Voices of the Dead (25 page)

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Authors: Peter Leonard

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Suspense & Thrillers

BOOK: Voices of the Dead
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“I told you about the woman, the other survivor.”

“What’s her name?”

“Joyce Cantor.” Harry picked up his Stroh’s and drank from the bottle.

“She credible?”

“I’ve never talked to her but from what I’ve heard her story’s accurate, believable. She was there.”

“You better get her on the phone, tell her what’s going on.”

“I’ve tried. Her number isn’t listed.”

“Where’s she live?”

“Palm Beach.”

“I’ll get it for you.”

They were at the Lindell AC having lunch, burgers and fries, Harry glancing occasionally at the Detroit sports memorabilia on the walls. It was crowded and loud. Jimmy Butsicaris, the owner, making his rounds, talking to four guys in suits a couple tables away.

Stark wiped his mouth with a napkin, took his cigarettes out, tapped one out of the pack and lighted it and left the pack on the table. Benson & Hedges 100s.

“My biggest concern from a legal point of view,” Stark said, blowing out smoke, “you bring charges against Hess, a solid citizen, politician, successful businessman, Huber could tie you to the three neo-Nazis you shot. And he’s got the murder weapon.” Stark placed his cigarette on the edge of the glass ashtray.

“How do you know they found the bodies? And what connects them to the gun?” Harry said.

“That’s the chance you take.”

“What about the mass grave?”

“How do you put Hess at the scene?”

“Joyce and me.”

“It’s been thirty years. How can you be sure he’s the right guy?” Stark picked up his hamburger and took a bite.

“I remember him.”

“But you didn’t recognize him when the DC cop gave you the mug shot,” Stark chewing while he talked. Stuck his finger in his mouth and dislodged a piece of hamburger, looked at it and put it on his plate. “And you didn’t recognize him in the restaurant, sitting at the table.”

“I was distracted,” Harry said. “Had a few things on my mind.”

“You went to Munich to the man’s house and didn’t recognize him,” Stark said. “When did this light bulb of recognition go on?”

“There was something familiar about him, but I didn’t put it together till I saw him in a Nazi uniform.”

“I have to tell you, it doesn’t sound very persuasive.” Stark put his napkin over what was left of the hamburger and picked up his cigarette. “And since we’re on the subject, here’s another concern. Hess is a war criminal. He’s supposedly killed or had killed anyone with a connection to his past. Am I right? You think he’s just going to forget about you?”

“It’s crossed my mind.”

“I hope so.”

Harry brought the Colt Python out and laid it on the table next to his plate.

“Jesus, put that away. Are you fucking nuts?”

He picked up the gun, slid it back in his sport-coat pocket. “Here’s something I didn’t tell you. The night Sara was killed a Jewish couple were murdered in Georgetown, shot in the back of the head. I saw photographs on Taggart’s desk. Martz and Lisa were killed the same way. Nine-millimeter Parabellum shell casings next to the bodies. Fired from a Luger.”

“What’re you saying, Harry?”

“Hang on, it gets better. Before Hess hit Sara he’d been at a strip joint called Archibald’s. Dancer named Coco said she was sitting next to him, touched his leg.”

“Probably copping his joint,” Stark cut in.

“Hess had blood on the front of his pants.”

“Spatter from the Georgetown couple?”

“That’s what I thought.”

“You tell Taggart?”

“Yeah. He thinks I’m crazy.”

“I can see why.”

“It wouldn’t have mattered. Hess has diplomatic immunity.”

A waitress came and took their plates, asked if they wanted anything else, another beer? Stark shook his head. “Just the check,” Harry said. “It’s on me.”

“Okay, big spender, thanks.” Stark lit another cigarette. “Were the Georgetown couple survivors?”

“Taggart didn’t know.”

“How old were they?”

“He was forty-five. She was thirty-six.”

“Maybe the parents crossed paths with Hess at one time. Knows their names?”

“Why would he go after the son or daughter? Doesn’t make sense.”

“When did it happen?” Stark said, flicking his cigarette ash.

“August 2nd, the night Sara was killed.”

“All right. Let me see what I can find out.”

