Sohlberg and the White Death

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Sohlberg and the White Death Page 12

by Jens Amundsen


  The men had spoken with nostalgia even about their worst times together. But they never spoke about the time in Kosovo when the sick one had come back to rescue Laprade from certain capture and torture while braving mortar and machine gun fire and slim odds of both men getting out alive.

  When the illness got worse they spoke less. Some days they just sat together in silence while the sick one slept and the healthy one chain-smoked. Of course smoking wasn’t allowed inside the hospital or in the little garden outside. But who was going to order the dour commissaire—a brute—to get rid of his cigarette?

  Pancreatic cancer had ravaged his old pal into a shriveled husk. During the bad days the former comrade no longer recognized Bruno de Laprade. But the detective continued to visit his lonely friend every day at the Hôpital de la Croix-Rousse in north Lyon.

  “I’ll be back tomorrow.”

  His friend’s only response was labored breathing. Laprade’s anger rose at the sight of Death letting his friend linger in pain and suffering despite the best efforts of the medical profession and pharmaceutical industry. The commissaire felt like punching and beating someone to death. But the Grim Reaper was beyond his reach. So were all of the diseases that plague mankind.

  ~ ~ ~

  An enraged Commissaire Laprade grunted as he took one more look at Sohlberg’s text message on his cell phone before leaving the hospital. He boarded the subway’s “C” line south to downtown and soon fell into a glum reverie.

  Laprade reviewed his life and he was somewhat glad about having retired from the Legion after 20 years. That allowed him at age 38 to start a new career at the Judicial Police—formerly known as the Sûreté nationale. Investigating criminal cases during the last 10 years had been enjoyable but for the fact that in France the judicial police operate under the orders and supervision of an Investigating Magistrate from the judicial branch. That meant that in too many cases the magistrates tended to interfere. Or they tried to pester the commissaire in charge of the case to give a ludicrous minute-by-minute accounting of absolutely everything that was being done and not done in an investigation.

  Laprade made his daily call on Operation Locust to Magistrate Emmanuelle Desmeulle. He liked her because she rarely interfered with his cases. The commissaire left a message on her phone:

  “The meeting is on for this morning. We’ll see what he has to say.”

  He dialed Sohlberg’s cell phone. “I’m on my way. Be there in six minutes or less.”

  “I’m already here.”

  “Then don’t eat the all of Pignol’s stock . . . leave some pastries for me and the rest of the world.”

  “Well . . . you know how it is . . . when us Vikings pillage . . . well . . . we pillage.”

  Laprade had never seen anyone eat as much food as Sohlberg. He was also amazed at how the slim Norwegian detective could be married to such a large woman. In Laprade’s eyes the charming Emma Sohlberg was fat. But Sohlberg always described his wife as Rubenesque.

