Authors: Colin Forbes
Boekstraat was little more than a sordid alley. A drunken seaman staggered out, stared at her and she walked on. Behind her The Parrot, also clad in seaman's clothes, followed cautiously.
Lara didn't like the look of No. 198. It was a small hotel with a neon light over the doorway. She mounted the steps, entered a bleak lobby. The bright red-haired woman behind the counter looked like a madame. My God, she thought, it's a place where prostitutes bring clients.
'Mr Knaap is expecting me,' she said firmly.
'I'm sure he is, dearie.' The woman spoke French with a heavy Flemish accent. 'My, we're going up in the world, aren't we?'
'I did say Mr Knaap . . .'
'Room 14. Up those stairs. First floor. Fourteen is on the right. No need to give yourself airs and graces.'
'Oh, stuff it,' Lara told her and hurried up the greasy-stepped stairs.
Klein opened the door to her, gave a little bow, gestured for her to enter, closed and locked the door. He waved a hand round the sleazy bedroom.
'I apologize for the accommodation. Security. This place has a secret back exit. For obvious reasons. You'll do better in Brussels.'
'Brussels?'
'That's your next destination. Tell me quickly. What about Antwerp?'
The room was illuminated by a forty-watt bulb inside a bedside table lamp. The pink shade was tattered. Lara remained standing and she sensed Klein was in a hurry to leave. Big deal.
'I don't like the look of Antwerp port,' she said. 'It's a long way up the river Scheldt - a long way from the North Sea. I can't find any safe escape route - the city is dense. It's a trap - rather than an opportunity.' She took a package from her shoulder bag and handed it to him. 'There is a collection of pictures I took. Sorry to be so negative again. In fact, some of the French ports are far more accessible. Is Hamburg the next port to look over?'
'Not yet. I want you to go by train to Brussels tonight -a room has been reserved for you at the Mayfair in the Avenue Louise. You'll enjoy yourself there. It's expensive . . .' He handed her a sheaf of notes held by a paper band. 'For your expenses. I'll contact you there in due course. And now I must leave.'
He took her by the shoulders, pulled her to him. They embraced and he pulled away suddenly. 'Not in a place like this. Wait five minutes after I've left, then leave yourself. And if you have trouble with some man in Boek-straat, use this on him. Aim for the eyes.'
He gave her an aerosol can, kissed her again on the cheek and left the room. She timed five minutes and hurried down the staircase, past the counter without a glance at the leering madame, and walked rapidly back out of Boekstraat. The Parrot, concealed in a shadowed doorway, frowned as he began to follow her. He felt that he had missed something.
* *
The atmosphere was tense as the meeting went on at Park Crescent. Tweed had deliberately created the mood of a 'council of war' to impress on everyone present the seriousness of the situation. The phone rang again, Paula took the call, then looked at Tweed, handing him the instrument as she spoke.
'It's Olympus for you.'
Tweed here. Any news? Time could be running out . . .'
He listened. 'What's that? Please repeat. Thank you.'
He handed the phone back to Paula, picked up a pencil and began tapping it on the table. Paula was beginning to read his gestures. He was worried. He looked round the table.
'Don't ask me how I know. It looks like Belgium. Maybe Brussels itself. HQ of NATO.'
'That doesn't make sense,' Bellenger protested. 'You have been talking about a huge number of sea-mines.'
'I know. I agree.' He glanced at the wall map. 'But it could be Antwerp - the pistol pointed at the heart of Europe, as Churchill once called it in World War One.'
'Makes more sense,' Bellenger agreed. 'What about time running out? You used that phrase.'
'We may have very little of it left.'
'And what, I am curious to know,' Howard enquired, 'is this Olympus business?'
He had said very little up to now, listening instead of talking, which wasn't his style. Paula lowered her head, began doodling in her notebook. How would Tweed deal with this one?
'Oh, that,' Tweed replied casually, 'is just a codeword so I know who is making the report. We change it daily.'
'I'm still puzzled,' Bellenger said. 'Could you briefly sum up the history of this problem - and tell us what progress, if any, we've made?'
'Hear! Hear!' commented Howard and straightened his tie.
'I'll cut corners to make it brief,' Tweed began. 'A bomb was placed outside Miss Grey's house at Blakeney. The bomb disposal team only survived because of information earlier provided by Commander Bellenger. Explosive used was TNT.'
'What about the thirty sea-mines . . .' Howard began.
'Assumed to be armed with the same deadly Triton Three. Colossal explosive power. Plus twenty-five bombs . . .'
'Probably twenty-four now,' Bellenger pointed out. 'One already used at Blakeney.'
'All smuggled out of Russia,' Tweed continued, 'by Igor Zarov, master planner, expert at deception operations, who walked away from the Soviets. Definitely not your normal defector. Lone wolf type. Wants to make a huge fortune while he's still young . . .'
'Don't we all,' said Howard, but no one laughed.
'Zarov may be using the name Klein. He persuaded a top Swiss watch designer to make him special timer devices and control boxes . . .'
'The one crude aspect of the sea-mine we grabbed,' Bellenger remarked.
'Zarov murders the Swiss as soon as he gets his hands on the timers and boxes. A Turkish Nestle driver is used to transport this lot from Switzerland to some unknown destination. He ends up at the foot of a precipice with his truck. More of Klein's work. Leave no one behind who could help us.'
The bullion stolen in Basle,' Paula interjected.
'Coming to that. Prior to obtaining the timers Klein plans a raid on two Basle banks, uses Triton Three -confirmed by Bellenger's experts from debris taken from the bank vaults. That's converted into ready cash — I'm guessing here - to pay for the very large team of professional cutthroats he's hired.'
