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FLOODGATE by ALISTAIR MACLEAN

Hunter’s Horn. But it wasn’t Vasco.’

‘Never said it was. I said “What’s the message from Vasco?” It was Henri,

Henri, sit, is the owner. Vasco is under observation but whoever is

tailing him didn’t know, wasn’t to know, that it’s virtually impossible

to follow Vasco without Vasco being aware of it. So he couldn’t come

here. The person or persons following him would have raised their

eyebrows if they saw you here: they’d have gone into shock if they’d

found me, which would have been a small disaster for us and the end of

the usefulness of both Vasco and yourself. So the only place left for

Vasco was the Hunter’s Horn. Even there he couldn’t use ihe telephone for

he would still be being watched. So he wrote a small note for Henri who

did the telephoning. You’re to ask me a question and you’re to give Henri

my answer inside five minutes.’

Annemarie sighed. ‘Did you have to spoil it for me?’ Then she brightened.

‘But you didn’t get it all, did you?’

‘I’m brilliant at deducing the obvious. I’m not clairvoyant.

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The rest, what I didn’t get, can wait, including the reasons why Vasco is

going to call me back.’

‘I didn’t say that?’

‘Henri did. The inessage.’

She made a moue. ‘It went like this. Two tails. Understand can’t ditch.

Meet two-‘

De Graaf interrupted. ‘What was that meant to mean?’

‘Westenbrink’s shorthand, I imagine,’ van Effen said. ‘Only two ways of

getting rid of his tails. He could throw them into the nearest canal,

which he’s perfectly capable of doing or he could easily have lost them

which he is again perfectly capable of doing. Either course of action

would have ended any connection he’s succeeded in making.’

Annemarie went on: ‘Meet two, three men four-thirty Hunter’s Horn.’ She

pushed across a piece of paper.

‘Stephan Danilov,’ van Effen read. ‘Pole. Radom. Explosives expert. Oil

wellfires. Texas. Clear enough. Interesting, sir?’

‘It is indeed. How do you feel about blowing up banks?’

, Should be interesting to see the law from the other side. They’ll bring

along a Polish speaker, of course.’

Annemarie said: ‘You think this is a Polish criminal group.’

‘No. just to check on me.’

‘But if they speak to you in

‘If they speak to him in Polish ‘ my dear,’de Graaf said, ‘He’ll answer

in Polish, in which language he’s very fluent. Your friend from Utrecht,

Peter, of course knew this.’

Annemarie said: ‘But – but you’ll be recognised. Everybody in that – that

ghetto knows you, I mean, knows who you are.’

‘Ninny. Sorry, but, please. If you think I’m going to present myself as

Lieutenant van Effen you can’t be feeling too well. I shall, in the best

traditions as befits the circumstances, be heavily disguised. I shall put

on about twenty kilos – I have a suit and shirt designed to cope with the

excess avoirdupois -fatten my cheeks, tint hair and moustache, wear a

sinister scar and a black leather glove. That’s to disguise the fearful

scars and burns I sustained when – let me see, yes, of course – when I

was putting out this oil fire in Saudi Arabia or wherever. It’s

remarkable what a single black glove does. It becomes the focal

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point for identification in nearly everyone’s mind and if you’re not

wearing it, you’re not you, if you follow me. And don’t call Krakerdom a

ghetto – it’s an insult to decent Jews.’

‘I didn’t mean to -‘

‘I know. I’m sorry. Call Henri, tell him it’s OK and to let a few minutes

pass before giving Vasco the nod.’

She made the call and hung up. ‘Everything seems all right. A few

minutes.’She looked at van Effen. ‘You already have all the details you

want. Why have Vasco make the call?’

‘Why have Vasco make the call?’ Van Effen tried to look patient. ‘Vasco

goes back every afternoon to this empty block of flats that they’ve taken

over under so-called squatters’ rights. He’s been under surveillance

since his meeting with the council or whatever they call themselves since

last night and it’s a safe assumption that he’ll remain under

surveillance until the time of the meeting in the Hunter’s Horn. How’s

he supposed to have communicated with me to arrange this meeting? Tele-

pathy?’

