The Eighty-eighth Key, Chapter 23

88th key cover image

The Eighty-eighth Key

Part IV

Chapter 23

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Patrick/Frank Bullitt made his way from the lot as the loudspeaker barked his name once again: “Pat, report to Mr. Chalmer’s office…Pat, report to…”

He stopped at the water fountain and took a long slurp before he resumed walking, anything to slow his way there – and several others around the showroom watched with knowing expressions on hand, hoping he’d be fired for this overt display of disobedience.

Because over the past week Patrick had sold nine cars, while all the other salesmen had sold…none.

And now, on this Friday afternoon – payday, of course – they wanted a comeuppance more than anything else.

So Patrick grinned knowingly as he walked into Paddy Chalmer’s ornate office. “You need me for something?” he said, not a little insolently.

“Why yes, Pat, I do. Have you got something working?”

“Yeah, a broad lookin’ at that last 914.”

“Oh, well then, I won’t keep you long. I need you to help me with an errand tonight. Got any plans you can’t break?”

“Nope, I’m all yours.”

“Okay, that’s all then.”

“Right.”

________________________________

“After three months you’ll get a take-home car,” Paddy Chalmers told Patrick as they worked their way across the Bay Bridge – just as dark came on and a sudden fog rolled across the water like smoke. “Just one of the perks, I guess you could say.”

“Okay,” Patrick replied.

“You don’t talk much, do you?”

Pat shrugged. “Nothin’ much to say, ya know?”

“Carmine tells me you’ve put your hands in cold water.”

“Did he?” and Pat replied cautiously now because this was slang for killing someone.

“And I was wondering. What if we need something like that. Should I come to you?”

“Depends on the money, I guess.”

“And that depends on the hit. Yeah, I got that. So, what about a cop? You down for that?”

“A cop? You mean, like some guy walkin’ a beat?”

“No, a police captain.”

“High profile?”

“No, he’s a paper-pusher, a real pencil-dick…”

“All cops are pencil-dicks, Paddy. How does fifty sound?”

Paddy nodded. “About what I figured.”

“Okay, so next time I’ll ask for a hundred.”

And Chalmers laughed with him, then Patrick grinned – if only to seal the deal.

Once over the bridge, they made their way down to Hayward; Chalmers pulled into the airport and parked near a row of hangers.

“Now we wait,” Chalmers said, leaning back with a sigh. 

It didn’t take long.

About a half-hour later a small twin-engined plane landed and taxied to the row of hangers; Chalmers got out, motioning Patrick to do the same, and they walked out to the plane just as the right engine shut down. The pilot climbed out the door on the right side and walked down the wing, then he went aft to the small luggage compartment. Chalmers handed over an envelope and the pilot opened the little door, reached in, took out two duffel bags; he handed one to Chalmers, the other to Patrick, and without a word the pilot got in and started the right engine and taxied over to a fuel depot – leaving Patrick to commit the airplane’s registration number to memory.

Chalmers put the bags behind his seat, then they drove off northbound for Oakland, and, after a few minutes, they were winding through an area near the waterfront that seemed filled with abandoned warehouses, though there were still a few working enterprises here and there. Patrick watched Chalmers’ eyes in the mirror; he was scanning to the rear, checking for a tail as he drove about aimlessly for a half hour.

Then, without warning, he flipped off the Porsche’s headlights and turned hard into a darkened parking lot. Now, heading towards a closed-door Patrick expected an imminent crash – until a larger sliding door opened at the last possible moment…

…and as soon as the door slid shut behind them lights blazed-on and a huge warehouse full of men and painting equipment came into view…

Chalmers parked and got out of the Porsche, so Patrick followed…and it didn’t take him long to spot Callahan, busily masking off the windshield on an orange Porsche 912. Without a word, Patrick fell in behind Chalmers as they walked to an office and sat down. 

Patrick watched the Porsche they had just used drive off, but he saw that an older man now had the duffel bags, and this man disappeared into another part of the warehouse. A few minutes later a beat-up Chevy Nova appeared; Chalmers stood and made his way to the driver’s seat, Patrick following close behind.

A few minutes later they were on the Bay Bridge again, headed back into the city.

But Chalmers drove through the park until he came to a house out near the cliffs, and parked there Patrick saw the Prussian Blue 911 he’d sold to Mrs. ‘Kildare’ – aka his handler. Chalmers then took out a set of keys and handed them to Patrick.

“Get the car and follow me.”

“Right.”

Patrick walked over to the Porsche and got in, started the motor, and as quietly as possible backed out of the driveway. The Nova took off and he followed; a few blocks away they came to what looked like a moving van, only the back doors were standing wide open and there was ramp sloping down to the street. One man stood by the ramp and indicated he should stop at the bottom, and after Patrick got out a second man got in and drove the Porsche inside while the first secured the rear doors. Chalmers pulled up beside Patrick and told him to get in; they sped off towards downtown in silence.

“Smooth, Patrick. Pretty smooth.”

“Yeah?”

“Sorry, but I had to see how you handle a little pressure.”

“Uh-huh.”

“You know what I like about you, Pat? You don’t ask questions. Yeah. I like that.”

Patrick nodded. “Any place around here this time of night got a decent steak?”

And for some reason this made Chalmers laugh.

________________________________________

Mason/Callahan had seen Bullitt get out of the car and what bothered him most was how recognizable Frank was, even with the long red hair and the natty Ray-Bans, so naturally, the first thing he did after Bullitt left was to go to the bathroom and look at his own disguise. Full, bushy beard, scruffy gray hair, and clothes that bordered on ragged…but, yeah, he was pretty sure he still looked like Harry Callahan. ‘So the first thing I gotta do is stay away from cops, especially from San Francisco,’ he thought as he looked at his reflection. ‘Maybe I ought to go skinhead, chop the eyebrows a little?’

Then, banging on the bathroom door: “Mason, you in there?”

“Yeah man. Bad enchiladas…”

“Well, light a fuckin’ match and hurry it up.”

He flushed the old toilet and ambled out, still tucking-in his shirt, and Danson was there with one of the duffel bags that Bullitt had just delivered.

“What’s up?”

Danson unzipped the duffel and took out what looked like a small vinyl pouch, just like you’d find in the trunk on top of a car’s spare tire. “Take five of these and put them with the spare tires in those cars.”

“Just lay ‘em on top? That’s it?”

“Yeah.”

But for some reason Harry knew this was a test of some sort, that people would be watching him, checking to see if he tried to snoop around and see what was inside, so he went to each of the five cars that would go out tonight and dropped one pouch per car in the boot. When he was done he went back to masking off the latest 911, getting it ready for the paint booth – and he acted as if nothing unusual had gone down.

But the cop in Callahan had quickly deduced that the pouches were loaded with either heroin or hashish – the weight and feel unmistakable…

So, the group was not only moving stolen cars, they were also distributing narcotics; the obvious next question was simple enough: where were they getting their product from – because now he knew the ‘real money’ was in those black vinyl pouches…

When his shift was up he had just begun to put away his tools when Danson and two other men walked up.

“Got time for breakfast?” Danson asked.

“Yeah, sure. Can I wash up first?”

“Not necessary,” one of the other men said.

“Okay, ready when you are.”

They walked outside to a Caddie with blacked-out windows and Danson told him to get behind the wheel; once seated one of the other men instructed him to drive down to the airport in Hayward…

He noted it was a little past midnight and the sky was partly cloudy, the temp about 50 degrees…so it made sense they were going to meet a plane, maybe pick up more product?

But no one in the car said a word – until the turned into the airport…

“Turn left here,” one of the men said, then: “go down to the far lot and park.”

From there, all four walked out onto the ramp and out to what looked like a surplus Huey…

Then this same man, the one who appeared to be in charge, spoke again: “They tell me you can fly these things.”

“Well, I…”

The man reached inside his jacket, like he was going for a shoulder holster. “Look, Slick, either you can or you can’t. Which is it?”

“I can, but it’s been a while,” Mason lied – because Goodman had foreseen this moment, too.

“Prove it.”

Harry walked around the Huey and pulled the covers, then up to the starboard side forward where he opened the pilot’s door and climbed in; he heard the aft door port-side open, then it slammed shut after, presumably, the others clambered in and took their seats.

Harry reached for the overhead and flipped on the main bus, then he powered-up the ship’s systems one by one. He got the interior lights on and set to red, then found the headset and got it settled over his ears…and as soon as he did the intercom chirped to life.

“You hear me okay, Mason?” he heard Danson ask.

“Yup.”

“Okay, we’re going to the north tower on the Golden Gate. From there, take a heading of 2-5-5 magnetic. I’ll tell you when to stop.”

“Okay, 2-5-5 from the north tower until advised.”

“And, uh, no radios tonight, Mason.”

“Got it.”

Harry started the turbine and watched his pressures, then he flipped on the intercom again. “Uh, I assume no exterior lights?”

“You assume correctly,” one of the other men said, his accent from south of the border.

“So, no transponder?”

“You got it, slick,” Danson added.

Harry nodded…because that meant he’d have to keep the Huey under fifty feet, and at one in the morning. He dialed in San Francisco approach and picked up the barometric pressure, then set this reading on the altimeter.

“Y’all buckled in?” he asked as he pulled up sharply on the collective, and as quickly he dropped the nose and ran the throttle up smoothly until the flutterbug was racing across the bay…the skids maybe twenty feet above the waves…

‘Goddamn, but it feels good to be up here again, even now…’ he thought, realizing he missed flying more than he’d been willing to admit. 

There were several small boats coming and going across the bay, mainly to and from Sausalito, and he kept well away from this traffic – but in the end, no one challenged him as he made his way across the bay to the bridge. There he set his heading bug to 255 degrees magnetic and drove the Huey out to sea.

“What’s your airspeed,” one of the other men asked.

“One ten knots,” Harry replied.

“Slow to 20.”

“20, Roger.”

“Turn on your rotating beacon for thirty seconds, then power it off.”

“Roger.” Harry flipped the switch on the overhead as he watched the second hand on the clock countdown…

“There he is!”

“What?” Harry asked.

“Flashlight, at your ten o’clock,” he heard Danson say, and then he saw it. One man in a very small Zodiac inflatable boat, more like a yacht tender, was about a hundred yards away.

“Okay, got him,” Harry said as he turned to look at his passengers.

“Two of us getting out here, Mason. Thanks for the ride.”

“Right,” Harry said as he slipped over to the little boat. He heard an aft door slide open and prepared to counter the weight-shift, and when that was done and over with he turned to Danson. “Where to?”

“Mind if I come up?”

“Hell no! Come on, man…it’s too quiet up here!”

Once Danson had settled in the left seat he asked again: “Where we headed now?”

“Back the way we came, down in the waves.”

“Right.”

“That was the best flying I’ve ever seen. Did you go through the entire Army flight school?”

“Yeah. But, well, I got kicked out.”

“Army, huh? Hear that’s pretty tough.”

“The flying wasn’t. All the other bullshit was.”

“You instrument rated?”

“Yup.”

“No shit?”

“No shit.”

“I guess you wouldn’t mind doing more – errands – like this?”

“If the money’s good enough, sure thing.”

“Thousand bucks a run okay? In the beginning, anyway. Maybe some more on the big money runs.”

“I’m in.”

“You haven’t asked what you’ll be carrying? Why is that, Mason?”

“Because I don’t give a flyin’ fuck, Amigo. As long as the money’s good, ya know what I mean?”

Harry could see Danson’s grin reflected in the windshield, so he guessed that was the right answer…

_____________________________

Avi’s head of security was allowed into the cardiac intensive care unit one morning, though he had been cautioned to keep things simple and stress-free…

“How is she?” was the first thing out of Avi’s mouth.

“Fine, actually. Nothing to worry about.”

“What about her cancer? What do we know?”

“She’s had the surgery, and she did well. They’ll commence with one round of chemo, then six weeks of radiation, beginning next week.”

Avi took a moment to digest all that, wiping away more than a few tears in the process, before he continued. “Tel Aviv?” he asked.

“For now. But the doctors think she might be better off doing the whole thing at Sloane-Kettering.”

Avi nodded. “See if you can expedite that, Lev.”

“Yes, I will.”

“And…is there any news about Harry?”

“Not much. He is flying helicopters now, at least once this week. Colonel Goodman is concerned, however. He thinks the equipment is too old to be used as it is.”

“He’ll just have to trust Harry, I assume. The rest of the operation?”

“Sam and Al are…”

“Who?”

“Al Bressler. You remember, the one who lights his farts?”

“Ah, how could I forget. Go on…”

“They followed a lead into Syria but it went cold. They are now in Venezuela.”

“What the hell?!”

“A new lead. I don’t have the details…”

One of Avi’s nurses came in and went straight to the IV; she injected a sedative then turned and shook her head, implicitly telling Lev to cut his visit short.

“Well, I will find out what I can. I’ll be back this afternoon; can I bring you anything?”

“A stripper with huge tits,” he called out for the benefit of his nurses.

Both men smiled, then Avi continued in a lower voice: “Get Imogen to New York, would you? And find out what you can about Harry?”

“I will, my friend.”

And Avi nodded, smiled a little before his eyes clouded over.

The nurse returned then: “I doubt he’ll be awake this afternoon.”

“So, I should return in the morning?”

The woman hesitated, then simply nodded.

“What are you not telling me?” Lev asked.

“Doctor Cooley thinks he may be rejecting the new tissue. There is a new drug he’s trying to get approval to use, but if not, well, things could become very bad, very quickly.”

“Is there anything I can do to help?”

“Not unless you can get hold of a supply of this medicine.”

“What is the hold-up?”

“Well, the drug is made by an Israeli company, but there’s some problem with the import license.”

“Indeed. Tell me more…”

___________________________________

She was having a good day. Lucid, the doctors called it, which meant she knew where she was and what time of the day it was outside her little cocoon. She’d just managed breakfast when she went to her Bösendorfer; once her hands hovered over the keys she closed her eyes and cast herself free of time – and she was soon adrift on a sea of memory…the Old Man in the Cape staring at her knowingly.

And von Karajan was agitated this morning, too. He wanted nothing more than to see where she was taking this monumental work, but most of all how she was going construct her conclusion. At the same time, he was growing more and more fearful of this piece, fearful of its underlying power. She had rescored key passages of the second movement only the day before, and as she worked through the closing passages he had found himself weeping uncontrollably, his hands shaking and his pulse hammering in his head. What would older musicians do when they encountered such raw power? Would they survive the telling of her story, indeed, their encounter with such deadly emotion?

Now he watched her hands.

Porcelain white, like purest marble under Michelangelo’s hand, waiting to come to life again.

Then she looked up, her eyes roaming the room until she found him.

“You must not hear this, Herbert,” she sighed. “Let it be a surprise.”

“Imogen, are you sure?”

“I am, but help me with this notation before you leave me.”

He came to her, paper in hand as she placed her fingers on the deepest keys, those leading down to the eighty-eighth key, and he watched as her fingers searched for the meaning passed down from the clouds…

He had never, not once in decades of conducting, seen anything remotely like what she was forming…then her hand found the eighty-eighth key and she played the chord…

He felt his breath sundered, his vision fading to a vast field of limitless white stars as he lost control of his legs and fell to his knees. He tried to write, tried to get these sudden fleeting images of death from his mind, but he found the effort almost impossible. 

He stood, breathing again but with trouble, and he found her motionless – though her hands were frozen to the keys of her creation…and as he wiped tears from his eyes he finished the notation. But…this was just one chord, not a movement…

“Imogen?” he said quietly. “Imogen, are you with me…?”

Nothing. No movement at all, just a slab of cold, white marble…

Then, in a violent outburst, she grabbed the pages from von Karajan and began writing furiously, page after page taking form in the dead quiet living room of Avi’s house in the desert compound. In less than an hour she poured out the final vital passages that lead her to the eighty-eighth key – her shattering finale – buried deep within that one shattering key…

…and then she stood back from her beloved Bösendorfer as if to leave, and then fell to the floor.

von Karajan ran and knelt beside her, feeling for a pulse…

…but there was nothing to be felt now, nothing of this life remaining in her discarded body, and he screamed for the security detail…

…but she was gone by the time they got to her. Dead and gone, and now only the final chord of her life lingered on in the air – apparent.

_______________________________________

Harry Callahan left his little apartment and made his way to Water Street, then walked along the waterfront past Jack London Square on his way to the ferry that connected Oakland to San Francisco. It was almost cold out in the twilight, and a thick fog was rolling in on the tide – making it difficult to see if there was anyone tailing him. Of course, his instructors had taught him the very basic tradecraft, including the most salient fact of all: stopping too often to check for a tail was a dead giveaway in and of itself, and anyone with even a basic understanding of the art would pick up on his evasions in an instant. So…

…he just ignored the possibility and walked hurriedly to the ferry, needing to make the 7:30 crossing…

And once inside the little pavilion he bought his ticket and was able to board immediately. He made his way to a seat with a decent enough view of his fellow travelers and watched them board, and as the ferry pushed away from the pier he got up and went for a coffee. He turned and began to walk away when he heard a voice…

“Excuse me, sir,” an old woman said to him, “but you dropped this.”

“Oh!” Callahan said, patting his coat pocket. “Thanks very much!”

He pocketed the five dollar bill and went to his seat and drank his coffee, then got up and went to the head. Once in a stall he read the message from his controller, committed the address to memory, then flushed the banknote into the sea.

He still hadn’t picked up anything that even hinted at a tail, but suddenly he felt a nagging suspicion tugging at his coattails…‘be careful…be very careful right now…’

And Colonel Goodman had warned them all, and more than once: when you felt that nagging doubt in your mind’s eye, there was no doubt at all.

And as simple as that, he knew he was blown.

As the ferry docked he went to the rail to watch the soft kiss of home, and there he ran his fingers through his hair once, then scratched his right ear a moment later – signaling his handler to abort the meeting.

He walked down to Fisherman’s Wharf and grabbed a bowl of chowder, then made his way back to the ferry and returned home.

_______________________________

When he unlocked the door to his apartment he immediately knew someone had been inside while he was away. An unwanted smell, perhaps? Lingering body odor, maybe one cigarette too many? It didn’t matter, though, did it?

Why would anyone be tailing him, unless…?

And why would anyone search his apartment, unless…?

Unless he was blown?

And there, in his little living room, sat Danson…

…and three mean-looking hoods.

“Whereya been?” Danson asked.

“Went over to the city for some chowder.”

“Any good?”

“Yeah, I guess. One of the guys at work told me about this place…”

“Oh, where’s that?”

“Scoma’s,” ‘Mason’ said, looking Danson in the eye. “Over by…”

“I know where it is,” Danson replied, only a little too brusquely. “Look, we got a shipment coming in…a biggie…so let’s go – I don’t wanna be late.”

Mason nodded and followed the men out the door, still very much aware this might be a hit…then they walked to a beat-up Dodge four-door parked a block away and told him to drive again.

“Back to Hayward?” he asked.

“No, over to the city,” one of the other men said, this one speaking with a very pronounced ‘south of the border’ accent. 

“Man, I don’t know my way around over there…” Mason said as he looked at Danson’s eyes in the rearview mirror.

“Don’t worry about it.”

“Well, how do I get to the bridge?”

Danson sighed, more than a little put out now, then he told Mason to pull over. “You stay up front, but I’m drivin’,” was all he said, and after they crossed the bridge Callahan figured they were headed to Half Moon Bay, and probably to the little general aviation airport down by the water. He leaned back and closed his eyes, and soon fell asleep…

Only to jerk wide-awake as the Dodge rattled over a speed bump.

“You know what, buddy? You snore, and I mean you really snore.”

“Sorry,” Harry said as the Dodge pulled up to what looked like a brand new stretched Bell JetRanger.

“You ever flown one of these?”

“Nope.”

“Well, I hear it’s just like a Huey…”

“But…”

“But nothin’, Mason. You’re either our pilot or you’re not, got it?”

Harry nodded then followed Danson and one of the others over to the Bell, his stomach now in acid-drenched knots. He saw a battery cart hooked-up port-side and a fuel truck that was just pulling away as he climbed-in, and using a penlight he felt more comfortable after a quick scan of the overhead panel. He put on a headset and flipped on the main bus then switched over to the external power cart; when he saw volts were holding steady he powered up the radios and interior lights…then looked at the fuel tanks…

“How far out we goin’?”

“We got plenty of gas, Mason. Don’t sweat it, buddy…”

And that reply only made his stomach knot even more. He burped once…bile filling his throat.

He started the turbine and then switched to internal power, gave a hand-signal to the kid out on the ramp to unplug the cart as he watched pressures and temps build…

“Got a rough heading for me?”

“West,” a rough-looking guy obviously from south of the border said. And this one looked familiar now, too. He’d been on the first trip…?

“Two-seven-zero it is.” He looked aft and saw that Danson wasn’t onboard; indeed, it was only himself and this ‘Mexican’ Svengali.

“I hear you do pretty good at keepin’ low, man. So…keep real low for now.”

Callahan nodded as he added power and collective, and as soon as the little ship was about twenty feet AGL he nosed over smoothly and turned west. They roared over a small trailer park and past a huge radome, then he dove sharply after they passed a huge cliff that faced the sea – and then he settled-in about twenty feet over the waves…

“Make your speed like one-forty, okay mano?”

“Got it.”

Callahan scanned the wave tops as the ship skimmed the sea, his eyes hitting the instruments one by one – but only briefly… One second of lost concentration out here in the dark and at this speed there wouldn’t even be an oil slick to mark the point of impact…

After about a half-hour his companion broke the silence: “Okay, you can ease it up now, go up to a couple hundred feet.”

“Thanks.” And Callahan did ease up – a little.

Then the guy reached up and flipped on the rotating beacon, and Harry watched the clock intently – because after thirty seconds the guy turned them off again…

And as suddenly a small ship lit up, and, in the overwhelming darkness, it looked like the ship was afloat high in the sky…disorienting Callahan for a second and taking him back to that mad flight from Hue out to the Constellation…so many years ago…

“They will be heading into the wind, Amigo. You see the pad?”

And Harry saw it as he circled the ship in the darkness, almost amidships and with the orange triangle marked with a big yellow ‘H’…

Harry continued this wide, arcing approach then he came up alongside the ship’s starboard side, bleeding speed with his nose up about five degrees until the Bell had matched the ship’s speed. When he was settled amidships he slipped left until he was over the pad, still matching the ship’s speed, and only then did he flare gently, settling onto the ‘H’ with not even the slightest hesitation.

“You are a very good pilot, señor. Very good indeed. The last pilot we had couldn’t do what you just did.”

Men on deck hooked up a power cart and Callahan cut the engine, then switched to external power. One of the crewmen ran a static discharge pole to the rotors and then another ran out with a fuel bowser, refueling the Bell out at sea. When that was done the port-side passenger door slid open and a gang of men began tossing black duffel bags into the cabin…

“Got any idea how much all that crap weighs?” Harry asked.

“Just enough, Amigo. Believe me, I have seen the sharks out here, and I have no desire to swim with them.”

Harry nodded. “Swell.”

“So, your name is Mason?”

Harry nodded. “Yup.”

“Well, Mason, my name is Pablo. Pablo Escobar. Nice to meet you.”

Harry looked down at the man’s offered hand and he took it. “Yeah man, you too.”

And Pablo laughed at that. “Mano, you can relax now. You passed my little test.”

“Passed?”

“Yeah. The last guy? The one that couldn’t land out here? Well, next trip out was his last.”

And now Harry laughed. “Well, Pablo, I’m not exactly a great swimmer…”

“Neither was he.”

“Man, I’m gettin’ hungry…how about you…?”

And now it was Pablo’s turn to laugh: “Me too, Mason. Me too…”

________________________________

Avi’s head of detail walked into the CICU not really knowing what to say, let alone how he was going to break the news to his boss – who was if nothing else his very best friend, not to mention a man he looked up to. He walked over to one of the nurses and questioned her about the best way to…

“He can’t handle anything like this, sir. I mean it… You do it and you might as well kiss his ass goodbye.”

“I see. By the way, let his physicians know that the drug they wanted will be arriving in about five hours. One of my men will be carrying it in from Intercontinental.”

The nurse looked at Lev and her eyes blinked rapidly. “How did you…”

“Please, don’t ask.”

“Okay, I won’t. But Dr. Cooley sure will.”

“I’m sure he will. May I speak to Avi now?”

“Just for a minute…”

Lev gowned up, then slipped on a face mask and gloves before he entered the little room, and his ears popped when the door closed behind him.

“So,” Avi said, looking him in the eye, “you bring news? Is it bad?”

“No, my friend. Harry is well, and even now von Karajan is putting on the finishing touches. The premiere is scheduled for the first of June.”

“And, how is my Imogen, Lev?”

“She has been asleep, medications I think?”

“Chemo? Has it begun?”

“I have not heard, Avi…”

And then the old man looked into Lev’s eyes…and he knew.

“You were never a good liar, my friend,” Avi whispered.

“I can not see through people with your skill, sir.”

Avi nodded, then he seemed to relax. “When you next see Harry, please give him the package, would you? And tell him I very much wanted him to attend the premiere. It will mean something to him if I am not mistaken.”

“I will tell Colonel Goodman, my friend.”

