The Black Sun Read online




  James Twining To my parents and my sister, thank you for everything

  If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants. —Sir Isaac Newton, letter to Hooke, 1675

  Historical Background

  This novel is inspired by the incredible true story of the Hungarian Gold Train and its desperate journey across a ravaged continent in the dying days of the Second World War. When it was eventually discovered by U.S. troops in a remote Austrian tunnel, it was found to contain several billion dollars’ worth of stolen gold, art, and other treasures. All descriptions and background information provided on works of art, artists, thefts, architecture, and Nazi uniforms and rituals are similarly accurate. Descriptions of the workings

  of

  the

  Enigma

  machine

  have

  been

  simplified.

  EXTRACT FROM THE VÖLKISCHER BEOBACHTER, OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF

  THE NAZI PARTY (EDITION A, NO. 270, SEPTEMBER 27, 1934), FROM

  WEWELSBURG 1933–1945: A CULT AND TERROR CENTRE OF THE SS, BY KARL

  HÜSER; TRANSLATED BY ROBIN BENSON

  Today the old defiant Wewelsburg Castle, situated in a historical location in the old land of the Saxons, has passed into the care of the SS of the NSDAP and is to serve, in future, as the Reich Leaders’ School of the SS.

  As a result, Wewelsburg Castle, which can look back on a long and glorious role in German history, has also been assigned a place of historical importance in the Third Reich.

  For it is here that the men are to be instructed in a worldview and beliefs as well as to receive physical instruction, whose calling it is to assume the office of leaders in the SS, and who are to march forward as examples and leaders before the nucleus of our healthy German youth.

  EXTRACT FROM THE SPOILS OF WORLD WAR II, BY KENNETH D. ALFORD

  On May 16, 1945, the 3rd Infantry Division, 15th Regiment, A Company, commanded by Lieutenant Joseph A. Mercer, entered the Tauern Tunnel 60 miles south of Salzburg. To their astonishment, they discovered a partially concealed train crammed with gold and other valuables . . . . The 1945 estimated value of the contents of the train was $206 million—which would translate into several billion dollars today. PROLOGUE The broad mass of a nation . . . will more easily fall victim to a big lie than to a small one. Adolf Hitler Mein Kampf

  CHAPTER ONE

  ST. THOMAS’ HOSPITAL, LONDON

  December 27—2:59 a.m.

  Ash cash. That’s what medical students call it. Every cremation or burial release form requires a doctor’s signature, and every signature earns its donor a small fee. Death could be good business for a doctor who happened to be in the right place at the wrong time. To Dr. John Bennett, however, shouldering the icy rain as he walked briskly over to the main hospital building from the ugly hulk of the accommodation block, the prospect of a few extra quid was small compensation for being paged at three a.m. Very small. As if to emphasize the hour, Big Ben, its face suspended in the air like a small moon on the other side of the river, chose that moment to chime, each heavy, deadened strike shaking Bennett a little further awake.

  He stepped out of the cold into the warm blast of the heaters positioned in the entrance vestibule, the sudden change in temperature making his glasses fog. He took them off and wiped them clean on his shirt, the moisture streaking across the lens. A red LED display glowed into life overhead as the elevator made its way down to him, the declining numbers scrolling

  6 james twining

  rhythmically across the panel. Eventually, there was a muffled sound of machinery as it slowed and the door opened. He stepped inside, noting as the elevator lurched upward that the bronzed mirrors made him look healthier than he felt.

  A few moments later, he walked out onto the ward, the wet soles of his shoes faintly marking the scarlet linoleum. The corridor ahead of him was dark, the lights dimmed apart from the emergency exit signs that glared green above the doors at either end.

  “Doctor?” A woman’s voice rang out through the gloom. He slipped his glasses back on to identify the approaching figure.

  “Morning, Laura,” Bennett greeted her with a warm smile. “Don’t tell me you’ve killed another one of my patients?”

  She shrugged helplessly. “I’ve had a bad week.”

