The Day After Tomorrow - The Day After Tomorrow Part 39
Library

The Day After Tomorrow Part 39

"No, you don't."

Running a hand through his hair, McVey walked across the room. When he turned back he was looking directly at Honig. "You ever lose one of your friends in the line of duty, Herr Honig?"

"You don't do this game without it . . . ," Honig said quietly.

"Then how much longer do we have to wait for Judge Gravenitz?" It wasn't a question, it was a demand.

94.

GRANDIOSE, S SHORT and red faced, with a shock of silver white hair, district Kriminal Richter Otto Gravenitz gestured toward a grouping of leather and Burmese teak chairs and bade them in German to sit down. Standing until they were seated, he crossed in front of them and sat down behind a massive rococo desk, the soles of his shoes barely reaching down to the oriental carpet beneath them. In contrast to the Spartan decor of the rest of the building, Gravenitz's office was a rich oasis of taste, antiques and wealth. It was also a well-calculated display of power and position. and red faced, with a shock of silver white hair, district Kriminal Richter Otto Gravenitz gestured toward a grouping of leather and Burmese teak chairs and bade them in German to sit down. Standing until they were seated, he crossed in front of them and sat down behind a massive rococo desk, the soles of his shoes barely reaching down to the oriental carpet beneath them. In contrast to the Spartan decor of the rest of the building, Gravenitz's office was a rich oasis of taste, antiques and wealth. It was also a well-calculated display of power and position.

Turning to the others, Honig explained in English that because of Scholl's prominence and the severity of the charge against him, Judge Gravenitz had chosen to conduct the deposition himself, without the presence of a state prosecutor.

"Fine," McVey said. "Let's get on with it.

Leaning forward, Gravenitz turned on a tape recorder "and, at three twenty-five, they got to business.

In a brief opening statement, translated into German by Remmer, McVey explained who Osborn was, how he chanced to see his father's murderer in a Paris cafe and how, in the absence of police and the fear he would lose sight of him, he had followed him to a park along the Seine. There he gathered the courage to approach and question him, only to have Merriman shot to death moments later by an assailant they believed also to have been in the hire of Erwin Scholl.

Finished, McVey looked at Osborn measuredly, then gave him the floor and sat down. Remmer translated as Gravenitz swore Osborn in, then Osborn began his testimony. In it, he restated what McVey had said and then simply told the truth.

Sitting back, Gravenitz studied Osborn and at the same time listened to the translation. When Osborn finished, he glanced at Honig, then back to Osborn. "You are certain Merriman was your father's murderer? Certain after nearly thirty years?

"Yes, sir," Osborn said.

"You must have hated him."

McVey shot Osborn a warning glance. Be careful, it said. He's probing.

"You would too," Osborn said without flinching.

"Do you know why Erwin Scholl would have wanted your father to be killed?"

"No, sir," Osborn replied quietly and McVey breathed a sigh of relief. Osborn was doing well. "You have to remember I was a little boy. But I saw the man's face and I never forgot it. And I never saw it again until that night in Paris. I don't know how much more I can tell you."

Gravenitz waited, then looked to McVey.

"Are you certain, beyond doubt, that the Erwin Scholl who is now here in Berlin is the same man who hired Albert Merriman?"

McVey stood up. "Yes, sir."

"Why do you believe the individual who shot Herr Merriman was also employed by Herr Scholl?"

"Because Scholl's men had tried to kill him before and because Merriman had been in hiding for a long time. They finally tracked him down."

"And you are certain, beyond doubt, Scholl was behind it."

This was the kind of thing McVey had tried to avoid, but Gravenitz, like respected judges everywhere, had a second sense, the same kind parents had, and it carried the same warning: Lie and you're dead. "Can I prove it? No, sir. Not yet."

"I see . . . ," Gravenitz said.

Scholl was an international figure, huge and important, and Gravenitz was teetering. A thinking judge would no more casually sign an arrest warrant for Erwin Scholl than he would for the chancellor of the country, and McVey knew it. And Osborn's deposition, strong as it was, bottom line, was in reality hearsay and nothing more. Something had to be done to push Gravenitz over or they would have to go to Scholl without a writ and that was the last thing he wanted to do. Remmer must have sensed it too because suddenly he was standing up, pushing back his chair.

