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Contents
Preface
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Twenty-one
Postscript
Copyright
About the author
‘I don’t think my life has been so extraordinary. It’s just been my life, it’s been routine to me. I’ve never had any other kind of life. I just think that I’ve been well trained to do what I had to do. I’m an operator, a liquidator just doing his job. To me, it’s just a way of making a living. Some people learn a trade, well this is my trade.’
For André, who led me into the web.
Preface
In case you feel, as you turn these pages, that you have stumbled upon some cheap thriller bursting with impossible coincidences and unlikely events, remember that what you are about to read is the truth. It is usual to state at the outset that the characters in a book are not drawn from the living and that the country written about is but a region of the imagination; unfortunately that is not the case with Assassin.
This is a strange tale that deals with an extraordinary world, but the men in it are real enough. Carlos Evertsz the assassin is not a paperback villain but a man of flesh and blood still in our midst today, a real life double agent who has been licensed to kill. Dr Manuel Sosa the demoniac intelligence chief with a taste for orgies and blackmail, Haitian voodoo, torture and murder, is also alive and well.
The tropical Caribbean island of the Dominican Republic, the unhappy paradise which has been their stamping ground, not only exists but remains unchanged. The names and places mentioned are real names, real places. Every word quoted was said and every conversation reproduced actually took place.
Lowlife has a habit of seeming to imitate art, so if the real thing sometimes reads less convincingly than polished fiction, and tends towards the melodramatic, it is only because that is the way the facts have it.
Hunched up in the back of the taxi I stared vacantly at the drab winter streets of suburban Madrid and glumly accepted the first rush of adrenalin. Dreadful unease moved through unbearable tension to vague nausea. Familiar ground. My strange mood was born of an obsessive curiosity which was compelling me to visit the local gaol to make contact once again with a man I knew to be a mass murderer. A man who could not even remember how many people he had killed; who had robbed me, broken into my apartment and finally threatened to kill me.
The argument for going out was a slim one. A need to keep tabs on a rare animal; a desire to keep my notes up to date and get the maniac down on paper. Our lives had become entwined and had been crossing for five years. And here we both were, back in Madrid again where it had all begun. Fate seemed to be egging me on, destiny beckoning.
The truth is that I don’t know why I wanted to see the monster again, except that after such a long relationship I felt that he was my monster, part of the family. The relationship itself is difficult to explain. After so long, so many bars and restaurants and cities, so many ups and downs and fallings-out, it had settled into something like a bad marriage, an unpleasant but manageable routine. In a way we had become . . . friends?
I could have tapped the taxi-driver on the shoulder at any time. ‘Forget it. Turn around.’ Instead, I dug my hands deeper into the pockets of my coat and watched the meter revolving like a slot machine, musing darkly that whatever figure it stopped on had to be an unlucky number.
When I arrived at Carabanchel, as Madrid’s local gaol is known, I was more favourably impressed by it than other prisons I had visited the assassin in. Its rounded red brick turrets and arches gave it a demented Andalusian charm. In Spain only the immediate family of a prisoner is allowed to visit so I told the warder that I was looking for my brother. My information was that Carabanchel was such a mess, with so many men flooding through it daily, that it was possible to slip in with the other visitors.
I stamped about in the cold for two hours waiting for my name to be called. From time to time troops or police carrying old-fashioned rifles and the occasional submachine gun were let in through the main gate; three cops arrived for work squashed into a tiny Seat, their rifles wedged awkwardly between their knees; a prison van, bringing new men to the gaol, cut across the yard and drove through the main gate. And an incongruous sight in that prison yard - Spanish matrons, dressed in black, struggling with great toy animals made by a member of the family in the prison workshops. As I watched them carting off the curious products of their wayward offspring I wondered if the assassin was at that moment engaged in sticking a trunk on a comical elephant or stuffing some cuddly thing with fluff.
Finally the warder came over to me carrying a clipboard and I saw that my name had an asterisk against it. He looked at me suspiciously. ‘There’s no Englishman here!’
He had the look of a man who liked to get to the bottom of things so I accepted the news without comment and made off. On my way back into Madrid I felt let down. Back in the apartment where I was staying there was a letter for me which had been forwarded from London. It was from the assassin, telling me he was in gaol in Carabanchel.
One
It all started in Madrid, almost five years ago, when I first met the assassin, Carlos Evertsz. Despite the fact that I knew nothing about him then, and stumbled across him in the most casual circumstances, our very first meeting was a head-on collision.
I was staying with a young, wealthy Spanish-American named Gregorio Webber and arrived back at his apartment one Sunday morning to find a drinks party going on. It was just another gathering in a long idle summer, which had been a succession of sunny, fearless days.
Webber’s apartment was a satyr’s den luxuriously decorated like an 18th-century brothel with endless mirrors, lush drapes and inviting love couches; the terrace was hung with plants and boasted a fountain and a chilled draught beer machine. More serious drinks were usually mixed by a flunkey in the kitchen so on the morning of the party I headed in that direction.