Stark called him at the scrap yard the next day. “The Georgetown couple are Mitchell Goldman and Sherri Shore. He was a dentist, successful practice, recently divorced and engaged. She was his fiancée and former receptionist.”

“Why would he get remarried so fast?”

“Maybe she was pregnant. Or maybe he’s a glutton for punishment. I don’t know. Both the dentist and the fiancée were born and raised in Baltimore. Both sets of parents also born and raised there. I dug a little deeper. Mitch Goldman’s ex moved to Florida after the divorce and took her maiden name.”

“What’s so unusual about that?”

“Nothing unless her name happens to be Joyce Cantor. That the connection you’re looking for?” He paused. “She works for Sunset Realty, lives in the Winthrop House. Condo, corner of Worth Avenue and South Ocean Boulevard. Trendy neighborhood. Phone number’s 407-642-3655.”

“She saw Hess coming out of a restaurant in Munich, recognized him, and went after him,” Harry said.

“How come she recognized him, you didn’t?”

“I don’t know.”

“Hess flew to DC to kill her. Shot the fiancée by mistake. Did the dentist, I’m guessing, ’cause he happened to be there. I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s got the same thing in mind for you, Harry.”

“We know Hess is good at shooting unarmed people,” Harry said. “Let’s see how he does against someone with a gun.”

Hess flew first class Munich–London, London–Detroit with a passport identifying him as Gerd Klaus from Stuttgart. Going through United States customs, a dark-skinned agent—Hess would have guessed was Hispanic—studied his passport, taking his time, in no hurry even though there were many people in line behind him.

“What is your purpose for coming to the United States, Mr. Klaus?”

“Business,” Hess said, friendly and polite even though it was demeaning to be interrogated by this Mexican.

“What type of business are you in?”

“Automotive parts.”

“Do you have a business card?”

“Sure do,” he said in his best American English. Hess had come prepared, handed the man one of his freshly printed cards that said he was Midwest sales manager. He had been speaking English for thirty years. He loved American cinema and had even perfected a Southern accent.

“Welcome to America,” the Mexican said, stamping his passport and handing it back to him.

He had reserved an automobile at Avis, waiting for a bus outside the terminal with the other salesmen in suits and ties. He rented a silver Chevrolet Malibu, two doors and a long hood, that drove like a truck, the steering sloppy and loose. If this car was any indication of American innovation, they had a long way to go before they would catch up to the Germans.

He drove to Detroit. He had booked a room at the Statler Hotel on Washington Boulevard, handed his car keys to the valet, checked in and was escorted to a room on the seventh floor. He made an overseas phone call to his secretary, Ingrid, asking if Rausch had phoned. Rausch had gone to Bergheim the day before to dispose of Colette Rizik and her mother.

“No, I am sorry, Herr Hess, he has not.”

That was unusual. But lately, Arno had seemed to lose his concentration. Hess gave her his phone number at the hotel.

At 4:00 p.m. Hess drove to a bar in a town called Allen Park, a gray single-storey cinderblock building, paint peeling, pickup trucks outnumbering cars in the parking lot. The inside was dark and crowded, men lining the bar, loud rock music playing. He was approached by a man in his mid-thirties, long hair pulled back and tied in a ponytail, muscular arms exposed in a sleeveless denim jacket.

“You Mr. Klaws?” he said, pronouncing the name wrong.

Hess nodded. He could see
Sieg Heil
tattooed on his right forearm.

“How was your flight over? I’m Buddy.” He extended his hand and Hess shook it. “So you’re the genuine article, huh? Never met a real Nazi before. Sir, this a real honor, I mean it.”

He reminded Ernst of the Blackshirts, his own neo-Nazis, a generation that was missing something, a generation that would never measure up to the high standards or the high achievers of the Third Reich.

“Ever meet Adolf Hitler?”

“I was fortunate enough to make the Führer’s acquaintance, yes.”

“What was he like?”

“Charismatic, mesmerizing, a born leader.”

“I’ll bet. He’s one of the greatest men that ever lived. I read
Mein Kampf
. Talk about a page-turner, I couldn’t put it down.” He glanced at the bar. “Want a beer or something?”

