The Butcher's Theatre (83 page)

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Authors: Jonathan Kellerman

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BOOK: The Butcher's Theatre
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He made love to her infrequently, told her she was a warrior-heroine, the kind of woman he wanted as mother of his children.

They signed up for the U.N. job together, planned to carry their activism to Palestine. Here, too, he doctored while she did the dirty work.

She composed twenty different propaganda pamphlets, found a printer in Nablus who could make them up in English, French, and Arabic. Made contact with the PLO operatives who came to the Amelia Catherine disguised as patients, growing close to one of them—Hassan’s cousin, Samra. A pretty, dark girl, also trained as a nurse but working full-time for the liberation of Palestine. Hassan introduced them to each other in one of the examining rooms; an easy bond of friendship followed soon. The two women became confidantes, tutor and student.

Samra coached, Peggy performed well.

In February she was promoted to more important functions: serving as a conduit between Hassan and arms smugglers in Jordan, making payoffs, overseeing early morning transfers of the wooden crates to the big house on Ibn Haldoun.

Samra lived in a flat in Sheikh Jarrah, but the house was hers, deeded to her family—a rich family, like Hassan’s. Her father had been a judge in East Jerusalem before escaping to Amman in ‘67

Good friend, Cousin Samra.

In reality she was no cousin at all, but a wife. The one and only Mrs. Hassan Al Biyadi. A Jordanian marriage certificate found in her purse proved it, complete with signature by her father the judge.

Shmeltzer had waved the dogeared piece of paper in Cassidy’s face, told her she was a gullible idiot, a stupid, stupid girl who deserved to be deceived.

She screamed denial. The old detective slapped her out of her hysteria and continued to attack her verbally, savagely, to the point where Daniel thought of intervening. But he didn’t and finally the denial gave way to a new grasp on reality. Peggy Cassidy sat in her chair, shaking, gulping water, bubbling at the mouth, unable to spill her guts fast enough.

Yes, she’d known the first two Butcher victims were Amelia Catherine patients—Hassan’s patients. Had wanted to tell someone—Mr. Baldwin, at least. But Hassan forbade it, said their cover was more important, they couldn’t afford police probing around the hospital.

She began weeping: “Those poor women!” Hassan hadn’t cared, didn’t care about anyone! He was a pig—the Arabs were all pigs. Filthy, sexist pigs, she hoped they all rotted in hell, hoped the Jews killed every single one of them.

One extreme to the other.

An unstable girl. Daniel wondered how she’d cope with prison.

Amos Harel was waiting outside his office, pacing and smoking. Unlike him to show nervousness; something was wrong.

Gauloise butts littered the floor. The door was closed. As Daniel came closer, he saw the look on the Latam chief’s face and a flame ignited in his belly.

“One of my men is dead,” said Harel hoarsely. “Itzik Nash, strangled in the alley behind the reporter’s building. Your man, Cohen, is missing—no trace of the car we

gave him. We found his radio near Itzik’s body. They were supposed to maintain regular contact—Cohen was probably checking up on Itzik when he got hit. The reporter’s also dead, bludgeoned to pulp up in his flat, swastikas painted in blood all over his bedroom walls—his own blood, according to Forensics. They’re still there swabbing and dusting. The Canadian, Carter, is the only suspect who was out last night. No one knows where the fuck he is.”

Daniel knew Itzik Nash—they’d attended Police School together. A roly-poly guy with a ready arsenal of lewd jokes. Daniel visualized him wearing the thick-tongued idiot’s yawn of the strangulation victim. Thought of Avi in the Butcher’s hands and found himself trembling.

“God. What the hell happened!”

Harel took hold of the doorknob, twisted savagely, and shoved the door open. Inside his office sat a Latamnik—the man who’d broadcast as Relic. He was staring at the floor. Harel’s throat-clearing raised his face, and Daniel saw that his eyes were lifeless, filmed over. He looked withered, a husk of himself. The code name strangely apt.

“Get the hell out here and tell him what happened,” ordered Harel.

“He faked us out,” said the Latamnik, coming to the doorway.

Harel put his face close to his man’s, sprayed Relic with spittle as he talked: “No vidduy, just facts.”

Relic licked his lips, nodded, recited: “Carter took the predictable path, Ben Adayah to Sultan Suleiman, walked right by me. I picked up his trail the moment he passed the Rockefeller, followed him up Nablus Road and into the Pilgrim’s Vision Hotel. Place was empty, just the night clerk. Carter registered, went up the stairs. I leaned on the clerk; he told me the room number—three-oh-two—and that Carter had ordered a whore. I asked if Carter had ever stayed there before—did he have any particular whore in mind? The clerk said no to both. There was only one roundheels working this late—she was up in one of the other rooms, would be free in fifteen minutes. He was planning to send her up then. I warned him not to let on anything was up, took a house key, and waited in the room behind the desk. When the

whore showed up and picked up the key, I followed her to three-oh-two, let her go in, waited maybe fifteen seconds, then went in myself.”

