Tom Clancy Duty and Honor
“Right. I’m scared.”
“Don’t think. Just move.”
The tree line loomed, and then they were into it, the darkness enveloping them. Jack stopped, crouched, sidestepped right into the foliage. If Möller was hiding somewhere on the trail above, their ploy wouldn’t fool him, but it would give him dispersed and obscured targets.
Effrem whispered, “How long do we wait?”
“We don’t. Stay close.”
Jack stood, pushed off, and charged up the trail. The grade steepened and soon his legs were burning. Branches snagged his clothing. Leaves slapped his face. The trail snaked left, then right in a switchback. Jack bounced off a tree trunk, corrected his course, and kept going. Ahead he saw a roughly oval gap in the trees; through it, the corrugated steel wall of a building.
Five feet before the gap Jack said, “Dodge left,” and again they separated and crouched off the trail. Jack peeked out, saw nothing.
“I don’t hear the engine,” Effrem said.
“Me neither.”
Now doubt slipped into Jack’s mind: If they failed to stop Möller before he reached the plane, what then? Open fire on the plane? What if the pilot was an innocent bystander? And what if that innocent bystander spotted their kidnapping of Möller?
While Jack was ninety-nine percent sure it’d been Möller behind the wheel of Eunice Miller’s Subaru, neither he nor Effrem had actually laid eyes on the man since Mike’s Mini Mart in West Haven. Moreover, if they’d managed to track Möller this far without alerting him, doing so now would be a mistake. Damn it!
Don’t spook him, Jack. Best to let Möller go about his business and hope they could pick him up later.
Effrem said, “Jack, what’re we doing?”
To the east, the plane’s engine began idling up.
“Jack . . .”
“We’re letting him go.”
“What! You said—”
“I changed my mind. How’re your eyes?” Jack said, handing the binoculars across to him. “You’ve got one job: Grab that plane’s tail number before we lose it.”
“And while I’m doing that, you’re doing what?”
“Making sure Möller isn’t getting ready to snap shut the bear trap.”
Before Effrem could protest or ask another question, Jack got up, covered the last few feet to the trail opening, and stepped through. Before them was a line of eight outbuildings arrayed from north to south. Between each, a narrow alley led to the tarmac.
Which way? The plane had landed north to south, which meant the pilot’s takeoff would be on the reciprocal.
“Follow me.”
At a trot, they moved along the buildings, Jack clearing each alley before they proceeded across. As they passed the sixth intersection Jack glanced right and saw the plane taxiing north along the runway. It was picking up speed, the engine spooling up for takeoff. Despite being a single-engine prop aircraft, this was no Cessna or Piper Cub, Jack realized. It was bigger in both fuselage and wingspan.
“Keep moving,” Jack ordered, and started sprinting.
They reached the last building and Jack skidded to a stop, peeked around the corner. It was clear. “Go,” he told Effrem, who scooted past him, sprinted to the building’s front corner, and knelt down. He lifted the binoculars.
The plane swept past, its navigation lights flashing against the gray tarmac. Then it was gone, out of sight behind the trees.
“Effrem?” Jack called. “Tell me you got it.”
“I got it.”
MUNICH, GERMANY
With his head resting against the window seat bulkhead, Jack dozed, occasionally opening his eyes to see the darkened landscape below had changed, until finally he saw in the distance the twinkling lights of Munich. He yawned and stretched. Beside him, Effrem was typing on his laptop.
A Lufthansa flight attendant’s voice came over the intercom and announced the plane’s descent to the airport, first in German and then in English. Well familiar with the procedure, Jack was already returning his seat to the upright position.
“Tray table,” Jack told Effrem.
“Huh?”
“Before you get scolded by Dagmar.”
Their attendant, a statuesque blonde with an easy smile, had been downright Teutonic in her cabin management. The way Jack had caught Effrem staring at her, he guessed Effrem was either attracted to her or frightened of her. Or both.