And again Avi nodded his head. “If I am not mistaken, Lev, God is calling me now. You will pardon me for leaving you, but…”

Lev took his friend’s hand and held it close while Avi passed, then he went to the foot of the bed and began the El Maleh Rachamim, the Hebrew Prayer for the Dead…

__________________________________

© 2020 adrian leverkühn | abw | and as always, thanks for stopping by for a look around the memory warehouse…[and now, a brief note on sources: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need until work is finalized. Yet with current circumstances (a little virus, not to mention a certain situation in Washington, D.C. springing first to mind…) so waiting to mention sources might not be the best way to proceed. To begin, the primary source material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two seminal Hollywood ‘cop’ films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of the screenplay for The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. Steve McQueen’s grin was never trade-marked, though perhaps it should have been. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’/vigilante storyline derives from characters and plot elements originally found in that rich screenplay, as does the Captain McKay character. The Threlkis crime family storyline was first introduced in Sudden Impact, screenplay by Joseph Stinson. The Samantha Walker character derives from the Patricia Clarkson portrayal of the television reporter found in The Dead Pool, screenplay by Steve Sharon, story by Steve Sharon, Durk Pearson, and Sandy Shaw.  I have to credit the Jim Parish, M.D., character first seen in the Vietnam segments to John A. Parrish, M.D., author of the most fascinating account of an American physician’s tour of duty in Vietnam – and as found in his autobiographical 12, 20, and 5: A Doctor’s Year in Vietnam, a book worth noting as one of the most stirring accounts of modern warfare I’ve ever read (think Richard Hooker’s M*A*S*H, only featuring a blazing sense of irony conjoined within a searing non-fiction narrative). Denton Cooley, M.D. founded the Texas Heart Institute, as mentioned. Many of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed within the works cited above, but keep in mind that, as always, this story is in all other respects a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing historical fabric. Using the established characters referenced above, as well as a few new characters I’ve managed to come up with here and there, I hoped to create something new – perhaps a running commentary on the times we’ve shared? And the standard disclaimer also here applies: no one mentioned in this tale should be mistaken for persons living or dead. This was just a little walk down a road more or less imagined, and nothing more than that should be inferred, though I’d be remiss not to mention Clint Eastwood’s Harry Callahan, and Steve McQueen’s Frank Bullitt. Talk about the roles of a lifetime…given shape and life by two actors who will stand tall through the ages.]

The Eighty-eighth Key, Ch. 22

88th key cover image

The Eighty-eighth Key

Part IV

Chapter 22

____________________________________

Walking along Hesperian Boulevard towards Oakland, the man held his thumb out, hoping to catch a ride into the city. He looked grubby, and to most who looked at him as they passed, more than a little dangerous, and so car after car roared by without so much as a tap on the brakes. After a half-mile or so an old pickup truck pulled over to the side of the road and stopped; the man jogged up to the passenger and looked in…

“Where you headed, buddy?” the driver asked.

“Up to Oakland, I guess,” the man said.

“You guess? You don’t know where you’re going?”

“Not really,” the man said, shrugging.

“Well, get in.”

The man climbed into the old pickup and pulled the door to – right as the driver took off.

“So, you just getting here?” the driver asked.

“Yeah.”

“Where from?”

“Joliet.”

“Illinois? Wow, you do time there?”

The man nodded, looked out the window.

“Got a place to stay?”

“No, not yet.”

“You ain’t on parole or nothin’, are you?”

“No, free as a bird.”

“How’d you swing that?”

“Wrongful conviction, case got thrown out.”

The driver whistled. “Whoa, you luck out, or what?”

“Or what,” the man sighed.

“Got a name?” 

“Mason,” the man said.

“What do you do, Mason?”

“Mechanic.”

“Cars?”

“Cars, trucks – and I can do helicopters.”

“No shit? ‘Nam?”

“Yeah.”

“You know how to fly ‘em?”

“I was checked out in Hueys, but it’s been a few years.”

“No shit… ” the driver said. “What did you do time for?”

“Arrested – for stealing cars, but…”

“But you didn’t do it, right…?”

The man smiled and shrugged, and yet both men laughed knowingly.

“Well, Mason, welcome to the land of milk and honey.”

Harry Callahan looked around and smiled. “Looks like everything I hoped it would.”

___________________________

Avi settled in the back seat of his government car and flipped through a folder full of briefing notes he’d missed this morning, but his heart wasn’t in it today. He’d been with Harry for two months and he had to admit he was missing the boy. And he was concerned about his mission, too. Because it was dangerous. Even Colonel Goodman thought it was dangerous, but necessary.

Yet now, Avi Rosenthal looked at Harry Callahan as someone more than his wife’s son: after their time together in Switzerland, and at Goodman’s training camp in the desert, he’d begun to look at Harry as someone more like the son he’d never had. The son that the unsettled circumstances in Europe after the war had conspired to take from him.

He leaned back and thought about those chaotic days…

Trying to get from Palestine to Germany had been impossible, but then he’d received word from Saul that Imogen was supposed to be in a refugee camp in Poland, and that he – Saul – was on his way to find her. Avi hadn’t quite known what to do about Imogen after that…except to let Saul handle it.

Like his older brother always had, he thought – now somewhat sarcastically.

He’d found her, alright. Then he’d conspired with Lloyd Callahan to get her to America. And away from him, and their life together in Palestine.

And it had taken him almost twenty-five years to find her. And…when he did, where was she? Right under Saul’s watchful eye – betrayed, by his own flesh and blood!

And when they were reunited it was too late. She was as barren as the desert, and at night almost as cold.

And that put Harry Callahan in a unique spot, a place Avi considered carefully now. 

His party had asked him to run for prime minister, and while he had considered the idea – briefly – in the end, he’d thought it too politically risky. He had almost as much power as the PM but none of the political vulnerability. And running publicly would thrust Harry into the spotlight, wouldn’t it? And though a few people in the Air Force knew of his exploits, those could never become public knowledge.

But what if Harry embraced Judaism? What if he could be convinced to immigrate to Israel?

‘Don’t kid yourself,’ Avi said to himself as he looked at the passing landscape.

Because he knew as well as anyone that Harry Callahan wasn’t an American. No, he was a Californian, through and through. And while California just happened to be in America, Californians were different from all the other people who lived there…

Too bad, he thought. Still, he had to consider his feelings for Harry now that he’d been asked to run for office…

His car turned into the compound and pulled up to his house, but after he stepped out of the car his security detail met him on the walk.

“How is she today?” he asked.

The head of his detail spoke first: “She is with von Karajan again, going over final arrangements for the performance.”

“But, how is she?” Avis asked, because he could see it in their eyes.

“Fragile, so we took her to the internist yesterday, and we have news.”

“News?”

“She is ill, Avi. Very ill.”

“And?”

“Ovarian cancer, and it has metastasized.”

Avi took a deep breath, then he stumbled, began to fall…

And his men caught him, steadied him as he struggled to breathe…

He grabbed his chest, tried to get away from the pressure that had come for him…

“Oh no,” he whispered. “Not now. Please God, not now…there is so much yet to do…”

________________________________________

The man looked at himself in the mirror – and grinned.

His shoulder-length red hair was drawn into a pony-tail, and he was sporting a full beard now, too. He pulled his tie a bit, loosened it a little – then thought better and snugged it up again. This was supposed to be a job interview, after all.

He walked back to the conference room and the men gathered there looked up as he came in.

“So, your name is Patrick?” one of the men asked. “Patrick Flannery.”

“Yessir.”

“Where’s your family from, Pat?”

“Cork.”

“Well Pat, take a seat.”

“Okay.”

“So, your resumé looks impressive. A top salesman award winner and more than once, great numbers for two years running. But selling Mercedes in New York is an easy gig, don’t you think? So, I take it you think you’re up to the challenges of selling out here?”

“Are you kidding?” Patrick said, his face a stoic mask. “Selling Porsches in California ought to be about as about as hard as…”

“Don’t say it, Pat,” all the other men in the room said, laughing.

“Okay.”

“So, you know how this game is played, I take it.”

“Sir?”

“Don’t call me sir, Pat. My name is Paddy. Paddy Chalmers. And I’m the Sales Manager here.”

“Okay.”

“So, like I said, the stuff on your resumé – and your friends – tell me you’re ready to go, and without much training. That’s what I mean by how the game is played. Anyway, is that about the size of it? You ready to hit the floor today?”

“Yessir.”

“By the way, I like the hair. Kind of a laid-back Hollywood look, ya know?”

Patrick nodded, his face otherwise a mask.

“So Pat, we do things a little different here, but we’ll get into that later. Our mutual friends in Jersey vouched for you, so you’re in. Welcome aboard, and all that shit. I’m going to hand you over to one of our top producers, and he’ll show you the ropes then let you get settled into your new office.”

“Okay,” Patrick said, his face still impassive – yet vaguely menacing.

The other men in the room watched the new guy as he left the room, but they waited for the door to close before they began speaking…

“Boy, he’s a talkative son of a bitch, ain’t he?” one of them said.

“Hard as nails. That’s the word on the street, anyway.”

“Stone cold killer,” Chalmers said. “More than once, too.”

“No shit?”

“Yeah,” Chalmers added, “you don’t want to fuck around with this one.”

“So, you think he’ll play ball?”

“No problem. And we can use him for dirty work if we need to. At least that’s what Carmine told me. Apparently, this guy really loves the wet stuff. ”

“Any problem taking out a cop?”

“Carmine told me this guy is a perfect fit for the operation.”

“We can’t afford no shit this time, Paddy. If we…”

“Look, Sean, if this guy gets outta line, like last time we take him down to the water, take him for a little swim – ya know? Just like the last guy…”

_______________________________

Patrick walked around the showroom with a stuck-up kid from Hillsboro, listening to the salesman’s standard spiel he was supposed to recite…

“Porsches sell themself, Pat. People that come here generally know what they want before they walk in the door; we’re just here to show ‘em inventory and get ‘em the numbers.”

Patrick looked at the kid and nodded.

“So, you sold MBs back in Jersey?”

“Yeah.”

“So, pretty much the same gig. Doctors, lawyers, the usual characters, right outta central casting.”

“Uh-huh.”

“You, uh, don’t say much. That approach work for you?”

Patrick shrugged. “Usually.”

“Well, you got the next one that walks in the door, man. It’ll all be on you, so do your magic.”

“Right.”

“So man, our inventory is kinda slim right now. Twelve 911s and two 930s, a couple of 914s leftover from last year…”

“Discontinued, right?” Patrick asked.

“Yeah, replaced by the 924, and in my opinion it’s an even bigger piece of shit than the 14.”

“What’s the word on the 928?”

“We should get our first one in three, maybe four months. So, you heard about her?”

Patrick nodded. “Where’s the used lot?”

“Man, we ain’t got much used stuff. Anything we take in on trade, if it ain’t a Porsche we wholesale it out, usually same day. Thing is, not many customers come in with a trade.”

“Cash buyers?” Patrick asked, grinning.

“Mostly. Yup, looks we got one…” the kid said as a woman walked in the main door, and he even whistled his approval. “Yowza, man. See if you can get me her phone number, wouldya…?”

But Patrick was already walking across the showroom floor by the time the kid realized Chalmers was there by his side…watching Pat as he seemed to glide across the brightly polished white floor to the woman.

“How does he seem to you, Steve?” Paddy Chalmers asked, his arms crossed across his chest.

“Kinda stuck-up, man. Like a know-it-all…ya know what I mean?”

Paddy watched quietly as the new guy walked the woman around a white 911 Turbo, then over to a Guards Red 924, yet even from a distance, he could tell Patrick was steering her back to a 911.

Then Pat took the woman out to the lot and straight to a Prussian Blue Metallic 911 Targa, and Paddy could tell the new guy was a natural. “Get the keys to that one, Steve.”

“Yes, boss.”

By the time Pat walked back to the showroom for the keys, Chalmers had them in hand and met him at the door.

“If you get her there, tell her a thousand under sticker is the best we can do.”

But Patrick simply stared at him for a moment before he spoke: “I already sold it. For sticker.”

“You what?”

But Patrick was already walking back out to the Targa; he opened the driver’s door and helped the woman get in, then walked around and got in the passenger’s seat…

____________________________

“So, how am I doin’?” Bullitt asked the woman, grinning.

“Not bad,” she said. “But I think you should loosen up a little. You might be scaring these guys a little too much…”

‘She’ was going by the name of Debra Kildare, though she was in fact a Mossad agent assigned to the Bennett team, and regarded as one of  Colonel Goodman’s best operatives…and Frank would be reporting to her during the team’s opening moves. “Oh,” she said as she opened her purse, “you’ll need my license for the title, and here’s my insurance card.”

“We better take it for a quick drive.”

“Keys, please,” ‘Debra’ said, smiling as she started the Porsche and deliberately made a few jerky shifts on her way out of the lot.

“Anyone following,” Bullitt asked as he watched her eyes scanning the mirrors.

“No…nothing yet.”

They drove over to the park, and there they pulled into the aquarium and removed the top, stowing it upfront before returning to the dealership. They walked in together – and straight over to Chalmers, who was still waiting by the door.

“So, how did you like it?” Paddy asked as he introduced himself to ‘Debra.’

She nodded. “Any chance this young man could follow me home? I drove my car down this morning, and…”

“Of course. So, no trade-in?” Paddy asked.

“No. I’m getting this for my husband’s birthday.”

“I see. Shall we title it…”

“I have all the information here, Mr. Chalmers. We’ll register it to our production company if that’s okay with you.”

“We’ll take care of all that, and we can have your new car ready to go in a half-hour or so. Patrick, you have her papers?”

“Yes.”

“Well Pat, let’s get to it. M’am, we’ll be back in a minute or two, if you’d like to wait…”

_________________________________

Goodman’s team had done their homework, had put Callahan out on the street right before Nigel Danson drove from his mechanics job home to his place in Oakland. As the team had seen Danson pick up hitchers more than once, they figured it was even money he’d stop and pick up Callahan, and knowing Danson’s background they’d figured – rightfully, as it turned out – that Callahan/Mason would be an easy recruit…

Danson worked a legit day job at the Hawthorne Municipal Airport, working as a mechanic on small general aviation aircraft five days a week. But he supplemented his income by working at a chop-shop in Oakland, an enterprise that took in freshly stolen cars and trucks, switched out VIN numbers and slapped a fresh coat of paint on the hot cars before pushing them through a shady dealer network all over northern California, providing unsuspecting new buyers with bogus salvage paperwork – papers good enough to pass muster at their local DMV.  

But the real beauty of the operation was the network of legitimate informants around the Bay Area providing precious intel to the thieves, because several salesmen at these dealerships, most often high-end foreign auto dealerships, were providing this growing network with the addresses of new purchasers – as well as spare keys to the vehicles in question – in exchange for a cut of the action. Cars were then lifted in the middle of the night and driven to nearby trucks – that then covertly transported the stolen cars to one of the shops in the East Bay area. As soon as the fresh paint cured, within a few hours these lifted cars showed up in dealerships all over California, places like Sacramento, Stockton, and the Central Valley, and the profit margins made this new operation more than worthwhile financially. Yet, even so, the stolen car operation was just the tip of the iceberg…

And now Callahan was on the inside of the biggest chop-shop in the East Bay – learning the ropes under Danson’s tutelage – while living in a small apartment Danson had miraculously provided, and at an impossibly low rent, too. After one week’s work, Callahan took home over three thousand in cash, and this was in addition to his paycheck from his other job at a nearby helicopter maintenance facility Danson had hooked him up with. Harry figured he’d made more in one month doing this stuff than he would have in almost half a year at the department, and he found that more than a little humorous. At these wages, criminal operations would completely wipe-out legitimate businesses within a few years, and if you extrapolated these new, illegal synergies throughout the economy, organized crime would soon be the single most powerful entity in the region.

And this simply meant that organized crime rings would soon push aside more traditional political parties. After studying the nature of this trend with one of Colonel Goodman’s Mossad instructors, Bennett’s team knew this type of political collapse had already happened in Italy and Ireland, and even now Japan was suddenly at risk. If these organizations succeeded in the Bay Area, after already making real progress in New York and Boston, how long would the United States survive?

Yet the most important question remained unanswered: which nation-state, if any, was behind this operation?

And that, more than anything else, was what the Israelis wanted to know. And what Harry hoped to discover.

______________________________

Avi Rosenthal opened his eyes and looked around the room as best he could; banks of monitors winked and beeped his vitals; he could see two nurses in the room, one of them writing, the other injecting something into an IV hanging overhead…

He tried to talk but found his mouth taped shut, then he felt hard plastic on his tongue just as he realized his throat hurt like hell. 

‘I’ve been intubated, so I’ve already had surgery,’ the said to himself, trying to assert control over his emotions by rationally cataloging the elements of his surroundings…

He tried to turn his head and moaned as the pain in his chest increased, but this caused one of the nurses to turn his way. When she saw his eyes were open this nurse came to him, told him they could remove the tube now that he was awake, then she scurried off and was soon out of sight.

Then he realized the nurse talked with a very strange accent…

But Physicians soon surrounded his bed, poking here and prodding there, one of them pinching his toenails and watching fluid rebound, another shining a blinding penlight in his eyes, yet a few moments later the tube was gone – and in its place a searingly bad sore throat…

“Don’t worry, Mr. Rosenthal,” one of the voices said, “you’ll soon be…”

But Avi was focused on the man’s voice, the strange accent, and now he was growing very worried…

“Where…am I…?” he just managed to get out, his voice more a ragged, hoarse cracking sound.

“Houston. Texas. You’re at Texas Heart, Mr. Rosenthal.”

Avi’s mind raced… Texas Heart…Denton Cooley’s place in Houston. That could only mean one thing…he had a new heart…

The realization rocked him, left him feeling bereft of his senses.

“Are you – Cooley?” he croaked, but his soul screamed when the physician nodded. “So, new heart?” he asked.

“Mr. Rosenthal, you’ve been through a lot the past week. I know you have a ton of questions but we’ll go over everything after we get you through the next day or so. Try to calm down now, or we’ll need to put you under again, and that means another intubation. Just take a few deep breaths and try to think about something less stressful, okay?”

Cooley looked at the man, then at a beeping monitor, and a moment later Avi felt himself falling into the darkest well imaginable…

_________________________________

Imogen sat at her piano, her fingers wandering through vague shadows, her eyes closed as old memories came to her unasked.

Colonel Goodman was with her now almost all the time, and Herbert von Karajan, the conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, had rarely left her side since news of her husband’s heart attack reached the house.

She had dropped to the floor, crying at first but soon deep in conversation with another unseen voice. von Karajan hadn’t known what to do, but Avi’s security detail had. They carried her to bed and called her physicians, and the conductor had simply followed them inside her room – and had rarely left her side since. 

But von Karajan was a sympathetic soul. He understood the nature of music, the real purpose of the structures within a piece, and he realized that now was probably the most important time there was.

As soon as she could hear his voice, von Karajan had walked her to the piano and set her free.

And with pencil and paper in hand, he had scribbled down the symphony of memory that had burst free and come pouring from her soul. The music that came from this explosion shattered his soul, the beauty rendered him little more than a mute witness to the birth of something so utterly otherworldly…yet she seemed to be holding back one vital passage as she came to an obvious conclusion…

“Imogen? What is it? What are you hearing now?”

But she had nothing left to give and had begun to fall…

Goodman caught her, and the two of them just managed to get her to the bedroom. Guards were called, physicians were soon at her side.

“Dear God, Herbert!” Benny Goodman cried, aghast at her sudden implosion. “What are you up to?”

“You saw it for yourself. She is talking to God. She is transcribing what was said.”

Goodman tried not to smile, yet he nevertheless turned and walked from the room and spoke with Avi’s security detail.

“Is there any word on his condition?”

“The last donor heart was a match. He should be out of surgery soon.”

Goodman nodded. “I think one of us should contact Harry, let him know what has happened.”

“You can’t do that, Colonel. It is too soon. You could blow their cover, put the whole team at risk.”

And Goodman had then slowly nodded his understanding. “Are they in place?”

“Just barely, and we will need more time to get the Bennetts in place. Please, give it to them, or all this will have been a waste of time!”

“Where is Lloyd Callahan now?”

“If I recall correctly, his ship is en route from Hong Kong to Osaka.”

Goodman paced for a few minutes, then he walked to Avi’s secure phone and lifted the receiver.

“I need to get to Japan, quickly,” he said, then he listened for a while as other people passed along their advice. “Very good. Make it happen.”

He placed the phone in its cradle and walked from the house; his driver then took him to the airbase and dropped him off at the security hanger. His Falcon 20 began the journey east as other assets shifted in the long night ahead.

 

_______________________________________

© 2020 adrian leverkühn | abw | and as always, thanks for stopping by for a look around the memory warehouse…[and lastly, a brief note on sources: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need until work is finalized. Yet with current circumstances (a certain virus, not to mention a madman in the White House springing first to mind, and let’s just agree right here and now to not talk about age…) so that might not be the best way to proceed; and with my thinking along these lines first in mind I’d hate to have this story stop ‘unexpectedly’ without some mention of sources relied on here. Of course, the primary source material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two seminal Hollywood ‘cop’ films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of the screenplay for The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. Steve McQueen’s grin was never trade-marked, though perhaps it should have been. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’/vigilante storyline derives from characters and plot elements originally found in that rich screenplay, as does the Captain McKay character. The Threlkis crime family storyline was first introduced in Sudden Impact, screenplay by Joseph Stinson. The Samantha Walker character derives from the Patricia Clarkson portrayal of the pivotal television reporter found in The Dead Pool, screenplay by Steve Sharon, story by Steve Sharon, Durk Pearson, and Sandy Shaw.  I have to credit the Jim Parish, M.D., character first seen in the Vietnam segments to John A. Parrish, M.D., author of the most fascinating account of an American physician’s tour of duty in Vietnam – and as found in his autobiographical 12, 20, and 5: A Doctor’s Year in Vietnam, a book worth noting as one of the most stirring accounts of modern warfare I’ve ever read (think Richard Hooker’s M*A*S*H, only featuring a blazing sense of irony conjoined within a searing non-fiction narrative). Many of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed within the works cited above, but keep in mind that, as always, this story is in all other respects a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing historical fabric. Using the established characters referenced above, as well as a few new characters I’ve managed to come up with here and there, I hoped to create something new – perhaps a running commentary on the times we’ve shared? And the standard disclaimer also here applies: no one mentioned in this tale should be mistaken for persons living or dead. This was just a little walk down a road more or less imagined, and nothing more than that should be inferred, though I’d be remiss to not mention Clint Eastwood’s Harry Callahan. Talk about the role of a lifetime…given life by an actor for the ages.]

The Eighty-eighth Key, Ch. 21

88th key cover image

Okay, a little housekeeping before we get underway.

First, I’d hoped to wind this story down by chapter 21, but more and more changes to the original outline have forced a rethink on that… So, looking at a few more chapters (at a minimum), it was either do that or write one massive ‘War and Peace’ length chapter; in the end I’ve decided to break the conclusion down into smaller bits. Today’s chapter is a shorty and will wind down part three of the tale. Chapter 22 will begin Part IV.

Assuming no new stoppages to non-emergent surgeries, I’m going under the knife in early August, so Harry’s story needs to be done before that happens – one way or another. But another story will wrap by then, as well. The working title is ‘Saturday in the Park,’ and I’d say this newest story is more than halfway complete. I wanted to get this info out to you as it is quite possible that, if I finish ‘Saturday’ first, I’ll go ahead and post it before ’88’ wraps up.

So, assuming no major interruptions, both Harry and this new story will be out by the end of the month, and ‘Saturday’ won’t be released in chapter form. Its just one long piece so when it comes out that’s all she wrote, folks…the fat lady will be singing.

These are mad times. Covid has become a surreal part of our day to day routine now, if a most unwelcome part, and Putin’s Puppet (aka Herr Trump) seems to be doing his very best to completely destabilize the world between now and November. Some of you live in parts of the world that are easing up a bit, while others (mostly in the good ole US of A) are still battening down the hatches in one way or another. One way or another, this story has touched us all, and we aren’t close to the end of this tale.

One coping mechanism for many of us has been movies on the various streaming services, and I’ve got a couple of recomendations to share with you. If you’ve got Netflix, I’ve got to mention The Titan as one of the better sci-fi flicks I’ve seen in a while. Their recent documentary on Jeffrey Epstein ought to make your skin crawl, too. Over on Amazon Prime, I ran across a little bit of 60s Cold War nuclear paranoia that you might want to check out, titled The Flight That Disappeared. Really bad score, but the story asks a few important questions in a more-or-less fanciful setting. One last item to put in your pipe…Prometheus and Alien: Covenant ought to be considered as one long thought piece that, in many ways, takes off where Bladerunner left us (and I’d say the Bladerunner sequel, too). The Prometheus storyline is David’s, while Covenant belongs to Walter, but think of David as a stand-in for teleological ethical theory, and Walter as a Deontological döppelganger, while the humans – especially in Covenant – are idiots completely unfit to be roaming around the galaxy. If Ridley Scott gets green-lighted to make his conclusion, it ought to be a real barn burner, but I bring these two up now because there just seems to be something about the current zeitgeist that fits this storyline. Anyway, watch ’em and think about it, and I’d love to hear your thoughts.

Anyway, let’s jump back into Harry’s story…

The Eighty-eighth Key

Part III

Chapter 21

____________________________________

Walking up to the wreck, Callahan thought it looked like an old Soviet T-54 main battle tank, but now, after several years under the desert sun, the original dark green paint had given way to a lizard-like patchwork of rusty tans and grays, the main turret punctured in at least two places by, he assumed, an Israeli tank that had scored a hard kill then moved swiftly on to the next encounter. 

