Arthur Curtis got to the Kintopp an hour early for his appointment with Hans Reuter. The Kino was full already with a hundred film patrons in the narrow space, both men and women tonight, watching Sarah Bernhardt. He took his beer and wandered toward the screen, simulating a search for a closer seat while he looked for a back way out. There was none — which would make a fire a precarious proposition, and the effect of Reuter betraying him even worse.
The safer move would be to stay out of the Kino and nurse his beer at the bar. With an unpleasant premonition gnawing at him, Curtis emerged from the darkened theater and took a place at the bar. At six forty-five, a carpenter with his toolbox in hand and sawdust on his overalls came in, ordered beer, and drank it slowly, ignoring the entrance to the Kino and glancing occasionally at the street door, as if waiting for a friend. Arthur Curtis studied the man intently. The premonition grew sharp, but it took him too long to isolate the source.
The sawdust was what troubled him, he realized at last. German workmen were precise. They swept up at the end of every day. They would never step out in public covered in sawdust, even hurrying home from work, and this one wasn’t hurrying. He was barely touching his stein to his lips.
Art Curtis downed his beer, nodded a casual farewell to the barmaid, and pushed through the front doors into the street. He breathed in the evening air and glanced around the bustling neighborhood of shops and tenements.
As luck would have it, Hans Reuter was early. He was walking fast, his head down, either unconcerned that he was being followed or hoping like an ostrich that what he couldn’t see couldn’t hurt him.
Curtis made a lightning decision and took a huge chance that his initial glance at the street had correctly picked up no shadows.
Reuter flinched as Art Curtis took his arm.
“Let’s walk, instead.”
“Why?” asked Reuter. But his hunger for the money gave him no choice but to let Curtis set their course.
“We can transact our business in half a minute. Give me the name. I’ll give you the money, and we can go our separate ways.” Run our separate ways was what he meant — in his case, straight to the French border, the hell with the office. But telling Reuter they were under observation was no way to make him take a chance.
“His name?”
“They call him ‘the Monkey.’”
Isaac Bell had called him an acrobat. “What’s his real name?”
“I don’t know.”
“I don’t pay for ‘I don’t know,’” Curtis shot back, scanning the street ahead and behind. He saw workmen homeward bound, shoppers with groceries, couples holding hands converging on the Kintopp. Oddly, there were no cops.
“He’s an Army officer.”
“That much I knew already.”
“You didn’t know he was a general major,” Reuter replied smugly.
“His rank means nothing without a name,” Curtis lied. If it was true, such a high rank would narrow the possibilities to a handful.
“Would you accept a description?” Reuter asked.
“It’d better be precise.”
They were passing under a streetlamp and Curtis got a good look at Reuter’s face. A confident expression matched his smug tone as he said, “Thirty-five years old, medium height, powerful frame, blond hair, green eyes, long arms like a monkey.”
Thirty-five was unusually young for a general major in the German Army. But the rest of the description was too incongruous to be a lie.
“If you can tell me that, you know his name. There can’t be two officers his age who look like that. No name, no money.”
Two men gliding toward them on bicycles took PO8 Lugar pistols from the baskets attached to their handlebars, and behind him Arthur Curtis heard the carpenter burst out of the Kintopp and drop his toolbox.
29
Hans Reuter ran.
The bicyclists shot him down. He tumbled into the gutter. Pedestrians screamed, dove to the cobblestones, and bolted into shops. Art Curtis had already pulled his Browning. He whirled around and dropped the carpenter with a lucky shot to the chest, then spun back around and fired twice, wounding the nearest bicyclist. The man he missed returned his fire.
Art Curtis felt the hammer blow of a 9mm slug and found himself suddenly on his back, staring up at the darkening sky. If anyone had shouted Polizei!, he might have stayed on the ground. But no one did, and the men on the bicycles had Army pistols, and the cops had been ordered out of the neighborhood. That meant they’d been sent to kill him, which gave him the fear-driven strength to stagger to his feet. The man who had shot him looked surprised, raised his pistol, and took deliberate aim.
The Van Dorn detective did not waste precious time aiming at a target six feet away. He triggered his Browning, jumped over the body, and ran.
“You’re white as a ghost, my friend,” exclaimed the old Army sergeant when Arthur Curtis collapsed onto the bentwood chair beside him.
“Too much schnapps last night.”
He kept telling himself it was only a shoulder wound, except he could feel in his lungs that the bullet, which was still lodged inside him, had done greater damage. At least it hadn’t broken any bones, and for some reason there was no blood on his coat, just a tiny hole that a moth could have eaten. But it hurt to breathe and his head was spinning, and the walk to the sergeant’s beer garden had nearly killed him.
“Good German lager will fix that! Waitress! Beer for my friend.”
Arthur Curtis rested until the beer arrived, tipped the stein toward the old man, and asked, through gritted teeth, “Do you recall before you retired a general major nicknamed ‘Monkey’?”
The old sergeant shook his head. “No.”
“I heard it the other day. It’s such a strange nickname for a high-serving officer.”
“Well, he wasn’t so high then.”
“What? I mean, what do you mean he wasn’t so high then? Who?”
“I retired, what was it… six years ago? He was only a colonel, a very young colonel. What a man! What a soldier! You’ve never seen a fighter like him. They say he resigned his commission to fight in Africa. A guerrilla fighter with the Boer commandos.”
“Did you know him?”
“Me? A sergeant from Berlin know a Prussian aristocrat? What could you be thinking, my friend?”
Curtis gripped the table to right himself as a sudden burst of pain nearly knocked him off his chair. He put all his might into composing his voice. “I meant, did you serve under him?”
“I only knew him by reputation. He was admired. Still is, I’m sure.”
“Why did they call him Monkey?”
“Not to his face,” the sergeant chuckled. “Mein Gott, Colonel Semmler would have sliced their ears off and made them eat them.”
“Semmler… But why did they call him ‘Monkey’?”
“He looked like one. Enormous arms and big brows like a monkey.” The sergeant glanced about and lowered his voice. “Not quite the picture of the purebred Prussian aristocrat, if you know what I mean. More the sturdy peasant, like me.”
“I thought Semmler was a Prussian name?”
“Of course. And they said he’s a Roth, too — buckets of superior Prussian blood, if not the superior shape. My friend, are you all right? You look at death’s door.”