“Shoot, sorry.” Effrem powered down the laptop and stowed it in his messenger bag beneath the seat. “Did she catch me?” he asked.
“Do you want her to catch you?”
“Shut up. So what’s our first order of business when we land?”
“Hotel, sleep, coffee, then strategy.”
They’d been running hard for almost forty hours, first from Alexandria to Vermont and then, with the departure of Möller’s plane, from Vermont to JFK Airport and finally back to Dulles. By ten a.m. they were back at Jack’s condo and looking for flights to Munich. They found one, a nonstop Lufthansa leaving out of Dulles that afternoon. Once aboard the plane, Jack had promptly buckled his seat belt, then drifted off to sleep.
Effrem’s capture of the plane’s tail number tightened Jack’s focus on Germany and Switzerland, but it also raised more questions. According to Switzerland’s Federal Office of Civil Aviation website, the plane in question, a Swiss-made Pilatus PC-12 NG, registry HB-FXT, belonged to a private citizen, a Zurich resident named Alexander Bossard. Both Jack’s and Effrem’s initial research into plane and man turned up little aside from the fact that Alexander Bossard could afford a $4 million private jet and dispatch it across the Atlantic to rescue Möller from a defunct airstrip in rural Vermont. Was Bossard also the owner of the luxury apartment Eric Schrader used while staying in Zurich? It seemed a reasonable hunch.
Jack’s larger concern was for Belinda Hahn’s safety. Her father had intimated she was in jeopardy but hadn’t gone any further. With her father dead, a tied-up loose end, presumably, was she slated for the same fate? Or did he have it wrong? Though her e-mails to Peter had been those of a loving daughter, Jack couldn’t discount the possibility that she was a willing participant in all this—whatever “this” was. Whatever the truth, reaching out to Belinda Hahn was at the top of Jack’s to-do list.
Having vacationed in Munich, Jack returned to what he knew: Hotel München Palace in the city’s Bogenhausen Quarter, a long stone’s throw from the Luitpold Bridge and the Isar River, which split the city into east and west. Jack had spent hours walking the river trails and parks along both banks.
Thirty minutes after clearing customs and picking up their rental car, a Citroën, they were pulling to a stop outside the München Palace’s front doors. It was almost three a.m. The bellman was at their car door instantly, opening it before walking to the trunk and retrieving their luggage.
“Danke schön,” Jack said, handing him a tip.
“Es ist mir ein Vergnügen.”
Jack headed for the doors. He noticed Effrem wasn’t following but rather standing, staring at his cell phone. His face was drawn. Jack walked back to him. “What’s up?”
“Kaitlin Showalter died yesterday afternoon.”
—
This news changed Jack’s plans. Kaitlin Showalter was dead because she was on the wrong train at the wrong time and she had something Stephan Möller needed, a car. What might he or his compatriots do to Belinda Hahn, who was much more than a target of opportunity? Jack wondered if they were already too late.
He allowed himself and Effrem ninety minutes of sleep, then left the hotel and headed west on Prinzregentenstrasse in the predawn light. The city was already coming alive, with morning delivery trucks and buses making their stops. Despite sitting just thirty miles from the northern edge of the Bavarian Alps, Munich had had a wet and hot spring, and already the trees were well into
bloom.
Staring out the window, Effrem said, “So much greenery. And it’s so tidy. I have been here a dozen times and I can count on one hand the pieces of trash I’ve seen on the street.”
“German efficiency.”
Once they were across the Isar River, Jack followed the car’s in-dash navigation system until they reached the Neuaubing district. Belinda’s apartment building, a five-floor quadplex, sat several blocks south of Bodenseestrasse, surrounded by boutique restaurants and pubs, all of which were closed and dark. It was not yet six o’clock. He wanted to catch Belinda before she left for the day.
Jack slowed as he passed the front door of her building. The lobby was dimly lit, but Jack could make out a two-door vestibule with an intercom system on the wall. He saw no doorman.