“Do you have the weapon?”

“Well, you bet. No time like the present, huh?”

Hess followed him outside to a red pickup truck parked in the lot.

“Step into my office,” Buddy said, grinning.

Hess opened the passenger door and sat on the bench seat. Buddy got in and reached for the glove box, opened it and took out a blue steel semiautomatic with a suppressor on the end of the barrel.

“Here she is,” Buddy said. “Silenced Walther PPK, exposed hammer, double-action trigger mechanism. Reliable and concealable. Magazine release button is on the left side of the frame, but as a former military man I bet you knew that. Holds seven plus one in the throat. And a box of extra rounds like your man Mr. Rausch specified. I myself prefer a higher-caliber weapon, something with knockdown power. What’re you huntin’, small game?” Buddy smiled again. “Extra ammo’s in the glove box. Total for everything’s eight hundred dollars.”

More than twice what the gun was worth, the American Nazi taking advantage of him. Hess reached for his billfold in the inside pocket of his sport jacket, opened it, counted eight hundred-dollar bills out of a thick stack and handed the money to Buddy. He slid the gun in his right side pocket and put the box of cartridges in his left pocket. “Do you know a secluded area where I can fire the weapon?”

“Sure do. Tell you what, you can follow me or ride with me. Your choice.”

Hess followed him out of Allen Park on a two-lane road to a rural area with farms on both sides of the road. Buddy turned left on a dirt road that went straight into woods, slowed down and parked on the side of the road. They walked through the trees, reminding him of the Vonderer Forest in Bavaria, big mature trees, high canopy of leaves. They walked in deeper and came to a clearing, a stretch of open grass that was fifty meters wide.

“Here you go. This is about as secluded as you’re going to get.”

Hess was going to try the Walther out on Buddy. Kill anyone who could identify him. But he might need another weapon or even the man’s assistance with something. Keep your options open, Hess said to himself.

Buddy’d read about the Blackshirts this neo-Nazi organization in Munich, Germany and wrote a letter:
To whom it may concern
, saying he would like to start a Blackshirt chapter in Detroit, Michigan, USA. And if any of them were ever planning a visit to the…f A‚ he’d be honored to show them around. He’d even put some Blackshirts up at his house in Hazel Park, a suburb of Detroit.

He didn’t hear anything for months, then got a letter from some guy named Arno Rausch saying a famous Nazi, Gerd Klaus, was coming to town and he could use some help procuring a firearm, a Walther PPK fitted with a suppressor.

Buddy knew just where to get it. He’d met Ed Stannard at the Gun & Knife Show at the Light Guard Armory a few years back. Ed, who everyone called “Ed the Head,” dealt guns both legally and under the table. Buddy’d called him, told him what he needed and drove out to his farmhouse in Saline that had tall bushy marijuana plants growing around the outside, looking like overgrown shrubs.

The inside smelled like weed and Ed had guns spread out across the carpet of the empty living room. Ed’d screwed the silencer on the end of the barrel of the Walther and handed it to him.

“Here you go, bro.” Ed’d said. “Don’t get caught with the suppressor, they give you like ten years.”

“Don’t worry,” Buddy said.

“Need any assault rifles? I can give you a real good deal.”

“I’m all set,” Buddy said. “But how about some ammo for the Walther?”

“No problem.”

Buddy’d been a member of the Viking Youth Corps and the Imperial Aryan Alliance but was between organizations at that time. He had 88, neo-Nazi code for
Heil Hitler
tattooed on his left shoulder, and
Arbeit Macht Frei
on his right biceps, German for: “work makes you free.” What was on the gates at concentration camps. And
Seig Heil
on his right forearm.

Buddy’s dad, Herb‚ had been a member of the American Nazi Party and used to goose-step around the house in his Nazi uniform: brown shirt, black tie and pants, red, black and white swastika arm band, peaked cap with the Totenkopf emblem on it. His dad preached racial purity to Buddy and his sister Tanya. He’d said, “Immigrants, homosexuals, nigs and Jews were polluting our society.” His dad and his buds would burn Mexican flags they called buzzard rags, and Israeli flags they called kike Kleenexes.

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