"Yes, of course I have. But that"s last year"s news..."
Nagy immediately detected the change in tone from contempt to cautious interest - concealing avid interest. He played his fish.
"Two hundred francs and I"m not arguing about the price. It"s entirely non-negotiable. You could still catch tomorrow"s edition. And I can tell you how to check out what I may tell you - with one phone call."
"Tell me a little more..."
"Either another Kruger case, this time nearer home, or something equally big. That"s all you get until you agree terms. Is it a deal? Yes or no. And I"m putting down this phone in thirty seconds. Counting now..."
"Hold it! If you"re conning me..."
"Goodbye, Jaccard..."
"Deal! Two hundred francs. G.o.d, the gambles I take. Give."
"Robert Newman - you have heard of Robert Newman? I thought you probably had. He"s just come in on Flight SR 837 from London. You think he arrives late in the evening anywhere without a purpose? And he looked to be in one h.e.l.l of a hurry..."
"You said I could check this out," Jaccard reminded him.
"He"s staying at the Hotel des Bergues. Call the place - ask to speak to him, give a false name. Christ, Jaccard, you do know your job?"
"I know my job," Jaccard said quietly. "Come over to my office now and the money will be waiting ..."
Arthur Beck sat behind his desk, a forgotten cup of cold coffee to his left, studying the fat file on Lee Foley. A good selection of photos - all taken without the subject"s knowledge. A long note recording that he had resigned from the CIA, that he was now senior partner in the New York outfit, CIDA, the Continental International Detective Agency. "I wonder..." Beck said aloud and the phone rang.
"I"m so sorry I didn"t phone earlier.. Tripet in Geneva was full of apologies. "An emergency was waiting for me when I got back to the office... a reported kidnapping at Cologny... it turned out to be a false alarm, thank G.o.d..."
"Not to worry. I have plenty to occupy myself with. Now, any developments?"
"The Mongrel - Julius Nagy - confirmed exactly your description of Foley. He is somewhere in Geneva - or he was when he left Cointrin at seventeen hundred hours..."
"Do something for me, will you? Check all the hotels - find out where he"s staying, if he"s still there. Let me give you a tip. Start with the cheaper places - two and three-star. Foley maintains a low profile."
"A pleasure. I"ll get the machinery moving immediately ..."
Beck replaced the receiver. He rarely made a mistake, but on this occasion he had badly misjudged his quarry.
Foley, who had dined elsewhere, approached the entrance to the Hotel des Bergues cautiously. He peered through the revolving doors into the reception hall beyond. The doorman was talking to the night concierge. No one else about.
He pushed the door and walked inside. Checking his watch, he turned left and wandered up to the door leading into one of the hotel"s two restaurants, the Pavillon which overlooks the Rhone. At a banquette window table he saw Newman and Nancy Kennedy who had reached the coffee stage.
Newman had his back to the door which had a gla.s.s panel in the upper half. Foley had a three-quarter view of Nancy. Newman suddenly looked over his shoulder, Foley moved away quickly, collected his key and headed for the elevator.
The Pavillon, a restaurant favoured by the locals as well as hotel guests, was half-empty. Newman stared out of the window as several couples hurried past, heads down against the bitter wind, the women wearing furs - sable, lynx, mink - while their men were clad mostly in sheepskins.
"There"s a lot of money in this town," Nancy observed, following his gaze. "And Bob, that was a superb meal. The chicken was the best I"ve ever eaten. As good as Bewick"s in Walton Street," she teased him. "What are you thinking about?"
"That we have to decide our next move - which doesn"t mean we necessarily rush on to Berne yet..."
"Why not? I thought we were leaving tomorrow..."
"Maybe, maybe not." Newman"s tone was firm. "When we"ve finished do you mind if I take a walk along the lake. Alone. I have some thinking to do."
"You have an appointment? You"ve checked your watch three times since the main course..."
"I said a walk." He grinned to soften his reply. "Did you know that Geneva is one of the great European centres of espionage? It crawls with agents. The trouble is all the various UN outfits which are here. Half the people of this city are foreigners. The Genevoises get a bit fed up. The foreigners push up the price of apartments - unless you"re very wealthy. Like you are..."