Jack debated whether he should simply ring Belinda’s buzzer and ask to see her. He quickly rejected the idea. What would he say? I was there when your father was murdered? If she had any sense—and based on her e-mails to Peter, she had plenty—she would call the police. Plan B.
Jack circled the block until he found an all-night grocery store, and left Effrem waiting in the car. He came back out with a brown paper bag overflowing with vegetables. Jack climbed in and handed the bag to Effrem, who said, “I don’t cook.”
“You should learn. Essential skill for a bachelor.”
“Who said I’m a bachelor?”
“You aren’t?”
Effrem hesitated. “Yeah, I am. But I’m offended you assumed so.”
Jack returned to Belinda’s apartment building and found a parking spot down the block. He shut off the headlights and the engine. “You see her front door?”
Effrem turned in his seat and looked out the Citroën’s rear window. “Yes.”
“Stay here and watch. You’ll know what to do when it’s time.”
“Oh, good,” Effrem replied. “Could you be a little more vague, please?”
“If you’d like.”
They sat for a few minutes, watching her door until Jack was satisfied they hadn’t been followed. Then he took the grocery bag from Effrem and climbed out. He walked down the block and took up station beneath a tree directly across from Belinda’s door. He kept his eyes fixed on the elevator at the far end of the lobby.
Jack’s ploy depended on two factors: timing and the kindness of strangers.
Ten minutes later the first of these factors fell into place. Through the vestibule doors he saw the down arrow above the elevator door light up.
He trotted across the street, opened the first vestibule door, then fumbled his grocery bag and let half the contents spill onto the floor. Jack knelt down and grabbed at a head of lettuce that was rolling away from him. Across the lobby, the elevator doors parted. He reached up and, using his own condo keys, tried to slip one of the keys into the inner door’s lock. He dropped the keys, reached for them, and let a trio of oranges tumble from the bag.
“Einen Augenblick. Warten Sie ab!” a female voice called. A moment. Wait.
Jack looked up to see a woman in her early thirties in jogging clothes, her blond hair in a ponytail, hurrying toward the door.
“Danke,” he called.
He scooted back so she could open the door, scattering the oranges as he did so.
“Lassen Sie mich Ihnen helfen!” the woman said. Let me help you.
She knelt down and began helping Jack collect his runaway fruit.
Jack gave her a sheepish smile and muttered, “Danke schön.” When they finished, he stood up, thanked her again, and stepped into the lobby as she held the door for him.
“Schönen Tag.” Have a good day.
“Dir auch.”
Jack waved as she jogged away.
A few moments later Effrem walked up to the door and Jack let him in. They headed toward the elevators. “Smooth, Jack,” Effrem noted.
“Who can’t sympathize with a bumbling idiot?”
They took the elevator to Belinda’s floor. Her apartment was at the end of the hall.
“Now what?” asked Effrem. “What’re you going to say?”
It was a good question. Jack’s grocery-bag ploy had gotten them inside, but he still faced the same problem as before: how to make contact with Belinda without spooking her. He’d already put the possibility she was involved in all this on a mental side burner. Chances were, unless she was a monster, she had nothing to do with her father’s death; whether this also applied to the attempt on Jack’s life was something else. One step at a time.
“I’m going to let her speak for herself,” he replied.
Jack handed Effrem the groceries, then pushed the buzzer button. Thirty seconds passed. Jack buzzed again. Now he heard movement from inside, feet stomping on wood floors. He caught a flicker of movement behind the peephole.
“Wer ist das?” a woman’s voice said through the door.
Jack took a breath, then said, “Fräulein Hahn?”
“Ja? Wer ist das?”
“Sprechen Sie Englisch?”
A long pause. “I speak English.”
“Miss Hahn, I live in Alexandria, not far from your father’s house. I have something of his. May I slide it under the door?”
Another long pause. “Yes, go ahead.”
From his jacket pocket Jack took one of the sudoku books he’d found in Peter Hahn’s house. Like all of the others, this one’s inside cover bore an inscription: “To your good brain health. Love, Belinda.”
