Bomb Grade
Page 42
‘And worth a lot of money.’
‘What would you expect?’
‘You’re the broker.’
‘Twenty million. Maybe as high as twenty-two,’ said Charlie, relying on Hillary’s valuation of ten containers.
‘I want $25,000,000,’ demanded the Russian.
‘I could try.’ The recovery was the essential, not the money. Which would never be paid anyway, although a proportion might have to be put up, for bait. Lost even.
‘You can guarantee a purchaser?’
‘It will need some negotiation. But yes, I can.’ This was wrong, Charlie told himself: against all his own arguments that a robbery as brilliant as Pizhma came after, not before a buyer had been established and a price fixed. As wrong as figures that didn’t add up when they knew exactly how much had been taken at Pizhma and empty containers and wrong batch numbers and … No it wasn’t, Charlie abruptly corrected himself. It wasn’t wrong at all. What had been wrong was his myopically believing the internal battle for ultimate control of the six-clan Dolgoprudnaya Family had begun after the murder of Stanislav Silin. He’d virtually had it spelled out for him by Gusev and not put it in context. And then he remembered a laugh and a word – akrashena – which he’d always known was important without properly realizing just how important. Charlie smiled and said, ‘I think I should have offered congratulations before now.’
Sobelov regarded him warily. ‘For what?’
‘It’s been a bloody battle. At least ten people killed if I’ve correctly interpreted newspaper stories.’
The Russian’s wariness remained. ‘That would show a most unusual business interest on your part.’
‘Isn’t the reason I’m sitting here, having this conversation, that I’ve already shown how seriously I regard business?’ said Charlie, easily.
The smile returned. ‘Which is how I expect you to conduct this business transaction: very seriously indeed. In the hope that it may be the first of many.’
‘I hope there aren’t any hard feelings about the confrontation with people asking me to take out operating insurance?’
Sobelov flicked an impatient hand, still holding Charlie’s business card. ‘None. And thank you, for your congratulations. I’m pleased at the outcome.’
Not as pleased as he was, Charlie thought, as he left the Metropole an hour later with the arrangement to use Ranov as his conduit to the new Dolgroprudnaya boss of bosses. It took a lot to suppress the euphoria but he managed it, zigzagging a circuitous route to Ulitza Chaykovskovo. At the American embassy he was greeted by an equally excited James Kestler with the news that he was going to be the major prosecution witness at the Berlin trial and after that return to Washington for reassignment. Charlie offered congratulations for the second time that day and said he was going to Berlin as well and at once the enthusiastic Kestler began planning celebrations in Germany. They contented themselves that day with a single drink in the embassy mess, because Charlie was anxious to be back in Lesnaya for Natalia’s arranged call. She flustered immediately into apologies for the dinner party. It had been something else Popov hadn’t told her, until the very moment of their arrival. They’d argued about it, particularly about the wedding invitation. She didn’t want him to come and Charlie said he didn’t want to, either. It wouldn’t be a problem. She said she thought Hillary was a very pretty girl: vivacious was the word she used. Charlie said she was a free spirit and that it wasn’t serious and Natalia said she was sorry. When he told her, in Russian because Hillary was with him in the room, that he was going to Berlin but before that to be briefed in London – which was the explanation he’d given the Americans for his intended absence – Natalia said Popov had received an official summons, too. Charlie wasn’t surprised when Hillary received her Berlin summons the following day because he’d pressed Balg for it to be issued, to give her the freedom of movement he wanted.
Charlie did fly to London but only to satisfy any Moscow exit check and only long enough to cross from the arrival to the departure section of Terminal 2, pausing on the way to telephone Gunther Schumann who was again at Tegel airport to meet him. The German conceded at once that he’d promised his superiors too much predicting they could break up the Dolgoprudnaya cell in Berlin – as Mitrov had sneered, the Marzahn address had been empty when they’d raided it – but that the forthcoming trial would more than compensate. And then he listened without interruption to what Charlie recounted before saying, ‘We have got the prints! Of all of them. But we didn’t make the comparison! So we just can’t lose!’
‘Providing they match,’ cautioned Charlie.