  “Who was it this time?”

  “Mr. Hammon.”

  “Hammon? Well, I can’t say I’m surprised. He was in a pretty bad way.”

  “He was fine when I came on duty. But when I looked in . . .”

  “People get old,” Bennett said gently, sensing she was upset. “There’s nothing you could have done.” She smiled at him gratefully. “Anyway, I’d better take a look. Have you got the paperwork ready?”

  “It’s in the office.”

  The windowless room was positioned about halfway down the ward, the only light coming from the glow of two surveillance monitors and the LED display of the video recorder beneath them. One monitor showed the corridor where they had just been standing; the other flicked between the patients’ rooms, pausing a few seconds in each. The rooms were identical, a single narrow bed dominating the space with a few chairs drawn up under the window and a TV set fixed high up on the facing wall. The only variation was in the quantity of flowers and get-well cards on one side of the bed and monitoring and resuscitation equipment on the other. Unsurprisingly, there seemed to be a

  direct

  correlation

  between

  the

  two.

  7 the blac k sun

  Laura rummaged around on the desk for the file, the blue glow from the monitors staining her red nails purple.

  “Do you want the light on?”

  “Please,” she replied, without looking up.

  Bennett reached for the switch, when suddenly something caught his eye. The roving camera had settled momentarily in one of the patients’ rooms. Two dark figures were silhouetted against the open doorway, one slight, the other improbably tall.

  “Who’s that?” Bennett said with a frown. The picture jumped to the next room. “Quick, get it back.”

  Laura switched the system to manual and scanned the rooms one by one until she found the men.

  “It’s Mr. Weissman’s room,” she said in a low, uncertain voice.

  The two figures were now standing on either side of the bed looking down at the sleeping patient. Even on the monitor he looked thin and frail, his skin pinched, his cheeks hollowed by age. Various wires and tubes emerged from under the bedclothes and led to a heart-rate monitor and some sort of drip.

  “What the hell are they playing at?” Bennett’s surprise had given way to irritation.

  “You can’t just come in here whenever you feel like it. What do people think we have visiting hours for? I’m calling security.”

  As Bennett reached for the phone, the tall man on the left snatched a pillow out from under the sleeping man’s head. He awoke immediately, his eyes wide with surprise and then, as he blinked at the two men looming above him, fear. His mouth moved to speak, but whatever sound he might have been trying to make was smothered as the pillow was roughly pushed down onto his face. Helplessly, his arms and legs flapped, like a goldfish that had leapt out if its bowl.

  “Jesus Christ!” Bennett gasped, his voice now a whisper. He jammed the phone to his ear, the white plastic slippery against his sweaty skin. Hearing nothing, he tapped the hook switch a few times before locking eyes with Laura. “It’s dead.”

  On-screen, the tall man nodded to his companion, who lifted a black bag onto the bed and

  reached

  in.

  The

  teeth

  of

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  what Bennett instantly recognized as a surgical bone-saw sparkled in the light. Deftly, the figure slid back the man’s left pajama sleeve and placed the blade on his arm, just below the elbow. The man jerked his arm but to no avail, what little strength he had left clearly ebbing away in his attack-er’s strong grasp.

  Bennett glanced at Laura. She was standing with her back to the door, her hand over her mouth, her eyes glued to the monitor.

  “Don’t make a sound.” His voice was thin and choked. “We’ll be fine as long as they don’t know we’re here. Just stay calm.”

  The saw sliced through the skin and muscle in a few easy strokes before it struck bone, the main artery gushing darkly as it was severed and the blood pressure released. In a few minutes the arm had come free, the limb expertly amputated across the joint. The stump oozed blood. Abruptly, the struggling stopped.

  Working quickly, the figure wiped the saw on the bedclothes, then returned it to his bag. The arm, meticulously wrapped in a towel snatched from the foot of the bed, soon joined it. The victim’s face was still masked by the pillow, the bedclothes knotted around his legs like rope where he’d kicked out and got himself tangled up. The heart-rate monitor showed only a flat line, an alarm sounding belatedly in the empty nurse’s station down the corridor.