The Latamnik shook his head, still unbelieving. “She was all alone, Pakad, sitting on the bed reading a comic book. Not a trace of Carter. The window was bolted, dusty—it hadn’t been opened recently. I looked everywhere for him, tried other rooms, the communal lavatory. Nothing. He must have slipped out the back way—there’s a rear stairway leading out to Pikud Hamerkaz.”

“Didn’t you call for backup?” demanded Daniel. His hands were clenched at his sides, his abdomen searing. His body so tense the muscles threatened to burst through the skin.

“Sure, sure. I know the layout of the hotel—we watched it last winter on a dope surveillance. I radioed for help first chance I had—while waiting for the whore to show up, maybe, three minutes after Carter arrived. The closest guy was one of ours, Vestreich on Habad Street, but if he left, it meant no coverage for the Old City. So your Arab, Daoud, came over from Kishle, maybe five, six minutes later, and stationed himself out back.”

“Could Carter have known you were following him?”

“No way. I stayed twenty meters behind, always in the shadows. God wouldn’t have spotted me.”

“Could anyone have warned Carter about you?”

Relic pressed himself against the corridor wall, as if trying to shrink. “No way. I had my eye on the clerk at all times; no one else around. I wanted to have him phone Carter’s room to confirm the bastard was up there, but the Palace is a shithole, half a star, no phone service to the rooms, no way to send a message. I tell you, Daoud was out back in five minutes—he didn’t see him leave.”

“Plus the three minutes before you called makes eight,” said Daniel. “Plenty of time.”

“Four wouldn’t have been enough—bastard never went up to the room in the first place! Never made it to the third floor, at all. He probably climbed one flight, walked through to the back stairs, and slipped out before Daoud arrived. He used the goddamned hotel as a tunnel.”

“Where’s Daoud now?”

“Looking for Cohen,” said Relic. “If Carter had gone south, back on Sultan Suleiman, Daoud would have run right into him, so he must have headed north, up Pikud Hamerkaz, maybe west to Mea She’arim or straight up to Sheikh Jarrah. We alerted Northwest and Northeast Sectors—no one’s seen a damn thing.”

The Latamnik turned to his boss. “Fucking bastard faked us out, Amos. We were told he was probably unaware of the surveillance, but that’s bullshit. The way he acted, he had to suspect something was up—he paid cash, didn’t register in his own name—”

“Terrif,” muttered Daniel. “He registered as D. Terrif.”

“Yes,” said Relic, feebly, as if another surprise would tax his heart. “How’d you know?”

Daniel ignored him, dashed away.

He ran down the four flights to subground, insisted, over the protests of the Mossad guard, that Deputy Commander Laufer be pulled out of the interrogation.

Laufer came out flushed and indignant, ready to do battle. Before he could open his mouth, Daniel said, “Be quiet and listen. Harel’s itzik Nash is dead. Avi Cohen may be dead too.” As he related the details of the surveillance disaster, Laufer deflated like a punctured tire.

“Shit, Cohen. Was the kid ready for something like this?”

Stupid bastard, thought Daniel. Even now, he’s looking to pin blame. “Carter’s out there somewhere,” he said, ignoring the question. “Cohen’s car is nowhere in sight, which could mean it’s garaged. It supports our suspicion of a second place—a second kill spot, away from the hospital. I want authorization to go into the Amelia Catherine, go through Carter’s room and see if we can come up with an address. And a release of the bastard’s picture to the press in time to make tomorrow’s editions.”

Laufer shifted his weight from one foot to another. “I don’t know.”

Daniel restrained himself from grabbing the idiot’s collar. “What’s the problem!”

“The timing’s bad, Sharavi.”

Daniel curled the fingers of his bad hand, raised the

ravaged flesh in front of the deputy commander’s face. “I’ve got a maniac on the loose, a new hire in danger of being slaughtered—what does it take!”

Laufer stepped back, looking sad, almost sympathetic. ”Wait,” he said, and went back into the interrogation room. Daniel waited while the minutes flowed slowly as honey, drowning in inertia, chafing to be doing something. Despite the frigid air-conditioning, the sweat was pouring out of him in cold rivulets; he caught a whiff of his body odor. Acrid. Toxic with rage.