You had lived on this battlefield by keeping your wits about you, or you died – and quickly, too. But wasn’t it the same on any field of combat, Callahan thought. Nothing had changed since Roman legions walked these plains, and as long as humans chose conflict over coexistence nothing ever would change

But right now he was looking for cover, because he could hear several helicopters – and they would be flying a standard search grid, looking for him – headed up the valley in his direction. He found what he needed by crawling under the shattered bulk of the tank’s main hull, and he waited for the first helicopter to show itself.

It didn’t take long.

The Huey flew over the tank once, then circled before setting down twenty meters away.

And as the rotors spun down his round-faced instructor stepped out of the Huey and walked right up to Callahan…

“Could you possibly have found a more obvious place to hide, Inspector Callahan?” Colonel ‘Benny’ Goodman cried. “Really! Have you not listened to one thing we’ve tried to cram inside that nonsensically thick skull of yours!”

Harry pulled himself out of hiding, brushing sand and gravel off his uniform as he stood, but then he jumped back when the colonel pulled out a holstered Beretta and fired three rounds into the sand by his feet.

“Let alone, Inspector Callahan, that in this heat every cobra within a hundred miles will try to find shade this complete!”

Callahan looked down at the still-writhing snake and shuddered.

“Well, I guess it wasn’t a total loss, Callahan. You evaded for fifty-five hours; not bad for your second time out.”

Callahan stood motionless long after the colonel had turned and started back to the Huey.

“Well, come on, Inspector! Or do you want to walk all the way back to camp!”

‘Camp’ was an odd assortment of tents clustered between a few dozen palms that rimmed a small spring-fed watering hole not far from the Dead Sea. The desert here was warm during the day and positively cold at night, and after two nights of sleeping in the rough Callahan was whipped. He wanted a shower and a steak – in no particular order – then about twenty-four hours of serious rack time…

But no…that was not to be.

He was the first picked-up, but an hour later Al Bressler arrived – looking dejected, at least until he found he’d beaten Callahan…

Then Bullitt arrived – looking worn-out – and put-out. 

That left the Bennetts – Sam and Stacy. She was doing pretty good, too, considering she was dead. Or supposed to be, anyway. After the Israelis found the FBI had been penetrated the decision had been made to get her off the streets, and Jim Parish had been recruited to complete the deception. Still, not even the Israelis had considered the scale of the attack that took out Chip Bennett.

Stacy had some serious training under her belt from the FBI Academy in Quantico, but Sam had been a Marine in the war, so it was still even money who might be toughest of the two. 

“So?” Frank asked the group as he settled in with a bottle of cold water. “Who’s gonna last the longest?”

‘Who cares,’ thought Callahan.

Turned out everyone assumed Sam would come in well before his sister, because – of course – he was much older and therefore had to be in worse shape.

Stacy Bennett came in on the next Huey.

And the Israelis had yet to find Sam, and now Colonel Goodman was growing a little concerned.

“Suppose he fell into a ravine?” the colonel’s aide said.

“Or maybe a cobra found him?” Callahan added, still coming to terms with how close he’d come to another fatal encounter with the snakes out there.

They heard another helicopter approaching, but this one was coming from the coast, yet everyone gathered near the pad and waited for it to arrive.

But no, two new instructors jumped out before the heavy transport helicopter thudded away back to the northwest. 

Six hours later – a little after midnight – Sam stepped out of another Huey and joined the team in their mess tent for a quick de-brief, then everyone filed out and found their way to a tent for some sleep; not an hour later the sound of grenades and machine-gun fire filled the air, and the team bolted from their tents – running low to the ground to prepared trenches – only to be told this latest drill was over.

Callahan grumbled as he crawled back into his sleeping bag, wondering what the hell had happened to the comfortable little world he’d left behind in Switzerland…until he found a dead cobra coiled up on top of his sleeping bag.

“Swell,” he growled…but he was too tired to bitch about Goodman’s sick sense of humor just now…

_______________________________

Saul Rosenthal watched British troops loading German prisoners onto transport lorries, yet he was surprised by his lack of emotion as he watched the scene unfold.

“What a fucking waste,” was about all he could think to say as he looked back over the last ten years. A simpleton, really, a raving Austrian lunatic had appealed to the very worst in human nature, a deeply embedded populist anti-semitism combined with a sense of Aryan superiority, and with this divisive hate as his weapon of choice, Hitler had turned an industrious, democratic society in on itself, and he had taken Europe down the same rabbit hole with him. Not even twenty years after the end of the last war. Like a pendulum swinging back and forth between ever widening extremes, Hitler had exposed the raw edges of humanity’s desire for self immolation to a new light of day; he then watered and fed these impulses until the impulse became undeniable. And unstoppable – at least within the confines of Europe.

Rosenthal had watched as Hitler’s brand of divisiveness spread from the Tirol to Bavaria, from greater Germany to France and Italy. Hitler’s brand of hate wasn’t unique, either; it had laid dormant in Europe for ages, the virulence breaking out every fifty years or so, and he knew it would break out again. Hitler had tapped into this same awesome power of hatred just as the next populist leader would – wherever that might be – and humanity would be dragged kicking and screaming down into the warrens once again.

“Maybe Avi is correct,” Saul said to the wind as the last German troops were transported from Denmark. “Maybe Palestine is the answer. Perhaps the world will simply leave us alone.”

But Avi was the traitor that had leaked the scientist’s departure information to the Gestapo, and all in an effort to arrange his marriage to Imogen. 

And he had vowed to kill his brother, hadn’t he?

But how? How do you kill your own flesh and blood without becoming the very evil you hope to destroy?

Then he was hit by the thought: How could the liberal democrats of the Weimar Republic have killed Hitler – without becoming the very thing they wanted to destroy?

But was the equation ever really so simple?

Probably not.

If left as things stood now, he thought, humanity was doomed to cycle between altruistic periods of intellectual expansion and regressive interludes of irrational mysticism. Yet, if a strict balance was maintained between the two cycles, human development might be stymied; the only way forward would be to keep the irrational mysticism ‘within’ – somehow – under control.

So…how could he keep Avi under control?

‘Avi wants Imogen most of all, correct?’ Saul said to himself. ‘That means he wants a future only she can provide. And that means he wants to take her to Palestine.’

He found himself walking along the waterfront – several British-flagged cargo ships off-loading medical supplies. The shipping area was only now coming alive, after several weeks of bombing and resistance activity, and it felt good to see the city coming back to life. Seamen from all over the British Commonwealth were crawling around the wharves but in amongst this vibrant throng he saw a new, very different queue forming quayside…of refugees, if the look of the tattered scarecrows waiting there meant anything at all, and taken as a whole this looked like a very malnourished group…

‘But…what if I deny Avi the future he craves? Would that be punishment enough for his many betrayals?’

He looked at the ships as he walked along the water’s edge, the rough contours of a plan taking shape as he looked at the destitute scarecrows gathered in the shadows of a broken world. ‘I’ve got to keep her away from Avi, whatever I do. Somehow, I’ve got to break this new cycle he seems intent on starting…’

_____________________________

After another day in the desert Callahan was exhausted and his body felt sore all over, but so too did they all – though the oldest among them, Sam Bennett, still seemed the most ‘on the ball’ – both physically and emotionally. Harry knew Sam was carrying the heaviest burden of those in their little group – the death of his son – yet as far as Chip’s murder was concerned Sam’s sister Stacy seemed to have been the most adversely affected. The ‘attack’ had been uncovered only hours before it happened, and the advance word was a sniper was going to try to take out Stacy. The bomb in Frank’s Porsche had taken everyone, including the Israelis, by surprise; now Sam was intent on revenge and his fury burned with a ferocity that really troubled Stacy.

Yet, after talking with Stacy, Harry learned that what bothered her most of was much simpler, if far more deadly. Someone in the Bureau had ‘burned’ her, had been providing the Bay Area Vigilante Group with detailed reports of her whereabouts – details that had been known only to a very small group of people – and she knew once this person was uncovered they would surely be killed. The problem – for Stacy, anyway – was that every person on that list was a friend. The solution – as she now understood it – involved getting her close enough to the traitor to take him out. and as she told Callahan what she knew so far he began to see the dimensions of her problem. No matter how this turned out, if she took out an agent there was no way she could go back to work for the Bureau. Extrajudicial killings were not tolerated within law enforcement for all the obvious legal and moral reasons, and by ‘going off the reservation’ like this, it would make her a real pariah. 

They were gathering now, after shooting practice out in the desert, in the tent that they’d been using for classroom training, and after they settled in their seats Colonel ‘Benny’ Goodman came in – carrying several file folders that he put on a folding table well away from the tent’s floppy entry. Callahan watched carefully while the old Israeli set out his materials; he knew Goodman well enough by now to see that something was troubling him – and Callahan found that vaguely unsettling too.

“Good evening,” Goodman said as he pulled up a chair and, leaning on the chair, faced the group.

“What’s wrong, Benny?” Sam Bennett asked, for everyone had picked-up on the old man’s sour expression and agitated expression.

Goodman steepled his hands on his knee and nodded. “How many of you know Captain Jerome McKay?”

“Pencil Dick?” Callahan and Frank Bullitt at once, causing everyone – but Goodman, who looked confused – to laugh a little.

“Pencil Dick?” Goodman asked.

Sam Bennett cleared his throat, trying to hide his grin behind a deepening scowl: “McKay is,” Sam began, “an officious, pompous little know-it-all, Benny. He earned the name by being more concerned with budgets than with officer safety.”

“But…Pencil Dick?” Goodman repeated, and Frank held up his fist with only his little finger extended, and this he wagged bag-and-forth a few times.

“Ah,” Goodman said, his understanding now apparent.

“What about McKay,” Harry asked.

Goodman took a deep breath then dove in: “Well, it seems your Captain McKay might be the leader of the network.”

Callahan burst out laughing. “McKay? Are you fucking kidding me? He couldn’t lead a blind man to a goddamn urinal!”

Goodman fed a tape into the hulking reel-to-reel deck on the table and pushed play; scratchy audio filled the tent and Harry could hear cars in the background, as well as sounds you might hear in a busy restaurant, like the recording had been made somewhere like a sidewalk café…

‘What do we have on him?’ one voice could be heard asking.

‘Enough to compromise his chances in the election,’ a second voice said.

‘Photos?’

‘And audio.’

‘What does McKay want to do?’

‘Jerry? Fuck, he wants to kill the fucker…’

Goodman switched off the tape and looked at Bennett. “Well?”

Sam shook his head. “I don’t buy it. They knew they were being watched and they’re setting him up…”

Goodman nodded then looked directly at Bullitt.

“You’ve got something else, don’t you?” Frank said – but Goodman only nodded – before he took a file folder from the table. 

Goodman took several photos from the file then held them out: “Frank, tell me who you see…”

Frank rifled through the images and everyone saw his hands start shaking.

“That’s McKay, alright,” Bullitt snarled.

“And who else, Frank?”

“Senator Walter Fucking Chalmers.”

Sam Bennett whistled then let that settle-in for a moment – before deciding to speak, then: “Okay Benny, what are you not telling us?”

“Well, it looks like, from the information we’ve gathered so far, that the McKay group is either trying to influence Chalmers, or they’re trying to recruit him.”

Bullitt shook his head. 

“What is it, Frank?” Goodman said, wanting to draw this out slowly, let his students come to their own conclusion.

Bullitt scowled before he spoke this time: “If there’s a national leader, it’s Chalmers.”

“Why?”

“Because the bastard always looks for the easy way, that’s why. No scruples. No morals. He’s a psychopath who doesn’t care who or what he runs over on his path to glory.”

Sam Bennett coughed. “You said national, Frank. Why?”

But Bullitt grinned before he spoke again: “Because he’s already formed an exploratory committee, Sam.”

“For what, Frank?” Goodman asked – only now somewhat coyly.

“For president, Benny,” Frank grinned.

“Our sources say he made a name for himself going after the mob,” Goodman said now, leading them to a new conclusion.

“That’s right,” Frank replied.

“The Mafia?” Goodman added.

“Yeah, of course.”

“So, the Italian mob?”

“Yes, Benny, the Italians.”

“So,” Goodman smiled, “the Italians. But just out of curiosity, Frank, are there any other ethnically focused organized crime rings working out of the city?”

“The Chinese,” Callahan said.

“There is growing activity among the Vietnamese refugee community…” Stacy Bennett shared.

“What about the Threlkis family?” Goodman asked Callahan. “Who are they linked to?”

“The Italian syndicate down in L.A.,” Harry replied.

“Okay,” Goodman sighed. “Who have we left out?”

Silence.

Goodman looked around the tent. “Anyone?”

No one spoke.

“Okay. So, Miss Bennett, you work out of the Boston Bureau offices, correct?”

“Yes,” Stacy said, looking a little uncomfortable.

“And what ethnic group runs the biggest syndicate in Boston?”

“Evenly split,” she said, “between the Italians and the Irish.”

“Ah, the Irish,” Goodman said, smiling. “Anyone know Walter Chalmers’s ethnicity?”

“Irish?” Frank Bullitt replied.

Goodman nodded. “And how about Jerry McKay?”

“Let me guess,” Sam Bennett growled. “Irish.”

Goodman nodded before continuing. “And so, let’s go back to the beginning now. The Bay Area is a ripe target for all the economic reasons we’ve mentioned, but what do we know about the various law enforcement agencies in the region? Anyone care to guess which ethnic group has the largest representation within these ranks?”

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” Callahan snarled. “Are you telling us that the Irish mob is burrowing into our department?”

Goodman nodded as he shrugged. “Sorry. But to be clear, their effort started across the bridge, in Oakland. High preponderance of Irish pubs in the area around Jack London Square, and many of those operate as fronts for the Irish mob, just like the Italian mob uses restaurants in New York and Boston. We found Chalmers has invested, and I use the term advisedly, heavily in such properties all around the region, but so too has Captain McKay.”

Sam Bennett squirmed in his seat. “Okay, do we have actionable intel on these two?”

Goodman shook his head. “Circumstantial only, like their investment activities. But…”

“Oh-boy,” Bullitt sighed, “here comes the fun part…”

“Indeed,” Goodman said, smiling. “You and Harry are going in. We have a few leads that need to be run down, the type of information gathering we think is best suited to people familiar with the American way of…”

“Shaking hoods down?” Callahan said, shaking his head.

Goodman shrugged. “You said it, not me.”

“So, me and Harry. Where?”

Now Goodman smiled. “Oh, I think we’ve found something perfect for you, Lieutenant.”

Frank looked at the old man, then he turned and looked at Callahan…

“But first,” Goodman added, “we’ll need to tune up your appearance just a bit…”

“Swell,” Callahan said, still looking at Bullitt. “I love it already.”

“Oh, Inspector, no doubt you will. No doubt at all.”

 ________________________________________________

© 2020 adrian leverkühn | abw | and as always, thanks for stopping by for a look around the memory warehouse…[and now, a brief note on sources: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need until work is finalized. Yet with current circumstances (a certain virus, not to mention a madman in the White House springing first to mind, and let’s just agree right here and now to not talk about age…) so that might not be the best way to proceed; and with my thinking along these lines first in mind I’d hate to have this story stop ‘unexpectedly’ without some mention of sources relied on here. Of course, the primary source material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two seminal Hollywood ‘cop’ films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of the screenplay for The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. Steve McQueen’s grin was never trade-marked, though perhaps it should have been. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’/vigilante storyline derives from characters and plot elements originally found in that rich screenplay. The Threlkis crime family storyline was first introduced in Sudden Impact, screenplay by Joseph Stinson. The Samantha Walker character derives from the Patricia Clarkson portrayal of the pivotal television reporter found in The Dead Pool, screenplay by Steve Sharon, story by Steve Sharon, Durk Pearson, and Sandy Shaw.  I have to credit the Jim Parish, M.D., character first seen in the Vietnam segments to John A. Parrish, M.D., author of the most fascinating account of an American physician’s tour of duty in Vietnam – and as found in his autobiographical 12, 20, and 5: A Doctor’s Year in Vietnam, a book worth noting as one of the most stirring accounts of modern warfare I’ve ever read (think Richard Hooker’s M*A*S*H, only featuring a blazing sense of irony conjoined within a searing non-fiction narrative). Many of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed within the works cited above, but keep in mind that, as always, this story is in all other respects a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing historical fabric. Using the established characters referenced above, as well as a few new characters I’ve managed to come up with here and there, I hoped to create something new – perhaps a running commentary on the times we’ve shared? And the standard disclaimer also here applies: no one mentioned in this tale should be mistaken for persons living or dead. This was just a little walk down a road more or less imagined, and nothing more than that should be inferred, though I’d be remiss to not mention Clint Eastwood’s Harry Callahan. Talk about the role of a lifetime…given life by an actor for the ages.]

the eighty-eighth key, chapter 20

88k p3 image

The Eighty-eighth Key

Part III

Chapter 20

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He spent his mornings at the Tagesklinik, the psychiatric day clinic in Davos, and when the sun was out he skied with ‘Uncle’ Avi. When she was well enough Sara joined them, and she proved to be an able skier. In the evening, Avi disappeared for hours on end; Harry assumed Avi was talking with Imogen but little mention was made of these interludes.

After a week and with Sara remarkably improved, Harry took her to dinner at the Alpenhof.

They danced around the edges of their wounds as they talked, and they grew into the moment, seemed to check their cares at the door. He was mesmerized by the candlelight drifting through her story, within the carefree pools of her laughter, and they took drinks after dinner in a small alcove haunted by an ancient fireplace. And at one point he reached over and took her hand.

And it all came so naturally after that. This coming together that had eluded Callahan for so long.

One Saturday morning she joined him on the mountain and just the two of them skipped and danced across the snow; they met Avi at the Weissfluhgipfel for lunch, and even the old physician in his cape drifted by once, helping a young boy who had turned an ankle on the slopes. To Harry the universe seemed reborn, and up here in the sunlight, breathing the enchanted, wind-kissed and sparkling mountain air made everything about this new life feel alive with hidden promise.

And at lunch Avi watched his ‘nephew’ with renewed interest; when Sara excused herself he took the opportunity to say so…

“If I am not mistaken, Harry, you seem to be very much in love.”

Callahan picked up his Piesporter and took a sip, then dipped into his salad before he spoke. “I never knew life could feel this way, Avi. There’s something so sweet about waking up and knowing she’s out there.”

Avi nodded as a sudden memory passed on a breeze. “I felt that way too, once upon a time.”

And Harry watched the old man’s face, his eyes now as he spoke. “Mother?”

Avi nodded. “We would walk on this one beach, not far from the city…”

“In Denmark?”

“Yes. The way the sun played across her face. The way she lifted my spirits. When you find such things, Harry, only a fool lets go.”

And Harry sat back, let those words roll around in his mind – at least until Sara returned.

“My, you both look so serious now,” she remarked as Harry pulled out her chair. “What have I missed?”

“Only the most intimate secrets of the universe,” Avi said, smiling.

“Ah, then it was of love that you were speaking?” she added, smiling.

“What else?” Avi said. “What else could possibly matter on such a wonderful day, with two such people?”

And then Sara turned to Harry. “And you, sir? Do you love me, even just a little?”

“More than just a little,” Harry said. “I can’t imagine anything nicer than the idea of waking up beside you every day for the rest of my life.”

“Careful, Harry,” Avi enjoined. “You’re making serious overtures now.”

“I am. True enough, Avi.”

“What are you saying, Harry?” Sara said as she took his hand.

“Marry me, Sara. Let’s just get away from this world and make a new one all our own.”

And she smiled. “We shall have to give the matter some special thought, no? Perhaps this evening? But first, we’ll need to find our way back down our magic mountain.”

Avi stood and dropped some cash on the table. “Well, you two take your time, but I’ve got to run down to the village. A few pressing errands to attend – before the day is out. Harry? I’ll see you at the house, before dinner I hope?”

“Goodbye, Uncle,” Sara said, letting slip her best, most defiant smile.

Avi looked at the gathering storm and sighed. “Harry? I’d head down to the Middle Station now, and keep away from the rocks.”

“Okay.”

The followed Avi out onto the snow, then watched him go to the funicular station while they strapped on their skis; Harry looked at the clouds slipping up the mountain and frowned.

“I think we will have a white-out, don’t you, Harry?”

He nodded then looked at her. No fear. There was no fear on her face nor in her eyes, just an open willingness to take whatever life wanted to toss in front of her. He stepped over to her and kissed her once, briefly, then once again – and time passed slowly as an unforeseen electric feeling passed from his knees to his gut.

“I love you,” he said pulled away, but then he kissed her forehead. This time when he pulled away he saw a tear or two on her cheek and the sight literally humbled him.

And when she told him she loved him too? Well, all was right in the world, wasn’t it?

“So,” she said, “to the Middle Station?”

“You lead, I’ll follow.”

“I like the sound of that,” she said as she pushed off and skated down the first steep pitch.

“Jeez,” Harry said to himself, “not so fast…”

The first few hundred meters were on fading sunlight, then they entered a thick wall of cloud – before a heavy, blanketing snow filled the way ahead. He tucked-in a few feet behind and turned when she turned, traversed where she traversed, and when she grew winded he stopped beside her.

“How am I doing,” she asked, smiling.

“Beautifully,” he said to her radiant face.

“I think we’re about halfway now,” she added, and Harry agreed…then she pushed off and dropped out of sight.

He caught up with her and they fell into a surreal rhythm, carving delicate arcs across the face of the mountain in almost perfect unison, and Harry realized – quite consciously – that he had never felt so at one with another person, and the feeling was as unique as it was exhilarating.

The clouds thinned and he could see the Middle Station ahead, the valley floor beyond, and Sara’s streams of coppery hair leading him on. 

All he really knew was that he wanted this moment to last forever.

____________________________

Aircraft passed by low overhead during the night, and now there were reports of paratroopers in the woods outside the ghetto…British paratroopers…!

And now Saul Rosenthal slipped through those woods with Imogen in hand, leading them to a proposed meet-up with British forces. The two were traveling light now; the only thing Saul demanded she bring was her score of the Third Piano Concerto…because he knew this was a treasure beyond rubies. 

They fell to the earth when a volley of machine gun fire ripped through branches overhead, and Imogen closed her eyes tightly as bits and pieces of twigs and leaves rained down on her. She heard tiny, scared voices off to the left, then the cries of children running in blind terror – before these were answered with even more machine gun fire. The heartbreaking echoes of children moaning in the darkness, then single shots followed by silence – and her nightmare was complete.

“Czech troops,” Saul whispered. “They are killing witnesses.”

Imogen buried her face in her hands, but she could only pray ‘her’ children were not among the dead.

Many of the elders had already been murdered by Nazi collaborators when word of the parachute drop reached Saul, so he made his move and collected Imogen. His plan, if he didn’t find the British, was to get her to the railway station and head south and west, away from the advancing Russians.

Then more machine-gun fire to the left to the right all around and now there was nowhere to go, no place to hide in the sudden crossfire. Saul pushed her into a slight depression beside a fallen tree and covered her with his body…until he heard men yelling, then running through the forest back towards the camp.

He remained silent and still, barely breathing, until he felt someone poking his leg.

“Yo! Mate! You Rubenstein?” a disembodied voice whispered.

“Uh…Rosenthal, but yes. We are here.”

“Well, let’s get a move-on, mate. Follow me – for the last train to Brighton!”

Saul felt a sudden wave of relief…until he tried to help Imogen stand. And standing there, even in the dark of night, he could tell she was bleeding – and badly, and when she started falling the paratrooper moved quickly to catch her. 

Saul made sure he had the score safely stowed, then they made their way through the forest to a small clearing. As promised, a twin-engined was waiting for them, and a few minutes later a medic helped get Imogen onboard and settled.

“Next stop, Hamburg!” the medic said brightly as the plane rumbled across the meadow and took to the air, then, he spoke to Saul: “I can’t find an entrance wound. Any chance she was pregnant?”

__________________________

 Harry held Sara’s hand as he walked with her to the clinic, and as evening snow fell quietly all around them he realized there was so much he wanted to say…yet she seemed to have been reading his mind when she pulled him close…

“You go to your Uncle Avi now, get cleaned up and talk awhile. I’m not going anywhere, and when you’re ready we can talk and talk until we find the answer to us.”

He held her for a long time, soaking in her radiance like a flower turning to the sun…then he turned and faced the mountain, holding her close even so…

“What is it about this place, Sara?”

She sighed a long, hopeful sigh: “I think we found each other here. This will always be our special place.”

He nodded as he turned to meet her eyes. “I love you.”

“And I love you. Now…be off with you!”

He kissed her gently and he watched as she walked into the shadows, then he turned and began the short walk to the house Avi had rented for the winter.

But Harry did not see the four men who fell in behind him, and so preoccupied was he that the men followed him with ease.

_____________________________

No bombs had fallen around the University, and the Schwarzwald house looked, at first glance, relatively unscathed…but a deeper examination revealed troubling damage everywhere Imogen looked.

And the first thing she noticed was the absence of her family’s belongings – aside from a few paintings on walls here and there. All her possessions were gone, her parent’s too: clothing, personal effects…everything. And there were uniforms hanging in her father’s closet, Nazi uniforms. A high ranking officer, if she read the insignia correctly – but Saul wasn’t with her now and there was no one to ask.

