Malin, though; Malin was his. Lock wanted that inflated, bullying life reduced, its power drained away, its crookedness laid bare. He wanted Malin to understand what it was to be nothing; to be a beggar; to be undone.
HE FOUND WEBSTER in the restaurant, the only person in the neat, bright dining room. The place smelled faintly of toast and fried bacon. Webster was stirring a cup of coffee, the spoon chinking against the side; only his table had a tablecloth.
“You alone?”
“They don’t serve lunch. Herr Maurer’s wife made me an omelette. I’m sure she’d do another.”
Lock shook his head. “Just the smell in here is enough. Thank you.”
“Coffee?”
“Water.”
“Sit down.” Webster got up and went into the kitchen; he seemed to be making himself at home. Lock looked out the window, which gave onto neat brick outbuildings by the side of the hotel. Herr Maurer was wheeling a tall white fridge on a trolley toward a white van whose doors were open at the back.
Webster came back with a bottle of still water, a bottle of fizzy, a glass and a bowl of ice.
“I didn’t know which you wanted.”
“What do you think they gave me?”
“They gave Dmitry something called GHB. It’s made of floor cleaner.” Lock didn’t say anything. “But there was a bottle of gin in your room that I don’t remember seeing. Was that yours?”
“No. No gin.”
“Then they probably gave you quite a lot of that as well. If not from that particular bottle.”
“That makes sense. I can taste it on my breath.”
Webster held up the bottle of still water to Lock, who nodded.
“We should do it.”
Webster finished pouring and passed Lock the glass.
“Are you sure?”
“Utterly. I owe it to Nina. Not to mention Marina and Vika. Christ, and everybody else.” He took a drink. He could feel it cool and mineral in his throat.
Webster watched him, as if expecting more. Lock drank again.
“You’re certain?”
“Certain.”
“Then we have a lot to do.”
LOCK CALLED MALIN THAT NIGHT. Webster had written a script for him, and told him to keep his tone professional. This was a deal, like any other.
Webster had bought new phones from town that afternoon. Six more; they were getting through them. He had also spent hours talking to people in London about the operation. Security people were flying out, and would be there that evening. Nina was going to stay with her sister in Graz. Lock marveled at how precisely each move had to be plotted. He was coming to rely on Webster, he realized: swapping one controller for another.
It was late in Moscow when he called. Malin would still be up, though. He slept little.
The line rang five times before he answered.
“Richard.”
“Konstantin.”
“Where are you?”
“Somewhere you can’t find me for once.” They spoke Russian.
“I wish you would come home.”
“It isn’t home anymore, Konstantin. Let’s be honest, it never was.” Webster, standing over Lock, tapped his finger on the script on the desk. Get on with it.
“Richard, I am perhaps the one man anywhere who can protect you. Don’t listen to anyone else who says he can.”
Lock glanced up at Webster, who nodded. “Konstantin, I have a proposal. I have something you want, and you have something I want. I have Dmitry’s file. I know you’ve been looking for it.”
The script paused here to give Malin time to respond, but he said nothing.
Lock went on. “I can promise you that you won’t find it unless I help you. I’m prepared to give it to you in return for my liberty and a sum of money to compensate me for the trouble you have caused me. I will also ensure a smooth handover of my ownership interests to a party of your choice. I would recommend a Russian entity of some kind.”
“How much?”
“Wait. I’m not finished. I will also undertake to talk to any law enforcement agency only about matters within my competence. I will not speculate about anything else. As Kesler will tell you, that won’t be enough to do you any harm. Not in Russia. I may not be so lucky but I’m happy to take that risk. Finally, you will undertake to leave me alone and let me live my life. The same goes for Nina Gerstman.”
Malin was silent for perhaps ten seconds. Lock glanced up at Webster and shrugged. Then Malin spoke. “Is that it?”
“In essence, yes. When we meet we can discuss details.”
“How much?”
“Ten million dollars.”
Malin grunted. “Where do you want to meet?”
“Be ready to fly to Europe on Monday morning. I will call you again at midnight tomorrow night and let you know which airport. The flight will not be longer than four hours from Moscow. When you land I will call you again and give you a time and a place to meet.”
“That’s not enough time to file a flight plan.”
“It’s Russia. You’ll manage.”
The line was quiet. Eventually Malin said, “Let me call you back in an hour. I need to think.”
“No you don’t. If you don’t say yes to a meeting now I will call the FBI immediately and give them the files. They’ll enjoy them.”
“If you have the files you can tell me what’s in them.”
“You can find out when I see you on Monday. This isn’t a trick.”
Silence again. Lock imagined Malin, that blunt face processing what it had heard.
“Call me tomorrow night,” said Malin and hung up.
Lock felt Webster’s hand on his shoulder and looked up.
