proper channels? We have a common interest here.’

Harry smiled briefly. ‘I was impatient. I thought if I could find Sergeant Barrow and persuade him to go back, it would involve the minimum of fuss. . for him as well as us. I’m sorry if I’ve gone about this the wrong way, but I’m sure you understand.’

To his surprise the man nodded and handed back his passport. ‘And is this definitely Barrow? You can formally identify him?’

‘Yes. It’s Graham Barrow.’ Harry handed him Barrow’s passport.

‘We will need to keep this, Mr Tate. And you will have to make a statement at the station in Schwedt. Perhaps you would be good enough to go there. One of my men will accompany you.’ He stared at Ulf. ‘Herr Hefflin also.’ He motioned to the waiting ambulance men to take the body away. ‘I will have the area sealed while we carry out more intensive investigations, although I do not think there will be much to tell us who killed this man.’ He didn’t look happy at the thought, and Harry got the impression that if things got sticky, he was going to have to rely on Ballatyne to call in some favours, status non-attributable or otherwise. Being stuck in the German justice system wasn’t going to help him find Paulton or Vanessa Tan.

TWENTY-SIX

Far away from Schwedt, in Bremen’s discreet Burgerpark, a short drive from the city centre, Deakin was pacing the elegant columned foyer of the Park Hotel, his face taut with anger. He had just taken a call from the man following the mystery investigator. ‘I don’t bloody believe this,’ he hissed. ‘Petersen picked up our man coming through Tegel and tracked him to some place called Schwedt, on the Polish border. First thing he does on arrival is talk to a local guy, and less than an hour later they find Barrow’s body and call in the Federal cops.’ He snapped the phone shut with venom. ‘Christ, of all the places. . how in God’s holy name did he find it so quickly? They might as well have fitted Barrow with a bloody tracking device!’

Greg Turpowicz was unmoved by Deakin’s mood. He thought the Brit was getting way too stressed for his own good. It was something that had been showing more and more just recently. Instead he gazed thoughtfully at the magnificent domed ceiling above them and said softly, ‘I know Schwedt; it’s in the middle of nowhere. Petrochemicals and paper, mostly. Jesus, if that’s where Beavis and Butt-head did their jig with Barrow, and this guy found it already, they didn’t exactly break their necks trying to hide the evidence, did they?’

‘They do a job we don’t want to,’ said Deakin defensively. It had been his decision to take on the two Bosnians and he disliked any criticism of their methods. ‘They’re not sophisticated but they’re good at what they do.’

Turpowicz shook his head, recognizing the futility of arguing, and walked over to a coffee table in one corner of the foyer, where they had been sitting waiting for their meeting. He turned the open laptop to face him, calling up the photo from the Continentale in Scheveningen, and stared at the picture as if trying to read beneath the face. ‘This guy’s smart; he moves quick and he asks all the right questions.’ He looked at Deakin. ‘Why do I find the hairs lifting on the back of my neck, Deak? Who the fuck is he and what are we going to do about him?’

Deakin shook his head. ‘I don’t know yet. Let me think about it.’ He sat down and took out his phone, and dialled a number. He checked in case anyone was close, but the hotel was quiet and nobody was paying any attention save for a slim Chinese man in a neat suit, standing by the reception desk. They had marked him down as a security man the moment they arrived. ‘Petersen? Are you still in that place. . what’s it — Schwedt? Right. Stay put. I don’t care how you do it, but I want the name of the man you’ve been tailing. Drop some money on the local cops if you have to.’ He switched off the phone and looked at Turpowicz. ‘Good enough for you? We’ll find him and deal with him.’ His face was bleak.

Turpowicz grunted and checked his watch. ‘Where’s Paulton got to? I thought he was supposed to be in on this with us, putting up some front.’ It was a reminder that they had agreed on a united display to show the Protectory’s substance, something the Chinese were in favour of when negotiating.

Deakin waved a hand. ‘He’s busy on something else; sent a text to say go ahead without him. Anyway, once the monkey we’re seeing hears what we have for him, I don’t think he’ll care about how many we are. He’ll just want results.’

‘If you say so. Better not let him hear you call him a monkey, though. They can be a bit touchy about body image.’

But Deakin was ignoring him, his mind already on something else. Seconds later he was on his phone again, talking to Nicholls. ‘Did you get the photo I sent you?’

‘Yes. Is there a problem?’ Nicholls sounded cool.

‘There could be.’ He brought Nicholls up to date on the discovery of Barrow’s body. ‘Whoever this bozo is, he’s getting too close.’

‘I agree. But what do we do about it? Or are you planning on setting your tame bouncers on him?’ Nicholls had no more love for the Bosnians, Zubac and Ganic, than Turpowicz, an opinion he had never bothered to conceal.

‘Forget them. You need to contact our man in the MOD. Send him the photo and see if the face comes up on the official files. If he’s an investigator, he’ll be on record somewhere.’

‘All right. But it’s risky. He might get jumpy if he thinks we’re after one of their own.’

‘Tough shit.’ Deakin’s tone turned savage. ‘He gets enough easy money out of us for supplying names and numbers; now let him earn it. I want to know who this tricky bastard is!’ He shut off the phone again just as a uniformed under-manager came gliding across the floor and gave a hint of a bow. In the background, the Chinese security man stood waiting, hands crossed in front of him.

‘Gentlemen? Mr Wien Lu Chi will see you now. Follow me?’

Deakin nodded and picked up the laptop. As he turned to follow the under-manager, Turpowicz grabbed his arm, and said softly, ‘You didn’t really answer me, Deak. You said you’d deal with this investigator. What does that mean exactly?’

Deakin brushed off the American’s hand. ‘Simple. He’s a threat. I’m going to stop him. Permanently.’

TWENTY-SEVEN

‘You are free to leave, Mr Tate. . Herr Hefflin.’ Drachmann handed both men their documents. He didn’t look pleased. They had been in the local station for over three hours, providing detailed statements along with answering a list of supplementary questions. It had all been very low-key, but there had been no mistaking the intensity behind the queries. ‘If it were my choice,’ he continued bluntly, ‘I would have you stay in Schwedt until we had completed our investigation. But I have my instructions from the Bundesministerium — the Ministry of the Interior.’

‘Thank you. What now?’

‘As long as there are no problems, the body will be released in a few days, after our Senior State Medical Examiner has satisfied himself. After that you may make arrangements for it to be returned to England.’ He stared at Harry for a long moment, giving the impression that he wanted to ask a lot more questions, but could not. ‘Our forensics personnel say that in their opinion the lack of gunshot burns indicate it cannot be a death by suicide. Somebody unconnected with the shooting may have found the body and removed the gun — perhaps to sell. We will never know. It would be useful to know who might have wished harm to Sergeant Barrow, a complete stranger in this area.’ He lifted his eyebrows and waited.

Harry shrugged easily. The tactic was one he recognized, meant to draw him into saying more than he might want to. ‘I wish I could help,’ he said eventually. Ballatyne must have intervened at a high level to facilitate their release. If so, it would explain Drachmann’s general air of reluctance to let the matter drop. ‘I’m as puzzled as you are. I can only think they might have been criminals acting on chance.’

‘Criminals.’ Drachmann considered the word as if it were new to him. ‘Ah. You mean the Mafiya?’

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