And as Seyss walked across the room and replaced the dossier on the mantelpiece, he felt a cold hand settle on his shoulder.Sachlichkeit.
“You know, Egon, you’re right. I wouldn’t dream of asking you for anything else. The information you’ve provided is top notch. The rest is up to me.”
Egon smiled confidently. “I’m glad you think so.”
“Come to think of it, I don’t think we need ever to speak to each other again.”
It was true. He had everything he needed. Moreover,he didn’t want anyone left to tie him to the murder of two world leaders, either. He had no intention of being captured or killed. He was, after all, a Brandenburger.
Sensing his intentions, Egon lost the self assured grin. “Erich, don’t be rash.”
“I’m not, Egon. Just smart.”
“This is ridiculous. Why, we’re practically family.” But even as he spoke, his right hand was delving inside his jacket, fumbling for an all too conspicuous bulge.
Seyss found his holster, unsnapped the leather flap, and withdrew the Colt .45, all in single fluid motion. Family? With a Jew? As he dropped the safety and tightened hi
finger on the trigger, the thought made him cringe.
“I might as well be your brother,” mumbled Egon, his words coming fast and loose. He had freed his pistol from his pocket, a neat little Browning 9mm, and held it limply in front of him, his hand shaking almost as much as his voice. “Christ, I’m your boy’s uncle. If that’s not blood, I don’t know what is.”
Seyss let go the pressure on the trigger, cocking his head just the slightest. His boy’s uncle? What was he talking about?
“Pardon me?”
And in that instant, Egon raised the Luger and straightened his arm to fire.
Seyss’s grip hardened round the Colt. Stepping forward, he depressed the trigger even as he raised the pistol. A split second passed, no more, but to Seyss it was all the time in the world. As a sprinter, he had learned to measure the world in halves of seconds, in quarters, in eighths. Somehow, he could see things more clearly when he was moving. Motion brought clarity, and clarity, understanding. Where others saw a blur, he saw an outline. Where others saw a shadow, he saw a form and could discern its intent. And so he knew he had won.
Squeezing off a round, he drilled a hole dead center in Egon Bach’s forehead.
Some people had no business touching firearms.
Chapter 47
It was raining when Judge left Ingrid’s apartment the next morning. The sky huddled low, a gray umbrella leaking fat drops that tasted like dirt and gasoline. Bilgewater, he thought, from the bottom of a sinking ship. He walked down Eichstrasse to the first main thoroughfare and turned right, heading west. Ingrid’s apartment was in the Mitte district of Berlin, on the western edge of the Russian zone. The area was a wreck, a maze of crumbling matchboxes. One building stood for every two knocked down. The place brought to mind a middleweight journeyman beaten to within an inch of his life and hanging on only by dumb tenacity.
He continued a block or two, then ducked under the striped awning of a stubborn grocer. The stalls were bare of fruits and vegetables. The shelves had a dozen cans of beans, corned beef and sweet potatoes. All American. Still, the grocer stood behind the counter, apron secured around his sizeable girth, hair a pomade lake, offering his customers a smile meant for a better day. Judge nodded and turned his attention back to the street.
No cars traversed the wide boulevard. No trucks. No motorcycles. In fact, he couldn’t see a motorized vehicle of any size or shape. The only thing moving at seven o’clock Wednesday morning were horses and pedestrians and both were hauling wagons and litters piled high with debris. He’d stepped back in time. It was 1900 and his mother was due to leave on the SS Bremerhaven sailing from Hamburg for New York on the morning tide.
The rain stopped and Judge ventured out into the street, craning his neck in either direction. Not good, he thought to himself. How could he expect to get around Berlin without a car. A streetcar passed, trundling along at a jolly five miles per hour. He could walk faster. A squad of Red Army soldiers shuffled by and in his nervousness, he waved hello to them. Slowly, the city came to life. A Jeep zoomed past, then a truck with a red star painted on its hood. Another Jeep, another truck. This went on for five minutes, interrupted only by the hacking cough of some ancient German sedans jury-rigged to run off a wood-burning fire. Two motorbikes zipped by in close succession, hardly more than beat up Schwinns with scrappy little motors bolted to their chassis. But Judge couldn’t care less about the size of their engines. Anything that could get him around the city at a decent rate was okay by him. His scavenger’s eye fell instead to the twin black saddlebags hanging over the bike’s rear wheel. Emblazoned in gold were a huntsman’s circular horn and the initials DBP. Deutsche Bundespost. The German Postal Authority.
Judge had his answer.
A last motorbike was parked in the courtyard behind the stalwart stone premises of the Berlin Mitte Post Office. It looked even older and more beat up than the others, its tires bald, more than a few spokes bent, broken, or missing. The gas tank was dented and the seat ripped, so that even from his position twenty yards away, he could see a spring or two protruding. Still, the bike had a license plate affixed to its front tire guard and the requisite black saddlebags;
Judge hid himself in a recessed doorway halfway up the alley leading to the post office and for ten minutes watched the postmen come and go. From the scant activity, it was clear mail service was only just being restored. He considered bribing a carrier for his bike or simply asking for a ride, but discarded both possibilities without real consideration. He needed the bike and he needed it now, without argument, discussion, or disagreement. Like it or not, there was only one surefire way. “The strong arm stuff,” Spanner Mullins liked to say, and for once, he didn’t disagree.
Running back to the street, he wrestled a sturdy stretch of two by four free from a pile of debris. He returned to his spot just as an engine sprang to life. A glance revealed the courier to be an elderly man dressed in an army sergeant’s field gray tunic. Taking a breath, Judge gripped the plank in his hand like a Louisville slugger and brought it to rest on his right shoulder. And as the cycle crossed the threshold of his vision, he stepped into the alley and swung for the bleachers.
It was another man who struck the mailman; a stranger who chucked him off the bike and gave him a swift kick in the gut for good measure. Better the postman concentrate on regaining his wind than giving chase.
Climbing onto the bike, Judge tested the throttle with a few tentative strokes. The chassis might be gone to crap, but the feisty engine growled magnificently. He steered the bike onto Blumenstrasse, accelerating wildly until the Post Office was far behind him. He had the criminal’s high going — the fast-beating heart, the clarity of vision, the sense of invincibility — and God help any man who tried to stop him.
Yet even in the crystalline delirium of theft, part of him knew he’d hit rock bottom. Brawling with General Carswell at Jake’s Joint, beating up Bauer, and now, committing what amounted to armed robbery. He’d been on a downward spiral since setting foot in the country and now he’d reached his final refuge: the lawless and wholly unrepentant landscape of his youth.
It was necessary, a rational voice preached.You didn’t have any other choice.
Stow it, his old self answered. The time for arguing was long gone.
At the next street, Judge veered left and didn’t slow until he’d reached the Unter den Linden. Ingrid had drawn a crude map of Berlin in the cloak of dust that layered her vanity. If he ever got lost, all he had to do was motor north or south — depending upon where he was in the city — and he would hit the grand boulevard which in the western part of town was called the East — West Axis, and in the east, (past the Brandenburg Gate) became the Unter den Linden. Once on this street, he could orient himself.