`God knows. Maurice is talking of moving on to Copenhagen. Do you know a decent hotel there?'
`The d'Angleterre,' Newman said promptly.
`Maybe we could have lunch?' she suggested, her eyes still holding his. 'I suppose you do know nowadays it's not thought too forward for the woman to chase the man?'
`We might do that – have lunch. If we can avoid Willie and the Brigadier.'
`Talk of the devil, here comes Maurice. Save me from a fate worse than death.'
Burgoyne, spruce in a check sports jacket, navy blue trousers, hand-made brogues, and with a crimson cravat at his neck, pulled up a chair. Sitting in it very erect he tugged at his moustache and gazed at both of them.
`Hope I'm not intruding – or are you beginning to start an affair?'
`I live in hope,' Newman replied in a neutral tone.
Helen's reaction was savage. She straightened up, leaned forward. Her grey eyes blazed and her tone was venomous.
`That's an outrageous suggestion. You'd do well to watch your tongue. You're not in the Army now. Bad manners in the officers' mess don't go down well in these surroundings.'
Did I drop a great big boulder in the pond?' Burgoyne asked ironically. 'It was a joke. You do know the word, Helen? Spelt j-o-k-e.'
'In the worst possible taste,' Helen fumed.
'Anyone for coffee?' Burgoyne enquired, quite unperturbed.
'I thought you were going to say anyone for tennis,' Helen continued her onslaught. 'You do realize that half the time you talk like old China hands back in Hong Kong – language thirty years out of date?'
Newman noticed a flash of fury in Burgoyne's eyes at the phrase 'old China hands'. It lasted only for a second. Burgoyne continued to be anything but conciliatory.
`I suspect I touched a raw nerve with my use of the word affair. You really must learn to conduct these things more circumspectly.'
`And you,' Helen told him, 'might learn not to butt in where you're not wanted. Half the time, back in the New Forest, you're dragging Willie and I off somewhere we don't want to go. Or hadn't you caught on?'
`Willie,' Burgoyne observed, 'will tag on to go anywhere – provided someone else is paying for the drinks, food, and accommodation.'
`For a pseudo-Brigadier you have a crude way of expressing yourself,' Helen rapped back. She looked at Newman. 'I'm feeling peckish, Bob.'
`Then let's try the Grill Room.'
As they stood up Helen threw one more verbal javelin, glaring at Burgoyne.
`If you're having lunch here too, I can recommend the Haerlin restaurant…'
Tweed and Paula stepped out of the elevator and immediately Paula spotted Burgoyne, who was still sitting with a cup of coffee in front of him. She nudged Tweed.
`I've seen him. Let's go and have a little chat with our eminent soldier.'
To her surprise the Brigadier smiled as though he welcomed their company. She was even more surprised when he jumped up, offered her a chair.
`Miss Grey, you are looking positively radiant. I like your suit. Very chic.'
`Thank you.' She sat down slightly dazed at the absence of Burgoyne's normal brusque manner. Tweed chose a seat placing him between them. 'They've left you on your own?' Paula suggested.
`I'm afraid so,' he replied, sitting down next to her. 'I don't appear to be very popular. Would you do me the honour of joining me in an aperitif?'
Paula stared, taken aback by the politeness. 'A glass of dry French white would go down nicely.' Burgoyne glanced at Tweed, who chose mineral water.
Burgoyne raised a hand, beckoned with his index finger to a waiter. Oh dear, Paula thought, reverting to type – dealing with the peasants. She had a further surprise.
`Could you be good enough to fetch us a glass of French wine, mineral water, and I'd be grateful for a double Scotch?'
`I hope we're not spoiling a few minutes on your own while you ruminated on a business problem,' Tweed remarked.
`On the contrary, it's a change to enjoy pleasant company. I've just had a vicious duel of words with Helen Claybourne. She's gone to lunch with your Robert Newman. She banned me from taking my own lunch in the Grill Room.'
`Doesn't sound like the Helen I've met,' Paula commented. 'I wonder what was wrong?'
`Ah! You don't know the real Helen. That outward coolness fools everybody. Underneath she's a ruthless tigress.'
`That's interesting,' Tweed interjected. 'It sounds very much as though she's taken a dislike to you. If so, why on earth does she travel with you?'
`Willie…' He paid the waiter, added a generous tip, and sighed. 'Willie,' he repeated. 'She appears to feel her job involves looking after him. Which is amusing. Master Willie is only too capable of looking after Number One.'
`He seems so indecisive,' Paula said.
`That is the impression he creates, I agree. In business, as well as earlier in the Army…' He paused and looked at Tweed. 'I learned never to take people at face value. You can come badly unstuck if you do. But I'm sure the insurance game has taught you that…'
They chatted for a while and then Tweed said he was taking Paula out for a breath of fresh air. They put on their coats they had propped over chairs, thanked Burgoyne for his hospitality. Again it was a thoughtful Tweed who left the hotel with Paula at his side.
`He seemed to be making a show of pointing the finger at Willie,' Paula observed as they crossed the road towards the lakeside walk.
And very adroitly done,' Tweed agreed.
The white Volvo pulled up behind them with a screech of burning rubber. Tweed grabbed Paula round the waist, ready to shove her ahead of him and tell her to run.
`No need to call the police,' a familiar voice growled.
They swung round and Kuhlmann was stepping out of the front passenger seat, leaving his driver behind the wheel. He removed the unlit cigar from his mouth and jiggled it up and down like a conductor's baton to emphasize what he was saying.
`A fresh development. Didn't think it wise to talk over the phone when you're so close to Berliner Tor.'
`What's happened?' Tweed asked.
`Thirty minutes ago Dr Wand took off in his Lear jet from Hamburg bound for Kastrup Airport, Copenhagen.'
`That's very satisfactory. Thank you, Otto. Things seem to be working out as I foresaw. By the way, did Wand take Jules Starmberg with him?'
`No, definitely not. I dug out old photos of that villainous Luxemburger from the time when his wife was murdered. Gave them to the men watching the Lear.'
No alarm bells rang for Tweed at this information. He was too absorbed in racing over in his mind the precautions he had taken.
`And your present plan?' Kuhlmann asked.
`We are flying to Copenhagen ourselves this evening, and your co-operation has been invaluable. I've had two intriguing conversations recently.'
`Which you won't tell me about. Play it your own way. You always do.'
`Something's just struck me – I must contact Nielsen at Copenhagen police headquarters…'
`I've already done it.' Kuhlmann grinned. 'By now he will have plain-clothes men waiting at Kastrup for the Lear to land. They'll follow Wand, find out where he holes up. I'd say that wraps it up for now.'
`You think of everything. Thank you again…'
Tweed and Paula resumed their walk along the footpath by the Binnen Alster lake. They were walking through a parkland of green grassy slopes and trees. The sound of the traffic was muffled. For Paula it was dreamlike after her experience at Blankenese harbour. No one else was about as they wandered on in the chill air and the sunlight.
`It's a beautiful city,' Paula enthused. 'I love the green roofs of those magnificent old buildings across the lake. I suppose the roofs were once copper and have turned that colour with exposure to the elements.'
`I imagine so,' agreed Tweed.
`It's such a green city. And I love those mansard rooftops – they're so elegant. We hardly ever see them back home.'