“What did he say?” said Webster.
“That we should call tomorrow.”
“That’s good. Very good. Did he say he was coming?”
“No. But I think he is.”
“How was he?”
“Same as ever. He doesn’t give much away.”
“You were good. Confident.”
Lock smiled. His head was clearing and for the first time that day he thought that he could eat.
LATER THEY ATE together in the restaurant. There were three other guests: a party of Americans, a husband and wife and their friend, all retired, they said, and traveling around Germany and the Netherlands for a month. For ten minutes before dinner Lock and Webster swapped small talk with them in the bar, Webster engaging with them while Lock, still feeling delicate, sat back. The friend had been in Wandlitz ten years before when the hotel had just opened; she had come in the summer and swum in the lake. Webster moved the conversation on to their trip. Yes, they had been to Berlin. What an extraordinary city—a historical monument in itself; but such violence it had known. Webster was good at this, Lock thought. Eventually, to Lock’s relief, he said that they must go and eat, and they took their table.
“Nice people,” said Webster.
“Nice people. Very nice. They’ve had a good life.”
“No self-pity, please. You told me you were feeling positive.”
“No, I mean it. They’ve had a good life. That’s good. It’s nice to meet some normal people. I can’t remember the last time I did.” Lock took a sip of water. He pulled his napkin off the table and shook it open on his lap. “Do you know what I was going to do before I called you in London?”
Webster shook his head. “No.”
“I was going to run away. I had it in my head that if I could get to Switzerland I could withdraw all my money and disappear. I know someone in Istanbul who I thought could get me a passport.”
“Where would you have gone?”
“I don’t know. Vanuatu. Some Indonesian island. Somewhere with sunshine an
d no government to speak of.” He smiled. “In Switzerland I’ve got nearly nine million dollars. If I live another thirty years that’s three hundred grand a year. That’s enough.”
A waitress came and asked if they were ready to order.
“What can you manage?” asked Webster.
“Very little.”
“Boiled rice and carrots is what you want. And a glass of red wine.”
“Why on earth would I want that?”
“Good for upset stomachs. Trust me. I wouldn’t have anything else.”
“OK. But no wine.”
Webster ordered in German. “So what happened? Why didn’t you go?”
“I remembered that the Swiss had been asking questions. They’d had one of my people in to talk to them in Zurich. Did you know that?”
Webster shook his head.
“So it wasn’t you?”
“Not us.”
“I don’t suppose it matters. I thought they’d stop me at the border and that would be that.” Lock took some bread and broke a piece off. He took a small, tentative bite and chewed gently. The bread felt strange in his mouth. “But I shouldn’t think they would have.”
“They might. But not yet, probably.”
“Exactly. I think I was scared. Or I just didn’t want to go.”
“Paradise not all it seems?”
“I don’t think I could lie in the sun every day anymore.”
“So what do you want?”
“I have no idea. No idea.” I do, thought Lock. I want to live in London and see my wife and child. To say it out loud would be to jinx it.
LOCK AND WEBSTER barely saw each other on Sunday: Webster went to Berlin to meet a man called George and find a location for the meeting, and Lock spent the day in his room drawing up a plan for the handover of Faringdon.
In the afternoon he walked around the lake on a path of compacted snow, watching the ducks, the metal rigging on the masts of boats pinging softly in the wind like cowbells, black branches laden with frosted white sagging above his head. There was a light mist on the water and everything was silver gray. Twenty yards behind him one of George’s people followed.
He wanted to speak to Marina. She would be worried. Webster had explained that if he did Malin would hear the call, learn the number of Lock’s phone and attempt to trace it. Even if that phone was then dismantled and thrown on the growing heap of defunct mobile carcasses, Malin might still be able to work out from which cell the call had been made, and though time was now running short and his chances of doing so quickly on a Sunday slim, they couldn’t risk his discovering their whereabouts. But Lock had insisted, and so Webster had suggested a simple solution, good enough to last the half a day or so they needed: they would phone the switchboard of a friendly company in London, which would phone the switchboard of a friendly company in New York, which would then forward the call to Marina’s number, so that all Malin would see, in the first instance and without a good day or two of work, was a pair of apparently unconnected numbers that had nothing whatever to do with Lock. That, Webster had said, ought to be enough, provided that Lock made sure he didn’t mention precisely where he was, what he was planning, or with whom he was planning it. To Lock, who really only wanted to tell his wife that he loved her, it all seemed absurdly cautious.
He made the call. A minute later he heard Marina’s voice on the line, somehow unexpectedly close.
“Hi. It’s me.”
“Richard. Thank God. Where have you been?”
“I’m sorry. It’s been difficult to call.”
Marina was quiet. “You should have let me know.”