She walked up the stairs to her room and walked to the window that had framed so much of her life, and the view she found waiting for her wasn’t really so different now. The same red tile roofs, and as there ever was…a few large ships tied up along the wharves loading and unloading the needs of the moment.

But these were ships-of-war flying the Union Jack, and all around the harbor there was evidence that real war had indeed visited Copenhagen, and more than once. She spied a warehouse with its roof a splintered jumble of charred timbers, and out beyond the middle of the harbor a small German patrol boat lay drunkenly on its side, aground on a sandbar and with black smoke still faintly streaming from yesterday’s aerial attack on German positions.

The last thing her father had told her was that he would not abandon the city of his birth, and now it looked as if that was the fact of the matter. Still, she wanted…no, she needed to know the truth of his story, and – even as she stood there, framed in the light of truth – she could feel the tortured vibrations of his end throughout the house. Now completely unbidden, music began taking shape in the air all around her and, as she closed her eyes, she surrendered to the insistent force, grabbing chaos from the sky and imposing order through the chromatic notes and chords the Old Man in his Cape had taught her once upon a time.

__________________________

Harry bounced in the doorway and found Avi waiting for him by the fireplace. A small fire was burning, but not a single lamp was one – so the effect on the space was almost primitive…like he had entered a cave.

And when he saw Avi’s flickering face, even standing in the dim evening gloom, he knew something was wrong.

Because just then Avi turned to face him.

“You are an imbecile!” Avi screamed. “An impotent, self-absorbed imbecile!”

And then he saw another man sitting across the room. A hard man, twisted into windblown form by brutal experience. “I simply don’t understand,” this man began saying, “unless you are so truly addled you are no longer capable of thinking like a man.”

“And fuck you, too,” Callahan hissed.

And on hearing those words the hard man stood and walked over to Harry, and then – in a flash of hands he tossed Harry across the room. 

“Fuck you?” the hard man said, his voice now a ragged, coarse whisper. “You couldn’t fuck your own hand if it was all you had left in the world, you simple, stupid oaf.”

Harry pulled himself up and looked at the old man, then at Avi…

But just then the front door opened and in walked four men surrounded by swirling snow…

“What the hell?” Harry whispered as he looked at Frank Bullitt, then to Sam Bennett and Al Bressler. And there behind them all – was that Stacy Bennett?

© 2020 adrian leverkühn | abw | and as always, thanks for stopping by for a look around the memory warehouse…[and now, a brief note on sources: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need until work is finalized. Yet with current circumstances (a certain virus, not to mention a madman in the White House springing first to mind, and let’s just agree right here and now to not talk about age…) so that might not be the best way to proceed; and with my thinking along these lines first in mind I’d hate to have this story stop ‘unexpectedly’ without some mention of sources relied on here. Of course, the primary source material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two seminal Hollywood ‘cop’ films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of the screenplay for The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. Steve McQueen’s grin was never trade-marked, though perhaps it should have been. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’/vigilante storyline derives from characters and plot elements originally found in that rich screenplay. The Threlkis crime family storyline was first introduced in Sudden Impact, screenplay by Joseph Stinson. The Samantha Walker character derives from the Patricia Clarkson portrayal of the pivotal television reporter found in The Dead Pool, screenplay by Steve Sharon, story by Steve Sharon, Durk Pearson, and Sandy Shaw.  I have to credit the Jim Parish, M.D., character first seen in the Vietnam segments to John A. Parrish, M.D., author of the most fascinating account of an American physician’s tour of duty in Vietnam – and as found in his autobiographical 12, 20, and 5: A Doctor’s Year in Vietnam, a book worth noting as one of the most stirring accounts of modern warfare I’ve ever read (think Richard Hooker’s M*A*S*H, only featuring a blazing sense of irony conjoined within a searing non-fiction narrative). Many of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed within the works cited above, but keep in mind that, as always, this story is in all other respects a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing historical fabric. Using the established characters referenced above, as well as a few new characters I’ve managed to come up with here and there, I hoped to create something new – perhaps a running commentary on the times we’ve shared? And the standard disclaimer also here applies: no one mentioned in this tale should be mistaken for persons living or dead. This was just a little walk down a road more or less imagined, and nothing more than that should be inferred, though I’d be remiss to not mention Clint Eastwood’s Harry Callahan. Talk about the role of a lifetime…given life by an actor for the ages.]

the eighty-eighth key, chapter 19

88k p3 image

The Eighty-eighth Key

Part III

Chapter 19

____________________________________

“You know, I do hope I’ve not presumed too much by bringing you up here, but this just happens to be my favorite place in the world.”

“It’s truly remarkable, Avi.” Harry looked at the high alpine landscape – in winter – feeling a curious mixture of gut-busting fear, dread, and pure fascination. There wasn’t a cloud in the sky, and it seemed everywhere he looked there was nothing but pure, unblemished snow for as far as the eye could see. 

They were standing near the top of the funicular railway that leads from Davos Dorf to the Weissfluhjoch Station, perched high above Davos and in the central part of the Parsenn ski area. There were dozens of skiers scattered around, all busily putting on skis and adjusting goggles or gloves before taking off down the mountain, but what fascinated Harry most of all was Avi’s decision to bring him up here.

Avi had not asked once if he could ski, and standing up here in the freezing wind it seemed a dizzying assumption to have made. Or a very calculated decision.

But he had, in high school, traveled up to Tahoe more than a few times with June, and both had learned to ski at Squaw Valley just after the little ski area had hosted the Olympics, yet that had been almost twenty years ago. The skis he stood on this morning seemed only vaguely familiar, and his feet ached in the rigid plastic boots; Avi – on the other hand – moved about with practiced ease on his skis and spoke with arrogant confidence as he used his ski pole to point out several local mountain landmarks.

And it hit Harry suddenly. He was being measured by this man…judged. But as what? A man? Worthy of something greater? Or did Avi expect to find him wanting in some way? 

“How are your boots? Comfortable enough?”

Harry slid back and forth on his skis, forcing the blood in his legs to circulate, then he reached down and adjusted two buckles. “Good enough for a warm-up run.”

“Excellent!” Avi pushed off and made for one of the easier trails down the mountain, and Harry fell in behind and watched the old man ski. 

For his age, Avi appeared to be doing well enough, but even to Harry’s unpracticed eye, Avi wasn’t a particularly accomplished or gifted skier. The old man made long traverses and slow, mostly tentative turns, and he stopped more than once that first run to simply catch his breath – something Harry felt no need to do. Still, he understood Avi was at least twice his age, and that the old man lived in a country not particularly well known for alpine skiing, so he was still inclined to sit back and wait for the inevitable trap to spring.

When they made their way to the end of the trail Avi stopped and rubbed his thighs before he looked up and turned to Harry – and curiously, the old man was beaming.

“Do you know, Harry, that is the first time I have ever made it down without falling!”

“You looked a little uncertain at first but, to me, it looked like you’re pretty good at this.”

The old man smiled openly now. “You think so?”

Harry nodded, meeting the old man’s infectious smile with one of his own, yet he felt a little awkward when Avi stepped close and clapped him on the shoulder. 

“There is a very nice restaurant up top if you would indulge me. Are you up to one more run?”

“Absolutely. And if it warms up a little it might even be enjoyable!”

And they both laughed as they poled over to the funicular station for their second ride up the mountain.

________________________________

Frank Bullitt was with Captain Bennett and the Israeli intel officer at a small diner just outside of Santa Cruz; their eyes were cast down on bowl’s of a pinkish chowder, lost – as if each was lost in thoughts of mortal import, and their concentration appeared complete.

“You’re absolutely sure about all this?” Bennett said, still unable to look up from his soup.

The old Israeli shrugged. “I am never absolutely sure about anything in this business, but we have  two recordings now…”

“Not over land-lines…?”

“No, they’ve gone deep now,” the old man said. “Operating like old pros, which is what bothers me most of all.”

“Why’s that?”

“Well, Captain, think about it. They either have ex-intel people on the inside, or they are being advised – or directed – by an active intel operation outside your ranks.”

“Who has that capability?” Bullitt asked…and the old man grinned when their eyes met.

“Any nation or organization intent on destabilizing the region,” the Israeli sighed.

Bennett crossed his arms as he leaned back in the booth. “Destabilize…the Bay Area? Are you serious?”

The old man swallowed hard as he nodded. “There’s a tremendous amount of money in the region, as well as incredible academic energy. The climate is perfect, and there is ready access to international markets. Computer companies are relocating here as fast as they can…”

“So…?”

“Well, Captain…think about the long game…but think about why someone, or some group, would want to make their opening move with an infiltration of local law enforcement agencies.”

“You’re talking about an organization, aren’t you?” Bullitt said. “Or something else?”

The old man coughed once before he nodded. “My biggest concern right now would be a criminal organization backed by an interested nation-state. When the French first started to get a grip on the heroin trade setting up in Marseilles they first encountered Corsican operatives, but soon enough they began peeling back the layers of the onion…and what did they find?”

Bennett shrugged, but Frank knew the outlines… “First they traced the goods back to Afghanistan, then to Turkey…”

“But who was running the overall organization, Detective?”

Bullitt shrugged.

“It was a long trail, a trail that led from Palermo to Damascus, but there the trail grew cold and hard to follow. Ultimately, the French lacked the political resolve to follow the trail because they soon understood that the objective was not located in France.”

“Oh?” Bennett said. “Where, then?”

“New York City, of course, but even Interpol missed the common denominator. It was first detected anecdotally in Newark, then, with a little effort, operations were detected in smaller outlying suburbs surrounding New York City. Support personnel in various departments were co-opted – turned, if I may use the term – but even so, clear patterns emerged.

“Most police departments use women for dispatch duties, and these women are notoriously underpaid. As such, they are easy to recruit, though of course unwittingly. Other support personnel follow; records clerks, jailers, even maintenance workers. Once penetrated at these levels, agents assume positions either inside the organization or around its periphery, and once this is accomplished others already employed by the agency are identified as possible recruits. An aggrieved group usually emerges as the focus of recruitment efforts – racial animosity, as well as religious or ethnic strife – all are utilized.

“Once the shadow organization is in place, operational parameters can be changed almost at will. Instead of being agents of change, for instance, the organization’s actions can be reoriented to raising cash for a greater cause. You only need to use your imagination here, but once the nucleus of the organization is up and running your options grow exponentially.”

Bennett lit up a cigar and growled. “And you think this is happening now, in my city?”

The old man leaned back and shrugged. “I put this forth more as an idea you need to consider. Also, for such a complex organization to be at work in this region would mean that it has been operationally active for years. Penetration will be deep, and you must understand that if discovered, it will be found in the most unexpected places – and hidden deep within all levels of the established institutional and political hierarchy.”

Bennett chomped on his cigar, turning thoughts over in his mind as possibilities presented in his mind… “You mentioned an organization, a criminal organization, supported by a nation-state. And what was that about the French giving up…? At Damascus? You mean, in Syria?”

“Yes, of course.”

“Are you telling me the fucking Syrians wanted to take over New York City?”

The old man smiled, tried to resist the urge to laugh out loud. “Not at all, Captain. The French lost the trail in Syria.”

Bullitt grinned. “And that’s where you picked it up, right?”

The old man turned his head slowly and looked at the detective with something approaching respect in his eyes – but he only shrugged.

“And let me guess,” Bullitt added. “The trail leads north. Like…to Moscow?”

And again the old man only shrugged.

“You’re not going to tell us?” Bennett grumbled. “Right?”

“Captain Bennett, you must understand something. I am not here. My team is not here. This is not my country, it is yours – and yet we are killing people here. It is an almost impossible situation and one we would most assuredly not be in – if not for your Inspector Callahan. Because he is, in a way, family.”

“Family?” Bennett said, clearly confused.

Again, the old man simply shrugged away the question hanging in the air apparent – before he reached out to take the check. “You’ll permit me to buy lunch today, gentlemen?” he said as he stood to leave. “It has been a pleasure.” Then he turned to Bullitt. “You are very resourceful, Detective, but do not try to contact me again. If I have any need of further information, I will be in touch.”

Frank shuddered as he watched the old man walk over to the counter and pay the waitress.

“Maybe we ought to leave the tip?” Bennett sighed as he watched the old man disappear down a side-street.

“Ya think?”

“I got the impression he thinks we’re up to our asses in alligators.”

Frank nodded. “Money. Academic energy. Computers. Wasn’t that what he said?”

“Yeah. So, who’d want to control all that stuff?”

“The most important question right now, Sam, is who the hell wouldn’t want all that?”

“And?”

“It ain’t Russia, Sam.”

“Okay. Who, then?”

“Us.”

“What?”

“Us, Sam. The enemy is us. Somehow, someway, someone is trying to tear us apart – from within.”

“What makes you say that?”

“They know us too well. What our triggers are, where all our weaknesses reside, and where all the skeletons are buried.” Frank pulled in a deep breath, then slowly shook his head while he let the stale air slip away. “I think what he was telling us was we better get our house in order, and in a hurry.”

“Yeah, before we lose complete control.”

Frank looked at his captain and wondered how he was holding up. Their night on the town had shaken a few things loose but even now he could see the shadows playing out in Sam’s eyes.

“How’s Fran doing?” Bullitt asked.

“Better. Cathy has been a saint, you know.”

“That’s because she’s a saint.”

“Really? So, why does she stick with an old sinner like you?”

Frank leaned back and stared at the ceiling for a while…before a slashing grin split his face – just as a shard of memory might…in the last light of day.

___________________________

Seated inside the glowing confines of the Restaurant Weissfluhgipfel, Harry cast sidelong glances Avi’s way from time to time – when he wasn’t staring at the view – or at the gorgeous young fräulein seated at the table off to his right. She was enchanting, though when Avi took note of Harry’s interest the old man merely smiled before he looked away.

“I simply love it up here,” Avi said again.

“I can see why,” Harry sighed.

“Well, shall we have some wine? Or would you like a beer?”

“At this altitude? You’ll have to roll me down the mountain…”

“Ah, but isn’t that the fun of it?”

Harry smiled. “Maybe you’re right.”

Avi summoned their waiter and ordered a bottle of Piesporter, two salads, and a fondue. Harry tried, unsuccessfully, to not stare at the girl – until finally, he turned his chair to block the sight of her. 

This only caused Avi to chuckle a bit.

“What’s so funny?” 

“Hmm? Oh, Homo sapiens, I should think.” Avi looked at the girl, then at Harry. “You might be so forward as to ask her where she’s staying? Perhaps you might even ask her out for a drink this evening?”

“Who?”

Avi laughed loudly. “Who, indeed.”

And Harry smiled.

“At least you have good taste in women,” Avi added.

And just then, when the girl turned and looked at them, Harry seemed to freeze inside, and it felt like the cold hand of death had just gripped his heart.

“Are you alright, Harry?” 

But even though he felt light-headed, he also felt a line of perspiration form on his brow and along his upper lip, so as soon as their waiter poured a glass of wine he took a long pull, then closed his eyes – shutting out the flood of memory.

“Damn, that’s decent,” he said after he finished the glass.

“All that is good and decent about Germany can be found in that wine,” Avi said somewhat wistfully. “Eating an apple in the shade of a mighty tree, reading Goethe between bites of cheese. So many memories. So sweet the wine.”

“Avi, why am I here?”

The old man beside Harry sat a little more erect, comported himself to his assumed station in life. “How did your session go yesterday?”

“Well, your physicians seem to know just about all there is to know about me. I suppose I should congratulate you on your thoroughness.”

Avi smiled. “You’ll forgive me for taking an interest, I hope.”

Harry saw the girl looking their way again, so he turned to her: “If you’re alone, would you like to join us?”

The girl turned and faced him again. “Yes, I think I might like that.”

She spoke with a light English accent, the warm lilts very cultured to Callahan – who stood and pulled back her chair before helping her into the one between his own and Avi’s. More wine was summoned, another place setting arranged and food ordered. Introductions were made and suddenly Avi couldn’t have been happier.

“Can you imagine a more spectacular place?” he said to Harry and Sara Rosenkranz, visiting from Vienna.

“My parents used to bring us here every winter,” she said, adding, “I feel like I grew up on this mountain.”

“And yet here you are,” Avi said, his countenance now almost fatherly. “Alone in the Alps and so far from home. Are you running, perhaps? Or are you a little lost?”

There was no evasion or regret in the girl’s eyes, only a subtle understanding that this was a man who read people, and that there was no use hiding from him.

“I think a little of both,” she said.

“And what are you running from?” Avi asked.

“Life. And death.”

“Ah. So tell me…what have you lost?”

And only then did the girl turn away. Her eyes grew cloudy, a tear formed and ran down her soft cheek, and Harry almost wanted to turn away – so swift was Avi’s dissection.

Yet she came back to them.

“I went to Sweden a few…well, I went.”

“I see,” Avi said, his penetrating voice now tightly controlled, yet implicitly consoling. “And your life has not been the same since, has it? Not since your return?”

She shook her head. “No.”

“Was it a boy?”

She looked at Avi. “Who?”

“Your baby?”

And suddenly Harry was lost inside a landscape that made no sense, looking for signposts that pointed to a way out.

“Yes,” she said. “A little boy. My little boy.”

“Your parents? Did they make you?”

“No. A man at my office…”

Harry stood abruptly and walked away from the table and through the main door, out into the hard winter light; when the cold air hit his eyes he ran blindly across hard-packed snow until his lungs burned, until his own tears stopped flowing, and there he fell to his knees. With his fists bunched he began pounding the snow, first with his left hand, then with the right…over and over…watching the emergency room physician pounding his Looney-June’s chest over and over, over and over, over and over…

Until everything was over. Everything.

And then there was a shadow. 

An old man standing next to him, out here on the snow.

“Your hands are bleeding, young man. You’d better come with me.”

And then Callahan looked up at the man.

He was a short, old man, what you might call portly. His hair was ancient and white, almost yellow in places not shaded by an elegant if somewhat floppy hat. He was wearing a short cape that hung just to his waist, and he walked with the aid of a cane.

And Callahan felt the cane seemed somehow odd, too. The glistening wood was adorned with what looked, at first glance, like silver lightning bolts set inside the grain, yet as he stood next to the old man – what seemed most unsettling to him was that the bolts somehow seemed to be almost alive.

_____________________________

She walked the children along the rough cobbled streets to their school, and then she made her way to the Music House – where the small orchestra was allowed use of their instruments, and where many of the musicians practiced when they were not otherwise engaged with more pressing matters. Hauling bodies to the crematory was often pressing enough, and many of the orchestra’s men and women did so with depressing regularity, depending more or less of the severity of winter’s weather or the state of the ghetto’s food supply.

But there was a decent piano in the Music House, and Imogen spent her mornings with the instrument. As the contours of her new life came into sharp relief she began to put her experiences not in a journal, but into the music she created there, in her new home. Somehow she recreated life in the camp within her music, and in time her Third Piano Concerto emerged. The small orchestra rehearsed the piece just one time, and when the men and women finished this first arrangement they put down their instruments and openly wept – before they one and all disappeared into the night.

_______________________________

His hands bandaged, the old man in the cape walked Harry back into the restaurant, and they found Avi and the girl, Sara, still at the table.

“Ah, we were beginning to wonder what had become of you,” Avi said, before he saw the bandages on Harry’s hands. Then, when he saw them: “Dear God, Harry! What has happened to you?”

“He slipped and fell on the ice,” the old man in the cape said. “I am, by the way, a physician from town. I volunteer up here three afternoons a week, and as I was arriving I saw this young man slip and fall. Superficial scrapes, nothing more. He should be good as new by morning.”

“Really?” Avi said, apparent concern overtaking his surprise. “Will you be able to ski down, or should we take the funicular?”

“I would recommend the railway,” the old man in the cape imposed. “Best not test those dressings too soon.”

“I see,” Avi said. “Well, Doctor, would you care to join us?”

The physician smiled. “Another time, perhaps? Have a nice stay, young man, and I hope we’ll run into one another again, before you leave?”

“I’d like that,” Harry said. “Thanks again, Doc.”

The old physician left them to their view of the world, and Avi sat back in his chair and sighed. 

“Perhaps it is just as well,” he said. “A storm is moving in. The valley will be in cloud before we finish up here. Harry, have some salad, and I’ve ordered you a small schnitzel. Mind you, I think you’d better let me cut your meat…!”

Soon enough they made their way to the funicular, and there Avi sat next to an upper window – leaving Harry to pass the time with Sara as the car rumbled slowly down the mountain. 

She seemed a few years younger than himself, very white of skin topped with straw-colored hair that verged on copper, which set off her greenish eyes – that seemed limpid and soft – so that her face seemed almost a liquid, anything but static. Her fingers were shorter, her fingernails wide – almost like she came from a farming family – yet she held herself with care. Patrician was the word that came to his mind, and he was altogether smitten.

When he helped her off with her jacket the first thing he noticed was the hospital wrist-band from the psychiatric clinic in town, if only because he had worn one just like it the day before. Just inside the wrist cuff of her sweater’s left arm he could – just barely – make out the curled edges of gauze pads, and the inferences began coming together. An affair of some sort – gone bad, no doubt – perhaps an unwanted pregnancy. But unwanted by who, or whom? Ultimatums shouted in the night, the hasty decisions that followed leaving her feeling feral and cornered, shut off from a world she took for granted. A quick flight to Sweden, the short drive in from the airport full of passing strangers gliding across an emotionally barren cityscape, then through the clinic’s doors and into hospital gowns for a few tests and an interview. Two hours later and all her confusion was sitting in the bottom of a bucket inside a refrigerated lab case, then another ride to another airport and back to a place called home – but that didn’t feel like home anymore.

The easy way. Take the easy way out. A knife less sharp across the wrist, but that was only a plea for help, right? We’ll get her the help she needs, and those soft cooing voices trundled her off to the mountains. 

“Our baby girl. She seems so far away now.”

“Have we lost her?”

And so…a wrist-band. But every picture tells a story, if we can but open our eyes from time to time.

He listened to her, to the flat affect, to the barely concealed scars buried under each new word.

“Your uncle told me about what happened in San Francisco. I’m so sorry,” she whispered at one point, and Harry tried to smile a little but he realized he felt too ashamed for trying to take the easy way out himself.

“Sometimes life just gets too hard,” he managed to say, and he took a deep, ragged breath that seemed to last a little too long.

“He mentioned someone named June? Something that happened a long time ago?”

That cold grip around his heart? Would it always come on so hard and fast?

“We were young,” he managed to say before he looked away.

Then this stranger from a strange land leaned into his arm, and soon he felt her face leaning on his shoulder and the only thing left to do was turn and kiss the top of her head before he wrapped an arm around her. Time seemed to spin around a different axis for a while, like he was on a planet orbiting a distant sun and not even the sky was familiar.

Attendants from the hospital were waiting for her at the station, as was the old physician in his cape. He smiled at her, then at Harry, when they walked from the railway car, and as soon as she was settled in her wheelchair the attendants whisked her away to a waiting Mercedes.

“Did you have a nice talk?” the old physician said as he came up to Harry.

And Harry looked at the old man for a split second, before he turned and looked back up the mountain. “There’s something magic up there, isn’t there?”

“You’d not be the first to feel that way, young man.”

“Will I be able to see her again?”

The physician shrugged. “I hope so,” he sighed. “But we will see.” Then he held out his hand, and Harry took it. “We can talk about it when you come for your appointment in the morning?”

Harry nodded, then turned to find his ‘uncle’…

___________________________________

“The Russians are less than a hundred kilometers away,” one of the camp elders said, his voice trembling.

“Word is the British have broken through, that they are nearing Prague,” another said, somewhat hopefully.

“Where is that representative from the Red Cross,” another asked. “The Swiss man?”

“With Misha,” Imogen Schwarzwald replied quietly, and the others in the room turned to face her, if only because when this strange woman spoke – which was rare enough – everyone always stopped and listened. “They will return soon, so do not worry.”

She spoke with a preternatural steeliness in her voice, despite her obvious frailty. Despite her – ‘condition.’ Almost three months pregnant…but how had it happened? No one had been seen visiting her, not even once. Just the opposite seemed true, if anyone asked. Yet here she was, just showing and because of lingering conditions in the ghetto not at all well.

But…what if the Russians got to Theresienstadt before the British, or even the Americans? What would become of her – and her baby…?

The elders had come to respect this quiet woman’s gentle wisdom, yet even so most feared her. A physicist, she was educated beyond their understanding, yet she was of a cultured people, even if she was, obviously, a troubled soul, and so many of the less well-off regarded Imogen as something of a patrician, of being from a higher station in life, but this was their custom.

She had proven gifted with the children in her care and had even managed to keep clear of the Nazi officers in the camp…so the question remained: how had she come to be with child? Yet, when some suggested she was a collaborator these people soon disappeared from the camp. As a result of these disappearances, an aura of fear surrounded Imogen, even if that fear was cloaked in yielding respect.

“Imogen,” one of the elders asked yet again, “what of Palestine? Have you heard from your husband again?”

She turned away from the voice and shook her head. “Nothing new,” was all she said – before she walked to the window and looked at dark clouds gathering along the far horizon.

___________________________________

Frank Bullitt moved from the city, to the Sea Ranch area on the coast far to the north, though he kept his apartment near the marina, and he turned in his retirement papers.