"Don"t let"s spoil a lovely evening." She checked her own watch. "You go and have your walk - I"ll unpack. Whether we"re leaving tomorrow or not I don"t want my dresses creased." Her chin tilted at the determined angle he knew so well. "Go on - have your walk. Don"t spend all night with her..."
"Depends on the mood she"s in." He grinned again.
Newman, his sheepskin turned up at the collar, pushed through the revolving doors and the temperature plummeted. A raw wind slashed at his face. Across the road, beyond iron railings, the Rhone chopped and surged; by daylight he guessed it would have that special greenish colour of water which was melted snow from peaks in the distant Valais.
By night the water looked black. Neon lights from buildings on the opposite sh.o.r.e reflected in the dark flow. Oddly British-sounding signs. The green neon of The British Bank of the Middle East. The blue neon of Kleinwort Benson. The red neon of the Hongkong Bank. Street lamps were a zigzag reflection in the ice-cold water. Thrusting both hands inside his coat pockets he began walking east towards the Hilton.
Behind him Julius Nagy emerged, frozen stiff, from a doorway. The gnome-like figure was careful to keep a couple between himself and Newman. At least his long wait had produced some result. Where the h.e.l.l could the Englishman be going at this hour, in this weather?
Sitting in Pierre Jaccard"s cubby-hole office at the Journal de Geneve Journal de Geneve, Nagy had received a pleasant shock. Jaccard had first pushed an envelope across his crowded desk and then watched as Nagy opened it. Thirty-year-old Jaccard, already senior reporter on the paper, had come a long way by taking chances, backing his intuition. Thin-faced with watchful eyes which never smiled even when his mouth registered amiability, he drank coffee from a cardboard cup.
"Count it, Nagy. It"s all there. Two hundred. Like to make some more?"
"Doing what?" Nagy enquired with calculated indifference.
"You hang on to Newman"s tail for dear life. You report back to me where he is, where he goes, whom he meets. I want to know everything about him - down to the colour of the pyjamas he"s wearing..."
"An a.s.signment like that costs money," Nagy said promptly.
It was one of the favourite words in Nagy"s vocabulary. He never referred to a job - he was always on an a.s.signment a.s.signment. It was the little man"s way of conferring some dignity on his way of life. A man needed to feel he had some importance in the world. Jaccard was too young to grasp the significance of the word, too cynical. Had he understood, he could have bought Nagy for less.
"There"s another two hundred in this envelope," Jaccard said, pushing it across the desk. "A hundred for your fee, a hundred for expenses. And I"ll need a receipted bill for every franc of expenses..."
Nagy shook his head, made no effort to touch the second envelope. Despite Jaccard"s expression of boredom he sensed under the surface something big, maybe very big. He clasped his small hands in his lap, pursed his lips.
"Newman could take off for anywhere - Zurich, Basle, Lugano. I need the funds to follow him if I"m to carry out the a.s.signment satisfactorily..."
"How much? And think before you reply..."
"Five hundred. Two for myself for the moment. Three for expenses. You"ll get your bills. Not a franc less."
Jaccard had sighed, reached for his wallet and counted five one-hundred franc notes. Which cleaned him out. Tomorrow he"d been on his way to Munich - but he was gambling again, gambling on Newman who had cracked the Kruger case. Christ, if he could only get on to something like that he"d be made for life.
Which was how Nagy, shivering in his shabby overcoat and Tyrolean hat, came to be following Newman who had now reached the lakeside. Earlier, just before crossing the rue du Mont Blanc, the Englishman had glanced back and Nagy thought he"d been spotted. But now Newman continued trudging along the promenade, his head bent against the wind.
As he approached the Hilton, which faces the lake, the street was so deserted that Newman heard another sound above the whine of the wind. The creaking groan of a paddle steamer moored to one of the landing stages, the noise of the hull grinding against the wood of the mooring posts. A single-funnel paddle steamer going no place: it was still out of season. Waiting for spring. Like the whole of the northern hemisphere. No more neon signs across the broadening expanse of the lake. Only cold, twinkling lights along some distant street. He stopped by the outside lift and pressed the b.u.t.ton.
