A car engine. No, bigger than that. A van perhaps. Muffled voices. A radio playing pop music. Roads. Bumpy. Slow to begin with, as if they were locked in city traffic. Then faster as they escaped the jams.
There was such a distance between her and the world now. She’d no longer any idea how many days had passed since those strange events when they went to see a man with a long white beard surrounded by strange, funny creatures with black faces who kept handing you spicy sweets from nets with long handles.
It might have been a dream. Or an odd nightmare, like the one with the monster. That seemed gone too. It was as if her life was winding down, shrinking into itself, intent on becoming nothing at all.
How long now?
Fifteen minutes. More. Then they came to a halt.
Metal doors clanked open. She heard a brisk breeze. The whine of a distant plane. Voices. Two men talking, low tones in a language she couldn’t follow.
It was about her. Of that she was sure. Not that she knew how.
When they dragged out the bag she banged her head on something. A wheel arch maybe. It was hard. Hurt.
She whimpered.
‘Quiet!’ a man yelled in Dutch.
Natalya Bublik, eight years old, not afraid, just concerned, curious too, curled up more tightly inside the stinking holdall.
They were carrying her. Two men. The bag in their arms.
She wondered where.
Shaking and rattling back towards Centraal station. Other trains joining them as the lines converged.
‘Where?’ Hanna asked again.
‘Look around you,’ he said.
She did. An elderly woman. A teenager with a pair of earphones clamped round his skull. Vos in the corner, pretending not to see her.
‘For the love of God I gave you the money. Where?’
‘Little girls play games. Why shouldn’t we? Hide and seek. Good day, Mrs Bublik.’
She slammed her fist hard against the window. Vos was staring at her now.
Hanna marched over, told him what she’d heard.
‘Is he saying she’s on the train?’ she asked.
Head turning, one way, the other. People starting to look.
‘Where do I start?’
‘Hanna . . .’
He had his own phone out now. Pressing a button.
‘Not here,’ she muttered. ‘How big’s the train?’
‘Hanna . . .’ His hand was on her arm. She barely noticed. ‘I’ll have officers waiting in the station. We’ll go through every carriage. If Natalya’s here . . .’
‘If . . . ?’ Her bright eyes glared at him. ‘
If
. . . ?’
Such a short journey. They were slowing down already. The vast canopy of Centraal started to enfold them. Vos made a rapid call to control, got straight through to the station office. Told them to have a team waiting on the platform.
‘You never thought they’d let her go, did you?’ she snapped. ‘You think she’s dead.’
She was ready to storm off, one way or the other.
‘We’ll search the train,’ he said. ‘We’ll search the train. If we’re lucky—’
‘People like me don’t get lucky, Vos! Haven’t you noticed?’
The few passengers in the carriage shuffled down the stairs. Uniform officers milling around the grey platform as it appeared.
All the mundane activities of Centraal. Announcements. Farewells on the concourse. People lost and bored, some with the dead-eyed look of the reluctant traveller, others excited at the journey ahead.
‘We’ll find her,’ Vos said.
Bakker got into the van without asking and Van der Berg followed. She smiled at two stony-faced AIVD officers in the back.
Then they headed across the city, past Centraal station where blue lights were flashing on a line of patrol cars parked outside, on to a quiet cobbled street. She saw the name: Rapenburg. Looked at Van der Berg. He shrugged. This was new to him too, and the two AIVD men weren’t about to enlighten them.
They came to a halt outside a plain, pale brick terrace house. Still just the two black Mercedes and the van. Seven AIVD officers checking their weapons, earpieces in. Bakker and Van der Berg shuffling their feet trying to look inconspicuous.
Fransen pulled the team together behind the van, glared at the two police officers as if they didn’t matter, then briefed the group.
Short and to the point. Khaled was inside. The real one this time. He was with Henk Kuyper and ready to offer a deal. Negotiate safe passage for him from the incident in Leidseplein and the Bublik kidnapping. Then he’d give them the Barbone network on a plate.
‘Do you believe him?’ Bakker asked.
‘Doesn’t matter if I believe him or not,’ Fransen said. ‘He thinks we’re about to sit down for a nice polite conversation.’ She tapped the weapon of the tall, hatchet-faced AIVD officer next to her, failed to notice he didn’t like that. ‘He’s wrong.’
She glanced at each of her men in turn.
‘Ready?’
Van der Berg walked to the door. His finger hovered over the bell.
