Authors: Hugh Miller
âYou won't get away with this,' Erika panted. âYou or the other one, Miles or whatever he calls himself.'
âPlease, spare me that.' Sabrina tucked a loose strand of hair into the clasp at the back of her head. âI just did get away with it. Didn't I?'
âThat's what you'll pay for,' Erika said. The pain of Sabrina landing full-weight on her shin had brought tears to her eyes; they had flowed freely down her cheeks, taking a quantity of mascara with them. âI'm talking about later.'
âDo you want me to make it rougher still?'
âYou wouldn't dare harm me.'
âI've already harmed you. And your friend.'
âWhat did you do to him?'
âGiven the difference between his weight and mine, and given the fact I knew I had to deal with two of you, I played dirty pool, Erika.'
âWhat did you
do
to him?'
âKnocked him out with a blast of CS.' Sabrina held up the silver canister, then dropped it back in her pocket. âHe went down like he'd been shot. In a couple of minutes he'll come round and he'll be fine. For the time being. If you don't answer
my questions, I'll take it out on him.' She went into her pocket again and brought out a hypodermic syringe, the needle capped and in position. âPentothal, Erika.'
Erika looked shocked.
âAnd don't tell me I wouldn't dare.' Sabrina nodded at the syringe, which contained yellow-tinted water. âThere's a big overdose in there.'
âYou're a crazy woman!'
âWell, you obviously know that when the subject's heart is really pounding, a big dose can bring on a spectacular brain seizure.'
âYou could kill him!'
âYes, I could.' Sabrina moved close. She bent down, putting her face level with Erika's. âShall we talk?'
âWhat the hell do you want with me? I don't
know
anything.'
âYou have information I need. Please don't wear down my temper by denying it. Listen - I won't come to harm for any of this. But your boyfriend could. Don't doubt me, that would be a bad mistake.'
âWhat do you want, for God's sake?'
âThe name, address and timetable of your assassin.'
Erika said nothing. She lowered her head.
âAm I to take it you're refusing?'
âWhy do you want to know this?'
âI work for an organization that has to stop what you're doing to the men on Emily Selby's list.'
âWhat organization?'
âI can't tell you. But in spite of what you think is evidence to the contrary, we are on the side of the angels.'
âA Nazi would have no difficulty saying that.'
âErika, I don't like Nazis. Did you ever hear of a neo-fascist called Klaus Schneider?'
Erika nodded. âI heard of him. Was he a friend of yours?'
âI brought him in.'
Erika stared. âThat's easy to say.'
âThe details of how he was caught were never made public,' Sabrina said. âBut I bet you know what happened.'
âPerhaps I do.'
âSo. Schneider was on a bench at Unter den Linden on a warm night in August 1992. He was waiting for a consignment of stolen heroin which he planned to sell below the going price. It was one of his ways of raising funds for the cause. At the appointed time a young woman arrived and he followed her into the bushes to make the exchange. Except she turned on him, beat him up, stripped off his clothes and tied him to a tree. Then she took a Polaroid and sent it to his compadres, those who thought he was the new Führer. They got the picture with a note saying the same would happen to them. Dispersal of the group was my mission. It worked.'
Erika shrugged. âThe details are correct, but you can't prove you were the woman.'
âI swear on my mother's life, I was.'
âThen why object when we take serious action against the fascists?'
âBecause you're into wholesale slaughter, and there's no obvious proof that you're targeting the right people.'
âBut we are.'
âTo say that, you must have substantial proof, or at least enough to get a legitimate investigation going. Why not hand over your evidence to the police?'
âConventional investigations are too polite and too prone to end in flabby liberal leniency. Our way is better.'
âErika,' Sabrina leaned close again. âI can't spend any more time arguing. I have a job to do. I need to know who your hatchet man is. I'm prepared to do what it takes to get an answer. I wasn't kidding about the Pentothal.'
Erika was staring into the bedroom. Gregor had come round. He lay coughing feebly against the carpet.
