“You were an Army officer yourself, weren’t you, Senator?” said Cozzens.
Banner truculently chewed on the stogie. “Yass. I never got above the rank of shavetail. We were the dogfaces who gave ’em hell at Chateau Thierry. But I’ll tell you all about my war experiences later, Cap’n. We’ll all work together on this. Not nice seeing our New Zealand friends getting bumped off. Not nice at all.”
“No, certainly not,” said Cozzens.
Banner struck an attitude of belligerent ease. “Waal, I’m listening, Cap’n. You were one of the witnesses to this murder. What were you doing at the Legation?”
Cozzens frowned. “I was here by appointment, Senator. Mr Gosling wanted me to suggest a good handgun for his personal use and to give him instructions in how to handle it.”
“Why?”
“I think,” said Cozzens slowly, “he wanted to use it to protect himself.”
“Against what?”
“He never had a chance to tell me. But I think
Scowling, Banner took it from him. “So that’s the Russian pop-pop.”
“Right,” said Cozzens. “A Tokarev, a standard Russian automatic. It’s a 7.62-mm. with a Browning-Colt breech-locking system and it uses Nagant gas-check cartridges.”
“This was the gun in the sealed envelope,” said Banner. “Are you sure it wasn’t some other gun you heard being fired?”
Cozzens slowly shook his head. “I’ve spent a lifetime with guns, Senator. I’ve got to know their ‘voices’ just the way you know people’s. When you hear an accent, you know what part of the world the speaker comes from. That’s the way I am with pistols and revolvers. So I’ll stake my reputation that the shots we heard had a Russian accent, meaning they were fired from a Tokarev automatic, slightly muffled. Besides that, ballistics bears me out. The bullets found in Gosling’s body were indisputably from that gun.”
Banner grunted. “And all the while the gun was sealed up tight in an envelope and you could see the secretary holding the envelope while the shots were fired?”
“That’s right,” answered Cozzens.
“How d’you explain it, Cap’n? What’s your theory?”
“Theory? I haven’t any. I can’t explain it. If I hadn’t seen it with my own eyes, I wouldn’t believe it.”
“Anything else you have to offer?” asked Banner.
“Nothing. That’s all.”
The stogie in Banner’s mouth was burning fiercely. He looked around the office where the murder had been committed. It was a completely equipped modern office. Nothing had been disturbed. He mumbled:
Banner turned to McKitrick. “I’ll see Odell.”
Cozzens left while Banner was being introduced to the FBI agent, Odell.
“You heard Cozzens’ story about the shooting, Odell,” said Banner. “Have you anything to add to it?”
Odell shook his red-haired head. “No, it happened just that way, Senator.” His frank boyish face was grave.
“Why were you stationed here?”
“At a request from Mr Gosling. He asked for our security.”
“How long’ve you been hanging out here?”
“About a week, Senator.”
McKitrick interrupted to say: “Odell asked for this assignment.”
Banner studied the young man with the rusty hair. “What’s the reason, Red?”
Odell hesitated, growing crimson around the ears. “Well, Senator – a – Miss Wagner – Well, you’ll have to see her to appreciate her-”
Banner suddenly chuckled. He was thinking of his own misspent youth chasing the dolls.
Odell sobered. “She’s a hard girl to make friends with,” he admitted ruefully.
“It’s tough, Red,” grinned Banner. “Fetch in the li’l chickie and we’ll see if I can’t make better time with her than you did.”
Odell went out of the office and returned with Gertrude. She looked scared at Banner. Big men in authority seemed to have given her a sudden fright. Her shoulders were hunched up as if she were cold. Odell held her solicitously by the elbow.
“Hello, Gertie,” boomed Banner as familiarly as if he had helped to christen her. “Siddown.”
She dropped gratefully on the leather lounge as if relieved to get the strain off her shaky knees.
“Gertie, there’s no reason why you should think I’m gonna panic you. I’m your big Dutch uncle, remember?”
She smiled at him.
“Now, Gertie,” he resumed, “you live with your people, don’t you?”
“No,” she said hoarsely, then she cleared her throat. “No, Senator. I have no relatives in America. They’re all living in Germany.”
“Germany?” Banner made a quick pounce. “What part of Germany?”
“On a farm outside of Zerbst.”
Banner’s little frosty blue eyes looked shrewd. “That’s in East Germany, ain’t it, Gertie?”
“Yes.”
“Tell me about ’em. And how you got out?”
It wasn’t too complicated a story. Gertrude had been born just after the end of World War Two. She grew up in a Communist dominated land, where everybody was schooled in the Russian language. She learned to speak English too – from an ex-Berlitz professor who ran a black market in verboten linguistics. Farm life had been stern, as she grew big enough to help her father and crippled mother with the chores, but Gertrude had become sturdy on plenty of fresh milk and vegetables, and she used to walk back from the haying fields with her rakehandle across her back and shoulders and her arms draped over it. It made her walk straight and developed strong chest muscles.
“Yass,” muttered Banner at this point. “Like those Balinese gals carrying loads on their heads.” He dwelt silently on Bali for a moment, then he said: “Go on. How’d you get outta East Germany?”
She had, she explained, visited East Berlin several times, helping to bring farm products to market. Each time she came an urge grew stronger in her to see all the things she had heard rumors about, the free and wealthy people of the West, the shops and cinemas along the Kurfurstendamm, and the opportunities for a better life. One day, at the Brandenburg Gate, the urge overcame her. She made a wild, reckless dash, eluding Soviet soldier guards, and made it, panting, falling into the arms of sympathetic West Berliners in the American Sector. She had thought that she would surely find somebody who could help to get her crippled mother and her father free too, but so far there was nobody who could perform that miracle.
Her good looks and quick learning ability eventually got her sponsored for a trip to the United States. Mr Gosling, of the New Zealand Legation, had proved kind to her and had got her the job.
She stopped talking, her brunette head with the Dutch bob bent low.
“Haaak!” Banner cleared his throat, making a sound like a sea lion. “Who’re you living with now?”
“Nobody. I have a small apartment to myself. I have become an American citizen.”
Banner sourly eyed the chewed wet end of the stogie in his hand. “Now about this envelope with the gun in it. When did it come to your desk?”
“Sometime near 11:00 o’clock in the morning, Senator.”
“Who brought it?”
“A man from the special messenger service.”
“Would you know him if you saw him again?”
“I think I would.”
“Was your boss, Mr Gosling, engaged at 11:00?”
“Yes, Mr Lockyear was in there.”
“What time did Cap’n Cozzens come into the reception room?”
“Around 11:15.”