‘Make mine a Cuba Libre,’ I said to a man bent over a tray of ice cubes at the sink.
He turned around and there was something so contemptuous in the movement that even before he looked at me I knew I had made a mistake and the dead black fish eyes of Carlos Evertsz took me in for the first time. It did not take intuition to realize that you did not ask this sort of character to mix drinks. But there was something much more to it than that. I had made, after all, only a minor gaffe, yet I felt really unnerved.
For the brief moment that Evertsz stared at me I actually contemplated backing out of the kitchen. He dropped his eyes and went to the fridge and took out a large bottle of coke and shoved it at me.
‘The rum’s over there,’ he said, jerking his head, and turned back to the ice cubes.
I muttered my thanks, mixed myself a stiff drink and fled from the stifling atmosphere of the kitchen to the terrace. A fellow house guest, a tough black New York ex-basketball champ, was leaning against the plant-covered railing.
‘Jesus, who is that in the kitchen?’ I asked, taking a massive swallow of rum.
The facial muscles of the basketball champ seemed to tauten. His
answer was a mixture of a hiss and a stage whisper. ‘Carlos!’
The champ moved over to our mutual host and they bent their heads together and began to talk, glancing first at me and then towards the kitchen. Eventually Webber came over to me.
‘Peter and I are driving over to St Tropez for a few days,’ he began.
‘Have a good time,’ I said.
‘Thanks. The thing is Carlos might be around a bit - looking after the place.’
‘Looking after the place?’ I asked confused.
‘Yeah, you know - keeping an eye on things.’
I must have looked blank.
‘Anyway, I’ll let him know you’re going to he here so he won’t bother you.’ Webber continued. Suddenly he dropped his voice. ‘Whatever you do don’t let him in the apartment. Bolt the door and close all the windows - even when you’re inside. Especially when you’re inside. Don’t wander around the terrace. Double-lock the place when you go out and tell the concierge, whom I’ve told to call the cops if he tries to get in. Okay?’
I wanted to ask how this man was going to look after the place and keep an eye on things if the doors were to be bolted against him and the cops called every time he came near, but Webber had moved away before I could even work out a question. The basketball champ came over.
‘Gregorio’s put you in the picture?’
‘Well . . .’
‘Don’t worry, you won’t get any trouble,’ he continued. ‘But remember - Carlos is a Very Dangerous Guy.’
More questions formed themselves but they were not to be asked for Evertsz himself had wandered in amongst us. Webber had obviously told him I was a guest and he was now attempting to be friendly and was smiling, although the effect was menacing rather than comforting. Evertsz and the basketball champ made small talk - something about kicking ass in the tougher districts of New York, as far as I could make out - and I talked to Webber about the high cost of fun in St Tropez. I didn’t get much out of them at all about Evertsz before they left for their trip and the first night alone in the apartment was distinctly unpleasant. I bolted the door and shut the windows, even looked under the bed.
At first there was no sign of Evertsz, under the bed or anywhere else. After a couple of days he called.
‘Everything okay?’
‘Yes thank you.’
‘Okay.’
He rang off.
During the following week I began to hear rumours about him. He was wanted for murder in the Dominican Republic; he had worked as a bodyguard for Ramfis Trujillo, the playboy ex-dictator; he had worked for Webber but it had gone badly wrong; he had robbed Webber’s brother Tom; he was blackmailing so-and-so; he was pushing drugs; he was a hired gunman - and so on.
Madrid was certainly the right place for somebody with such a disquieting background. It provided a sophisticated and secure haven for the dead wood of yesteryear’s tyrannies. The political flotsam and jetsam that washed up on General Franco’s shores was an ugly mix. Crumpled, out-of-work dictators were as thick on the ground then as faded football stars. The celebrities among them included Fulgencio Batista, who was leading a life of sumptuous isolation made possible by the $70 million he took with him when he left Cuba; Juan Peron of Argentina was enjoying his estimated fortune of $500 million and living a quiet life with his third wife and the remains of his first, who had been magnificently preserved since her death in 1952 by a $100,000 embalming job and lay in one of the bedrooms in a glass-windowed coffin. Ramfis Trujillo, from the Dominican Republic, was also there in a cocoon of immense wealth.
And then there were the run-of-the-mill old-world fascist types: generals and colonels from South America, Nazis in their thousands from the Second World War, émigrés from Cuba - most of them so heavy that they were not even allowed into Miami - and a whole population of minor shits dressed in ill-fitting suits, cheap white shoes and dark, mirror glasses.
There are places in Madrid where these people need not feel that history has left them behind. At the Cuban émigrés club — where the members form a crowd of white suits turning grey over daiquiris - the toast is, ‘The true Cuba, the old Cuba!’ (The barman used to mix daiquiris for Papa Hemingway, incidentally, and they are, without doubt, the best in the world.) And there is a superb restaurant run by Hitler’s personal chef where the Aryan waiters have cropped blond hair and click their heels.
