Death in the Cloud

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Death in the Cloud Page 1

by E. J. Simon




  Copyright © 2020 by E. J. Simon. All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or in part, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission of the publisher, except for the use of brief quotations for review purposes.

  Book Cover Design by ebooklaunch.com

  Published in the United States of America by Simon/Zef Publishing

  ISBN: 978-0-9912564-8-8

  This is a work of fiction. Characters and events are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events, is purely coincidental. Although many of the settings and agencies—and some persons—involved in this story are real, the author has taken liberties to suit the needs of the story, and this book does not purport to provide an accurate, true depiction of any of them.

  Dedicated to my late brother, Teddy, the inspiration for Alex Nicholas, and who kept a copy of my books on his bed stand to the very end. I will miss you.

  Chapter 1

  Now he remembered everything. It began with the murder—his murder. Who remembers such a thing?

  He was at his old restaurant, Grimaldi’s in Whitestone, Queens, sitting across from Maria, the woman he sold it to years ago. Veal parmigiana, bubbling tomato sauce, and mozzarella still sizzling on his plate. Alex was feeling his age, his knees ached, his shoulder sore under his custom-tailored blue sport jacket, the second Chivas just beginning to dull the pain. Too many years playing ball, too many late nights at the bar.

  He felt the bitter winter breeze as the door from the street opened. Looking up he watched the kid with the Mets cap enter and walk up to the bar, brushing off the snow from his oddly light jacket. He looked out of place among the bar’s typical late-night clientele of tough guys in leather coats.

  He turned his attention back to Maria, a beautiful woman, long dark hair, and a perpetual tan, in her late forties, who had accidentally become too close a friend for him to pursue romantically. He wished he’d caught it in time.

  There was sudden movement, heads turned toward the kid in the Mets cap, who was approaching him—too quickly in a place where sudden movements weren’t welcomed. Alex knew right away he should have paid more attention, and that whatever was going to happen would be too late to stop. He tried to quickly get up from the table. Maria, her back to the action, looked at him, clearly puzzled. He saw the silver gun barrel pointed at him and then a flash, the sound of thunder, the smoke from the gun, a sharp burn tearing through his chest, and then, as the kid put the gun’s barrel to his head and fired, a sense of imploding inside his head.

  And then, again, just to be sure, more shots. Each a lightning strike inside his brain.

  Yet his eyes still worked. He saw his plate of half-eaten veal parm, now a darker shade of red than the tomato sauce that had been there. It was blood, his blood, blending with the molten mozzarella. He wouldn’t touch it now, not that he’d get the chance. Funny the things that run through your brain just before the power goes out.

  Alex had slept well. At least that was what he thought. He felt renewed. Or was it…refreshed? Maybe like his old computer after he turned it off and then back on. Suddenly, he found himself recalling new things, scenes he thought he missed but had heard about from others. They had now entered his mind. He could see them, vividly.

  There was more gunfire as his cop friends bolted up from their drinks and dinners and shot the kid who murdered him. Good, he thought. Whoever the hell he was, he got what he deserved. Then the conversations they thought he couldn’t hear as everyone knelt over him, cushioning his bloody head. His friends didn’t care if they got blood on their clothes.

  “He’s gone,” someone said. “It’s over.”

  He could hear sirens in the background, cops on walkie-talkies, women, screaming. Maria, the beautiful bar owner he had been having dinner with, “Oh my God, Alex, oh my God.”

  You can tell who you friends are when you’re shot dead in front of them.

  Then there was the hearse…he loved black Cadillacs; the funeral, and the casket he had always thought he would want closed but now was happy it was open. Not that it mattered—from his viewpoint he could see everything; he was just glad they could see him.

  Michael was giving the eulogy.

  “I’m Alex’s brother. We were ten years apart in age…

  “Alex’s loves were his friends and family—his son, George, all three of his wives, Pam, Greta, and Donna—he was the first one to admit he wasn’t a good husband—baseball, the Yankees, music—Sinatra, Johnny Cash—women, particularly younger ones. Oh, and he loved his dinners.

  “He was a great athlete and would have signed with the Pittsburgh Pirates out of high school if our parents hadn’t forced him to go to college.

  “As popular as he was, he took a neighbor to her high school prom, a dwarf. He knew no one else was going ask her…

  “He’d fight—often picking on the bullies, never the weak…

  “He was tough, stubborn, and he had a temper, but underneath, he was vulnerable and he had a huge heart that he hid beneath the tough-guy persona we all saw…

  “Alex wasn’t built for old age. Perhaps he was fortunate to be spared those years.

  “We will miss him. If there’s a God, Alex is in heaven—and God will have his hands full.”

  From inside, he looked up at the white silky, cheap polyester ridges of cloth liner; the casket’s fabric acting like a frame around each mourner as they filed by: his son George had finally put a tie on, not bad for forty; his brother Michael; his old friends; and a few enemies.

