Текст книги "The Butcher's Theatre"
Автор книги: Jonathan Kellerman
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Текущая страница: 20 (всего у книги 41 страниц)
A look-down to see what the maids were doing.
Still blabbing and vacuming. The coast was clear.
Into his room, licking, waving.
In came the cat.
Close the door, lock it, grab the furry fucker by the neck and throw it hard against the wall.
Thud. It cried out and slid down the wall and landed on his bed, alive but something was broken. It just lay there looking funny.
He unlocked the bottom drawer of his desk, pulled out the hypodermic needle that he'd prepared. Lidocaine from one of the little rubber-topped bottles Doctor kept in the library closet, along with boxes of disposable needles, packages of gloves, bandages, and the empty doctor's bag-a Gladstone bag. it was called-which made this fantastic thunk when you opened and closed it. A couple of times he'd taken stuff, put it in the bag, and brought it up to his room.
Big smile: Hi. I'm Dr. Terrific. What seems to be the problem?
He'd used lidocaine on bugs and worms and the mouse that he'd found half-dead in the trap in the cellar. Mostly it killed them right away, so he figured it was too strong. But bugs were no fun anyway-so small, just sticking them with the needle fucked them totally up. And the mouse had been all crushed, almost dead when he found it.
A cat, now that was a different story-a step forward, real science.
In school, he was flunking science because it wasn't real science-the teacher was a lame-o, all words, no reality.
The cat tried to crawl off the bed, stopped, just lay there.
This was real. He'd been real scientific, taken the time to plan everything. There was a pediatrics book in the library-he read it for hours before finding a drug dosage chart for newborn infants, then used it to dilute the lidocaine, then added even more water, mixing all of it together in a juice glass, hoping he hadn't ruined the lidocaine.
Only one way to find out.
The cat was trying to get off the bed, again. Its eyes were all cloudy and its back legs were dragging.
Fuck you, dickhead, messing things up like that!
He picked it up by the scruff, stuck the needle in its chest, and shot in the lidocaine. Did it a bunch more times, the way it said in the book, trying to get pinpoint anesthesia.
The cat made squeaky sounds, struggled for a while, then shuddered and then went all stiff.
He placed it on his desk, belly-up, on top of the layers of newspaper he'd spread all over.
It wasn't moving-shit! No fair!
No, wait Yeah, there it was, the chest going up and down. Fucker was still breathing, weak, you could barely see it, but still breathing!
All right!
He opened the bottom drawer again, took out the two knives that he'd chosen from the box in the library: the biggest scalpel and a curved bistoury. He held them in his hands, watching the cat breathe, knowing this was real science, not any bugs or half-dead mouses.
Hi, I'm Dr. Terrific.
What seems to be the problem, Mr. Cat, Mr. Snowball? Mr. Little Dickhead who almost ruined my life?
The cat just lay there.
Big problems for you. Things got all red in front of his eyes. The roar in his head got louder.
He took a deep breath. A bunch of them, until things got clear again.
Hello, Mr. Cat. Time for surgery.
Friday. Daoud's nights keeping Roselli under surveillance had been as productive as tilling concrete.
For the past week, the monk had remained within the walls of Saint Saviour's, taking only one brief walk Wednesday night, shortly after midnight. Not even a walk, really. Fifty steps before turning on his heel-abruptly, as if he'd experienced anxiety, a sudden change of heart about venturing out-and heading back quickly for the refuge of the monastery. Daoud had just begun to trail him, walking maybe ten meters behind, disguised as a Franciscan, the hood pulled down. After Roselli changed direction, Daoud kept on going and, as they passed each other, retracted his head into the brown folds of his robe and stared downward, as if lost in contemplation.
When Roselli had gone twenty more steps, nearing the curve at Casa Nova Road, Daoud permitted himself a half-turn and a look back. He watched the monk round the bend and disappear; then Daoud headed swiftly toward the monastery on silent, crepe soled feet, getting to the curve just in time to see his quarry vanish behind the large doors. He stopped, listened, heard retreating footsteps, and waited in the darkness for an hour before satisfying himself that Roselli was in for the night.
