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Blood Ties

Page 22

by Warren Adler


  "What could you possibly have to say to him now?" Karla asked with surprising gentleness.

  "The truth," Helga said.

  "What truth?" Karla snapped, the brief gentleness gone. Despite the lined face, the strength remained. The eyes resumed their coldness.

  "It is for him. Not for you."

  "We share everything," Karla said, the old imperiousness rising. Watching her, Helga welcomed the increasing intensity of her hatred for her. She had expected the tyranny.

  "Your contempt no longer intimidates me, Karla. Really, nothing you can say will make any difference now."

  "I'll see that you don't get one more cent!" The words sounded the ring of defeat. Helga focused her eyes, fixing them on the face. It was a moment to be savored, a preview of what was shortly to happen between her and Charles. No one must be spared, she vowed.

  "They're not his children, Karla. None of them."

  But the woman's face was impassive, a mask.

  "Did you hear what I said?" It was as if she were being deprived of a gift.

  "I know," Karla said. Her eyes had narrowed. Anger had become resignation, leaving Helga confused.

  "You knew?" Helga whispered, the moment spoiled forever. Karla nodded.

  "From the beginning," Karla said.

  "The beginning?"

  Karla drew herself to her full height, the imperial arrogance recalling the old intimidation. "I gave him his life for providing the children."

  What was she saying? Helga was suddenly confused, disoriented, the sense of time and space awry.

  "He was a Jew," Karla went on. "I discovered him by accident. He was quite willing to trade his life. What choice had he? He fulfilled his end of the bargain admirably."

  "No," Helga said, backing away. Her mind was desperately trying to recall old images. But the terror was drowning in her mind.

  "Did you think you were so clever? We both knew Charles was sterile. Who do you think protected you?"

  I am somewhere else, Helga thought, surely in the middle of a nightmare.

  "You?" A von Kassel trick, of course, she decided. Another trick. "I will tell him that as well," she said, her voice weak. She started to move forward, but her legs would not respond.

  "It might have gone on forever. But when it became apparent that Hitler was losing, I had no choice, no choice at all. There was no other way, Helga."

  "It was you then..."

  "They were freeing the Jews. He would have told. He might have killed your babies." It was Karla who moved closer now. "Helga, I had to save the children."

  "And Konrad?"

  She turned away.

  "Karla!"

  "Charles tried to save him. He really did. The Gestapo would have been quite obliging. He wanted to keep the bargain. But it was too late."

  "Too late?"

  "You can't blame Charles." She paused. "Don't you see? I had to have him killed before he arrived there. I'm telling you, Helga. I saved the children."

  Helga felt the heat of rage expand beneath the paralysis of fear.

  "Leave it alone, Helga. You see, it has worked out fine. And it is doubtful they would believe you."

  Helga's fingers clutched the passport in her pocket. "I told Siegfried, Karla. I told him."

  A trembling snarl curled Karla's lips, the smugness gone.

  "You stupid bitch!"

  It was then that the anger exploded and Helga's legs moved. But Karla barred the way.

  "Let me pass," she demanded.

  Karla nodded, as if in surrender, moving aside.

  Helga had taken a few halting steps when from behind she felt the weight of something pushing her and she knew that she had not the strength to prevent it. Even as her body lurched over the shallow wall, and the force of gravity was drawing her downward, her fingers clutched the old passport.

  CHAPTER 14

  Albert saw his Aunt Karla standing over the prostrate body of a strange woman, limbs askew, as if she were a puppet whose strings had been cut. Beside him, the hotel manager, his mincing pose gone, made clucking noises with his tongue.

  "So terrible for you, Countess, to have discovered it by accident. What a shock!" he cried, his voice edgy with near hysteria. The Countess was pale but controlled. The discovery of a body, Albert knew, was not likely to ruffle his aunt's inner calm. For his father's sake, he was thankful that he had found her. The body seemed incidental.

  "Who is she?" Albert asked.