Sam Bennett turned in his papers not long after, and when people spoke of Captain Bennett these days there was pity in their voice. Obviously a broken man, Bennett simply disappeared from the department at a critical time. When patrolmen drove by to check on Bennett’s house the lights were almost always off, though shadows could be seen moving about inside.

Delgetti and Carl Stanton each had several years to go before they could retire, but peers noted both men seemed completely unmotivated now…and they were soon regarded as shuffling their way to retirement.

And Harry Callahan? No one had heard of or seen any trace of him for weeks, then months. He had simply disappeared without a trace.

And yet, he was very much alive…living on the side of a Magic Mountain.

© 2020 adrian leverkühn | abw | and as always, thanks for stopping by for a look around the memory warehouse…[note: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need until work is finalized. Yet with the current circumstances that might not be the best way to proceed, and I’d hate to have this story stop ‘unexpectedly’ without some mention of sources. Of course, the primary source material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two seminal Hollywood ‘cop’ films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’ storyline derives from characters originally found in that screenplay. The Threlkis crime family storyline was first introduced in Sudden Impact, screenplay by Joseph Stinson. The Samantha Walker character derives from the Patricia Clarkson portrayal of the pivotal television reporter found in The Dead Pool, screenplay by Steve Sharon, story by Steve Sharon, Durk Pearson, and Sandy Shaw.  I have to credit the Jim Parish, M.D., character to John A. Parrish, M.D., author of the most fascinating account of an American physician’s tour of duty in Vietnam – found in his autobiographical 12, 20, and 5: A Doctor’s Year in Vietnam, worth noting as one of the most stirring accounts of modern warfare I’ve ever come across (think Richard Hooker’s M*A*S*H, only in searing non-fiction). Many of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed within the works cited above, but keep in mind that, as always, this story is in all other respects a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing historical fabric. Using the established characters referenced above, as well as a few new characters I’ve managed to come up with here and there, I hoped to come up with something new – perhaps a commentary of the times. And the standard disclaimer also here applies: no one mentioned in this tale should be mistaken for persons living or dead. This was just a little walk down a road more or less imagined, and nothing more than that should be inferred.]

the eighty-eighth key, chapter 18

88k p3 image

The Eighty-eighth Key

Part III

Chapter 18

____________________________________

In the days and weeks after the Bennett assassinations, the City of San Francisco was living along the edge of a very sharp knife. Tourists stopped coming to see the sights, hotels emptied and flights into and out of SFO flew with most their seats unsold. Criminal enterprises – from ‘mom & pop robberies’ to more organized rackets fell off the radar too, because the police department’s patrol division was on a total rampage. Traffic stops escalated into life and death affairs, so much and so frequently that people began obeying speed limits and using their turn signals – both being completely unheard of in and around the city.

Sam Bennett took extended family leave and was rarely heard from. Frank Bullitt was heard talking about taking early retirement, leaving Delgetti and Stanton rudderless and adrift. Al Bressler went back to vice and, just after An Linh’s funeral, Lloyd Callahan left for the Orient. Jim Parish left for a new posting in Hawaii – but only after he was sure his friend’s deteriorating mental state didn’t need a more rigorous intervention. He watched Callahan for a few days, not quite sure what to make of the false bravado on constant display.

Or was it false?

Was Callahan a psychopath – unable to assimilate An Linh’s murder? The more questions he asked the more uncertain he became until, in the end, he felt like he was peeling away the layers of an onion – and not at all liking what he found.

After a few days of this he forced Harry to take four weeks of vacation, and after Parish left for Hawaii Harry literally sat at his piano for hours on end. His first night alone he played dark creations interspersed with off the wall television classics – themes from shows like Peter Gunn and 77 Sunset Strip – before he fell away into his beloved Gershwin, and somewhere in the middle of Summertime he lost it completely – falling to the floor and crying for hours.

He found himself the next day walking the city, taking An Linh to all the places he wanted to share with her – before he realized the ghostly nature of the shadow by his side.

The next night he pulled his favorite chair up to the window and propped his feet on the sill, and for hours he watched the regular hard-core drinkers file in and out of the bars the lined both sides of the street below. Occasionally he could hear the half-hearted efforts of a really bad pianist playing at the nearest dive, a real bloodbath that belonged to the Threlkis syndicate, and so for some reason, he decided the time was right – so he walked over and stepped inside.

An altogether unimpressive looking kid sat at the keyboard stumbling his way through Green Dolphin Street and Harry watched until he couldn’t take it anymore – and then he walked up to the bar.

“Whaddayahavin’,” the bar-keep muttered.

“Club soda, lime,” Callahan replied.

“Sure thing.”

“Who runs this place?”

“Who’s askin’?”

“Just wonderin’, really, but is that the best you can do?” Callahan said, nodding towards the piano player.

“Kid’s connected. Not much I can do about it.”

“Connected?” Harry asked.

“One of the Threlkis kids, or so I hear.”

“Protection?”

The barkeeper nodded through his frown, and when the kid started butchering some kind of Stevie Wonder song they both grimaced.

“Sounds kind of like he’s choking a cat,” Callahan said through gritted teeth – but then without saying another word he walked over to the piano and looked at the kid while he finished up the tune. “You play any Gershwin?”

The kid shook his head.

“You ever take lessons?”

The kid looked up on hearing that. “Fuck-off, faggot. Not interested.”

Callahan sneered, then growled: “The name of the song you’re butchering is ‘Don’t You Worry ‘Bout a Thing,’ right?”

“I ain’t butcherin’ nothin’, faggot.”

“Move over,” Callahan said – and the tone in his voice was all the kid needed to hear. He slid down and Harry sat; without hesitating, he banged out the song, then stood and went back to the bar.

The kid followed. Kind of like a puppy, Callahan thought.

“You a teacher or somethin’?” the kid asked.

“Nope.”

“Jack, buy the faggot another drink, and I’ll have a tequila sunrise.”

Callahan’s jaw was working overtime now, his teeth clenched tight.

The drinks came and Callahan downed his water, then he turned to leave – but then, as expected, the kid went too far.

“Come on, faggot…wanna go out back and get on your knees?”

Callahan turned and faced the kid – yet still, Callahan kept his mouth shut – content to let his eyes do the talking for now…

Only up to now the kid had just enough sense to keep his mouth shut, and so Callahan simply stared at him, egging him on, deciding to let the kid seal their fate…

Which came by way of an uncoordinated dry-gulch, a knee-to-the-groin that Callahan deflected with ease, followed by a floppy-wristed attempt at a right cross…

…and then Callahan grabbed the kid’s fist in mid-strike and slammed it down on the bar, next he drove an ice-pick through the kid’s hand – and with that part of his plan complete he turned and walked out of the bar.

Heading through an early morning fog down to the wharf he felt the adrenaline coursing through his veins, his anger still at an intense peak. A few minutes passed before he began to come down, yet still he walked around the gently bobbing boats…letting this brew come to a boil. He took in fishermen loading ice and pumping diesel into holds and tanks – and for a while he wondered what a life at sea would feel like – before he figured enough time had passed. He sighed and turned back for his apartment.

‘Why do I always walk down to the sea?’ he reflected. “And in the fog…?”

He was almost home when he saw a girl in the shadows – an obvious hooker – and he thought about using her in his little plan – just as she stepped into the light.

“Hey man, wanna party?”

“No thanks, darlin’,” Harry said, trying but not quite succeeding to smile, “I’m tryin’ to quit.”

She laughed. “Never heard that one before. You live around here?”

“Yup.”

“I’m kinda cold. Could you fix me up with some coffee?”

“Sure, if you don’t mind some home-brew.”

She fell in beside Callahan and followed him to his apartment. He went into his little kitchen and put on the kettle, then set up his carafe with a filter and coffee, and he made enough for two. 

“Have a seat,” he said as he finished up, and after he gave her a cup he walked over to the window and looked down at the bar.

The expected patrol car was parked out front now, and an ambulance was still there too; even so he shook his head as he watched two patrolmen walking up the hill towards his building. So predictable. And yeah, soon enough they were out front; when they buzzed his number he let them in, then went to his door. Waiting for the inevitable knock…

“Callahan?” one officer said when he opened his door. “You nail that kid?”

“You know who the fuck his old man is, man?” the other said.

“What are you talking about?” Harry said. “I’ve been up here with this young lady all night.”

The first cop peered in and leered at the hooker before he nodded. “Nice, quick alibi, Callahan. I salute you.” 

Callahan shut the door and watched them leave from the window, and from the way they were acting he figured both of ‘em were on the Threlkis payroll.

“You a cop?” the girl asked.

“Yup. Homicide.”

“You gonna arrest me, or what?”

“For what? Being cold?”

“Mind if I finish this? It’s pretty good.”

“From Jamaica. It ought to be.”

“Where’s that?”

“Caribbean.”

“Oh. Like the ride? At Disneyland?”

“Yeah. Like that. Mind if I ask how old you are?”

“Why?”

“You run away?”

She looked away, answering that question with a well-oiled screen of silence.

“Now, just one more question: If you wanted to go home right now, what would stop you?”

“I don’t want to go home, man.”

“That wasn’t the question.”

She shook her head. “You don’t wanna know, man. You really don’t.”

“What makes you say that?”

“Look man, they got no problem takin’ out a cop. You, like, hearin’ me?”

He nodded his head while he watched the cops walking back to the bar, and he watched as a couple of men got out of a Lincoln and walked over to meet them. The cops nodded and pointed in the direction of his apartment, and then one of the men handed each cop an envelope.

“You’re working a Threlkis street, so that makes you for one of theirs.” He looked at the developing situation, watched it unfold just as he knew it would. “Your pimp. What kind of car does he drive?”

“A black Lincoln. Why?”

He watched the two men get sawed-off shotguns from the Lincoln’s trunk before he turned to the girl. “You better finish your coffee…” he said as he helped her to the door. “Matter of fact, you’d better head out the back door.”

She saw the men walking up the street…and didn’t need to be told twice.

He went to the bedroom and double-checked that all his important papers were in the top dresser drawer, then he went to the living room and sat down.

And he waited.

And waited.

At one point he thought he heard something fall in the stairwell, but then his little world fell silent and close once again.

Then…a gentle knock on the door…and this he did not expect.

He stood and went for the door, and as planned – unarmed, and he didn’t bother to look out the peep-hole. 

“It’s open,” was all he said.

He watched the knob turning and stepped back, wondering what it would feel like. Pain, probably, then cold awareness before…

But when the door opened Avi Rosenthal walked in, followed by several heavily armed men in black uniforms, their faces blacked-out and glistening with sweat.

“You trying to kill yourself, Harald, isn’t going to make my job any easier, ya know?”

Callahan went to the landing and looked down at the Threlkis men – now thoroughly dead – being stuffed into black nylon body-bags. Then he felt a scalding pinch on his left arm – before a gentle warmth washed over his falling body.

_________________________________

He was, he said, a colonel in the Waffen SS, and not to be trifled with – yet he seemed cautiously courteous. Almost unctuously so. He did not introduce himself, yet he made sure Imogen understood that he knew everything worthwhile there was to know about her, and he repeated time and time again her vulnerability while she was his guest in Theresienstadt. And to drive the point home he walked up to her and took her left breast in hand and fondled it aggressively – in full view of the clearly frightened children huddled on the floor.

“If I want to take you, I will take you. If it amuses me to have a dozen guards sodomize you in the middle of the street, it will happen. If you challenge any rule I will debase you in ways you have never imagined.” He moved his gloved hand from her breast to between her legs, and he lingered there. “Am I being clear?”

“Yes, perfectly clear.”

“You have no protector here, no clever scientist to look after your interests. Do you understand what that means?”

“I understand.”

“We will see. I understand you play the piano quite well. Do you know Wagner?”

“Yes, of course.”

“Ah? Very good…then I may indeed have need of your services from time to time, when I entertain guests from Berlin.”

She remained quiet, and quite still, trying to keep in the moment…but in any event the colonel had already turned and left the room, leaving her to pick up the pieces. Several of the littlest children were openly sobbing now, clutching her ankles in blind fear, so she knelt and gathered all the boys and girls ‘round – yet for a moment she wondered what to say…

But just then the deep rumble of thunder shook the town, and the children gathered closer still…

“I wonder,” she began, “have you heard of the old blind man in the cape? He conducts a very peculiar orchestra…”

Several children looked up at her as she spoke, and they seemed enchanted by her words…

“Yes, come with me to the window, and let us look for him, and we might just see what he is up to this evening!”

Everyone moved to the window, and the smallest children she placed on the window seat, making sure everyone had a clear view of the sky…

“There he is!” she cried. “There, across the way, on that brown roof! Now watch closely, watch his cane, because the entire sky is his orchestra, and he conducts his orchestra with that magic cane! Get ready! Here it comes…watch that tree!”

And a fiery bolt of hot-white lightning came down inside a searing crescendo of thunder, the charge hitting a tree just beyond the gates of the camp, and now – far from being frightened – all the children watched as Imogen described the Caped Man’s movements, and even the oldest girl gathered and watched, fascinated – yet clearly unable to figure out how this strange lady knew when the thunder and lightning were coming, let alone where the lightning would strike.

__________________________________

Frank Bullitt knocked on Harry’s door, and when no one came he used his own key and went in – and he went inside expecting to find the worst. But Harry was not in the bedroom, the kitchen appliances were stone cold, the shower floor dry as a bone. Badge in wallet on top of dresser, his Smith still in its shoulder holster hanging from the hook on the back of the closet door. No clothes in the hamper, everything else neat, no signs of a struggle.

He walked back down the stairs to the third landing and knelt there, looking at several splatters of what just might be blood, then he took out his penlight and sighted along the wall looking for scuff-marks…and yes, there they were!

He went back to the apartment and called central, summoned Dell and Carl and a full Crime Scene Unit, then he called Bennett, who was still at home.

“Sam? Frank. I’m at Harry’s.”

“Is he there?”

“Nope, and there’s evidence of a struggle on the stairs.”

“Blood?”

“Yessir.”

“Goddamnit!”

“Yup.”

“Let me know what you come up with.”

“Right.”

Bullitt hung up the phone and turned to the door, and right away he saw an old man standing there, his hands in his pocket.

“Can I help you?” Bullitt asked, his hand sliding inside his jacket – reaching for his 45.

“Doubtful,” the old man said as he stood there, “but I can probably help you.”

“You see what happened?”

The old man shook his head. “Mind if I come in?” he asked.

“Not at all.” Frank watched carefully as the old man slid – silently – into the living room, and as he removed his hands from his pockets while he walked to the window. The old man went there and looked down the street.

“See that Lincoln down there? The black one – across from the saloon?”

Frank came to the window and looked down the street. “Yeah?”

The old man handed Frank a set of car keys. “Check the trunk. You’ll find a couple of Threlkis’s men in there.”

“Dead?”

“You could say that.”

“And you know this how?”

“My men killed them.”

“Your men?”

The old man turned and faced Bullitt. “Yes. Mine.”

The old man proceeded to take out a small wallet and handed Frank a business card – but the only thing printed on the card was the obscure name ‘Rosenthal.’

“You one of Avi’s?” Frank asked, and the old man simply nodded. “You know where Harry is?”

“With Avi. And with any luck at all, he’ll be back soon.”

“You know where he is?”

“Me? No, I don’t.”

“Why are you here?”

“Cleaning up some loose ends, Lieutenant.”

“I see.”

“You need to spend more time with your Captain Bennett, Lieutenant. He is not well.”

And it wasn’t what the old man said, but the way he said it that caused the hair on the back of Frank’s neck to stand on-end: “Why? What are you saying?”

“Bad dreams. Waking up in the middle of the night, playing with his revolver. I’m afraid he might have an accident…cleaning his gun, something like that.”

“And how do you…”

But the old man simply shrugged as he turned and walked slowly out of the apartment.

Frank looked at the Lincoln’s keys in his hand, trying to come up with some kind of plausible story to feed the press. When Carl and Delgetti arrived he handed the keys over to Carl and told him to go check the car’s trunk – while he briefed Dell on his conversation with the old man.

“Where do you think they took Harry?” Delgetti asked.

Frank shook his head. “The guy seemed more concerned with Bennett.”

“With Sam?”

“Yeah. Kinda implied the old man is suicidal.”

“What? Bennett? No way!”

“I don’t know, Dell. He lost his sister and his boy in one fell swoop. Maybe we’re assuming Sam is stronger than we…”

“So what do you wanna do about it?”

“Get him thoroughly toasted, for one. Get him talking…” Frank seemed to come alive as he worked through an idea, turning things over in his mind as more and more ideas poured in. “I’m gonna call Cathy…you and Carl handle this one…then come on up to The Shadows around nine or so.”

_________________________________

He woke up to the now all-to-familiar droning of the Jetstar’s four Pratt & Whitney turbojet engines, yet this time the backs of his eyeballs felt sore, almost abused. He rubbed them with his knuckles for too long, leaving his vision blurred and his headache worse, so he reached up and found the air nozzle and dialed it open, directing the airflow to his face.

“Feeling okay?” Avi asked.

Harry shook his head. “What was in that shot? Panther-piss?”

“Here, try this.”

“What is it?”

“Tomato juice, celery, salt, pepper, and a little Tabasco.”

“Vodka?”

“No,” Avi said.

“That’s called a Virgin Mary.”

“That’s disgusting.”

“So, where are you taking me this time?”

“Switzerland.”

“And why…”

“To a psychiatric hospital.”

“Turn this fuckin’ thing around, Avi. I mean it. Right now.”

“This aircraft is going to Geneva, and so too are you. I’ve had you under constant surveillance since the incident at the Bennett house, and I am not going to sit idly by and watch you destroy yourself.”

“Why Avi, I didn’t know you cared…”

“I don’t, Harald. I do, however, care for your mother, and if she were to lose you now…well…I’m not sure she would recover. And, in any event, I will not take that chance.”

Callahan shut up and looked out the window, saw what had to be London far below and took a long pull from the glass of tomato juice. “Not bad,” he sighed.

“Too much salt, but you need electrolytes after that sedative. You’ll want to drink some water soon, or your ankles will look like an elephant’s.”

“My eyeballs are on fire.”

“Here, take these.”

“And these are?”

“Panadol. What you call Tylenol.”

Harry downed the caplets and leaned back, let the cold air stream down his face until he couldn’t stand it any longer, then he turned and looked out the window again – this time it looked like they were over Paris – and he got lost in the passing landscape as afternoon slipped into evening.

“So…Geneva. Then where am I going?”

“We are going to a clinic near Davos, but high up in the mountains.”

“We?”

“Yes. I’ve wanted to do some skiing for some time now, and this might turn out to be a good excuse to do just that.”

“Glad to be of service.”

Avi looked at him for a moment before speaking. “Life is a precious thing, Harry. This cliché is of course well-intentioned…but, why are you smiling?”

“I do believe that is the first time you’ve called me ‘Harry’.”

Avi shook his head.  “Your mother would kill me.”

“Really? I never knew her to be quite that aggressive.”

“Oh? I wonder if we’re talking of the same woman.”

“Where did you two meet?”

Avi sighed as he leaned back in the seat. “Copenhagen, of course, years before the war. I think it was her playing, really more than anything else, that brought us together.”

“Was she that good?”

“She was better than you could possibly imagine, Harry. My father knew many of the best musicians, people like Gustav Mahler, and he thought your mother was better than all the rest.”

“What did your father do?”

“My family has always been involved with the business side of music. Publishing new works, selling music to students, or scores to orchestras. We still have the store in Copenhagen, as well as the little shop in San Francisco.”

“Wait…you have a store in The City?”

“Yes, of course! You mean, you didn’t know?”

“I had no idea. There are two stores, if I’m not mistaken?”

“Yes, just as in Copenhagen; one for sheet music, and the piano dealership – which has been more than useful over recent years.”

“Oh?”

“Yes, the Soviet consul’s house, among others, simply has to have the best pianos for their various receptions, and we were more than happy to supply them – suitably equipped, of course.”

Harry nodded. “So, you were related to Saul Rosenthal?”

Avi hesitated, not quite realizing the lack of depth in Harry’s familial literacy – and unsure how to proceed: “He was my older brother, and he became the sole proprietor of the business after the war. I took no interest in such things after I moved to Israel.”

“So, Saul knew my mother?”

Again Avi blinked rapidly, then crossed his hands in his lap. “I feel most certain that he did.”

“Man, that’s weird…”

“Weird? How so?”

“Mom would never go up to the store. She always sent me and Dad.”

“She hates automobiles so. Perhaps that explains why.” Avi looked out the window and squinted into the evening gloom, looking for a way out of this thorny line of questioning. “Ah, the alps already! We are getting close, so time to buckle up! We will resume our little talk later…”

But if anything, by now Harry Callahan was a skilled inquisitor in his own right, and watching Avi’s body shift and squirm, let alone the way his eyes darted down and to the left, told him more than Avi’s hastily constructed evasions ever could. And now, and for the first time, he began to look at Avi Rosenthal not as a friend but rather an inquisitor in his own way. And perhaps one who held the keys to a vast prison.

© 2020 adrian leverkühn | abw | as always, thanks for reading…

[note: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need until the work is finalized. Yet with the current circumstances that might not be the best way to proceed, and I’d hate to have this story stop ‘unexpectedly’ without some mention of these sources. Of course, the source material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two Hollywood films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’ storyline derives from characters originally found in that screenplay. The Threlkis crime family storyline was first introduced in Sudden Impact, screenplay by Joseph Stinson. Most of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed within the works cited above, but as always this story is otherwise a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing historical fabric, using the established characters referenced above, as well as new characters I’ve come up with here and there.]

the eighty-eighth key, ch. 17

88k p3 image

The Eighty-eighth Key

Part III

Chapter 17

____________________________________

Is there any real difference between dreams and a nightmare? If there is, the line between the two must be very fine indeed. Just the slightest change leads the dreamer from an exquisitely comfortable experience down a rabbit hole to gasping confinement, with inward-pushing walls forcing the dreamscape to resolve the dreamer’s darkest fears. Dreams take us on a curious journey within those things we often hold most dear, while nightmares force us to experience our darkest imaginings, and as such it might now be important to recall that both the dream and the nightmare come from within. Neither comes unbidden; both are invited guests.

Yet, and by way of further exploration, perhaps you might consider the line between delusion and perceived reality. Delusions, like nightmares, are constructs of the mind, while reality is imposed not from within but from the world around us. We are surrounded by reality, while delusions warp the deluded mind from within, by what in the end is a most fragile web of self-deceit. 

But what happens when the world around us takes on all the characteristics of a nightmare? And what happens to the soul when confronted with just so much existential dread? And perhaps the most important thing of all, what happens to the mind when all the characteristics of a nightmare exist – but there is no easy escape from the terror by simply waking up?

____________________________________

One of Imogen Schwarzwald’s constant companions throughout her life had been the Caped Man with his cane, her very own sumner of thunderstorms, and yet to those who knew Imogen best, this invisible talisman was most often an unseen harbinger of cataclysmic change. Even so, the Caped Man rarely spoke to Imogen, preferring instead to use his cane to summon change or to use it like a conductor’s baton – to play with lightning or to bring a mast’s gaff crashing down. He had, of course, never changed over the years of her life, and he came to her now as he always had: dressed the same; his eyes the same; and as he ever had, he came to her unbidden. Rather like a nightmare, you might say.

And when the Caped Man came to Imogen she retreated from the world, from that place we might be tempted to otherwise call reality, and at first she grew still – and then in time she was possessed by an immense quiet. Yet even in the quietest moments – as when rain falls like tears in the sunshine, even when the song is almost over – the effect of the Caped Man could still be heard, his music playing within her eyes as she fell away.

Because deep within these moments he often spoke – but was it to her that he spoke?

It hardly matters, because more often than not she spoke to him. 

Not in words, however.

No, she spoke to the Caped Man in another language, in the arcane vibrations taught to her by another tormented soul. In the notes and chords taught to Imogen by her mother.

And yes, though it hardly matters now, Imogen Schwarzwald’s First Piano Concerto – which she played for the first time on the occasion of her seventh birthday – revealed the contours of her first extensive conversations with the Caped Man. Within that first piece, deep within the sintered vibrations of her soul, variations on a theme could found that would echo throughout her life – even within the grasping walls of the waking nightmare that was the Nazi concentration camp known as Theresienstadt.

____________________________________

The party wound down after that last rousing chorus, and even Fred the dog reappeared, walking from butt to butt, sniffing tentatively as he came back to Sam Bennett. He sat by his master’s side and looked up expectantly, hoping for a pat on the head or a scrap of steak – not so very different from all the others in attendance – and the pup watched as the people started to head – in ones and twos – for the side-gate.

But then he scented something unfamiliar, and he growled.

Frank turned to face the sound, then he went and knelt by Fred: “What is it, fella?”

And Fred stood, then strode to the gate and sat. Protectively.

“Now that’s odd,” Bennett said as he got to the gate and opened it. He stepped out onto the sidewalk and looked up the street towards the park, then down to the bay – and he saw nothing.

Everyone gathered there, by the gate, and everyone looked, too, but no one saw anything untoward…so the usual conversations resumed. “Seeya tomorrow,” type things, and “Sure had a nice time, Sam.”

Chip Bennett sidled over the Frank Bullitt and asked about his new Porsche, then asked where it was parked.

