`That was significant?'
`Ever since I had known him as a youth he had a black beard.'
Newman leaned forward. 'You mean you knew him earlier?'
`Before he left to set up his mission station in Africa. My family was friendly with his. The man I saw through the watch window was not Dr Berlin...'
`Without his beard,' Newman began.
`I knew him before he first grew his beard. When he was clean shaven. The man I saw was not Dr Berlin,' she repeated. `Like him, yes. And he was smoking English cigarettes...'
`How do you know that?'
`When one of the favoured sisters...' Again her lips curled in a sneer. `... brought out the waste bin I offered to empty it. I found English cigarette stubs. And when I saw him walking round the ward I thought he looked English. Anglo-Saxon, certainly. Maybe Scandinavian.'
`Could you please describe him?'
`After all these years? God in heaven, I was frightened — the security was so tight. No, I can't remember what he looked like. It was only a glimpse I got. But enough to know he was not Dr Berlin,' she repeated firmly.
`The security was tight, you said. What kind of security?'
`It was controlled by a Russian colonel. He always wore civilian clothes. A man in his middle forties. His name was Lysenko...'
`How do you know that?'
`The doctor in charge always referred to him as The Colonel when talking to the other sisters. Once I heard him use his name. Only once, but it stuck in my mind.'
`Can you describe him?'
`Short, heavily-built. A brutal-looking man. He had bushy, bristly eyebrows. Clean-shaven otherwise.'
`Earlier,' Newman reminded her, 'you said there was a muddle, that you were put on duty in that ward for two days. You must have seen him close up then?'
`After seeing him through the window I didn't know what to do. I went to the canteen for half an hour. When I got back he was lying in bed, his face covered with the bandages again. I checked his temperature. Normal. The chart showed a high temperature. I felt his pulse. Normal. I checked his blood pressure. Normal. Whoever he was, that so-called patient was perfectly fit. I marked the chart four degrees higher — to fit in with the previous reading. The doctor was appalled when he found I was in attendance. He changed the roster, then he took me into his private office. He said he had deleted my name from the roster, that I must never let anyone know about the mistake.'
`Why was he so considerate?' Newman asked sceptically, probing for inconsistencies.
`He once made a very bad error treating a patient. I was the only one who noticed. The patient died. He knew I'd seen his blunder. I never said a word.'
`A form of gentle blackmail on your part?'
`Nothing of the sort!' She reared up. 'He was simply a nice man who repaid a debt.'
`Excuse me,' Newman soothed her down, 'I misunderstood. Was that the last time you saw the bogus Dr Berlin?'
`No. I am a bird-watcher.' She glanced back at Falken. 'I have received much help in my hobby from my friend here. So I always carry a small pair of binoculars. Two weeks after this patient arrived I saw him in the distance, walking in the park round the hospital. I used the binoculars. He had grown the black beard. He looked very like the real Dr Berlin, but I could tell the difference. The following night he left and I never saw him again.'
`Left the hospital, you mean?' Behind her he saw Falken gesturing at the clock. Ten minutes. The interview had to end quickly.
`In the middle of the night. They said he had to meet someone.' She snorted. 'Who ever heard of a patient leaving at that hour?'
`Why are you telling me all this?'
`Because of what they did to my son.' Her voice was vehement. Her eyes flashed malice. 'He is a good boy. Maybe a bit headstrong, but they ruined him. All over a bottle of vodka they found in his car. He answered back the policeman who stopped him. He quarrelled with the judge. A bit headstrong. But now he is breaking rocks to help rebuild the autobahn near Plauen. He was training to be an accountant...'
`I'm so sorry,' Newman interrupted. 'That really is terrible.' `Mrs Piper,' Falken said quietly, 'you must leave now. Your safety is at risk.'
`So soon?' She stood up, followed Falken to the rear door, talking over her shoulder to Newman. 'You will not identify me in your article as a sister at that hospital? They couldn't trace me from what you write?'
