unlocking door, then she said one last prayer and turned the knob.

It opened!  Like a reprieved prisoner, she backed into her friend's

apartment, smiling once at the guard before she shut and locked the

door.  After shooting home the bolt, she sagged against the door, her

entire body quivering in terror.

For an unsteady moment she thought she might actually collapse, but she

forced down her fear and padded up the narrow hall to her friend's

bedroom door.  A crack of light shone faintly beneath it.

Ilse knocked, but heard no answer.

'Eva?'  she called softly.  'Eva, it's Ilse.'

Too anxious to wait, she opened the door and stepped into the room. From

behind the door a hand shot out and caught her hair, then jerked her to

the floor.  She started to struggle, but froze when she felt a cold

blade press into the soft flesh of her throat.  'Eva!'  she rasped.

'Eva', it's me-Ilse!'

The hand jerked harder on her hair, drawing her head back.  The blade

did not relent.  Then, suddenly, she was free.

'Ilse!'  Eva hissed.  'What the hell are you doing here?  I might have

killed you.  I would have.  I thought you were a rapist.  Or worse.'

The remark threw Ilse off balance.  'What's worse than a rapist?'

'A faggot, dearie,' Eva answered, bursting into laughter.

She folded the straight razor back into its handle.

Ilse's panic finally overcame her.  Tears streamed down her cheeks, and

she sobbed as her middle-aged friend hugged her wet face to a

considerable bosom and stroked her hair like a mother comforting her

child.

'Ilse, darling,' Eva murmured.  'What's happened?  You're beside

yourself.'

'Eva, I'm sorry I came here, but it was the only place I could go!

I don't know what's happening-'

'Shh, be quiet now.  Catch your breath and tell Eva all about it.  Did

Hans do sometfiing naughty?  He didn't hit you?'

'No ... nothing like that.  This is madness.  Crazy.  You wouldn't

believe me if I told you!'

Eva chuckled.  'I've seen things in this city that would drive a

psychiatrist mad, if you could find one who isn't already.  Just tell me

what's wrong, child.  And if you can't tell me that, tell me what you

need.  I can at least help you out of trouble.'

Ilse wiped her face on her blouse and tried to calm down.

Despite the presence of the men outside, she felt better already.

Eva Beers had a way of making any problem seem insignificant.  A barmaid

and tavern singer for most of her fifty-odd years, she had worked the

rough-and-tumble circuit in most of the capitals of western Europe.  She

had returned home to Berlin three years ago, to 'live out my days in

luxury,' as she jokingly put it.  Hans sometimes commented that Eva was

only semiretired, for the frequent pilgrimage of well-dressed and

ever-changing old gentlemen to her door seemed to indicate that

something slightly more profitable than conversation went on inside

number 43.  But that was Eva's business; Hans never asked any questions.

She was a cheerful and discreet neighbor who often did favors for the

young couple, and Ilse had grown very close to her.

'Eva, we're in trouble,' Ilse said.  'Hans and I.'

'What kind of trouble?  Hans is Polizei.  What can't he fix?'

Ilse fought the urge to blurt out everything.  She didn:t want to

involve Eva any more than she already had.  'I don t know, Eva, I don't

know.  Hans found something.  Something dangerous!'

'It's drugs, isn't it?'  Eva wrinkled her nose in disgust.

'Hashish or something, right?'

'I told you, I don't know.  But it's bad.  There's a man in the hall

right now and he's waiting for Hans to get home.

There are three more men outside by the doors!'

'What?  Outside here?  Who do you mean, child?  Police?'

Ilse threw up her hands.  'I don't know!  All I know is that Hans's

station said he left hours ago.  I've got to get out of here, Eva.  I've

got to warn Hans.'

'How can you warn him if you don't know where he is?'

Ilse wiped a wet streak of mascara from her cheek.  .1

don't know,' she said, trying to stop her tears.  'But first I've got to

get past those men outside.'

As the old barmaid watched Ilse's mascara run, a hot wave of anger

flushed her cheeks.  'You dry those tears,' she said.  'There hasn't

been a man born to woman that Mama Eva can't handle.'

10.  10 P. m. Europe Center, Breitscheid Platz.  West Berlin

Major Harry Richardson stared curiously at the receding back of Eduard

Lenhardt, his contact in Abschnitt 53.  In seconds the policeman

disappeared into the crush of bodies crowding the bar of the imitation

Irish pub in the basement of the Europe Center, West Berlin's answer to

the American megamall.  This twenty-two-story tower housed dozens of

glitzy shops, bars, restaurants, banks, travel agencies, and even a

hotel-all of whose goods and services seemed to be priced for the

Japanese tourist.  Harry had chosen it for its crowds.

He swallowed the last of an excellent Bushmill's and then began to

gather his thoughts.  Eduard Lenhardt was only the third in a chain of

personal contacts Harry had spoken with tonight.

Contrary to Colonel Rose's orders, Harry had kept his racquetball date.

And by so doing, he had learned that Sir Neville Shaw, director of

Britain's mI-5, hid ordered British embassy personnel to burn the

midnight oil in West Berlin.

Shortly after that, Harry had called a State Department contact in Bonn,

an.  old college buddy, who had let it slip that the Russian complaint

filed against the U.S. Army specified papers taken from Spandau Prison

as the primary object of Soviet concern.  The British and the French had

received the same complaint.  Harry could well imagine the British

consternation at such an allegation.  After the phone call, Harry had

finally gained an audience with his reluctant contac from Abschnitt

53-Lieutenant Eduard Lenhardt.

Lenhardt had revealed information to Harry in three ways: by what he'd

said, by what he hadn't said, and simply by how he'd looked.  In Harry's

professional opinion, the policeman had looked scared shitless.

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