  Emma Sohlberg could not compare with the exquisitely toned widow Theillaud. Of course—to Emma Sohlberg’s credit—she had plenty of curves in the right places. And Laprade admired how well the Sohlbergs got on and how loving they were to each other. He also appreciated how the couple often invited him to lunch or dinner and how they never asked questions about his past or his personal life.

  ~~~

  Sohlberg had already gone in one more time into Pignol for another haul of pastries when Laprade walked up to him.

  “Did you leave any for me?”

  “One or two.”

  Laprade bought a large selection of Pignol delicacies for himself because he would probably not drop by again in the afternoon. He turned and looked at the empty-handed Norwegian. “Aren’t you going to buy more?”

  “Why not?”

  With pastry bags in hand the men took the subway and got off at the Vieux Lyon station. Laprade had to walk a tad slower while Sohlberg took his time looking at the ancient streets, buildings, and hidden courtyards of medieval Lyon.

  A matronly clerk waved them to the back office once they reached the cramped quarters of Flaubert et Cie. An impossibly narrow staircase took them up two floors and past three heavily armed plainclothes. The two detectives stopped briefly at a small room on the second floor where a recording technician told them she’d start recording as soon as the informant entered the room upstairs.

  A heavy oak table and three matching chairs dominated the low-ceiling room which had once been a medieval merchant’s counting room. A strange light came in through an oddly shaped window of thick green glass ensconced in the timber-framed wall of wattle-and-daub.

  “I wonder what’s bothering him,” said Sohlberg after he repeated to Laprade the informant’s exact words about “Stuff’s happening. Serious stuff. . . .”

  “I’m sure that Ishmael won’t disappoint us. He’s delivered big time so far.”

  “Right,” said Sohlberg. He spoke slowly so as to minimize his hideous French. “But I still think it’s rather odd how he’s managed to get that kind of information without being found out and knocked off.”

  “I agree. But we might never find out. He’s sort of like the wandering sailor in Moby Dick . . . one day here . . . one day there.”

  “I loved that book. You also read it?”

  “No,” said Laprade. “I saw the movie. I thought that’s what gave you the idea for the name of Ishmael.”

  Sohlberg almost laughed at the idea that he had picked a code name from a movie. But he did not laugh. He wasn’t sure if Laprade would take it as an insult from a cultural snob. After all everyone tread lightly when it came to Laprade. The Norwegian cleared his throat and said:

  “Actually . . . I got the name Ishmael from Genesis and the name Locust from the Book of Joel. I think it’s time that our traffickers receive some Old Testament justice.”

  ~ ~ ~

  Both detectives took off their suit coats and then discussed recent information that the snitch had given them. They explored follow-up questions that they needed to bring up. After an hour the men fell silent as each rehearsed what he would say. Their reverie broke when a malodorous officer in a sweat-ringed shirt brought Laprade a hand-held radio receiver to hear progress reports on the informant’s walk through Old Lyon. The reports began to come in.

  “Subject with blue duffel bag just left station . . . walking north on Rue Saint-Jean. . . .”

  Sohlberg and Laprade tensed up because a last minute sidewalk assassination was not in the realm of the impossible.

  “Subject at intersection with Rue de la Bombarde. . . .”

  And finally:

  “Subject entering building. No one following.”

  “Alright boys and girls,” said Laprade into the radio. “Make sure you lock the street door as soon he gets past the courtyard. Let me know if anyone else tries to get in the building. Block the traboule between the first and second building. Make sure that both the iron gate and the wood door are locked and guarded on both sides. Search him for weapons as soon as he gets past the iron gate.”

  Ten minutes passed. Sohlberg’s mouth dropped open in shock when the man entered the counting room. The two detectives whipped out their guns.

  “Who the hell are you?” yelled Laprade.

  “Put your hands up,” said Sohlberg.

  The man complied.

  “Now . . . put the bag on the table real slow with your right hand . . . keep your left hand up in the air.”

  The man smiled and did as he was told. “Come now Inspector Sohlberg . . . and Commissaire Laprade. Let’s not get overly dramatic.”

  Sohlberg moved the bag on the table away from the informant. Meanwhile Laprade handcuffed the trespasser who looked like any harmless tourist in a casual khaki, blue polo shirt, and green windbreaker. Laprade searched the man again for weapons and pushed him into a chair. The good-looking man was unremarkable except for his not carrying a wallet or cell phone or money or any ID papers.

>   Sohlberg stood behind the man and he leaned over to the man’s left ear and calmly said, “Where’s Gerardi?”

  “Rico Gerardi has been retired.”

  Sohlberg quickly thought over the most-likely scenarios that would account for the absence of Rico Gerardi. None looked pleasant for the drug mule turned informant. Sohlberg went with the simplest and most open-ended question he could ask:

  “Is Federico Gerardi dead or alive?”

  “Does it matter?”

  Laprade slapped the intruder hard across the face to establish instant rapport and the pecking order. “Answer the question or next time it won’t be my hand that meets your face.”

  “Listen you two idiots. Let’s not waste time. Rico Gerardi is dead.”

  Sohlberg took a deep breath. “Who killed him?”

  “Does it matter? . . . Augusto La Torre ordered it . . . two Camorra soldiers from Naples took care of your Rico Gerardi.”

  Sohlberg gave careful consideration to the man’s words and said:

  “How do we know that Rico Gerardi is dead?”

  “Because I said so.” A little laugh erupted out of the man’s throat. The disrespectful chortle established his true relationship with the detectives and the exact pecking order: he who has the most information is the top dog. The man observed doubts in the detectives’ faces. “You want proof?”

  “Of course,” said Sohlberg.

  “Open the bag.”