They did.
Again Charlie had come with a lot of confidence-shattering evidence – although he’d only just got the most shattering of all – and although he knew he could direct it more accurately than before there was no stage-set theatricals this time, just the bare and windowless interview room with its sparse essential furniture. The only addition was an extra tape recorder.
There was an eyebrow lift at Charlie’s presence when Ivan Mikhailovich Raina was escorted in but no other reaction. Charlie said, ‘You did very well: almost beat us. The others supported you well, too. I thought they’d totally collapsed but they hadn’t, had they? You must frighten them a lot.’
Raina frowned. ‘I don’t know what the hell you’re talking about.’
‘Your faction lost,’ declared Charlie. ‘There’s been a lot of killing but Sobelov won.’
There was a brief narrowing of the eyes but that was all. ‘You’re still not making sense.’
‘Let’s look at some more photographs,’ invited Charlie, opening the prepared package. ‘This is the one that will interest you most …’ He set out first the autopsy prints of the naked Stanislav Silin. ‘He was obscenely tortured for a very long time: I’d guess the testicle crushing was the worst but you can see they pulled his teeth out, with pliers I’d guess. And the pathologist says he was blinded long before he died, probably with whatever the heated rod was that inflicted all those burns … And look what they did to his wife.’ The pictures of Malin were also from the autopsy. ‘See what they did to Petr Gavrilovich? They blinded him, too, but I don’t suppose he had the name they wanted. To almost separate the two parts of his body like that the pathologist thinks they actually held the shotgun against his stomach and fired both barrels simultaneously: the skin is burned all around the wound …’
Raina had gone putty grey and his throat was moving where he kept swallowing and Charlie hoped he’d be able to get out of the way if the man actually vomited.
‘… This one really affects you,’ Charlie went on, sliding across the table the German photographs of the empty nuclear cylinders: in several, scientists were actually shown to be groping inside. ‘Those are the ones you brought out. Which were completely empty and clean, otherwise those unprotected physicists wouldn’t be feeling around inside like that. I don’t know how the switch was made, any more than you do, but it was. I guess we’ll establish Sobelov was at Pizhma from the physical comparison against the satellite prints: that’s where it would have been done, at Pizhma.’
‘None of this means anything to me,’ rasped Raina, dry-throated.
‘Yes it does,’ insisted Charlie. ‘It means that Sobelov had you carry into Germany canisters that would have been empty when they eventually got to the Middle East or wherever else you were selling them. Which would have been your death warrant …’ He flicked across another photograph, of the emasculated con man found months before on the Wannsee Lake. ‘… They always kill people who try to con them, like they killed and mutilated him.’
Raina sat shaking his head but not talking and Charlie wondered if he should have been more direct. Still better to frighten the man, he decided. ‘Listen!’ Charlie ordered, pressing the play button on the second pre-set recorder. Mitrov’s reference to akrashena echoed into the room. At once Charlie stopped and rewound it but before repeating it he said, ‘This time don’t listen to the word:
listen to the laugh. Your laugh, Ivan Mikhailovich. Your laugh because you thought the joke was funny and you wouldn’t have thought that unless you were part of the inner planning group and knew akrashena didn’t mean wet paint. And you were very much part of the inner planning group weren’t you …?’ Charlie groped unnecessarily for the Dolgoprudnaya list Natalia had supplied and which, until the tests that had been completed an hour earlier, Raina could have rebutted. Exaggerating, Charlie went on, ‘… But not in Moscow: you’re not on this list and it names every member of the Dolgoprudnaya ruling Commission …’ Break, you bastard, thought Charlie: he was dry-throated himself now from talking so long but he lgnored the water carafe, not wanting the Russian to infer desperation when there wasn’t any. ‘… There’s no record of Mitrov, either. And he’s a corps leader. Or of Dedov or Federov or Okulov. I know they’re just street people but there are a lot of street people here, as well. And you know why?’
‘Because there’s no such thing as a Militia Records system and that list is a load of crap, probably something you made up yourself,’ answered Raina, proving his knowledge of Militia inefficiency and lack of criminal intelligence.
