And Captain Kryzinski.
Was the Universe trying to tell me something?
Maybe the Universe was trying to tell Kryzinski something, too. As we talked, it appeared that the new Scottsdale police chief had decided to “upgrade the department's image” and start handling everything by the rule book. This meant, Kryzinski groused, that management should immediately cease what had been a cozy relationship with outside sources. No more judicious leaking of information in order to receive better information, no
quid pro quo,
no unhealthy fraternization with PIs such as myself.
“The world's changing, Lena,” Kryzinski said. “Individualism's out, bureaucracy's in, and Big Brother's watching us all. The other night I was talking to Steve, my son-in-law who just quit NYPD to start his own PI agency. He says it's like this back there on the Force now, too, rules and regs up the ass. Hell, it's so bad that most of those new college cops have science degrees. Private work is the only place left now where an old cop can do things the way he wants to do them. So I'm going back to Brooklyn and work for Steve.
With
him, actually. We'll be full partners, like you and Jimmy.”
“Wait a minute, wait a minute. Did I hear that right? You're going to turn PI?” My mind was churning.
“It's either that or retire, and I'm not ready to hang 'em up yet.”
“Jesus, boss. I've got an opening right here at Desert Investigations. Jimmy's leaving to make big bucks with Southwest MicroSystems.”
A long, long silence. Then he broke my heart all over again. “It wouldn't work, kid.”
“Yes it would!” It was all I could do to keep from screaming, please don't leave me, please don't leave me.
He broke through my misery with a chuckle. “I appreciate the offer, but don't you see? I'm too used to telling you what to do, and to start flipping that around would get real uncomfortable real fast. Nah, my mind's made up. There'll be no problem working with Steve 'cause we worked different precincts when I was back there. Besides, I miss my grandkids. All my family's there, you know.”
There it was, the “F” word again. Family.
Everybody had one but me.
I couldn't stand it, I simply couldn't stand it.
With a quick glance outside, I saw that the skies were still blue and the sun was still shining. Life would go on. Nevertheless, I shoved away from my desk, hit the lights, and locked up. When Jimmy returned from lunch, he could answer the phones. For now, I was getting the hell out of the office.
I dashed upstairs to change into something more upscale than my Wal-Mart turtleneck and jeans, then headed for Papago Park. After parking the Jeep next to the Studebaker Golden Hawkâit looked prettier every dayâI ambled slowly onto the set trying to act casual. No point in letting Warren realize how desperately I needed to be with someone who still had feelings for me. Irrational, perhaps, but I didn't care. I stationed myself between Harry Caulfield, looking more like a pirate than ever with his crooked grin and eyepatch, and Mark Schank, who was here either as a film buff or to make a buck off the Golden Hawk. Given his avaricious expression, my betting was on the latter. At the time, though, both men were intently watching Warren direct Frank Oberle, who looked thrilled to be taking over Ernst's place.
I felt better just listening to Warren's soothing voice. “Now, Frank, what I want you to do is sort of meander around underneath the guard tower where you used to be stationed, and say whatever comes into your mind. Talk about the Germans, how nice they were, how well you guards got along with them. And don't worry about anything, you'll be great. If you flub up, which I doubt you'll do because you're a natural, we'll just do it again.”
Oberle ingnored Warren's flattery. “Them Germans weren't all nice. Kapitan Ernst⦔
Warren interrupted with a pained smile. “This scene's the film's emotional payoff, so let's try to stay positive.”
“Listen, son, if you'd a lived through World War II like me, you'd know what to do with all that positivity crap. Das Kapitan was a thug and I'm glad he's in hell.” But he did as Warren directed, hobbling on his false leg across the rocky ground, stopping once to prod his cane at a rusted beer can, talking all the while. The camera and sound crew followed, skipping nimbly over the cactus.
Oberle's voice carried toward us on the soft April breeze. “I remember the night of the escape like it was yesterday, especially the Christmas carol those Germans was singin'.
Stille Nacht.
It made everybody feel warm and fuzzy-like, you know, two nations, one faith, Baby Jesus gettin' born and all that rot. Some of us guards sang along with them. Course, what we didn't know was that the Germans was just usin' all that commotion to cover the sounds their buddies was makin' as they crawled on their bellies like snakes through the tunnel. The sneaky bastards.”
Harry chuckled and Warren rolled his eyes, but kept the cameras rolling.
Oberle pointed up at the reconstructed guard tower. “There's where I was stationed that night, in Guard Tower Two, overlookin' Compound 1A, where they escaped from,” Oberle said. Then he squatted down and slapped his hand on the ground. Warren was right: Oberle was a natural. “You can still see here how the ground's all sunk in from the tower's weight.” Using his cane for leverage, he stood up. “Problem was, there's a blind spot here, all the way from Guard Towers Two and Three, and us guards could never see everything that was goin' on with those German boys. Captain Parshall, the camp's provost marshal, warned the high mucky-mucks about the blind spot, but they ignored him. So guess where the Germans dug, huh? Unlike our pointy-headed brass, they wasn't fools.”