The D.C. came back shaking his head.

“Not yet. Mossad wants no attention drawn to the hospital—no tip-offs—until all the members of Al Biyadi’s terrorist cell are in custody. Most are local assholes-—they’re being round-up right now. But the big boss—the one directing Al Biyadi—left for Paris through Damascus, last week. We’re waiting for confirmation that our French operatives have him.”

“What about my operative, damn you! What about Cohen laid out on some table for dissection!”

The D.C. ignored the insubordination, talked softly and rhythmically, with the exaggerated patience reserved for mental defectives and hostage-takers. “We’re not talking about a long delay, Sharavi. A few hours until the local busts are accomplished. The Paris data could arrive any minute—a day at the longest.”

“A day!” Daniel spat on the floor, pointed toward the closed door of the interrogation room. “Let me go in there and talk to them. Let me show them pictures of what this monster does.”

“Pictures won’t impress them, Sharavi. They have a nice scrapbook of their own: the Japs mowing down pilgrims at Ben Gurion, the Ma’alot school bus, Qiryat Shemona, Nahariya. That house was a fucking arsenal—pistols, Kalash-nikovs, fragmentation grenades, a fucking rocket launched. They had plans to shoot up the Western Wall during Shabbat shaharit services—preferably during a big tourist Bar Mitzvah. Schematics of the best places to place bombs at the Rabinovitz Playground, the Tiferet Shlomo Orphans’ Home, the zoo, Liberty Bell Park—think of the pictures

that would create, Sharavi. Hundreds of dead kids! Cassidy says there are two other arms storehouses—in Beit Jalla and Gaza. Cleaning up a mess of that magnitude is more important than one maniac.” He stopped, hesitated. “More important, even, than one detective, who’s probably dead already.”

Daniel turned to go.

Laufer grabbed his arm.

“You’re not being fucked over totally. As of this moment, finding Carter is top departmental priority—as a covert. The hospital is being watched—asshole shows his face, he’s in custody before his heart takes another beat. You want men, you’ve got them, the entire goddamned Latam, the Border Patrol, airplanes, whatever. Every cruise car will have a picture of Carter—”

“Six cars,” said Daniel. “One’s in the shop.”

“Not just Jerusalem,” said Laufer. “Every city. You’re worried five cars can’t cover our streets—take my goddamned Volvo. I’ll put my goddamned driver out on patrol, okay? You want an address on Carter? Check housing records, utility bills, the goddamned phone bills—every clerk and computer in the goddamned city is at your disposal. The slightest whiff of bullshit, call me immediately. The moment the cell’s been busted, the hospital’s open territory.”

“I want access to U.N. records.”

“You’ll have to wait on that,” said Laufer. “One of Al Bayadi’s terrorist chums is a secretary at U.N. headquarters on the Hill of Evil Counsel. No surprise, eh?”

Laufer’s fingers were moist on his arm. Daniel pried them loose.

“I’ve got work to do.”

“Don’t fuck up,” said Laufer. “This is serious.”

“See me smiling?” Daniel turned and began walking away.

“You and Shmeltzer will get credit for the armory bust,” Laufer called after him. “Service medals.”

“Terrific,” said Daniel, over his shoulder. “I’ll give them to Cohen’s mother.”

He reached the Chinaman by radio at three o’clock, Daoud five minutes later. Both had been cruising the city

for signs of Avi or the Volkswagen. He called them in, convened a meeting with his three remaining detectives and Amos Harel.

“Goddamned kid,” said the Chinaman. “God damn him. Probably pulled some John Wayne stunt before he got hit.”

“Everything indicates he was playing by the rules,” said Daniel. But Laufer’s question had come back to haunt him: The kid was less than dependable. Had he been ready?

“Whatever,” said the Chinaman. “What now, pictures of the bastard in all the papers?”

“No.” He informed them of the Mossad restriction, felt the anger in the room harden into something dark and menacing.

Daoud expelled breath, closed his eyes and rubbed his temples, as if in great pain. Shmeltzer got up and circled the room like and old jackal. Harel took out a Gauloise and crushed it, unlit, between his fingers.

“Goddamned cloak-and-dagger mothercunts!” exploded the Chinaman. “I tell you—”

“No time for that, Yossi.” Daniel cut him off. “Let’s get organized, make sure he doesn’t get away this time. Amos is giving us every man we need—he’ll be coordinating lookouts along the Jerusalem to Tel Aviv Road and up the coastal road, train stations, bus stations, Ben Gurion, every harbor including the freighter docks at Eilat. When I’m through, he’ll give you the details.

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