26
As far as Jack was concerned, Munich was a closed door to them, and he wanted to spend as little time in Zurich as possible. They were prey, and their only advantage right now was mobility.
Jack wanted to accomplish two things in Zurich: one, investigate the villa to which Effrem had tracked Eric Schrader; and two, do some digging into Alexander Bossard, the owner of the plane that had rescued Stephan Möller from the airstrip in Vermont. For Jack the question wasn’t so much whether Bossard was connected to Jürgen Rostock, but how exactly.
It was an hour before dawn, and ahead Jack could see the glow of Zurich’s skyline on the horizon. They’d made the two-hundred-mile trip from Munich in just over two hours; Jack had been on the autobahn before, but never at night. He’d found the experience at once exhilarating and exhausting.
After escaping the cabin and reaching the car, Jack had driven south to Munich, where he’d picked up Effrem and their luggage; they’d then gotten on the autobahn and headed west at top speed. Belinda, still suffering the effects of either the propane exposure or the shock of the incident or both, lay curled up in the Citroën’s backseat, a sweater tucked under her chin. Here and there, singed hairs jutted from her head like bent electrical wires.
Effrem was also asleep, his head resting against the passenger-seat window.
Jack hit a bump in the road and Effrem bolted forward, hands reaching for the dashboard. He blinked rapidly and looked around.
Jack said, “You’re okay. We’re a few miles outside Zurich.”
“Thank Cronkite,” Effrem said.
“Pardon?”
“Something I picked up from my mother. She’s an atheist. Walter Cronkite is as close to a God as she allowed in her life.”
“Were you dreaming about Möller?” Jack asked.
Effrem nodded. “I was still in the SUV. It was on its side and Möller was pouring gas through the sunroof.”
Jack decided to use this as a segue. “We need to talk about what happened at Kultfabrik.”
“About what?”
“I told you not to get out of the car. You got out of the car.”
“So? I was trying to help, Jack. I wasn’t about to let Möller—”
“What you did was hand yourself to him, and now we’ll be damned lucky if the Munich police aren’t hunting for us. If Möller had gotten you alone—”
“But he didn’t, did he? Things turned out okay.”
Jack felt a knot of anger forming in his belly. “That’s not the point, damn it. The point is I had a reason for telling you to stay put.”
“Which was?”
“One, to keep you out of the line of fire; two, to have you as another pair of eyes; three, as backup in case I needed someone followed.”
Effrem took a few seconds to answer. “I hadn’t thought about two and three.”
The irony of this conversation wasn’t lost on Jack. Change the words and the setting and it could have easily been an exchange between him and John Clark or Gerry Hendley. Plenty of times Jack had acted on well-intentioned impulse, but in tight spots good intentions didn’t make either you or those around you bulletproof. The difference between “Things turning out okay” and catastrophe often sat balanced on a knife’s edge waiting for that Guatemalan butterfly to flap its wings.
Now, suddenly seeing himself from the outside looking in, Jack felt his stomach churn. My God, how many times had he come close to getting someone killed without realizing it? Or almost blown an operation because he refused to pause, take a breath, and listen to someone else? Effrem was young and eager, and perhaps only now was he realizing the deadly seriousness of what they were doing. Jack had no such excuses. He’d had years to outgrow his impulsivity and yet he hadn’t. Why?
In fact, wasn’t this one of those times he should be pausing to reassess the situation? They were flying by the seat of their pants and Jack was at the stick. Was it time to make a call to Clark or Hendley? he wondered. And tell them what, exactly? The truth was, beyond being able to make a marginal case that Stephan Möller was a murderer, he had nothing but hunches and an ever-growing list of questions.
And now it was too late to call a halt. He had two lives in his hands. If he went home, Effrem and Belinda were as good as dead. The only help Gerry Hendley would — and could — offer was an escort to get them back to the United States safely, and a few well-placed phone calls to a higher authority. And then what? he thought. Hope someone else solved the problem? No. They were in the thick of it now. They had to keep moving and keep digging until Jack found a way to end it.
He realized he was gripping the Citroën’s wheel so tightly his hands were shaking. He was one of those idiot swimmers who paddle into the ocean only to realize they’ve gotten caught in a riptide.
Jack said, “Listen, Effrem, a lot of this is my fault. You shouldn’t be here. Back in Alexandria, I should have said no.”
“It wouldn’t have stopped me.”
“Maybe not.” Jack shrugged. “Either way, you need to hear what I’m saying: These people have tried to kill both of us, and they’re going to keep trying. We either stop now and call for help or we get our shit together and do this right.”
“I vote for that, the shit-together option.”
“Fine, but that means listening to me and doing what I tell you. If there’s time to explain, I will. Otherwise, just do it.”
Effrem nodded, then grinned. “So, when you say ‘Jump,’ I ask ‘How high?’”
“When I say ‘Jump,’ you do it, then ask when you can come back down.”
From the backseat Belinda called groggily, “What stinks in here?”
“Your hair,” Effrem replied.
“Right. And who are you again?”
“Effrem.” He jerked a thumb toward Jack. “I’m with him.”
Jack drove around the northern outskirts of Zurich until he found a suitable hotel, mid-priced and transient-friendly near the airport, then booked a room and put Belinda inside with a stash of food and water.
Her facial expression told Jack she wasn’t happy about the sequestration, but neither did she argue. Belinda Hahn had taken some body blows recently: her father murdered, a stranger arriving on her doorstep to suggest her own boss may be involved, and her cabin blown out from under her. Whether she herself recognized it, Jack knew she was still in shock. Sleep was the best thing for her right now.
Once satisfied with her promise to stay in the room, Jack drove the Citroën into downtown Zurich, where he picked up Alfred Escher Strasse and followed it to Lake Zurich. The sun was fully up and the lake’s flat surface acted as a mirror. Jack pivoted the Citroën’s visor to block the glare coming through his side window. In the hills surrounding the city, the pine trees were sprinkled with snow, and the lake ice had melted, save for a few car-size bergs.
The villa to which Effrem had tracked Eric Schrader sat on a stub of land jutting into the lake about halfway down its western shore and was sandwiched between two gated yacht clubs. With the exception of the latter, the location vaguely reminded Jack of his condo in Alexandria. That, and a price difference of five or six million, he estimated.
At Effrem’s direction, Jack turned right on Seestrasse, or Lake Road, then followed its meandering tree-lined course south until they reached the outskirts of the village of Wädenswil. Two more turns brought them to a frontage road not twenty feet from the shoreline.
“Out your window,” Effrem said. “See the stone pillars and the black wrought-iron gate?”
Jack did, but just barely. The villa’s driveway was obscured by tall, tightly packed hedgerows and overhanging pine boughs. Without slowing the Citroën, Jack scanned the entrance for signs of security but saw only a card reader mounted on a stone pillar. No cameras, no post for an attendant, and the ivy-covered wall on either side of the entrance was barely six feet tall, its crest made of smooth stone. Nor did Jack see any address placard. Ten feet through the gate, the driveway curved out of view.