He kept the surveillance going until daybreak, shuffling back and forth on St. Francis Road, down Aquabat el Khanqa to the Via Dolorosa, reading the Arabic Bible that he'd brought for a prop, always keeping one eye on the tower of the monastery. He stuck it out until the city awoke under a golden banner of sunlight, watched early risers emerging from the shadows, and, tucking the Bible under his arm, started walking away in an old man's halting pace, blending in with the burgeoning stream of workers and worshippers, allowing himself to be carried along in the human flow that exited the Old City at the New Gate.
Engine roars and bleats and guttural commands filled his ears. Fruit and vegetable vendors were unloading their cargo; flocks of sheep were being herded toward the city walls for market. He inhaled the rotten sweetness of wet produce, made his way through dancing spirals of dung-laden dust, and walked the two kilometers to his car, still dressed as a monk.
The night-watch assignment was a little boring, but he enjoyed the solitude, the coolness of dark, empty streets. Took strange pleasure in the coarse, heavy feel of the robe, the large, leather-bound Bible he'd brought from home. As he drove home to Bethlehem, he wondered what it would have been like had he devoted his life to Christ.
Shmeltzer continued the week's routine of double-checking doctors, finding them arrogant, stingy with their time, a real bunch of little princes. Friday morning he had breakfast with his Shin Bet friend at the Sheraton, watched her eat buckwheat pancakes with powdered sugar and maple syrup. and asked the tape recorder in her purse to contact Mossad and check out Juliet Haddad's Beirut brothel. Afternoon was more record-searching and collating, the detailed, patience-straining work that he found enjoyable.
Friday evening he spent, as he had the past five evenings, with Eva Schlesinger, waiting in the corridor at the Hadassah Oncology Ward, then taking her arm as she walked shakily out of the room where her husband lay unconscious, hooked up to monitors and nourished by tubes.
Shmeltzer leaned against a gurney and watched people hurrying up and down the hospital halls, oblivious to his presence. Nurses, technicians. More doctors-he couldn't get away from them. Not that they were worth a damn. He remembered their reactions to Leah's aneurysm, the damned shrugs and false sympathy.
One time he'd peeked into Schlesinger's room, amazed at how far the old man had faded in so short a time. The tubes and needles were all over him, like the tentacles of some kind of sea monster-a giant jellyfish-wrapping themselves around what remained of his body. Meters and machines beeping away as it it meant something. All that technology was supposed to be life supporting-that was the story the white-coats told-but to Shmeltzer it seemed to be sucking the life out of the old palmahi.
A couple of times the hospital visits had been followed by tea at a cafe, an hour or so of winding down from the damned hospital ambience, small talk to hide from the big issue. But tonight Eva told him to take her straight home. During the drive back to French Hill, she was silent, sitting up against the passenger door,.as far from him as possible. When they got to her door, she turned the key in the lock, gave him a look full of anger-no, more than that: hatred.
Wrong time, wrong place, he thought, and braced himself for something unpleasant, feeling like an idiot for getting involved in a no-win situation, for getting involved at all. But instead of spitting out her pain, Eva bored her eyes into his, breathed in deeply, took his hand, and pulled him into the apartment. Moments later they were lying next to each other in her bed-Tell it straight, shmuck: their beds, hers and the old man's. Schlesinger wouldn't be sleeping in it again but
Shmeltzer still felt like an adulterer.
They remained that way for a while, naked and sweat-ing atop the covers, holding hands, staring at the ceiling.
both of them mute, the words knocked out of them, a mismatched pair of alter kockers, if he'd ever seen one. He, a scrawny bird; she, all pillows, wonderfully upholstered, her breasts heavy and flattened, thighs as soft and white as hallah dough.
She began crying. Shmeltzer felt the words of comfort lump up in his gullet, congealed by inhibition. He lifted her hand, touched dimpled knuckles to his mouth. Then, suddenly, they were rolling toward each other, slapping against each other like magnets of opposite polarity. Cleaving and clawing, Shmeltzer cradling her, listening to her sobs, wiping wet cheeks, feeling-and this was really crazy-young and strong. As if time were a pie and a large slice had been restored by some compassionate god.
