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Authors: Robert Wilson

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The Silent and the Damned (47 page)

BOOK: The Silent and the Damned
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'They couldn't make a case without Marty cracking up and confessing the whole thing to them, and I told you about his trips to Chile in the seventies. What I didn't tell you was that the Chilean authorities did eventually catch up with him and he spent three weeks in the London Clinic, which was another torture centre, on Calle Almirante Barroso. In three weeks of punishment he didn't give anybody up. The only reason he didn't suffer the same fate as Todd Kravitz was because it was later on in the game and the human rights people were being more assiduous by then. This was not a guy who was going to crack under some FBI questioning.'
'So you thought it was fitting that he should be reporting back to you on someone who had been a notorious member of that regime?' said Falcón.
'Most Europeans think that Americans have no sense of irony, Inspector Jefe.'
'Was that why you didn't give him any information on Rafael Vega's real identity?'
'One of the reasons,' said Flowers. 'But if you're supposed to be reporting back on the state of mind of a person, it's better not to have your insight distorted by history.'
'What was so important about Vega's state of mind?'
'This was a guy we lost track of in 1982 when he absconded from a witness protection programme.'
'So that was true about him testifying in a drug- trafficking trial?'
'That was the surface truth. He held some damaging information about US Army officers and Agency personnel who were involved in running drugs for arms back in the late seventies and early eighties, so we cut a deal. He would act as a witness in a show trial and we would give him a new identity and fifty thousand dollars. He took both and disappeared. We couldn't find him anywhere.'
'But you knew about the wife and daughter?'
'That's all we could do, keep an eye on them and hope that he resurfaced. He was careful. He didn't come back for his daughter's wedding, which we were all expecting, and we assumed he was dead. We stopped watching, but we did send someone down to his wife's funeral.'
'When was that?'
'Not that long ago, something like three years – I can't remember exactly. But the funeral was when we found him again. He'd finally thought he was safe,' said Flowers. 'We researched his life, found that he was a successful businessman and thought that we had nothing to worry about, until the Russian mafia connection came to light about eighteen months ago.'
'Did you think he was in the arms dealing business again?'
'We just thought we'd better take a closer look at Rafael Vega,' said Flowers. 'But, I lied to you earlier, we did train him. He knew our ways. He knew our type of people. So we looked for other candidates and that was where the FBI came in. Marty Krugman was our perfect candidate – apart from some instability in his marriage.'
'Do you know what I'm feeling now, Sr Flowers?' said Falcón. 'That you're giving me just enough information to satisfy my curiosity.'
'The full story would take a long time.'
'One moment you're talking about tying up loose ends and the next you're talking about reporting on his state of mind.'
'It was both.'
'What "loose ends" were you really nervous about?'
'We had begun to think that he might be operating again in some way,' said Flowers. 'It's an addictive profession, Inspector Jefe. We found out that he'd bought a passport in the name of Emilio Cruz and that he'd taken Moroccan visas.'
'I assumed that was his escape route.'
'What did he need to escape from?'
'Maybe it was from you, Sr Flowers,' said Falcón.
'He had the Emilio Cruz passport before we put Marty Krugman next to him, before we discovered his Russian mafia connection.'
'Why did he run from the witness protection programme in the first place?'
'They're living deaths, those things,' said Flowers. 'I'd have done the same.'
'Did he have good reason to believe that his daughter's family was not killed in an accident?'
'That was twenty years after he'd absconded,' said Flowers. 'It's one of the unfortunate side effects of an addiction to this profession – you can never take things at face value. People die in road accidents all the time, Inspector Jefe.'
'And did you discover what the Russian mafia connection was all about?'
'He allowed them to launder money through his projects and they indulged his paedophilia. I understand he liked to watch. El Salido, remember?'
'So what was Marty's job – if you already knew all that?'
Silence from Sr Flowers. A big, bored sigh.
'When did you tell him that Rafael Vega was Miguel Velasco?' asked Falcón.
