Read The Lucifer Network Online
Authors: Geoffrey Archer
Waddell cleared his throat.
âNothing's come across my desk,' he replied cagily. âRing me when you've spoken with him.'
âI will.'
He reached the Intercontinental by 9.35. To the left was the bar where Jackman must have sat with his cronies a year ago and where Julie had met Max Schenk. Clusters of armchairs around low tables. He turned his back on the bar then paused at the news-stand in the lobby in case the London papers were in. They weren't.
Collins had secured a remote table for two in the brasserie overlooking the Stadtpark. He recognised Sam and held up his magazine as a signal.
âPat Collins.' They shook hands. âYou've seen this, have you?' He passed Sam a faxed copy of the morning's
Chronicle
story.
âJust been told about it,' Sam grimaced. He skim-read a few paragraphs then put it aside. âIf I read the rest it'll ruin my breakfast.'
âWhy don't you do the circuit,' Collins suggested, pointing to the buffet, âthen we can talk.'
Sam took himself off to the servery and helped himself to a plate of fruit and some scrambled eggs and bacon.
De Vere Collins was an untidy-looking man with a reddish, pock-marked complexion and straggly hair. He'd finished eating, leaving the tablecloth in front of him covered in crumbs. Their table was in a corner, out of earshot of the others. Collins poured himself another cup from a cafetière, then glanced round to check nobody was standing near them. He leaned forward.
âThere's been a pretty startling development in the Jackman case,' he murmured. âThat theory the Yanks
had about him shipping atomic demolition munitions to Osama bin Laden â it doesn't stand up any more.'
Sam blinked. âWhy not, for Christ's sake?'
âThe ADMs have been found, that's why.'
âGood Lord! Where?'
âStill in Moscow. An undercover police squad raided a Chechen mafiya hideout yesterday looking for drugs, and there they were. Still in component form. The nasties hadn't found anybody to reassemble them, it seems. And there were a few key bits missing.'
Sam let out a gust of air. Their house of cards had collapsed. Back to square one. Then he frowned. âBut I've just spoken to Duncan Waddell. He didn't mention any of this.'
âHe may not know it yet. I got it from a friend at the US Embassy.'
âWell . . .' Sam gulped, thrown into confusion. âWhere the hell do we go from here?'
âMakes it more important than ever that we find Vladimir Kovalenko and persuade him to tell us what Jackman shipped for him,' Collins reminded him. âTrouble is it's only been rumours so far that he's back in Vienna.'
Sam had little faith in Kovalenko ever being found, which made it vital to know whether Julie's friend Max Schenk had been a business contact of Harry Jackman's.
âThere is one other avenue I'm pursuing,' he ventured cautiously. âIt may not take us anywhere, but it'd be mad not to explore it now we don't have any other leads.' He explained about stumbling across Julie Jackman last night, and his suspicion that her boyfriend could have been a contact of her father's. When he'd finished, Collins wrote Max Schenk's name in a notebook.
âI'll see what Austrian security have on him. Sometimes they're helpful, sometimes they aren't.' He puffed out his cheeks and gave Sam a sideways look. âHow come the
little bitch talked to you? I thought she considered you the devil incarnate.'
âBelieve it or not she's apologised for what she did. Claims she got it all wrong.'
âWonders'll never cease!'
Sam finished eating and glanced around. The coffee shop was built like a conservatory. Sleek men in suits were scattered amongst the potted plants. He tried to picture it a year ago, full of woolly-haired scientists discussing the idiosyncrasies of HIV.
Collins's mobile phone bleeped. He dabbed the button. âYes?'
Suddenly his eyes bored into Sam's. âBloody hell!' He jotted something on a paper napkin, grunted a couple of acknowledgements and ended the call.
âWhat's happened?' Sam demanded.
âVladimir Kovalenko.'
âHe's been found?'
âHe certainly has. The Kriminalpolizei were called to an apartment in the second district first thing. The bugger's been murdered.'
Collins's embassy car was waiting outside the hotel. The driver refused to break the law and took them through the traffic at regulation speed. Collins tapped his knees impatiently.