The Chinaman spent another Friday night in and around the Damascus Gate, alternating between joking around with the lowlifes and pressuring them. Receiving promises from all of them, Arabs and Jews, that the moment they saw or heard anything, blah blah blah.
At one in the morning a series of behind-the-hand whispers steered him to a petty sleaze naned Gadallah Ibn Hamdeh, and known as Little Hook, a diminutive, crook-backed thief and swindler who sidelined by running girls out on the Jericho Road. The Chinaman knew him by sight but had never dealt with him personally and wasn't familiar with his haunts. It took an hour to find him, halfway across the Old City, in Omar Ibn el Khatab Square, inside the Jaffa Gate. Talking to a pair of backpackers at the top of the steps that led down to David Street, just past the facade of the Petra Hotel.
The Chinaman stood back for a moment and watched then conferring in the dark, wondering if it was a drug deal. Ibn Hamdeh was bowing and scraping, gesticulating wildly with his arms as if painting a picture in the air, reaching back every so often to touch his hump. The backpackers followed every movement and smiled like trusting idiots. Except for a solitary street sweeper who soon turned down the Armenian Patriarchate Road, the three of them were alone in the square; the Aftimos Market and all the other shops on David Street, dark and shuttered.
Too conspicuous for dope, decided the Chinaman. Had to be some kind of swindle.
The backpackers looked to be around nineteen or twenty, a boy and a girl, tall and heavily built, wearing shorts and tank tops and hiking boots, and carrying nylon knapsacks supported by aluminum frames. Scandinavian, he guessed, from the goyische features and blond, stringy hair. They towered over the little hunchback as he kept jabbering on in a steady stream of broken English. Laying on the shit in a high, choppy voice.
When the boy pulled out money, the Chinaman approached, nodding at the backpackers and asking little Hook, in Arabic, what the hell he was up to. The hunchback seemed to shrivel. He backed away from the money and the detective. The Chinaman whipped out his arm and grabbed him by the elbow. A look of protective aggression came into the male backpacker's eyes. He had peach fuzz on his chin, a narrow mouth set in a perpetual pucker.
"He's my friend, man."
"He's a crook," said the Chinaman in English, and when the boy continued to look hostile, showed him his police badge. The backpackers stared at it, then at each other.
"Tell them," the Chinaman commanded Little Hook, who was grimacing as if in agony, doing a little dance, calling the Scandinavians "my friends, my friends," playing the part of victim, outrageously overacting.
"Hey, man," said the backpacker. "We were seeking a place for the night. This fellow was helping us."
"This fellow is a crook. Tell them, Hook."
Ibn Hamdeh hesitated. The Chinaman squeezed his arm and the little thief started crowing: "I'm crook. Yes." He laughed, displaying toothless upper gums, lower incisors jacketed with steel. "I'm nice guy, but crook, ha ha."
"What did he tell you?" the Chainaman asked the backpackers. "That his sister has a nice place, warm bed, running water, and free breakfast-you give him a finder's fee and he'd take you there?"
The girl nodded.
"He has no sister. If he did, she'd be a pickpocket. How much did he ask for?"
The Scandinavians looked away in embarrassment.
"Five American dollars," said the girl.
"Together, or each?"
"Each."
The Chinaman shook his head and kicked Ibn Hamdeh in the seat of the pants. "How much money can you spend on a room?" he asked the backpackers.
"Not much," said the boy, looking at the bills in his hands and putting them back in his pocket.
"Try the YMCAs. There's one in East Jerusalem and one in West Jerusalem."
"Which one's cheaper?" asked the girl.
"I think they're the same. The east one's smaller, but closer."
He gave them directions, the boy said, "Thanks, man," and they loped off. Stupid babies.