  "I never saw her before," Karla said. "I found an American passport in her pocketbook. Her name is Barber."

  "A stranger?" Albert asked. He looked down at her face, twisted in a sneer of contempt. Her demise had not been tranquil. He turned away, revolted by the attitude of death.

  "She came in last night," the manager volunteered. "I had originally asked her to leave, but the Countess..." He looked at Karla, whose eyes narrowed, a look of swift annoyance which passed quickly. But it seemed to serve as a warning to the manager. He suppressed any further explanation, obviously deferring to the Countess. Albert did not think it amiss. She always took over.

  "It was to avoid a scene," the Countess said. "She was obviously drunk. It was easier to let her sleep it off." She paused. "There seemed no need to precipitate a scene. Not in the midst of the family gathering."

  "And no one knew her?" Albert asked again, puzzled.

  "I never saw her in my life," Karla repeated.

  He felt the urge to probe further. For a moment he peered into the woman's face. Her eyes were open. The color had disappeared but the contempt was clear. The woman's head was awry.

  "Probably broke her neck." He looked upward, contemplating the fall. "Why did she choose this place?"

  "There is enough going on here without this," his aunt said. Albert looked up. His aunt was looking sternly at the manager, who by now had regained his composure.

  "You think she just wandered in?" Albert asked the manager, who looked at his aunt. She nodded approval.

  "It does happen," the manager said. "Although we are quite remote, an unbooked tourist will occasionally wander by. But we never book outsiders during a von Kassel reunion."

  Albert looked down again at the crumpled body. "She seems an unlikely tourist."

  "When it comes to Americans, you never know," the manager said.

  Albert shook his head. He wondered if she had any remote relationship to the family, an old retainer, a mistress perhaps. He looked at her face again, studying it.

  "It is curious," he said.

  "We mustn't exaggerate it, Baron," the manager said. He had apparently fully recovered his obsequiousness. "I mean blow it out of all proportion." He looked at Karla, who nodded solemnly. "And she might have been some disgruntled ex-employee." He looked down at her. "She is vaguely familiar."

  "You know her?" Albert asked.

  "One can't be sure."

  "It would do us no good to call the police," his aunt said.

  "I agree," the manager added quickly. "Why should we be victimized because this lady chose to end her life here?"

  It was, Albert agreed, a needless complication. He dreaded any confrontation with authorities. Interrogation. Suspicion. But he was, he knew, allowing a thought to take shape. He felt the sense of conspiracy. But that was a condition he had lived with always. Above all, the effect on the von Kassels was the principal consideration. Why stir up needless dust?

  "The matter can be handled," the manager said.

  The man's attitude had subtly changed. The mincing had disappeared. It would be a costly matter, Albert knew. He would have to be very cautious now, avoid pitfalls. Again he looked at the body.

  "I'm sure Hans can deal with it," his aunt said. They had been thinking along the same lines.

  "Yes, I suppose so," Albert said with resignation.

  Hans bowed, a thin smile emerging.

  Again Albert looked at the body. He could not contain his curiosity. "Where was she from?"

  "A place in America. Fargo."


  "Fargo?" It was puzzling. "North Dakota. A long way from home," he whispered. Perhaps he should pursue it, he wondered. His mind, despite his caution, opened to possibilities.

  "You're sure she had no family connection with us?" he asked. "Someone that Father might have known. Someone from his past."

  Karla shrugged. "Considering where she came from, it hardly seems likely," she said. If he were curious, a trained policeman would likely be more so. It seemed too incongruous to accept at face value.

  "I see some familiarity," the manager suggested. He looked at Karla, obviously falling short of committing himself. The man's insincerity was transparent.

  "There are any number of possibilities," Albert said. "Perhaps we should ask the others?" He felt his aunt stiffen.

  "And what would that accomplish? It would be better to close the matter as quickly as possible. The fact is, it seems like an obvious suicide."

  "She seems to have jumped from the rampart," Hans added quickly. "There is a promenade up there. It's a marvelous view. Our guests adore it."

