* * *
Later in the afternoon Parson received a call from the Turkish police that made him change his mind. Gerhard Grüner was in hospital in Istanbul, having broken his leg in a fall. Unlike Heida, Grüner was particular that Parson should know his whereabouts. He had information and wanted to speak as soon as possible.
When the Turkish police checked the Konak Hostel they found no trace of a Stephen Sutler, but plenty of evidence of Gerhard Grüner. The desk clerk stated that Grüner had asked for assistance in procuring the services of a man, or preferably a young boy. He had asked for magazines and places to go. Grüner, it seemed, had been clumsy, and suffered nothing less than he deserved.
Parson took note of the information, but as soon as the call was completed he tore the page out of his notebook. This was nonsense.
It took time to find where the police were holding Afan Zubenko and his sons; because of Grüner’s statement the men had been brought into custody, and Parson was having trouble finding out where. When he finally located them at the Central Police Station in Eminonu, he found that the police in Istanbul weren’t interested in assisting him. Access to the Zubenkos, he was told, would be impossible. Parson called Gibson to see what muscle he could employ.
* * *
Rather than wait for Gibson’s reply, Parson met Grüner at the hospital and brought him back to his hotel. The two men stood side by side at the window looking down on the grey parkway before the city walls. Grüner leaned forward on his crutches, one leg bandaged from his knee to his thigh: unbalanced, he veered toward the glass. A scuff ran from his cheek to his temple, pink and sore enough to make Parson cringe.
‘This was where you saw him?’
‘He came by coach.’ Grüner tapped the window. ‘Where that stall is, by the wall.’
Parson looked down on the terminus at men selling newspapers and boys with flat baskets of fruit, lokum, sandwiches. Sutler could be among those people right now, he had no way of knowing. While hunting Sutler he’d developed ideas about who the man might be, but he didn’t know much. It would be possible to pass Sutler in the street and not know it. In ten days he could have adopted any kind of disguise with minimal effort, although Grüner was emphatic that the man looked exactly like the photograph they were using online and in the US press, the photograph taken from Sutler’s ID. Coming to Istanbul was a risk. A risk Sutler could have avoided by veering north of the city and crossing by land to Greece or Bulgaria.
‘And where was his hotel?’
Grüner pointed out the Konak and the travel agency on a tourist map. He’d drawn in red the route he’d followed with Sutler. His voice a little slow, lulled with medication.
Within an hour they began to roll over the same information. Grüner’s voice became dry, his expression a little glassy. Ready to leave, Parson helped the journalist to a seat. He laid the crutches carefully within reach and asked the man what he would do now. Grüner shrugged and shook a cigarette out of the pack. Lined side by side on the table, a small digital camera, the map, a pencil, and a red sports cap.
‘I don’t know. Iraq is not possible. Those men took my camera. I don’t have the pictures. I have this.’ He pointed at the camera. ‘It’s not as good. Not good enough for work. I have a story now without pictures.’
They looked out at the city to a view of a cold, bright, and cloudless sky. Parson accepted a cigarette. He picked up the camera, turned it over in his hands.
‘How did Sutler look?’
‘Not so good. His face. He had these bruises, and his nose was big. Swollen.’
Parson drew on his cigarette. ‘But describe him.’
‘Like before. Thin. Nervous. He has short hair now. English.’
‘Does he look like me?’
Grüner looked at Parson and shook his head. ‘Not so much. I mean maybe the same shape, more or less, in the face. A little rounder. The hair is much shorter.’
‘You need a photo?’
‘Of course. Maybe the story runs for a day or so, but with a picture it would be different. It would mean more money. People would take it more seriously. A picture is what everybody wants. I had him in the terminal and outside the hotel. Some in the street.’
‘And he doesn’t look like me?’
Grüner looked again at Parson and studied him hard. ‘Maybe, if you were in the street? It’s possible.’
Parson picked up the sports cap as he rose. ‘And after this you return to Frankfurt?’
‘To Hamburg. They said that I can travel. But I don’t know what will happen now.’
Parson shook the journalist’s hand and pointed to the window. ‘You said you saw him at the buses? Beside the coaches?’
* * *
Gibson did not call Parson back. Instead — as he walked among the coaches parked at the terminus, deliberate enough to provide Grüner a good opportunity to photograph him — he received a call from the German consulate. One of their men, Henning Bastian, was interviewing Afan Zubenko at the Central Police Station and they wanted him to come in.
The tone of the call disturbed Parson. This was not a polite request.
* * *
An hour later Parson arrived at the Central Police Station — a long building tagged on to a new apartment complex, with ironwork in front of the lower windows, pale magnolia walls, and bare planters. Informed that Henning Bastian was still interviewing Zubenko, Parson was escorted to one of the interrogation rooms and told to wait.
He sat at a table for an hour in a simple windowless room with the faint odour of fresh paint; two guards at the door, hefty men, both silent, and faintly bothersome, their attention locked on him so surely he began to feel that he had done something wrong.
The feeling deepened with the arrival of the cultural attaché. Bastian: boyish, lanky, thin-faced, dressed in a light grey suit, wiped his hands with a piece of tissue before he sat down. He looked to Parson, then the table, then the three men who had accompanied him, and briskly told them all to sit down, a clipped precision about his instructions. One of the men handed him a black-backed register as the others scurried to fetch chairs.
Bastian looked impatiently about the room. ‘Can we start?’ He turned his attention to Parson. ‘Mr Parson. I am Henning Bastian with the German consulate, and I have been assigned to oversee the claims made by the photographer Gerhard Grüner regarding Stephen Lawrence Sutler.’
Parson jerked his head forward. ‘He hasn’t made any claims against Sutler, his claims are against Zubenko.’
‘I need a little background.’ The man closed his eyes and opened them. ‘I need a little clarification on why you are involved with Gerhard Grüner, in what capacity you have come to know him.’ Once again, the man gave a slow blink. ‘I would like to speak with you about your business with the Hospitality and Operational Support Company of Hampton Roads, Virginia.’
Parson intended to say yes, but taken aback by Bastian’s formality he couldn’t find his voice.
‘Mr Parson, please confirm for me that you are working for Gibson and Baker, under instruction from their clients, the Hospitality and Operational Support Company of Hampton Roads, Virginia. I am saying this right? This is correct, no?’
Parson nodded.
‘Gibson and Baker are public adjusters based in London? You investigate and assess insurance claims made against your clients? Is that right? You investigate claims and potential suits in order to — what — to advise on risk, on fraud?’
‘That’s right.’
‘And yet HOSCO have you searching for Stephen Lawrence Sutler?’ Bastian’s hands settled either side of the register.