âFirst Harry Jackman gets it and now Kovalenko,' Sam murmured, in a voice low enough for the driver not to hear. âSomebody's making damn sure we don't find out what was in that shipment out of Moscow.'
âThere may be no connection, of course,' Collins warned. âThere's a whole string of people who wanted Kovalenko dead.'
They crossed the brown streak of the Danube Canal and turned right by the Prater amusement park with the
giant Ferris wheel towering above them. Then they hit a traffic jam. A tram had had a minor altercation with a car. The police were sorting things out.
âShouldn't be long,' their driver commented. âDoesn't seem to be much damage.'
Sam noticed a copy of the
International
Herald
Tribune
on the seat next to the driver. Anxious to know whether the allegations against his father had reached the international press, he picked it up.
âMind if I have a look?'
âHelp yourself,' the driver told him.
He checked through the pages but found nothing. Then Collins pointed to an article headed
MYSTERY VIRUS STRIKES EU OFFICIAL
.
âThat one's getting interesting,' Collins told him. âThe bloke had some sort of brain meltdown and they think he was infected deliberately.'
âHow d'you mean?'
âBio-terrorism with a racist motive. The victim was the head of the EU's anti-racism centre here in Vienna. Infected with a virus no one's ever seen before. Through a cut with a chip of glass, they think.'
Sam turned to him. âAny connection with the Southall bomb and the other racist incidents in Europe?'
âNobody knows. But that's what they're working on.'
Sam stared fixedly through the windscreen. Max Schenk was a virologist . . .
He shook his head. No good getting ahead of himself.
The traffic began to move again and soon they were passing the Messegelände, Vienna's huge International Trade Fair site. Beyond it, monolithic apartment blocks lined the road. The driver turned left then pulled up outside a drab-fronted building where four police vehicles already stood. The street was curiously empty of onlookers.
âIf this were London, there'd be rubbernecks everywhere,' Sam murmured.
âThe Viennese tend to keep themselves to themselves,' Collins explained.
They got out of the car and Collins gave his name to the uniformed officer guarding the door to the apartment house. After a few words into his walkie-talkie he saluted and told them the Herr Inspektor was on his way down.
When the plainclothes officer appeared, Collins greeted him as an old friend, then introduced him to Sam as Inspektor Pfeiffer. The security policeman led them up a stone staircase that smelled of some undefined unpleasantness. He had the ruddy complexion of a Tyrolean mountain guide and spoke reasonable English.
âThe police were called by a neighbour at five of this morning,' he told them. âShe heard much noise from the apartment next door. Like a fight.'
They reached the floor where the incident teams were at work. The apartment was small and in severe need of refurbishment.
âOur high-living friend had come down in the world,' Sam murmured. There were three doors off the narrow hall, all open. From one of the rooms came flashes of light as a police photographer captured the scene.
âAt first the officers thought it must be a robbery. That the thieves were discovered by the victim and killed him. But one look at the body and it was clear this was a planned murder.'
âBecause of the way he was killed?' Collins asked.
âYes. They used a garrotte.' Pfeiffer raised his eyebrows. âQuite special, I think. Come. I show you.'
The bedroom he led them into looked as if a hurricane had passed through. The cheap bedside table and lamp were overturned and a wardrobe door had been
wrenched off its hinges. Books and clothes were strewn round the floor. In amongst them lay the prostrate figure of a man sprawled on his side on the brown carpet, the blue of his distended face almost matching the indigo of his silk pyjamas. Round his neck was a thick metal strap with a thumbscrew at the back.
âJesus. That's medieval,' Collins gasped. He turned to Sam. âRecognise him?'
âIt was years ago,' Sam whispered. âAnd I only saw him from a distance.'
âHow did you identify him, Herr Inspektor?' Collins asked.
âThe crime officers found six passports in a suitcase, including his original Russian one with a photograph taken before he had the cosmetic surgery to change the way he looked. That's when I was called in.'
âAny idea how long he'd been living here?'
