CHAPTER FIVE

HE WAS ABLE to do things others could not bring themselves to do.

Things others could not bring themselves to do.

His stomach fell every time Stag thought of Heydrich. Harry’s reaction was worse. A weight seemed to have settled on Harry since they left Jake’s.

“Our Reini. Our.” Harry stared down at the beer mug in his hand. They’d stopped off at the first tavern on Wuttke Avenue, another sad, run-down bar frequented by bikers.

Stag was at a loss. “You didn’t know,” was all he could think of.

Harry’s face was pale, and he’d grown quiet since they’d left Jake’s office.

Stag thumbed the moisture forming on his beer glass. “I mean, shit, the guy was painted over. After the war, someone could have sold it to your grandfather for a loaf of bread, and the name stuck. No damnation in that coincidence.”

“Nobody in my family had to fight for the USA. My grandfather was too old, my father wasn’t born yet.”

“Just because they didn’t fight the Nazis doesn’t mean they sympathized with them.”

“Yeah,” Harry said, unconvincingly.

“Your family was the best there ever was.” Stag had to pull the words from the cold place in his soul. The spot had frozen over since Holly had been standing by his side. And then wasn’t anymore.

“You and your family, out of the goodness of your hearts, took on a fucked-up, rebellious, completely charmless, thirteen-year-old. Your folks were all right. You can’t question that just because they had a creepy painting in their bar. They probably didn’t even know about it.”

“But what about the SD. The Sicherheitsdienst?”

“What about it? It was a security service. Every government has one. If we knew everything the NSA has done, we’d never sleep at night. Are we responsible for them?”

Harry seemed unconvinced. If anything, he got even paler.

“They were good people, Harry. Good people.” Stag swallowed a sudden feeling of helplessness with a swig of beer.

A long silence followed before Harry began to murmur his thoughts. “Back in high school I did a paper on Birkenau, the death camp at Auschwitz. Ever tell you that?” He emptied his glass and motioned for another. “One guy—he worked in Birkenau as a guard—he’d oversee gassing people all day long. Men. Women. Children. Men would cram them into the chambers until they could barely shut the door because the gas worked more efficiently that way. Here were all these naked and shaved people, families, mothers and babies. Total chaos and terror. One day the guard wrote about an incident. A little boy about five years old tried to stop in this mass of screaming humanity because a little girl ahead of him had dropped some kind of trinket she’d managed to keep. The little boy picked it up off the ground and chased after her, until he was crammed into the death chamber with all the rest.

“At night the guard would go home after seeing all this, and he’d have dinner with his family. In his journal, he would write about how excited he was to take his children to the movies in town. Yeah, all day he would gas other people’s children, nice children, sweet children trying to return trinkets, and then go home, and do something completely normal with his own, like he was the goddamned postman.”

His next beer arrived, and he took a deep thirsty gulp. “And that was the worst part about doing that paper, see? Not what the guy actually did in Birkenau, but that I had to explain the unexplainable. Here was a guy just like my dad, hardworking, responsible. He would go home at the end of a long day, and have dinner, and plan fun times with his kids, never thinking at all about what he was doing all day.”

He frowned, the shadows on his full face deepening into furrows. “We’re all capable of that, you know. We don’t want to admit it, but it’s really easy to just go along with things, and not think about them, not question what we’re doing until we’ve become monsters. We detach ourselves. Pretend what we’re doing is okay. We can do really bad things. Then go on, normal as pie.”

“‘Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities,’” Stag said, quoting Voltaire.

The chiming of glassware as the bartender stacked it was the only sound breaking the ensuing silence.

“There’s always worse though.”

Stag raised an eyebrow.

Harry took a long swig. “Worse are the ones that do give it a lot of thought. ’Cause they’re convinced they’re right.”

Image

The cell number had been listed in the name of Harold Gerde. 4EVER did his research. It had taken another nanosecond to find the address. But there was nothing at the listing except a defunct bar with civil sheriff’s tape across the door. He moved on to the other name: Stag Maguire, the one they’d talked to. That name came up in research as both Stag and the fucked-up name of Hyortur Maguire. But it eventually made sense. Hyortur was an Old Norse name for deer or stag. Maguire, it turned out, was Icelandic-American; probably—as 4EVER’s research told him—from people who farmed in North Dakota or Minnesota. All that was easy. What wasn’t easy would be getting information directly.