Beside me, Harry chuckled again. I knew he'd heard it all before, but the tale his buddy spun about the âpointy-headed' brass' screw-ups warmed the cockles of his old enlisted-man's heart. Near us, several extras stood smiling and nodding. Most were tall, blond-haired and blue-eyed, cast for their resemblance to their real-live counterparts. All were dressed in khaki pants and shirts with PRISONER OF WAR stamped in large letters across their backs. Their uniforms contrasted vividly with the high-tech film equipment that surrounded us, making me feel as if we were all wobbling around in a time warp. And in a way, we were. A twenty-first-century film was being made on top of the remains of a World War II prison compound, which in turn had been built on top of the remains of an ancient Hohokam Indian village. If ever I needed a reminder that the past never died, this was it.
After a while, Oberle and Warren drifted out of hearing range and I grew bored. It was then that I noticed Lindsey, who had been studying the shooting schedule, staring at me. Curious, I left Harry to Mark Schank's sales spiel about a 1946 Chevrolet coupe and wandered over to her. “Nice day, huh?” When you can't think of anything to say, talk about the weather. Which is why conversations can get so boring in Arizona. We don't have a lot of weather to talk about. Except for summer, when we fry.
Lindsey didn't appreciate my attempt at friendliness. Waving the shooting schedule at me, she snapped, “Can't you see I'm busy here?” Although almost Warren's age, in her early forties, she still looked like a runway model with her impeccable black linen slacks and shirt, flawless makeup, and hair as glossy as a television shampoo commercial. She always made me feel sloppy.
“Just making conversation.” I began to walk away, but what she said next stopped me in my tracks.
“Stay away from him.”
Him? I glanced back over at the barrier tape, where Mark Schank was handing Harry his business card. Did he think the retired deputy was in the market for a Deusenberg? Beyond the two, standing on a small rise, were Warren and Oberle. “Stay away from who, Lindsey?”
“You know damn well who, you bitch.” Lindsey's eyes danced with malice. Then she turned and walked away, until she became hidden behind a large lighting umbrella.
Mark Schank was right. Life throws curve balls.
***
As I drove toward MaryEllen Bollinger's North Scottsdale condo, I made a mental note to call my therapist. In the meantime, I vowed not to think about my own unhappiness. This lasted until the first afternoon rush hour slow-down on Loop 101, when my frustrations boiled over and I cursed at the witless drivers around me before realizing the true targets of my rage were Jimmy and Kryzinski. One was leaving me for a woman, the other for a city.
How fair was that?
Without her theatrical makeup, MaryEllen looked much younger than she had at The Skin Factory and I envied her peaches-and-cream complexion while deploring the big shiner that marred it. After she settled me on the white sofa and poured me a cup of chamomile tea I started right in. “As I said on the phone, I still have a few questions, but first, I need to ask you something, if only to satisfy my own curiosity. The cops gave you a speeding ticket near Anthem at four a.m. on the night of Ernst's murder. What were you doing up there?” I already knew what she'd told the cops, but I wanted to hear it from her, because a wee hours trip to the far north housing development still made no sense to me. If she'd have kept going, she'd have wound up in Flagstaff.
When she smiled, MaryEllen looked about nineteen. “I was going to visit Clay. My boyfriend.”
“The guy who gave you the shiner, right?.”
She reached a manicured hand to the bruise. “I didn't have it then. That came later.”
In other words, after the cops stopped her she continued on her way, and sometime later that nightâor morning, to be exactâher boyfriend hit her. “What did you and Clay fight about?”
“We had a disagreement over where the relationship was headed. But that's been settled now.” She sipped slowly at her tea, savoring the delicate flavor.
From the other room, I could hear her roommate moving about. At least I hoped it was her roommate, not the eye-smacking Clay. It had been my experience that women like MaryEllen forgave and forgot too quickly, convinced that they couldn't do any better, anyway. “Okay, let's move on. You've said you confronted Ernst, hoping he'd confess and that it didn't work out, but here's my next question. When he first opened the door and saw you, what did he look like?”
She frowned. “I don't understand.”
“Did it look like he just woke up, or did it look like he'd been up for a while?” There was a chance Ernst had entertained an earlier visitor, and the person was still there, hidden out of sight in a back room.
“Oh. Yeah, I got the bastard out of bed. The lights were out when I arrived, but it didn't take him long to get to the door. Less than a minute.”
Transferring from bed to the wheelchair would have entailed a certain amount of effort and time, so her answer didn't sound right. I pictured Ernst, lying in bed, waking to the sound of someone banging at the door. He would have to raise himself by his arms, somehow swing off the bed over to the wheelchair, then position himself there. “Was he dressed in street clothes or pajamas?”