A small version of the external elevators which slide vertiginously up the sides of many American hotels, the lift arrived and Newman stepped inside, pressing another b.u.t.ton. It occurred to him how exposed he was as the small cage ascended - the door was of gla.s.s, the lift was lit inside, a perfect target for any marksman.
Nagy timed it carefully, running up the staircase to the first floor so he saw Newman vanishing inside the restaurant. He waited, then followed. Before entering the restaurant, Nagy removed his shabby coat, stuffed his Tyrolean hat inside a pocket, smoothed his ruffled hair and walked inside. A wave of heat beat at his bloodless face.
The restaurant is a large rectangle with the long side parallel to the lake. Newman was sitting down at a window table at the far end, a table for two. The other chair was already occupied by a girl who made Nagy stare.
The little man sat at a table near the exit, ordered coffee from the English waitress who appeared promptly - the waitresses here are of various nationalities. He studied Newman"s companion surrept.i.tiously. Some people had all the luck he thought without envy.
The girl was in her late twenties, Nagy decided, memorizing her appearance for Jaccard. Thick, t.i.tian- (Nagy called it red) coloured hair with a centre parting, a fawn cashmere (at a guess) sweater which showed off her ample figure and tight black leather pants encasing her superb legs from crotch to ankle as though painted on her. Gleaming leather. The new "wet" look. Very good bone structure - high cheekbones.
A stunner. At first Nagy thought she was a tart, then decided he was wrong. This girl had cla.s.s, something the little man respected. Exceptionally animated, their conversation gradually developed so she listened intently while Newman talked, drinking his cup of coffee at occasional intervals.
At one stage she reached across to straighten his tie, a gesture Nagy duly noted. It suggested a degree of intimacy. Something else for Jaccard. Nagy had the impression Newman was instructing her, that she asked a question only to clarify a point.
When Newman paid the bill and left she remained at the table. Nagy had a moment of indecision - who to watch now? But only a moment. Newman walked towards Nagy - and the exit, putting on his sheepskin as he walked past the little man without even a glance in his direction. Nagy, who had paid his own bill as soon as his coffee had arrived, followed.
This time Newman jibbed at the exposed elevator. He ran down the staircase and walked back briskly along the Siberian promenade. He dived inside the revolving doors of the Hotel des Bergues and went straight up to Room 406. Nancy, wearing a transparent nightdress, opened the door a few inches, then let him inside.
Was she good?" was her first question.
"You think I"m some kind of stud?" he replied genially.
"I"ll tell you something - when we arrived and you had to register, I was like a jelly inside with embarra.s.sment. Mr and Mrs R. Newman..
"The Swiss are discreet. I told you..." He had already taken off his tie. ".. they only want to see the man"s pa.s.sport. And it"s b.l.o.o.d.y freezing outside. I walked miles."
"Come to any decisions?"
"Always sleep on decisions. See how they look in the morning."
It was in the morning that the world blew up in Newman"s face.
Ten.
Geneva, 14 February 1984. -2?. The concierge called out to Newman as they made their way to the Pavillon for breakfast. Nancy had tried to persuade him to use Room Service and he had refused point-blank.
"You Americans can"t think of any other war of living except Room Service..."
He excused himself, stopping at the concierge"s desk. With a broad smile the concierge spread out the front page of the Journal de Geneve Journal de Geneve. Newman"s photograph stared back at him inside a box headed Sommaire Sommaire. The text was brief, not a wasted word.
M. Robert Newman, famous foreign correspondent (author of the bestseller KRUGER: THE COMPUTER THAT FAILED) has arrived in Geneva. He is staying at the Hotel des Bergues. We have no information as to his ultimate destination or the new story he is now working on.
"It is good to be famous, yes, no?" the concierge remarked. "Yes, no," Newman replied and gave him a franc for the paper.
His face was grim as he pushed open the door into the restaurant. Nancy had chosen the same window table, sitting in the banquette. Newman sat in the chair opposite and stared out of the window. At eight in the morning Geneva was hurrying to work, men and girls heavily m.u.f.fled against the chilling breeze.
"I"ve ordered coffee," Nancy said, breaking a croissant as she studied him. "Bob, what"s wrong?"
He pa.s.sed the newspaper across without a word, steepled his fingers and went on staring at the swollen Rhone. She read the news item and glowed, waiting until the waitress had arranged their coffee pots.
