rolled out from under the table and leapt to his feet very fast. He was still holding the Mauser and he was grinning. It was a good try. He didn’t expect the pistol in Stefan’s hand, Hannah’s PKK. His surprise didn’t last any longer than it took Stefan to fire.

The Kriminaloberassistent was dead. In the doorway Hannah and Karl were still struggling. The bearded man lashed out and pushed her away. He scrambled to his feet and ran. Stefan hadn’t moved. He still had the PKK pointed at Rothe. Hannah got up and stepped over the body. ‘He’s dead. The other one isn’t!’ Stefan didn’t understand for a moment. It didn’t seem to matter. They were alive. She grabbed the pistol and raced to the door. ‘What are you doing?’ He ran after her into the hall. There was the sound of a car.

As Hannah reached the steps the black Mercedes was already heading down the drive, picking up speed. Stefan was there beside her now. ‘You won’t stop him.’ She stood quite still, holding the PKK in both her hands. The car was at the gate when she fired a single shot. The Mercedes carried on, straight on, out into the middle of Eschenweg, not turning to the right or the left. Then it halted; the man slumped over the wheel was dead too.

Stefan stared at Hannah. It was a shot he could never have made.

‘You’ve done that before.’

‘It was never a human being, just a target.’ She was still staring at the car. Then she turned, handing the PKK back to him, as if she didn’t want to touch it now.

‘What do we do, Stefan?’

‘We find anything that moves that’s leaving Danzig. If we needed to get out before, I’d say we’ve more than overstayed our welcome now.’

‘And Bishop O’Rourke?’

‘There is that,’ he smiled wryly. They were in this now, whether they wanted to be or not. They couldn’t just walk away with what they knew.

‘We can’t let it happen, can we?’

He shook his head. ‘No, we can’t. Keller’s got a phone.’

‘The phones aren’t safe, Stefan, none of them are.’

They needed to act. Stefan’s mind was racing.

‘Sean Lester’s the only one who can stop this.’

Hannah took his hand, pulling him down the steps.

‘I’ll go to the cathedral. You go to the High Commission.’

They ran down the steps and back out into Eschenweg, past the Mercedes in the middle of the road and the dead man slumped over the wheel, past the houses with red roofs and tidy gardens, past the apartment blocks where the swastikas hung from the windows, into Adolf-Hitler-Strasse. Hannah went one way and took the tram to Oliva; Stefan took the tram the other way, back into the city. There wasn’t really any choice.

At the mouth of the Tote Weichsel, where the river dissolved into the Baltic, there was a narrow spit of sand that became thinner and thinner until it disappeared into the sea itself. This was the Westerplatte. In high summer the beaches here were far less crowded than Zoppot’s. Here, scattered among the trees, were the concrete bunkers that represented Poland’s only military presence in Danzig. A hundred soldiers sat there for no very good reason, except that they could. When the League of Nations established the Free City it was a tiny concession to mollify Polish anger that the city they still claimed as part of Poland wasn’t Polish. The League saw the Polish flag flying over this windswept spit of sand as a gesture so modest as to be unimportant. The Poles saw the flag over the Westerplatte as proof that one day the city they called Gdan?sk would be Polish, whatever language was spoken in its streets. For the Germans of Danzig it had been an irrelevance to some and an irritation to others; an itch rather than a sore. But as the years went on and Hitler’s voice grew shriller in the city, the Polish fort and the Polish flag that flew over the Westerplatte had become an insult. It was a sore now. And if it could sometimes be ignored it could never be forgotten.

Stefan Gillespie sat in Sean Lester’s car, looking out at the Baltic. Behind them, among the trees, was the red and white Polish flag. On a day like this the Westerplatte was a wild place. The beaches were empty and there was only the low hum of the wind off the sea. They were a long way from the streets swathed in swastikas and the trucks of stormtroopers cheering for a democratic end to democracy. The High Commissioner had driven the car himself. He had no reason to believe his chauffeur was a spy but trust wasn’t something that could be taken for granted in the Free City any more. And here, today at least, there would be nobody to see them.

They had been silent for a while now. Lester was trying to make sense of what Stefan had told him. Some of it made no sense at all, but then he had only fragments of information. Where it did make sense it frightened him.

Another car drove towards them. The High Commissioner watched it approaching, still thoughtful. He got out of his own car and Stefan followed. The constant hum of the wind was louder. As the second car pulled up Stefan could see that the driver wore the uniform of the Schutzpolizei.

‘Oberleutnant Lange is the nearest thing to a policeman I can trust.’

‘You don’t sound very sure,’ said Stefan.

‘Trust can be bought and sold like everything else. Diplomacy isn’t really geared up for this. I remember some advice given to me by a British diplomat before I left Geneva: When deciding what to wear in the morning, bear in mind the day may bring unforeseen demands. Women should always keep a hat and gloves in the office for emergencies and men should keep a black tie in the desk for unexpected mourning. I don’t keep one in mine. Reinhold Lange is my best chance of not having to go home to get one.’

Oberleutnant Lange got out of his car and walked towards Stefan and the High Commissioner. Sean Lester shook the policeman’s hand warmly.

‘This is Herr Gillespie. I spoke to you about him before.’

‘You’re the detective sergeant?’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘And you’re here on some kind of holiday?’

‘Not exactly a holiday.’

‘I can see Irish understatement puts even English understatement into the shade,’ said Lange. He looked at Lester. ‘Do you know if the bishop is all right?’

‘He’s been told anyway. Fraulein Rosen went straight to the cathedral. And I have spoken to him now as well. The question is, who’s going to protect him?’

‘The Langfuhr police have picked up the car and the dead driver. Not easy to miss really. The car was in the middle of the road. They also found the two men inside the house, Kriminaloberassistent Rothe and Herr Keller. But the investigation has been officially handed over to the Gestapo now. So there is a solid wall up around it, which tells its own story of course. I can’t get any more information.’

‘Are they looking for Herr Gillespie and Fraulein Rosen?’

‘I don’t know that either. But I’d say probably not. They don’t know who else was at Keller’s house. There may be some descriptions, but that’s going to take time. I think we can work on the assumption that it just looks like a Gestapo operation that went wrong. What is clear is that this man Keller was working for the Gestapo and the SS. That’s all I have. I think you know that already, Herr Gillespie?’ Stefan nodded. Lange continued. ‘That’s why they’ve shut it down as far as the Schutzpolizei are concerned. It’s political. But nothing seems to be happening, which is odd when there’s a dead Gestapo man. However, maybe not so odd if there’s something more important to cover up. I do take this threat against the bishop seriously.’

‘You do know something then?’ asked Lester.

‘Last night there were some SA men up in the forests above Oliva.’

Stefan and Lester exchanged glances. It wasn’t news to them.

‘Yes, I think you know something about that too, Sergeant. This is just rumour as far as I’m concerned. It’s the kind of information I’m not allowed to do anything with these days. It’s political,’ he smiled. ‘No crime has been reported and no bodies have been found, but I think two men were killed. What’s going around is that they were killed for a reason. I mean other than the usual reason, that the Nazis didn’t much like their opinions.’

‘And there’s a connection to Bishop O’Rourke?’ said Lester.

‘Scapegoats,’ replied the policeman. ‘It’s a well-established Nazi trick in Germany. You shoot someone you don’t like, say a businessman who doesn’t want to pay his dues to the Party, then you dump the body of someone else you don’t like at the scene of the crime, say a communist or a socialist, and announce he was the killer, shot

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