"Your Honor," he said in German. "As I understand it, one of the primary reasons you agreed to see us on such short notice was because two police officers working on the case were shot. One could have been coincidental, but two-"

"Yes, that was a strong consideration," Gravenitz said.

"Then you would know one was a New York detective, killed right in his own home. The second, a highly respected member of the Paris police, was seriously wounded at the main rail station in Lyon, then taken to London and put in a hospital under a false name and a twenty-four-hour police guard." Remmer paused, then continued. "A short time ago he was shot to death in that very same hospital room."

"I'm sorry-" Gravenitz said, genuinely.

Remmer accepted his sentiment, then went on. "We have every reason to believe the man responsible was working for Scholl's organization. We need to interrogate Herr Scholl personally, Your Honor, not talk to his lawyers. Without a writ we will never be able to do that.

Gravenitz put his palms together and sat back, then looked to McVey, who was staring right at him, waiting for his decision. Expressionless, he leaned forward and made a note on a legal pad in front of him. Then, running a hand through his silvery mane and glancing at Honig, his eyes found Remmer.

"Okay," he said in English. "Okay."

95.

MCVEY W WAITED with Noble and Osborn until Gravenitz signed the with Noble and Osborn until Gravenitz signed the Haftbefehl, Haftbefehl, the arrest warrant for Erwin Scholl, and presented it to Remmer. Then, thanking Gravenitz and shaking hands with Honig, the four left the judicial chambers and took Gravenitz's private elevator to the garage. the arrest warrant for Erwin Scholl, and presented it to Remmer. Then, thanking Gravenitz and shaking hands with Honig, the four left the judicial chambers and took Gravenitz's private elevator to the garage.

They were walking on eggshells and knew it, Osborn included. For all intents, the court order now resting in McVey's pocket, as Honig had suggested, was all but useless. Presented to Scholl in your everyday knock and notice-"Good evening, sir, we are the police and have a warrant for your arrest and this is why"-Scholl might be carted off to jail like John Doe, but within the hour would come a battery of attorneys who would do all the talking, and in the end Scholl would walk out, most likely never having said a word.

In the weeks that followed, a volume of depositions would be filed by Scholl and a number of extremely distinguished others vouching for Scholl's character and swearing his total noninvolvement, denying he'd ever known, had business with or had reason to have business with Osborn's father or any of the deceased; denying he'd ever heard of, let alone known and had dealings with, a man called Albert Merriman; avowing he'd been else-where and not at his Long Island estate during the dates mentioned; denying he'd ever heard of, let alone had dealings with, a former Stasi agent named Bernhard Oven; avowing he'd been in the United States and nowhere near Paris at the time of Merriman's murder. And those sworn testimonies, backed by the prominence of those who had given them, would in effect, warrant Scholl's complete innocence. Adding to that the fact there was no real evidence, the charges would be promptly dismissed.

And then, perhaps a year or more later, with Scholl's name and person fully distanced and the episode all but forgotten, would come the cold, detached retribution Honig had warned about. And McVey, Noble, Remmer and Osborn would see their careers and then their lives crumble into nothing. Friends, co-workers and people they'd never heard of would come forward with accusations of theft, corruption, sexual depravity, malpractice and worse. Their families would be held up to ridicule and their once-proud names would be splashed across media headlines for as long as it took to ruin them. Compared to the]m, Humpty-Dumpty would be a great granite edifice, chiseled eternally whole alongside the other grand survivors atop the cliffs at Mount Rushmore.

With a squeal of tires Remmer wheeled out of the garage and onto Hardenbergstrasse with a federal police escort car right behind.

Five minutes later, he pulled into a garage on a street across from the twenty-two-story glass-and-steel Europa Center. "Auf Wiedersehen. Danke," "Auf Wiedersehen. Danke," he said into his radio. he said into his radio.