"I"m going to marry a real celebrity, aren"t I? Where did they get the photo? I rather like it..."
"From their files. It"s appeared often enough before, G.o.d knows. This changes everything, Nancy. It could be dangerous. I think I"d better leave you here for a few days. Go on to Berne alone. I"ll call you daily..."
"Like h.e.l.l you will! I"ve come to see Jesse and I won"t be left behind. Why dangerous?"
"Sixth sense..."
He paused as a small man in a shabby coat and a Tyrolean hat walked past, glancing briefly inside the restaurant and away as he caught Newman looking at him. A t.i.tian-haired girl strolled past in the same direction. She wore a short fur coat, the collar pulled up at the neck, and clean blue jeans tucked inside her leather boots. Newman winked at her and she turned her head to stare ahead.
"You"re starting early today," Nancy observed. "I saw that..."
Did you see the little man who was walking ahead of her?"
"No. Why?"
"Julius Nagy, a piece of Europe"s drifting flotsam." "Flotsam?" Nancy looked puzzled.
"One of the many losers who live on their wits, by their contacts, peddling information. He was at the airport last night. He followed us here in a cab. He could be responsible for that piece of dynamite..."
His finger tapped the Sommaire Sommaire box and then he poured coffee and broke a hard roll, covering a piece with b.u.t.ter and marmalade. Nancy, her mind in a whirl, kept quiet for a few minutes, knowing he was always in a better mood when he"d had his breakfast. box and then he poured coffee and broke a hard roll, covering a piece with b.u.t.ter and marmalade. Nancy, her mind in a whirl, kept quiet for a few minutes, knowing he was always in a better mood when he"d had his breakfast.
"You"re not going off on your own," she told him eventually. "So, what are we we going to do going to do together together?"
"Finish our breakfast. Then I"ll decide..."
But by the time he"d swallowed his fourth cup of coffee, his orange juice and consumed two rolls, the decision was taken out of his hands.
Berne. Inside a large mansion in Elfenau, the district where the wealthy live, Bruno spread out the front page of the Journal de Geneve Journal de Geneve on an antique drum table. He studied the picture of Newman carefully. on an antique drum table. He studied the picture of Newman carefully.
"So they have arrived," he said in French.
"We knew they were on the way, Bruno. The question is, will they pose a problem? If so, they will have to be dealt with - you will have to deal with them."
The large man with tinted spectacles who stood in the shadows spoke with a soft, persuasive voice. The huge living-room was dark even in the morning. Partly due to the overcast sky - and partly because heavy net curtains killed what pallid illumination filtered from the outside world.
Bruno Kobler, a hard-looking man of forty, five feet ten tall, heavily built and in the peak of physical condition, glanced towards the ma.s.sive silhouette. Light from the desk lamp glinted on the dark gla.s.ses. He was trying to gauge exactly what his employer had in mind. The man in the shadows continued speaking.
"I recall so well, Bruno, that when I was building up my chemical works it looked as though a rival might upset my calculations. I didn"t wait to see what he would do. I acted first. We are on the eve of a total breakthrough with Terminal. I will allow nothing to stand in my way. Remember, we now have the support of the Gold Club."
"So, I set up close surveillance on Newman and his woman?"
"You always come to the correct conclusion, Bruno. That is why I pay you so well ..."
Arthur Beck of the Federal Police sat with the receiver to his ear, waiting while the operator at Geneva police headquarters put him on to Tripet. A copy of the Journal de Geneve Journal de Geneve lay in front of him. As he had antic.i.p.ated, the momentum was accelerating. They were coming in. First Lee Foley, alleged detective with the CIDA, now Newman. Beck didn"t believe in coincidences - not when events were moving towards a crisis. And this morning his chief had warned him. lay in front of him. As he had antic.i.p.ated, the momentum was accelerating. They were coming in. First Lee Foley, alleged detective with the CIDA, now Newman. Beck didn"t believe in coincidences - not when events were moving towards a crisis. And this morning his chief had warned him.
"Beck, I"m not sure how much longer I"m going to be able to give you carte blanche carte blanche. Very powerful interests are at work - trying to get me to take you off the case..."