  "How would she have known about it?"

  "You sound like a detective, Albert," Karla said with irritation. He admired her utter lack of emotion.

  "Well then..." he said. His tone suggested agreement.

  "There are, after all, only the three of us..." Karla's voice, too, trailed off. There was no need to complete the thought. They all understood.

  "And if someone comes after her?" Albert asked. It was a persistent tug at his logic.

  "That will be my problem," Hans said, his voice under-laid with new-found arrogance. They needed him now.

  He had better not question it further, Albert decided, looking again at the dead woman's face, searching it. He could find no familiarity. He turned to the manager.

  "Can you do it?" he asked.

  "Of course," Hans said, the nerve in his jaw continuing to palpitate. Albert knew he was already calculating the gain to himself. "There is a deep lake up there," he said, looking upward toward the peaks beyond the ridge line.

  He had not wanted to hear details. But the manager was showing his cleverness now. The cost was spiraling upward.

  Karla patted Hans' arm. "A very clever fellow. We will know how to take good care of you, right Albert?"

  "Of course.... "Albert nodded. Was there still time to retreat, he wondered. It was, after all, a monstrous act. Surely the woman had family, friends. He projected their anguish upon himself, despite knowing that he would, in the end, go along. Why was there even the slightest tinge of guilt? What was this woman to him? He had no sense of complicity in her choice of dying. Like the arms business. Selling inanimate objects of death did not create death. We are innocent, he told himself.

  "You go on into the luncheon, Countess," the manager said, bowing his head and clicking his heels, recovering his old pose. Gently, he touched the Countess' arm as if he might guide her back to the castle. But it was simply a signal for Albert to take it and lead her away. Albert obeyed and without looking back they headed toward the castle entrance.

  "It is really the best way, Albert," Karla said. "Your father is too weak to be bothered with such nonsense. Police. Investigations. The press."

  She seemed to be belaboring the obvious.

  "Let's hope we have avoided it," he said.

  "Hans is a good man. You'll see."

  "I would imagine that he has great expectations," Albert said, watching his aunt. The color had gone back into her cheeks. He admired her strength.

  "I have great faith in your business ability, nephew," she said. "No one has ever questioned that," she added. Her implications were clear. But she had added another dimension to his own dilemma. His complicity had made her an ally. Their arrival in the dining room prevented further contemplation. He led her to a chair beside his father.

  "Karla." His father's face had brightened. "I was worried."

  "She was taking a walk, Father," Albert said quickly, his aunt nodding in confirmation. He did not linger there. The sight of food made him queasy.

  Seeing Dawn's familiar luggage standing near the lobby entrance reminded him of her departure. He wished he could avoid a confrontation, especially now. But he owed her that, he decided. A fond farewell. It had not been her fault. Indeed, it had not been anyone's fault.

  He was surprised to see her sitting calmly in their suite, fully dressed in her traveling outfit, looking refreshed, relaxed. In her hand she held a champagne glass from which she sipped daintily.

  "I was waiting for you, Albert." She smiled and lifted her glass. "Surely a farewell glass of champagne is in order."

  Thankful for her understanding and grace, he reached for the iced bottle and poured himself a glassful.

  "It was good while it lasted, Albert. Don't you think?" She raised her glass.

  "Of course," he agreed.

  "These things are never simultaneous." She had continued to smile, but a brief tremor in her voice prompted a clue to her deeper feeling.

  "Messy business. Endings." Dawn drained her champagne glass and held it out to him for a refill. He dutifully poured, avoiding her eyes, determined to be patient.

  "Really Albert, it was great fun. I want you to understand that, despite our words last night, I am not bitter. Not bitter at all." She swallowed another mouthful of champagne and he noted that her hand was shaking.

  "You know I still love you." She was not going to get maudlin, he hoped. Not maudlin, please! To avoid any response, he lowered his eyes.

  "But I'll get over that," she said with forced cheerfulness. "Nobody dies of a broken heart. As a matter of fact, it might be a rather interesting experience." He wanted to remind her of the pressure of departure, the specter of a missed plane.