Newman had a flash of inspiration. 'Don't worry. I shall call my informant Dr Z. That will protect you completely …'
He saw that Gerda was carrying the windcheater but had forgotten the food basket which was nowhere in sight. She sensed what he was going to say and shook her head. Falken locked the rear door when they had left the camper. Karen Piper hurried to her motor-cycle. She was putting on her crash helmet when they climbed back inside the Chaika.
`Now we wait for her to go,' Falken said. `And I've twisted my ankle crossing that rough ground. I think you'll have to drive the camper, Emil.'
`The camper?'
`Time to switch vehicles. We should have done that earlier, but there was no opportunity. I'll leave the key in the ignition here. It will make it look as though we're coming back if it's discovered. That's why Gerda left the food basket in the camper.'
Piper started her machine, never gave a glance in their direction and rode off up the slip road. They were walking back to the camper, Falken was now leaning on Newman for support, when they heard the chorus of sirens. Screaming like banshees. Coming from all directions, so it seemed to Newman.
`Hurry!' Falken gasped. 'They'll block all the exits.'
Thirty-Seven
The sense of being hemmed in by concrete increased as Newman walked slowly to the camper, held up by helping Falken whose ankle was obviously hurting him badly. The heat, the humidity was trapped by the overhang. And the sirens were almost deafening now.
Gerda had run ahead, had unlocked the door on the driver's side, then ran round to unlock the rear doors. She vanished inside and reappeared inside the driving cab.
`Had to fool Piper,' Falken said, talking in short bursts. `Make her think we're still using the Chaika... If they catch her, break her down under interrogation... she can't tell them we've switched to the camper…'
Newman helped him up the step, Falken flopped on the couch as Newman slammed the rear door closed and ran to the front. Gerda was sitting in the passenger seat, nursing the Uzi inside the windcheater.
`I'll guide you,' she said as she handed him the key and he slipped it into the ignition, turned it. The engine fired first time. The petrol gauge showed 'full'. He played with the gears briefly to get the hang of the mechanism.
`I'm ready. Which way? Guide me...'
`That way. Keep under the span of the bridge. Then turn on to the old rail track. Drive down inside the gulch. If we make that they won't see us.'
He drove over the wasteland after lowering his window a few inches. The siren had merged into one endless wail as though they were all meeting at the zigzag. She told him where to turn. He moved on to the rail track. They were no longer protected by the overhang of the bridge. If someone peered over the wall they'd be seen.
The track descended steadily inside the gulch, the banks rose higher on both sides, above them were glimpses of the dense mass of rye crops growing. He accelerated. Falken had said the wooden sleepers had crumbled to powder. Not all of them. Newman had to grip the wheel tight as the vehicle bumped over still intact sleepers concealed beneath the growth of weeds.
'You're all right now?' Gerda said. 'Just stay inside the gulch...'
`Not much choice, have I?'
`I'm going back to check through the rear windows, see what is happening.'
`Have fun.'
Newman's mood had changed. The nervousness had gone. He was ice cold. The action filled his mind. Now he had something to do, to concentrate on. Ahead the track disappeared round a bend. He pressed his foot down further. If he could reach that bend, get round it, he guessed they'd b
e out of sight of the zigzag. Which was exactly what had sent Gerda running back to the rear windows.
Falken was holding on tight to the end of the couch, his leg with the sprained ankle sprawled along it. He was being bounced all over the place. He gritted his teeth, managed to smile at Gerda as she passed him.
She peered through the right-hand window. The track ran away into the distance. The huge massif of the zigzag reared up where the track ended. No one was peering over the wall yet. Hurry! The camper swayed from side to side, rocking like a ship at sea, putting maximum strain on the springs. Then she felt the vehicle turning slowly, following the curve of the track. She stood very still, holding on to the door handle, gazing at the zigzag. Don't look yet! Please, God, don't let them look yet...'