Bullitt got the hint and pointed up the street while he fished his keys from his coat pocket.

“You remember how to drive a stick?” Frank asked as Chip took off up the street, then he turned to face An Linh. “Did you have a good time?” he asked.

“There is much to take in, many new things to understand,” she said, “yet I wonder how much I’ve seen here is really so different from what I am used to.”

“Well,” Cathy said, taking Frank’s hand in her own, “in the end we’re all just people. I suspect we all share the same hopes and dreams.”

“And we’re all haunted by the same demons,” Stacy Bennett added. “Yet…”

An explosion shattered the night, knocking everyone off their feet. Glass shattering in nearby windows rained down on the street, and several trees caught fire – which spread to several wood-shingled rooftops, causing an even greater conflagration. Soon several houses were ablaze.

Sam Bennett was first on his feet, the first to recognize what had just happened, and he called out his son’s name as he took off running up the street. Bullitt stood and helped Cathy to her feet, but when he heard Sam’s cry he turned and followed his captain up the street.

Harry had instinctively cradled An Linh and fallen on her, protecting her with his body, so the next thing he saw was Al Bressler kneeling beside Stacy Bennett, and then he noticed Jim Parish performing CPR on Stacy. He shook his head, tried to think past the incredible ringing in his ears, then he too realized what had happened and took off running up the street.

He found Frank and Sam standing near the rim of a deep crater, and there was, quite literally, nothing recognizable left of Frank’s Porsche.

And Chip Bennett. He was dead, and as the realization hit Sam he drifted slowly to his knees and began praying.

“Stay here,” Frank told Callahan as he turned and sprinted to the Bennett house, and with that Harry reached out, put his hand on Sam’s shoulder to let his friend know he was not alone, and only then did he look around at the carnage.

Several cars were overturned, their distorted hulks charred and in places, melted. Dozens of trees were still on fire, and while three houses were already total losses, several more were close to being fully involved…

…and that was when Callahan first recognized a peculiar odor in the air.

“That’s C-4,” he said.

“What?” Bennett said, suddenly a police captain once again. “C-4? Are you sure?”

“Yeah, I’m sure.”

“Then this wasn’t a gas leak, was it? Where’s Frank?”

“He went to the house…”

“Come on. Nothing we can do here.”

Already the air was filled with choking smoke, and though dozens of sirens could be heard approaching the area Bennett ran to a house and called-out for survivors. Callahan did the same, and by that time both Al Bressler and his father had fanned-out, looking to assist anyone in need.

At one point he saw Parish still hovering over Stacy Bennett, and both Cathy and An Linh were with him, and he wondered what that was all about before he ran into a burning house. He called out, heard a faint reply so ran upstairs and through a thick wall of smoke. He called out again and followed the reply to a bedroom; he found an elderly man propped-up in a hospital bed, hooked up to an oxygen bottle…

“Can you move on your own,” Harry called out as small flames began breaking through the ceiling, and the old man simply shook his head. He ran to the bed and picked the man up and tossed him over his shoulder, and, with his left hand, he grabbed the oxygen bottle and turned for the door.

But the way ahead was already blocked by another wall of flames.

He made his way to another door and this one opened onto a small balcony that overlooked a manicured side yard, and firemen saw him standing there and raced his way with a ladder.

He helped the first fireman up the ladder take the old man, then he made his way down just as the house fell in on itself. Sparks and flaming embers fell on everything and his coat was soon a smoldering mess; he felt his scalp burning and snuffed out the small flames there, then ran across the street to see what had happened to Stacy Bennett.

Jim Parish was kneeling beside her inert form and without needing to know anything more he knew she was gone and he shook his head, suddenly very confused. He saw Sam holding onto Fran a moment later, then Frank holding Cathy, cradling her head. He couldn’t see An Linh anywhere and he grew anxious – until he saw her sitting next to his father, both on a small bench, and now feeling somewhat more at-ease he walked their way.

“What happened to Stacy?” he asked as he came up to his dad.

“Doctor Parish thinks she might have had a heart attack,” Lloyd Callahan said. “I’m sorry, Harry.”

“Are you alright?” he asked them both, and though his father nodded in the affirmative, when An Linh merely looked away he knelt next to her.

And she looked at him.

“I think Cathy was correct,” she said. “We are all alike. And this city is not at all different than Saigon.”

He looked away, because in a way she was absolutely correct, yet in so many other ways she couldn’t have been more wrong – but how do you explain things you can’t often see? How could he tell her about all the good things without sounding ridiculous? Not after all she had been through the past few weeks. Not after a lifetime of living through bombed-out streets and all the other vestiges of war.

Or maybe, he thought, I’m just biased. He turned, looked at the cratered street lined with ruptured cars, the homes with burning roofs and shattered windows, and then he stopped believing, if only for the briefest moment. ‘Maybe I can’t see the forest for the trees, because…is this really so different? Were the riots in ’68 really so different? John and Bobby Kennedy? Martin King? Didn’t their blood stain just as deeply…or have I missed something?’

And then he felt like he was standing along the edges of a vast precipice, and waiting below – in the darkness – was a vast unknown…like a nightmare waiting to engulf everything he thought he knew about this place.

_______________________________

Some nightmares can’t be denied. They spring forth from deepest fear and slowly invert all the goodness in a dream. Nightmares are undeniable, and the worst are unforgettable.

The same can be said of those circumstances we might, with justification, call waking nightmares. Yet there are key differences. Nightmares are close cousins of delusion, the workings of the subconscious mind, while waking nightmares are creatures in and of this world. But consider that waking nightmares are quite often crafted by sick minds and imposed on others as a form of torture. Let us consider for a moment the concentration camp.

Imagine getting off a train and being met by guards who instruct you to enter a common bathing area for purposes of delousing, and, after you are forced to remove all your clothes, you are packed in a large showering area with dozens of other naked men, women, and children. You are, in such circumstances, being – quite literally – stripped of your humanity, but then gas starts pouring out of dozens of overhead ‘shower’ nozzles, and one by one the people around you fall to the floor, and yes, you realize they are dead. And soon enough you too take your last breath as you fall onto this writhing mass before everything within you grows cold and still.

Can such events be anything other than a nightmare?

But then there was Theresienstadt. The Nazi idea of a halfway house for Jews.

Not everyone sent to Theresienstadt was transferred to one of the Nazi death camps and, indeed, a relative few spent the entire war here. On the other hand, most who found themselves delivered to Theresienstadt were short-timers; if these people weren’t quite what was called for they found ready passage booked on the next train to Poland – to one of the main death camps located there.

And so, on one rainy afternoon, Imogen Schwarzwald found herself on the station platform in the Czech town of Terezín – in the company of several hundred Jews from Holland and Denmark – and she had all her belongings with her. The remnants of her life were contained in one suitcase that held perhaps three changes of clothes and a few toiletries, and the assembled Jews were told to stand away from the platform – in the rain – and they remained standing there for several hours.

Then all of the assembled Jews were told that they would have to carry their belongings up a steep, winding street to their new quarters, so the group – mainly elderly men and women – picked up their luggage and began walking up the hill. The two-mile walk took several hours, all of it taking place during a cold downpour. One by one the weakest fell out of the ranks – those men and women were never seen again – and when the remainder reached the hilltop their belongings were taken from them and – still in the rain – ransacked. Anything of value was simply taken, and then all the remnants were simply thrown into a garbage truck and carried away – never to be seen again. Again, you strip away humanity layer by layer, piece by precious piece, until there is no room for feelings.

Many of the assembled Jews had been told they could purchase apartments in the village, and those with the means did so. These wealthier Jews were now separated from the main group and taken to the most filthy barracks in the compound. Layer by layer, piece by piece…

Imogen was taken to a small house, and the family inside took her to a small room on the top floor, where she learned she would reside with six children – all of them recent orphans.

Cold, wet, and utterly disoriented, Imogen went to the one small window and looked out over the rooftops – and she couldn’t help but think back to her father’s house in Copenhagen, with its view of the red tile roofs and the harbor beyond. She thought of him for a moment, then she thought of Avi Rosenthal and his impossible dream of making it to British Palestine…then she felt someone standing close by and she turned…

“You are the physicist?” the woman standing by her side asked.

“Yes.”

“And you are a teacher?”

“I am.”

“Good. Do you teach anything besides math and physics?”

“I play the piano well enough to teach.”

The woman shrugged. “We have several pianists here, an entire symphony orchestra as a matter of fact. We have little need for another.”

“I see. What has this to do with me?”

The woman sighed, then she too looked out the window. “If you are not useful here you will be transferred to one of the Polish camps.”

“Polish?”

“These camps…well…people do not return from these places.”

“What are you saying?”

“From what we have heard they are killing hundreds a day at these places, perhaps more…”

“That is ridiculous,” Imogen interrupted. “Who would allow such a thing?”

The woman grimaced before she spoke next. “The veneer of civilization is very thin here. You would do well to remember that before speaking out.”

Imogen felt a familiar stillness settling-in as those words washed over the room, and with these words she new the Caped Man would call for her soon – yet on an elemental level, she now understood that this was something she could no longer allow. If she was not useful, this woman had just told her – she would, at the end of another train ride, be one of hundreds killed on a daily basis at some mysterious Polish camp.

“So,” Imogen replied to the implied threat, “who am I to teach?”

“You are to take care of these children when you are not teaching. They are the future, and this above all else we cherish – and defend. When we return to our homeland, to Palestine…”

“My husband is in Palestine,” Imogen said, “waiting for me.”

And on hearing this the woman seemed to hover over the first hints of an idea. “And what does he do there?”

“He is negotiating with the British and the Americans for the creation of a Jewish homeland.”

On hearing this the woman staggered backwards, as if she’d just been dealt a knockout punch. “You must wait here. Do not leave this room.”

And the woman fled down the stairs at a furious pace, leaving Imogen to take a hard look around her immediate future. The children – the youngest still in diapers, the oldest in her teens – seemed impossibly well kept…given these circumstances…and in a flash Imogen heard the woman’s voice again: ‘they are our future…’

Of course! The residents of this camp were pouring all their resources into these children, because they were the future. Their future. And this future would reside in…Palestine.

Just as Avi had foreseen.

Only at the time few people in Denmark had bothered listening to Avi and his wild dream.

She looked down, down to the street far below, and like the briefest flash of an idea she thought she saw Saul Rosenthal speaking with several old men, but then she realized that could not possibly be happening. 

Not here.  

And certainly not now.

And in time she heard several men rushing up the stairs – yet she remained fixed in time, staring out the window as darkness fell over the decaying town, then she saw reflections in the glass. Men in uniforms. They were SS, she knew, because the twin silver lightning bolts shimmered in the glass, and in that last slice of awareness she knew they had come to take her to Poland.

Because the Caped Man was out there now, out there in the rain with his cane, conducting another symphony in the clouds.

___________________________

Callahan was kneeling on the sidewalk beside Jim Parish, kneeling over Stacy Bennett’s cooling body while they looked at a small puncture wound on the right side of her neck…

“Harry, that looks an awful lot like a 5.56mm to me.”

Callahan nodded, then he looked up, trying to remember how she had been standing, trying to calculate the angle to the assassin’s perch…

She had been standing closest to Sam, on his right side…

He looked down the street – and watched a dark blue Ford sedan pull away from the curb and take off towards the marina.

The sheer audacity of the strike had kept events at arm’s length, but now the weight of everything lost came crashing down on Sam and Fran Bennett. They clung to the familiar as gales of uncertainty tore at sanity’s weaker fringes, then Cathy and Frank helped them to their house. Harry watched Dell and Stan sifting through the shattered wreckage of Frank’s 911, then it hit him…

…something was wrong…

He turned and looked around, saw his father standing watch over the scene…

“Dad,” he called out, “you’d better get…”

…but now his father was running…

…running towards An Linh…

He turned and saw her falling, saw the wreckage of yet another senseless killing taking form within the sundered fabric of time, and by the time he made it to her side it was all over.

He cradled her head, tried to make sense of the expression on her face, in her eyes, but everything she had ever been was fading now.

Whatever she had hoped for in this coming to America was fading fast, too. As fast as the blood pouring from the exit wound on the far side of her hopes and dreams. 

He kissed her forehead, squeezed her hand as paramedics ran to his side – but he looked their way and shook his head.

“Welcome to America, my love,” he whispered.

© 2020 adrian leverkühn | abw | as always, thanks for dropping by…

[note: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need until the work is finalized. Yet with the current circumstances that might not be the best way to proceed, and I’d hate to have this story stop ‘unexpectedly’ without some mention of these sources. Of course, the source material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two Hollywood films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’ storyline derives from characters originally found in that screenplay. Most of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed in the works cited above, but as always this story is otherwise a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing historical timeline, using the established characters referenced above.]

the eighty-eighth key, ch. 16

88k p3 image

The Eighty-eighth Key

Part III

Chapter 16

____________________________________

‘What is the difference between a dream and a nightmare?’

Imogen turned the thought over in her mind, asking herself again if she would choose the nightmare – assuming she could step back in time and endure her latest conversation with Heisenberg once again. Why had he chosen to speak of her future in such stark terms? Had he seen her fate if she chose not to cooperate once in Leipzig? Worse, what if her role – stalling for more time – was uncovered? If it was discovered she had stalled Werner – and the Gestapo – long enough so that almost all of the Danish contingent from the University could escape the city?

Just what would they do to her then?

And if the worst happened, would Werner Heisenberg really stop protecting her? There was hardly anyone within the hierarchy of the German scientific establishment held in higher esteem than Heisenberg, but what were the limits to his power? She was a Jew, after all.

And now she was living in Leipzig, in an apartment just off the Augustusplatz, and she had two servants attending to her every need. And no doubt reporting her every movement to the Gestapo…yet even so she was still relatively free. Free to report to the labs. Free to attend lectures if she so chose. And free to teach…

And she was free to play the piano that Werner provided.

And so she played, working like never before perfecting her craft, soon playing even better than Heisenberg – who seemed to mind this most recent diversion not at all.

And when she began composing again, Werner soon began coming by her apartment with his wife, and they listened in rapt attention to her swelling progress. When her Second Concerto was finished Heisenberg took it to the conductor of the University Orchestra – who immediately agreed to a performance – and who with Werner agreed the work merited publication. After a month’s rehearsal, the concerto was performed at the old Gewandhaus on a cold January night, and the work was generally well-regarded by all who came – with the exception of a small contingent from the Reichssicherheitshauptamt. These men regarded Schwarzwald’s Second as yet another example of degenerate art, and they left the concert hall in a particularly foul mood.

And, oddly enough, all this was watched by a small, bespectacled man from Denmark – who seemed to watch the men in black leather overcoats rather more than the orchestra. He followed them out into a light snow, and though he kept to the shadows he still did his very best to avoid detection. The men, he saw, walked to Werner Heisenberg’s house and waited, apparently none the wiser that they, too, had a watcher.

______________________________

Parish looked at bright splashes of pulsing strobes as the little jet bounced through yet another layer of cloud, then a vague cityscape cast in blues and blacks appeared just below, and when he saw the wing sprout all kinds of flaps and slats he knew they were landing…but where were they?

He looked at An Linh across the narrow aisle, and she seemed not at all concerned by the day’s twists and turns – yet how was that even possible? Pulled from the imploding wreckage of the country she had known all her life, thrust into the maelstrom of thousands of orphans being sorted like packages to be sent off to foster homes, and all the while under no illusions at all that the man she had endured all this for had just been murdered…?

And yet here she was – if anything looking more sedate than anything else.

Then he looked at the elder Callahan once again and saw the old man was looking out his window, too – yet looking anything but sedate. And who could blame him? His son killed – or so it had seemed until this morning – and now, this – escape? Bogus cops’ questions then Frank Bullitt’s spirited actions had dispelled the first notion, yet the next thing he knew he was being spirited away from his house and spit into this little jet to be carried away to…where?

Let alone his home was now occupied by what? …Commandos?

Parish looked at his watch, noted they had been airborne for almost five hours and he guessed – if the snowy landscape below was any sort of indication – that they were somewhere in the midwest, probably Detroit or Cleveland. One thing was certain, however: the Israeli commando up front wasn’t being any help at all. 

He felt the kiss of tires on earth, felt their rumble diminish as the little jet began braking on the slushy concrete, and a moment later they pulled to a stop outside of a small hanger. The air-stairs opened and a blast of arctic air swirled through the cabin, and just then the Israeli motioned for them to come forward. Parish saw another van outside on the tarmac, this one with its door open and engine running, and he spotted a Quebec license plate on a passing truck as he led An Linh down the steps.

It took a half-hour to drive into the city, and after a bit of dodging the dense evening traffic the van pulled into a covered entryway to the Chateau Frontenac Hotel, and when the van’s door slid open Parish noted they were being met by an elegantly dressed older man, surrounded by an entourage of anxiously observant men who all seemed to be equipped with earpieces…

…and, Parish noted, the elegantly dressed older man seemed most interested in the senior Callahan.

“Ah, Mr. Callahan?”

“Yessir?”

“My name is Feldman. I am to see to your group’s needs for the next few days. Will you come with me, please?”

Parish looked this character over while he spoke and saw not one bit of deference as he spoke; indeed, he saw nothing at all in the man’s curious demeanor, not even a hint of curiosity as they fell in behind him. They marched along straight to a bank of elevators and rode up several floors in silence, then followed the man to a room at the end of a short hallway. He knocked on a seemingly ancient oak door, and, after a brief moment, the door creaked opened.

And there stood Harry Callahan.

______________________________

Not a half-hour later, Saul Rosenthal watched a black Mercedes pull up to the Heisenberg residence just as the Gestapo team emerged from the stately house, only now, and more ominously, Werner Heisenberg seemed to be in their custody. Rosenthal had no way to follow the team so, keeping to the shadows once again, he made his way carefully to his preferred spot overlooking Imogen’s apartment building – and there he waited…in the gently falling snow. The lights were still off so he suspected she might not have returned from the concert hall, and, true enough – not an hour later he saw a car turn down her street.

And not a minute later he noticed the other car staking-out her return. They pulled up parallel to the car he suspected Imogen might be in, just as the first car pulled to a stop in front of her building’s entry.

And as Imogen emerged from the car the Gestapo surrounded her, then roughly pulled her to their car. Rosenthal watched and carefully noted the time, then slipped deeper into the shadows before moving again.

______________________________

Parish stepped back as An Linh rushed past on her way to Harry’s outstretched arms, yet he was most surprised by the elder Callahan’s initial reaction. Lloyd at first registered astonished delight on finding his son alive, yet when the Vietnamese refuge soared by he seemed to focus on his son’s reaction most carefully, and only then did he wipe an errant tear away.

Jim Parish held his own feelings in check as he watched An Linh implode under the weight of such an unexpected shock, yet when he thought about his own reaction later that evening he found he thought about the reunion with a sense of wonder. How this tiny orphan survived a savage upbringing to land a job at the most prestigious bar in Saigon was only a tiny part of her tale; recognizing that in Harry Callahan – and Callahan alone amongst all the Caravelle’s varied patrons – she had somehow found a way to peace…and that was, in Jim’s mind, the most wondrous story of all.

The elegant old man, Leopold Feldman, was the Israeli consul, so it was under Israeli auspices that An Linh, Parish, and Lloyd Callahan would remain the next few weeks. Parish soon met and grew to respect Sam Bennett, but he was more than surprised to see that Bennett’s sister Stacy was madly, yet stoically in love with Harry.

That first evening the group went down to the Frontenac’s elegant main dining room, and they were seated next to huge, arched windows that afforded magical views of the Saint Lawrence River far below. An Linh seemed physically enjoined to Harry, while Jim Parish managed to grab a seat next to Stacy Bennett, leaving Sam Bennett to talk shop with Al Bressler and Lloyd Callahan. A  gaggle of Israeli agents dined at several nearby tables.

Though Jim Parish didn’t feel too out of sorts when he learned Stacy was some sort of higher-up within the FBI, when he learned she was working out of the Boston office he instantly warmed to her. 

“I miss Cambridge,” he blurted out when she mentioned she was working in Boston.

“Oh?”

“Yeah, I did my undergrad and went to med school there.”

Stacy seemed impressed by this and turned away from Harry. “Harvard, or MIT?”

“And why not Radcliffe?” he replied.

“You don’t fit the profile,” Stacy said, adding: “Your ass isn’t big enough.”

Parish’s eyes lit up as he nodded his approval. “Well, Harvard it is, then. What about you? I take it you’re a Yalie.”

“Fuck you,” she sneered, “and the horse you rode in on.”

“Ah, hit a nerve, did I? Your boss went to Yale?”

“Yup.”

“So, how’d you get mixed up in this mess?”

And so she told Parish about the vigilante squad working within the SFPD and the attempt on her brother’s life, then her role in Harry’s staged assassination, which led to more and more questions about Israelis and crooked cops…

“Sorry, can’t talk about that element,” she whispered. “And you’d do well not to even mention Israelis when this is all over with.”

“Got it,” Parish said. “So, what’s it like, being dead and all…”

She smiled: “Ya know…I kinda like it. There’s a sort of freedom I’ve never experienced before. I’ll miss it when this is over.”

“You have no idea how weird that sounds.”

“Oh, that’s right. You’re a surgeon, right? I forgot.”

“You forgot?”

“Yeah, I read your file a few days ago.”

“Do you have any idea how weird that sounds?”

“At least we’re speaking the same language.”

“Huh?”

“Well, everything sounds weird to you. At least we’re…”

“Okay. Got it.”

“Oh? You’re pretty quick – for a Harvard puke.”

“So…Cornell?”

“No.”

“Dartmouth?”

“God, no…”

“Okay, I give up.”

“Loyola undergrad, Georgetown law.”

“Which Loyola?”

“L.A.”

“The party school? I’m surprised.”

“How’d you know that? You from LA?”

“No, Oregon. My folks have a dairy farm outside of Portland.”

“You grew up – on a farm?”

“Yup. Sorry.”

“Don’t get me wrong…but I think that’s great…”

“Great? Why’s that?”

“That’s where I always wanted us to be…our family…when I was growing up. I thought living on a farm would be the bestest thing ever…”

“It was…different,” Parish sighed. “My folks are getting on, and Dad keeps asking me what he should do with the place after they’re gone…”

“God…keep it. Nothing like land…nothing…don’t ever let it slip away from you.”

Parish grinned. “He’d like you, I think.” – ‘And I think I’d like you to meet him,’ he thought.

She smiled as she watched him say those words, and at the way she suddenly felt about this chance encounter. “Really? Why’s that?” – ‘And I think I’d really like to get to know you better,’ she thought.

 And all of this happened without Harry Callahan ever knowing what happened to Stacy Bennett, and how she slipped ever so quietly out of his life.

______________________________

He had slipped into one of his better hideouts, an alleyway with a fine view of Leipzig’s secret police headquarters, so he could plainly see Imogen when they spirited her out of the building and into yet another waiting Mercedes. People were out and about on the streets now, most walking heads-down and hands-in-pocket, striding purposely-by on their way to work, and at an opportune moment Rosenthal slipped from the shadows and made his way through the rush and onto a waiting streetcar, this one heading in the same direction as the car. Though he didn’t know Leipzig well, he had a bad feeling they were taking her to the main railway station, and soon enough that fear was realized.

He hopped off the streetcar and followed Imogen and her S.S. guard to a distant railway platform – to a train with the listed departure for Prague – and so now he knew, his darkest fears had now come to pass. She was bound for Theresienstadt, the halfway point to Hell…but he knew that for the S.S. this choice made the most sense. The Nazis used the Czech ghetto-camp as a showcase of their ‘good intentions’ towards Jews, while artfully concealing the dreadful conditions within, and so Jewish artists, writers, and musicians often found their way to this shallow grave. Weaker, less useful residents were soon shipped off to the killing camps, so Rosenthal knew that if he was going to act he’d have to act soon.

Saul slipped into a coach near Imogen’s, and as the old steam engine huffed it’s way out of the station he sat back and closed his eyes. All he could do was hope his diplomatic passport and Red Cross credentials would get him through the border crossing. If not, he told himself, he’d be on the next train to Poland.

______________________________

When Lloyd and Harry Callahan returned to their old house in Potrero Hills – with An Linh now always walking quietly beside her fiancé – all seemed as it had once before.

Almost.

Harry was the first to discover several bullet holes in the kitchen – that had only recently been spackled-over. Then he found blood residue within the grout on the bathroom floor…and soon other telltale signs that a brief, fierce firefight had played out inside the house. Then he noticed neighbors looked at him coldly when he sat with An Linh on the front porch. Only when she grew tired and retired for the evening did his father join him in the last colorful splashes of evening. 

In fading pastels of the day, Lloyd carried two rum & cokes out onto the porch and sat down next to his son.

“You look like you could use this,” he said to Harry as he passed the drink.

“Probably more than one, Dad. I suppose you saw…?”

“Yeah. A bunch of special forces types took over the house when the Israelis moved us to Quebec. I got the distinct impression they were setting a trap.”

“Looks like they were successful,” Harry sighed. “But I haven’t seen anything about it on the papers, or on the news…” Harry said before he looked up when a black Porsche 911 Targa slowed and pulled into their driveway, then he smiled when he saw it was Frank Bullitt. “Goddamn,” he whispered, “another fuckin’ Porsche.”

“How does he afford those things,” Lloyd asked.

