Bloodline Sidney Sheldon

“We owe you a debt of gratitude,” Almedin said.

Max Hornung looked at him and blinked. “What for?” he asked.

 

 

CHAPTER 43

 

Alec Nichols had not wanted to attend the banquet, but he had not wished Elizabeth to go alone. They were both scheduled to speak. The banquet was in Glasgow, a city Alec hated. A car was outside the hotel, waiting to take them to the airport as soon as they could decently make their excuses. He had already given his speech but his mind had been elsewhere. He was tense and nervous, and his stomach was upset. Some fool had had the bad judgment to serve haggis. Alec had barely tasted it. Elizabeth was seated next to him. “Are you all right, Alec?”

“Fine.” He patted her hand reassuringly.

The speeches were almost finished when a waiter came up to Alec and whispered, “Excuse me, sir. There’s a trunk call for you. You can take it in the office.”

Alec followed the waiter out of the large dining room into the small office behind the reception desk. He picked up the telephone. “Hello?”

Swinton’s voice said, “This is your last warning!” The line went dead.

 

 

CHAPTER 44

 

The last city on Detective Max Hornung’s agenda was Berlin.

His friends the computers were waiting for him. Max spoke to the exclusive Nixdorf computer, to which one had access only with a specially punched card. He talked to the great computers at Allianz and Schuffa and to the ones at the Bundeskrimalamt at Wiesbaden, the collection point for all criminal activity in Germany.

What can we do for you? they asked.

Tell me about Walther Gassner.

And they told him. When they were through telling Max Hornung their secrets, Walther Gassner’s life was spread out before Max in beautiful mathematical symbols. Max could see the man as clearly as if he were looking at a photograph of him. He knew his taste in clothes, wines, food, hotels. A handsome young ski instructor who had lived off women and had married an heiress much older than himself.

There was one item that Max found curious: a cancled check made out to a Dr. Heissen, for two hundred marks. On the check was written “For consultation.” What kind of consultation? The check had been cashed at the Dresdner Bank in Dusseldorf. Fifteen minutes later Max was speaking to the branch manager of the bank. Yes, of course the branch manager knew Dr. Heissen. He was a valued client of the bank.

What kind of doctor was he?

A psychiatrist.

When Max had hung up, he sat back, his eyes closed, thinking. A loose thread. He picked up the telephone and placed a call to Dr. Heissen in Dusseldorf.

An officious receptionist told Max that the doctor could not be disturbed. When Max insisted, Dr. Heissen got on the telephone and rudely informed Max that he never revealed any information about his patients, and that he would certainly not dream of discussing such matters over the telephone. He hung up on the detective.

Max went back to the computers. Tell me about Dr. Heissen, he said.

Three hours later Max was speaking to Dr. Heissen on the telephone again.

“I told you before,” the doctor snapped, “that if you want any information about any of my patients, you will have to come to my office with a court order.”

“It is inconvenient for me to come to Dusseldorf just now,” the detective explained.

“That’s your problem. Anything else? I’m a busy man.”

“I know you are. I have in front of me your income tax reports for the past five years.”

“So?”

Max said, “Doctor, I don’t want to make trouble for you. But you are illegally concealing twenty-five percent of your income. If you prefer, I can just forward your files to the German income tax authorities and tell them where to look. They could start with your safe-deposit box in Munich, or your numbered bank account in Basel.”

There was a long silence, and then the doctor’s voice asked, “Who did you say you were?”

“Detective Max Hornung of the Swiss Kriminal Polizei.”

There was another pause. The doctor said politely, “And what is it exactly you wish to know?”

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