Jack slid it under the door and waited.
“I am calling the police,” she said finally.
“Please, don’t,” he replied. Both feet, Jack. Dive in. “I was there. I saw what happened to him. I want to help.”
“Who’s that with you?”
“A friend. Listen, dial the police, dial 110, but keep your finger on the zero. If we do something you don’t like, make the call.”
“I have pepper spray.”
“Good. Go get it. Belinda, listen: I know the name of the man who killed your father. I came to help.”
After a long thirty seconds, the dead bolt on the door clicked open.
MUNICH, GERMANY
Belinda hadn’t been bluffing, Jack noted as they stepped through the door. Belinda did have pepper spray, not one of the pocket models, but rather a soda can–size version designed for bears. She stood at the end of the hallway, pointing the nozzle at them with one hand while clutching her cell phone in the other. Lying at her feet was the sudoku book.
“Is that thing real?” Effrem murmured to Jack. “Do they make Mace that big?”
“Yep. And it’s more powerful than regular pepper spray.”
Over the years Jack had been stabbed, slashed, beaten, and doused with OC, or pepper spray. He would take the first three over the fourth any day. Pain was manageable. OC was pure, unmitigated misery so intense it made time stand still. The memory of it churned his stomach.
“Stop right there,” Belinda ordered.
Peter Hahn’s daughter was barely five feet tall, petite, with short dark hair and rectangular-shaped glasses. She wore a pair of gray sweatpants and a red Washington Wizards T-shirt.
“You, with the mop on your head!” she barked. “Close the door and lock it.”
Effrem touched his index finger to his chest. “Me?”
“Yes, you! Do it or I’ll give you a shower!”
Jack believed her. Peter Hahn hadn’t raised a pushover. Jack said to Effrem, “Move very slowly.”
With his free hand held above his head, Effrem shut and locked the door.
“What’s your name?” Belinda demanded.
“I’m Jack. This is Effrem.”
“Do you have guns?”
“No.”
“Show me. Lift your jackets and turn in a circle.” They both did so. She asked, “What happene
d to my father?”
In the hallway Jack had rehearsed a gentle answer to this question, but Belinda Hahn was tough. And angry. She deserved an unvarnished answer. “He was shot. Once in the stomach, once in the head.”
“Where in the head? I know, so don’t lie. The police told me.”
“The right eye,” Jack replied.
Belinda’s hand on the OC canister wavered slightly, then steadied.
Jack said, “Effrem and I have been following the man who shot your father. His name is Stephan Möller. Does that name mean anything to you?”
Belinda ignored him. “Why didn’t you go to the police?”
“Möller was working with a man named Schrader. Schrader tried to kill me, and your father had been helping him.”
“You’re lying! My father would never—”
“I think he helped Schrader as little as he could, and even then he didn’t want to. He had a chance to kill me twice and didn’t do it. Belinda, men like Möller and Schrader don’t worry much about police. Do you understand what I mean?”
“Maybe.”
Interesting answer. “And I think he was trying to protect you. Is that possible?”
“Possible,” she replied.
Effrem asked, “In what way?”
Belinda jerked the OC canister toward him. “Flip that light switch beside you.”
Effrem did so and the overhead hallway light came on.
Canister extended, Belinda took three steps forward, raised her cell phone, and took a picture of Jack and Effrem’s faces. She said, “Now you’re in my cloud. And my Photobucket account. The police will check it, you know, if something happens to me. They have face-scanning technology now, too.”
“We’d be lucky to make it out of the city,” Jack replied. “Belinda, if we meant you harm, we wouldn’t have knocked on your door. You can either trust us or tell us to leave. Either way, you’re in charge.”
After a few moments Belinda lowered the OC canister. “You want coffee?”
—
Belinda’s apartment was small, with a kitchen/nook, sitting room, and one bedroom. It was tidy, the decor all blond wood and stainless steel. Her tiny balcony was a hanging forest of ferns so thick Jack could barely see the building across the street.