Braun opened a humidor on the desktop, took out a cigar, clipped the end off with a cutter and lit it, blowing out puffs of smoke. “Where will you go? I imagine you still have contacts in South America.”
“I was thinking about the Côte d’Azur. Did I ever tell you I own a villa in Nice?”
“I don’t think so.”
Braun’s right hand slid off the desk and disappeared from view.
“Well, if that’s all, Gerhard, I’d better be going.” Hess knew what would happen next. He gripped the Walther behind his back and aimed it at Braun just as Braun’s right hand appeared holding a Luger, but not in time. Hess fired, hit him in the center of his chest. Gerhard’s body was blown back against the chair and slumped forward on the desktop.
Joyce was recovering faster than expected and had been moved to a private room with twenty-four-hour police protection, although Conlin said he could only justify it for a couple more days since they were pretty sure Hess had left the state.
Harry went to the hospital to say goodbye.
“I can’t thank you enough.”
“I’d like to stay but I have to get back to work. If you ever need me just pick up the phone.”
“No, I’ll whistle, Harry. Remember?”
“Sure.” That’s what he’d said to Joyce at the Frankels’, thinking of the movie To Have and Have Not, the night Hess had surprised them.
“Say goodbye to Cordell for me.”
“He feels bad about what happened.”
“He should never have been put in that position. I’m not his responsibility. I’m not yours, either.” Joyce took a breath. “You think this is the end of it, Harry?” She looked at him as if she could read his mind. “You don’t, do you?”
“I know he’s gone. Left in a hurry. According to Conlin, Hess alias Max Hoffman flew to New York City. His name was listed on the American Airlines manifest.” They knew it wasn’t the real Max Hoffman. Police had discovered his body buried in the garden behind his house, sniffed out by a German shepherd from the K-9 unit. But he didn’t think Joyce had to hear that. “Joyce, he’s wanted in Germany and now he’s wanted here. I think he’ll just disappear.”
“Harry, you always say the right thing.”
Harry had paid for a room for Cordell at the Breakers, and bought him a plane ticket back to Detroit. With the Colombians after him Cordell was anxious to get out of town. They flew Eastern Airlines first class to Detroit, Cordell excited, up front with the high rollers, drinkin’ champagne before the plane took off and Courvoisier and Coke after it did. “Man, you do it right, Harry.”
“What are you going to do when we get back?”
“I don’t know.”
“Where’re you going to stay?”
“I could sleep in your basement.”
“How about the guest room?”
Cordell nodded. “What are the neighbors gonna say, you got a colored guy stayin’ with you?”
“You think I care what the neighbors say?” Harry paused. “How about a job? Try playing it straight for a change. You might like it. Nobody’ll be coming after you with a gun.”
“You makin’ conversation or makin’ an offer?”
“Know how to work a guillotine shear?”
“Yeah. Sure, Harry. Doesn’t everyone?”
“How about a grapple hook?”
“Got any jobs you need done indoors, sittin’ at a desk?”
“Become an expert at everything, one day you can buy me out.”
“That’s just what I want to do – own a scrap yard.”
Harry walked in the kitchen, put his suitcase on the floor, Cordell standing in the doorway, duffel balanced on his shoulder. “Your room’s at the top of the stairs to the left. You’ll like the floral motif.”
Cordell moved down the hall and disappeared.
Harry went to the phone and checked his messages. There were forty-two. He fast-forwarded through them, erasing the sales calls and political pitches, until he heard Colette’s voice. “Harry, I’m staying at a friend’s. Call me as soon as you can. I’ll explain everything.” Colette took a breath. “Harry, I love you.” She’d never said it before, nor had he, and it made him happy, it made him want to see her and hold her. Harry dialed the operator, gave her the phone number in Munich. It rang a dozen times and he hung up. He’d try her again later.