'Any idea of the size of that team?' Butler asked.
'From what Lasalle told me, those recruits include Frenchmen, Luxembourgers and maybe other nations. I can only guess - but I'd say that team numbers between twenty and thirty . . .'
'Oh, my God!' It was Howard who had jerked upright. 'I had no idea it was on that scale . . .'
'Which,' Tweed pointed out, 'indicates a target of some very great magnitude. And that's the two hundred million pound question.' He glanced at the wall map. 'Where is the target? As you see, Klein
appears
to be moving steadily north from southern Europe. He's also recruited The Monk, the top marksman on the continent. And as Bellenger has emphasized, a huge amount of high-explosive is involved. Also a unit of scuba divers. A curious combination. So, can anyone look at that map and make a stab as to what the target might be?'
'Why two hundred million pounds?' Howard enquired. 'That is a gigantic sum.'
'Because a dubious banker - I won't name him - has arranged to have that sum available in gold bullion for some other purpose I don't believe in. Our friend, Klein, has a love of bullion, as you may have gathered.'
'What on earth could he be planning to persuade anyone to hand over money like that?' Howard sounded sceptical.
'Oh, a major catastrophe,' Tweed told him. 'He specializes in organizing them.'
'So what action do you propose to counter this horrendous danger?'
'First, I'd like Commander Bellenger to fly with his experts tonight to SAS HQ in Hereford where the SAS unit is assembling. He can explain to their bomb disposal men about what he's nicknamed the Cossack mines and bombs.'
'Happy to oblige,' Bellenger replied. 'We can be ready to move in one hour. Transport?'
'Two choppers are waiting for you now at Heathrow.' Tweed's tone became grave. 'I must stress to everyone in this room the vital importance of total security. Nothing told you must be even hinted at to anyone else.' He looked at Bellenger. The SAS commander at Hereford has no idea of what I've been talking about. So it must remain.'
'You said "first",' Howard pointed out. 'What else have you in mind?'
Tomorrow I'm flying to Belgium to meet Bob Newman - who at the moment is staying underground . . .'
'Exactly where?' asked Howard, staring at the map.
'If I told you with five of us sitting round this table he'd no longer be underground.' He stood up and walked over to the map, pointing to a certain area. 'We have to make a trip to a stretch of this river known as Les Dames de Meuse. I think there may be interesting developments.'
'Of what sort?' Howard persisted. 'You say you're short of time. I don't see the point.'
'What I have to do,' Tweed explained patiently, 'is to find a link between the banker who handled the bullion stolen from Basle - and Klein himself. I hope to find it there.'
'Why?'
'Because if I'm right the same banker has arranged to have two hundred million pounds more of bullion available. And I am now convinced these waterways - this network of canals from near Basle to the Meuse - is the route along which the bullion travelled. By barge. Maybe the timers and control boxes, too.'
'Sounds like a pleasure trip,' Howard snorted.
'It may turn out to be anything but that.'
28
After leaving Lara, Klein drove north from Antwerp. He crossed the border near Roosendaal into the flatlands of Holland, driving on through the night along Route D. He had changed cars in Antwerp, hiring an Audi and using false papers in the name of Meyer.
It was still dark when he drove through Rotterdam, north again, to the ancient town of Delft. Dawn was breaking as he moved along narrow cobbled streets lined with ancient buildings. In the middle of the streets flowed canals crossed by hump-backed bridges. The place was deserted as he left the town, drove a short distance further and turned into a large camping site.
Neat rows of campers lined the tracks. In many there were lights as the early-rising Dutch prepared breakfast. Grand-Pierre, alerted by his phone call from Antwerp, ushered him inside a larger camper.
'Coffee?' the Frenchman asked in his own language.
'Litres of it. I've been driving all night. How far is the training advanced?'
'Oh, we're ready when you are. I need one day's warning to assemble the whole team here in Delft.'
'Why?'
Grand-Pierre, ex-French Foreign
legionnaire
, didn't even look at Klein as he bent over the coffee percolator. The Frenchman was huge, six feet tall and heavily built with a mane of black hair. He was an expert safecracker who had never been caught. Those large hands must have a delicate touch, Klein thought as he stood in his dark coat, shuffling his feet restlessly in the confined area of the camper. Just the touch needed for handling timers.
'Why?' Grand-Pierre repeated. 'Because I have over twenty men training in the wilds of Groningen, Holland's northern province. They jog along the beaches, swim in the sea off the Frisian Islands . . .'
'
Under
the sea, you mean?'
'Of course. They attached the dummy mine you gave me to the underside of a Dutch fishing vessel . . .'
'Wasn't that a risk?' Klein demanded, taking his hands out of his pockets and almost at once thrusting them inside again.
Grand-Pierre noticed the gesture as he handed over a large mug of steaming coffee. Restless type, he thought, a bundle of energy, always wanting to move on to his next destination the moment he'd arrived. The slow-moving giant glanced at Klein's chalk-white face as his guest swallowed his coffee. Bloody brain-box with his clever face, wherever he came from.
Not that Grand-Pierre cared. What he cared for was the hard cash paid. As though reading his mind, Klein took a package from his pocket and handed it to the Frenchman with his chamois-gloved hands.
'Help to keep you going. Expenses, plus the equivalent of twenty thousand francs in Dutch guilder towards your fee.'
'No risk,' Grand-Pierre replied to Klein's earlier question, 'and you might as well, forget the job. I was there myself, underwater, when they carried out the experiment. They released the mine, swam off, and the fishermen had no idea of what had happened. You said train them, I train them. How far to the target? It's a big team to transport.'