Better, thought Charlie. He wanted Raina defiant. That way he’d drop further and more quickly when the trapdoor was sprung. ‘No,’ he said, positively. ‘It’s because none of you are part of Dolgoprudnaya in Moscow. You’re the group here, arranging all the deals. One of the most important links in the nuclear trade: the most important, as the Dolgroprudnaya are the biggest Russian Family. But which you didn’t want to come out because that’ll greatly influence the trial judges here, won’t it? And you and Mitrov aren’t shown to have killed anyone on the satellite film, are you?’
The putty look had gone and Raina had recovered from the shock of the murder photographs, the defiance growing. ‘You’re talking crap and you know it. I don’t know what you’re trying to achieve – I hardly understand a word you’re saying – but I can’t help you any more than I have.’
Charlie sniggered a self-deprecatory laugh. ‘There are so many wrong turns and outright mistakes in an investigation, until finally things slot into place. Like us spending all the first morning of his questioning playing the interrogation of you and the other three back to Mitrov, imagining it would bring an early confession – and then imagining that it did! – when what we were really doing was rehearsing him for what he had to say …’ Charlie poured himself some water at last, staging the interruption now. ‘And he was good: bloody good. But he made just one mistake and it’s turned out worse than ours. But then it wasn’t his fault entirely because he’d heard you name Marzahn as a district where the Dolgoprudnaya lived, so all he really did was pick up your bluff by naming KulmseeStrasse and the number and jeering that there wouldn’t be anyone there, which he knew like you knew that there wouldn’t be …’ Charlie extended his hand towards the Russian, his forefinger narrowed against his thumb. ‘And you came that close to getting away with it. The Germans took the place apart, did every forensic test there is, and collected enough fingerprints to fill a book. But no one thought of comparing them to yours or the others they already had in custody.’ He shook his head. ‘Like I said, there are so many mistakes that get made. We’ve corrected it, of course. Today. We’ve matched so many prints, of each of you to KulmseeStrasse – which Mitrov’s on record as identifying as the Dolgoprudnaya house – that the forensic technicians are complaining of overwork!’
‘Can I have some water, please,’ said Raina.
Once it started the confession flowed freely, like confessions usually do, and Charlie sat back for Schumann to take over, needing the respite and because it was a very necessary part of what would now become an even more extended and sensational trial and it would be necessary for the court evidence to be presented by a German investigator. He listened and dissected every word, though. Raina confirmed that he headed the Berlin cell and that he had been the link between the purchasers and the Dolgoprudnaya supply, not just on this failed occasion but five times before. Pizhma had been by far the greatest – he doubted the total amount of all the five previous shipments came anywhere close to two hundred and fifty kilos – and had been by far the most complicated. He didn’t know the details or the identities – a strict division was always maintained between Stanislav Silin organizing the supplies and his responsibility for their sale – but there’d been a lot of official help with the understanding of it continuing in the future. The dispute between Silin and Sergei Sobelov for supreme control of the Family had been going on for months, which was why Pizhma had been so important. Silin saw it as the way of proving to the six clans his right to be boss of bosses and fight off Sobelov’s challenge. Raina had thought it would confirm Silin’s position, too, which was why he’d remained loyal. It took a lot of pressure from the German to learn who the previous five purchasers had been, because Raina protested the names would obviously be false, although the government-issued passports would have been genuine because only governments could afford the money involved – a total, for the five earlier transactions, of $45,000,000. Schumann switched his demands and got the countries – two consignments to Iran, two to Iraq and one to Algeria – before eventually getting the names of the men with whom Raina had negotiated. Charlie re-entered the interrogation at that point.
‘So Silin didn’t know who your Pizhma customer was, here?’
‘No. He used to meet them, but only once and then there was never any names.’
‘I don’t understand.’
‘They usually want to see what they’re buying. There’s a lot of cheating.’
‘So he didn’t know the identity of who brought the ten canisters that Malin took to Odessa?’
‘No.’
‘Did Malin know?’
The Russian shook his head. ‘He had to deliver them to an Iranian customs boat. I did the deal here, with the same man whose name I’ve already given you. It wasn’t possible this time to go to Moscow because we were shipping direct from Pizhma. This time he dealt with me on trust.’
