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The Sum of All Fears.pdf - Delta Force

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CHAPTER 16<br />

Fueling the Fire<br />

'Guten Abend, Frau Fromm,' the man said.<br />

'And you are?'<br />

'Peter Wiegler, from the Berliner Tageblatt. I wonder if I might speak with you<br />

briefly.'<br />

'About what?' she asked.<br />

'Aber . . .' He gestured at the rain he was standing in. She remembered that she<br />

was civilized after all, even to a journalist.<br />

'Yes, <strong>of</strong> course, please come in.'<br />

'Thank you.' He came in out <strong>of</strong> the rain and removed his coat, which she hung on<br />

a peg. He was a captain in the KGB's First Chief (Foreign) Directorate, a<br />

promising young <strong>of</strong>ficer <strong>of</strong> thirty years, handsome, gifted in language, the<br />

holder <strong>of</strong> a master's degree in psychology, and another in engineering. He<br />

already had Traudl Fromm figured out. <strong>The</strong> new Audi parked outside was<br />

comfortable but not luxurious, her clothing – also new – very presentable but<br />

not overpowering. She was proud and moderately greedy, but also parsimonious.<br />

Curious, but guarded. She was hiding something, also smart enough to know that<br />

turning him away would generate more suspicion than whatever explanation she<br />

might have. He took his seat on an overstuffed chair, and waited for the next<br />

move. She didn't <strong>of</strong>fer c<strong>of</strong>fee. She hoped the encounter would be a short one. He<br />

wondered if this third person on his list <strong>of</strong> ten names might be something worth<br />

reporting to Moscow Center.<br />

'Your husband is associated with the Greifswald-Nord Nuclear Power Station?'<br />

'He was. As you know, it is being closed down.'<br />

'Quite so. I would like to know what you and he think <strong>of</strong> that. Is Dr Fromm at<br />

home?'<br />

'No, he is not,' she answered uncomfortably. 'Wiegler' didn't react visibly.<br />

'Really? May I ask where he is?'<br />

'He is away on business.'<br />

'Perhaps I might come back in a few days, then?'<br />

'Perhaps. You might call ahead?' It was the way she said it that the KGB <strong>of</strong>ficer<br />

noticed. She was hiding something, and the captain knew that it had to be<br />

something – '<br />

<strong>The</strong>re was another knock at the door. Traudl Fromm went to answer it.<br />

'Guten Abend, Frau Fromm,' a voice said. 'We bring a message from Manfred.'<br />

<strong>The</strong> captain heard the voice, and something inside his head went on alert. He<br />

told himself not to react. This was Germany, and everything was in Ordnung.<br />

Besides, he might learn something . . .<br />

'I, ah, have a guest at the moment,' Traudl answered.<br />

<strong>The</strong> next statement was delivered in a whisper. <strong>The</strong> captain heard approaching<br />

steps, and took his time before turning to look. It was a fatal error.<br />

<strong>The</strong> face he saw might as easily have come from one <strong>of</strong> the endless World War II<br />

movies that he'd grown up on, just that it lacked the black-and-silver-trinimed<br />

uniform <strong>of</strong> an SS <strong>of</strong>ficer. It was a stern, middle-aged face with light blue eyes

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