'I must admit I'm sick and tired of the violence the Americans are causing.'
'And,' Tweed said quietly, 'you'll be glad to see the back of us.'
'I don't remember saying that.'
'Because you're tactful. But you know when Ronstadt and Co. do leave – probably to Germany – we'll go after them.'
'My job is to protect Swiss civilians,' Beck admitted. 'Luckily, so far there haven't been any casualties among our people. But if what has happened continues, then it's only a matter of time.'
'I think you're absolutely right. You said Ronstadt told you he would be leaving in two or three days. I think he may slip away tomorrow.'
'I'm still keeping officers on watch at the exit to autobahn 5. When Ronstadt and his thugs do move they'll be detained at the border; as I said before, on the pretext that we suspect they're smuggling drugs. Then I'll inform you, give you time to get there and track them.'
'For that, I'm very grateful. Over the years you have always been a reliable ally.'
'That has worked both ways. I'd better go now. You take care of yourself.' Standing up he took a compact mobile phone out of his pocket, placed it on a table close to Tweed. 'I know you mistrust these things, but it will let me contact you urgently – wherever you may be at the time. Incidentally, I think Ronstadt is tricky. Don't overlook the possibility he might leave in the middle of the night…'
When Beck had gone Tweed used the phone to summon everyone to his room. Paula arrived first, followed almost immediately by Newman, Marler, Butler and Nield. Tweed had also ordered three pots of coffee and cups for seven people. Afterwards he had called Keith Kent and asked him to come and see him.
Tweed was standing by the window, hands behind his back as he gazed into the night. It was a stance Paula recognized – he had at times done the same thing at Park Crescent when he was working out a problem.
'Coffee!' she called out with enthusiasm. 'How about the rest of you?' she asked when they had all arrived. 'Put a hand up if you want a cuppa.'
Six hands rose in the air. She started pouring as they found somewhere to sit or perch. Keith Kent looked round, saw he had met everyone present in London, clasped both hands and made a shaking motion. Unusually, it was Marler who spoke first.
'Tweed, when we reached safety on the landing stage, I heard you say to Beck that you were suspicious of the way the information reached us. You were referring to the earlier news that Ronstadt and his gang would be holding a meeting aboard the Minotaur. So you had to be talking about what Denise Chatel told me.'
'I was,' Tweed agreed.
'You think she made up the story?'
'I'm not sure. But it all seemed rather neat. Denise being called by an unknown American. Then told that Sharon wanted to meet her at the bar in the Euler.'
'So we can't trust her?' Marler remarked, now leaning against a wall.
'We can't trust anyone,' Tweed said emphatically.
'I have good news for you,' Newman said ironically. 'Dear Rupert is here. Staying at this hotel.'
'I know,' Tweed replied. 'Sir Guy told me.'
'And he has his pal Basil with him,' Newman went on. 'Also staying in this hotel. I had a drink with Basil, the ladies' dream. You'll never guess what he wanted to cadge off me…'
He relayed what had happened in the bar. He abbreviated their conversation but gave them the flavour of it. Paula gasped.
'Twenty thousand pounds! The nerve of the pimp.'
'He wasn't best pleased,' Newman told her, 'when I told him to go jump in the Rhine, or words to that effect. I was surprised at how ugly he turned.'
'Must be desperate,' Paula commented.
'Desperate men are dangerous,' Tweed mused. 'What I can't understand is how Guy found out we were here. And he wasn't prepared to tell me.'
'Could Ronstadt have told him?' Nield wondered. 'It stands out like a sore thumb that Ronstadt has known we are here for a while.
'Why would he do that?' asked the normally taciturn Butler.
'Possibly to confuse me,' Tweed suggested. 'Have me looking in all directions so I'd miss something obvious.'
'That would mean Strangeways is one of them,' objected Butler.
'I did say a few minutes ago we can't trust anyone,' Tweed reminded him.
'Not even Denise Chatel,' said Marler.
'Beck has been over here to see me,' Tweed began. He told them everything the Swiss police chief had said. 'So if he's right,' he concluded, 'we had better be ready to leave at any time. Better get some packing done when you leave here.'
'You still think it's the Black Forest?' Newman queried.
'You should know. Kurt's last word was Schwarz, which, as I remarked earlier, is German for black. If I had to gamble I'd say it will be the Black Forest.'
The phone rang, Paula answered, told Tweed Beck was on the line for him.
'Yes, Arthur…'
'Just heard a weather report. Thought you ought to know there's been a heavy fall of snow in the Black Forest. More on the way. Unusual for this time of year, but occasionally it does happen. Excuse me now, I'm up to my neck in work.'
Tweed put down the phone. He told them what Beck had said. Paula sighed.
'Just what we needed. If I have time I'm going to shop for warmer boots.'
'Incidentally, Keith,' Tweed said, 'I'd appreciate it if you would come with us when we leave here.'
'Go to Singapore as long as you pay me. If you don't need me I'd better go and start packing.'
'Good idea.'
'What sort of game do you think Strangeways is playing?' Newman asked when Kent had gone.
'I wish I knew,' replied Tweed. 'But I'll tell you one thing. As soon as I can I'm going to make him tell me how he knew we were here. I think I can get it out of him. He's in a highly nervous state. When I went into the writing room the, hand holding his pen was trembling. Then later he started fiddling with it.'
'I think,' said Newman, standing up, 'we'd all better get back to our rooms and start packing. Beck could be right. Ronstadt might try and do a moonlight flit.'
Paula waited when everyone except Tweed had gone. She was curled up like a cat in an armchair. Tweed refilled her cup before he spoke.
'You have something on your mind.'
'Yes. Don't worry about my being ready if we have to leave at a moment's notice. I'm half-packed already.'
'Knowing how methodical you are, I thought you might be. Now, what's bothering you?'
'Not bothering. I admit it's sheer curiosity. But why is Keith Kent coming with us when we leave?'
'I told you in the car on our way to the launch what he had said.' Tweed produced an envelope, took out the two banknotes, a British twenty-pound note, a ten-pound note. 'Fakes. Good ones. They really worry me.
'Why?'
'Remember that letter from the dead, as Marler called it – from Kurt Schwarz? The wording was brief. Be very careful of the barges. At Park Crescent I thought he was referring to Thames barges. When we arrived here and I saw barges on the Rhine I began to think they were what Kurt had referred to. We now know it was. We'll never know how he suspected what might happen.'
'But he was right. So what about the banknotes?'
'The second sentence in Kurt's letter said: You must locate the printing presses. So what prints banknotes? Printing presses. I think Washington has devised a diabolical plan to destabilize Britain. There may not be much time to stop them. And I think the secret lies at their base in the Black Forest.'
29
Tweed received the invitation soon after Paula had left him. When he picked up the phone it was Sharon Mandeville. He remarked he hadn't seen much of her since arriving in Basel.
'Well, some people would say that's your fault,' she chided him gently in her soft voice. 'You stood me up for drinks.'