“That’s her,” Stigler said to Riemenschneider, sitting next to him in the front seat of his work van. He watched the blonde, in a cap and raincoat, come out of the apartment building and move down the street in a cold steady drizzle. People were walking under umbrellas and traffic was heavy. He could see a blur of headlights and taillights through the wet glass. Bauman was sitting on a toolbox in the back of the van.
“Will you turn on the heat? It’s freezing back here.”
Franz started the engine, turned up the heat. Riemenschneider got out and took off after Colette. Franz waited a few minutes then made a U-turn and cruised to the end of the block. He saw the big man standing in the square waving at them. Franz pulled over and rolled down the window.
“She went into a restaurant,” Riemenschneider said.
“We’ll wait.”
Fifteen minutes later Franz saw Colette Rizik approaching, coming toward him through the haze, crossing the deserted square, rain still coming down. When she was right in front of him he said, “Excuse me, do you know the time?”
She was carrying a white plastic carryout bag, stopped, looked at her watch and said, “Eight thirty-eight.”
Franz could see Riemenschneider’s wide bulk in silhouette coming behind her. “I had to get a new tire after what you did. Cost me forty Deutschmarks.”
Colette swung the carryout bag at him and started to run. Riemenschneider, surprisingly quick for his size, had closed in fast, grabbed her in his powerful arms, lifted her off the ground, Colette screaming, and Baumann coming behind Riemenschneider wrapped duct tape over her mouth and around her head, and taped her hands behind her back.
Colette opened her eyes and looked around. She was in a small room with an adjoining bath. They had removed the duct tape, but her wrists were cuffed to a chain that was bolted to the wood plank floor. She got up and looked out the window. The room was on the second floor of a house surrounded by woods. She went into the bathroom and splashed cold water on her face, dried herself, went back and sat on the edge of the bed.
Sometime later, the door opened. Colette saw Franz Stigler’s head look in. “She’s awake.”
Ernst Hess came in and stood next to the bed.
“That day I came to your apartment dressed as a postman, I have been wondering, what gave me away?”
“Your shoes.”
“No one noticed but you. But that’s your business, isn’t it? Observing, remembering details.” Hess smiled. “That’s what saved you. If you hadn’t noticed my shoes, you would have been shot, and I’m guessing the article never would have appeared.”
“I mailed the photographs to Berlin after I escaped.”
“My point exactly. Was it fate? Was it luck?”
“I don’t know, but you’re the last person I would have expected. Why would you risk coming back?”
“There was some unfinished business. Now that I have you I can reel in Harry.”
“He’s not going to come back here. He’ll be arrested and you know it.”
“You think that’s going to stop him?”
“I would worry more about myself if I were you. The reward is up to half a million dollars. Somebody is going to recognize you and call the police. Keep an eye on Franz and his buddies. How much do you think an electrician earns in a year? One phone call and he’s rich.”
Hess moved to the door, opened it. “Franz, come in here.” Stigler shuffled in the room, standing at the foot of the bed. He seemed nervous in Hess’ presence.
“Fraulein Rizik thinks you are going to turn me in to the authorities and collect the ransom.”
“I would never
do that,” Stigler said, giving Colette a dirty look.
“Franz, how much money do you earn in a year?”
Stigler shrugged. “Forty-five thousand marks.”
“The reward is one million, seven hundred and forty thousand. Maybe Fraulein Rizik is right.”
Hess winked at Colette, and Stigler looked helpless, caught in this hypothetical scenario.
“Herr Hess, I can assure you, I would never …”
Hess grinned, enjoying the game. He liked to make people squirm. “It’s okay, Franz. I am just pulling your leg.”
Stigler seemed to regain his composure.
“But if I hear anything …” Hess let it hang, patting Stigler on the back and grinning again. “Let Fraulein Rizik stretch her legs and have something to eat. I will be back later.”
Hess had seen her come out of the beauty salon and started after her. Leopoldstrasse was crowded with shoppers, women mostly, carrying shopping bags, keeping the Munich economy going. “I am sorry I missed your birthday,” Hess said when he caught up to Anke. She glanced at him, shrugged him off and kept moving. He grabbed her arm. “It’s me.”