But even in such a setting of chipped, lacklustre glamour among this seedy crew of psychos, war criminals and political gangsters, Evertsz stood out from the crowd. The more I found out about him the more devotedly I fastened the bolt at night. The truth about Evertsz outstripped the rumours.
He first began to come into focus when I went around to Webber’s office one day and was talking to Eddie and Adolfo, his two tough Philippino accountants. Evertsz’s name came up in the conversation.
‘That prick is a menace,’ Eddie barked and tugged open a drawer to expose a plump black revolver lying in it. ‘That’s for him if he ever comes round here again.’
Apparently in the days when Evertsz had been employed by Webber as his private security man he had soon grown bored with the job and embarked on a policy of fraud and blackmail against his employer.
His first ruse was to pretend to be Webber’s brother and to sign cheques to the value of half a million pesetas in his name. He then attempted to withdraw a large sum from his Swiss account and capped the whole episode by breaking into Tom Webber’s apartment.
Posing as a personal assistant, Evertsz gained access by telling the porter that Webber was going on a hunting trip and that he had been sent to pick-up the necessary equipment. Unsuspecting, the concierge helped him pack. Evertsz brought out two large leather suitcases, laid out underclothes, shirts, suits, an electric razor and was careful not to forget the toothbrush.
‘I’ll guess he’ll need a warm shirt,’ he said thoughtfully.
He then filled the other case with expensive camera equipment, rifles and binoculars. The cases were so heavy when he had finished packing that he enlisted further help from the concierge to carry them to the lift and load them into a taxi.
In a mood of maniacal self-aggrandizement he telephoned his employer. ‘Your brother’s security needs attention, boss,’ he said. ‘I just cleaned his apartment out.’
When Tom Webber threatened to go to the police Evertsz answered coolly that if he did he was a dead man. A compromise was arrived at. If Evertsz returned the stolen property the brothers would forget about it. Evertsz sent round a bunch of pawn tickets.
This incident was capped some time later when he went into Tom Webber’s office on the Gran Via and held his English secretary to ransom. He phoned Eddie and told him to bring 50,000 pesetas with him but the accountant took a gun instead.
‘When I got there Carlos was in a chair with his feet on the desk playing Al Capone. He said, “Have you brought the money?” and I saw him look at the gun in my waistband. He had his in a shoulder holster.’
After a long session of bluff and counter-bluff combined with mutual threatening - ‘I thought, Christ, the crazy bastard really is going to kill me!’ - Eddie got the secretary out of the office. Evertsz let the incident drop by telling the accountant he would kill him one day.
I left the office with a holy dread of bumping into Evertsz again and, sure enough, everywhere I seemed to go he would be there. That very night I was sitting in the foyer of what was then the Castellana Hilton when he came in. I had been with friends who had moved on and left me to finish a bottle of champagne. Evertsz came over.
He was with a peculiar looking girl with glasses who dressed as if she had been let out of a nunnery twenty minutes earlier and the ways of the world were foreign to her. At her side was a really stupid-looking, stocky little man who opened his mouth in a vast yawn. I shook hands with everybody and they all took seats around my table.
Evertsz dropped a friendly hand on to my knee and smiled. ‘Playboy,’ he said, indicating my champagne with approval. When I a
sked if the girl would like some she laughed in a strange, hysterical shriek which I thought would set off alarm bells. The stocky man yawned again and then held up both hands as if he was trying to stop a lorry going down a one-way street.
‘He doesn’t drink,’ Evertsz explained, tipping the remains of the champagne into one of the glasses left by my friends. He smiled at the girl. ‘Nor does Rosa.’ The girl shrieked at the sound of her name and stabbed furiously at her glasses. My grip tightened around the fluted champagne glass, a hopelessly genteel and ineffective weapon.
‘I’m giving them a taste of the dolce vita,’ Evertsz continued. ‘This guy’s Rosa’s brother. He’s the chaperone.’
This would have brought a peal of wild laughter from me in normal circumstances. The thought of the moron before me - picking his nose with thick, shovel-shaped fingers and his mouth open in a garlic yawn - protecting his sister from Evertsz conjured up all sorts of hilarious situations.
I fidgeted, mumbled an exit line and stood up.
‘Don’t go,’ Evertsz said.
He was smiling but his words came out flat, like a man unused to people doing things against his wishes. I sat down.
For another uncomfortable half-hour I sat drinking with the weird trio. Evertsz acted the bon viveur and somehow managed to generate downright menace from behind a shield of impenetrable politeness. They were all going dancing and I was invited to join the merry group at a club later on. I told them I would try and meet up with them. Rosa was hysterical as I said goodbye; her brother yawned. Evertsz squeezed my shoulder tough-guy style.
I fled into the night.
Two days later I stumbled across them all again in a club late at night. It seemed that Evertsz had broken his companions down for they both had drinks in front of them and were, in fact, pie-eyed. The chaperone jumped to his feet and embraced me, yawned and collapsed back into his seat. I said hello to Rosa, and steeled myself against the inevitable cackle of nervous laughter, but she stared blearily before her and was silent.
Assassin: The Terrifying True Story Of An International Hitman Page 1