Marathon Man
Page 17
“Anything.”
“Stop protecting your brother—it’s clear you must be—he should have been dead when he got torn apart, I know about wounds, remember that, and I examined the body, remember that too. He must have wanted to see you so much he stayed alive for just one reason, to tell you something, something incredibly important. He wouldn’t have done what he did just to shout ‘Babe’ a couple of times and then keel over. Okay. Now’s the time. Let it out, it’s crucial: What did he say?”
Babe lay quietly on the floor in the back. “I’ve told you everything important that happened, I swear.”
“Maybe something unimportant, then—he’s dead, he doesn’t need your protection any more, and nothing you can say is going to shock me, people say terrible things in my business, I’ve heard about how dangerous he was, how he was a double agent, how he was a thief, a raving homosexual, you name it I’ve heard it about him, and I’ll bet he heard worse about me, but we’re dealing with a fucking Nazi now, we could try swimming through all the blood he’s spilled and never make it all the way across to the other side, so for Christ’s sake, what did he tell you?”
“Nothing...”
“Shit,” Janeway said, and he slammed down on the brakes till the car stopped.
Babe stuck his head up.
They were back where they’d started, by the boarded-up house, and both Karl and Erhard were waiting. “I couldn’t make him talk,” Janeway said, getting out of the car. “He’s Szell’s now.”
“No,” Babe screamed. “You killed them!”
“You’re much too trusting,” Janeway said, “and it’s going to cause you grief someday.” Again the quick smile. “Welcome to someday.”
Karl reached in for Babe. Babe had nothing left to fight with. Three minutes later he was strapped back in the chair.
PART
IV
DEATH
OF A
MARATHON
MAN
23
“Hurry it up,” Janeway said as Karl and Erhard finished strapping Babe into immobility. “One of you go get Szell.”
Karl looked at Janeway. “You do not give me orders.”
“Oh, come on, come on,” Erhard said, limping off. “We’ve no time.” Karl followed him.
Babe just stared up at Janeway. “It was all lies, wasn’t it, all a lot of crap about you being this buddy of Doc.” Janeway said nothing for a moment, and as he watched him, Babe couldn’t catch much Gatsby resemblance any more. What Janeway really looked like was the Nixon lawyer Dean—a pilot fish they called him. A thing that hung around the biggest shark for power.
“Scylla was a romantic fool, it killed him eventually. He was always trying to overpower his love objects with the breadth of his passion. Every lover he ever had was unfaithful to him. He was never as friendly with me as he thought—business before pleas-sure, didn’t someone once say something like that?” The dazzling smile again, and now Gatsby was back. “Who do you think got him involved with Szell?”
Again, the footsteps in the hall.
And just as Karl and Erhard had stiffened at their sound, so did Janeway now. Gatsby gone, the pilot fish returned.
“I’ll leave you,” Janeway said, and then Babe and Szell were alone in the room. Otherwise, things were much the same: bright lamps, clean towels, the black leather case resting close. Szell stood at the sink, washing his hands. Done, he shook them, dried them with a towel. Then he brought them under the brightest lamp and examined them carefully. Evidently, something displeased him, because he went back to the sink and scrubbed again, harder than before. This time, when he was finished, he brought his hands back under the fight and started talking. “You must pardon me, I am terribly fastidious, it is, you could say, my fetish. Where I live, I have my own laundress each and every day. She is greatly gifted.” He took another towel, dried his hands, turned to Babe now. “So you are Scylla’s brother.”
Babe didn’t answer.
“Oh please—now is our time for conversation; pain is in great part mental, and believe me, there will be plenty of that coming up for you. But now, I think it would be pleasant if we talked. Would you like to know how you were taken in? The bullets were blanks, the knife had a retractable blade, only effective if you don’t look too long or too closely, but if you don’t, most effective indeed, wouldn’t you agree?”
Babe said nothing.
Szell walked over to him. “‘Thomas Babington,’ Janeway reports. After, of course, the great British historian. What do people call you? ‘Tom,’ I expect.” Babe closed his eyes.
“I tell you something: I understand your having a certain aversion to me, but you see, I want to chat and I am in command just now, but I would never force my presence on someone who did not want it. Therefore, if you do not wish to speak to me, fine, if that pleases you; but if I wish to excavate more deeply into your cavity, then also fine, if that pleases me.”
Very quickly Babe opened his eyes and said, “Why do you have so little accent? I know about languages, and it’s very hard to hide the German.”
Szell almost smiled. “Janeway alerted me that you were smart, but even I did not expect such an opening foray. ‘What are you going to do with me?’ would have been expected. Perhaps some queries concerning your brother. But you have found my pride first shot, and for that I salute you.”
“I’m just interested in languages, that’s all, it’s part of social history,” Babe said. Then: “What are you going to do to me?”
“Bad things,” Szell promised, and, going on without a pause, he said, “I had alexia as a child, which is a disease—”
“I know about alexia, it’s where you can’t understand written speech.”
“Very impressive,” Szell said.