The camper continued moving round the curve. The zigzag was disappearing. Then it was gone. She let out her breath. Her hand gripped the handle so tightly she had trouble unflexing her fingers. She went back to Falken who again smiled. She could tell he was in considerable pain. She sat beside him, gently pulled down his sock. His ankle was swelling, turning blue.
'I'll get the first aid kit, fix that for you...'
`Later. Get back to Emil. He's doing well but a little moral support will help.'
`Back soon.'
She flopped into the passenger seat, glanced at Newman who was staring ahead where the track ran dead straight inside the gulch for about a kilometre. He hit more of the intact sleepers, the bouncing started worse than ever.
`We're out of sight of the zigzag,' she told him. 'Now no one can see us.'
`I'd like to slow down. I'm shaking this thing to pieces.' `Good idea. Want one of your nasty East German cigarettes? I can get the packet out of your pocket.'
`No thanks. Never smoke when I'm driving. You can drop a lighted cigarette in your lap at the wrong moment, get smoke in your eyes. Only fools and addicts smoke and drive. Tell me, is the roof of this camper well below the level of the gulch?'
`Well below. I told you, we can't be seen now we're round that curve.'
And where are we heading for?'
`Leipzig still. By our own private route. The rail track.' `You've used it before?'
`Once. So I know what lies ahead, where we have to leave it at what used to be a level crossing. That's a distance yet. Then we move back on to the highway into Leipzig.'
`Look,' he protested, 'I'm going the wrong way for the border. We're heading due east.'
`You're thinking of the way you came in — past the watchtower. You don't go out that route...'
`But I was told...'
`Pullach can be naive. Falken's always cursing them. Never once has he passed a guest back across the border the way he came in. You don't get twice lucky in our world. It's my responsibility to put you on a different escape route.'
`Via Czechoslovakia?'
`No.' She hesitated. 'We never tell an outsider too much in advance. You understand?'
`Too bleeding right I do. In case I'm caught. Then, like the Piper woman, I can't tell them much under interrogation.'
`The system works. It's a question of survival. I will tell you that you're going out via the Baltic. But not how. Yet.'
`The Baltic! That's one hell of a way north. Practically across the full depth of the DDR.'
`That's the way it has to be. And now I'd better go and attend to Falken's ankle. Be back soon.' She smiled as he glanced at her. 'You really are doing very well. We trust you more than most we've had sent to us.'
Newman felt relieved and anxious at the same time. Relieved that the camper roof couldn't be seen above the gulch, anxious about this new escape route to the Baltic. He'd never dreamt they'd try to send him out via the extreme north. That meant driving a vast distance before he even came in sight of safety. And he'd had enough experience now to realize the highways were the danger points. Patrol cars, road-blocks, God new what else. He forced his fears out of his mind. Concentrate on the present. He looked ahead and frowned.
Little more than a kilometre away the gulch was spanned by an old hulk of an arched stone bridge. Presumably — as Gerda had said they'd used this route before — the bridge was wide enough for a vehicle. Trains had once passed under it regularly. But the camper was an exceptionally high-roofed vehicle. Had they travelled in a camper last time?
He stopped, left the engine ticking over and made his way back inside the camper. Gerda had just finished bandaging Falken's ankle, was pulling up his sock gently. They both looked up with a surprised expression.
`What is it?' Falken asked sharply.
`An old road bridge ahead. Were you in a camper when you used this route before? I'm thinking of roof clearance.'
`No. We travelled in a car. And this was a narrow gauge railway, smaller coaches than the average.'
`We'll have to hope we get through. And, since I've stopped I'm going to climb the gulch bank, take a look-see...'
`I'll come with you,' Gerda said.
They used the rear door, stepping down into ankle-deep weeds sprouting from the old track. Together they scrambled up the steep side of the gulch, pushing their way through thistles and grasses. Here and there an outcrop of limestone protruded, embedded deeply into the embankment. They slowed down as they neared the top. Cautiously they raised their heads above the level of the rye growing to the verge of where the embankment fell away. Looped round her neck Gerda had brought with her binoculars Falken used in his conservation work. He kept a pair in the camper.
