Night Crossing: A Novel
Love of country and love for a beautiful woman collide in this gripping World War II story inspired by real events
In the fall of 1938, a British executive is stabbed to death in an alley off Unter den Linden, Berlin’s most famous boulevard. Missing from the crime scene and from Ronald Draper’s hotel room are the papers of “utmost importance” that he claimed to be bringing home to England. Inspector Cameron Ross of the Metropolitan Police is sent over to assist in the murder investigation, but his real mission—as outlined by his father, Colonel Ross of the Secret Intelligence Service—is to find out what was in those documents.
Ross’s inquiries go nowhere until he meets Ulrike Walter, a beautiful young violinist who knows more than she should. Ulrike may be engaged to a member of the Hitler Youth, but she and the British inspector have a chemistry that cannot be denied. A year later, war is declared and Ulrike flees Germany for England, where she is immediately jailed as an enemy alien. Her only chance for freedom is Cameron Ross, a man torn between his commitment to family and country and his feelings for a woman he hardly knows. 

Night Crossing is the 3rd book in the Secret War Trilogy, which also includes Early One Morning and Blue Noon.
 
"1102933565"
Night Crossing: A Novel
Love of country and love for a beautiful woman collide in this gripping World War II story inspired by real events
In the fall of 1938, a British executive is stabbed to death in an alley off Unter den Linden, Berlin’s most famous boulevard. Missing from the crime scene and from Ronald Draper’s hotel room are the papers of “utmost importance” that he claimed to be bringing home to England. Inspector Cameron Ross of the Metropolitan Police is sent over to assist in the murder investigation, but his real mission—as outlined by his father, Colonel Ross of the Secret Intelligence Service—is to find out what was in those documents.
Ross’s inquiries go nowhere until he meets Ulrike Walter, a beautiful young violinist who knows more than she should. Ulrike may be engaged to a member of the Hitler Youth, but she and the British inspector have a chemistry that cannot be denied. A year later, war is declared and Ulrike flees Germany for England, where she is immediately jailed as an enemy alien. Her only chance for freedom is Cameron Ross, a man torn between his commitment to family and country and his feelings for a woman he hardly knows. 

Night Crossing is the 3rd book in the Secret War Trilogy, which also includes Early One Morning and Blue Noon.
 
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Night Crossing: A Novel

Night Crossing: A Novel

by Robert Ryan
Night Crossing: A Novel

Night Crossing: A Novel

by Robert Ryan

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Overview

Love of country and love for a beautiful woman collide in this gripping World War II story inspired by real events
In the fall of 1938, a British executive is stabbed to death in an alley off Unter den Linden, Berlin’s most famous boulevard. Missing from the crime scene and from Ronald Draper’s hotel room are the papers of “utmost importance” that he claimed to be bringing home to England. Inspector Cameron Ross of the Metropolitan Police is sent over to assist in the murder investigation, but his real mission—as outlined by his father, Colonel Ross of the Secret Intelligence Service—is to find out what was in those documents.
Ross’s inquiries go nowhere until he meets Ulrike Walter, a beautiful young violinist who knows more than she should. Ulrike may be engaged to a member of the Hitler Youth, but she and the British inspector have a chemistry that cannot be denied. A year later, war is declared and Ulrike flees Germany for England, where she is immediately jailed as an enemy alien. Her only chance for freedom is Cameron Ross, a man torn between his commitment to family and country and his feelings for a woman he hardly knows. 

Night Crossing is the 3rd book in the Secret War Trilogy, which also includes Early One Morning and Blue Noon.
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781480477612
Publisher: Open Road Media
Publication date: 03/25/2014
Series: The Secret War Trilogy , #3
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 344
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Robert Ryan was born in Liverpool and has worked as a race car mechanic, journalist, jazz composer, university lecturer, and more. He has written many novels, including Early One Morning, a Sunday Times (UK) bestseller. He lives in North London with his wife, three children, a dog, and a deaf cat.

Read an Excerpt

Night Crossing

A Novel


By Robert Ryan

OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA

Copyright © 2004 Robert Ryan
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4804-7761-2


CHAPTER 1

Berlin: October 1938


The alley where Ronald Draper of Imperial Chemical Industries had bled to death now smelled of carbolic and ammonia, thanks to the civic-minded Hausfrau who had scrubbed away the large stain of blood and excrement at the far end of the passage. It was, thought Inspector Cameron Ross, admirable that anyone who lived in these dank Weimar blocks could be so conscientious.

