The Stockholm Syndicate (31 page)

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Authors: Colin Forbes

Tags: #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction

BOOK: The Stockholm Syndicate
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"He says he can see a blond man running towards a lake which he will reach in about two minutes. He has a good view of the target from the top of the crag but the range is too great for opening fire. He proposes sending a cordon across country to surround the fugitive but would like a word with you."

"Beaurain here," the Belgian said into the instrument. "I want that man at all costs - preferably alive, but dead rather than let him escape."

"We're moving now, sir," Henderson's voice confirmed. "And at the base of this crag I found something odd - show you later."

Palme took a firmer grip on his machine-pistol and spoke with great conviction. "We can get him. He has kept to the gulley to make himself invisible, but that gulley winds it's marked on the map. An old stream-bed. We go straight across country. OK?"

"OK," Beaurain agreed. He had hardly spoken when Palme was moving at a steady trot away from the blackened ruin, his weapon held diagonally across his body ready for immediate use. Behind the sturdy Swede followed Beaurain and Louise.

They soon saw that Palme knew what he was talking about. Because of their starting point and Norling's present position they had a good head start on Henderson and his circling cordon. The trio led by Palme would reach the blond-haired man first. Arriving at the deep gulley, they went down one side, crossed it, climbed the other side, and Louise gasped when she saw the view.

Without her realising it they had been climbing gently since leaving the area of the house and now they were on a low ridge with the ground ahead falling away from them. The boomerang shape of a lake spread out below, unruffled by even a whisper of breeze, the sun blazing down on the startling blue surrounded by the yellow of the rape. Norling was only a few hundred metres ahead. They had got him!

"The plane - the float-plane - concealed in those reeds!"

It was Beaurain who first grasped Norling's plan of escape and - because of the accident to Fondberg's chopper - how close he was to succeeding. Away to their left and behind them Henderson's men were spread out, in correct military fashion, in a fan-shaped cordon. It was Beaurain who detected the terrible danger.

"
Get down! Drop flat for God's sake!
"

The fair-haired man had turned, seen the trio and his reaction was immediate. Standing quite still he fumbled inside one of his pockets, fiddled briefly with something between both hands, hoisted his right arm up and bowled the missile overarm. His hand returned to his pocket for a second object. The first grenade was sailing though the air heading straight for where Beaurain and his companions had been standing.

They sprawled flat among the rape, hugging the ground. There was an ear-splitting explosion. Debris rained down on their reclining figures. Norling had their range. Beaurain shouted a second warning. "Lie still, don't move, don't show him where we are." He had just finished his warning when the second grenade burst. Again debris was scattered all round them.

Beaurain did not have to shout a third warning. Both Louise and Palme remained perfectly still. Seconds later a third grenade detonated. Then a fourth ... a fifth ... a sixth... The grenades were landing further and further away from where they lay. Norling was running to the lake, stopping briefly to hurl another grenade, then running again. Beaurain stood up cautiously. His caution was wasted.

Norling had already reached the float-plane and was inside the cabin, and the engine burst into action. As Louise and Palme climbed to their feet, Beaurain aimed his Smith & Wesson and fired twice. It was quite hopeless. Out of range. "Use the machine-pistol!" he shouted to Palme.

Palme was already cuddling the stock against his shoulder, but as he did so the float-plane streaked out across the lake and he didn't even bother to press the trigger. As Henderson came running up followed by two of his men Beaurain shrugged his shoulders and lit a cigarette. He watched as the float-plane lifted off and continued its flight at a low altitude, vanishing over the fold of a hill.

Fondberg's chopper," Henderson suggested. "If we get him in the air fast..."

"Which we can't - because in landing he lost his tail rotor." Smoking his cigarette, Beaurain looked down towards the lake where the float-plane had been half hidden inside the belt of reeds. "Stig, he took off in one hell of a hurry. Go down to where that float-plane was and see if you can find anything. We'll meet you back at the drive."

When they arrived back on the highway Beaurain told Fondberg the bad news and the Säpo chief put out a call for the float-plane on his radio. "Not that you can expect much," he warned Beaurain. "The trouble is we have plenty of those machines buzzing about in this part of the world - and especially further south where the country is littered with lakes. So what have we discovered?"

"You tell me," Beaurain suggested.

"The Syndicate's explosives dump - probably stockpiled for bank robberies - and their temporary headquarters which is now a pile of smoking rubble. That's it."

"Except look who's coming down the road."

Ed Cottel had walked. Since the unknown gunman had shot out his two front tyres he had been walking back down the highway. And Cottel objected to walking, couldn't see the point of it when there were things called automobiles available. He gave Fondberg and Beaurain a terse account of his experiences while Louise listened; then he absorbed what Beau-rain told him about what had happened to them.

"You say there was a Volvo 245 parked behind the house?" he checked when Beaurain had completed his story. "None of this makes much sense. One of my watchers reported Viktor Rashkin had left in a Cessna piloting himself taking off from Bromma with a flight plan for Kjula. Then he gets in a Volvo 245 and drives in this direction. It turns out that there was a Volvo 245 parked out of sight behind this house. Now you tell me the guy who peppered you with grenades before he took off in his float-plane was Dr. Theodor Norling. Are you sure?"

"There's nothing wrong with my eyesight," Louise rapped back.

"Ed, I'm more interested," Beaurain interjected, 'in who might be the killer who tried to wipe you out when you were sitting in that hired Renault off the highway."

"No idea," Cottel said brusquely.

"And who are all these watchers you keep occupied tracking the movements of Viktor Rashkin?" Beaurain persisted. "You seem to have an obsession with the Russians."

