Read The Lucifer Network Online
Authors: Geoffrey Archer
âNot exactly.' Julie straightened her back and pulled the robe's belt tighter round her waist. She had no wish to get into all this, but didn't see an alternative. âMax was delivering a conference paper on viral mutation. I was just a lowly scientific officer, brought along by my boss to try to pick up tips about laboratory techniques. Max and I weren't exactly moving in the same circles at the conference. But everyone was staying at the Intercontinental. And so, coincidentally, was my father. Most evenings there were social events connected with the conference, although I did manage to spend one with my father and his girlfriend â I told your colleagues.'
âI know. Go on.'
âWell, after dinner, I'd said goodnight to Dad and gone up to my room. Then a little later I realised I'd left a folder somewhere with my conference papers in it.
I came downstairs to look around the bar and that's when Max spoke to me. He knew my name. Said he'd seen me around and had made up his mind to get to know me. I was flattered. And he had my folder in his hand. Said he wouldn't return it unless I had a drink with him.'
âAnd the rest is history.'
âWell, yes. He impressed me. He'd done his homework. Knew a lot about me. Pressed the right buttons. He's a nice man, actually. And I'd reached a point in my life when I was ready to meet one.' Still was, she thought to herself.
âHow come Max knew so much about you?'
âI don't know. I never really thought about it. Too busy enjoying the warmth of the attention he was giving me.' She frowned. Delicate tramlines spread across her broad forehead.
Sam's antennae twitched.
âWhat sort of things did he know about you?'
âI don't really remember.'
âTry.'
She shrugged. âWell . . . he seemed to know â or sense â that I'd had some bad experiences with men.' She grimaced, unhappy about the way that had come out.
âWhere would he have got that from?'
âI don't know.'
âProfessor Norton?'
âNo way. I'm not even sure he's aware that I have a child.'
Julie
knows
â Jackman's words still niggled. Could it be, Sam wondered, that she didn't yet
know
that she knew? But that her father had thought she did?
âIs it possible your
father
could have told Max about you?' he suggested, the words emerging simultaneously with the thought taking shape in his head.
Julie looked at him as if he'd just appeared from outer
space. âMax had no connection whatsoever with my dad,' she said dismissively.
âYou quite sure?'
âTotally.'
Then the frown came back and Sam realised he'd got her thinking. She wasn't sure at all. Not any more. He perched on the end of the bed and leaned towards her.
âThe men your father was doing business with a year ago â you told Denise Corby that you met some of them.'
â
Met
is too strong. They just happened to be sitting in the same corner of the bar. I don't remember anything about them.'
Sam narrowed his eyes. âSo, if you don't remember anything about those men sitting in the bar with your father, Max Schenk might have been one of them.'
Julie blinked as if blinded by what he'd just suggested. âI can't believe that . . .' she whispered.
Sam stroked his chin. The trail he was following had no logic to it. Even if Schenk
had
for some reason been able to quiz Harry Jackman about his daughter it was hardly likely he'd have been the gun-runner's partner in the illegal shipment of nuclear materials. The man was a doctor. He ran a clinic.
But it was a lead. And one which made sense, if Jackman's dying words had had more meaning to them than a reference to a letter not yet sent. And, if there was even the smallest chance that Max Schenk and Harry Jackman had been in conversation at the time the âred mercury' deal was struck, then it needed investigating. Sam leaned forward and took hold of Julie's hands.
She saw that his eyes had become as soft as chocolate again. She had a nasty feeling she wasn't going to like the reason for it.
âA few minutes ago, Julie, you said you wished there
was some way you could make up for what you did to me last weekend.'
âYes,' she croaked, certain now that what he was about to ask of her was going to hurt.
âI want you to see Max Schenk again.'