  He watched as his wives, the three of them in succession, each younger than the last, passed, in the chronological order of their marriage, by the coffin. They all had at least two things in common: perfectly proportioned size 34D breasts, compliments of Alex’s good friend, Dr. Armand Simonetti, the famous Park Avenue plastic surgeon, and they all wore Chanel No. 9 perfume. He loved the scent. Even now, he could smell them through the funeral lilies. He gave the same perfume to all his wives—and lovers. It came in handy on those nights when he cheated on them; they’d never catch a different scent from another woman.

  First came Pam, the original love of his life, the blond, perpetually tanned cheerleader from high school. They married young, too young, yet had a great relationship both before they married and after they were divorced. Not so much in between. He would continue to see Pam after their divorce and throughout his next two marriages.

  Then Greta Garbone, the horrific mistake anyone who is married three or more times must make, although she did give Alex his only child. Greta had married him because she thought he’d make her a movie star. Right after they were married, she changed her name from Rosemary to Greta, figuring it would look better on the movie credits. She wanted Alex to move to LA. “Yeah, we’ll move to LA,” he told her one night when they were both drunk, “when you look like Angelina Jolie.” It all really soured when he tried to get her to star in a porn film. She finally ran off with a magician who she thought had an upcoming act in Vegas, but it turned out to be Asbury Park, New Jersey, instead.

  As it turned out, it was Greta, bitter over her divorce and blaming Alex even for her split with the magician, who put him here in this casket. She and some much older, washed-up Mafia guy, Joseph Sharkey, fell in love—and Sharkey hired the kid to shoot Alex. She got revenge and Sharkey got in her good graces. It didn’t end well for Greta, though, but that was another long story.

  Finally, Donna Finkelstein, his widow and possibly the happiest
person in the church. She would be rich now. That said it all.

  His brother Michael, dressed in his stylish navy suit. They’d never been quite as close as he’d hoped. Michael was so different. More into books instead of bookies, so straight, hard to get close to. His wife, Samantha, a good-looking blond but not Alex’s type, too smart, pushy. Their daughter, Sophia. Tall, good-looking, too. Another smart one. Nice. All of them, including Michael, who was a little snobby for Alex’s taste, but who didn’t act that way toward him?

  Then his friends—all of them for most of his life—Russell Munson, Fat and Skinny Lester, Shugo the bartender, Joe Sal, “the surgeon,” who owned the biggest auto body shop in Queens, Jerry, Freddie the barber, the other Jerry, Raven, John, and so many more.

  He heard the music as they were carrying him out of the church, felt the casket being tilted—they must have been going down the front steps of the church—followed by the ride in the back of the hearse. The drivers didn’t give a shit, they were talking about getting home for dinner. One of them stole the ring off his finger before they locked the casket.

  He could smell the grass as they opened the rear gate of the hearse and carried him out to the—his—gravesite. It was almost over, like the last moments of a killer’s trial; soon it would just be him, trapped alone in the cell, the jury, judge, family all gone home from the courthouse.

  The Greek priest Father Papadopoulos gave his sermon. What was he thinking? Did he really believe all this stuff he was saying? Alex would be the only person there who would know the truth.

  People were probably thinking: It’s almost over. Saying to each other, You wanna meet for a drink? The sound of the dirt falling on his coffin as he was dropped lower and lower, being let down into the earth. How long would it take before the seal of the casket gave out and he was …exposed to…whatever else the dirt held? He wanted to open the lid, hoping against all hope that Fat Lester would reach down with his meaty hand and pull him up from the dirt before it was too late, before everyone threw their roses and walked away to go home or out for dinner, leaving him, alone, buried under the earth, at the mercy of the gangs who came at night, drank vodka, smoked weed, and pissed on the headstones.

  But he was still there.

  Chapter 2

  Washington, DC

  Inside the Oval Office, surrounded by history, President Harry O’Brien sat in his upholstered wooden rocker, a coffee table separating him from his French counterpart, Francois Payard. Grateful for the time alone with the Frenchman, the President looked over at the antique clock above the fireplace; only fifteen minutes left before the door to the outer offices would open, bringing in their respective aides and selected members of the press. Until then, he could speak from his heart.

  “The Greeks may have mishandled their economy but the Germans are destroying any chance of restoring it—or, getting their money back. Even the IMF agrees with the assessment.”

  “You and I are in complete agreement,” Payard said, “but Madame Merkel has much pressure on her, the politics, you understand.”

  “I know, I know. It’s the same here.”

  The President was enjoying the easy exchange. For once, he was meeting a foreign leader who had no contentious issues with him.

  “So, will Mister Sarkozy run again…against you?”

  “Surely, as long as he thinks he has a chance. He will run. If nothing else, he must please his wife, yes?”

  “I understand,” the President said, smiling. “It’s the same here.”

  Payard checked his watch, his expression turned serious, he suddenly appeared tight. “Mr. President, I have a serious issue to bring to your attention…It concerns the missing airliner.”

  Chapter 3

  Normandy, France

  Before he buckled himself in, Captain Ernst Kruger double-checked to be sure he’d securely locked the cabin door. Tonight, he would be alone in the cockpit, flying the jetliner by himself. Given what lay ahead, there’d be no question about him staying awake.

