“Wishes, I think,” I said as I knotted my field scarf. Diana had been in my dream, but sometimes it had been Dalenka. One of them had told me something.
“Where to now?” Big Mike said.
“The castle,” I said, trying one last time to remember the dream before it was gone for good. “See if Sidorov turned up.” Sidorov. He’d been in the dream, too, on the road to Canterbury. “Big Mike, did they ever positively identify Joey Adamo?”
“The guy in the trunk?”
“Yeah.”
“Jeez, Billy, I don’t know. He was chopped up in pieces, from what I heard. They didn’t call Homicide, that’s for sure. Zerilli let Angelo Adamo have the body back, so I guess he was satisfied.”
My dad was a big believer in the subconscious. He always said the answers to most questions were lying around in plain sight, like the jumbled pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. According to him, the hardest job was to see all the pieces, to understand them, without worrying about how they fit, especially the ones that didn’t make sense. If things don’t fit a pattern, most people ignore them. But a good cop notices everything, then lets his subconscious work it out.
I’m pretty sure that sometimes, sitting in his armchair and staring out the window, Dad was taking it easy. Or when his eyes closed and his head went back, he might have been taking a nap. But once in a while, late in the evening, or after Sunday dinner, he’d jump up, pace a few times around the living room, tapping his index finger against his lips. He might shake his head no once or twice and stop the pacing, but then there would come the snap of the fingers, as if all the pieces had fallen into place.
I was close, but I was stuck at the head-shaking stage. I knew I had to look at this as one case in which all the parties were connected. I didn’t know how, but I trusted my subconscious wouldn’t steer me in the wrong direction. I hoped I could listen to it as well as Dad listened to his.
“Let’s go,” I said, grabbing my trench coat.
Big Mike took the steep hairpin turns up to the castle like a race-car driver. He had to brake at the last turn for a column of soldiers and a couple of constables. I recognized one of them from last night, the fellow who’d organized the Home Guard search for Germans. I told Big Mike to stop.
“Constable,” I said. “Any luck?”
“Don’t know if I’d call it luck, sir. We found one Jerry, straightaway. Gave himself up peaceably enough. But then that Russian fellow got himself lost, and we spent the whole night and most of the morning searching for him.”
“What Russian?” I asked.
“Captain Sidorov,” he said. “He asked if he could join us as we were forming up. I saw no harm in it.” There was a defensive tone in his voice, as if he expected me to blame him for something.
“Where is he now? Didn’t you find him?”
“Well, he got himself killed, sir. You were with him last night, weren’t you? Were you a friend of his? I’m very sorry.”
I didn’t know what to say. I stared at the constable as the weary Home Guard men stood around our idling jeep, obviously wanting to get home. They were wet and mud soaked, having gone out without rain gear, not knowing that they’d be gone long enough to get caught in a channel squall.
“I knew him” was the best I could say. I remembered I’d seen a pack of unopened Luckies in the glove box, so I got them out and passed them around, which brightened spirits considerably. “Tell me what happened.”
“The captain got lost, after we sent two of the lads back with the prisoner. We kept on with the search, figuring we had a good chance of finding him as well as the rest of the Jerries.”
“How did you know there’d be more?”
“It was a Heinkel 111 that was shot down. Crew of four, and they all bailed out. Searchlight crew saw ’em, had ’em in their beam all the way down. It promised to be an easy night, if they all came in like that first lad.”
“Sidorov?” I said, trying to get him back on track.
“Right you are. Then the rain started up, and we figured he must’ve looked for shelter.”
“Showed him the place meself, just the other day,” one of the Home Guard said. He wore corporal’s stripes and looked about fifty years old, thin and wiry, strong in spite of his gray whiskers. “I was with his group on the tour we gave, showing them Russians around our invasion defenses and all.”
“Showed him what?”
“The bunker. He must’ve gone in to get out of the rain. It’s supposed to be locked, but maybe we left it open by accident after the tour. Or if he had a knife, he could have pried it open.” Nods greeted his assertion, the sad sort of nod that gives off a silent tsk tsk.
“What the hell happened?”
“The bunker was stocked with about one hundred No. 76 Special Incendiary Grenades,” the corporal said. “Sounds impressive, but they’re nothing more than pint glass bottles, filled with phosphorus and benzene. The mixture ignites when it comes into contact with the air.”
“Don’t tell me one broke,” I said.
“He must’ve tripped in the dark and knocked a case down. The bottles are stored in wooden crates, half filled with sawdust. If just one went, it would have set them all off,” the corporal said. “Horrible, it was. The sky lit up with the flames, and we all took off at a run, but it was already too late. A concrete bunker with one small door and three firing slits, well, that makes for one intense fire when a hundred of them incendiaries go up.”
“You found his body inside?”
“What there was left of it, we did. He must’ve tried to get out, since we found him half out the door. If it wasn’t for his cap, in that bright blue color, we wouldn’t have known. It must have blown off his head from the force of the explosion. A small mercy, but quick at least. There were bits and pieces of his uniform left, a few you could see were that same color. And his pistol.”
“What condition was that in?” I asked, thinking about how small a mercy indeed.
“Take a look yourself,” the constable said, handing me a blackened piece of metal that had a resemblance to a revolver at least. The wooden grip was gone, and the cylinder was misshapen from the rounds exploding within it. The stamp of the Soviet star was still visible on one side. I handed it back to the constable and wiped the black from my hands, trying to put things together, listening to that small voice at the back of my head that was warning me about something, something about the dream I’d had.
“What kind of ammunition does that take?” I asked, aware of the eyes on me. The men were almost finished with their cigarettes and were losing interest in my question. “Anyone know?”
“That’s a Nagant M1895, Lieutenant,” the corporal said. “Fires a 7.62mm round. There were some on his belt as well, but they all cooked off.”
“I bet,” I said. “Is that pretty much the same size as a. 32-caliber bullet?”
“A little larger, but close. Why do you ask, sir?”
“Just curious,” I said. “Did you recover any of the slugs?”
“No reason to look for them, was there?” The constable was looking at me a bit strangely now. “In any case, the heat was so intense in that enclosed space, they probably melted past recognizing. What’s your point, if you don’t mind me asking, Lieutenant?”
“I was a police detective, before the war. Makes me suspicious of everything,” I said, thinking of Dad sitting in his armchair, waiting for the answers to come. “So, you ran to the fire, found there was nothing you could do, and went on with your search, right?”
“I posted two of the lads at the bunker, and then we continued, yes.” I tried to imagine the scene and work backward. Sidorov blindly stumbling into a bunker he knew to be filled with unstable incendiary grenades did not fit well into my vision of the events. Then it came to me, and I had to resist the temptation to snap my fingers.
“And you found only two of the three remaining German fliers, right?”
“Why, yes, how did you know?”
“It came to me in a dream.”