âI don't want you to hurt him,' she said, the hardness gone from her voice.
âThen talk to me.'
For a long moment Erika stared at Sabrina. Then she nodded. âTake the cuffs off him. Give him water. Then I'll talk to you.'
âYou want me to let him loose before you've talked?' Sabrina shook her head. âI don't think so. Not until -'
âIt's a promise!' Erika whispered hoarsely. âA
promise. I never go back on a promise! Now in the name of God help Gregor. Help him!'
The black pickup was parked on a rocky bluff high over a stretch of open land between two dense clumps of woodland. The sun was high and the temperature inside the pickup, in spite of the windows being open, was 92 degrees Fahrenheit.
For more than two hours Chuck and Billy had sat behind the dusty windshield, observing Chadwick's station wagon parked on the open ground below them, its grey-and-blue paintwork baking in the heat.
âAll that time in a wagon in this heat with a dead man,' Chuck said. âThat guy ain't natural. What kind of man could put up with that?'
âHe's English, don't forget.'
Since parking the station wagon Mr Beamish did not appear to have moved. He had simply stopped on the dirt road linking the clumps of woodland, the same dirt road that led right through that sector of the Greenbelt Park. When he stopped he switched off the engine, sat back behind the wheel and folded his arms.
âHe does have air-conditioning in there,' Billy said. âBut I don't think that would give him too much protection, not after all this time.' He groaned. âI promised Mr Chadwick I'd clean the inside of that wagon after this character's done with it.'
At that moment Malcolm Philpott, sitting in the
station wagon, could see what the two men in the pickup would have to use their scopes to identify, a small bulk-liquid transporter with a fat blue chemical tank on its back. It approached along a branch road and came slowly down the hillside to the spot where Philpott was parked.
The driver was Russ Grundy. âMr Beamish?' he called.
âThat's right.'
âAre we being watched?'
âYes we are. Get into your part, Russ. You have a keen-eyed audience up on the hill over there behind me. Please don't look in that direction.'
Grundy got out. He was dressed in the uniform of a US State Trooper. He came across to the station wagon and held the door as Philpott got out.
âWhat do I have to do now?'
Philpott pointed to the back of the station wagon. âThere's a roll of carpet in there. In the interests of verisimilitude, there are two half-filled plastic sacks of water taped to the centre of the roll. I want you to help me carry that carpet over to your empty tanker and poke it in through the lid on top, which of course you will first open.'
âCan you tell me why I'm dressed like a lawman?'
âWhy do you ask? Do you need to know what your motivation is?'
âNo. I'm just eaten up with curiosity.'
âIn my experience,' Philpott said, âit's the really baffling visible evidence that burrows deep into people's credulity. I mean, what in heaven's name
is a state trooper doing driving a tanker? And what's he going to do with the carpet-wrapped corpse he's loaded into the tank?'
âIt's bizarre, I'll give you that.'
âThank you.'
From the pickup high on the bluff Chuck and Billy watched through their scopes as the ominous roll of carpet was manhandled on to the pickup and slid, after some struggling, down into the tank. They watched the trooper close the lid, get down, shake hands with Beamish, and drive away. After a couple of minutes Beamish drove off in the opposite direction.
âI'll be real glad when this day is over,' Billy said to Chuck.
Back in Dallas Philpott parked the station wagon at a quiet spot near his hotel, as arranged with Chadwick. Before he closed and locked the door, he sprinkled three drops from the phial of cadav-erine Grundy had obtained for him. Within seconds the unmistakable odour of decaying human flesh began to fill the interior of the station wagon. He shut the door quickly.
âMission accomplished,' he whispered with satisfaction. He'd enjoyed this little jaunt. It felt good to be back in the field again. As he walked back to the hotel he whistled softly, thinking ahead to a hot bath, a fine dinner, then a late flight back to New York.
âMemories threaten me,' Uli Jürgen said. âI hate the way they invade my present.'
âReally? How strange.'
