.'
âSure,' van Beck grunted. âYou pay, I'll supply. That's business.'
âThank you.' Smith relaxed back in his seat. âYou may go. Contact me in the usual way. You have a month.'
Van Beck nodded, making no reply. None was needed. He threw aside the curtain on its jangling brass rings, and strode out into the mellow light of evening. He drank white wine, marginally chilled, and cognac at the pavement table of a café, then rejoined his car and took the road to Chartres.
From the church porch, piercing eyes in a hooded face watched him.
Then the heavy door swung open once again, and a bent, shabby little priest joined the home-goers and the evening walkers. He smiled benignly at an old woman dressed, like himself, in rusty black. He reached to pat the head of a passing boy, but missed.
It was a sheltered place, twenty-eight miles west of Stuttgart: a plateau in wooded country screened from the road by trees, and hardly ever overflown. It made an ideal secret firing range. The US Army used the unfenced fields to test their newest toy, the General Electric Lap-Laser-gun.
The US Army had four Lap-Lasers at Stuttgart. Not very many, they conceded, but still one-third of those known to exist. For the manufacturers had made only twelve so far, and they were as yet in the experimental stage. Since the Army chiefs were confident that neither General Electric's security nor their own had been breached, they took their time about putting the Lap-Laser through its paces. No one, after all, they reasoned, was going to steal it â¦
On the day appointed by Smith for the theft of all four guns, a fine but drenching rain speckled the goggles of the Army's chief weapons instructor as he strained his eyes skywards to pick up the
incoming helicopter. The fretful buzz of its motor sounded intermittently out of the heavy clouds. He chewed his gum viciously and spat, a not un-accomplished combined operation.
The helicopter was part of the daily Lap-Laser routine, bringing the precious guns from the big, closely guarded Stuttgart base to the range each morning, and taking them back again in the evening for safe keeping. The guns could not be tested at the base: they were too powerful, too unpredictable.
Apart from that, they needed an enormous power source, and rather than transport huge and unwieldy banks of generators from place to place, the Army preferred the option of an isolated testing ground where they could install a small nuclear power plant.
The colonel glanced back over his shoulder at his sleekly sinister âbabies', all four stripped and stacked away, ready to leave on the return trip to the base. He grinned and winked at his second-in-command at his side.
âThey're really somethin' aren't they.' It was a statement, not a question.
âYeah,' acknowledged the major, through a stubby cigar that rarely left his stained lips.
There were US Army Generals, plenty of them, who would greet with genuinely blank astonishment any leading question about a laser-gun, and the chief weapons instructor and his 2âIC basked in the realization that they were part of an
impressively small band of experts. For example, if put to the trouble, which they rarely were, they would be able to explain that the Lap-Laser was made possible by advances not in ballistics or aero-dynamics, but in the field of optics. That statement in itself was enough to confound most questioners.
The colonel grinned appreciatively at the final touch the laser-gunners had insisted on adding to the already successful day's tests: at a range of a thousand metres they had drilled âUSAAF' through a four-inch plate of sheet steel as cleanly as if it had been stencilled on cartridge-paper.
The Lap-Laser's guidance system was similar to that of a conventional radar device, except that instead of using radio beams, it reflected beams of light when seeking its target. It could be sensitized to any target within its range, or any
kind
of target, because the mouse-ear detectors of the Lap-Laser, on either side of its firing mechanism, were tuned to distinguish the properties of a variety of different materials. They could run from a dozen different sorts of metal, to wood, brick, or the human body.
Once the target was located, the Lap-Laser sent out a concentrated ray of appallingly destructive force, which annihilated anything in its direct path.
Its other great advantage was speed. It is the practice in orthodox electronics to work down to a nano-second â one thousandth of a millionth of a second. If even greater speed is required,
the only alternative carrier is light, which can be con trolled to a pico-second, or micromicro-second â a millionth of a millionth fraction of time, of such minute duration as to be incomprehensible in human terms.
The Lap-Laser worked to pico-second tolerances, using a processor which General Electric built into the controlling computer specially for the job. To give the optical system the necessary speed to match the sophisticated laser-gun, the processor employed mini-lasers no larger than a grain of salt.
Allied to a power source of massive concentration and force, the lasers combined to produce a weapon that was like a glimpse into a fearful future. Everything ultimately depended on the uses to which the Lap-Laser was put, and on the inviolable guarantee that it could never fall into the wrong hands.