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In the back of the truck, pots and pans clanged together loudly.

Although they’d managed to exit the embassy compound, a quick glance in the mirror verified what Finn already suspected – the Mercedes was still dogging them. An easy enough feat since the truck’s top speed was only fifty m.p.h. – a speed he wouldn’t be able to maintain much longer. Up ahead were the congested streets of Georgetown.

‘What’s the first one-way cross street?’ he hollered at Kate. Since she lived in the area, he hoped she might know.

One hand braced on the passenger door, the other clutching the notebook computer to her chest, she shook her head. ‘I’m not sure. Maybe thirty-fourth street.’

‘One-way going in which direction?’

‘Um, south … I think.’

Finn eyeballed the passing street signs. 37th36th35th

34th Street.

About to risk everything on a ‘maybe’ and an ‘I think’, Finn made a sharp left-hand turn – putting the truck on a one-way street heading in the wrong direction. Overshooting the turn, the truck jumped the curve, careening through a neatly clipped hedge. Again, Finn yanked on the steering wheel, the truck wildly fishtailing from side to side.

As they mowed through the hedge, he heard Kate scream at the top of her lungs. ‘Finn! Watch out for the –’

Fire hydrant.

Knowing it was a done deal, Finn threw out his right arm, pinning Kate to the passenger seat as the catering truck ploughed into the hydrant.

9

Sixth Arrondissement, Paris, France

The opening gambit had been played, a pawn sacrificed.

More resigned than shocked to learn that Fabius Jutier had died by his own hand, Ivo Uhlemann hung up the telephone. The latest turn of events could only mean one of two things – either Sergeant McGuire had got too close to the truth or Fabius feared that he might capitulate if the situation turned violent.

Dare il gambetto.

A Spanish priest in the sixteenth century coined the phrase to refer to an opening chess move. Roughly translated, it meant ‘putting a leg forward to trip someone’. However, the American had proved himself surprisingly nimble, managing to sidestep their trap.

But to what end?

Lost in thought, Ivo walked over and closed the green velvet drapes; at night, Paris, annoyingly, became the city of headlights. That done, he seated himself at his desk, the Rococo furniture at odds with the modern lines of the laptop computer and wireless printer. The old and the new. The perennial clash as each battled the other for supremacy.

Ready to commence his weekly game of chess, Ivo signed on to the computer site using the tongue-in-cheek moniker ‘German Knight’. His opponent, ‘Java King’, was already online. They played each Tuesday at twelve a.m., insomniacs, the both of them. Since there was nothing that he could personally do about the situation in Washington, other than issue new orders, he saw no reason to cancel the weekly bout.

Playing white, Ivo moved his pawn to E4. The French Opening. A fitting tribute to his friend and colleague, Fabius Jutier.

The Cultural Minister had been trained – they had all been trained – to swallow a cyanide tablet rather than surrender to the enemy. No different to what many SS officers had been forced to do at the close of the Second World War, the Reich in flames, the Allied army on a bloodthirsty manhunt.

Indeed, a brave man must always be prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice for the greater good.

Ivo glanced at the computer screen. It had taken but a few moments for Java King to position his pawn at E6; the first move of what he hoped would prove a ferocious battle. Play. Counter-play. Attack. The weekly match kept his 76-year-old brain sharp; a weak mind was endemic to the lacklustre horde. His father, the noted physicist Friedrich Uhlemann, had been convinced that the mass of men, possessed of middling intelligence, required a guiding hand. Only then could such men meaningfully contribute to society.

As with all of the Seven’s founding members, Friedrich had been a brilliant scholar. Created in 1940 by the superintendent of the Schutzstaffel, Heinrich Himmler, the unit was envisioned as a seven-man think tank. Its members culled from the best universities in Göttingen, Vienna and Paris, the Seven bridged the divide between the humanities and the sciences. During the 1940s, interdisciplinary research had been a radical concept. In fact, the Ahnenerbe, the academic branch of the SS, had been subdivided into fifty different sections, each focused on a single narrow field of study.

With a click of the computer mouse, Ivo positioned his knight at C3, the diagonal now open.

As he waited for Java King to make the next move, he opened another tab on the computer, pleased to see that the two dossiers he’d ordered had been forwarded. He gave the photograph of Katsumi Rosamund Bauer a cursory glance before scanning the particulars of her life.

Hmm, a most interesting background.

Thirty-nine years of age, Katsumi Bauer had a doctorate in cultural anthropology and, until two years ago, had been a professor at Johns Hopkins University. According to the genealogy chart that a family member had obligingly posted online, the Bauer family emigrated to the American Colonies in 1710, part of a large contingent of Palatine German farmers who settled in New York. Her maternal line, which included several generations of samurai, arrived in California in the early twentieth century. Aiko, her mother, was a curator at the Pacific Asia Museum; father Alfred taught astrophysics at CalTech. As he read that, Ivo chuckled. How ironic.

He pulled up the second dossier.

‘Hmm, it would seem that our commando hails from a less stellar background,’ he murmured, again chuckling, amused by the pun. The parents, Patrick and Fiona McGuire, moved to Boston in 1972 from Northern Ireland. Typical of working-class Irish Catholics, the mother had been a homemaker, the father a day labourer until his untimely death in 1988. Perhaps it was bred into them. Whatever the reason, the Irish had a long history of being a subjugated people, always serving one master or another.

Ivo quickly skimmed the next few paragraphs, eyes opening wide on reading that McGuire’s twin brother, Mychal, was a member of Boston’s notorious Irish mob.

Seventy years ago, the McGuire brothers would have been a prize catch; German researchers were particularly interested in studying twins. To advance the burgeoning field of eugenics, all test subjects were thoroughly photographed. Tissue biopsies were then performed. If male, semen samples were forcibly collected; if female, gynaecological exams were conducted. Once the tests were completed, the subjects were euthanized with a single injection of chloroform to the heart, the collected data used to winnow out society’s undesirables.

As he finished reading the dossiers, Ivo clicked on the second computer tab. At a glance, he could see that his opponent had just moved his bishop to B4.

Well played, Java King. The move threatened Ivo’s white knight. While his Tuesday-night opponent tended to be passive, overly concerned with losing a major piece, Ivo played a more brazen match.

Again, he wondered at the American’s game, unable to determine if the commando was being passive or dangerously bold. What did Finn McGuire hope to gain in refusing the Seven’s generous monetary offer? And the woman, Katsumi Bauer – what role did she play in this recent turn of events?

Given her proud heritage and impressive education, Ivo suspected that he would have enjoyed the pleasure of her company.

A pity that Katsumi Bauer was not long for this world.