`I'll just close the padlock, then I'd better lead the way.' She pushed her cycle along the cinder track, only mounting her machine when they reached the road. She turned right, away from the suburb and the camp site and he pulled alongside her, then told her to stop.
`What's the matter?'
`Lights. Falken said the police would stop cyclists without lights.'
`You're so right. I must be losing my grip.'
They switched on their lights at front and rear and resumed cycling. There was no other traffic on the road and they had to cycle warily – after no rain for weeks the storm had made the road surface greasy. Beyond the grass verges on either side were deep ditches and beyond them open fields with, here and there, islands of tree clumps blurred in the gloom. Overhead the sky was a sea of clouds and the chilly breeze was raw as they cycled together.
`Now I want us to stop for a minute,' Gerda said.
They had been careful to use the toilets at the restaurant so Newman was puzzled for a moment. He watched while she took her handbag out of the saddle bag, took out a handkerchief, hauled out the Uzi and wiped it clean of fingerprints. Then she stepped on to the grass verge, using her handkerchief as a glove and threw the machine pistol into the ditch. It sank out of sight with a splash followed by a brief gurgle. They cycled on.
Shortly after she had dumped the weapon they reached an intersection where the country road they'd cycled along met a main highway. Gerda turned left on to the highway and pulled over on to the verge about a hundred metres from the intersection.
`We meet Stahl here. He'll come from that direction.'
She pointed the way they had come, checked her watch, took a small pair of field glasses out of her handbag. Leaning the cycle against her thighs, she raised the binoculars to her eyes and focused them, looking back down the highway.
`What's the idea?' Newman asked.
`Night glasses. I know the registration number of the truck Stahl will be driving. I have a small torch. I have to signal before he gets here. I want to be sure it's the right vehicle before I start flashing a torch about.'
`You really are well organized.' Newman hesitated. 'Is this where we say Goodbye?'
'No – till we meet again…'
'I'd like to thank you for all…' he began.
She placed an index finger over his mouth. 'It's the other way round. Why don't we just say it was good knowing one another? That we make a good team. And if a car or the wrong truck comes along we're conspicuous – so we pretend to be lovers.'
`We'd better practise then.'
He laid both cycles on the verge, took her in his arms, one hand behind the nape of her neck and kissed her full on the lips. She stiffened for a few seconds, then wrapped her arms round him and pressed her breasts against his chest. She kissed him ravenously, her whole body merged against his.
`Oh, damnit,' he said, looking over her right shoulder.
She released him, breathing heavily, turned to look in the same direction, the field glasses dangling from their strap round her wrist. In the distance two headlights like great eyes were coming down the highway. She pressed the lenses to her eyes. Newman kept his fingers crossed. This couldn't be Stahl. Not yet.
`It's him,' she said.
Newman glanced all round. No other traffic in sight. Behind the headlights the huge truck lumbered closer. Gerda flashed her torch on and off. Two short flashes, one long one. The truck passed the intersection, slowed, pulled up alongside them. A big job. An eight-wheeler. The cab attached – part of – the vehicle. A Mercedes. The driver kept his engine running, peered out of the window and Gerda called up to him. Something Newman didn't catch. A heavily-built young man with thick brown hair descended to the roadway and Gerda made swift introductions.
`Stahl, this is Emil Clasen…'
`Come with me,' Stahl said to Newman, then noticed the cycles lying on the verge. 'You'll only need one of these now,' he said to Gerda. He picked up Newman's machine, hoisted it above his head and hurled it clear across the ditch. It landed deep inside the field of rye, disappeared. 'Back of the truck,' he said to Newman. 'Hurry…'
Using a deadlock key, he opened one of the two rear doors, handed Newman a torch he'd hauled out of his trouser pocket and pointed inside the dark cavern. Newman turned to say something to Gerda but Stahl took his arm in a strong grip and urged him up inside the truck. Gerda thrust the field-glasses into his hand. 'Take these. They might be useful.'
`Seat for you at the far end,' Stahl called up. 'Use that torch – or break a kneecap. We'll talk later. We're too near Leipzig here. The porthole windows in these doors are one-way armoured glass…'
The door slammed shut and Newman was in pitch darkness. He switched on the torch as he heard Stahl locking the door. The porthole windows had circular flaps shutting him off from the outside world. He swivelled one flap upwards, switched off the torch.
Gerda appeared on her machine, cycling back towards Leipzig as Stahl released the air-brakes and the huge truck started lumbering forward. In the brief moment he'd had the torch on he'd seen a hanging strap attached to the wall of the truck. He held on to it with his left hand, watching Gerda's rear red light receding. The truck picked up speed. Then he froze.
A patrol car, travelling very fast, was approaching the intersection. He doubted whether they had seen the truck stop. Moving at that speed they'd have been inside the suburbs. He raised the night-glasses and pressed them against his eyes. The road surface along the highway was good, the truck was so heavy it hardly swayed.
The patrol car swung out of the intersection on to the highway, passed Gerda cycling, stopped, performed an illegal U- turn, drew up alongside Gerda. Two Vopos stepped out, halted her. Then he realized she was showing them her papers. One of the Vopos shook his head, opened the rear door, bundled her inside and followed. The other man climbed behind the wheel. Oh, God! And the bastards had left her cycle lying on the verge. He couldn't do anything. He was trapped inside the truck. The patrol car drove off, turning back towards Leipzig. Newman felt sick as a dog.
Forty-One
Inside the moving truck Newman swivelled the torch slowly round, getting his bearings before he looked for the seat at the front. There was a narrow central corridor which ran straight to the driver's cab. Along either side of the corridor long heavy wooden boxes were piled on top of each other from floor to roof.
They reminded him of ammunition boxes. Each had a handle at the end made of rope thick as a ship's hawser. They were held in position by leather straps which pinioned them to the walls. He checked for stencil markings which might indicate the contents. Nothing.
He made his way cautiously along the corridor. The walls of the truck puzzled him. From the outside the vehicle had the appearance of a refrigerated truck. There had been some lettering along the side of the vehicle but Stahl had hustled him aboard so quickly he hadn't read it.
At the front end the driver's cab was closed off from the main body of the truck. In his torch beam he saw a sliding panel and guessed that gave access to the driving cab. He found a small space just behind the cab beyond where the last boxes were piled up. To the left a leather padded seat was screwed to the floor. Opposite was an enamel bucket with a lid; toilet facilities, he guessed.
He sank into the seat, still wearing his raincoat, suddenly exhausted. It had been constant tension ever since they'd left Radom's farm. First the camper underneath the zig-zag. His concentrated interview with Karen Piper. Their flight along the old rail track. Hiding under the arched bridge as the Vopos stayed parked overhead. Then the storm, driving the camper along the flooded gulch.
Above all, what hit him now was seeing Gerda taken away by that bloody patrol car. Would she bluff her way through? He had no idea. Probably he'd never know her fate. He switched off the torch to save the battery, then stood up and knocked on the panel to let Stahl know where he was. The panel opened briefly. Stahl called out over his shoulder.