“I’m sorry. Really.” A pause. “How are you?”
“Scared. Where are you?”
“I’m sorry, sweetheart. I’m fine. I didn’t mean to worry you.” Despite himself he felt a thrill of reassurance that she had been thinking of him. “I think I’ve found a way out.” He waited for her to respond. “I can’t really talk about it but I’m seeing Konstantin. I think I can make a deal.”
“I spoke to him.”
“He called again?”
“I called him.”
Lock felt a small leap of fear—not of Malin, but of plans unraveling. He stopped walking and looked across the lake; his bodyguard stopped a few feet behind him.
“You called him? Why?”
“To see how much of him was left.”
“What do you mean?”
“I told him that my father was watching what he did. That if he hurt you he would finally be lost.”
“What did he say?”
“That his conscience was clear. That I had no reason to fear him.”
“You believe him?”
“He said one day I would know he did everything he could for you.”
Lock snorted. “Everything is right.”
“I think he believes it.”
A dozen sarcasms occurred to him. Justified, possibly: she had encouraged him to turn, and now she seemed to be suggesting that he turn back. He saw them clearly, but he didn’t feel them. She was merely as scared as he had once been.
“Don’t believe him,” he said, feeling a rush of energy at the thought that this whole business was now his to end. He would dictate terms to Konstantin; he would free himself; he would end this fear that had slowly etched away his life, and hers.
“I just—”
“Don’t. He’s got nothing left. He wants you to persuade me.”
“Will you talk to him?”
“I am talking to him. Tomorrow.”
“Not in Moscow?”
“I can’t say.”
The line was quiet. He could see her eyes, creased in a frown, full of sadness.
“I could be back in London tomorrow,” he said. “Or the next day.”
Still silence.
“Marina?” He knew that she was crying. “Sweetheart, it’s OK. I have something he wants.”
“OK.”
“It’s changed. Already.”
“That’s good.”
He could hear a catch in the rhythm of her breath; the lake was silent but for the rigging gently clinking. He looked for ducks but couldn’t see any. “Where’s Vika?”
“Next door. We just finished lunch. She’ll be in in a second.”
“Will you kiss her for me?”
“Yes.”
They were quiet again, and Lock knew that Marina was crying not from fear alone but from hope: she was proud of him again, and as it made her weep it filled him with lightness, almost jubilation. This was going to work. Not everything was jinxed.
“I should go,” he said.
“You should.”
“It’s going to be OK.” He hesitated. “I love you. I’m sorry I ever forgot that.”
“I know.”
“I’ll call you tomorrow. When it’s done.”
BY MONDAY MORNING Lock was calm. Strangely so: all the alarm, all the anxiety of the last month had left him, and he knew they wouldn’t return. Malin was coming. Lock had called him the night before and told him, in few words, rather enjoying himself, that he was to fly to Berlin. Malin was coming—not as his master but as his petitioner. And no matter how today ended, he would be his master no more.
Lock woke early, a little after six. He could see from the light under the door that Webster was awake. He sat in the dark and imagined the day. Malin would land sometime this morning. In a few hours they would phone him and tell him to come to the Staatsbibliothek No. 2 on Potsdamer Strasse at noon. The Berlin state library. Webster had explained that it was open without being unmanageable, busy without being hectic. It was a sober, quiet building where the meeting could be controlled.
Outside the sky had turned from black to deepest blu
e.
THEY DROVE INTO THE CITY in George Black’s car. Lock liked Black. He wasn’t a big man but there was a certainty about his manner, about the way he held himself, that made Lock feel safe. There were four of them in the car: Black, Webster, Lock and a well-spoken young man called James, who drove. George and James were at once exactly like their Russian counterparts and nothing like them at all. For one thing they were much more polite.
Twisting around in his seat Black explained that there were four more men already in Berlin. They were stationed in and around the library and would make sure that Lock was safe. “Not,” said Black, “that he’s likely to try anything out in the open.” When they got to Berlin two of Black’s men would be inside, two outside. Lock would wait in the car a few hundred yards away with James. When Malin arrived, and only then, James would drive Lock around and he would be escorted into the building. During the meeting itself three men would be watching from a short distance and three would patrol the area. When the meeting had concluded, Lock would be escorted quickly and easily to his car and driven to a rendezvous just north of Berlin. The second car would conduct countersurveillance on the first to make sure it wasn’t followed. Throughout, Webster and the team would sit back. It was important that Lock appear to be alone, even if Malin would assume he was not.
Webster had instructions for him too. They discussed the phone.
“You’ve got your two phones. When you sit down, take them out of your pocket and take the batteries out of each. Ask Malin to do the same. Try and look a little anxious. Make him think you’re the one worried about being overheard.”
The Silent Oligarch: A Novel Page 30