Chapter Twenty-Three

Ben awoke long before dawn, and Ruth was the first thing that came into his mind. He took a quick shower and pulled on jeans and a shirt, then went downstairs and walked straight over to his office. Grabbed a laptop, shoved it under his arm and took it back across the dark yard to the house. He made some coffee, then sat down at the kitchen table and ran an internet search on Hans Kammler.

Top of the results that flashed up on his screen was Kammler’s online encyclopaedia page. It showed a black and white photo of a tall, slim, determined-looking man, caught mid-stride and glancing at the camera. He was wearing the insignia of an SS-Obergruppenfuhrer, and his peaked cap bore the SS silver death’s head icon that had become the twentieth century’s most dreaded emblem of pure evil.

Ben sipped coffee as he read through the text. What Steiner had said about the man had been correct. Born in 1901 in Stettin, Germany, Kammler had trained as an engineer and gone on to enlist in the SS in 1932. Ten years later, now a general, he had been singled out as one of the Reich’s most skilled technicians and personally appointed by Adolf Hitler to oversee the design and construction of facilities for the Nazi extermination camps, including the notorious gas chamber and crematorium at Auschwitz – a task that he seemed to have attended to with single-minded fervour.

By 1944, Kammler’s scientific expertise had taken him even higher within the Nazi hierarchy. He’d been tasked by SS boss Heinrich Himmler to head up the V-2 rocket programme that had rained devastation on London in the later stages of the war. At the same time, Kammler had been put in charge of something called the Special Projects Division, about which there seemed to be very little information available, but which Ben figured had been the German equivalent of the USA’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, DARPA.

The man’s death was somewhat shrouded in mystery, too, with accounts ranging from suicide to execution by the Soviets alongside two hundred other SS soldiers in the final days of the war.

So much for the encyclopaedia entry. Ben clicked out of it and started exploring the other links that his search engine had thrown up. Somehow he didn’t think the Hans Kammler on Facebook was the same guy he was after. And the scattering of other results didn’t seem to offer up a great deal, either. Internet conspiracy theory nerds seemed to have run wild with speculation about Kammler’s involvement with the Special Projects Division. Just about all of the remaining search results were links to misspelt and frequently semi-literate forum entries linking Kammler to everything from Nazi occult rituals to time machines to flying saucers.

Ben gulped back the rest of the coffee as he waded through the quagmire with building impatience and frustration. None of this could possibly have any bearing on why anyone would want to kidnap Maximilian Steiner. It was becoming clear that he was going to have to talk to someone – someone who not only knew more about Hans Kammler than the internet could offer, but could also shed light on why Steiner’s documents were so attractive to a gang of neo-Nazi kidnappers. He reckoned the world of Holocaust-denying fascists must be fairly small and close- knit. The problem was getting a foot in the door.

But he had an idea of who might be able to help.

He was just about to shut down the laptop when Brooke walked into the kitchen. ‘Morning,’ she said sleepily. She was still in her dressing gown, her hair tousled, eyes bleary.

Ben stood and pulled up a chair for her at the table. She slumped into it gratefully as he prepared a fresh pot of coffee and put it on the range.

‘Christ,’ she said, resting her face in her palms. ‘Why did I drink so much last night?’

‘My fault. Sorry.’

She looked up at him. ‘Look at you. Fresh as a daisy. How do you do it?’

‘Addled by a lifetime of self-abuse,’ he said. ‘So intoxicated, my body’s given up caring.’

‘Sure. Then you go out for a ten-mile run and you don’t even get out of breath. Some alcoholic you are.’

For his SAS training Ben had once had to carry a thirteen-stone man with full kit and rifle up and down the side of a mountain. He wasn’t sure if he could still do that. Maybe he should give it a try sometime, he thought.

Brooke’s gaze flicked over to the computer. ‘What were you looking up?’

‘SS General Hans Kammler, inventor of the amazing Nazi time machine.’

‘You’re really going to do it, aren’t you?’

‘Look for my sister? Of course I am. I have to.’

The percolator was spitting and bubbling. He grabbed a mug, poured out Brooke’s coffee, added a dash of cream the way she liked it, and set it down in front of her. ‘I know what you think about this,’ he said as he sat down beside her. ‘But finding people is something I do well.’

‘If anyone can find her, you can.’ She paused to sip some coffee. ‘Oh, that’s good. But the real question is, Ben, what are you going to find?’

Ben stared at his hands on the table.

Brooke went on, her voice soft and gentle. ‘First, most likely, if you track down this woman, she isn’t going to be your sister at all. She’s going to turn out to be some crazy stranger who just happens to resemble the image you have of Ruth in your mind, the age she would have been now. Wishful thinking is a powerful force.’

‘I wouldn’t say it’s wishful thinking to believe that my little sister came back from the dead as a Nazi.’

‘That brings me on to the next bit. The worse bit. What if, by some bizarre chance, this person really is your sister? She won’t be the little girl you remember. She’ll have changed. Whether it’s wearing a swastika badge or joining some kind of cult, you have to ask what makes an intelligent person gravitate to this type of extreme behaviour. You don’t know what kind of mental or physical trauma she might have been through, what kind of people she’s been associating with and what severe psychological disturbances she could be experiencing. She’ll be someone you don’t recognise. She might not even remember you.’ Brooke paused. ‘I’m sorry. I’m laying it on thick, and I don’t want to hurt you. It’s just that you need to understand, for your own sake as much as hers.’

‘Everything you say makes perfect sense,’ Ben said. ‘But I won’t change my mind. I’m going after her anyway.’

She nodded and took another sip of coffee. ‘I knew that’s what you were going to say. But promise me that if you find her, and she really is who you think she is, that you’ll let me get involved. I mean, professionally. You’re both going to need help to get through this.’

He nodded. ‘It’s a deal. And thanks. You’re a real friend.’

‘And you’re a real worry.’

He looked at his watch. ‘Time to make the first call of the day.’

‘Who to?’

‘There’s a guy I know at Interpol. Luc Simon. He might be a place to start. I heard he’s high up the food chain these days. He was a cop in Paris when he and I worked together.’

‘Worked together?’

Ben shrugged. ‘Blowing up buildings, taking down bad guys. It was never an official thing. We had a kind of understanding.’

‘I won’t even begin to ask,’ Brooke said. ‘I’m going for a long, hot shower.’

As she left the room, Ben walked over to the phone and dialled the number for the Interpol General Secretariat in Lyon. After giving his name and details to an endless series of receptionists and secretaries who seemed hellbent on preventing him from being put through to the person he wanted, he persisted and finally heard the familiar voice on the line.

‘It’s been a long time,’ Simon said warmly. ‘I didn’t think I was going to hear from you again.’

‘Neither did I, for a while there. You’re a difficult man to get to talk to these days. Congratulations on your promotion, by the way. Commissioner. Pretty impressive.’

‘I gather you’ve moved on yourself since we last talked. You’re a respectable businessman now.’

‘A regular tycoon. But I was calling about something else. I need your help.’

‘Fire away. I’ll see what I can do.’

‘What do you know about neo-Nazis?’

Simon grunted. ‘Plenty. It’s a growing problem across Europe. You only have to look at the statistics for visitors to Hitler’s birthplace to see the rise. We have extreme far-right groups sprouting up like toadstools all over the place – France, Holland, Austria, Italy, everywhere. Why do you ask?’

‘What about Holocaust deniers?’

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