"Just with one Russian - because I'm convinced he fits in with the Stockholm Syndicate somewhere. I'll provide you with my record of those movements and see whether you can spot any pattern. As to my watchers - it's taken me God knows how long to build up a network of people throughout Scandinavia at all the airfields and seaports, people who've no idea who is employing them but like the money they get." A dry smile wrinkled his tanned face. "I guess Harvey Sholto would blow his top if he knew how I was using the funds I get from Washington. You've no idea how adept I've become at what we call creative accountancy."

"What we call fiddling expenses," Louise remarked.

"So now perhaps you understand," the American continued, directing his remark to Beaurain with a hint of sarcasm, 'my obsession with the Russians."

"No, frankly I don't. You seem to have forgotten that one of the Syndicate's own people deliberately murdered Serge Litov at Stockholm Central after he had served his purpose.
Touché
- you said the Russians fitted in with the Syndicate somewhere."

To hell with you," Cottel replied amiably.

"How much power does Harvey Sholto have in Washington?" Beaurain asked out of the blue.

"You don't mention his name - even favourably - if you want to keep your job on the government payroll. Officially he doesn't even exist."

"I see," the Belgian replied, and Louise wondered what he saw.

 

*

 

Harry Fondberg suggested that the entire Telescope force started back for Stockholm before the patrol-car he had summoned arrived. He was going to be the innocent bystander who had spotted the house exploding from the air while on another mission.

On the return journey Palme waited until they were well clear of Fondberg before producing something from inside his windcheater. "You were right to ask me to check round where Norling took off in his float plane he commented to Beaurain. "He must have been climbing into the cockpit when he dropped this and there was no time to go back for it." "This' was a slim red folder.

"Norling carried a brief-case," Beaurain recalled. "It looks as though at the wrong moment the case came open and in his haste to get away he never noticed. The brief-case looked pretty heavy, probably crammed with these folders."

"Anything interesting?" Louise enquired.

"Give me time - I've only just released the security device. One surprise: the language used is English -or American. The spelling is American
labor
instead of
labour
."

"It's a good thing Ed Cottel is travelling in one of the other cars," Louise remarked. "I think if he heard that remark he'd blow his top."

"It might be a better thing than even you realise at this stage," Beaurain replied cryptically, his eyebrows furrowed as he rapidly read through the sheets contained inside the folder. "This is a little too damned convenient, isn't it? It could be a plant left behind deliberately. How come if it did drop out of his brief-case when he was climbing into a float-plane on the edge of a lake that the bloody thing isn't even wet?"

"Because," Palme informed him smugly, "I found it resting on the edge of an old bird's nest made of reeds and God knows what else - a big nest. And don't ask me what bird! I don't watch them."

"OK, Stig. We can take it that this is genuine."

"With Stig's discovery my own little contribution isn't going to rate very high in the history of Telescope discoveries," Henderson said apologetically. "I found it at the foot of the far side of the big crag behind the house from where Norling detonated all his explosive."

Henderson handed his discovery to Beaurain who had turned in his seat and was staring fixedly at the object Henderson was holding. As though mesmerised he reached out a hand, took the object and held it in the open palm of his hand.

"What's so exciting about that?" Louise asked.

"Thank you, Jock," Beaurain said slowly, balancing the object as though it were made of gold. "You have just handed me the final key and proof I needed as to what the Stockholm Syndicate is really all about."

"It's the broken-off heel of an elevated shoe," Louise objected. "That's all."

"That's all," Beaurain agreed sardonically.

 

*

 

From his room in the Hotel Reisen overlooking the Strommen and the Grand Hotel across the water Harvey Sholto had put in a call to the home of Joel Cody, the President's aide. It was an arrangement that had been made before he left Washington to fly to Stockholm. Any operator intercepting a call to the White House just had to listen in to that kind of call. This way Sholto could be phoning any ordinary individual.

"Appalachian calling," he opened cautiously.

"Rushmore here."

Joel Cody himself had answered, and he was alone, so Sholto could start talking. He kept his voice so low that twice Cody had to ask him to speak up.

"Cottel..." He said the name quickly and deliberately mispronounced it. '... is getting close. I persuaded him to keep his distance earlier today but he's breathing down our necks."

"Real close?" enquired Cody. "I mean, you're not panicking over nothing? This is a delicate situation and we wouldn't like it to blow up in our faces."

"I'm telling you Cottel is within spitting distance of what you wouldn't like your best friend to tell you about. To say nothing of the guy you work for. And that's not all! You ever bought a telescope, one of those things you look through to see the girl taking off her bra in the window across the way? Well, they're also breathing down our necks. Correction - they're breathing down
your
neck. And you know something? I thought you had an election coming up."

"OK, OK," Cody replied hastily. "You're the man on the spot, you decide. You have, of course, our complete backing,"

"With that I should start running. But Harvey Sholto stays in business while presidents come and go - so shove it. And I'll see what I can do."

Sholto rammed down the receiver onto the cradle before the man in Washington had time to respond. High-powered rifle or revolver, the next time he would be shooting for real. And there were a lot of people to deal with in a short space of time. Just like the old times in Vietnam. He caught sight of his bald-headed reflection in the dressing-table mirror. Still, he had once killed twenty individual men in Saigon in different parts of the city in one day. And that had been to please Washington. Correction: to
save
Washington.

 

The news which determined Beaurain's final strategy came from an old friend just arrived at the Grand Hotel. The agitation Beaurain had detected when he had visited the Baron de Graer in his office in the Banque du Nord had disappeared. This time the Baron's expression was composed as he sat in an armchair close to the bathroom where Beaurain had turned on all the taps to scramble any possible listening device hidden in the room. But despite his placidity Beaurain saw in his eyes a steely determination.

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