  While doing his final pre-check, reading the instruments, his eyes couldn’t help moving around the cockpit. He looked closely at the windshield and controls around the co-pilot’s seat. The cleaning crew had evidently meticulously removed all traces of the Richard Le Clerque’s brains and blood.

  The rest of his copilot was buried in the woods outside the old hangar.

  Two days ago, as Kruger was implementing his planned hijacking, LeClerque, not part of the plot, had ingested a poison Kruger had dropped into his coffee. Prematurely realizing what was happening, he unlocked the cabin door, calling out for help. Suddenly a burly Russian passenger in first class rushed in to assist him. As a weakening Le Clerque tried to override Kruger at the controls, Kruger reached into his black pilot’s case, pulled out a Walther P5 9mm semiautomatic pistol, turned and fired two bullets into the Russian’s heart and then one into Le Clerque’s face, sending their blood flying through the cabin over the maze of dials and controls, splattering on the windshield and turning the scene into a blur of red as though someone had thrown in a bucket of red paint.

  He would inform the passengers and the uninvolved flight attendants that his copilot had attempted to hijack the plane, that it was unfortunate that the passenger, in the rush of events, had misread the situation and had to be shot, too. He reassured them he had it all under control, but they had to now make an emergency landing on the northern French coast.

  All communications from the plane had already been blocked and the transponder disconnected to prevent tracking. Next, Kruger lowered the oxygen level in the first and main cabins down to a level that gently incapacitated the passengers, keeping them, for the most part, quiet until they landed in Normandy where the aircraft was towed directly into an old, refitted Luftwaffe hangar, where the passengers and crew were held captive and under constant watch.

  Inside the hangar, they were all confused, with no idea what was happening or for what reason or cause. Despite the terror they’d witnessed on the plane and then being held captive against their will, they were perhaps convinced they had been chosen to survive the remaining ordeal.

  He switched on the PA system. “This is your Captain, Ernst Kruger. I know we are all happy and relieved to be back on board and getting airborne. We have been instructed to proceed directly to the US. I’m sure at some point we will be receiving a military escort so in case you see jet fighters around us, be assured it’s for our safety. Our flight time to Washington will be seven hours and ten minutes so sit back and let our terrific flight attendants serve you. Since I’m alone here in the cockpit, you won’t be hearing much from me from here on in. I hope you’ll enjoy your dinner and get some well-deserved rest before we land.”

  Although his address was carried throughout the cabin on the PA system, he was talking to himself.

  He wasn’t sure they’d ever make it to their destination but, getting close enough to be shot down by US fighter jets over Washington with a Russian dissident, his entourage and members of the Russian press, totaling more than a hundred Russian citizens onboard was enough to accomplish his goal. Both Moscow and Washington would be enraged, its leaders hungry for retaliation, its military and air defenses whipped into a jittery, paranoid frenzy.

  The stage would be set for the rest of Dietrich’s grand plan.

  “Flight attendants, prepare for takeoff.”

  Tonight, Kruger would see to it that Herr Dietrich’s plan succeeded. In executing the great man’s vision, he would happily give his life for what would follow.

  He entered the GPS coordinates into the flight management system’s GPS: 38°53’51.61” N -77°02’11.58” W:

  The White House.

  This time they wouldn’t miss.

  Chapter 4

  Westport, Connecticut

  Michael Nicholas had a secret, one he feared was about to be discovered. This secret h
ad already changed his life.

  It had been nearly three years since his older brother, Alex, was murdered at a restaurant in Queens. At his funeral, the Greek Orthodox priest had pronounced that Alex was on his way to heaven. Michael remembered hearing a low murmur of light-hearted dissent coming from the pews behind him.

  Standing beside Alex’s casket, he remembered telling everyone in the church that he couldn’t believe that he—and everyone else listening to his eulogy—would never see Alex again.

  Several days later, though, Michael realized he would.

  In fact, he saw more of his brother now, post-death, than he had before the murder.

  It was the secret he feared would be revealed. A revelation, he knew, would change—everything.

  Samantha was sound asleep. Michael quietly got up out of bed, walked out of the bedroom, down two flights to their basement, and entered his wine cellar, closing the heavy door behind him.

  Surrounded by a thousand bottles of wine, beautifully displayed in symmetrically stacked custom wooden shelves, Michael sat down at the heavy antique oak dining table, pressed the switch underneath, and watched as a large screen silently rolled down from its recessed compartment in the ceiling.

  Staring ahead at the screen, touching the wireless mouse on the table, Michael moved the computer cursor on the screen to the ancient gold Greek cross icon, tapped twice, and typed in his password: mickeymantle7.

  There, on the giant screen, the image of his brother instantly appeared.

  From the monitor, Alex seemed to take in the room, his head moving from side to side. “You can’t possibly ever drink all this,” he said.

  Michael, accustomed to his brother’s cynicism about his supposedly snobby tastes, laughed. “I guess your computer geeks never programmed in cocktails for you.”

 

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