by Steve Berry
“Very much.”
“Did he see the original in Leningrad before the war?”
“Actually, Father saw the room prior to the Russian Revolution. He was a great admirer of amber, as I am sure you already know.”
“Why don’t we cut the crap, Loring.”
Paul cringed at the sudden intensity of McKoy’s voice. Was it genuine or more games?
“I got a hole in a mountain a hundred fifty kilometers west of here that cost a million dollars to dig. All I got for the trouble are three trucks and five skeletons. Let me tell you what I think.”
Loring sank into one of the leather chairs. “By all means.”
McKoy accepted a glass of claret from a steward balancing a tray. “There’s a story Dolinski told me, about a train leavin’ occupied Russia sometime around May 1, 1945. The crated Amber Room was supposedly on board. Witnesses said the crates were offloaded in Czechoslovakia, near T´ynec-nad-Sázavou. From there the crates were supposedly trucked south. One version says they were stored in an underground bunker used by Field Marshal von Schörner, commander of the German army. Another version says they headed west to Germany. A third version says east to Poland. Which one’s right?”
“I, too, have heard such stories. But if I recall, that bunker was extensively excavated by the Soviets. Nothing there, so that eliminates one choice. As to the version east to Poland, I doubt it.”
“Why’s that?” McKoy said, sitting, too.
Paul remained standing, Rachel beside him. It was interesting watching the two men spar. McKoy had handled the partners expertly, and was doing equally well now, apparently intuitive enough to know when to push and when to pull.
“The Poles have not the brains or the resources to harbor such a treasure,” Loring said. “Somebody would surely have discovered it by now.”
“Sounds like prejudice to me,” McKoy said.
“Not at all. Just a fact. Throughout history Poles have never been able to collate themselves into a unified country for long. They are the led, not the leaders.”
“So you say west to Germany?”
“I say nothing, Pan McKoy. Only that of the three choices you offered, west seems the most likely.”
Rachel sat down. “Mr. Loring—”
“Please, my dear. Call me Ernst.”
“Okay . . . Ernst. Grumer was convinced that Knoll and the woman who killed Chapaev were working for members of a club. He called it the Retrievers of Lost Antiquities. Knoll and the woman were supposedly Acquisitors. They steal works of art that have already been stolen, members competing with one another on what can be found.”
“Sounds intriguing. But I can assure you I am not a member of such an organization. As you can see, my home is filled with art. I am a public collector and openly display my treasures.”
“How about amber? Haven’t seen much of that,” McKoy said.
“I have several beautiful pieces. Would you like to see?”
“Damn right.”
Loring led the way out of the Ancestors’ Room and down a twisting corridor deeper into the castle. The room they finally entered was a tight square with no windows. Loring flicked a switch embedded in the stone that lighted wooden display cases lining the walls. Paul paraded down the cases, immediately recognizing Vermeyen vessels, Bohemian glass, and Mair goldsmithing. Each piece was three-hundred-plus years old and in mint condition. Two cases were filled entirely with amber. Among the collection was a casket case, chessboard and pieces, a two-tiered chest, snuffbox, shaving basin, soap dish, and lather brush.
“Most are eighteenth century,” Loring said. “All from the Tsarskoe Selo workshops. The masters who crafted these beauties worked on the Amber Room panels.”
“They are the best I’ve ever seen,” Paul said.
“I am quite proud of this collection. They each cost me a fortune. But, alas, I have no Amber Room to go with them, as much as I would like to.”
“Why don’t I believe you?” McKoy asked.
“Frankly, Pan McKoy, it matters not whether you believe me. The more important question is how are you to prove otherwise. You come into my home and make wild accusations—threaten me with exposure in the world media—yet have nothing to substantiate your allegations except a manufactured picture of letters in the sand and the ramblings of a greedy academician.”
“I don’t recall saying anythin’ about Grumer being an academic,” McKoy said.
“No, you did not. But I am familiar with the Herr Doktor. He was possessed of a reputation that I would not consider enviable.”
