Authors: Campbell Armstrong
And then, as if in response to an order from an unknown source, the mob dispersed, some disappearing in the direction of the Görlitzer Bahnhof Station, others hurrying toward the Reichenberger Strasse or vanishing along sidestreets off the Oranienstrasse. They split into small groups, discarding their swastika accoutrements as they went.
Buchboden stepped out of the alley. All around him in the reflections of fire people lay on the pavements, women clutched each other and wept, a child went screaming past, clothes aflame. The scene was chaotic, insane: all sense of order had disintegrated for a few frenzied minutes, as if some mass craziness had possessed those young men and women briefly, a collective hallucination of savage brevity. Buchboden wandered across the street, avoiding a burning car, seeing three men gathered around a woman who was clearly dead, hearing cries, angry curses, noticing firelight glisten from broken shards of plate glass. He gazed at sparks rising from the roof of a building, a swift orange lick of flame whipping up into the wintry sky.
They had done their job well.
Buchboden walked to a corner, stepping past the injured, the dead. A Greek woman lay against a wall, the side of her face bloodied, her skull battered. A man, presumably her husband, hovered around her in panicky concern and helplessness. He looked at Buchboden imploringly. Help me, do something, help me. Buchboden continued to move. He couldn't help. He couldn't do anything. He made a gesture of sympathy â what more was expected of him? He heard sirens, ambulances, fire engines. The night was filled with noise. The sounds of law and order and sanity: too late. Too late again.
Buchboden saw a patrol car draw up a few yards away. Three uniformed cops came out, armed with rifles. Buchboden stepped toward them. He recognized none of them. He showed them his ID and they were immediately deferential.
âSkinheads,' Buchboden said. âOur young Nazi friends. They scattered all over the place. You'll probably round up a few if you can get through this mess,' and he gestured along the street, where another car suddenly exploded, blowing out the window of a bookshop. Somebody screamed.
The cops hurried away on foot even as more patrol cars arrived. A fire engine rumbled along the street, men unravelling hoses hurriedly. Two ambulances appeared, medics emerged, stretchers ready. Nurses and doctors wandered along the pavements, wondering where to start. Buchboden lit a cigarette in his gloved hand. Madness on a cold night; an asylum might have released its incurable in this part of the city. Fires raged. The street was an inferno.
There had to be twenty cop cars on the scene now. Another fire engine appeared, more ambulances. Somebody strolled toward Buchboden. It was Grunwald, who worked out of the same office as Buchboden at the Platz der Luftbrücke. Grunwald was young, naïve, one of life's optimists.
âIt's hard to grasp,' he said. He shook his head slowly. It was the gesture of a man whose basic nature was generous, an incorruptible man. âI just don't see any point to this â¦' He gazed the length of the street. âWhen did you get here?'
âI just arrived,' Buchboden said.
âYou heard about the other business with the Ossis?'
Buchboden said he hadn't.
âTwenty-three dead at the Brandenburg Gate. For what? For what?' Grunwald looked bewildered, as if he'd just seen a rampaging beast that defied any zoological category.
âThat's a mystery a little too profound for me to unravel,' Buchboden answered. âThe human savage.'
âThe human savage,' said Grunwald, whose clean-shaven face was illuminated by flame and looked glossy. âIt's fucking satanic.'
Buchboden pondered this description a moment. Satanic: no, it wasn't quite right. He laid a hand on Grunwald's sleeve. Grunwald looked despairingly at him. âFirst the killings at the Brandenburg Gate. And now this. I'd call that satanic,' he said.
Buchboden said, âI don't believe in supernatural agencies, Gerhardt. Only human ones.'
Grunwald seemed not to have heard. He said, âWhat's going on? What the
fuck
is going on?'
Buchboden shrugged. He could already see the next day's newspapers, the analyses of events. Columnists, editorial writers, would be speculating on whether the second demonstration of the night had been planned in advance or if it had spawned itself out of the violence around the Brandenburg Gate. They would contemplate the possibility of a connection between the two outrages and wonder if it were some mad coincidence of rage and destruction. There would be laments, the beating of breasts, deep concerns expressed over the state of the German nation: since the Second World War, Germans had become accustomed to analysing their collective psyche in print. Buchboden could see it all. He wouldn't even have to read the goddam papers. A nation at war with itself. The primitive animal rises again. The spectre over the land. All that and more.
