finished the job. Climbing down from the ladder, she put it back where she had found it.

`Everyone keeps quiet from now on,' Tweed whispered. He tapped Delvaux on the shoulder. 'Time to phone Benoit. We are going to turn off the tap and the radio. Tell Benoit an English friend, Sir Gerald Andover, called on you – a professional colleague and an old friend. He came to warn you his daughter had been killed. Did he know about your wife?'

`Yes, I told him after he arrived here…'

`And he phoned you from England earlier after Irene, his daughter, had been kidnapped.'

`But he didn't…'

`Say he did. It establishes an iron-clad reason for him to come and see you. There must be no mention of the real subject – Stealth. Have you got it?'

`Yes. It's simple – close to the truth. Only the timing was different,' Delvaux continued, whispering.

`And you tell him about me. About Paula and Newman. We suspected the same hideous technique was being employed on you. Luckily I was the one who found your letter to Andover – on his mantelpiece at Prevent. The letter in which you said you had solved the technical problem. By the way, how did you solve it?'

`Oh, from my researches, we built a Stealth light aircraft inside the works. I used the most advanced – at that time – radar and none of the available equipment detected it. So I analysed why – that involved complicated mathematical equations and the development of a theory. Laser is one element in the new apparatus you have in that case, but only one…'

`Now!' Tweed pounced. 'Repeat what you are going to tell Benoit. And not as though you've learned it by heart..

While explaining about the Stealth light aircraft Delvaux had spoken briskly. Paula found it pathetic to hear him relapse into his broken state as he repeated the story he had to tell. Tweed had the same reaction, but was also relieved – his story would be that much more convincing.

`Everybody else keeps quiet until we're out of the chateau,' Tweed warned again.

He switched off the radio, turned off the running water.

Paula had already cleaned and put away the crockery they had used, leaving out only Delvaux's. Otherwise Benoit might wonder why they had spent so much time there.

Delvaux phoned Benoit's headquarters in Brussels. He was told that as it was an urgent matter his call would be passed on to Chief Inspector Benoit immediately. It was possible he might arrive at the chateau very quickly.

Tweed patted the Belgian on the shoulder to indicate he had done well. To his surprise, as they walked across the hall Delvaux, snatching a coat from a cupboard, followed them outside.

`I can't wait in there alone.'

`You must get back inside soon. Benoit might fly here by helicopter.'

Tweed was worried, knowing that Benoit was in the vicinity. It was a fact he thought it best Delvaux did not know. They walked down the drive and Newman, remembering what had happened to Andover, put out an arm to make them stay still.

`I'll just check,' he said.

Holding his Smith amp; Wesson in both hands, he darted across the road, paused on the grass verge, listening, looking both ways. Then he approached the Mercedes cautiously. Only when he had checked the underside of the chassis with a pencil flashlight and looked at the engine was he satisfied. He went back and beckoned for them to cross.

He started the engines and switched on the heaters – the interior of the car was like an icebox. Delvaux sat in the back with Tweed while Paula occupied the front passenger seat next to Newman.

`Something very important I forgot to tell you,' Delvaux said suddenly. 'Hugo Westendorf in Germany was a member of INCOMSIN. Somehow the refugee problem is mixed up in all this.'

Two uniformed policemen were patrolling the dubious Marolles district of Brussels. Marolles lies behind the immense bulk of the Palace of Justice and is only a five-minute walk from the Hilton.

Both men were alert: it was not an area to go to sleep in. They peered into a bar. Marc, the younger, swivelled his eyes swiftly over the customers. No one 'known' to the police. They walked on, came to the entrance to a narrow cobbled street.

Armand, the older, paused, frowned. A few paces into the street a black Mercedes taxi was parked. He unfastened the flap of the holster on his right hip, making it easy to grab the butt of his pistol.

`Marc, might as well take a look. I think that cab is empty. Taxis don't park round here.'

His colleague had a pair of handcuffs and a truncheon slung from his belt on his left hip. His right hand was holding a walkie-talkie. They approached the car in the usual tactical manner – one man taking the right-hand side, the other the left. It was Armand who approached the driver's seat.

Marc noticed the sticker advertising a restaurant plastered across the rear window. Armand aimed his flashlight at the dashboard, saw the key in the ignition. He called out quietly to his colleague.

`Very odd. An empty cab and the key in the ignition.' `Except it isn't empty.'

Marc had opened the rear door. The cab driver was bent over in a huddled position so he couldn't easily be seen by a casual passer-by. Armand opened the other rear door, aimed his flashlight. The driver's head rested on the floor, sightless eyes staring up in the beam of the flash.

`Call headquarters,' Armand ordered. 'We have something here which is going to raise all hell… And that sticker is covering a bullet-hole in the rear window…'

Inside the parked Mercedes across the road from the Chateau Orange Delvaux was shivering despite the fact that the heaters were quickly warming up the interior. Tweed knew he was on the verge of another collapse.

`What is this about the refugee problem being mixed up with this whole strange affair? Andover used the word `catastrophe' to me. And how does Hugo Westendorf fit in?'

Tweed was hugely intrigued, although his manner was casual. Hugo Westendorf was – had been – a major player in the world of Western politics. He had been known as the Iron Man of Germany and – until recently – had held the post of Minister of the Interior. Suddenly, to everyone's surprise, he had resigned, pleading reasons of ill- health.

`Andover,' Delvaux continued, 'told us that a major part of the menace facing Western Europe was the tidal wave of refugees waiting on Poland's border to flood across the Oder-Neisse river line into Western Europe. He said they were being organized by the enemy.'

`You just said 'us',' Tweed reminded him. 'Who does that mean?'

`Oh, Westendorf was here several times when he was Minister. He travelled to Herstal secretly – incognito – to attend meetings with Andover and myself. Westendorf was very strong on stopping those refugees, employing drastic methods.'

`You will have to leave soon and get back to the chateau before Benoit arrives,' Tweed warned.

Delvaux wasn't listening. 'And the terrible mistake the Americans have made is not to protect themselves against the Stealth threat. A move to save money – to help their economy. They are wide open to a horrendous attack.'

`I have heard that,' Tweed assured him. 'Now, you must go. At once, please. And remember, Benoit will be discreet.'

Delvaux opened the door slowly, as though reluctant to leave. He stood outside with the door still open while he pulled up his coat collar. Tweed leaned over to speak to him.

`Gaston, one important thing you haven't told me. That is, if you know the answer. Who is the new enemy?'

`Didn't I tell you? I thought I had. Andover – with his expertise on global power – had worked it out. And Westendorf agreed with him, completely.'

`Who?' Tweed pressed urgently.

The most menacing force we have ever faced. Forget Hitler, forget Stalin. They were small beer, as you say in England. The new enemy is the People's Republic of China. Over a billion people, one-quarter of the world's population. Andover called them Fortress China – Communism which is economically successful. They read history.'

As he walked away, shoulders bowed, feet dragging, across the road back to the chateau, Tweed looked at Paula. She had twisted round to stare at him.

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