"Now," he said, dragging Ibn Hamdeh up David Street and pushing him against the grate of a souvenir shop. He flipped the little rascal around, frisked him for weapons, and came up with a cheap knife with a fake pearl handle that he pulverized under his heel. Spinning Ibn Hamdeh around so that they were face to face, he looked down on greasy hair, fishy features, the hump covered by a flowered shirt that reeked of stale sweat.
"Now, Gadallah, do you know who I am?"
"Yes, sir. The police."
"Go on, say what you were going to say." The Chinaman smiled.
Little Hook trembled.
"Slant Eye, right?" said the Chinaman. He took hold of Ibn Hamdeh's belt, lifted him several inches in the air-the shmuck weighed less than his concrete-can barbell. "Everything you've heard about me is true."
"Most certainly, sir."
The Chinaman held him that way for a while, then lowered him and told him what he'd heard on the street, got ready for resistance, the need to exert a little pressure. But rather than harden the hunchback's defenses, the inquiry seemed to cheer him. He opened up immediately. Laying on the sirs and talking fast in that same choppy voice about a man who had scared one of his girls the previous Thursday night, on the Jericho Road just before it hooked east, just above Silwan. An American with crazy eyes who'd seemed to materialize out of nowhere, on foot-the girl had seen no car, figured he'd been hiding somewhere off the road.
Eight days ago, thought the Chinaman. Exactly a week after Juliet's murder.
"Why'd you take so long to report it, asshole?"
Little Hook began an obsequious dance of shuffles and shrugs. "Sir, sir, I didn't realize-"
"Never mind. Tell me what happened exactly?"
"The American asked her for sex, showed her a roll of American dollars. But his eyes scared her and she refused."
"Is she in the habit of being picky?"
"Everyone's scared now, sir. The Butcher walks the streets." Ibn Hamdeh looked grave, putting on what the Chinaman thought was a reproachful look, as if to say: You've not done your job well, policeman. The Chinaman stared him down until the shmuck resumed looking servile.
"How'd she know he was an American?"
"I don't know," said Little Hook. "That's what she told me."
The Chinaman gripped his arm. "Come on. You can do better than that."
"By the prophet! She said he was American." Little Hook winked and smiled. "Maybe he carried an American flag-"
"Shut your mouth. What kind of sex did he ask for?"
"'Just sex, is all she told me."
"Is she in the habit of doing kinky stuff?"
"No, no, she's a good girl."
"A real virgin. What did he do then? After she refused?"
"Nothing, sir."
"He didn't try to force her?"
"No."
"Didn't try to persuade her?"
"He just walked away, smiling."
" Which way did he walk?"
"She didn't say." She didn't look?"
"She may have-she didn't tell me."
"You're sure of that?"
"Yes, sir. If I knew, I would certainly tell you."
"What was wrong with his eyes?"
Little Hook painted in the air, again, caressed his hump. 'She said they were flat eyes, very flat. Mad. And a strange smile. very wide, a grin. But the grin of a killer."
"What made it a killer's grin."
The hunchback's head pushed forward and bobbed, like that of a turkey pecking at corn. "Not a happy grin, very crazy."
"She told you that."
"Yes."
"But she didn't tell you which way he walked?"
"No, sir, I-"
"That's enough whining." The Chinaman pressed him for more: physical description, nationality, clothing, asking again what had been crazy about the eyes, wrong with the grin. He got nothing, which was no surprise. The pimp hadn't seen the man, had heard everything secondhand from his girl.
"If I could tell you more, I certainly would, sir."
"You're a fine upstanding citizen."
"Very surely, sir. I want dearly to cooperate. I sent out the word so you would find me. Truly."
The Chinaman looked down at him, thought: The little bastard looks pretty crazy himself, waving his arms, rubbing that hump like he's masturbating.
"I'm going to talk to the girl myself, Gadallah. Where is she?"
Ibn Hamdeh shrugged expansively. "Ran away, sir. Maybe to Amman."
"What's her name?"
"Red Amira."
"Full name."
"Amira Nasser, of the red lips and the red hair."
Not physically similar to the first two victims. The Chinaman felt his enthusiasm waning. "When did you see her last?"