`Oh, my God, no!' she cried.
`See what you mean,' Newman replied tersely.
Away across the rye field the ground sloped up to a hill. A road leading to the bridge ran along the mid-slopes. And two patrol cars were moving along it, heading for the bridge.
Gerda raised the binoculars to her eyes, focused them. She groaned. Newman reached out with his hand and gently pulled the binoculars downwards over her breasts.
`The sun could flash off the lenses, alert them.'
There are four men in each car. That's most unusual. They must be looking for someone...'
`Us, probably. We'd better move. Mind your feet on those rocks. We don't want two people with damaged ankles on this trip.'
They scrambled their way down through the mess of thistles and reached the bottom together. Gerda almost tripped but Newman grabbed her arm, steadied her. They ran back inside the camper and Newman slammed the door shut. Falken looked up and raised his eyebrows.
`Trouble?'
`Plenty,' Newman told him. 'Two patrol cars heading for the bridge, crammed to the gunwales with Vopos. Eight to be exact. I have to race them to that bridge, hope we can shelter underneath it. Hold on tight. They're bound to see us if we're in the open when they cross it...'
He ran back to the cab, thanking God he'd left the engine running. Gerda followed, sagging into the passenger seat as Newman released the brake. Again he rammed his foot down. The vehicle leapt forward, felt like a plane lifting off, crashing up and down over solid sleepers. Gerda, her facial muscles taut, stared ahead through the windscreen. She left him for a moment, returned holding the Uzi.
`There are eight of them, you said,' he warned. 'They'll be armed. Our only hope is to hide...'
`If we get there in time,' she reminded him, staring again fixedly through the windscreen.
And if the damned camper will go under that bridge, Newman thought. And if the bridge is wide enough to conceal us so neither end of this bloody great thing doesn't stick out in full view.
The camper jounced, wobbled, rocked as Newman kept his foot down hard on the accelerator. The arched bridge seemed an incredibly long way off. It crawled towards them. Beyond the bridge the sky was black as battalions of storm clouds massed. The heat inside the cab was appalling. They were partitioned off from the main part of the camper by a flimsy door, presumably to give privacy when people slept while the camper was driven through the night.
Newman's hands were sticky on the wheel. The left front tyre hit an obstacle
. The wheel slipped out of his grip. He fought to control it as the camper swerved towards the embankment. Just in time he swung it back on course. He wiped each hand separately on his trousers as Gerda glanced at him.
`One of those bloody rocks. Must have rolled down on to the track. I could do without a repeat performance.'
`You'll make it...'
`We have to.'
His eyes were glued to the stone balustrade at the top of the bridge, the point where some policeman in one of those two cars would glance over the parapet and see the camper. Unless they could get under that bridge first. He was gambling with dice he couldn't see. The cars had been moving fast.
He risked a shade more speed. The moment he'd applied the extra pressure the wheels met more solid sleepers. His backside was lifted clear off the seat. Gerda's shoulder bumped against his. She apologized, still staring forward. Would they never reach the goddamn thing?
A grey veil of rain was slanting down beyond the bridge. Thunderheads were building up. Maybe that was why it was so boiling hot inside the cab. They were close enough now for Newman to see the parapet was no higher than an average man's thighs. In the old days — when the trains still ran — schoolboys must have leant their elbows on that parapet, watching a train pass beneath them. No sign of the two cars crossing. Yet. They had to arrive at any second. There'd be no escape from the gulch. The Vopos would hold the high ground.
He rammed his foot down further. One final spurt. They couldn't lose now Yes they could. The arch looked too low to permit passage for the camper. It was going to be a matter of inches. Maybe he'd take the roof off. Through his open window he thought he could hear sirens. On a lonely country road? Yes, because it would wind. Sirens wailing to warn any traffic concealed round a bend. Definitely sirens.
`Push the door open!' he told Gerda.
The Janus Man Page 33