“Cathy. She made partner at the new architectural firm she’s at. They bought a lot up at that Sea Ranch development. Gonna retire in style, I reckon,” he added as Frank bounded up the steps two at a time.

Frank walked up to Lloyd and shook hands. “Nice to see you again,” Frank said.

“Can I get you something to drink, or are you still on duty?” Lloyd asked.

“Whatever you two are having,” Frank said, turning to Harry.

“Two fingers of Mount Gay and a shitload of Coke,” Harry said to his friend.

“Got any lime?” Frank added.

“I’ll get it, Dad.” Harry stood and looked at Frank, who seemed a little agitated, before he walked to the kitchen. He made three more and walked back to the front porch, and he found Frank sitting beside his father. “Here-go,” he said as he passed around the drinks.

“This just might be the best front porch in the city,” Frank said as he looked at the Bay Bridge just as the lights flipped on. “Best drinks, too.”

“What the fuck happened in this house,” Harry growled.

Bullitt shrugged, then let slip a long sigh, and he seemed almost embarrassed when he spoke next: “I’m not real sure, Harry. The Israelis ran this show, almost from start to finish…”

“What?” Lloyd said, his voice registering more than a little surprise. “Last time I heard this was still the United States…”

Frank turned to the elder Callahan and nodded. “You remember all that shit in Munich a couple of years ago? At the Olympics?”

Lloyd looked down, nodded. “How could you not.”

“Well, the Israelis have teams out tracking down the perps, but when their government heard that Jews were being targeted in San Francisco? Well, someone over there called Doctor Kissinger, and Kissinger called the governor. Long story – short, we gave ‘em the green light to identify and take out these people, with the FBI putatively giving cover to the operation. They ran wire-taps all over the state, ran down the heads of cells in San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose and one by one they took ‘em out. They lured the San Francisco cell here about three nights ago…”

“How come there’s nothing in the paper about all this?” Lloyd asked.

“Nothing to report,” Frank sighed. “No noise. Silenced weapons, I assume. A contractor dropped by the next morning and cleaned up the mess.”

“How many killed?” Harry asked.

“More than twenty, Harry.”

“All cops?” Lloyd asked, and Frank nodded. “What’s been reported is being attributed to Black Panther-type gang activity, maybe offshoots of the SLA, too. We’re drip-feeding misinformation to the press, the hope being that with little so information out there the story will just go away.”

“So,” Lloyd added, “blame it on the blacks?”

Frank shrugged.

“Is Dad safe here?”

Frank took a long pull on his drink, then nodded. “There’s no evidence anyone else is still operating in the Bay Area, Mr. Callahan. Even so, the teams working around the city will continue to do so for another week or so.”

“Are they keeping my place under surveillance?” Harry asked.

“You’re dead, Harry. Remember?”

“Not according to Israeli intel,” Harry said. “We were made over there.”

“So I heard. Fucking Bressler.”

“Not his fault, Frank. Just bad luck.”

“Yeah. Funny how bad luck always seems to work against the good guys.”

Harry finished his second drink then looked around. “Who’s ready for a refresh?”

Two more empty glasses hoisted, and Harry disappeared into the house.

“Frank,” Lloyd began, almost whispering now, “what are you not telling me?”

“I just have a bad feeling about all this, sir. I think Harry has been their number one target from the get-go, and we won’t have any good way to identify unknown members now that their leadership is blown. I think y’all came back too soon.”

Lloyd sighed. “Well, I’m headed out in a few days. Here to Hawaii, then on to Yokohama and Hong Kong…”

“How long will you be gone, sir?”

“Six weeks is the norm, unless we run across a typhoon out there.”

“Better you than me, sir.”

“Christ, Frank…are you kidding? With what you guys have to deal with day after day out there? Shit, I’d rather deal with a bad storm any day of the week rather than deal with the crap you two do.”

“I made these nice and strong,” Harry said as he came back onto the porch.

“Shit.”

“Damn,” Frank said as he grabbed his glass and took a long pull. “W-wow,” he gasped, “I hope you never take up tending bar professionally.”

“Me too,” both Callahans said – in the same breath.

“Oh, before I forget. Sam’s having a weenie roast tomorrow night, and everyone’s invited.”

“A what…?” Lloyd asked.

“Oh, sorry,” Frank said. “Hot dogs usually turn out to be steaks, and lots of beer manages to figure into things.” Bullitt stopped and stifled a long belch…

“Don’t start with that bullshit again,” Harry growled.

“What bullshit?” Lloyd asked with one eye-brow arched-up.

“Dad, if you’re lucky, well, you won’t find out.”

______________________________

Frank drove down to the wharf to pick up Harry and An Linh, and what impressed Frank most in that moment was that this tiny Vietnamese girl had absolutely no idea what a Porsche was, so had no idea what sort of status cars of this sort conferred upon the drivers lucky enough to own one. She simply slipped behind the passenger seat into the tiny bucket seat behind his, and once Harry was buckled-in he hammered the clutch and burned rubber for a few hundred yards.

The funny thing was, An Linh seemed not in the least bit impressed. Her face registered nothing, nothing at all: not fear; not excitement; not even mild curiosity…then it hit him…she had just come from Saigon, a fragile world where her day-to-day existence had been, quite literally, blown apart. And then an even funnier thing happened…

For the first time in his life, Frank drove the speed limit.

He shifted smoothly.

He made no sudden lane changes.

Because he realized that An Linh was looking at this new world as it passed by – yet still just out of reach – and he was the one person in this world given the opportunity to be, in a way, her first tour guide.

So he puttered down to the marina, then made an easy dash over to Golden Gate Park before winding through quiet residential streets to Sam Bennett’s house. He found a parking space within easy walking distance and the three of them walked along in the sunset, and still Frank marveled at the way An Linh seemed to be soaking up everything she saw.

“Everything must seem so new to you,” he said to her as they came to Sam’s house, “but I’m curious. What have you seen so far that impresses you most?”

She stopped and looked around, then turned to Frank: “How big everything is.”

“Such as?”

“The houses. Even many of the cars. They seem so much larger than anything I expected. Even Mr. Callahan’s house. Yet it is a simple house, no? Or so Harry tells me, yet even so it seems impossibly big to me.”

“Harry, you’ll need to turn her over to Fran, let her show An Linh around the kitchen…”

“Why?” An Linh asked. “Is there something wrong I should know about?”

“Hmm, oh, no – nothing wrong. Cathy, that’s my wife, she just redesigned the first floor, and the Bennett’s had a new kitchen installed during the remodel. All the latest gadgets. Pretty cool, too.”

“I see.”

Frank led them to the side gate – and he gently slid back the latch, hoping Sam’s Golden wouldn’t hear – but he had no such luck…

He saw the golden streak in time to slam the gate closed and turn to meet the impact…

The retriever leapt into Bullitt’s outstretched arms and began systematically licking every square inch of his face – until the pup saw An Linh, that is.

Then the pup slid to the ground and eased over to her side and looked up expectantly.

“An Linh?” Frank said, leaning down beside the retriever, “this is Fred.”

An Linh knelt and let the pup come to her on its own terms, and Fred sniffed her outstretched hand once before he licked it, and then she lowered herself a bit more – and that was all it took. Fred sidled into her, then fell onto his back, offering his belly…

And she instinctively began rubbing the pup until everyone within earshot heard Fred’s moans and groans.

A taxi pulled up curbside and Cathy hopped out – just as Al Bressler came walking up the sidewalk, and Frank let them in before they all headed to the smokey backyard where Sam was intoning magical incantations over the grill, summoning the perfect mixture of coal and smoke. His youngest boy, Chip, was tossing the football with Dell and Stan – though rifling was a more apt description of the kid’s passes. 

Al loved football more than police work so he drifted that way, while Harry saw that his father was already out here and standing beyond the smokey-blue veil enveloping the grill, a cold longneck already in hand. Frank was kissing Cathy so he looked at An Linh and smiled…

“Welcome to America,” he said, and when he saw the smile in her eyes he knew everything would be okay.

“So this is it? Backyards and bar-b-ques?”

“This is it, baby. This is what it’s all about. The best memories are made out here…”

“And the best rib-eyes,” Sam said as he walked over to hug An Linh. “So, how are you liking the city so far?”

“It is a most magical place, Captain Bennett…”

“Now, now, we’ve been through this before, Harry. She’s got to stop with all the ‘captain’ stuff. You are family now, An Linh, and family calls me Sam!”

“Yes…Sam.”

But he had already turned away before she could say more, and she watched him marching back to his fire pit – not yet sure what kind of man this was.

“An Linh? This is Cathy,” Frank said, “and she’s volunteered to show you around the house.”

“Hello,” she said. “So, you are Frank’s wife?”

“Not yet,” Cathy said, feigning a deep scowl. “But…maybe, someday.”

“I see,” An Linh said, even though she clearly didn’t.

Harry and Frank watched as Cathy led An Linh through the side-yard to the kitchen, and both quite suddenly had an uneasy feeling about how things might go in there.

And just then the side gate opened once again; they watched as Stacy Bennett led Jim Parish into the yard…

…and Jim’s eyes perceptively brightened when he saw Harry, but then he literally ran up to his old friend with open arms…

“Christ, Harry! It’s sure good to see you!”

And Harry was at least as confused as Frank with this turn of events. “You too, buddy,” he said, scowling…then…

“We gotta talk,” Parish whispered conspiratorially after Stacy passed-by on her way to find her brother.

“Okay,” Harry said as he led Parish back to the gate, “what’s up?”

“Stacy’s up. I mean, I don’t know how the hell you handled her…”

“What do you mean?”

“She’s a fuckin’ nymphomaniac, Callahan,” Parish whispered, the words coming out in a frantic staccato burst.

“A what?”

“You heard me!”

“I don’t get it. I think we screwed maybe three times over the past couple of years…”

“Shit, Harry…we’ve screwed three times – since lunch! I touch her down there and it’s like a gushing oil well. Uncontrollable. My balls are too small to feel now, and they’re screamin’ like fuckin’ hell.”

“Blue balls, huh?”

“Cobalt, Harry. I never want to have sex ever again, and after six years over there that’s sayin’ something.”

“Jesus, Jim. I had no idea.”

“Fuck, man. Well, I was beginning to think you’re like Superman or something.”

“No…this is all on you, Amigo.”

“You know the worst thing of it all? She dragged my ass out to one of the dirty movie places down in the Tenderloin. Double fucking feature. Deep Throat and The Devil in Miss Jones…”

“That the one with Linda Lovelace?”

“None other, Ace. A real sword swallower, and there we were when the lights went down, and like bam! – down goes the zipper and down she goes right then and there. By that time my nuts were running on empty and nothing was gonna happen, so, of course, right about then my dick started getting raw, and then she decides to give me some teeth. I don’t know what happened next but I was running out the fire exit and down an alley before I knew what was happening, and when I ran out of juice there she was, about five steps behind with tears running down her face like a fire hydrant had bust loose…”

“Jesus, Jim…”

“No shit. And she wants to get married, Callahan. Me. To a fuckin’ federal agent. I don’t know what to do, Harry.”

“What are your options?”

“Take a fucking assignment in Korea, or maybe somewhere in fuckin’ Africa…”

“You know…? When you get excited you say fuck a lot.”

“Fuckin’-A.”

“Harry!” they heard Sam yell, “Get your fuckin’ ass up here and get a fuckin’ beer for your fuckin’ friend!”

Parish doubled over laughing – while Harry just shook his head…

______________________________

An Linh sat down between the two Callahans at the huge, glass-topped patio table, barely able to contain her shock. The amount of food being prepared was simply outrageous, and that kitchen! She’d never seen anything like it before…all gleaming white with chrome accents everywhere – just like all the huge American cars she’d seen today! 

Jim Parish was sitting next to Harry, and Al Bressler was sitting directly across from An Linh and everyone seemed to be talking at the same time about things she just didn’t understand – when suddenly she had a vision of a fish out of water…

“Miss Linh?” Fran Bennett said. “Could I get you something to drink?”

“Frannie?” Sam interjected. “It’s just An Linh. That’s her first name.”

“Oh, of course, dear. Sorry.”

An Linh shook her head. “Please, not to worry…”

“You speak such good English,” Fran Bennett said. “Where did you learn?”

And then all conversation at the table ground to a sudden halt.

“At home, Mrs. Bennett. Actually, I learned to speak French first, then English. Only when I went to school did I learn tiêng Viêt, what you call Vietnamese, but by that time I was also studying German and Russian.”

Chip Bennett burst in then: “J’étudie le français à l’école!”

“Et vous aimez vos études?” An Linh replied.

“Oui, mais c’est toujours très difficile!”

“Alright, Chip!” Sam Bennett barked. “Knock it off and speak English!”

“Yessir. An Linh, do you suppose you could help me? When you have some spare time, I mean?”

“Of course. It would be my honor.”

Fran poured iced tea for everyone – pre-sweetened Lipton instant in this case – and An Linh took a tentative sip, nearly gagging on the syrupy stuff.

“Too sweet?” Fran said.

“No, no, it is very different, but interesting,” An Linh said as Harry put a plate down in front of her. It looked like she had a two-pound slab of steak, corn-on-the-cob, and a hot, gooey mound of something Fran Bennett called Boston Baked Beans, as well as a few slices of tomato and onion, and when she looked up she saw everyone attacking the food on their plates with a look of something like pure determination in their eyes. But of course, she thought. How else could you eat so much at one sitting? She sighed and attacked the food on her plate, eating until she thought she was going to explode.

“So,” Fran resumed, “where are your parents, An Linh? Did they remain in Vietnam?”

She felt Harry stiffen by her side, and she smiled inside. “Yes, Mrs. Bennett.”

“Well, perhaps someday you’ll be able to go home for a visit.”

Then Sam and Frank went rigid – while Lloyd seemed to hover over burning coals – as they looked at An Linh.

“Yes, perhaps so, Mrs. Bennett. At least I hope one day that will be possible.”

Fran smiled politely. “Perhaps you could tutor Chip? We’d be happy to pay you, of course.”

“Oh, thank you so much, but it would be my privilege to help your son.”

“You know, Sam? They need language teachers at all the schools right now… Do you suppose we could see about getting An Linh a temporary teacher’s certificate?”

“I don’t see why not, Frannie. If it’s something An Linh would like to do?”

An Linh sucked in her breath a little, if only because being a teacher was a most noble profession – and certainly not one she had ever imagined for herself. Maybe America truly was a land of impossible opportunities?

______________________________

They were sitting around an outdoor fireplace after the evening’s dishes were cleared, with Fran and Cathy in the kitchen washing up while Sam talked with Frank and his team about work. Harry was glancing at Jim, then at Stacy, trying to do the math…while Chip Bennett and Al Bressler talked football…all while An Linh tried to follow what was happening around the fire-pit.

“You know,” she heard Chip Bennett saying, “some guys in the locker room were trying to light ‘em off last week. It was fucking gross.”

“It’s all in your technique, kiddo,” Bressler said.

“What the hell are you talking about now, Bressler?” Harry growled.

“Lighting farts.”

Sam Bennett’s eyes hooded over while An Linh’s went wide. Fred’s eared laid back and he whimpered once.

“Excuse me, please?” An Linh said. “What is this – lighting farts?”

“Yeah, Al?” Harry snarled. “Why don’t you tell us all about it.”

“Now Harry,” Bressler moaned, “you wouldn’t…”

“Harry?” Captain Sam Bennett grumbled, “what’s this all about?”

“Well Sam, Al here is a world-class fart lighter, aren’t you?”

“No kidding?” Chip Bennett gleamed.

“Harry, please…” Bressler said, now almost pleading.

“Yes,” Harry continued, “Al is also a betting man. And one night in the dorm – this was during our academy days, Jim, in case you’re wondering, and Al made a little bet, and it went something like this. Who could light a fart and make the biggest flame? Isn’t that about right, Al?”

“God damn you, Harry,” Bressler groaned, his face buried in his hands.

“And before you ask, I wasn’t in the room when all these bets were being made, or when they were placed. No, I was in the library. Studying. Which, incidentally, was something Al should have been doing. So here I come, my hands full of books when I open the door to our room, and what do I find? Someone on my bed – MY bed, mind you – with their pants down and their knees curled up to their chin, and I see a zippo flicker and light…then…the biggest goddamn fart in human history came ripping out of Al’s ass. But this wasn’t just any ole fart. mind you. This was a Bressler Special…”

“Harry, please…”

“It started kinda like this high-pitched whistle, you know, like blowing up a balloon and then modulating the airflow just so…”

“Harry…?”

“Then this liquidy-fluttering sound began building until this kind of ripping roar started, and right about then the methane hit the flame…”

“Harry? You wouldn’t…”

“And there it was, ladies and gentlemen…a great billowing ball of flame…about as big around as a basketball and just floating there – right by Al’s ass. And you know what the best part was?”

“Harry? No…”

“The smell. The smell of a high octane fart mixed with burning ass hair. But no, that wasn’t all. No, because Al’s fart wasn’t the first in the room. Oh, no. There was already a toxic brew of farts and ass hair hanging in the air, yet Al’s was indeed the winning entry. Because all that methane had apparently settled on the bed. My bed. And right about then it ignited.”

Bressler looked up, grinning.

“Yes, ignited. A fireball like you’ve never seen before. Second degree burns on his asshole and up…I mean down…the backs of his thighs. My bed a flaming wreck. And then? Yup. The fire alarm went off. Our wing of the dorm…sprinklers going off…everyone running from their rooms…and their goes Al, a trail of smoke pouring from his ass as he beats-feet to the infirmary…”

“That was you?” an incredulous Sam Bennett asked as he glowered at Bressler. “We heard about that one down at division…”

“Second-degree burns?” Jim Parish, MD, asked. “For real?”

“You wanna see?” Bressler asked, getting ready to stand.

But it was too late.

As he began standing the Boston Baked Beans went to work…

And Bressler said, grinning: “Revenge, Callahan, is a dish best served hot…”

…and as the ripping sound began, Stacy Bennett stood and turned towards her brother before she fired off her own twenty-one gun salute…

When Fran and Cathy returned – carrying bowls of fresh fruit and ice cream – they found almost everyone writhing on the grass when Sam shouted…

“…beans, beans, the musical fruit…”

Then Chip piped-in…

“…the more you eat the more you toot…”

Followed by Bressler…

“…the more you toot the better you feel…”

Then in unison, a resounding chorus of…

“…so eat your beans at every meal!”

“Oh dear God,” Cathy said as the wafting smell hit. She turned and followed Fran into the house.

Fred was, of course, long gone by then.

______________________________

Saul was asleep – or at least pretending to sleep – when three uniformed border patrolmen entered his car…and a moment later he felt someone shaking his shoulder.

“Papers, please,” an officious young man commanded.

Rosenthal pulled out his passport, this one a Swiss Diplomatic passport, and he handed this over to the guard.

“Your business?”

“Inspection,” Saul said, stifling a yawn as he handed over his packet of official Red Cross documents.

The guard returned the documents after a brief inspection, and Saul resumed his sleep.

And as easy as that, Saul and Imogen had slipped into the dark belly of the beast.

 

© 2020 adrian leverkühn | abw | as always, thanks for dropping by…

[note: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need until the work is finalized. Yet with the current circumstances that might not be the best way to proceed, and I’d hate to have this story stop ‘unexpectedly’ without some mention of these sources. Of course, the source material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two Hollywood films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’ storyline derives from characters originally found in that screenplay. Most of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed in the works cited above, but as always this story is otherwise a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing historical timeline, using the established characters referenced above.]

the eighty-eighth key, ch. 15

88k p3 image

The Eighty-eighth Key

Part III

Chapter 15

____________________________________

“What is, do you suppose, the difference between a dream and a nightmare?” Werner Heisenberg asked, his settled hands resting on his lap, his entire demeanor expressing openness to her reply. 

And yet, Imogen now remained resolutely still, as if she was suddenly and utterly quite incapable of speech.

He inhaled sharply as he waited, then gently shook his head. “Then let me tell you,” he continued. “You can never control the outcome of a nightmare, dearest Imogen. A nightmare comes calling, doesn’t it? Quite unbidden, yes?” He stood and walked over to the piano in her solarium and sat there, waiting in vain for her to come to him. “And there is nothing you can do to prevent its coming, is there? Our dread fascination with death keeps us from waking, doesn’t it?”

Yet she still remained fixed in time and space, her eyes lost within the certainty of the moment. Saul and Avi had gathered all the university’s scientists and they were even now making their way to Sweden – with the help of British and American commandos who had miraculously arrived just in time to assist the group. All she had to do was stall Werner long enough to keep him from acting in time to prevent their escape.

Werner began playing the opening to Saint-Saëns Aquarium and she felt her Will dissolving as the music took hold, and without realizing it she began to sway as the music washed over and through her. Struggling to regain control she stood and walked over to her favorite window, and there she looked out over her mother’s garden. She focused on the order she saw in her mother’s work, all the while refusing the music, doing her best to turn away from the prying chords.

And even when the music stopped she remained absolutely still, waiting for the final assault she knew was coming.

“You know, if there was a way I could let you remain here, I would do so,” Heisenberg sighed. “Well, I would move heaven and earth to make that happen. But, dear Imogen, you must understand that I only have your best interests in mind when I tell you that you all will be safer with me and my group in Leipzig than if you remain here. The political activities of your friends have drawn too much scrutiny, and I can no longer protect them all, so you must help me, Imogen. I understand what you are doing, this playing for time, but you must also know that I will have to take you with me. So I ask you once again, do you truly understand the difference between a dream and a nightmare?”

She turned and faced him, looked past him to the old grandfather clock standing like a sentinel across the room before she smiled inside. “It is time, Werner.”

“Indeed? How so?”

“We must leave now, the two of us.”

“Leave? And where are we to go, Imogen?”

“Leipzig, Werner.”

“So, you come willingly?”

“Of course.”

He studied her face for a moment before he sighed again, and he realized in that moment that she had beaten him. Worse, he alone understood that by sacrificing herself to let the scientists flee she had chosen the nightmare. He looked at the resolve in her eyes with wonder, then he gently led her from her father’s house to the Mercedes parked on the street, and he helped her inside before he walked over and spoke with the small group of Gestapo.

“They plan on leaving this evening. You might have time to detain them before they flee,” he lied – and forever sealing her fate. “I am taking her to Leipzig straight-away.”

Saul Rosenthal watched from the safety of nearby shadows, and when it was safe he turned away from everything he knew and followed his love into the darkness.

_______________________________

Callahan sat with his mother at her Bösendorfer, and he tentatively worked his way through the opening notes of Gershwin’s Prelude No 2, the easy symmetry of the original arrangement for piano as comfortable as the moment might allow. She had always recoiled from Gershwin, his loose harmonic structures apparently biting into her like a pair of ill-fitting shoes, but she seemed more open to him now, more accepting of his lusty American motifs.

Sam and Stacy Bennett, and Al Bressler too, looked-on from across the living room of the house in the compound just outside of Tel Aviv, the three of them now all too aware of the fragile contours of Imogen Schwarzwald’s day-to-day existence – as well as the delicate relationship she maintained with her son, their friend. Al Bressler, of course, had no knowledge of Harry’s ability on the piano, and he sat – in dumbfounded silence – as his old friend worked his way through piece after piece, trying to coax his mother out of her latest bout of melancholia.  

She had seemed receptive, even talkative when Harry first led her to the piano, then he had played something by Camille Saint-Saëns and it was as if her world imploded. They had all watched in silent horror as she fell-in upon herself, withering into a hunched shell of herself as her son drifted through the first lines – but by then it was too late. Harry saw it too, and he forced the passage to drift towards Respighi’s The Villa Medici Fountain at Sunset, and she seemed to rally for a moment – before, in the end, she gave way to an unseen, infinite sorrow.

He went back to Gershwin, this time to the Prelude, and he forced her to play with him.

“I know how much you hate his music,” Harry whispered to her, “but please try, Mom.”

“I don’t hate Gershwin, my son. I resent him, and above all else, I resent his refuge in easy optimism to be almost revolting.”

“What?”

“Go back to Respighi for a moment. Now try to feel the music, Harry. Feel the vibration of the notes, of the elemental chords. Through your fingers, if you can, or try with the side of your face. That’s it. Rest your face on the piano just there while you play the notes, and let the vibrations play through you…”

Callahan played for a long time, searching for some kind of meaning…

“I’m not sure what you mean,” he said after several minutes.

She sighed, then positioned her hands over the keyboard…

“Beethoven was deaf when he wrote the Ninth,” she said as she played. “so how did he do it? Through recall alone? No, but he could still feel, Harry. He could feel the music, but think on this for a moment, would you? When you feel the power of the Ode to Joy, when you truly feel it within the structures of vibration, you feel exactly what Beethoven felt. When Strauss wrote his Death and Transfiguration how could he have known what death felt like? Yet when he died decades later his final words were that he was feeling exactly what he had written thirty years before. Should you want to feel death, you might want to learn to feel what Strauss created, yet do so with your face, or within your fingertips.”

“What has that got to do with Gershwin, Mom?”

“With the Second Prelude, Harry, he begins with such profound respect for sorrow, yet by the second passage he absolutely revels in an exuberance that seems so infernally out of place! It’s as though he can’t help himself, Harry! He created such a lush, expressive exposition of sorrow, yet then he seeks an easy refuge in that awful Bohemian ragtime of the 20s. He either didn’t know understand what he was doing, or his was a profoundly disturbed soul.”