“No, it’s just I kind of don’t mind studying so I do it a lot, English and psychology I minored in actually, it’s all related to history. What bad things, couldn’t you just tell me now, I’m not all that crazy about surprises.”
“We were speaking of alexia and my childhood problems, and I would never change such a subject, since, first of all, you asked the question, and, second and more important, your fear is growing as we talk, you are already anticipating pain, and I would guess your cavity is aching worse than two minutes before. Don’t bother answering.”
“It is,” Babe said.
“It was very hard for me—I don’t expect sympathy from a Jew, but you can clearly understand that my childhood was not a particularly pleasant time, since here I was, brilliant, I knew I was brilliant, I was positive, but everyone around me thought me backward, if not actually retarded. At any rate, I have always hated written speech—my penmanship, you would call it, is still in the scrawl stage, I loathe etymology, philology, but morphology I find fascinating. I assume you know what that is too.”
Babe nodded.
“Well then, there you have it. Inflections fascinate me. I love the vernacular. Plus one more thing.”
“What’s that?”
“I’ve spent the last quarter century and more in South America, and there isn’t much to do down there. If you’re not a revolutionary, it’s a very dull place. So I speak German, naturally, and naturally, Spanish, and also French and British and American. I am at the present time learning to speak Italian, and then, alas for me, it will all be over, I am too old to start Chinese.”
“Russian,” Babe said.
“You betray your youth,” Szell said. “As an historian you have gaps that need filling. After what we did to the Russians, I might just as profitably learn Hebrew.” Szell shook his head. “I was surrounded by madmen.” He looked at Babe and started laughing. “That must strike you as being humorous, since I’m quite sure you consider me a madman.”
“I really don’t, no,” Babe said. “Listen, we all have our little quirks, you say you’re innocent, that’s good enough for me.” He nodded as reassuringly as he thought feasible, considering the circumstances.
“I have not been innocent
since I was twelve years old and had my way with a chambermaid. I never said I was innocent. I merely say that I was never involved in any lunatic fancies. Whichever T.P. came under my care was there for a sound, viable reason.”
“T.P.?”
“Test person. We called them that in the experimental block. How is your tooth, hurting very badly?” Babe nodded.
“Are you hoping someone will rescue you?”
Babe nodded again.
“Possible but doubtful. Never lose hope. My father owned this building, and Erhard and Karl are the sole tenants. Next door the warehouse is unused. Keep hoping, please. It makes the pain expand. Once one stops aspiring, one becomes sluggish, a derelict. It is very difficult to force the truth from such a person.”
“I’ve told you the truth,” Babe said. “I’ve told you and I’ve told Janeway. A hundred times. I don’t know anything.”
“I paid your brother very well, top commission for bringing the diamonds to Scotland. I trusted him for such an exercise; Jews are only to be trusted when it comes to money. You may have different feelings, fine, I do not choose to argue. But they can only be trusted with limited amounts. Scylla worked for me for years, but once my father died, it was a different thing. I think your brother planned to kill me after I left the bank and take my diamonds, what do you think?”
“I don’t know anything about anything,” Babe said. “You see, I do not believe you. Your brother was trustworthy because he loved money. He was, after all, an American, and that is something of a national trait; an exaggeration, certainly, but not totally without foundation. Scylla was a courier for me, and a splendid one, powerful, armed, alert, all but impossible to rob. He received for his services much money, but always bit by bit over the years. Some now, more then. But the day of thousands is done; we have quantum jumped. Now we are into millions beyond dreaming. Now we are dealing with a different Scylla, and he cared, I am led to believe, for you, and he died, I am led to believe, in your arms, and so therefore it must not be overlooked that you would perhaps know something, perhaps only a little, perhaps a great deal, perhaps all—was he, for example, planning anything, and if he was, was he planning to do it alone, and if not, who else had he gone into business with, and since he is no longer with us, will they stop or does the plan stay in effect regardless, am I going to be robbed when I leave the bank—perhaps you could clarify some of these questions for me.”
Babe’s cavity was steady with pain now; he could tell the talk would be ending soon. “I don’t know.”
“For the last and final and, I promise you, ultimate time: Is it safe to get my diamonds?”
There was nothing Babe could say.
Szell opened the black leather case.
And took out a portable hand drill.
“Probably you have been thinking,” Szell said, busying himself with the equipment, “that you have been running in bad luck, having a cavity already sore for me to pick at. It would not be unreasonable for such a thought to have crossed your mind. If it has, let me tell you that, in point of fact, you were lucky, not the other way around.”
Babe’s heart would not stay in place. He remembered a bird from his childhood. It had gotten so excited when a cat came to its cage that it fluttered and screeched for a wild moment and then toppled, dead, its poor heart unable to stand the menace.
Babe wondered about his own heart, because this menace was very clearly growing. Szell plugged in the drill, switched it on experimentally, then quickly off once he determined it was working. He reached into the leather case again and removed what looked like a good-sized nail. He put the sharp end into the drill, locked it in place, called for Karl.
“His head,” Szell indicated quietly when Karl was in the room and the door shut again. “Very steady. It must be very steady this time, Karl, no movement at all, yes?”