'No, no, you're wrong there, Inspector Jefe. I'm not lying to you about that,' said Flowers. 'You're thinking we told him, and because of his past involvement in Chilean politics that was enough to incite him to murder.'
'Forcing a man to drink acid…' said Falcón.
'It's a nasty way to die,' said Flowers. 'It
sounds
like a revenge killing. But I want to be clear on that. We did not give away Vega's real identity. We did not want Vega dead. You have to believe Marty when he told you -'
'So what did you want to know?'
'We're not sure.'
'This doesn't sound very convincing, Sr Flowers,' said Falcón.
'Probably because it's the truth, and we've developed this magnificent myth about American infallibility'
'How about this for a theory…' said Falcón. 'You wanted to know his state of mind because you were worried that he had information that would further compromise more important members of the US administration of that era. The Secretary of State, for instance.'
'We were worried that if he did have something he might look for ways of using it against us, but we didn't know what it could be.'
'Who is "us"?' asked Falcón.
'That is all I'm saying on the matter,' said Flowers. 'You told me that your concern was whether Krugman killed him, and I can tell you that he didn't. Be satisfied.'
'How can I be sure of that?'
'Because Marty Krugman was with me on the night that Rafael Vega died, from between two and five o'clock in the morning,' said Flowers. 'I have a timed and dated recording of that meeting because it took place in the American Consulate.'
Chapter 29
Wednesday, 31st July 2002
On the way to the Jefatura Falcón stopped for a cafe solo on the Avenida de Argentina. He felt bleary and down like everybody else in the bar. The heat had wrung all the natural
alegria
out of the Sevillanos, leaving some introverted version of themselves to wander the streets and populate the bars.
There was no sign of Ramírez or Ferrera in the office. He took the audio tapes of the interviews with the arsonists and the original videotape stolen from the Montes finca and went up to Elvira's office. He met Ramírez coming down.
'I spoke to the arsonists again and asked them how they knew Montes,' said Ramírez. 'Twenty years ago Montes used to run a youth football side for disadvantaged kids. They were on his team. I've just checked it with the inspector from GRUME and I've had a proper look at their files. Montes was involved in helping them with all their brushes with the law.'
'Did they know Montes had killed himself?'
Ramírez shook his head, wished him good luck with Elvira.
He was not allowed in to see the Comisario, not even into the secretary's office. She put him in the corridor with the single-word explanation: Lobo.
Ten minutes later he was called in. Lobo stood by the window, arms folded across his chest – tense, angry. Elvira sat at his desk, his face drawn, as if he'd been there all night.
'What have you got for us?' asked Lobo, leaping the chain of command in his fury.
'Two audio recordings of the arsonists -'
'Did they name Ignacio Ortega?'
'No, they named Alberto Montes.'
Lobo pounded Elvira's table with three devastating blows that jumped his pencils into disarray.
'What else?' said Lobo.
'One video tape with footage from a hidden camera in the finca, showing four men participating in sexual acts with minors.'
'Are any of them known to us?'
'There's a defence lawyer and a TV presenter.'
'Joder,' said Lobo.
'Ramírez can identify one of the other men – a businessman who comes from his barrio. The fourth is unknown.'
'Who knows about this tape?'
'Ramírez and myself.'
'Keep it that way,' said Lobo, still brutal with rage.
'What about the arsonists?' asked Elvira.
'I don't think they knew what they'd stolen.'
'So, the only link between Ignacio Ortega and Montes's finca is that he installed the air-conditioning units,' said Elvira. 'You have no proof that he was procuring children from the Russians for use at the finca. And you have no proof that he brought clients to the finca to participate in sexual acts with minors.'
'That is correct,' said Falcón, knowing this had all gone wrong before he'd even started. 'The only way I could establish that he was taking clients to the finca is by speaking to the men on the tape.'
'Is there anything on the video that proves the footage comes from the Montes finca?' asked Lobo.
