It took Gustav Vogler nearly an hour to get to the crime scene near Alexanderplatz. He’d been at his desk in deep thought on his computer, going over the case files one more time. The first Polizei officers to arrive at the scene in the apartment complex thought it was a bungled robbery, with the apartment dweller protecting himself. But when they noticed the silenced guns and finally ran the apartment owner’s name through their system and found out the man had been a notorious Stasi officer, they’d decided to call in Gustav and his team.
Now, on the third floor of the apartment building, Gustav and his associate Andreas had the former Stasi man back in his bedroom while the crime scene investigators collected evidence, took photographs, and finally bagged the two dead shooters.
Gustav glanced at the one-page briefing on the man’s background and then said, “You say you’ve never seen those two killed outside your door before?”
“That’s right.”
“And they were trying to kill you?”
“I don’t know,” Bernard Hartman said. “I heard shots and eventually opened my door. They were laying there dead. Someone had shot them.”
“Just like that.” Gustav snapped his fingers.
The old Stasi man shrugged his shoulders and nodded his head simultaneously.
Gustav thought about the consequences of this hit. He guessed that there would have been another body showing up somewhere in Berlin in the next day or two. That is if the young couple had been successful. And if that had been a man and a woman it would have thrown their original investigation into an entirely new direction. It would have been the first woman. But then there were probably not a lot of female hit women.
“Who killed the young couple?” Gustav asked, his tone changing from congenial to gruff.
“I don’t know,” the former Stasi said.
The man appeared to be telling the truth, but Gustav knew the man had been trained in interrogation deception by the best in the business. He could beat and torture the man and get nothing. Gustav glanced at his partner, who shook his head slightly. They’d get nothing from him. They left him there and went out into the outer corridor, where the medical team had already bagged the bodies.
Gustav pulled his partner toward the elevators and said, “What do you think?”
“He’s lying. But did you happen to catch the spent casings out here in the hallway? Forty cal. And I’ll bet they match those found in Baden-Baden.”
Nodding his head in agreement, Gustav pushed the down button and waited. “Good observation, Andreas. Which means we should be on the lookout for another body dropping somewhere in our fine city in the next day or so.” But this time they’d have no opportunity to check on trains or any other mode of transportation. The possibilities of routes and modes of transport from Baden-Baden to Berlin were nearly endless. Besides, the hit man was already here in Berlin. All they could do was try to beef up patrols in dark areas around Berlin — a city where shadows had always cast wide, hiding those who didn’t want to be found.
Toni and Franz traveled much of the day from Bonn to Berlin, stopping often for food and bathroom breaks. She was in no real hurry. She knew she’d have to coordinate her efforts with the local Agency office, the station chief headquartered at the American Embassy in Berlin. Her concern for Franz had grown, though. His coughing up of blood had increased and she guessed he was fighting his own death with every good cell left in his body. Why? Because he needed to get to the bottom of Anna’s murder. It was his last case and he knew it. But he had to finish at the top of his game and she sure as hell wasn’t going to stop him. If anything, she’d make sure of his success. And her own. Even though she and Jake had divorced a long time ago, she still had feelings for him.
A few hours ago she and Franz checked into a hotel near Tempelhof International Airport, the one-time hub for the Berlin Airlift and home to the American military presence for decades.
Now, nearing midnight, Toni sat alone watching the local news. There’d been a shooting on the east side of Berlin, near the Alexanderplatz, where a young man and woman were killed. The reporters speculated, with no attribution whatsoever, that it had been drug related. Toni guessed the locals liked to hear that. Random shootings were both rare and unnerving. The message? Stay away from drugs and you won’t be shot.
Toni’s phone buzzed and she checked the number before picking up. It was her boss, Kurt Jenkins, the CIA director. “Hi, Kurt. What’s the news?”
“Where are you?”
She told him the hotel in Berlin and added, “Yes, Franz Martini is still with me.”
“How’s he doing?”
“Much better,” she lied. “He’s just contrary enough to kick cancer’s ass.”
“Let’s hope so. Are you alone?”
“Come on. He’s old enough to be my father.”
“That’s not what I meant. And you failed to mention that you were married.”
“I didn’t think I’d still have to tell you the obvious,” she scolded. “Who do you have for me locally? And don’t give me any more post-pubescent Army pukes. I need someone with some pull in Berlin.”
“I understand. How about Hank Roberts?”
“The station chief? That would be great.”
“You two have some history, right?”
He knew the answer to that. She and Hank had worked together many times when she was station chief in Vienna and Hank was in Hungary.
“Yeah, he’s a good guy. Anyone else?”
“He’s running a little thin right now,” Kurt said. “Most of his officers are at a meeting in Brussels. Hank stayed back because his wife is about to drop kid number three.”
“Is that wife number two?”
“Number three.”
“Wow, I’m behind.”
“I’ll have him meet you at the hotel for breakfast at nine.”
Toni watched the TV as the director talked. When she saw the image of a man running with a gun, she turned up the volume. “Just a minute.”
The reporter now speculated on a shooting in Baden-Baden that had happened the day before, showing the image of a man leaving an apartment complex there over and over. Although the face wasn’t in perfect view, Toni knew the man. Jake. And he had a limp from the knee replacement. She lowered the volume.
“Everything all right,” Kurt asked.
“Yeah, no problem. I’ll meet Hank tomorrow. Anything else?”
“Should I mention your Austrian friend to Hank?”
“Jake?”
“No. Franz Martini.”
“Absolutely. Franz also has contacts here in Berlin I plan on exploiting.”
Kurt Jenkins thanked her for her good work, which she knew was sketchy at best, and then they both hung up.
She lay back onto the bed, her thoughts going to Jake. What the hell have you gotten yourself into this time, my friend? If only she’d known about Jake and Anna being shot a couple months ago, maybe she could have gotten ahead of the situation and found out who was the intended target, who’d ordered the hit, and why they wanted either of them dead. Now she was playing catch up, just trying to stay ahead of the bullets. But Jake seemed to be a mile ahead of her. He was right in the thick of things. Like normal. Go to sleep, Toni. Tomorrow will be a long day.
28
Jake slipped out of his hotel after Alexandra was sound asleep, making his way by U-Bahn to a nice neighborhood in the west part of Berlin near the expansive Tiergarten.
Wearing all black, he walked the last portion of his journey in a light rain. A mist. Then he found the brick, three-story row houses in a posh area, occupied, Jake knew, by mostly diplomats from many different countries. An international school sat two blocks away. The children of these diplomats didn’t have to go far to school or to play in green open spaces.