The Inspector knelt down and examined the cobbles of this short cut that linked the street to one of the inner courtyards of the complex. Berlin had baked throughout the summer and even now, when autumn should have staked its claim and the first Winterhilfe—winter relief—collection-box-rattlers had appeared on the streets, the days were warm and humid. The smell from Draper's leaked body fluids must have built over the forty-eight hours while the crime scene was sealed, hence the need for the carbolic.

Something from the human spillage had been absorbed by the rough stones, because Ross could just make out an inch-wide ribbon that marked the route of Draper's slow crawl towards the street. The stain on the cobbles represented the last few minutes of his life.

Ross looked at the notes that he had been allowed to copy from the mortuary report. The Englishman had been stabbed nine times. The four wounds in his back were large, diamond-shaped punctures, probably made by a sharpened file. They had not been fatal. The blade that had entered his chest had been the one that had killed him. This weapon had been flat and wide, and had slid easily into his tissue and between his ribs, thrust upwards again and again until one of the edges snicked the aorta, filling Draper's chest cavity with blood.

Ross carefully examined the brickwork of the wall. The Neuköln tenements only dated from the 1920s but were crumbling already. He used his pencil to work at the individual bricks on the lower striations, hoping to find one loose, to discover the kind of hiding place that a desperate, dying man might choose. There was nothing, just a molehill of poor-quality mortar at his feet.

The policeman became aware of someone silhouetted at the street entrance of the alley and looked up. Ross was expecting one of the hard, snot-faced Berlin street kids who had pestered him when he had first arrived, but it was a uniform that greeted him. He squinted and checked the colours of the sleeve insignia—orange and green—and the jacket piping: orange. He relaxed. It was a young Anwärter of the Ordnungspolizei, the Orpo, the regular uniformed police. The Anwärter was the Berlin equivalent of a British bobby on the beat. Except the latter displayed no equivalent to the twin lightning flashes, the Sigrune, that adorned this tunic's breast pocket.

'And what do you think you are doing?' the young man barked.

'You are blocking my light,' said Ross, softly. 'Could you move aside, please?'

His calm, practised authority meant that the Orpo did as he was told and moderated his harsh Berlin accent by switching to Hochdeutsch. 'What are you doing here?'

Ross stood, grunting as his knees clicked. He walked forward into the main street, blinking in the light. The road was busy, the streetcars packed, the air filled with the rattle and spark of the S-bahn trains as they clattered over their wooden trestles. Friday afternoon, and the weekend had started in earnest. Across the street, a gaggle of startlingly white dresses, girls from the Bund deutscher Mädel, the League of German Maidens, many of them clutching pictures of Hitler to their nascent bosoms, skipped along the sidewalk, on their way to or from a Faith-and-Beauty dance rally.

Close up, the Orpo was a good-looking kid, a decade younger than Ross, barely into his twenties, and most of his bulk came from the pockets and belts and epaulettes that puffed out his uniform. Finally Ross said: 'I'm doing my job. What are you doing?'

Ross could see the confusion in the chiselled face. Ross's German was good, but a slight sibilance from his vestigial Scots accent suggested an Auslandsdeutscher of some description, possibly a Colonial German. 'I need to see the notebook. And your identity card.'

Ross took a step forward. 'Are you arresting me?'

'I don't need to arrest you to see the papers or your notebook,' said the young man, his hand sliding across the belt towards his whistle. Ross held up a placating palm and reached into his jacket pocket. He produced the Ausländer Dienstausweis, which had taken him a whole day of form-filling—and string-pulling—at the Polizeipräsidium on Alexanderstrasse to obtain. It allowed foreign policemen limited powers, mostly enabling them to enter official buildings, even if it didn't usually get them much further than the reception desk.

The Orpo took it, examined the four-page document and—handed it back before saluting smartly. 'My apologies, Inspector.'

'None needed. I should have identified myself immediately.'

'Anwärter Schuller at your service, sir. This is a former murder scene, Inspector. Is that why you are here?'

Ross nodded, biting his tongue. No, I just like poking around in piss-and bloodstained alleys, he wanted to say. 'This is your beat?'

Schuller waved an arm. 'From the canal to the park.'

That covered a hefty swathe of working-class districts, taking in the fringes of Hallesches Tor, once famous for its seedy boy-bars, now long suppressed, and all of Treptow. 'Big patch,' he said sympathetically. 'You know much about the case?'

The young man shook his head. 'The Kripo won't let us near anything interesting. I get to stop the traffic. Block people going into the bars while they take statements from the owners. Fetch them coffee and cake from Kranzler's.'

'They get anything from them?' Ross indicated the scruffy café up the street and, opposite, the bar-cabaret. The latter was the sort of place that would be closely monitored by the Sipo or one of the other police agencies charged with suppressing internal unrest. There were still a few establishments brave enough to take the Führer's pronouncements and recycle them as subtle satire and sarcasm. It was one of the many reasons why Hitler hated Berlin so much.