‘No,’ Fransen said. ‘We do this our way. I want an entrance.’
She looked at the tall officer, the one whose gun she’d stroked. Still missed the fact he clearly wasn’t impressed.
‘Take it down,’ she said.
And then the ram was smashing the door to pieces.
Ten minutes after the train had pulled into Centraal every carriage had been cleared. No young girls looking for their mother. No one who looked in the least suspicious.
Hanna Bublik had the air of defeat about her. Angry and final.
Vos stood with her by the platform. He’d checked with De Groot finally. Heard the news about Smits’s murder. Mirjam Fransen thought she had a lead. But it was to Barbone, not the kidnap. Nor was she offering any details, though Bakker and Van der Berg were along for the ride.
‘At least they’ve got something,’ the commissaris grumbled. ‘I’m sorry. It was worth a try.’
‘We haven’t finished . . .’
‘We’ve lost the girl, haven’t we?’ De Groot said in a soft and mournful tone. ‘I hate saying it. God knows—’
‘No,’ Vos interrupted. ‘You don’t know that. Neither do I . . .’
‘Pieter. I appreciate your concerns.’
‘This is about money, Frank. It has been ever since they handed Natalya over.’
Silence. De Groot was listening. Then he asked, ‘So?’
‘So you don’t destroy something of value. You realize . . .’
Bought and sold. Mother and daughter. Laura Bakker had said that and it was true.
‘You realize the value of your asset,’ Vos added.
De Groot made sympathetic noises, nothing more.
‘I’ve got to go,’ Vos told him and went back to Hanna Bublik.
She was crying. The way hard, brave women did. The tears stood in her eyes. She wiped them away with the sleeve of her new brown coat. Acted as if she should have been ashamed. Wouldn’t let them roll down her cheek.
‘You have to tell me, Hanna.’
‘Tell you what?’
‘The money. Where did the rest of it come from?’
She thought for a second then said, ‘A pimp. I said I’d work for him.’
‘Name?’
One moment’s hesitation then she said, ‘Cem Yilmaz. He’s—’
‘Turkish,’ Vos broke in. ‘Lives in Spooksteeg. Likes to pretend he’s legitimate.’
‘Isn’t he?’
This woman could spot a lie a mile off.
‘As far as I know,’ he replied.
‘I think he had someone break into my apartment and steal some of my things. He’s been trying to force me to work for him. I wondered . . .’
She closed her eyes, was in pain for a moment.
‘I wondered if it was him. If he maybe had her . . .’
‘Why? You have to be specific. If I’m to get a warrant . . .’
‘I don’t know! No good reason. I said no to him. Lots of times. He doesn’t like that. He . . .’
She unbuttoned the coat, dragged up her jumper, lifted the dressing and showed him the raw scar on her shoulder.
The initials in an odd script: CY.
Then pulled the sweater down again.
Marnixstraat had a small team that specialized in human trafficking. A bright, brave woman called Lotte de Jonge ran it. Vos called her, cut through the small talk, and asked if Yilmaz had any contact with people-smuggling organizations.
For a few seconds he heard nothing but the sound of a keyboard.
‘Just checking. To make sure. We’ve never even heard a whisper he’s got a trafficked girl on his books. He’s too smart to get involved directly.’
‘How about kidnapping?’
It was out of her area but she was on the system anyway. Nothing there she said.
He put Lotte de Jonge on hold and went back to Hanna. Ran through what had happened between her and Yilmaz again. It was too flimsy to get any kind of warrant, even if there was time.
‘OK,’ he said. ‘What about his people? Who’ve you met?’
A shrug.
‘There’s an old creep who collects the rent. Jerry. I think he works for him.’
‘What’s his—’
‘I don’t know his name! He’s about a hundred years old.’
She was close to giving up. He couldn’t allow this.
‘A man like Yilmaz distances himself from anything dangerous. He’d use intermediaries. If you met him with someone. Anyone . . .’
‘He had a friend,’ she said and wiped her face with her sleeve. ‘More than a friend. They were wrestling.’ She thought for a moment. ‘Dmitri.’
‘I need more than Dmitri,’ Vos pleaded. ‘A last name.’
‘I don’t have a last name. He was Russian. I’m sure of it. He had these horrible tattoos.’
She fought to remember.
‘There was a pair of eyes on his stomach. A skull in a basket on his chest . . . A bleeding heart inside a triangle. That was across his back.’