There was the obese Mr. Gerde who owned the phone they’d called the Dresdenhof on, and the goddamned Viking, Stag Maguire, who’d done the talking. The employer wanted information and for that they needed Maguire to tell them what he knew and why he had called. 4EVER’d been on the phone to Zug, Switzerland, for ten minutes. Fear was one method of getting people to talk. It wasn’t the only method, and there was debate whether it was the most effective. But it was certainly an effective way to start.

And that was how he was told to start.

He parked the Infiniti in the parking lot of Hyortur Maguire’s apartment complex.

4EVER didn’t understand what all the Nazi shit was about, but ultimately, he didn’t care. Nazis were other people’s scourges. His ancestors came out of the plantation system of the Old South. He was born to a welfare-mom crackhead on Livernois Avenue. If his IQ hadn’t been off the charts, there was no way a kid like him would have been offered a free ride through Harvard. Now he was one of the highest-paid independent contractors in the world. And he gave the Ivy League full credit for that.

Along with his thug life in Detroit. And a healthy dose of training by independent military contractors like Tarnhelm. They loved him in Zug. He was a rarity. He bought vertical auctions of rare wine, and he came with a genuine street cred and name. 4EVER.

Because when he did his job, you were “Deyah-d fo’evah.”

From the scrupulously clean windshield of the Infiniti, he watched a fat man in a dingy blue parka leave Maguire’s ground-floor apartment. It was Harry Gerde. He matched the mug shot from a DWI he’d gotten just last year. Now it looked like the guy was either having a stroke or drunk. 4EVER figured the latter because the hog staggered across the parking lot, skidding on the ice patches and righting himself as only a drunk can.

4EVER waited and watched, poised like a Zegna-clad bird on a wire. A bird of prey.

Rummaging through his pockets, Gerde found keys to the car in front of him. He opened it and retrieved three six-packs of Beck’s. Juggling them, he shoved the car door closed, and turned toward the apartment.

“Excuse me,” 4EVER said, getting out of his car. “Excuse me, sir.” He hoped the camel topcoat and the swank white car would keep the guy disarmed. Nothing like an impeccable white middle-class accent to generate trust in a black man.

“I’m looking for Mr. Maguire. Do you know where Mr. Maguire lives?”

Gerde looked a bit startled. “Yeah. He’s right over there.” He pointed to the door of the apartment.

“I’m with a law firm trying to reach him to settle an estate. We have some money for him.”

“Some money?” The guy’s triple chin went slack.

“Could you do me a favor and give him my card, Mr…. uh?”

“Gerde.”

“Where can I reach you, Mr. Gerde?”

“I’m right-the-fuck here.”

4EVER smiled. He didn’t know if the guy was being honest, or sarcastic, or stupid. Nonetheless, he gave him a trademark warm smile, letting his lip curl boyishly. It was amazing how much information people gave you when you just asked. He extended his Hermès-gloved hand. “Here is my card. Would you please convince him to call the number on it?”

4EVER watched Gerde’s reaction to his creamy, expensive engraved card. It was a fraud; of course, a beautiful luscious fraud of a card, but Gerde would never know.

“Okay. C’mon.” The fat fuck turned toward the apartment from which he came.

“Actually, I’m not the one who needs to speak to him. I’m really just here to deliver a message.”

Gerde sloshed around and stared at him with dull, alcohol-fueled eyes. “He’s right here, dude. Jus’ c’mon.”

“No. When he’s ready to talk, have him call this number. You got that?” 4EVER stepped closer to the guy. Gerde took an unconscious step back.

“Yeah, I got it, but why don’t you—” Gerde’s chins went slack again, this time in fear.

4EVER took out his gun.

He shot him, and casually stepped away as if he’d just waved goodbye.

Gerde screamed and watched him walk away, his eyes popped with abject terror.