'You think the Kripo'd tell me if they'd got anything, sir?' said Schuller ruefully. 'But I gather not. Nobody saw anything. Probably just another drunken brawl that got out of hand.'

'I'm sure you're right.'

At the edge of his vision, Ross saw the dark Horch saloon detach itself from the orderly flow of traffic and draw to a halt level with him. Two thick-necked bulls in plain clothes stepped out from the front. Schuller sprang back and straightened up, distancing himself from the foreigner.

'Inspector Ross?'

Ross nodded.

Both produced their glazed-linen identity cards. 'Oberregierungs und Kriminalrat Pohl would like a word.' The back door of the saloon was opened wide to show him the figure within.

Ross had a rule about getting into cars with strange policemen, but you didn't take a summons from a Kripo ORuKR— a rank equivalent to lieutenant colonel—lightly. He slid into the rear seat and the door slammed shut.

Pohl reminded Ross of a bloodhound, all eye-bags, jowls and wet mouth. His hair was greased back from a sharp widow's peak with a perfumed pomade. He offered his hand and introduced himself as Herr Doktor Pohl.

'My apologies for not seeing you at the Alex,' he said, using the slang for the Kripo headquarters. 'The reorganisation of the force takes all my time now. But I thought I would bring the good news personally. We know who killed your man.'

'Really?' asked Ross warily. 'You have the culprits?'

'Culprit. A man called Eickhoff. Not a Berliner. Already known to us.'

'You have him, in custody?'

Pohl nodded.

'Tegel or Plötzensee?' The two main Berlin prisons, although these days the latter held more politicals than criminals.

'Prinz Albrecht Strasse.'

That might make things trickier, thought Ross. The old university building was the heart of the Reich Security Service's ever-expanding fiefdom. 'Any accomplices, Herr Doktor?'

Pohl shook his head, setting his cheeks flapping. 'We believe he acted alone.'

Ross hesitated, wondering how to react to this nonsense. 'Can I see Eickhoff?'

'Not now. Monday perhaps.'

'Why not now?' He tried to keep the irritation from his voice.

'Inspector. We have to complete our own inquiries using our own methods according to German law before we can allow a ... guest to intervene. It is also the weekend and Reichsführer Himmler's birthday, which means a big parade on Unter den Linden to police. We will be short-staffed. Monday, perhaps.'

'Morning?'

'Afternoon.'

Ross opened the door to get out. 'Very well.'

'You have friends in Berlin to entertain you over the weekend?' asked Pohl, as if he genuinely cared.

'Some, yes.' All Ross really had planned was a round at the Wannsee golf course, which his father had recommended. Or rather, he'd said, 'If you manage to miss the trees, even you should get round on par.'

'Excellent. You know I am so glad that everything was sorted out at Munich between our countries. Aren't you?' he said, referring to the humiliation of Chamberlain by Hitler. Ross thought of his father's profanity-fuelled indignation at the news, but said nothing. 'Fighting over people like the Czechs ... I have nothing against them personally. I drive a Tatra, a fine car. But ...' Pohl shook his head dolefully. 'We can't let them dictate our two countries' destiny.'

'Indeed,' said Ross. 'Thank you, Herr Doktor.' They shook hands. 'Monday, then.' As he stepped out of the Horch, Ross turned and poked his head back inside, unable to stop himself adding: 'I'll be curious to know how this lone man managed to stab a big chap like Draper in the back with one weapon, then switched to another to stab him in the front.'

Pohl didn't skip a beat. 'Oh, so will I, Inspector. So will I.'


Ross caught a cab north, then walked the last kilometre back to his hotel, down poor butchered Unter den Linden, its trees a victim of subway construction and, subsequently, the width of the latest generation of tanks. He thought about Draper.

All he knew was that Draper had claimed to be on his way home to England with information of the utmost importance. That message had been left at the British embassy the day before he was murdered. Draper's hotel room had been searched thoroughly by embassy security before the Germans could get there. They had found nothing, which had infuriated Colonel Ross. So the old man had decided to call in what he called 'a few outstanding favours' from Scotland Yard, and to have a detective from the Met sent over.

Which was where Ross came in. Despite his protests, the Colonel wanted to keep it in the family, and requested that his son should be the one chosen for the mission. As usual, he had assumed that the Inspector had nothing better to do than wait for him to snap his fingers. Still, as Ross knew, his father was not an easy man to dislodge from an idea, and he simply went higher and higher up the chain of command until his request was granted.

