Dan Fesperman - The Double Game

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“Tell Bela to give me the book.”

This brought a sneer from Szondi, who seemed far less intimidated than his hired hands.

“You cannot speak to me directly, Mr. Cage? You let a woman do your talking for you?”

“Drop the book,” I said. “Then back away.”

He opened his hand. The book came open as it fell, pages fluttering, and landed facedown in the muck. Even under the circumstances I couldn’t help but wince.

I stepped over toward Szondi to retrieve it.

“Wait!” Litzi said.

Too late.

Szondi pulled a gun, and now I was directly in his line of fire, and shielding him from Litzi. But even as the barrel rose level with my stomach, a wonderful thing happened. Instantaneously, with barely time for a thought, I reacted just as I’d been taught to on that long-ago afternoon when I took the executive survival course, courtesy of Marty Ealing.

My move was from “Lesson Three: Disarming an Attacker.” My left hand shoved aside the barrel while my right clamped his forearm and twisted it until he cried out in pain and opened his fingers. The gun fell, right on top of the book, and I shoved Szondi onto his ass into the filthy muck. I grabbed the book, then the gun, and backed away.

The two thugs, apparently far smarter than their boss, hadn’t moved a muscle.

“Nicely done,” Litzi said. She looked even more surprised than me. Then she pulled a roll of duct tape from her shoulder bag and tossed it to me.

“Tape those two to that pole by the entrance, back to back,” she said.

She motioned the thugs into position, and they seemed in no mood to test her resolve. My hands were shaking as I started unpeeling the tape. Had I really just done that? As I taped the men into place I glanced at Litzi. I’d never seen this look in her eyes-neither rage nor menace; instead, a cold resolve. If either thug had even wiggled a toe, I’m positive she would have shot him. And where had she gotten a gun? Being someone who generally doesn’t know a Glock from a glockenspiel, I couldn’t have told you its make and model. But it was compact and tidy, and black as the night. It fit so comfortably in her hand that it might have been made especially for her.

I kept pulling the tape free with a ripping sound, then wound it around the thugs’ arms and midsections, pinning them together back to back with the pole in between, seven loops in all.

“Get up,” she said to Szondi. “Keep your hands where I can see them.”

I then taped Szondi to another pole, eight loops for him.

“That’s enough,” she said. “They’ll be able to get out soon enough, or else someone will hear them down here. But by then we’ll be gone.” Then she spoke one last time to Szondi.

“If you try to have us followed, these documents will be in tomorrow’s newspaper. A reporter I know is already standing by with copies, and if he doesn’t have an all-clear from me by six o’clock then he’s going to print them. Understood?”

He nodded. No more smiles.

Then we left. Just like that. Me and my trusty old girlfriend, who I’d once fancied needed my protection from the bad old East German Volkspolizei. The quiet archivist, my Marian the Librarian with nice legs, sensible glasses, and the maudlin backstory of an expired biological clock. The woman who, when she was seventeen, had been too timid even to do a decent job of spying on my father, yet she had apparently been in league with my handler from the beginning.

But under the circumstances, how could I be anything other than ecstatic to see her, even though she was packing heat and speaking the local language like a native? I kept glancing at her as we briskly descended the stairway toward the river, but she looked straight ahead, as businesslike as ever. By the time we reached the bottom my pulse had nearly returned to normal, and the evaporating sweat on my back was prickling like dried seawater. Glancing over my shoulder, and seeing no one in pursuit, I finally judged it safe to talk.

“I didn’t know you spoke Hungarian.”

“I don’t. I practiced three phrases: ‘Drop your weapon.’ ‘Hands on your head.’ ‘Don’t move or I shoot.’ I’m not sure what I would have done if they’d talked back or resisted.”

“Shot them? That’s what they seemed to think.”

“It’s what they were supposed to think.”

“I get the idea you’ve done this before.”

She shook her head.

“Only in training.”

“For the Agency?”

“God, no!” She frowned at me.

“Austrian Intelligence? And please don’t say KGB.”

This at least got a laugh, a flash of the Litzi I thought I’d always known.

“The Verfassungsschutz. The federal internal security police, but it was ages ago. I’m an archivist now, well and truly. Professionally, I don’t even live in this century anymore, or even the last one.”

“An archivist with a gun?”

“On special loan. At midnight tonight it turns back into a pumpkin.”

We headed for the bridge, blending back into the flow of pedestrians and bicycles.

“Is that all you’re going to tell me?”

“What more do you want to know?”

“All of it, if you don’t mind.”

“Saving your skin isn’t enough?”

“No.”

She smiled again. Every time she did, I inched a little closer to being able to see how these two Litzis might actually coexist. It wasn’t as if she’d become this way overnight. We’d been apart for thirty-eight years. No doubt she had changed in all sorts of ways. Up to now my view of her had been clouded by nostalgia. Now I finally beheld her as she really was, a woman of experience, a woman with a past.

“I was only in for three years,” she said. “They recruited me during my last year at university. Since then, I’ve only done the odd errand here and there, a few favors during manpower shortages. But never anything serious, and nothing even close to dangerous.”

“So you were, what, nineteen when you volunteered?”

“Twenty, and I didn’t volunteer. They approached me. Apparently they got my name from someone at your embassy.”

“Dad was in Berlin by then.”

“I’m not saying it was your father. But they knew all about our little trip and how I’d been threatened by the Vopos and, by implication, the Soviets. Knew it right down to the name of the little town where they pulled us off the train.”

She stared at me longer than necessary as we moved onto the bridge, to the point where I almost felt compelled to deny any involvement. Then she looked straight ahead and resumed her account.

“They told me they could ensure that nothing like that would ever happen to me or my family again. No more threats. But first they needed my help against ‘those kinds of people.’”

“Russians, or East Germans?”

“Leftists in general. More to the point, the RAF.”

The Red Army Faction, she meant, the organization of ultra-left, ultra-violent young people-half of them female, oddly enough-who had operated in Germany from the late sixties to the turn of the millennium. Known originally as the Baader-Meinhof Gang, its members had been implicated in shootings, bombings, kidnappings, and robberies, a reign of terror across three decades that peaked in 1977 with a string of abductions known as the “German Autumn.”

“I thought the RAF was strictly German?”

“It was, but in late seventy-seven they came into Vienna and kidnapped a millionaire on his doorstep, and I think the authorities went a little crazy. For a while they were convinced that every little bunch of campus lefties was going to metastasize into the next RAF cell, and that’s where I came in.”

“You were undercover?”

She nodded. “I was supposed to infiltrate them. Some ultra-left group at my university.”

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