“Slacks and a shirt. Because of, um, him not having any legs, the slacks were pinned up.”
Another answer that didn't make sense. Not only would Ernst have had to make the bed-to-wheelchair transfer, but also get dressed. Unless he slept in his clothes. But why would he do that? “Exactly what did he say when he opened the door?”
She gave a bitter laugh. “You think he said, âSo glad you could drop by, my dear'? Not hardly. He asked me what the hell I thought I was doing, banging on his door in the middle of the night.”
“To which you saidâ¦.”
“I asked him if he recognized me.”
Her answer took me off guard. “How could Ernst recognize you? You told me that every time you went by the set, you made sure he didn't see you, that all you did was call him on the phone.” Now that I considered it, her caution made no sense. What difference would it have made if he saw her or not? She would have been just another spectator.
“Because Daddy always said I looked like his little sister.”
Ten-year-old Jenny Bollinger, who'd been murdered in 1944 along with the rest of her family. “Did Ernst recognize you?”
“Only after I said who I was. Well, let me rephrase that. He said he didn't but I'm pretty sure he was lying.”
MaryEllen was somewhere in her twenties, and the night she'd gone over to Ernst's house, she had been slathered in stage makeup. Considering the sixty years that had passed since the Bollinger murders, it would have surprising if Ernst saw a family resemblance, even if he'd been in the Bollinger farmhouse in the first place. I dropped that line of questioning. “Tell me about Ernst's house, what it looked like.”
She gave me a look of disbelief. “You want the
Better Homes and Gardens
tour?”
“Was it neat? Or did it look like someone had been rifling through things?”
“Say, what's this all about? Are you accusing me of theft? Ernst had nothing I wanted, other than the truth!”
That I believed. MaryEllen didn't have the emotional makeup of a thief. In her own topless dancer way, she was much too naive. “When the police searched the house, it looked like someone had been trying to find something. I'm only trying to discover if that happened before you got there or after.” And why Ernst answered the door fully dressed.
“Sorry. I guess I'm pretty touchy these days. The answer to your question is no, the houseâwhat I could see of itâlooked perfectly normal. But I never went beyond the living room.“
If she was telling the truth, Kryzinski was right, and Rada Tesema was probably the person who'd gone through the house in search of his Star of David, leaving a trail of bloody fingerprints. Hiding my disappointment, I said, “Let's see if I have the time line straight. On the night of Ernst's murder, after your shift at The Skin Factory, you drove over to his house and woke him up. His place hadn't been rifled yet. Afterwards, you drove thirty miles north to Anthem and had a fight with your boyfriend. Tell me, did you get into any more arguments that night? Or after your boyfriend gave you the black eye, did you call it a day and go home?”
She actually laughed. “It does sound crazy when you put it that way, doesn't it? Look, I'll admit I was pretty revved up that night. I'd been planning on getting the truth out of Ernst ever since I found out that he was living here in Scottsdale. And as it happens, Clay had stopped by The Skin Factory just before my shift and told meâ¦Well, never mind what he told me. Let's just say I was feeling pretty pissed off when I left the club and decided that the time was right to settle some old scores.”
We talked for a little while longer, but she had no more information to give me. Then, just as I was about to leave, she stopped me. “Don't you want to ask my father about Ernst?”
I stopped dead. “Your father's still alive?”
An odd expression settled on her face. “In a manner of speaking. He has Alzheimer's, and isn't all that lucid anymore. Which is just as well.”
The excitement I'd started to feel faded. Alzheimer's meant that his memory, or what remained of it, would be spotty. On the off chance that he might be able to help, I took down the address of his nursing home. At the door, I turned and asked her one final question.
“You said you wanted to settle old scores that night. First with Ernst and then with your boyfriend. Did it work out?”
Her beautiful face looked haunted. “No. Nothing ever does.”
***
From MaryEllen's house, I struggled through the height of the evening rush hour to Shady Rest Care Home, where Chess Bollinger was living out the last of his days. Once I arrived at Shady Rest, which was located in Mesa not far from the Ethiopians' apartment, I realized what she had meant when she'd said it was just as well that her father was barely lucid. If, for any reason, I ever needed to spend some time in such a place, I'd want to be unaware of my surroundings, too. In a flat-out coma if possible.
On the exterior, the immense Shady Rest looked little worse than other care homes I'd seen before, with a plain, four-story brick facade uncluttered by too many windows and “landscaping” consisting of nothing more than stained concrete. But it was worseâmuch worseâon the inside. When I walked through the double doors and onto the stained brown carpet, I was enveloped by a funereal silence. The stench of near-cremated food, overlaid with a hint of human waste and Pine-Sol, filled the muggy air but it didn't appear to bother the gum-chewing receptionist, who was busy painting her nails a silver-sparkled fuchsia.