Andrew Williams - The Poison Tide

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The Poison Tide: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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1915. German guns are on their way to Ireland. The British government faces its worst nightmare: insurrection at home while it struggles with bloody stalemate on the Western Front. A British spy, Sebastian Wolff of the new Secret Service Bureau, is given the task of hunting down its enemies: one a traitor reviled by the society that honoured him as a national hero; the other a German American doctor who, instead of healing the sick, is developing a terrifying new weapon that he will use in the country of his birth.
Wolff’s mission will take him undercover into the corridors of power in Berlin — where he must win the confidence of the German spymaster who controls both men — then across the Atlantic in a race against time to prevent the destruction of the ships and supplies Britain so desperately needs to stave off defeat.
Moving from London to the Baltic coast, from Berlin to New York,
is set against a war like none before, in which men die in their thousands every day. And there are those on both sides who will use any weapon, who accept no limits, no morality except victory

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‘Have you finished, Anton?’ Emmeline called from the top of the stairs.

‘For now,’ he replied. ‘I’ll be right up.’

At four o’clock they stepped across the street to take tea with young Mr and Mrs Mitchell. He was something in insurance; she was expecting their first child. What a fascinating place Europe must be, they said, so many fine buildings, so much history. How sad its great nations were at war. It made the insurance business very tricky, Mr Mitchell confided chirpily.

‘I’m sorry, Anton,’ Emmeline said later. ‘Not your sort of people.’

Dilger smiled and took her hand, so rough from the farm pots and pans. ‘We’ll make friends, don’t you worry.’

After supper he left her sewing curtains in the parlour and caught a tram along Connecticut Avenue into town. He got off just beyond the Dupont Circle and walked the last three blocks.

The Grafton was the sort of comfortable but ugly modern hotel favoured by businessmen on a budget. No one stayed long enough for the staff to remember a name and no one gave Dilger a second glance as he walked across the lobby. The hotel telephones were in a booth close to the desk, mounted on the wall and a little low. He chose the one at the end, cranked it and asked the operator for a Baltimore number.

‘Tell Mr Hilken it’s Dr Dilger,’ he instructed the servant who answered his call.

The empty line crackled for two, three, four minutes and he was on the point of hanging up when he heard a bang and someone curse.

‘Sorry, the receiver. Are you still there?’

‘Mr Paul Hilken?’

‘Delmar? I got your telegram,’ he replied in German. He spoke it well, plainly a cultivated and youngish man.

‘Call me Dr Dilger. Look, you’ll need to send someone to me in two weeks, someone reliable.’

‘It’s all organised — Captain Hinsch will be your contact, but why don’t you visit us here?’

‘No. He must come to my house. On the fifteenth. He’ll need some instruction.’

‘All right, then, come here after you’ve made the delivery,’ he said pleasantly. ‘Do you like the theatre?’

‘And money. I need some money.’

‘I’ll send it with Hinsch. Don’t worry, everything is in order.’

Dilger gave him the address. ‘My sister’s staying with me.’

He was surprised. ‘So it’s a family business?’

‘She doesn’t know.’

‘I see. Well, is there anything else I can do for you?’ Hilken enquired politely.

‘Not yet. We must wait for nature to take her course.’

For a few seconds there was only the line. Then he laughed nervously. ‘“ That I may smite thee and thy people with pestilence… ”’ His voice sounded shaky and he laughed again to disguise his embarrassment. ‘Well, goodbye, Doctor. Take good care.’

16. Unholy Alliances

HE SAID HIS name was Mr Emile V. Gaché. He said he was Swiss but even Martha Held’s ‘ladies’ knew that was a lie. He said he was a banker, also a barefaced lie. He said he was a friend to Germany and in that at least there was truth.

‘What do you want from me?’ Wolff asked him after an hour of questions and lies.

‘You do not feel comfortable?’

‘It’s very intimate…’ Wolff waved his hand languidly at the waitress serving drinks and displaying her cleavage to the gentlemen on the couch opposite.