Paul noticed the shift in Loring’s tone. No longer congenial and conciliatory. Now the words came slow and deliberate, the meaning clear. The man’s patience was apparently running thin.
McKoy seemed unimpressed. “I’d think, Pan Loring, a man of your experience and breedin’ could handle a rough-by-the-edges sort like me.”
Loring smiled. “I do find your frankness refreshing. It is not often a man speaks to me as you have.”
“Given any more thought to my offer from this afternoon?”
“As a matter of fact, I have. Would a million dollars U.S. solve your investment problem?”
“Three million would be better.”
“Then I assume you will settle for two without the need for haggling?”
“I will.”
Loring chuckled. “Pan McKoy, you are a man after my own heart.”
FIFTY-FIVE
Friday, May 23, 2:15 a.m.
Paul awakened. He’d had trouble sleeping, ever since he and Rachel turned in a little before midnight. Rachel was sound asleep beside him in the sleigh bed, not snoring, but breathing heavily like she used to. He thought again about Loring and McKoy. The old man had willingly coughed up two million dollars. Maybe McKoy was right. Loring was hiding something two million dollars was a bargain to protect. But what? The Amber Room? That prospect was a bit far-fetched. He imagined Nazis ripping the amber panels off the palace walls, then trucking them across the Soviet Union, only to dismantle them again and truck them into Germany four years later. What kind of shape would they even be in? Would they be worth anything other than as raw material to be fashioned into other works of art? What had he read in Borya’s articles? The panels comprised a hundred thousand pieces of amber. Certainly that was worth something on the open market. Maybe that was it. Loring found the amber and sold it, garnering enough that two million dollars was a bargain to silence.
He rose from the bed and crept toward his shirt and pants draped over a chair. He slipped them on but passed on his shoes—bare feet would make less noise. Sleep was not coming easily, and he’d very much like to investigate the ground-floor display rooms again. The array of art earlier had been nearly overpowering, difficult to take in. He hoped Loring wouldn’t mind a little private viewing.
He stole a glance at Rachel. She was curled under the down comforter, her naked body covered only by one of his twill shirts. She’d made love to him two hours ago for the first time in nearly four years. He could still feel the intensity between them, his body drained from a release of emotions he thought never again possible. Could they make things right? God knows he wanted to. The past couple weeks had certainly been bittersweet. Her father was gone, but perhaps the Cutler family could be restored. He hoped he wasn’t simply something with which to fill a void. Rachel’s words earlier about him being all the family she had left still rang in his ears. He wondered why he was so suspicious. Perhaps it was the kick in the gut he’d experienced three years ago—caution shielding his heart from another crushing break.
He inched the door open and quietly slipped into the hall. Incandescent wall sconces burned softly. Not a sound drifted in the air. He crossed to a thick stone railing and glanced down at a foyer four stories below, the marbled space illuminated by a series of table lamps. A massive, unlit crystal chandelier hung down to the third-floor level.
He followed a carpet runner down a right-angled stone staircase to the ground floo
r. Barefoot and silent he moved deeper into the castle, negotiating wide corridors past the dining hall toward a series of spacious rooms where art was displayed. None of the doors to any room was shut.
He stepped into the Witches’ Room, which, as Loring explained earlier, was where a local witches’ court was once held. He approached a series of ebony cabinets and switched on tiny halogen lights. Roman Age artifacts lined the shelves. Statuettes, standards, plates, vessels, lamps, bells, tools. A few exquisitely carved goddesses, as well. He recognized Victoria, the Roman symbol for victory, a crown and palm leaf in her outstretched hands beckoning a choice.
A sound suddenly came from the hall. Not much. Like a scuff on carpet. But in the silence it rang loud.
His head whipped left to the open doorway and he froze, barely breathing. Was it a footstep or just a centuries-old building settling down for the night? He reached up and gently flicked off the cabinet lights. The cases went dark. He crept to a sofa and crouched down behind.