THE SUBMARINE HAD
rendezvoused on time with the Lynx from HMS
Suffolk
at midnight local, surfacing under a starlit sky at a point on the chart precisely defined by the Global Positioning Satellites. The helicopter, its nav lights off, had homed in on their fin, using its thermal imager for guidance. The winch line had snaked down with a bag of mail, then jerked up again with the sack of tapes destined for GCHQ. Ten minutes. Another five for the satcom transmission of the voices detected by Arthur Harris and their sojourn on the surface had been completed. Now the boat was deep again, heading south to Crete and the crew's first break ashore for ten weeks.
Arthur Harris was troubled. For him the game was being abandoned prematurely. There was more to be uncovered. Four hours to the east of them a drama was unfolding, the outcome of which he was desperate to know. His gamble was that when the tape of the Russian voices was played back at Cheltenham the bosses would want to know it too.
He lay on his mattress in the bomb shop surrounded by torpedoes, quite unable to sleep. In
Truculent
's proper bunk spaces little curtains closed off the narrow shelves
that passed for beds, keeping out the light, but here the fluorescent tubes in their shock-proof mounts between the loading rails blazed day and night. But it wasn't the light that was keeping him awake, it was the memory of the voice he'd heard coming from that small island east of Lastovo.
He was almost certain he'd heard it before in one of the small Cheltenham listening booths used for updating CTs before a patrol. Most of the tapes played to them for this mission had been in the rough-tongued Serbo-Croat of Balkan military commanders, but dropped in amongst them like a pinch of spice was a long-distance phone conversation recorded by the Echelon satellites of the US National Security Agency at their base at Menwith Hill. The recipient of the call had been sitting in a small, single-storey house in Maryland, a Russian scientist who'd made the leap into the American economy three years earlier. The call had originated in a Moscow phone booth, placed by a disgruntled biochemist who'd rung his friend to test the water. âIt's impossible here,' Harris remembered him saying, the voice heavy with disgust. âOne way or another I'm going to leave Russia. But I need a job, Yuri. Don't forget me. Otherwise I'll go to the people we all know about that none of us wants to work for. I have to eat, Yuri. I have to have a life.'
Chursin. Igor Chursin. An assistant director at the Russian State Research Centre of Virology and Biotechnology, known as VECTOR, based in Novosibirsk in Siberia. At the end of the Soviet era the laboratory had been the Moscow government's main centre for biological weapons research. The work continued today, but in even greater secrecy.
It had been the head of the Biological Warfare desk at GCHQ who'd slipped the tape into the briefing session. He'd done it as a âheads up' to alert them. As far as
anyone knew Chursin was still in Russia, but if he decided to carry out his threat to leave then he'd be a prime catch for any renegade nation looking to develop biological weapons. Iraq and Iran had been obvious candidates, but with Serbia suspected of preparing for war against NATO, it made sense to cast the net wide. However, the last place in the world any of them expected Chursin to turn up was on a barren lump of rock in the Adriatic.
Which was why Harris had a sneaking suspicion that he could have been wrong. That it hadn't been Chursin's voice on the VHF. Cheltenham would know for sure. And in four hours' time when they came back to periscope depth to receive the broadcast, the submarine would know too. There was nothing he could do until then. He turned his face away from the light and made a determined effort to sleep.
Vienna
Sam Packer was woken by the phone. He fumbled groggily for the handset.
âMmm?'
âSam Packer?'
âYes.'
âOh dear.
Sorry
if I woke you up.'
âWho is this?'
âThe name's de Vere Collins.' The SIS head of station in Vienna. The accent was surprisingly downmarket. âA friend in London told me where to find you.' Waddell â Sam had checked in with him when he arrived in Vienna.
âAnd since I didn't hear from you yesterday I thought I'd save you the trouble today.'
He was being reprimanded for failing to make contact.
âGood of you,' Sam grunted. âMy apologies.' He should have rung.
âAccepted. Now look, there's been a development overnight. It stands everything on its head, rather.'
âWhat's happened?' He was suddenly wide awake.