‘It is safe. Martha is a patriot,’ and he raised his glass to the spirit of the large operatic lady who was their hostess. ‘And you, Mr de Witt?’

‘Me? A businessman, I told you. More of a businessman than you, I think.’

He laughed — a strange, strangled laugh like a yelping dog. ‘An entrepreneur in the spirit of our times,’ he offered; and he was dressed like one, in an expensive suit and spats, fashionable middle-aged businessman or broker — more than a disguise or affectation; military in his bearing but in everything else trade, second or third generation — a new patriot. Convincingly good humoured for a vain man and a German officer. A little older than Wolff, early forties, with a large straight mouth, thin hair swept from a high forehead and sharp little eyes.

‘Our mutual acquaintance, Count Nadolny—’

‘Yes, the Count did mention you,’ he interrupted. ‘I like to make up my own mind.’

‘So do I,’ replied Wolff, rising impatiently from his chair.

‘Mr de Witt,’ he leant forward, his arm raised; ‘wait, please.’

Wolff stared at him for a moment, then resumed his seat.

‘Thank you. More wine.’ He turned to look for one of Martha’s girls, then got to his feet, fastidiously smoothing imaginary creases from his perfectly pressed trousers. ‘So, please, I will be just a minute.’

Wolff watched him weave across the drawing room to where Miss Held was holding court at a table. Fifties, full figure, auburn wig and frills; madam by night, German matron by day. Front of house an ordinary brick row, drawing room sinful Parisian silk and velvet, with couches so soft a small man might drown. Martha’s young ladies — coy smiles and laughter, ‘… everything light, darling… ’, squeezing the hand of a burly German businessman, draped on the arm of a sailor’s chair, ‘Champagne! More whisky!’ Oh, such Mädchen .

‘Correct. I’m not a banker,’ he said in a low voice, sitting beside Wolff again. ‘Champagne?’ He began to pour. ‘Captain Franz von Rintelen of the Imperial German Navy at your service.’

Wolff raised his glass in salute.

‘You’re a man who enjoys taking risks, correct?’

‘For the right price.’ Wolff put down his glass, took out his cigarette case and offered it to Rintelen. ‘No?’ He lit his own and reached for the ashtray. ‘I do have some principles.’

‘Of course, you are an associate of Sir Roger Casement.’

‘He doesn’t like to use the title,’ said Wolff, ignoring his ironic smile. ‘I’ve told you something of my history. If I can be of service to Germany, well…’

Rintelen’s sharp little eyes flitted about Wolff’s face like a persistent bluebottle. ‘So, I may have something that will suit you,’ he said at last. ‘There is someone I want you to meet first, another… entrepreneur.’

Captain Friedrich Hinsch was playing skat in the room above. He’d drunk too much, he was losing, he was in a foul temper, and the table breathed a collective sigh as he scooped what was left of his money into a sweaty palm and rose to join them. He was big and rough and rolled like a steamer in a gale, weather-beaten, a beetle brow, black calf-length boots over a grey suit, soap beneath one ear, a shock of blond hair, careless with his appearance, and the sort of man who would enjoy squaring up to anyone foolish enough to say so. He was expecting them and knew a little of de Witt’s story but was plainly unimpressed. ‘Don’t trust a man with more than one country,’ he grumbled.

‘Captain Hinsch is an…’ Rintelen slipped apologetically into English, ‘old salt.’

‘Hey, a beer.’ Hinsch waved to one of the girls.

‘And Mr de Witt is a man of principle.’

‘Principle.’ Hinsch spat it back sceptically.

‘But at a price,’ Rintelen continued. ‘He is an engineer, and he has experience of handling explosives.’

‘You have been talking, Mr Gaché.’

Rintelen coloured a little but ignored the jibe. ‘My associate is the master of the Neckar. He has been here since the beginning of the war…’

‘Almost a year,’ Hinsch interjected.

‘His ship is, what do the Americans say — “interned” — interned in Baltimore, a prisoner of the British blockade. But you have not been idle, Captain Hinsch, have you? Ah. Here we are.’

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