"Auf bald." See you later. The escort car accelerated off in traffic. See you later. The escort car accelerated off in traffic.

I assume you feel we're safe," Noble said, as Remmer pulled into a spot away from the entrance.

"Sure we're safe." Getting out, Remmer lifted the submachine gun from its door holder and locked it in the trunk. Then, lighting a cigarette, he led them down a ramp, through a steel utility door and along a corridor filled with electrical and plumbing conduit that ran directly under the street above and connected to the Europa Center complex on the far side.

"Do we know where Scholl is?" McVey's voice echoed in the long chamber.

"The Grand Hotel Berlin. On Friedrichstrasse, across the Tiergarten. From here, a long walk for an aging gentleman like yourself." Remmer grinned at McVey, then i pushed through a fire door at the end of the corridor Stabbing out his cigarette in an ashtray, he stopped at a service elevator and pressed the button. The door opened almost immediately and the four entered. Remmer punched the sixth-floor button, the doors closed and they started up. It was only then that Osborn realized Remmer had been carrying a gun at his side the entire time.

Looking at the three as they stood there silently in the pale light of the elevator, he felt wholly out of place, as if he were a fifth for bridge or the best man at an ex-wife's wedding. These were veteran policemen, professionals, whose lives were intertwined in that world like so much muscle and bone. The warrant in McVey's pocket had come from one of the state's most prestigious criminal judges and the man they were going up against was very nearly a world figure who would have an army of his own. McVey had told him the reason he was coming with them to Berlin was to give a deposition, and he had. And now there was no need for him. Was he so naive as to believe McVey was actually going to go the next step and honor what he'd said and let him come along when he confronted Scholl? Suddenly a knot tightened in his stomach. McVey didn't give a damn about Osborn's personal war. His agenda was his and nobody else's.

"What is it?" McVey caught him staring at him.

"Just thinking," Osborn said quietly.

"Don't overdo it." McVey didn't smile.

The elevator slowed and then stopped. The door opened and Remmer stepped out first. Satisfied, he led them down a carpeted hallway. They were in a hotel. The Hotel Palace. Osborn saw a brochure on a table as they passed.

Then Remmer stopped and knocked on the door to room 6132. The door opened and a stocky, tough-looking detective ushered them into a large suite that had two good-sized bedrooms connected by a narrow hallway. The windows in both rooms angled out toward the green of the Tiergarten park, with the window in the first room looking at an angle toward rooms in what appeared to be a newer wing.

Remmer slipped the gun inside his jacket and turned to talk to the detective who had let them in. McVey went into the hallway and looked into the second bedroom. Then came back. Noble wasn't particularly fond of the proximity of the new wing, which had any number of rooms that could see, albeit on a slant, into theirs, and said so. McVey agreed.

The stocky detective threw up his hands and told them with a heavy accent they'd been lucky to get rooms at all, let alone a suite. Berlin was alive with trade shows and conventions. Even the federal police didn't have a lot of pull when rooms had been overbooked three months in advance.

"Manfred, in that case, we're overjoyed," McVey said. Remmer nodded, then said something in German to the detective and the man left. Remmer locked the door behind him.

"You and I'll camp out here," McVey said to Remmer. "Noble and Osborn can have the other room." Crossing to the window, he fingered the feather-light material of the draw shade and looked down at the traffic on the Kurfurstendamm below. "Phones secured?" His gaze lifted to the dark expanse that was the Tiergarten across the street.

"Two lines." Remmer lit a cigarette and took off his leather jacket, revealing a muscular upper body and an old-fashioned leather shoulder holster that cradled what Osborn now saw was a very large automatic.

McVey pulled off his own jacket and looked at Noble. "Check on the situation with Lebrun, huh? See if they've found who the shooter was. How he got in. What the word is on Cadoux. See if anybody knows where he went, where he is now. We need to determine if he was there by chance or on purpose." Hanging up his jacket, he looked at Osborn. "Make yourself at home. We're gonna be here for a while." Then he went into the bathroom and washed his hands and face. When he came out he was drying his hands on a towel and talking to Remmer.