  The two men moved away from the bed, across the room, careful not to touch anything. But as he was about to shut the door, the tall man suddenly looked up into the far corner, into the camera lens, straight into Bennett’s eyes, and smiled.

  “Oh my God,” Bennett whispered in slow realization. “They’re coming for the tapes.”

  He jerked his head toward the other monitor. The thin man was walking slowly up the corridor toward them, the blade of the knife in his hand glinting like a scythe. Laura began to scream, a low, desperate, strangled call that grew louder and louder as the

  image

  on

  the

  screen

  drew

  closer.

  is that good men do nothing. PART I All that is necessary for the triumph of evil Edmund Burke

  CHAPTER TWO

  PINKAS SYNAGOGUE, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC

  January 2—10:04 a.m.

  The shattered glass crunched under the leather soles of Tom Kirk’s Lobb shoes like fresh snow. Instinctively, he glanced up to see where it had come from. High in the wall above him white sheeting had been taped across a window frame’s jagged carcass, the plastic bulging every so often like a sail as it trapped the biting winter wind. He lowered his gaze to the man opposite him.

  “Is that how they got in?”

  “No.”

  Rabbi Spiegel shook his head, his side locks bumping against his cheeks. Although smartly dressed in a dark suit and white shirt, he was thin and frail, and the material seemed to hang off him like loose skin. A faded black silk yarmulke covered the top of his head, firmly clipped to a fierce growth of wiry gray hair. His face was hiding behind a wide spade of a beard, his watery eyes peering through small gold-framed glasses. Eyes that burned, Tom could see now, with anger.

  “They came in through the back. Broke the lock. The window . . . that was just for fun.” Tom’s face set into a grim frown. In his midthirties and 12 james twining

  about six feet tall, he had the lithe, sinewy physique of a squash player or a cross-country runner—supple yet strong. He was clean shaven and wearing a dark blue cashmere overcoat with a black velvet collar over a single-breasted gray woolen Huntsman suit; his short, normally scruffy brown hair had been combed into place. His coral blue eyes were set into a handsome, angular face.

  “And then they did this?” he asked, indicating the devastation around them. Rabbi Spiegel nodded and a single tear ran down his right cheek.

  There were eighty thousand names in all—Holocaust victims from Bohemia and Moravia—each painstakingly painted on the synagogue’s walls in the 1950s, with family names and capital letters picked out in blood red. It was a moving sight, an unrelenting tapestry of death recording the annihilation of a whole people.

  The bright yellow graffiti that had been sprayed over the walls served only to deepen the unspoken weight of individual suffering that each name represented. On the left-hand wall, a large Star of David had been painted, obscuring the names underneath it. It was pierced by a crudely rendered dagger from which several large drops of yellow blood trickled toward the floor.

  Tom walked toward it, his footsteps echoing in the syna-gogue’s icy stillness. Up close he could see the ghostly imprint of the names that had been concealed under the paint, fighting to remain visible lest they be forgotten. He lifted a small digital camera to his face and took a picture, a loud electronic shutter-click echoing across the room’s ashen stillness.

  “They are evil, the people who did this. Evil.” Rabbi Spiegel’s voice came from over his left shoulder, and Tom turned to see him pointing at another piece of graffiti on the opposite wall. Tom recognized it as the deceivingly optimistic motto set above the gates of all Nazi concentration camps: Arbeit macht frei— work sets you free.

  “Why have you asked me here, Rabbi?” Tom asked gently, not wanting to appear unfeeling but conscious that anything useful that the rabbi might have to tell him could soon

  be

  lost

  in

  the

  emotion

  of

  the

  moment.

  13 the black sun

  “I understand that you recover stolen artifacts?”

  “We try to help where we can, yes.”

  “Paintings?”

  “Amongst other things.”