'That's difficult to say now that the building has been completely gutted by fire.'
'Have you had a report back from Felipe and Jorge about their findings?'
'Not yet. They probably stayed up in the sierra last night. They were still working at seven o'clock in the evening when I left. The lab technicians here will be working their way through the first batch of evidence. Hopefully there will be some surviving fingerprints on-'
'I tried to call you last night,' said Lobo.
'I had my mobile switched off,' said Falcón. 'I was working on my other case – Rafael Vega.'
'What progress there?'
Falcón gave his report on his meeting with Mark Flowers.
'I think I should have a meeting with the American Consul about that,' said Lobo.
'How does that leave you with your investigation?' asked Elvira.
'Juez Calderón gave me forty-eight hours. My time is up. I'm finished. I have no suspects and, unless Sergei the gardener turns up, I have no possible witnesses or leads,' said Falcón.
'What about this safe-deposit box key you found in Vega's house?' asked Elvira.
'It belongs to a box kept in the name of Emilio Cruz at the Banco Banesto. Juez Calderón has not had time to supply a search warrant yet.'
'You'll keep us informed when he does,' said Elvira.
'You might have to content yourself with the fact that Rafael Vega was a bad man who either punished himself or got what he deserved,' said Lobo.
'I expect Juez Calderón to terminate the case when I see him later this morning,' said Falcón. 'In terms of connecting Ignacio Ortega to the finca, we have one final possibility with the two bodies buried on the property.'
'Any thoughts about what happened there?'
'In the corner of one cell by the bed I found an inscription scratched into the wall in Cyrillic script. I'm having it translated. I suspect that it has something to do with the large stain in the middle of the floor, which I did not see until all contents were removed. The stain is likely to be blood. A sample of the concrete is being tested. In the mattress of the same room I found a piece of glass. I assume there was another piece which was used by the occupants of the cell to slash their wrists. I suspect that these two bodies were suicides.
'A local Juez de Instruction was being used at the crime scene at the finca. I would suggest that a Juez de Instruction is appointed to oversee the case here, as this is where all the evidence will be processed and will be where we hope to convict Ignacio Ortega.'
'That is being discussed with the Juez Decano de Sevilla at the moment,' said Elvira. 'What do you intend to do now, Inspector Jefe?'
'The obvious move is to establish a link to Ignacio Ortega by questioning one or more of the men on the video tape. Once he's confirmed as the central figure in this paedophile network we can bring him in and proceed in the direction of the Russian mafiosi – Vladimir Ivanov and Mikhail Zelenov,' said Falcón. 'I realize that the last element in that very ugly equation might be the most difficult to satisfy.'
Elvira's drawn features eased away from the intensity of Falcón's glare. They both ended up looking at the darkening cumin complexion of Lobo's furious face.
'For the moment, Inspector Jefe,' he said, 'in the light of what you've just told us about one of our senior officer's involvement in this case, I am going to ask you to do nothing and say nothing.'
In the silence that followed that request, which included a weighty admission, the questions started stacking up in Falcón's mind. He couldn't ask a single one. He said good morning and went to the desk to pick up the tapes.
'Best to leave those,' said Lobo.
Falcón's hand withdrew as if the wolf had snapped.
Down in the outer office Ramírez was sitting with his feet up, smoking. He put a finger to his lips, nodded next door and mouthed the words Virgilio Guzmán.
'I can't talk to you now, Virgilio,' said Falcón, walking behind Guzmán and into his chair.
'About what?'
'Anything.'
'What about Alfonso Martinez and Enrique Altozano?'
'One is in intensive care, the other has disappeared.'
'Enrique Altozano miraculously
reappeared
this morning,' said Guzmán. 'Doesn't that sound like someone who's been told the coast is clear?'
'It can sound like anything to speculative minds.'
'All right,' said Guzmán. 'Shall I tell you about Miguel Velasco?'
'I already know about him.'
'What do you know?'
BOOK: The Silent and the Damned
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