âMay I suggest we discuss it in the privacy of breakfast?'
Sam focused on the bedside clock. It was just before nine. âWhere?'
âThe Intercontinental does a good spread. It's not more than ten minutes' walk from where you are.'
The hotel where Julie had met Max Schenk. Wouldn't do any harm to look the place over, he decided. âFine. Say half an hour?'
âSpiffing, old chap.' De Vere Collins said it fake posh. âI'll be in the coffee shop. In the far corner, reading a copy of
Newsweek.
'
Sam showered quickly and ran a shaver over his face.
He tried to second-guess what development Collins might be talking about, but couldn't concentrate, his mind preoccupied with last night's encounter with Julie Jackman. To have such a strong urge for intimacy with someone who'd done him so much harm was a contradiction he was finding hard to rationalise.
He dressed in the business suit he'd worn the day before. There were things to be done before Julie saw Max Schenk again â assuming she managed to tempt him into another date. He intended to ask Collins to find out if Austrian security had a file on the doctor. As he straightened his tie, the phone rang once more. This time it was Duncan Waddell.
âThought I'd better warn you the screw's tightening,' he cautioned. âI don't know what you've done to the women of this world, but they're out to get you.'
âWhat's happened now?' Sam sighed, sinking onto the bed.
âThe
Daily
Chronicle
's struck again. This time it's your real name up in lights. Not only that â the subjects you were good at at school, your favourite food at around the time your father started spying for the Russians . . .'
âBloody hell!' The story about his father had finally leaked. âWhere the hell's all this personal crap come from?'
âFrom your loving sister, mostly.'
Sam groaned.
âBut the real culprit's a man called Craigie who picked up a couple of grand for telling the
Chronicle
you'd been in Scotland looking for pictures of your father.'
Sam put his head in his hands. He should have accepted the SIS security man's offer to have the Scotsman taken out.
âAfter getting that little tip-off, the hacks started digging,' Waddell continued. âThey traced your sister and she poured it all out like sick. She must really hate you.'
âYes, but it's not personal.'
âMust hate your dad too.'
âThat part
is.
'
âSo, in a word, I'd say you've been stuffed again.'
âThanks a million.'
âThe government's been “no commenting” ever since the first editions appeared. I'm afraid you're not exactly popular with the bloke at Number Ten. Brains a lot bigger than mine are still trying to work out what to do with you. Best thing is to stay where you are for now. Ring me again around midday. And don't go giving interviews to anyone.'
âThat I can't promise,' Sam replied sarcastically.
âOh. By the way. What did our friend Günther have to say for himself?'
âVery little. His wife's just died.'
Sam outlined their conversation, saying that everything Hoffmann had said served to confirm his father had
not
given away anything sensitive.
âGlad to hear it,' Waddell grunted.
âAnd Duncan . . . I met someone else last night.'
âNot the man whose name begins with K?'
âNo. A woman whose name begins with J.'
âGood God!' There was a stunned silence at the other end. âWhat the hell's she doing there?'
âKissing goodbye to a sugar daddy, apparently. Someone, it turns out, who may just possibly have had some connection with her dad.'
Another short silence. âYou don't mean a connection of the nuclear kind . . .?'
âI don't know yet.'
âJackman had many irons in the fire,' Waddell warned. âAnyway, what d'you propose to do about it?'
âI'm making further enquiries. With Julie's co-operation.'
â
Co-operation?
' Waddell spluttered. âWhat
is
going on over there?'
âThe girl's said sorry.'
âI shouldn't pay too much attention to that,' Waddell warned. âYou're sure there's no media around?'
âAs sure as I can be. Anyway, I propose to rope Collins in. I'm meeting him for breakfast in a few minutes.'
âMake sure you explain exactly what you have in mind. He's a stickler for doing things by the book. Which at this stage in your career is no bad thing.'
âPoint taken. By the way, he said there'd been a development overnight. What's it about?'