  "And, despite all this rather boring pain, I'm rather grateful that you brought me." The brief note of sarcasm indicated a contrived mood. "The von Kassel reunion. A rather dramatic event, don't you think?"

  What was she getting at? he wondered. Lifting his eyes to hers, he was confused by her mocking glare. So she is not going to be graceful after all.

  "All this dramatic talk about mythical knights and the glory of the von Kassel blood." Her sarcasm was taking flight now. She drained her glass again, but did not hold it out for a refill, putting it down on the table beside the couch.

  "A pity," she said. Her smile had disappeared. "It's all a fraud, you know." the words came casually as if she might be commenting idly about the weather. She made no move to go.

  "I suppose I could leave you to your ignorance, but I have the feeling you are about to find out anyway and I thought: Why deprive myself of the special joy of telling it? Why not be the first?"

  He tried to maintain his patience. If their parting was not to be sweet, it might as well be reasonably civil, he decided. Whatever it was she needed to get out, let it come and be done with it.

  "I'm making no sense, am I, Albert?" Her smile returned, although her eyes continued to mock him.

  "He is not really your father, you know."

  Incomprehensible, the words hung in the air. He felt a mild curiosity begin.

  "Really, Albert. He is not your father. The Baron had nothing to do with your precious conception. Siegfried and Rudi as well. You are all bastards. The lot of you." A croaking sound escaped her, hysterical laughter suppressed. He looked around the room, wanting to confirm reality. Either I am a fool to stand here and listen to this raving, or I am having a nightmare, he thought.

  "I am perfectly rational," she said calmly, reading his thoughts.

  "That is open to some question." He had not wanted to be drawn into the fantasy. Looking at his watch, he hoped that the gesture might stimulate her departure. She ignored it.

  "Your mother is alive," she said, searching for his face. Despite himself, the reference to his mother challenged his attention.

  "My mother?"

  "Ah, so you are listening now."

  "I'm listening, yes. But I must admit some concern about your
rationality." It crossed his mind that she had become unhinged, and he felt the responsibility for her protection. He had not expected that kind of reaction. His mother. My god, she was dead thirty years ago.

  "Your father was a Jew." She paused, letting the words penetrate the long silence. He had become conscious of his heartbeat and his concern for her was mounting.

  "Really, Dawn. It has been too much...."

  "Goddammit Albert." She stood up angrily and paced the room.

  "Perhaps a doctor..." He was instantly sorry he had said it.

  "A doctor?" He had expected a massive blowup, but she became calm when the full import of his meaning became apparent.

  "Crazy? You think I'm mad. But really, the story is too rich. She had a Jewish lover. Apparently your father is sterile. So she had the von Kassel progeny by proxy. The old Baron caught her in ... what is that phrase ... flagrante delicto ... and banished her, sending him off to the Gestapo. He doesn't know you are not his children. Apparently, she struck some sort of bargain for her lover's life and went away, with appropriate financial blandishments. Now she has returned to ... to what ... to topple the whole silly house of cards. I thought surely you'd be amused by it. I imagine your father will be hysterical. And your aunt. Her sides will split with laughter."

  The words had come out of her in a gush and she paused to take a deep breath, watching him, as if demanding some kind of tribute, some satisfaction.

  "A farewell gift, Albert. What better gift than the gift of knowledge?" She moved toward him, then he felt her lips brush lightly against his cheeks. "Sorry about all this, sweetie. But you're all rather clever. You'll think of something."

  He heard the door slam behind him and he stood rooted to the floor, groping for understanding.

  But how? he had wanted to say, watching the car disappear through the castle gates. Something tugged at his mind, as if the story had been concocted out of his own wish.

  CHAPTER 15

  "One finds it hard to refute," Karla was saying calmly. Olga, after recalling Wolfgang's version of the burning of their country estate and the way he had saved them, delicately picked up the teacup and sipped.

 

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