His attention was drawn by the appearance of two uniformed policemen who were dragging a young man along the pavement. The kid, maybe eighteen, wore a black leather jacket, the customary boots, and on the back of his hand was a gothic tattoo, perhaps a bat, Buchboden couldn't tell. The kid had blood running from a wound on his forehead. He blinked at Buchboden. He had a glazed, druggy expression.
âWe caught him in an alley,' one of the uniforms said. âTrying to hide. The fucker.'
âI had nothing to do with this,' the kid said. He was all defiance and hardness. âGo ahead. Got any eyewitnesses?'
Buchboden pushed the kid against the wall. âHow come you're bleeding?'
âI don't know. Somebody hit me. I was minding my own fucking business. Walking along. That's all.'
âSing me another song,' Buchboden said. He turned to one of the uniforms. âTake him to my office. I'll talk to him there. And anybody else you might round up. Bring them along. It might be quite a party.'
Buchboden released the kid, who raised a hand to his wound. âI wasn't involved in any of this,' he said.
Buchboden turned away. He knew there would be a long night ahead of him, interrogations, taciturn kids with nothing much to say, nothing much to offer by way of explanation. They'd regard the incident as some kind of happening, as if that were justification enough. Part of the
Szene
, nothing else. Beyond that, they'd be sullen and indifferent. Even Karl-Heinz Buchboden, notorious for his interrogative expertise, wouldn't get anything out of them. As Nightshade, he wouldn't be trying too hard in any event.
TWENTY-FIVE
LONDON
I
N HIS OFFICE
P
AGAN FOUND A MEMO FROM
N
IMMO
.
F
URTHER TO MY
meeting with the American Ambassador, I demand that in future any aspect of the investigation that involves the American Embassy or its personnel must be cleared by me, personally, in advance. Under no circumstances will you disregard this. In addition, I await your progress report.
Pagan pushed the sheet aside.
He imagined Nimmo and the Home Secretary having a little chat with Caan. He thought of the undercurrents of such a conversation, the Ambassador talking in his most cordial manner, the Home Secretary listening with his customary doped expression, Nimmo into his appeasement mode.
Pagan wasn't sure how to respond to the memo. He could report his conversation with Burr, but he reckoned that Nimmo would consider it the gossip of an old man who was either resentful or demented. Willie Caan involved in skulduggery? Unthinkable, out of the question. Caan was beyond reach, unassailable. He was a Good Guy, he took HIV-positive kids from the decrepit inner cities of England to Disneyland. He did Good Deeds. Besides, he represented a country from which, in ways too complex to unravel, the United Kingdom had come to expect patronage and support.
A shadow had been nagging Pagan ever since the meeting with Burr. If The Undertakers existed, and Caan knew about them, then the Ambassador was involved â however remotely â with the death of Bryce Harcourt; which meant there had to be some link, even at many very careful removes, between the Ambassador and Carlotta. And if Caan was being kept abreast of the investigation by Nimmo or the Home Secretary, what did that imply?
Everything Pagan passed to George Nimmo would go ultimately to Grosvenor Square. Nothing was secret. Confidentiality was a joke
.
And Caan had an inside track, a fast track
.
Pagan wandered the room, worrying over this consideration. He could hardly go to George and tell him to give Caan absolutely nothing. Nimmo wouldn't entertain such a notion. The alternative was simple. He'd be very selective about what he reported to Nimmo. And if George felt he was being ignored or sidetracked, screw it. It was no time to show George Nimmo, yo, a whole deck of cards.
Billy Ewing entered Pagan's office. âThis just came in.' He laid a fax on Pagan's desk. The message was from the Sûreté in Paris and had been signed by Claude Quistrebert. It was addressed to Pagan and stated that somebody using the name Karen Lamb had rented a car from Hertz in Paris. She'd given her destination as Marseille. The car had been found, seemingly abandoned, in the town of Chartres. Karen Lamb had apparently disappeared.
End of message, end of trail, Pagan thought.