‘What about payment?’
‘Eight million paid up front. It’s already in an account in Zurich. The remainder was to be paid upon successful delivery.’
‘You have signatory authority on the Zurich account?’ intruded Schumann.
‘Jointly, with Silin. It’s all lost now. And what we made before.’
‘We’ll get it,’ promised the eye-patched Schumann, more to himself than to the other two men in the room.
‘Sobelov should never have sacrificed you, should he?’ lured Charlie.
‘No,’ said Raina, viciously.
‘But then he didn’t know your full role?’
The Russian shook his head again. ‘It was just between Silin and me. We were related: proper family.’
‘Sobelov’s wrecked the Dolgoprudnaya, wouldn’t you say?’
‘Caused it a lot of damage,’ conceded Raina.
‘And put you in jail for the rest of your life?’
Raina did not reply.
‘Wouldn’t you like to bring him down? Destroy him, like he’s destroyed you and Silin and all the others?’
Something approaching a smile came to Raina’s face. ‘How?’
‘Tell me who your buyer was going to be here, for what you brought from Pizhma: who it was Mitrov phoned from Warsaw and who you were going from Cottbus to assure everything was all right, that you’d just been delayed. And tell me how to get to him: a way to introduce myself so he’ll think I’ve come from the Dolgoprudnaya.’
chapter 34
The name – Ari Turkel – fitted Raina’s belief that his buyer was Turkish, which followed logically from Germany’s huge Turkish population, but everyone agreed with Charlie that Baghdad would not use a foreigner for something so sensitive: the better logic was that the convenience of the Turkish community provided the cover, not the conduit. That argument was backed by the care-taking complexity of the meeting arrangements, which were more convo
luted than most Charlie had followed during his previous intelligence career. They were so labyrinthine, in fact, that after a day-long Bundeskriminalamt conference for which he and Schumann were summoned to Wiesbaden it was agreed, despite protracted opposition from German antiterrorist and counter-intelligence divisions, that Charlie had to work without any surveillance, no matter how expert or unlikely to be detected. And that he couldn’t, either, be fitted with any recording or transmitting device. This wasn’t just the opportunity to recover most of the biggest nuclear robbery ever: it was the unprecedented chance to arraign in a German court an Iraqi as proof of Baghdad’s complicity in the nuclear trade. Nothing could be allowed to endanger either.
Dean met with disbelieving silence but no open challenge Charlie’s insistence that his re-examination of Ivan Raina was not upon information he’d withheld from Moscow but because the Marzahn fingerprint had emerged during the evidence review.
‘I’ll not have tricks,’ the Director-General warned.
‘This is what we agreed I should do. Infiltrate,’ reminded Charlie. ‘The incredible bonus is getting most of the stuff back.’
‘Let’s make sure it is what’s been agreed: followed by you to the letter!’
Which is what Charlie did, although not to the alphabet the Director-General meant. The instructions Charlie had meticulously to obey hinged upon a telephone number – 5124843 – traced within an hour of Raina providing it to a street kiosk near the Spree bridge on GertrudeStrasse, in what had been East Berlin. He had to call at exactly 11 a.m. and to ask – using the precise words – if the red Volkswagen advertised in the Berliner Zeitung was still for sale. The reply had to be that it was not, but there was a white model available. If he was told it was the wrong number the attempt had to be repeated at the same time on succeeding days until the white model offer was made. The day after the right reply Charlie was to go, again precisely at eleven, for coffee at the Grand Hotel, on the FriedrichStrasse, once again in old East Berlin. He was to carry a copy of the Berliner Zeitung around which should be folded a tourist map of the city. After coffee he was to make his way to the Ganymed restaurant on the Schiffbauerdamm for lunch and afterwards return down the FriedrichStrasse to the U-bahn and take the train for two stops, going westwards. There was no other way to establish contact, which had created the problem from Warsaw and again after the breakdown delay reaching Cottbus. And why Raina was going to Berlin to start the routine later in the day he and his group had been picked up.