Fat lot of good it had done the Colonel sending him, for he, too, had turned up nothing. Perhaps the information had only been in Draper's head. In which case, it was lost to Colonel Ross for ever. He didn't relish breaking the news to the irascible old goat. Bringing his father bad tidings still reminded him of being summoned to the library with Nanny for a behind-the-ears inspection before bedtime.

He looked to his left down Wilhelmstrasse, at the lights blazing in the British embassy and beyond, imagining he could see number 8 Prinz Albrecht Strasse, although it was actually masked by other buildings, and tried to imagine the fear and pain that the arrested man must be going through in the basement cells. No matter that he was probably innocent of Draper's murder, the Gestapo would have found another reason to put him through hell.

At the Hotel Adlon, Ross walked across the lobby, past the lounging SS officers who seemed to be a permanent fixture, collected his key and was told there were no messages. He was therefore surprised to see an envelope on the floor as he opened the door to his room. The Adlon rarely got such things wrong. Unless whoever had delivered it had sneaked by the front desk.

Inside the envelope was a thick printed card, with the date filled in using a heavy Gothic script. An address in the western, more affluent, section of the city, an invitation to afternoon tea on Sunday, and a little checklist underneath. No uniforms. No ranks. No politics.

There was also no RSVP number, but by the time he had called the concierge and booked himself a table at Uckhurt's on Ku'damm for dinner that night and slid into a hot, soapy bath, Ross had already decided to accept. He had a hunch that there was a connection to the brutal death of a salesman in a Neuköln alley.

CHAPTER 2

The address on the card was on the southern side of Tiergarten, the so-called Alte Westen, a short walk through the chaos of Potsdamer Platz and west to the Matthäikirche, the Nazi church of choice. The house that Ross was seeking was not one of those villas done 'in the English manner' as Berliners said, with huge gardens and porticoes, the kind of places that housed either high-ranking officials or embassies, but in a more modest street—at least, by Alte Westen standards—of tall, flat-fronted edifices with refreshingly clean lines.

Ross found himself hesitating at the bottom of the steps to the house's rather sombre entrance, wondering whether he had made the right decision to come. His anxiety made him look across the street, to where a portly man in an ill-fitting uniform was watching. The man turned away and hastily scribbled something on the notepad he yanked from behind his Sam Browne-style belt.

'Don't worry about him,' said a voice. 'Just the local Blockwärter.' He turned to find a lady almost as substantial as the house in front of him. 'Sundays he gets to wear his uniform. Rest of the time, he's the local handyman. Which is a useful profession for a Party stooge. Here for tea?'

'Yes.' He showed his invitation.

She held out her hand and he took it and introduced himself. 'Gertrud Ritter,' she said. 'Vossische Zeitung.' Ross smiled, thinking that she looked like no journalist he had ever seen, with her copious jewellery, flouncy dress and flamboyant hat. Nor did she seem much like a Party member, although most scribblers were these days. There was something too tart about her tongue: Party members didn't make disparaging remarks about Blockwärter. 'Come along, then. Not been here before? A word of warning ...' She paused, her hand on the bell pull, and grinned. 'It's rather informal.'

The hall was more impressive than the exterior suggested. The floor was highly polished teak, the walls covered with murky portraits of various grandees and landscapes, the furniture heavy and ornate, and everywhere the giant potted plants so beloved of middle-class Germany. From behind white doors decorated with gilded inlays came the sound of animated voices. The young maid took their coats. Ross's new companion indicated the room beyond the closed doors and whispered in his ear, 'Would you like some help with who's who in there?'

'I'd be very grateful, gnädige Frau.'

They were ushered into the salon, a sensitive fusing of what had once been two separate rooms to form a space large enough to throw a decent ball. A row of floor-to-ceiling windows covered in surprisingly delicate gauze curtains let in shafts of the soft afternoon light, although flanking them were tightly curled swathes of dark velvet that could be swished across for a complete blackout. At one end of the room was a highly polished piece of ebony that even Ross's untrained eye could tell was a serious piano.

There were perhaps thirty people in the room, each holding a plate of pastries or cake in one hand, and coffee or wine in the other.

'Dutch ambassador over there,' Gertrud whispered in his ear. 'Klaus Blemberg, Deputy Chairman of Deutsche Bank, nice man, Jurgen Telling, of the Staatsoper ... well, formerly of the Staatsoper, that monster Tietjen got rid of him.' She took a breath, as if suppressing her anger. 'Goering's doing, of course ...' The list went on, mainly, it seemed to Ross, people associated with the arts, and especially music, although most of Gertrud's asides and explanations went over his head. 'And this gentleman,' she said loudly as a figure detached itself from the feeding frenzy around the table, 'is our host.'


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Night Crossing by Robert Ryan. Copyright © 2004 Robert Ryan. Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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