He relayed that to the woman on the other end of the line.
‘Jesus,’ De Jonge said. ‘That sounds bad.’
‘Why?’
‘It’s Russian jail code. The skull means he’s killed someone. The eyes . . . he’s gay. The heart . . .’
The keyboard sounded as if it was working overtime.
‘The heart?’ he prompted.
‘Just checking. It means he’s a paedophile. I think I’ve got a match. Someone on the European system with those tattoos. Let me send you a photo.’
The picture was on the handset almost instantly. An obvious prison mugshot. Cyrillic writing underneath. Vos showed it to Hanna. She looked at it, nodded.
‘Who is he, Lotte?’ he asked.
‘As bad as they come. Dmitri Volkov. Thirty-seven. Male prostitute. We’ve intel he moves kids around for a few cells. Never been able to prove it, of course.’
Hanna was watching him. Aware something was happening.
‘Don’t suppose you know where Dmitri lives?’ Vos asked.
‘I can try to find out,’ she said.
A beep on Vos’s line. He looked at the incoming call. Switched to it.
‘Frank,’ he said before De Groot could speak. ‘I thought we were keeping this quiet.’
‘Not any more,’ the commissaris told him. ‘They think they’ve found Khaled. I want you there. Get yourself a car.’
Bakker and Van der Berg came in behind the AIVD team. Down a long corridor into a room turning violent and noisy. Henk Kuyper stood up and got out of their way the moment they arrived.
There was a man opposite them. Big. Misshapen somehow. Fat but all the bulk was around his waist. He sat at a desk, arms folded, waiting for them, cigarette in his heavy right hand.
Looked up, furious, when he saw the force he faced.
Got to his feet, arms flying, scattering some papers from the desk.
‘What is this?’ he yapped. ‘I told Kuyper. I’ll talk to you people. I can be your friend.’
Fransen stopped in front of him, told the lead officer with her, the tall one with the craggy face and the black suit, to cuff him.
The briefest of struggles, one Khaled wasn’t going to win. The cigarette fell to the floor. He was shouting a lot, in foul-mouthed Dutch.
Hands behind his back, held by the AIVD man, still yelling.
‘You can let him go now,’ Fransen ordered.
‘He’s offering to cooperate,’ Kuyper said, arms folded, back against the wall. ‘I think he’s a middleman. A fixer. That’s all.’
‘That’s
all?
’ Khaled laughed.
The rest of the AIVD team started to hunt around the office, opening filing cabinets, poking at things.
Fransen walked up to him and said, ‘Give me Barbone and I’ll put you on a plane anywhere you like. Money in your pocket. A new passport.’
‘Natalya Bublik too,’ Bakker added, getting a filthy look from Fransen for her pains.
Khaled shrugged off the man behind him. Gave a good impression of outrage.
‘Who is this woman? I told you, Kuyper. I deal with your boss. Not some bitch with a mouth on her . . .’
She didn’t like that. Marched straight up. Face in his. The two of them between the chair and the desk he’d used.
Bakker watched intently. Trying to understand this. Something wasn’t right.
‘I am his boss, you moron,’ Fransen barked at him. ‘Head of AIVD in Amsterdam. I report straight to The Hague. If you want a deal I can cut it. There’s no one else.’
A pause to let him understand this.
‘Then take these stupid handcuffs off me,’ Khaled said.
‘They stay on until you give me something.’ She got even closer. Almost touched him and he didn’t like that. ‘An address. Some names. A reason to believe.’
Something in his face. Doubt. Fear even.
‘Do that,’ she added, ‘and I’ll be grateful. Do that . . .’
His hands shook behind his back. Bakker thought she spotted something odd beneath the heavy cardigan.
Khaled cast his eyes around the room as if calculating something. How many people there.
‘This is wrong . . .’ Bakker started to say.
But by then Khaled was moving. He bent forward, pushed his big frame into Mirjam Fransen. Launched himself at her, taking the two of them down onto the desk. Pumping with his chest, banging Fransen against the stained wooden surface, pressing her down constantly.
Looking for a button, Bakker thought straight away.
‘He’s got something on!’ Bakker yelled. ‘Dirk . . .’
The detective was moving too. So were most of the AIVD officers, racing out of the little office, down the corridor. Henk Kuyper among them.
Khaled fought to press himself down once more to force the explosive vest hard into the woman beneath him.