Karl took Babe’s head between his big hands and exerted really a tremendous amount of pressure. Babe was helpless. No, he had been helpless all this while, he was only more helpless now. But was that possible? He tried forcing his good brain into concentrating on that particular subject.
No good.
His mind was not his to control now. He could only stare at the drill and the nailheadlike object sticking out of it.
Szell saw his fascination. “A diamond stone,” he said, indicating the nailhead. “A portable hand drill, obtainable at, I should think, any first-class hardware store, and an ordinary diamond stone, an absolutely standard dental tool. That is the beauty of it all, the ease of availability. Back at the camp, I tried getting that point across, but Mengele was so obsessed with his lunatic notion of breeding a race of blue-eyes that he ignored the implications of what I was trying to get through—but then, I told you he was a madman, what could any one expect? But, you see, throughout combat over the centuries, a captured spy was of value only if he spoke the truth, and you know about iron maidens in the Middle Ages and testicle shock in more modern times, but they don’t work—they have no build to them. You’re feeling fine, then you’re in agony, and if they keep it up you die, and if they stop the pain eases, and it really could have all been so simply solved if Mengele had listened. You see, anyone can do to you what I’m about to do to you—a few days of training is more than enough, and if Mengele had listened, there would not have been a captive able to resist us, because a newly cut nerve is much more sensitive than the one I touched in your cavity before—that nerve was already in the act of dying before I began.”
“You’re going to cut a nerve?”
“A live nerve, yes, a healthy one. I’ll just drill straight into a perfectly healthy tooth and in no time at all I’ll reach the pulp.”
Pulp. Babe registered the word.
“The inner -substance of your teeth,” Szell said. “With a young person like yourself, the pulp is easily reachable. It shouldn’t take me more than a minute. Drilling into a healthy tooth isn’t all that dreadful, except in this case the drill will cause a good bit of heat, and of course that won’t help you much, but until we reach the pulp it should be more or less bearable. The pulp is where the nerves are. It’s really a complex of blood vessels and nerve fibers, veins and arteries and lymphatic tissue all intertwined—don’t worry, though, there won’t be a lot of bleeding—oh, I’m not saying there won’t be a drop or two, but no more,” and with that he started drilling straight into the front of Babe’s biggest tooth, the upper left incisor in the center of his mouth.
Babe stood it.
Szell kept on drilling.
A little heat from the drill now.
More heat.
Szell bent closer.
Babe wanted to scream, but wouldn’t give Szell the satisfaction.
Szell kept at it.
Babe screamed.
“I told you the heat would be uncomfortable,” Szell explained. “Just a few more seconds and we should be through to the pulp.”
“I don’t know what you want—Christ wouldn’t I tell you if I knew?”
“Your brother was very strong. Strength is an inherited trait. No. I’m sorry, but I’m afraid we won’t know the extent of your knowledge until we’re well into the pulp. You’ll tell me everything then.”
“I’ve told you everything.”
“Quite so.” He went back to his drilling.
Babe was tensed to scream again, but it wasn’t that bad this time, the heat hadn’t developed to a point beyond bearing. And then, surprisingly, no more than a few seconds after he had begun, Szell turned the drill off.
“We’re at the edge of the pulp now,” Szell said. “You told me before you didn’t like surprises, and I was just being helpful. Now, in just a moment you’ll understand how right I was when I said that a nerve in an existing cavity is infinitely duller than a good fresh one. I don’t think there’s anything to equal a good fresh one, especially in a young person like yourself. Tell me if you think I’m right.”
He drilled into the pulp.
Babe started to cry.
It wasn’t something he had any control over. There were suddenly tears of affliction criss-crossing down, and Szell seemed not at all surprised, only nodded and kept going deeper into the pulp.
Babe was half unconscious when Szell stopped.
“Care to see a nerve?” he asked Karl. “It’s all right, he needs a moment, let his head alone.”
Karl took his hands away, allowing Babe’s head to go limp. Gently, Szell took Babe’s face and opened his mouth. “That red is a nerve,” Szell said softly. “Didn’t know that, did you?”
Karl made a negative sound.
Without the drilling the pain was considerably less. Babe lay quietly, head limp. It was important to keep that from Szell.
Only Szell knew, because at that exact moment he said, “All right, back to it,” and again Karl stationed the head, and again Szell drilled, and again Babe cried. This time when Szell stopped, he did not allow Karl to release his grip; this time Babe’s respite was shorter.
In the silence, Babe managed, “... How... how can... you do this?...”
“How? Shall I give you one old Jew’s answer? A wise man. He said this: ‘We were not for them the same.’ You are not quite, for me, human.”
After the third session, Babe begged, “... Kill me “A Jew cannot die when he will, only when we will” was all Szell answered. Then they went back to it.
After the seventh session, Szell shouted for Erhard and Janeway. “He didn’t know—he told me nothing— if he had known, he would have told me, we’ve wasted time, get rid of him.”
Babe was only barely conscious in the chair.
“Kill him, you mean?” Karl asked, making sure.
“How would you like it to happen?” from Erhard.
“Do once something right without me!” Szell thundered, patient no more.