Another sound slipped past him. A footstep. Definitely. Somebody was in the hall. He shrank farther behind the couch and waited, hoping whoever it was moved on. Perhaps it was simply one of the staff making required rounds.
A shadow spread across the lit doorway. He peered over the sofa.
Wayland McKoy walked past.
He should have known.
He tiptoed to the doorway. McKoy was a few feet away, headed in the direction of a room at the far end. Earlier, Loring had merely pointed out the darkened space, calling it the Romanesque Room, but had not offered a tour.
“Couldn’t sleep?” he whispered.
McKoy reeled back with a start and whirled around. “Goddammit, Cutler,” he mouthed. “You scared the fuck out of me.” The big man wore a pair of jeans and a pullover sweater.
He pointed to McKoy’s bare feet. “We’re starting to think alike. That’s scary.”
“A little redneck wouldn’t hurt you a bit, city lawyer.”
They stepped into the shadow of the Witches’ Room and spoke in hushed whispers.
“You curious, too?” Paul asked.
“Damn right. Two fuckin’ million. Loring jumped on that like flies on shit.”
“Wonder what he knows?”
“I don’t know. But it’s somethin’. Trouble is, this Bohemian Louvre is so full of crap, we may never find out.”
“We could get lost in this maze.”
Suddenly, something clattered down the hall. Like metal to stone. He and McKoy leaned their heads out and glanced left. A dim yellow rectangle of light spilled from the Romanesque Room at the far end.
“I vote we go see,” McKoy said.
“Why not? We’ve come this far.”
McKoy led the way down the carpet runner. At the open door of the Romanesque Room they both froze.
“Oh, shit,” Paul said.
Knoll had watched through the judas hole as Paul Cutler donned his clothes and crept out. Rachel Cutler had never heard her ex-husband leave and was still asleep under the covers. He’d been waiting for hours before making his move, allowing ample time for everyone to retire for the night. He planned to start with the Cutlers, move to McKoy, then Loring and Danzer, particularly enjoying the last two—savoring the moment of their deaths—exacting compensation for the murders of Fellner and Monika. But Paul Cutler’s unexpected leaving had raised a problem. From what Rachel described, her ex-husband wasn’t the adventurous type. Yet here he was, venturing off barefoot in the middle of the night. Certainly not heading for the kitchen and a midnight snack. He was most likely snooping. He’d have to tend to him later.
After Rachel.
He crept down the passage, following a trail of bare bulbs. He found the first exit and tripped the spring-loaded switch. A slab of stone swung open and he stepped into one of the empty fourth-floor bedrooms. He crossed to the hall door and hustled back to the room where Rachel Cutler slept.
He entered and locked the door behind him.
Approaching the Renaissance fireplace, he located the switch disguised as a piece of gilded molding. He’d not entered from the secret passages for fear of making too much noise, but he might need to make a hasty exit. He tripped the switch and left the concealed door half open.
He inched over to the bed.
Rachel Cutler still slept peacefully.
He twisted his right arm and waited for the stiletto to slither down into his palm.
“It’s a friggin’ secret door,” McKoy said.
Paul had never seen one before. Old movies and novels proclaimed their existence, but right before his eyes, thirty feet away, a section of stone wall was swung open on a center pivot. One of the wooden display cases was firmly affixed to it, three feet on either side allowing entrance into a lit room beyond.
McKoy stepped forward.
Paul grabbed him. “You crazy?”
“Do the math, Cutler. We’re supposed to go.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean our host didn’t leave this open by accident. Let’s not disappoint him.”
Paul believed going any farther was foolish. He’d pushed things coming downstairs to start with, but now he wasn’t sure about following the situation to its conclusion. Maybe he should just go back upstairs to Rachel. But his curiosity told him to go on.
So he followed McKoy.
In the room beyond, more lighted cases lined the walls and center. Paul strolled through the maze in awe. Antico statues and busts. Egyptian and Near East carvings. Mayan etchings. Antique jewelry. A couple of paintings caught his eye. A seventeenth-century Rembrandt he knew was stolen from a German museum thirty years ago and a Bellini taken from Italy about the same time. Both were among the world’s most sought-after art treasures. He recalled a seminar at the High Museum on the topic.
