Authors: Colin Forbes
Then she hurried past him down the stairs. Her expression was bleak and completely lacking in warmth. Marler shrugged.
'I think,' Nield whispered, 'she's gone off you...'
In the bar Tweed walked straight over to Sharon. She looked up and gave him a smile of extreme pleasure. Putting down her file, she stood up so he could hug her.
'Just when I was getting so bored with all this work you walk in, so now I can look forward to a really entertaining evening.'
'Rather a late evening,' he said sitting down facing her.
'Oh, the night is young. Who knows? We may be here at dawn.'
'This is Keith Kent,' Tweed introduced. 'Keith, Sharon Mandeville.'
'How nice to meet such a competent-looking man for a change. I am wondering what you do for a living.'
'I'm a banker.'
'A money man. Well, they say money makes the world go round.'
'Except,' Tweed said, 'at times the lust for money, when satisfied, is sometimes succeeded by the lust for power.'
'Tweed, you are a cynic.' She laughed. 'A dyed-in-the-wool cynic.'
'Or maybe a realist.'
'Paula.' Sharon focused her attention on her. 'I'm so glad you're here. Otherwise I'd feel out-gunned. Why don't we go shopping together? There are some marvellous shops here if you know where to go.'
'I doubt if my bank balance would come up to yours,' Paula said with a smile.
'Nonsense. It would be a change to have some female company. I'm drinking champagne. I'll order another bottle.'
'Not for me,' Tweed said hastily.
'There's Paula and Keith. May I call you Keith? Good. And now, Bob, I noticed you were hobbling. You've been in the wars?'
'Slipped on a flight of stone steps in Freiburg. It's nothing.'.
Sharon waved to a waiter. She ordered two more bottles of Dom Perignon. Then she leaned towards Tweed, speaking quietly.
'Talking about company, have you seen who is at the bar?'
Tweed turned round. At the bar, which had a pale yellow front, two men were perched on bar stools, their backs to the room. Rupert and Basil Windermere. He looked back at Sharon.
'What are they doing here?'
'Lord knows. They're a nuisance. Both of them, separately, have pestered me. I gave them a very cold shoulder. I can't imagine why they turned up here — unless they followed me on the autobahn. But why would they do that?'
'Your guess is as good as mine.'
'Then, to cap it all, you haven't noticed who is at a corner table by himself over there. That boor, Ed Osborne.'
Tweed again twisted round on his banquette. At that moment Ed Osborne looked up, caught his eye, stood up and lumbered over to their table between the facing banquettes. He slapped Tweed on the back, grinning, slurring his speech.
'Hi, feller! Great to see you again. You folks mind if I join you? Guess it's OK.'
As he sat down next to Tweed he looked across at Sharon and winked. She ignored him and started chatting with Newman. Osborne had a glass of Scotch in his right hand. Waves of the drink were drifting into Tweed's nostrils.
'What brings you all, as I believe they say in our Deep South, to this part of the world?'
'What brings
you
here?' Sharon asked sharply, her expression cold.
'Good question. Very good question,' Osborne mumbled. 'Guess I can give you a good answer. Had a hard time in Washington, then in London. So I'm takin' a few days off. Kinda holiday — just roamin' around, roamin' where the spirit takes me.'
'Then I hope you're enjoying yourself,' Sharon replied, her manner still cold.
'What gets me,' Osborne went on, 'is how we all keeps turnin' up in the same places. First there was Basel, then Freiburg and now, believe it or not, Strasbourg. I reckon it's a case of who is following who?'
There was a silence. Sharon busied herself pouring champagne into glasses. Paula shook her head, thanked her. Kent leaned forward, his voice crisp.
'Maybe if we started with leaving London we'd know what is going on. Would you agree, Sharon?'
'Sorry, Keith, but you've fogged me.'
'Well, take myself. I travelled to Basel to check a bank account. Then I moved on to Freiburg because a man called Jake Ronstadt was going there.'
'A horrible man,' Sharon exclaimed. 'No manners at all.'
'I agree with you,' Paula joined in. 'He kills people - like all those victims in Britain when bombs went off in department stores. Random massacres.'
'I can't believe that, Paula,' Sharon flared up indignantly. 'You will have gathered Ronstadt is not a man I want anything to do with from what I said earlier, but the idea that he could in any way be involved with those horrific outrages is absurd. Damn it, he has a big job at the American Embassy in London.'
'What sort of job?' Paula asked.
'I'm sorry, but I have no idea.' Sharon had calmed down. 'At the Embassy we function in watertight compartments. It's the new Ambassador's idea. Something to do with security, as far as I can gather.'
'So he wouldn't be running the Executive Action Department, then?' Newman suggested. 'The EAD for short.'
'I've never heard of it.' Sharon sipped champagne, frowned. 'If it exists it sounds like a section directly controlled by the Ambassador - to ensure his decisions are carried out. He's more corporate than diplomatic, came after resigning as president of a big oil company.'
'Ruthless people,' Osborne commented, 'bosses of big oil outfits. Get up to a lot of skulduggery. Stuff the public never hears about. Washington shouldn't bring big business into diplomacy.'
'He - the Ambassador - has always been perfectly charming to me,' said Sharon. She looked up as Denise Chatel appeared, holding a file. 'Not now, Denise. Can't you see I've got company?'
'You said it was important,' Denise began.