"The night she saw Flat Eyes. She packed her bag and was gone."
"Wednesday night."
"Yes, sir."
"And you just let her go?"
"I am a friend, not a slavemaster."
"A real pal."
"Yes, sir."
"Where does her family live?"
"I don't know, sir."
"You said Amman. Why there?"
"Amman is a beautiful city."
The Chinaman frowned skeptically, raised a fist. Ibn Hamdeh flashed stainless steel.
"Allah's truth, sir! She worked for me for two months, was productive, quiet. That's all I know."
Two months-a short shift. It jibed with what he'd been told about Ibn Hamdeh. The hunchback was small-time all ihe way, not even close to a professional flesh peddler. He promised novice whores protection and lodgings in return for a percentage of their earnings but couldn't hold on to them for very long. When they found out how little he delivered, they abandoned him for sturdier roosters. The Chinaman pressed him a while longer, showed him pictures of both victims and got negative replies, wrote down a general physical description of Amira Nasser, and wondered if he'd see her soon, cut open and shampooed and wrapped in white sheeting.
"May I go now, sir?"
"No. What's your address?" Ibn Hamdeh told him the number of a hole in an alley off Aqabat el Mawlawiyeh, and the Chinaman wrote it down and radioed Headquarters for verification, requesting simultaneous record checks on both the hunchback and Amira. Ibn Hamdeh waited nervously for the data to come in, tapping his feet and caressing his deformity. When the radio spat back an answer, the address was correct. Ibn Hamdeh had been busted a year ago for pickpocketing, let off with probation, nothing violent in his file. Nothing at all on any Amira Nasser.
The Chinaman gave Ibn Hamdeh a business card, told him to call him if he heard anything more about the flat-eyed man, pointed him toward the Jaffa Gate, and ordered him to get lost.
"Thank you, sir. We must rid the city of the abomination. Life is not good, this way." The hunchback stopped before the gate, made a sharp turn on Christian Quarter Street, and disappeared into the darkness.
Flat eyes, thought the Chinaman, continuing east on David Street, then hooking north and taking the Souq Khan e-Zeit toward the Damascus Gate. A crazy grin. A redheaded whore. Probably another dead end.
The souq had been watered before closing, the cobblestones still wet and glowing in the bands of moonlight that seeped between the arches. The market street was deserted, save for Border Patrolmen and soldiers, giving way to noise and lights as he approached the Damascus Gate. He walked past the coffee-houses, ignoring the revelry and fanning away cigarette smoke, exited gratefully into the cool night air.
The sky was a starlit dome, as black as mourning cloth. He flexed his muscles, cracked his knuckles, and began circulating among the tents of the Slave Market, buying a soda at one and standing at the back drinking it, watching a European-looking girl do a clumsy belly dance. Flat eyes, a crazy grin. The hunchback was probably a habitual liar, so maybe it was a just another con-false cooperation aimed at weaseling out of a larceny bust. Or maybe not. Maybe he had put out the word because he wanted to talk.
Still, the time frame made sense: a week between murders, the killing on Thursday night, the dumping Friday morning. If Red Amira had been tagged as number three, her escape helped explain why the time lapse since Juliet. Maybe this guy had some sort of schedule that allowed him out only on Thursday and Friday.
On the other hand, the red hair didn't match. Maybe the whole story was bullshit.
He took a big gulp of soda, planned his next moves: Check out this Red Amira-too late for that right now. Examine the spot where the American had propositioned her, see if there was a place for someone to hide, if there was room to conceal a car. Also a daylight job.
If he found anything interesting, he'd call Dani tomorrow night. He had nothing yet that justified disturbing the guy"s Shabbat.
The bellydancer shook her cymbals and ground her abdomen; pooshtakim hooted and cheered. Bland, appraised the Chinaman, definitely European, a college girl picking up extra shekels. No zest, too skinny to make it work-you could see her ribs when she undulated. He left the tent, saw Charlie Khazak standing outside his pleasure palace, sucking on a cigarette and wearing a snot-green shirt that seemed to glow in the dark. The shithead hadn't forgotten their little heel-on-instep dance. When he saw who was looking at him, he threw away the smoke and backed into the tent, was gone when the Chinaman got there. Forty minutes later, he showed up, only to find the Chinaman stepping out of the shadows, using a shishlik skewer for a toothpick, yawning like some giant yellow cat.