"This Charlottenburg deal tomorrow night. Let's find out what it is and who's going to be there. I trust your people in Bad Godesberg can do that for us."

Osborn left them, went into the second bedroom and looked around. He was working like hell to control the paranoia growing inside him. Twin beds with olive-and blue bedspreads. Small table between the beds. Two small chests of drawers. A TV. A window looking out. Its own bathroom. He knew McVey's mind was tracking the whole, a field officer with a slim ace up his sleeve maneuvering a small combat unit against a king's army and searching every way possible to gain advantage against it. Osborn wasn't even in his thoughts. He'd been purposely roomed with Noble so McVey wouldn't find himself in a position where they would be alone and Osborn might ask questions. Because then McVey would be in the awkward situation of having to explain why Osborn would not be going along when they went to meet Scholl. That was smart. String him along. Save it to the last minute. Just go out the door saying, "Sorry, this is police business." Then leave him in the custody of the federal police waiting out side in the hallway.

96.

"PRIVATE D DINNER . Black tie. One hundred guests. Invitation only." Remmer was sitting in his shirt sleeves at a small table, a coffee cup in one hand, a cigarette in the other. In the last hour a half-dozen calls had gone back and forth between Remmer and operatives at the Intelligence Division at Bundeskriminalamt-BKA-Headquarters in Bad Godesberg as they tried to work a profile of the affair at Charlottenburg Palace. . Black tie. One hundred guests. Invitation only." Remmer was sitting in his shirt sleeves at a small table, a coffee cup in one hand, a cigarette in the other. In the last hour a half-dozen calls had gone back and forth between Remmer and operatives at the Intelligence Division at Bundeskriminalamt-BKA-Headquarters in Bad Godesberg as they tried to work a profile of the affair at Charlottenburg Palace.

Osborn sat in the room with them, his sleeves rolled up, I watching McVey pace up and down in his stockinged feet. He'd decided the best thing would be to use McVey as McVey had used him. Quietly, unassumingly. Try to find some way to take advantage of-his situation without giving the police any sense of what he was thinking. The Hotel Palace, he'd learned, was part of the giant Europa-Center complex of shops and casinos smack in the heart of Berlin. The Tiergarten, directly across from them, was like Central Park in New York, huge and sprawling, with roads cutting through it and pathways everywhere. From what he'd been able to conclude from a variety of conversations between the policemen themselves and a battery of phone conversations with others, besides the plainclothes BKA detectives stationed in the hallway outside their room, others were downstairs working two-man shifts watching the lobby, two more were posted on the roof and backup radio-car units were on standby alert. A security check had been done on the guests occupying the six rooms in the wing across with sight lines into theirs. Four were occupied by Japanese tourists from Osaka, the other two by businessmen attending a computer trade show. One was from Munich, the other from Disney World in Orlando. All were who they said they were. What it meant was they were about as safe as they could be even if the "group" had discovered where they were and tried to do something about it. The problem was, it also meant Osborn's chances of doing anything other than what McVey wanted were all but nil.

"A Swiss corporation called the Berghaus Group is giving it." Remmer was reading from notes he'd scratched on a yellow legal pad. To his left, Noble was talking animatedly on the telephone, a pad like Remmer's at his elbow.

"The occasion is a welcoming celebration for an-" Remmer looked at his notes again. "Elton Karl Lybarger. An industrialist from Zurich who had a severe stroke a year ago in San Francisco and has now fully recovered."

"Who the hell is Elton Lybarger?" McVey asked.

Remmer shrugged. "Never heard of him. Or this Berghaus Group either. Intelligence Division is working on it, also on providing us with the guest list."

Noble hung up and turned around. "Cadoux sent a coded message to my office saying he fled the hospital be cause he was afraid the police on guard had let Lebrun's killer in. That they were part of the 'group' and would get him next. He said he would be in contact when he could."

"When did he send it and from where?" McVey asked.

"It came in little more than an hour ago. It was faxed from Gatwick Airport."