“McKoy, this stuff is all stolen.”
“How do you know?”
He stopped in front of one chest-high case that displayed a blackened skull resting on a glass pedestal. “This is Peking Man. Nobody has seen it since World War Two. And those two paintings over there are definitely stolen. Shit. What Grumer said was right. Loring is part of that club.”
“Calm down, Cutler. We don’t know that. This guy may just have a little private stash he keeps to himself. Let’s not go off half-cocked.”
He stared ahead at a set of open, white-enameled double doors. He noticed the whiskey-colored mosaic walls beyond. He stepped forward. McKoy followed. In the doorway they both went motionless.
“Oh, fuck,” McKoy whispered.
Paul gazed at the Amber Room. “You got that right.”
The visual spectacle was broken by two people who entered through another set of open double doors to the right. One was Loring. The other, the blond woman from Stod. Suzanne. Both held pistols.
“I see you accepted my invitation,” Loring said.
McKoy stiffened. “Didn’t want to disappoint you.”
Loring motioned with the gun. “What do you think of my treasure?”
McKoy stepped farther inside. The woman’s grip on her gun tightened, barrel jutted forward. “Stay cool, little lady. Just goin’ to admire the handiwork.” McKoy approached one of the amber walls.
Paul turned to the woman Knoll had called Suzanne. “You found Chapaev through me, didn’t you?”
“Yes, Mr. Cutler. The information was most helpful.”
“You killed that old man for this?”
“No, Pan Cutler,” Loring said. “She killed for me.”
Loring and the woman stayed to the far side of the thirty-foot-square room. Double doors opened out of three walls, windows lined the fourth, but Paul assumed they were fake. This chamber was clearly an inside one. McKoy continued to admire the amber, massaging its smoothness. If not for the seriousness of their predicament, Paul would have been in awe, as well. But not too many probate lawyers found themselves in a Czech castle with two semiautomatic handguns pointed at them. Definitely not a course on this in law school.
<
br /> “Tend to it,” Loring softly said to Suzanne.
The woman left. Loring stayed across the room and kept his gun trained. McKoy moved close to Paul.
“We will wait here, gentlemen, until Suzanne fetches the other Cutler.”
McKoy stepped close.
“What the shit we do now?” Paul whispered.
“Hell if I know.”
Knoll slowly peeled back the comforter and crawled onto the bed. He nestled close to Rachel and gently massaged her breasts. She responded to his touch, sighing gently, still half asleep. He let his hand roam down the length of her body and discovered she was naked beneath the shirt. She slid over and cuddled close.
“Paul,” she whispered.
He wrapped his hand around her throat, rolled her over onto her back, and then slipped on top. Rachel’s eyes went wide with fear. He brought the stiletto to her throat, gently probing the scab from last night’s encounter with the tip. “You should have taken my advice.”
“Where’s Paul?” she managed to mouth.
“I have him.”
She started to struggle. He pressed the blade flat against her throat. “Sit still, Frau Cutler, or I will twist the edge to your skin. Do you understand?”
She stopped moving.
He motioned with his head toward the open panel, relaxing his grip slightly to allow a look. “He’s in there.” He retightened the lock on her throat and moved the knife down her shirt, flicking off each button. Then he parted the folds. Her bare chest heaved. He lightly traced the outline of one nipple with the knifepoint. “I watched earlier from behind the wall. Your lovemaking is intense.”
She spat on him.
He backhanded her face. “Insolent bitch. Your father did the same thing and you saw what happened to him.”
He slugged her in the stomach and heard the breath leave her. He delivered another blow to her face, this time with his fist. His hand returned to her throat. Her eyes rolled in a daze. He pinched her cheeks and shook her head from side to side.
“You love him? Why risk his life? Pretend you are a whore, the price of my pleasure . . . a life. It will not be unpleasant.”