'Well, it will have to wait. I don't get much chance of relaxation for a change. We'll deal with it later. Understand?'
Denise, looking humiliated, started leaving. On her way out she was passing close to the bar. Rupert's hand came out, wrapped itself round her waist.
'Let go of me.'
'You all play hard to get. Think I don't know that by now?' he sneered.
Newman stood up, walked over, still hobbling slightly. Reaching the bar, he laid a hand on Rupert's shoulder. He was smiling when he spoke.
'Lady doesn't want your attentions, Rupert. Doesn't like being touched by you.'
'And I'm fussy about who touches me. So kindly remove your hand from my shoulder. I never hit cripples,' he sneered viciously.
'Very wise of you.'
Newman removed his hand. In a blur of movement he bunched his fist, slammed it into Rupert's jaw. Rupert came off his stool, just managed to grab the edge of the bar to stop himself sprawling on the floor. Denise had gone as he lifted his hand, felt his jaw, glaring at Newman.
'I'll get you for this. That's a promise.'
'I say, chaps; Basil broke in, 'we do have an audience. Best to preserve our dignity in such situations, don't you think?'
'Couldn't agree more,' said Newman, and he returned to his banquette seat.
'They really are a most unpleasant couple,' Sharon commented. She looked at Newman. 'I like a man who can take care of himself.'
'You know something,' Tweed said, speaking for the first time, 'I've done a lot of driving. I feel like stretching the limbs. I think a little walk might do us good, freshen us up.'
'Good idea,' said Newman. He looked at Sharon. 'I hope that you won't think us rude.'
'Not at all. When you get back I'll be here going through my work. Must make up for lost time. Then you can come in and rescue me and we'll kill the rest of the champagne.'
Tweed was helping Paula on with her coat in the lobby while Kent and Newman collected theirs from reception. Marler appeared, already attired in his coat. Tweed told him what they proposed doing.
'I've just come back from checking where they park guests' cars. Ronstadt's black Audi is there.'
'I thought Ronstadt and his thugs might be hidden away inside this hotel,' Tweed remarked as they wandered outside. 'It is high time they were taken off the face of the planet.'
'Setting yourself up as bait?' Marler suggested.
'I'm worried about the passage of time. I want us to be able to stop having to think about Ronstadt and his lethal tricks. And look who we have here.'
Butler and Nield, muffled in coats, stood just out of sight of the hotel entrance. Marler told them to follow a little way behind them.
'Ronstadt and Co. are probably going to put in an appearance,' he warned.
'Can't wait,' said Butler.
Paula slipped her hand inside her shoulder bag, withdrew her Browning.32 automatic, slipped her hand under her coat. Again the arctic air hit them after the cosy warmth of the interior of the Hotel Regent.
They walked past a waterway and Paula paused to peer down over a steep wall. The water was about fifteen feet below here. She glanced back, saw a flight of steps leading down to a small landing stage. A small open launch was tied up to the foot of the steps. She thought she saw movement, then decided it was her imagination. They walked on, trailed by Marler with Nield and Butler.
'You really have to see this part of Strasbourg by night — this way you appreciate its beauty, its strange character,' Tweed said.
'Strange is the word,' Paula agreed, huddled in her coat.
Their footsteps were the only sounds in the dark of the night. No traffic anywhere. No people at this hour. Paula was fascinated by the architecture. Hulking ancient buildings leant out over cobbled streets. She saw that many of them had pointy gables, that the roof line went up and down and in the walls was embedded a criss-cross of old wooden beams. Most of the buildings were four storeys high with an endless variety of tiny dormer windows in the ski-slope roofs above, dormers perched so precariously they seemed to be on the verge of sliding down into the streets below. One grotesque old house was so crowded with dormers on its roof arid looked like Gothic gone mad. She was reminded of a scene from Grimm's Fairy Tales - with the emphasis on grim.
'It gets claustrophobic,' she said, 'with the narrow streets and the buildings looming over us.'
'It's unique, as far as I know,' said Tweed.
They had followed a complex route, turning into different streets at almost each corner. Always, to their right, the stone wall rose above the pavement and, beyond it, another waterway. She was beginning to feel lost.
'I hope someone knows the way back,' she remarked. 'I do,' replied Tweed.
'A stranger would need a map.'
'I've got one in my head from the last time I was here. And I noticed in the hotel they have another kind of map - one showing the network of waterways for people hiring boats.'
Paula was disturbed by the areas of dark shadow where the moonlight couldn't penetrate. At intervals there were street lamps and then more shadows. She kept looking back and always Marler and his two friends were a short distance behind them. Marler waved at her encouragingly. She waved back, then stopped.
'We've actually walking in a circle to take us back to the hotel,' Tweed told her.
'I can hear a strange noise. Water rushing.'
'That is the sluice, which is quite spectacular. Heaven help anyone who takes the wrong turning on the waterways and finds himself being carried down it. They do have notices on the walls warning sailors. And we're nearly at Pont St-Martin. That's the bridge nearest the sluice. We might take a look at it.'
Tweed had started walking again and the sound of water rushing at immense speed grew louder. Paula stopped again.
'What is it now?' Tweed asked gently.
'I can hear a different sound. Chug-chug. Like the motor of a launch.'
'You're right. And it's coming closer.
Don't
look over that wall,' he warned.
'I'd take his advice,' said Kent. 'Stay where you are now.'