De Graaf cleared his throat and looked at Annemarie. ‘You must forgive

our Lieutenant his old-world gallantry. Do you go back to the dreadful

place now?’

‘Very soon.’

‘And you stay there overnight?’

She gave a mock shudder. ‘There are limits, sir, to my loyalty to the

police force. No, I don’t sleep there at nights.’

‘No raised eyebrows among the fraternity?’

‘Not at all, sir. I have a gentleman friend who comes calling for me

every evening. The Krakers; undzrstand this sort of thing.’

‘And you go back in the morning?’

‘Yes, sir.’ She put her hand to her mouth to cover a smile but de Graaf

had seen it.

‘You are amused, young lady.’ His tone had lost some warmth.

‘Well, yes, I am a little, sir. Your voice and expression of disapproval

and disappointment. This friend is really a very gallant gentleman.

Especially as he’s.married.’

‘Inevitably.’ De Graaf was not amused.

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‘He takes me to his cousin’s house, leaves me there and comes for me in the

morning. That’s why he’s gallant, because he’s very much in love with his

own wife. His cousin, Colonel de Graaf, is a lady.’

De Graaf said: ‘The Chief of Police is in his usual condition, namely, out

of his depth.’ He was noticeably relieved. ‘You will, of course, Peter,

have carried out a check on this cousin, this lady?’

‘No I have not.’ Van Effen spoke with some feeling. ‘I wouldn’t dare.’

De Graaf frowned briefly then leaned back and laughed. ‘Behold our intrepid

Lieutenant, Annemarie. He’s terrified of his young sister. So you’re

staying with Julie?’

‘You know her then, sir?’

‘My favourite lady in all Amsterdam. Except, of course, for my wife and two

daughters. I’m her godfather. Well, well.’

The phone rang. Van Effen picked it up and listened for perhaps half a

minute then said: ‘Can anyone overhear my voice if I speak?’ Apparently

nobody could for van Effen said: ‘Say that you’ll give me half a minute to

think it over.’ At the end of that period van Effen spoke again: ‘Say to

me: “Stephan, I swear to you it’s no police trap. My life on it. And if it

were a police trap what would my life be worth then? Don’t be silly.”‘

A few moments later van Effen said: ‘That was fine. Will you be coming with

them? Fine? Be sure to tell whoever comes with you – I’m sure it won’t be

the gentlemen who have you under surveillance at the moment – that I have

a police record in Poland and have a United States extradition warrant out

against me. I shall be wearing a black leather glove.’ He hung up.

‘Nice touch about the police record and extradition warrant,’ de Graaf

said. ‘Nice criminal touch and two statements they have no way of checking

on. You will be carrying a gun, I assume?’

‘Certainly. It would be expected of me and I’ll have it in a shoulder

holster that should make it obvious to even the most myopic that I am

armed.’

Annemarie said doubtfully: ‘Perhaps they will take it off you before

discussions start. just as a precaution, I mean.’

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‘One must take a chance about those things. I shall be brave.’ ‘What Peter

means,’ de Graaf said drily, ‘is that he always carries a second gun. It’s

like his single glove theory, that people only concentrate on one thing at

a time. It’s in that book of his, I’m sure. If a person finds a gun on you

he’s got to be almost pathologically suspicious to start looking for

another.’

‘It’s not in the book. I don’t put thoughts like those in criminal minds.

Curious, sir, that we’ll both be engaged in something interesting at

exactly four-thirty – you and the Minister, schnapps in hand, peering down

at the Texel seadyke from the safety of your helicopter seats while I am

entering the lion’s den.’

‘I’d switch with you any time,’ de Graaf said morosely. ‘I should be back

from Texel by six – damn all I can do up there anyway. Let’s meet at

seven.’

‘Provided we both survive – you the schnapps, me the lions. The 444 would

be in order, sir?’

De Graaf didn’t say that the 444 would be in order: on the other hand he

didn’t say it wouldn’t.

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Three

The Chinook helicopter, a big, fast experimental model on demonstration loan

from the US Army of the Rhine, suffered from the same defect as other,

smaller and less advanced models in that it was extremely noisy, the rackety

clamour of the engines making conversation difficult and at times

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