Marianne Edel was on a high-legged stool in the centre of the bare-floored studio, her face and her uncovered shoulders mercilessly sunlit by tall windows and wide fanlights. When she spoke she tried not to move.
âHow else would you make contact with memories?' she said. âThey have to invade the present before you become aware of them.'
âThey always seem to challenge my safety. So I try to leave the past undisturbed.'
Jürgen stepped back from his easel and put down the brush he had been using. He smiled at the canvas, being careful to frown at the same time, so he would look self-critical. The picture pleased him. It gave him a secure, competent feeling. All his good commercial work did that.
âI think we are finished, Frau Edel.'
At six sittings over four weeks he had painted a perfect likeness of his sitter, which any half-adequate portraitist could have done. But he was Uli Jürgen, so his picture was much more than a likeness. He had been described as an artist who could invest a portrait with the spirituality of its subject. The picture of Marianne Edel was a true likeness invested with a dozen ingenious falsehoods - at the eyes, the mouth, the jawline, the neck. Her skin sagged and wrinkled in exactly the places it did in reality, but in the picture the sagging and the furrows were softer-edged and looked more like silken drapery than tired epidermis.
âMay I look at it now?'
âWellâ¦'
Individually the falsehoods were unremarkable, but the collective effect was to flatter Marianne Edel shamelessly, and brilliantly. A stranger looking at the picture would see a convincing harmony of line and tone and colour which suggested, powerfully, that the vigour and sexuality in the image must be a true reflection of those qualities in the sitter. Uli Jürgen had known Marianne Edel only a little over a month, but he doubted she had ever looked half as good as his creation.
âYes, come and look,' he said.
She stepped down carefully from the stool and stood beside him. For a minute they were silent, he thinking about his meeting later with his
accountant, she bedazzled by a talent that could make her resemble so strongly her own idea of herself.
âYou are a genius,' she said.
âOh, come now.'
He cringed within himself as she impulsively threw her arms round his neck and kissed him on the mouth.
âYou darling!' she exclaimed, and kissed him again.
Jürgen held his breath and waited for it to be over. The woman was fifty, heavy for her size and not well preserved. Facially she bore an unflattering resemblance to the actor Jon Voight. She had stale breath and bad taste in perfume. But she was rich, and Jürgen never repulsed money or anyone who came bearing it, however objectionable.
âYou think your husband will like it, then?' he said as she released him.
âHe will adore it. When can I take it home?'
âIt should remain here another ten days, at least. But if you are really impatient to remove it to your home, I can have it taken there two or three days from now by someone who knows how to handle freshly-finished canvases. He can hang it for you, too.'
âThat would be splendid. Can you arrange that for me?'
âHorst will be here later to pick up some other work. I will organize everything with him then, and call you to confirm.'
Marianne Edel took her coat from the stand by the window. Jürgen helped her put it on.
âYou are so well organized for an artist,' she said. âAnd more of a thinker than I would have expected.'
âA thinker?' Jürgen smiled cautiously. âWhat makes you say that?'
âYou've told me so many interesting things on my visits here. And what you were saying just now, about memories, that is so haunting.'
If she had not been a client he would have laughed. In the circumstances he stared neutrally into his coffee cup. The observation about memories was entirely for effect. He had read some of it somewhere and made up the rest.
âMy husband says you're the living image of Freud, you know.'
Jürgen looked at Frau Edel. âFreud?'
âYour beard, the broad forehead - and the way you hold a paintbrush when you look at the canvas, it's just the way Freud held a cigar.'
It was the first time he had been told he looked like a Jew, and it stung. He looked pointedly at his watch.
âI must go,' said Frau Edel. He accompanied her to the door. âDo call me as soon as you have made arrangements to have the portrait delivered.'
âOf course.'
She kissed his cheek one more time before she left. He closed the door softly behind her, making a sour face at the panels.
âFreud, indeed.'
The telephone rang. He hurried across and picked it up. It was his accountant's secretary, reminding him of his appointment.