"Shabbat shalom, Charlie."
"Shabbat shalom. I've been asking around for you, trying to help out."
"Gee," said the Chinaman, "I'm really touched."
"I'm serious, Lee. This murder shit is bad for all of us. Bad atmosphere, people staying home."
"How sad." The Chinaman broke the skewer with his teeth, began chewing the wood, swallowing it.
Charlie stared at him. "Want some dinner? On me."
"Nah, already had some. On you." The Chinaman smiled, pulled eight more skewers out of his pocket, and let them drop to the dirt. He stretched and yawned again, cracked giant knuckles. More than a cat, Charlie decided. Fucking slant-eyed tiger, he should be caged.
"So," said the detective, "business stinks. What a pity.
Who knows, you might have to turn to honest labor." He'd been hearing the same tales of woe from other pimps and dealers. Since the papers had started pumping the Butcher story, there'd been a fifty percent slowdown on the Green Line. worse in the small pockets of iniquity that peppered the Muslim Quarter-sin-holes deep within the core of the Old City surrounded by a maze of narrow, dead-black streets, nameless alleys that went nowhere. You had to want something very badly to go there. The hint of a scare and the places shut down completely. All the whores were kicking about working with strangers, girls on the border staying off the streets, opting, temporarily, for the comforts of hearth and home. The pimps expending more effort to keep them in line. receiving less reward for their efforts.
"Everything stinks," said Charlie, lighting a cigarette. "I should move to America-got a cousin in New York, drives
"Do it. I'll pay for your ticket."
The big screen TV was turned up loud; from behind the flaps came the sound of squealing tires.
"What's on tonight?"
"French Connection."
"Old," said the Chinaman. "Got to be what? Fifteen, twenty years old?"
"A classic, Lee. They love the car chases."
"Then how come so few of them are watching? Your man behind the bar told me you had a newer one scheduled. Friday the Thirteenth, lots of knives and blood."
"Wrong time, wrong place," said Charlie, looking miserable.
"A temporary attack of good taste?" The Chinaman smiled. "Cheer up. It'll pass. Tell me, Rabbi Khazak, what do you know about a whore named Amira Nasser?"
"She the latest?"
"Just answer."
"Brunette, cute, big tits."
"I thought she was a redhead."
Charlie thought for a moment. "Maybe. Yeah, I've seen her with red hair-but that's a wig. Her natural color is dark."
"Does she usually go dark or red?"
"She takes turns. I've seen her as a blonde too."
"When did you last see her?"
"Maybe three weeks ago."
"Who runs her?"
"Whoever wants to-she's an idiot."
The Chinaman sensed that he meant it literally. "Retarded?"
"Or close to it. It's not obvious-she looks fine, very! adorable. But talk to her and you can see there's nothing] upstairs."
"Does she make up stories?"
"I don't know her that well, Lee. She connected to thej Butcher?"
The Butcher. Fucking press.
"Little Hook says he'd been running her."
"Little Hook says all sorts of shit."
"Could he be?"
"Sure. I told you she's an idiot."
"Where does she come from?"
"Hell if I know."
The Chinaman placed a hand on Charlie's shoulder.
"Where's she from, Charlie?"
"Go ahead, beat me, Lee," said Charlie wearily. "Why the hell would I hold back? I want this thing cleared up more than you do."
The Chinaman took hold of Charlie's shirt, rubbed the synthetic fabric between his thumb and forefinger, half expecting it to throw off sparks. When he spoke, his voice was knotted with tension.
"I doubt that, asshole."
"I didn't mean-" Charlie sputtered, but the big man released him and walked away, heading back toward the Damascus Gate in a long, loose, predator's stride.
"What's so interesting down there?" the girl called from bed.