âShe's playing games,' Ewing said. âRents a car, informs the Hertz people where she's going, then dumps it. At which point she either gets picked up by somebody else, probably by prearrangement, or she finds another means of transport out of Chartres. She's making a maze, Frank. But it doesn't tell us where the hell she is, does it?'
Pagan sat back in his chair. He thought about Carlotta and wondered if she'd changed her appearance. She might be unrecognizable. Plastic surgery. Disguises. Even if he were to issue a photograph of her to the Press, what good could come of it? There would be the usual series of false sightings and reports from cranks and crackpots. He didn't need that clamour.
Pagan closed his eyes. He was thinking of the photograph that had been taken of Carlotta in Rio, the shadowy male figure in the background, that little stroke of familiarity he'd felt. But it led nowhere. It faded out in the dim recesses of memory. Who was the guy?
He looked at Ewing. âIs Foxie around?'
âTold me to tell you he'd gone out hunting for somebody called McLaren. Said you'd know.'
Pagan massaged his eyelids in a weary way. âIf he needs me, he can call me at home.'
He went back to Holland Park and sat for a time listening to the silences of the apartment. Familiar sounds â the buzz of the refrigerator, the click of the thermostat in the water-heater â struck him as strange for some reason. Perhaps he'd been gone too long; perhaps he needed a change in his life. He pondered the alleged existence of The Undertakers, considered the complicity of Ambassador Caan, thought about Jake Streik. He was restless, pacing the apartment. In the kitchen he unwrapped a ham sandwich he'd bought at the deli down the street. Bland. Brennan Carberry would probably have suggested mustard, Dijon or an exotic brand he'd never heard of. He chewed as he wandered through the rooms. He put the half-eaten sandwich down on the bedside table. He wasn't in the mood for fodder. His head was buzzing. He was juggling names, possibilities, connections; gridlock in his skull.
The apartment was confining. He had to get out. He changed his clothes, put on a clean overcoat, and went downstairs. He got into the Camaro, and drove without any sense of direction, without conscious purpose. But he knew in his heart where he was headed. Why deny it? He passed the black windshaken expanse of Hyde Park, and then he was in Park Lane. He stopped the car outside the Hilton. He went into the lobby, approached the desk and asked for Brennan Carberry. He was directed to the house telephone. He dialled her room number. She picked up and said, âHello, Frank.'
âHow did you know it was me? You psychic?'
âWho else do I know in London? Where are you?'
âIn the lobby.'
âWell? Come on up.'
He walked to the lifts, rode to the ninth floor, wondered what he was doing here. It was an easy question to answer on one level: the girl attracts you. You're lonely. Perplexed. But other levels were more difficult to reach. Did he want involvement? Was he looking for something
meaningful?
God help me, he thought. No, this was surely something else: infatuation, say. Or simple need.
She was standing in the doorway of her room when he stepped out of the lift. She smiled, raised a hand; she was barefoot and wearing a black velvet robe, knee-length.
âEnter,' she said.
He stepped into the room, she shut the door.
âI hope I'm not disturbing you,' he said.
âIt depends on your definition. You can disturb people in different ways. It doesn't always have to be unpleasant.'
He gazed at her face. There was an air of expectancy in her expression.
Pagan scanned the room, looked at the newspapers and magazines strewn across the bed, an open box of chocolates on the bedside table. A single lamp was lit; the shadows were calming, but he felt awkward and wondered why she kept having this effect on him. He recalled the egg salad sandwich, the shredded mess he'd made of his paper napkin. He had the feeling that if he were to embrace her he'd somehow manage to break her spine or bring about some kind of calamity.
âI should go,' he said. He looked at his watch.
âDon't be ridiculous. You've only just arrived. Sit. Relax. Get comfortable. Have a chocolate. Here.'
She held the box toward him.
âI'm trying to give them up,' he said.
Was his desire for her a means of dismissing the variety of problems that confronted him? Easy to deal with on that level: Brennan Carberry as a rocket leaving planet Earth. Up up and away. No more conundrums, perplexities. The desire was suddenly strong; it had intensified, opened out into other possibilities. A mysterious kind of flowering had gone on. He remembered the way she'd touched him in the sandwich shop in Soho. He recalled the feel of her skin. He wanted to touch her even now â so why was he restraining himself?