  Tom sensed that his voice still had an edge of uncertainty to it. Not enough for the rabbi to pick up on, perhaps, but there all the same. He wasn’t surprised. It was only just over six months since he had gone into business with Archie Connolly. The idea was simple: they helped museums, collectors, governments even, recover stolen or lost art. What made their partnership unusual was that, after turning his back on the CIA, Tom had spent ten years as a high-end art thief—the best in the business, many said. Archie had been his long-term fence and front man, finding the buyers, identifying the targets, researching the security setup. For both of them, therefore, this new venture represented a fresh start on the right side of the law that they were still coming to terms with, Archie especially.

  “Then come upstairs. Please.” The rabbi pointed toward a narrow staircase in the far corner of the room. “I have something to show you.”

  The staircase emerged into a vaulted room, the pale morning light filtering in from windows set high in the white walls. Here there was no graffiti, just a series of shattered wooden display cases and a tiled floor strewn with drawings and watercolors, some torn into pieces, others screwed up into loose balls, still more covered in dirty black boot prints.

  “This was a permanent exhibition of children’s drawings from Terezin, a transit camp not far from here. Whole families were held there before being shipped east,” the rabbi explained in a half whisper. “You see, there is a certain awful innocence about war when seen through the eyes of a child.”

  Tom shifted his weight onto his other foot but said nothing, knowing that anything he might mumble in response would be inadequate.

  Rabbi Spiegel gave a sad smile. “Still, we will recover from this as we have recovered from much worse before. Come,” he said, crossing to the far wall, “here’s what I wanted to

  show

  you.”

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  A gilt frame, perhaps two feet across and a foot wide, hung empty on the wall, only whitewashed stonework visible where the painting should have been. Tom edged toward it.

  “What was there?”

  “An oil painting of this synagogue completed in the early thirties.”

  “It’s been cut out,” Tom said thoughtfully, running his finger along the rippled canvas edge where the painting had been sliced from the frame.

  �
��That’s why I asked you to come,” the rabbi said excitedly. “They could have left it in its frame if all they wanted to do was damage or destroy it. Do you think maybe they took it with them?”

  “I doubt it,” Tom said with a frown. “The people who did this don’t strike me as art lovers.”

  “Especially not a painting by this artist,” the rabbi agreed grudgingly.

  “Why, who was it by?”

  “A Jewish artist. Not well known, but dear to us because he lived here in Prague—until the Nazis murdered him. He was called Karel Bellak.”

  “Bellak?” Tom drilled him with a questioning look.

  “You’ve heard of him?” the rabbi asked, clearly surprised.

  “I’ve heard the name,” Tom said slowly. “I’m just not sure where. I’ll need to speak to my colleague back in London to be sure I’m thinking of the same person. Do you have a photo of the painting?”

  “Of course.” Rabbi Spiegel produced a photograph from his pocket and handed it to Tom. “We made a few copies of this one a few years ago for the insurance company. They told us the painting wasn’t worth much, but to us it was priceless.”

  “May I?” Tom asked.

  “Keep it. Please.”

  Tom slipped the photograph into his overcoat.

  “From what I remember of Bellak . . .” Tom began, pausing as two Czech policemen stepped into the room and peered around at the damage.

  “Go on.”

  “Is there anywhere a little more private we can go?”

  “Why?”

  Tom tilted his head toward the policemen.

  “Oh.” The rabbi sounded disappointed. “Very well. Come with me.”

  He led Tom back down the stairs and across the main body of the synagogue to a thick wooden door that he unbolted. It gave onto a small open space, the oppressive cinder gray walls of the surrounding apartment blocks looming down on all sides. A few trees reached into the small window of gray sky overhead, their leafless branches creaking in the wind and occasionally scraping their skeletal fingers against the stifling walls. Ahead of them, the ground undulated in a series of unexpected mounds and dips and was peppered with dark shapes.

  “What is this place?” Tom asked in a whisper.