"The view," said Avi. "There's a beautiful moon out tonight." But he didn't invite her to share it.
He wore skintight red briefs and nothing else, stood on the balcony and stretched, knowing he looked great.
"Come on in, Avraham," said the girl, in her best sultry voice. She sat up, let the covers fall to her waist. Put a hand under each healthy breast and said, "The babies are waiting."
Avi ignored her, took another look across the courtyard at the ground-floor apartment. Malkovsky had gone in three hours ago. It was doubtful he'd be out again. But something kept drawing him back to the balcony, making him think magically, the way he had as a child: An explosion would occur the moment he withdrew his attention.
'Av-ra-ham!"
Spoiled kid. Why was she rushing? He'd already satisfied her twice.
The door to the apartment remained closed. The
Malkovskys had finished their meal by eight, singing Shabbat songs,in an off-key chorus. Fat Sender had come waddling but once at eight-thirty, loosening his belt. For a moment Avi thought he was going to see something, but the big pig had simply eaten too much, needed air, a few extra centimeters around the waist. Now it was eleven-he was probably in bed, maybe mauling his wife, maybe worse. But in for the night.
Still, it was nice out on the balcony.
"Avi, if you don't come here real soon, I'm going to sleep!"
He waited a few moments, just to make sure she knew she couldn't push him around. Gave one last look at the apartment and walked inside.
"Okay, honey," he said, standing at the side of the bed. He put his hands on his hips and showed off his body. "Ready."
She pouted, folded her arms across her chest, the breast tops swelling with sweet promise. "Well, I don't know if I am."
Avi peeled off his briefs, showed himself to her, and touched her under the covers. "I think you are, my darling."
"Oh, yes, Avi."
Friday, at ten-thirty in the morning, Daniel called Beit Gvura. Though the settlement was near-midway between Jerusalem and Hebron-phone connections were poor. A chronic thing-Kagan had protested it on the Knesset floor, claimed it was all part of a government conspiracy. Daniel had to dial nine times before getting through.
One of Moshe Kagan's minions answered, announcing "Gvura. Weakness is death" in American-accented Hebrew.
Daniel introduced himself and the man said, "What do you want?"
"I need to talk with Rabbi Kagan."
"He's not here."
"Where is he?"
"Out. I'm Bob Arnon-I'm his deputy. What do you; want?"
"To talk with Rabbi Kagan. Where is he, Adon Arnon?"
"In Hadera. Visiting the Mendelsohns-maybe you heard of them."
The sarcasm was heavy. Shlomo Mendelsohn, cut down at nineteen. By all accounts a kind, sensitive boy who'd combined army service with three years of study at the Hebron yeshiva. One afternoon-a Friday, Daniel remembered; ye-shiva boys got off early on Erev Shabbat-he'd been selecting tomatoes from an outdoor stall at the Hebron souq when an Arab emerged from the throng of shoppers, shouted a slogan, and stabbed him three times in the back. The boy had fallen into the bin of vegetables, washing them crimson as he bled to death, unaided by scores of Arab onlookers.
The army and the police had moved in quickly, dozens of suspects rounded up for questioning and released, the murderer still at large. A splinter group in Beirut claimed credit for the kill, but Headquarters suspected a gang of punks operating out of the Surif area. The best information was that they'd escaped across the border to Jordan.
Moshe Kagan had been campaigning for Knesset at the time; the case was custom-made for him. He jumped in, comforted the family and got close to them. Shlomo's father made public statements calling Kagan Israel's true redeemer. After the thirty days of mourning were up, Kagan led a parade of enraged supporters through the Arab section of Hebron, arm in arm with Mr. Mendelsohn. Displaying the dead boy's angelic face on slogan-laden placards, trumpeting the need for an iron-fist policy when it came to "mad dogs and Arabs." Windows were broken, knuckles bloodied; the army was called in to keep the peace. The papers ran pictures of Jewish soldiers busting Jewish protesters and when the election was over, Kagan had garnered enough votes to earn a single Knesset seat. His detractors said Shlomo had been his meal ticket.