Held up by fog, Von Holden's jet touched down at Tempelhof Airport at 6:35, three hours later than planned. At 7:30, he got out of a taxi on Spandauerdamm and crossed the street to Charlottenburg Palace, now dark and closed for the evening. He was tempted to go around and in through a side door to personally check out the final security preparations. But Viktor Shevchenko had done it twice today already and reported to him en route. And Viktor Shevchenko he would, trust with his life.

Instead, he stood there looking in through the iron gates, visualizing what would be taking place in less than twenty-four hours. He could see it and hear it. And the thought that they were on the eve of it thrilled him almost to the point of tears. Finally, he let it go and began to walk.

As of five o'clock that afternoon, Berlin sector had established that McVey, Osborn and the others had arrived in the city and were headquartered at the Hotel Palace where they were under the protection of the federal police. It was exactly as Scholl had predicted, and he was no doubt right as well when he'd said they had come to Berlin to see him. Lybarger was not on their agenda, nor was the ceremony at Charlottenburg.

Find them, watch them, Scholl had said. At some point they will try and get in touch, to arrange a time and place where we can meet. That will be our opportunity to isolate them. And then you and Viktor will do as is appropriate.

Yes, Von Holden thought, as he walked on-we shall do as is appropriate. As quickly and resourcefully as possible.

Still, Von Holden was uncomfortable. He knew Scholl was underestimating them, McVey in particular. They were smart and experienced and they had also been very lucky. It was not a good combination, and it meant what-ever plan he came up with would have to be exceptionally resourceful, one in which experience and luck would play , as little a hand as possible. His real preference was to take the initiative and get it done quickly, before they had the chance to implement their own plans. But getting to four men, at least three of whom would be armed, guarded by police in a hotel that was part of a complex as huge as the Europa-Center, was all but impossible. It would require significant overt action. It would be too bloody, too loud and nothing would be guaranteed. Besides, if something went wrong and anyone were caught, it chanced compromising the entire Organization at the worst possible time.

So, unless they made an unthinkable mistake and some how left themselves open, he would stay with Scholl's orders and wait for them to make the first move. From his own experience he knew there was little question that whatever? countermeasure he devised would be successful as long as he was there to command the operation personally. He also knew his energy was better spent on the logistics of a working plan than worrying about his adversaries. But they were a troubling presence and he was uncomfortable almost to the point of requesting Scholl postpone the celebration at Charlottenburg until they had been taken care of. But that was not possible. Scholl had said so from the beginning.

Turning a corner, he walked a half block, then went up the steps to a quiet apartment building at number 37 Sophie-Charlottenstrasse and pressed the bell.

"Ja?" a voice challenged through the intercom.

"Von Holden," he said. There was a sharp buzz as the door lock released and he climbed the flight of stairs to the large second-floor apartment that had been taken over as security headquarters for the Lybarger party. A uniformed I guard opened the door and he walked down a hallway past a bank of desks where several secretaries were still working.

"Guten Abend." Good evening, he said quietly and opened the door to a small but serviceable office. The problem was, his thought train continued, the longer they stayed in the hotel without contacting Scholl, the less time he had to formulate a plan of action and the more time they would have to work out a blueprint of their own. But that was something he had already begun to turn in his favor. Time went both ways, and the longer they were there, the longer he had to set the forces in motion that would tell him how much they knew and what they were plotting. Good evening, he said quietly and opened the door to a small but serviceable office. The problem was, his thought train continued, the longer they stayed in the hotel without contacting Scholl, the less time he had to formulate a plan of action and the more time they would have to work out a blueprint of their own. But that was something he had already begun to turn in his favor. Time went both ways, and the longer they were there, the longer he had to set the forces in motion that would tell him how much they knew and what they were plotting.

97.

"GUSTAV D DORTMUND, Hans Dabritz, Rudolf Kaes, Hilmar Grunel-" Remmer put down the faxed description sheet and looked across to where McVey sat reading the same five-page copy of the Charlottenburg guest list. "Herr Lybarger has some very wealthy and influential friends."

"And some not so wealthy, but just as influential," Noble said, studying his own copy of the list. "Gertrude Biermann, Matthias Noll, Henryk Steiner."