âFour weeks only. The woman in the next apartment, she saw him arrive with two bags.'
âAlone?'
âYes. And she say he never have visitors.'
âBecause he knew that if he did, they'd probably kill him,' Collins commented.
âSo it looks. But this garrotte, I have never heard it to be used by criminals in Vienna. The people who do this are not from here, I think.'
Sam stared miserably at the remains of the witness they'd placed so much store in finding. âHave you found any other papers in the apartment?' he asked forlornly. âDiaries, business contracts, notebooks?'
The Inspektor shook his florid head. âOnly the passports and some plastic cards. We already make investigation about the bank accounts he have.'
A forensic specialist had begun dusting the furniture
for the attacker's prints. Sam guessed there wouldn't be any.
Collins turned from the room and pulled Sam with him. âThat garrotte's the sort of toy the KGB used to play with,' he whispered. âMy guess is the Kremlin's behind this. Kovalenko knew too much about the people at the top.'
Inspektor Pfeiffer had followed them out into the hallway and overheard. âI think you can be right. The FSB have wanted to find Herr Kovalenko very bad since six months. Every week we speak about him with Moscow. We had new information that he had been seen back in Vienna, but in the west of the city, not here.' There was a bullishness about his manner which Sam interpreted as contentment. One more undesirable foreigner out of the way.
âHow fat is your dossier on Kovalenko's activities?' he asked.
â
Fat
I would not say. Such people are not easy to check. There are so many like him in Vienna. And they all have some legal business to hide their activities. Many are in joint venture with Austrian citizens. We don't have enough officers to watch them as close as we would like.'
âWhat about in the last twelve months?' Sam checked.
âFor most of this year he has not been in Vienna. And before that we had nothing for many months. What I want to know most importantly is how the killers found him here.'
âA man like Kovalenko would never function totally alone,' Collins stated. âHe'd have used someone local to find him the apartment and watch his back. But such a person normally works for money, not loyalty. So if a better payer comes along . . .' He shrugged.
The explanation was tidy, but it was the timing of the
murder that disturbed Sam, as much as the killing itself. Kovalenko had been eliminated just a few hours after he'd told Günther Hoffmann why they were looking for him. He shook his head. It had to be coincidence. It couldn't be anything else.
He looked at Collins and they nodded at one another. There was nothing to be gained from hanging around this morgue.
They thanked the Inspektor and left.
Out in the street they paused by the car without attempting to get into it.
âI'm going back to the Embassy,' Collins told him. âDrop you somewhere?'
Sam thought for a moment. He'd arranged to meet Julie Jackman at lunchtime to hear what she'd arranged with Schenk, but he had a couple of hours to kill. Time enough for another word with Hoffmann.
âI saw a metro station close to that Ferris wheel. If you can drop me there it'll do me fine.'
âNo problem.'
They got back into the car. Sam drummed his fingers on his thigh, thinking hard.
Harry Jackman ships a mysterious cargo out of Russia after setting up the deal with Kovalenko in a hotel full of virologists, one of whom was Dr Max Schenk. A year later a virus is being used as a weapon . . .
âI've been having some more thoughts about the rendezvous Miss Jackman's trying to arrange with her former lover,' Sam announced.
âGo on.'
âI want her to wear a wire.'
âThat's a little OTT, isn't it?'
âShe'll be under a lot of stress. Can't expect her to remember everything that's said. She might forget something important. And I'd like to hear his voice.'
âI take your point.' Collins chewed it over for a moment. âWell, fine. There's a bloke I use occasionally who could help with that. Give me a ring this afternoon when you know when and where it's to happen.'
âThanks. I will.'
Ten minutes later Sam was on a train heading for Heiligenstadt again. When he reached the third-floor apartment in the Karl-Marx Hof, he found the door to the neighbouring flat open and the beak-nosed woman cleaning the threshold. A couple of her cats were curled up on the rug behind her. He gave her a courteous smile.
âYou again!' she remarked in German. âYou always come when he's out.'
He pretended not to understand and knocked at Hoffmann's door anyway.