“Disturbed? I see a man walking through a park, lost in thought. Some happy, others less so. It’s a walk through life, one path leading to another, and another…”

“Is that what you feel?”

“Yes. Every time. It’s a journey.”

“A journey? Or is it your journey, Harald?”

“Of course it’s mine.”

She laughed. “Ha! That’s rather impetuous, don’t you think. Or worse still, simply naive.”

“Naive?” Harry bristled. “How so?”

“As a musician playing the works of another, you have to understand that what you are conveying is nothing short of the composer’s feelings. When you play Gershwin, you are in a literal sense in touch with his feelings within the moment of creation. His thoughts and feelings, on a purely elemental level. Nothing more, nothing less. You may relate to the music in some peripheral sense, or you may wish to make it your own in some way, but what you are in fact experiencing is George Gershwin, pure and simple. Not Harald Callahan. And in order to become an artist, Harald” she said, pausing for emphasis, “you must learn to feel exactly what Gershwin felt. Feel precisely the way Gershwin felt. And Beethoven, and Strauss. You can always choose to be a hack musician and play the notes in their prescribed order off the printed page, or you can learn to see within the music, to seek out the composer’s feelings. Only then can you possibly hope to allow others to experience the same magic.”

“And to you Gershwin’s feelings are…”

“Incongruous. Distortions. Almost madness. How can one write about a melancholy journey and then slip into a ragtime dance…?”

“Because life is rarely so simple as a linear progression,” Stacy Bennett said, now standing above them.

“In life, perhaps,” Imogen sighed, now exasperated, “but not within a single composition.”

Harry looked up at Stacy, clearly shocked. “Why not, Mom?”

“Because, my poor Harry, life is simple. There is nothing beyond our suffering, nothing beyond the pain of this morbid existence. Everything else is a mask. The mask we wear to hide behind. To keep our suffering out of view.”

“I’m not sure I understand, Mom.”

As she collected her thoughts, Imogen seemed to collapse inward on herself once again. “I’ve lived a life of secrets, Harald. Cut off from my feelings…”

“Cut off?” Stacy asked. “How so…?”

“Cut off…yes,” she whispered as she slumped over, slowly leaning on Harry’s shoulder. “Oh God, no. There he is again…”

“Mom? Mother? There who is again? What are you seeing?”

“If it is as now as it has always been,” Avi Rosenthal said as he walked into the solarium, “it is the bearded man with his cane. When he comes I lose her for days. Sometimes weeks.”

Harry looked up at Avi, now standing beside Stacy, and he seemed uncharacteristically lost, somehow a man out of time. Harry knew that look, too. Avi’s countenance was the expression of a man used to keeping secrets, and then Harry remembered that this old man kept secrets for a living…

Harry Callahan closed his eyes and began playing Saint-Saëns Aquarium once again – and immediately he felt his mother stiffen. Like the puppet master had suddenly taken control of her strings…

“Mother…? Play the notes for me,” he said as he stopped playing. “Play the notes you’re feeling right now.”

“I can’t.”

“Yes, you can.”

“No, Harald. This I must never do.”

“You must not?” Stacy asked. “What will happen, Imogen?”

“Some secrets…” she started to say, but then she fell away from the trap, fell into an impossible torpor. 

“I think that’s all for now,” Avi said, rushing to Imogen’s side. “Harry? Would you help me with her…to the bedroom, I think…”

But Harry held out his hand, blocked Avi’s way. “No, not yet.”

He began playing Saint-Saëns again, this time simply – like a student learning the piece might – and then he deliberately stumbled once –

“Not like that,” she stammered, then her hands were flying over the keys – playing the piece in its entirety with a force and clarity Harry thought impossible…

And when she finished she sat up straight and looked her son in the eye. “You must learn to feel, Harald. You were never good at feeling the truth of the moment.”

“No?” Harry said quietly. “I suppose you’re right.”

“You always hid your feelings from us. From your father. From me. And from June.”

“I never hid my feelings from June!” Harry stammered, his voice shaking now. “How could you say that!”

“Then why did she…?”

“Don’t say it, Mother. Don’t you dare blame me for that.”

“Why did she murder your son, Harald. Why? What drove her to that precipice? Can you at least tell me that much?” She turned and looked at her son, her eyes now full of furious malice. “She asked me for help, you know. Help. To find a way to kill that baby.”

“And did you? Did you help her?”

“I gave her the number to the student health services at the university. I don’t know what she did after that.”

“Don’t you?” Harry growled. “And why is that, Mother…?”

“And you still pretend to not know…” She seemed to strengthen as her words bit into him, and to Stacy, it appeared as if she was taking strength from beating him down… “Because she was so beneath you, Harald. She was trash, her self-loathing a disease that infected everything she touched, and…”

“And what?” Harry cried. “You wanted to kill any part of me she might bring into this life?”

“Yes. Precisely so, Harald.” She turned to the keyboard and played the Gershwin prelude with perfect precision, yet when she finished, when she looked up in triumph, Harry and his friends were gone.

And she would never see him again.

Avi looked down at her and slowly shook his head.

‘So many secrets,’ he said as he sighed, before he too turned and walked away from all her jealous secrets.

__________________________________

Frank Bullitt listened to the wiretap recording once again, then the Israeli agent put another tape in the player and the group huddled closer to hear the latest…

“They’re in Israel,” the disembodied voice said.

“What? How do you know?”

“One of Al Bressler’s friends from Vice is on his honeymoon, in Jerusalem. Saw him there, apparently followed him. He had heard about the assassination, so he thought something was hinky since Al was supposed to be dead, and he followed him. Bressler was with some stewardess, found out she works for El Al; then he followed them to a compound just outside Tel Aviv.”

“This friend…? Is he…?”

“Yup. He’s sympathetic but won’t join.”

“How’d he know who to contact?”

“Don’t know,” said the voice on the tape.

Bullitt hit the pause button then looked at the lead FBI agent; he was from the Los Angeles field office of the FBI, and he seemed dialed-in and concerned about the implications of the overall investigation. “Okay. Do we have any identities yet?” Bullitt asked, and the agent shook his head.

The Israeli agent coughed once, and Bullitt turned to look at him. “Yes?”

“Do you care about their identities? Why not just take them out?”

“What?” the lead FBI agent asked, clearly startled by the implications. 

“You have an, ooh, what is the word? An infestation…no? Do you want an unknown number of show trials on television? Endless revelations about corruption within a number of police departments in the area? Or perhaps consider another option? Simply stamp out the infestation?”

“Well,” the FBI agent began, “let’s consider, first, due process considerations. These are U.S. citizens on American soil. Killing them is not an option. Publicity is not a major concern, either…”

“Perhaps,” one of the other Israelis asserted, interrupting the agent, “if you knew the identity of the group’s leadership you would reconsider. What if, for instance, one of the department’s assistant chiefs is implicated?”

“What are you not telling us?” Bullitt said, his steady gaze leveled at this senior Israeli agent.

Who simply shrugged. “We became involved after several Jewish organizations contacted us. We are here simply to help maintain good relations between our countries.”

“Yeah,” the FBI lead said. “We got that part…about two dozen times already.”

Bullitt cleared his throat: “Let’s just say, for purposes of conversation only, that you know the identities and locations of these bad actors. Would you, hypothetically speaking, be in a position to do something about it?”

“You’re Bullitt, are you not? San Francisco homicide?” the senior Israeli asked.

“Yessir.”

“Well, we now have evidence of a wide-ranging plot against Jewish citizens in your country, and now we have further proof that an intelligence operation against Jewish citizens of your country is now active on Israeli soil. You must understand that we are not, therefore, constrained by your legal niceties. We have found that in the past such matters can lead to very undesirable outcomes. You must, therefore, understand that we operate under very different auspices.”

“And you must understand,” the lead FBI agent said, “that we will not take part in any such unilateral action.”

The lead Israeli agent smiled. “Ah. Then we understand one another.” The Israeli then turned to Frank Bullitt. “Since the target of these so-called vigilantes have been members of your department, indeed, members of the homicide bureau, we would like your advice for the next week or so. Is this a problem?”

Frank looked at the Israeli, then at the lead FBI agent – who only shrugged before he turned and looked away in apparent disgust.

“No sir, I don’t think that’ll be a problem,” Bullitt said, his beaming grin more than a little disconcerting to the other FBI agents in the room.

______________________________________

Jim Parish sat beside An Linh in a taxi making its way across the Bay Bridge several days after their arrival in the States; she had taken news of Harry Callahan’s death with remarkable calmness – yet even so Parish knew still waters run deep, and hers might be the deepest of all. He had watched intently as she grew progressively more restive, and when it became more than obvious that she needed some sort of closure to begin the healing process he had contacted the San Francisco PD; in time he was connected to a Lieutenant Frank Bullitt in the Criminal Investigative Divisions Homicide Bureau. After a brief conversation with the detective, Parish agreed to bring An Linh to the city, to the Potrero Hills area south of downtown, and there she could meet with and talk to Harry’s father, Lloyd Callahan. She might, Bullitt implied, find what she was looking for there.

The taxi pulled up in front of an old Mission-style bungalow on Texas Street; it was, he saw, a small house by American standards, but it was beyond well-kept and exuded a simple, quiet elegance beyond anything else in the neighborhood. Bullitt was leaning on the front of an unmarked police car, waiting for them, and Parish noted the way the lieutenant cast an appreciative eye as An Linh exited the taxi and walked over to greet him.

“Major Parish?” the detective asked. “Nice to meet you. And you are Harry’s friend?” Bullitt said to An Linh, gently smiling. “Mister Callahan is waiting for us, so let’s come along.”

They walked up the stone steps to the deep front porch that spanned the width of the house, and soon an older man opened the door and stepped out to greet his son’s friends…

Parish immediately noticed the resemblance between father and son; Lloyd Callahan was tall and seemed to have been carved from a single block of hard, gray granite. His eyes were dark gray and the color almost matched the thatch of his wavy hair, and soon he found little snippets of Harry everywhere he looked…the way the senior Callahan moved his hands, the soothing tones of his calming voice when he spoke with An Linh about her relationship with his son, and how his demeanor shifted from frank curiosity to open acceptance when he learned that An Linh and his son had been much more than friends.

And they talked for hours, or so it seemed, and all the while Detective Bullitt sat and listened politely, attentively, as he too learned more and more about An Linh’s harrowing journey to America. And as he listened he grew more and more conflicted, and at certain points in the conversation, it was all he could do to not ‘spill the beans’ and tell this girl whose life had been nothing but an avalanche of shattered dreams that things were not all that they now must seem…

…until Lloyd Callahan mentioned that two detectives from the department had dropped by the evening before, questioning him about any details he might know concerning his son’s murder. But that wasn’t what had concerned Frank most.

No, what concerned him most of all was what one of the detectives said as he left this very same porch…

“If Harry calls, would you have him call me at this number?” the detective said, handing over a business card.

“I’m sorry, Mr. Callahan,” Bullitt interjected, “but do you have that card?”

“Yes, of course. Let me go and fetch it for you.”

And then Parish noticed the strangest thing. Callahan looked at a solid black commercial van parked on the street, and then he made what appeared to be signal of some sort.

And when Mr. Callahan returned with the card, Bullitt looked it over.

“I’ll need to keep this, sir,” he said as he turned to the black van once again.

And just then several men in black BDUs exited the van and jogged up to the porch. Parish noted the weapons these men carried, too – Israeli-made Uzis – and he suddenly realized things were not at all what they seemed.

“Mr. Callahan?” one of the commandos said as he stepped onto the porch. “You are no longer safe here. You will need to come with us – right now. And Major Parish? You and the young lady will need to come with me as well.”

“What the devil is going on here?” Lloyd Callahan growled, and again Parish could hear his friend’s voice in the old man’s menacing thunder.

“Not now, sir,” Frank Bullitt added in quietly hushed tones. “There really isn’t time.”

Several commandos entered the Callahan house, including an older man in civilian clothes who looked remarkably like Lloyd – at least from a distance, yet Parish didn’t have time to gather his thoughts before Bullitt and other men in black ushered the three of them to another black van.

No one spoke to them during the short drive out to the airport, and only after they arrived did Parish notice that Bullitt was no longer with them. Their small convoy of vans drove to a large aircraft hanger near the freight terminal, and as they approached the building one of the hanger doors slid open just enough to let the caravan enter. 

It was dark inside the cavernous space, almost as dark as night, yet Parish could just make out a small jet parked inside a deeper shadow, then a doorway sliding open, followed by spindly little air-stairs that reached down to the smooth concrete underneath. 

The commandos in their van stepped out and one ran up to the waiting jet and spoke to someone inside the cabin before motioning to the others.

“Okay,” one of the other commandos said as he opened the sliding side door on the van’s right side, “we go for a little ride now. All is good.”

Lloyd Callahan looked at Parish – who only shrugged – and then he looked at An Linh.

“It will be alright,” she said calmly as she stepped out of the van and walked towards the jet. “Harry would never let anything bad happen to us.”

And as confused as Major James Parish, MD, was inside that moment, he realized she was probably right. All this had to do with Harry and the attempt on his life, and as he walked up the air-stairs and into the stuffy cabin he willed himself to relax. Even after the cabin door closed and the jet’s engines began spooling up, he sat and watched An Linh and wondered what was the source of the preternatural calm that had taken hold of her.

She was a remarkable girl, he thought as the jet turned onto the runway, and just as suddenly he realized that he probably loved her too.

© 2020 adrian leverkühn | abw | as always, thanks for dropping by…

[note: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need until the work is finalized. Yet with the current circumstances that might not be the best way to proceed, and I’d hate to have this story stop ‘unexpectedly’ without some mention of these sources. Of course, the source material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two Hollywood films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’ storyline derives from characters originally found in that screenplay. Most of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed in the works cited above, but as always this story is otherwise a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing historical timeline, using the established characters referenced above.]

the eighty-eighth key, ch. 14

88keykobenhaben

the eighty-eighth key

part ii

chapter 14

The morning’s headlines were filled with news of several San Francisco Police Department officers that had been killed overnight – murders described as thoroughly brutal assassinations. The first of these reports savaged the climate of fear that had enveloped the Bay Area as a result of an apparent Death Squad operating at the heart of one of the most storied police departments in the country, then these articles went on to recount the rise of Briggs’ original group of vigilante cops, then Harry Callahan’s take-down of this group and then, finally, the emergence of an even bigger network of renegade cops cloistered within departments all around the Bay Area. Callahan’s ancestry was then cited as a possible motive for several recent hate crimes perpetrated against him by members of his own department, and for his murder overnight. Callahan’s associations with Captain Samuel Bennett, also struck-down within the past week, were then detailed, and then the murder of Bennett’s sister Stacy – which for some reason was highlighted in unusually graphic terms – rounded out these initial articles. The murder of Callahan’s roommate from the academy, Albert Bressler Jr. and from the department’s Vice detail, was also mentioned, and in context with the broadening ring of retribution-style killings echoing throughout the SFPD. An editorial concluded with the news that the chief and the mayor were to meet later in the week to discuss the creation of a Blue-Ribbon Commission to get to the bottom of all these terrible events…

At about the time the Chronicle’s late morning edition was being put to bed, just after all the breathless reporting about the explosion on the 101 was complete, an unregistered Lockheed Jetstar took off from SFO – bound for Zurich. 

Or so said the flight plan.

+++++

Harry sat in the very rear of the aircraft, alone now and very tired.

He watched Bressler putting his stale moves on the stewardess upfront, yet he was unsurprised how interested this beautiful young creature seemed in everything Bressler said.

“Poor Al…” Callahan sighed. “He’ll be clueless ’til the very end.”

Captain Bennett was hunched over a small table amidships, lost in conversation with Avi Rosenthal. No doubt they had been working on this operation together, and probably for quite some time; at least Harry had surmised as much as when he saw the Jetstar on the ramp at SFO.

Stacy was asleep across from him in a facing seat, and without realizing he was doing so he realized he was studying her features. Big-boned, just like her brother, and painfully smart, her long brown hair was just showing the first signs of gray here and there, and he smiled a little when he noticed she had just undergone another electrolysis treatment to thin the dark facial hair on her upper lip. Her right index-finger was heavily calloused – just like his – from endless hours of pistol practice at the range, and he noticed her forearms were at least as heavily muscled as his own. He knew from recent experience that she had runners’ legs, because – again, just like he did – she ran at least five miles every morning. She was, he suddenly realized, just barely feminine – and he didn’t find her attractive in the least. Which was, he now understood, a very good thing…if only because she had become his very best friend.

He looked up, looked past Sam to Avi sitting under a tiny reading light, and he was surprised to see that his ‘step-father’ looked like he had aged a lot over the last three years…and for some reason he found this unsettling.

How would, he thought with no small amount of dread in his heart, his mother look?

When he’d last seen her she was settling into her piano once again and taking an interest in writing music, but only after he’d passed along all he knew about Gershwin and Joplin and all the other colossal music of the Roaring Twenties. In other words, all the music she’d once found cringeworthy when she heard him playing…

He stood and walked upfront and the stewardess turned to greet him.

“Yessir?” she asked in a modest accent that sounded faintly German. “Can I get you something?”

“Coke. Maybe with a splash of rum.”

She smiled and disappeared into the Jetstar’s tiny galley – and Bressler turned to face him.

“Harry? I’m in love. This is it. The real deal.”

“Al, you say that after every date you’ve ever been on. All three of ‘em.”

Al scowled, then grinned. “Not this time, Harry. This is the real deal, I’m tellin’ ya.”

“Al, she’s a stewardess. She’s supposed to make you feel special.”

“Yeah, I know. She works for El Al, Harry. She’s the real deal, man.”

Harry sighed as the stewardess returned, and he smiled at her as she passed over the drink – complete with a thin wedge of lime – and he noticed the way she smiled at Al when she came back. He turned to leave and Bressler dove back in wherever it was he’d left off when Harry walked up.

“Well, I’ll be dipped,” Callahan said to himself as he walked past Avi and Sam to his seat, and he was surprised to see that Stacy wasn’t in her seat – until he saw the little amber ‘occupied’ light by the head door. He sat and buckled in, waited for her return.

He smiled when he saw her, smiled in spite of himself, and then he realized that he always felt that way whenever he saw her.

“Where are we?” she asked as she buckled in across from him.

“Greenland,” he said as he pointed out the window past the left wing-tip. “You slept through Toronto.”

“No shit?”

“No shit. I think you were more than a little tired.”

“I couldn’t sleep on the flight out.”

“Excited?”

She shook her head. “No, not really. More like a lot of stuff going on at work, trying to tie up as many loose ends as I could without arousing suspicion.”

“Well, how do you like being dead?”

She grinned then shook her head. “Probably about as much as you do.”

They talked about anything and everything except what was really on their minds, namely what was going on back in San Francisco, then Bressler walked back their way, beaming as he bounced along in the turbulent motion of the little jet.

“I’m tellin’ ya, Harry. She’s the one. The real deal.”

“Al, have you met Stacy Bennett? Sam’s kid sister?”

“No shit? You’re the one with the Bureau?”

“No shit,” she said, her puzzled expression making Harry smile even more.

“God damn, Harry, she even sounds like Sam.”

Harry smiled but he noticed Stacy didn’t, so he changed course.

“So, did you two set a date yet?”

“Huh? Oh, Debra. No, not yet, but that’s what I wanted to talk to you about.”

“Getting married?”

“No, dickhead. She’s offered to take me up to Jerusalem to see the sights, and I thought maybe you two would like to come along. Ya know, like a double date kinda thing…?”

Harry looked at Stacy, who nodded her head noncommittally, tossing in a little grin at the end just to keep him off guard.

“Sure, Al. Why not.”

“Great! I’ll tell her we’re on,” he said as he bounded off for the galley.

“That guy is like a hard-on with legs,” Stacy said under her breath.

“You have no idea.”

“How long have you known him?”

“My roommate in academy. He’s ambitious as hell, but maybe just a couple of bricks shy of a full load.”

“Ah, well then, he’ll go far. Probably make chief one day.”

“I wouldn’t be surprised. Unless he marries an Israeli flight attendant, that is.” 

“Bressler? That’s not a Jewish name is it?”

“Al? No way – he’s a dyed-in-the-wool, old school mackerel snapper; altar boy, knees are calloused from Sunday mass. Never missed a Sunday, even during academy. Went with him once. He takes those little talks with God seriously.”

“Oh well. Kismet, I guess. So, what does your step-father do?”

“Avi? Ya know, I’m not real sure, but I think it has something to do with military intelligence.”

“We don’t have anything on him in our files, Harry. I mean, zip. Only that he is registered as an accredited Israeli diplomat. His file is maintained in the Director’s office, marked Eyes Only.”

“What does that mean?”

“He’s big cheese.”

Harry nodded. “Figures. We’ve never really talked about stuff before.”

“Maybe it’s time you did. Know what I mean?”

He looked past Sam once again, focused on Avi this time. The old man had a relaxed, confident face, but the face of a man used to the exercise of real power. A dangerous man, Harry thought, but the idea bothered him not in the least.

Then Stacy’s voice dropped into a measured, conspiratorial whisper as she got to the heart of the matter: “How’d he get involved in all this, anyway?”

“Frank, I think.”

“Bullitt? Oh?”

“After the ‘kike’ thing, he…”

“The what?”

“Some patrolman called me a kike, and I turned him in…”

“You’re kidding, right? Why, I mean…how would he know…?”

“Yeah, exactly. Anyway, Frank thought Avi should know…”

“Uh…why would Frank be dialed into…unless Avi asked Frank to keep an eye on you?”

“Makes sense.”

Suddenly Stacy looked up – as her brother approached. “Hi, Sam. How’s the arm?”

“Throbbing like a sonofabitch. And I can’t have a drink, either. I’d kill for a rum and anything about now.”

“Painkillers?” she asked.

“Yup. So what are you two yakking about?”

“I asked Harry how the Israelis got involved.”

Sam looked her in the eye and Harry watched how Stacy backed down to her big brother’s presence. “Simple. I told Frank to get in touch.”

“Simple as that, huh? A San Francisco homicide dick just calls up the Mossad and presto! An Israeli jet whisks us away to Israel?” 

Sam sat on the arm of Harry’s seat, then crossed his beefy arms over his chest before he spoke again. “Judge Perryman was Jewish. Then all this vigilante stuff pops up and Harry is right in the thick of it, so I had Frank make the call through our back door.”

“Back door?”

Sam shook his head. “You don’t need to know, Stacy, so don’t ask.”

“Okay Sam, but at least tell me this much. Is the Mossad going to handle this, or the Bureau?”

“Stacy, don’t get too smart right now. Play dead like a good girl. Go to the beach, work on your tan and, if everything goes as planned, we can all go home in a few weeks.”

“Oh God, Sam,” she whispered. “What have you done?”

Sam met her question head-on. “That’s right, Stacy. I’ve sought authorization for the intelligence service of a foreign country to conduct an operation on U.S. soil.”

“Authorization? From who, Sam?”

And when Sam handed her a letter, Harry noticed it was on White House stationery. He watched as Stacy read through all three pages, then she handed them back to her brother.

“Well, Sam, I guess I only have one real concern.”

“What’s that?”

“I don’t have a swimsuit.”

+++++

At about the same time that Sam and Stacy and Harry were talking in the back of the Israeli Jetstar, a U.S. Air Force C-141 was landing at the Alameda Naval Air Station located just across the Bay Bridge from San Francisco. This last flight of hundreds of Vietnamese orphans was met by literally thousands of Red Cross volunteers, and then the American medical personnel who had accompanied these kids walked out of the cargo jet into a peculiar, heavy overcast. Among this last group was a young army major, Jim Parish, MD.

Parish helped gather all these kids into their assigned groups, then assisted the legion of volunteers as they helped load these groups onto buses. Each bus was assigned to a separate medical facility where each orphan would be examined before meeting their new foster parents, and Parish joined the last group to leave the base.

The bus driver had been reading the late morning edition of the San Francisco Chronicle when his bus was called to begin loading, so he’d tossed the newspaper onto the seat behind his just before the tidal wave of kids started coming up his bus’s steps. Parish brought up the rear and slipped into the seat behind the driver, and then noticed a familiar face just under the headlines…

He scooped up the paper and read through the article detailing the circumstances of his friend’s assassination, his hands trembling all the while, then he skimmed through all the associated stories that covered recent events within the San Francisco PD. By the time he finished reading his eyes were burning, and he looked down while he covered his eyes and tried to hold back the anguish sweeping over him.

Then he turned and looked for that familiar face somewhere in the back of the bus…

Yes, there she was. An Linh…as always sharing her irrepressible joy with yet another frightened child. How could he tell her that now, after so many years of constant struggle to reach these shores, the one man who had given her life meaning had been stripped away from her – almost as she arrived…

And so ends Part II

88k p3 image

© 2020 adrian leverkühn | abw | as always, thanks for dropping by…

[note: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgements until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need until the work is finalized. Yet with the current circumstances that might not be the best way to proceed, and I’d hate to have this story stop ‘unexpectedly’ without some mention of these sources. Of course, the source material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two Hollywood films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s screenplay. John Milius penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’ storyline derives from characters in that screenplay. Most of the other figures in this little story derive from characters developed in the works cited above, but as always this story is otherwise a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing historical timeline, using the established characters referenced above.]