Now he saw a glimmer of recognition on her face. “Ernst?” Anke was stunning as always, long blonde hair and plump red lips, long legs in knee-high black boots, long fingers with bright red nails, the smell of her perfume engulfing him.
“Keep walking. Go to your car.” He had followed her from the apartment he had rented for her, paying a year in advance.
“Ernst, what are you doing here? The police are looking for you. It is very dangerous.”
“If you didn’t recognize me no one else will.”
They walked another sixty meters and got in Anke’s Mercedes sedan, Hess’ Christmas present to her the year before. He sat in the front passenger seat and took off the cap. Anke leaned over the console, wrapped her long arms around his neck and kissed him on the mouth. “I’ve been worried sick about you, Ernst. Why didn’t you call?”
“I assumed the police had tapped your phone.” Hess was conscious of the pedestrians walking past the car and the traffic on Leopoldstrasse.
Anke was nervous, head moving, eyes darting around. “Ernst, where have you been?”
“You don’t seem happy to see me.”
“Yes, of course I am, but I am afraid.” Anke paused. “Where are you staying?”
“With you, I thought.”
“The police could be watching me. You’ll be arrested and I will too.” Anke pulled away from him and sat sideways in the seat.
“Who has been asking about me?”
“First a man with the federal police. That was more than a week ago.”
“Describe him.”
“Tall, six three, long dark hair.”
Hess pictured Zeller. “Who else?”
“Yesterday, the journalist who wrote the article about you was waiting outside my building. Have you seen it?”
Hess nodded.
“I didn’t believe a word.”
“What did she want?”
“She said you stole paintings during the war, and asked if I knew where they were. I told her the only one I knew about was the Durer.”
Hess couldn’t believe it. “Why would you tell her that?”
“You sold a painting. Why does it matter?”
“What else did she ask?”
“Did you own property other than the estate in Schleissheim and the apartment in Munich.”
“And what did you say?”
Anke was nervous now. “I said you had taken me to a villa in France one time, but it wasn’t yours.”
“You didn’t.” Hess could feel himself getting angry. “You told her it was in Nice?”
“But not where. She would have no idea how to find it. I don’t even remember where it is.”
“I can’t believe this.”
“Ernst, I’m sorry.”
“Start the car.”
“Where are we going?”
The room was dark. Hess glanced at the clock on the table next to him. It was 5:32 a.m. Anke was on her side of the bed, a bare shoulder sticking out of the covers, Hess recalling their lustful night. After drinking two bottles of champagne, Anke had been her old self again.
He slid out of bed, pulled the heavy floor-to-ceiling drapes apart and saw the dark shape of the Neues Rathaus rising up in the distance. He dressed in Max Hoffman’s worn khakis, long-sleeved plaid shirt, sport coat and baseball cap.
Light was breaking as Hess walked out of the apartment building, breath smoking in the crisp fall air. He felt relaxed and at home, seeing the city he loved for perhaps the last time.
Marienplatz was quiet and empty at this early hour. He stopped for coffee with a shot of schnapps at a cafe, then lingering, having a second cup. When he came out Altstadt was starting to come alive. He smoked a cigarette, watching trucks pulling up, workers delivering food and beer to the restaurants.
It was a short walk back to the hotel. Hess was on Salvatorplatz coming up on the Bayerischer when he saw the police cars, three of them parked in front of the hotel, lights flashing. He went to a newsstand across the street. Saw Huber step out of one of the cars and enter the hotel.
Hess glanced at the newspapers on display and froze. There was his photograph on the front page of the Suddeutsche Zeitung. The headline said: FUGITIVE WAR CRIMINAL ERNST HESS SEEN IN MUNICH.
He scanned the article that said Ernst Hess had been positively identified in southern Florida and was a suspect in several murders. U.S. authorities believed Hess had murdered an American citizen, assumed his identity and returned to Munich. Now he had a better idea what had happened. Conlin, the Florida detective, had contacted the Munich police. Why didn’t Huber tell him?
Hess bought the newspaper, folded it under his arm and walked to Karlsplatz. There was a phone booth in the Stachus. He telephoned Stigler.
“Harry, it’s the German girl,” Phyllis said on the intercom. “Should I tell her you’re busy? Just kidding.”
Phyllis transferred the call. Harry picked up the phone. “Hello.”
“Harry, they’ve got me.” It was Colette, voice sounding strange, distant.
“Fraulein Rizik is understandably upset,” Hess said, coming on the line. “She’s not herself. You better come and help her, Harry. You’re the only hope she has.”
“Let me talk to her.”
“You can talk when you see her. You’ve got forty-two hours. Someone will meet you at Frauenplatz, behind the church – the day after tomorrow, four p.m.”
Harry started to say something but Hess had already hung up.
Cordell said, “Harry, you’re fuckin’ with me, right? You’re not goin’ back ’cause you can’t. Remember those two days you spent in the prison in Munich, goin’ out of your mind? Now add like twenty years.”
“More than that,” Harry said.
They were in Harry’s kitchen, sipping drinks at the island counter.
“Okay, so you’re not crazy.”
“I don’t know.”
“Harry, let me understand something, okay? You’re gonna give yourself up for Colette, is that right?”
“It’s a challenge. Hess is saying: you want her, let’s see how good you are. Come and get her.”
“He knows the police are gonna be after you?”
“They’re after him too. That makes it more interesting.”
“Like a game, huh?” Cordell sipped the Courvoisier and Coke. “Don’t see how you can win though.”
“I don’t have a choice.”
“Then you better have a plan and a good one. Where we gonna fly into? And don’t say Munich.”
“I was thinking Innsbruck. Go through customs in Austria, rent a car, drive north through the Bavarian Alps.”
“That’s what I’m talkin’ about, Harry,” Cordell said, smiling now.
“You can’t go back either, remember?” Cordell had been implicated on Harry’s gun possession charge by the Munich police. Now he could c
onceivably be prosecuted as an accessory to murder.
“I’m goin’ and that’s it. Now what exactly did the Nazi say?”
Harry called a travel agent and booked two flights to Innsbruck, Austria by way of London. It was 4:45 p.m. They were leaving in three hours.
“What kind of gun do you want?” Harry said to Cordell. “If we’re going to do this we better be armed.”
“A .45 in nickel-plate be my first choice. And a rifle, Harry, something accurate at distance.”
“Where’d you learn to shoot?”
“The army, where you think?”
“You any good?”
“I can hit the target ninety-five per cent of the time from three hundred meters.”
“That may come in handy.”
“What I was thinking.”
Next, Harry called Fedor Berman, a Holocaust survivor and private detective who had supplied the .38 Colt he’d used to defend himself against the Blackshirts, the gun Detective Huber had. Harry told Berman he needed the guns right away and Berman said, no problem. “What are you hunting, Herr Levin, big game?”
“The biggest. I’ll see you tomorrow.”
Harry carried his suitcase upstairs, unpacked and repacked with warm clothes for Bavaria in November. He thought about Colette, hoping Hess would keep her alive till he got there. Harry didn’t question what he was doing. In his mind there was no other way. This time he would face Hess and finish it.
Cordell came downstairs, duffel bag over his shoulder, wearing the winter green leisure suit, a comb sticking out of his Afro. “Okay, Harry, let’s go?”
“I think you should wear something a little more subdued. On this trip we want to blend in, not attract attention.”
“What do you suggest?”
“I’d leave the leisure suits here. Dress more conservative.”
“Harry, I don’t have anything conservative.”
“Or we can pick something up in Munich if you like.”
“Tried that, you may recall.”
“Yeah, and you fit right in.”
“Fit right in on the set of Heidi maybe – with Shirley Temple and grandfather.”
“I’ve got some clothes that might work.”
Back from the Dead Page 17