  The zipper’s ugly ripping noise served as the prelude to a repulsive and breathtaking sight.

  Laprade cursed. “What the—”

  The shrunken head of Rico Gerardi peeked out of the duffel bag. A rough cord was sewn three times across the lips.

  The peaceful appearance of the dead man’s head troubled Sohlberg. The grotesque trophy could easily fit in his open palm. Sohlberg recognized all of Gerardi’s features although the shrinking had distorted the dead man’s facial characteristics into cartoonish exaggerations. The skin and the hair perfectly matched those that Sohlberg had last seen on Federico Gerardi. And yet Sohlberg was in denial. He could not bring himself into believing that the head was genuine. He slammed his hand on the table and said:

  “What’s this disgusting trick? . . . Who do you think you’re fooling with this fake?”

  Commissaire Laprade knew better. “No . . . this is real. I’ve seen shrunken heads before.”

  Sohlberg stared in horror at the shrunken head He remembered that The Sun or some other sleazy British tabloid had published pictures that a maid had taken of a dozen shrunken heads that appeared to be of European or Caucasian ethnicity. At least two of the heads belonged to former business associates of a Russian tycoon. The trophies were strung like garlic bulbs on a straw plait and they adorned the shoe closet of the Russian oligarch who lived the good life at 15 Central Park West in New York City.

  The repulsive head left Sohlberg and Laprade with a queasy foreboding. Meanwhile Rico Gerardi’s substitute relaxed and surveyed the scene before him. The tableau of death seemed to please him. The cold-eyed man appeared to be thinking of other suitable candidates for cranial downsizing and where and how he would display them.

  “Gentlemen,” he announced, “my name is Domenico Pelle.”

  Sohlberg and Laprade glanced at each other and nodded. They had not recognized the mobster from the 'Ndrangheta organization of southern Italy. Extensive plastic surgery had left him with the fake eternal youth and too-perfect looks that exhibited all the warmth and charm of wax fruit or plastic flowers. Micro-surgical implants had transformed Pelle’s balding dome into a lush carpet as dense as AstroTurf.

  “Yes . . . it’s me. Domenico Pelle.”

  The man closed his eyes. He lifted his chin and slowly moved his head right and left so as to be better admired by the two detectives who kept staring at the superb work that some surgical whiz had performed. With or without the plastic surgery Domenico Pelle would nevertheless have stood out from a crowd of common criminals. He had reasonably good manners and an MBA degree from Harvard. The third and fourth generation of Italian mobsters were obviously gaining the necessary sophistication to manage their huge business empires and multi-billion dollar fortunes.

  Laprade sneered. “Well now . . . since when do Italian mobsters look as pretty as a starlet?”

  “Detective! . . . You need to get with it . . . get on with the times. You know. . . . Look good. Feel good.”

  Laprade again slapped Domenico Pelle but this time with less enthusiasm.

  “Commissaire . . . you’re just jealous.”

  “Say that again and you will need an emergency visit to your surgeons and dentists.”

  “I can afford it. My eyebrow and nose surgeon did the actress Natalie Portman. I paid him more than what you two together make in ten years.” The surgically enhanced mobster ruined his beauty with a nasty smirk. He pointed at Laprade’s cigarettes. “I’ll take one. . . . So . . . gentlemen . . . shall we get down to business?”

  Chapter 12/Tolv

  LYON, FRANCE: AFTERNOON AND EVENING

  OF TUESDAY JULY 19, OR THREE MONTHS

  AND 7 DAYS AFTER THE DAY

  Sohlberg ordered mineral waters. He and Laprade pulled their chairs closer to the informant. Sohlberg started off:

  “Who killed Gerardi?”

  “He did.”

  “Who?”

  “Rico himself. He signed his own death warrant when he turned into a snitch.”

  “Who knew he was a snitch?”

  “Come on Sohlberg. . . .”

  “Stop. How do you know my name?”

  “I’ve done my research. Same with Laprade. For example . . . I know that he’s not French. He’s actually from Argentina.”

  Laprade’s faced darkened.

  Domenico Pelle laughed. “Our faux French commissaire was then known as Juan Pereyda. He was unemployed and he faced a lifetime of poverty in that ruin of a country when he decided to improve his lot with the French Foreign Legion. Juanito picked up his new name and identity after he left the Legion thanks to his friends in the intelligence services.”

  Sohlberg’s poker face hid the turmoil in his mind. Laprade was another person—like Azra Korbal—who was close to him and yet this person had a whole other life that they kept secret from him. The Norwegian remembered his long-dead first wife once telling him:

  “The world is where we hide from ourselves.”

  Domenico Pelle exhaled an enormous billowing cloud of tobacco smoke. “I know all about you two detectives. I like to find out everything . . . warts and all . . . about the people I do business with.”

  Sohlberg frowned. “You’re not doing business with us.”

  “Call it whatever you want. . . . I know how you . . . Sohlberg . . . got forced out of the police in Norway because you arrested a ring of corrupt judges. . . . I always have the corporate spies at Kroll look into people I do business with.”

  Laprade walked over and slapped the insolent Italian. “We don’t do business with you.”

  The mobster didn’t even blink. He smiled the cold smile of a man who holds a wining hand of cards. “You have no choice. For example . . . I knew within hours that Gerardi had walked out of a meeting with Sohlberg and detective Hernandez. . . . And no . . . it wasn’t Hernandez who told me and my people. He’s honest.”

  “So,” said Sohlberg, “how was Gerardi outed?”

  “A very nice deputy in the jail staff turned on the microphone and listened in on your little meeting. Of course we waited until we knew for sure what Gerardi had done. . . . His life was over when he got a suspended sentence. That was the proof we needed.”

  Laprade snorted loudly.

  Pelle smiled. “Sohlberg will gladly confirm that we’ve got plenty of people in our payroll who work in the Boston Police Department . . . the Suffolk County Sheriff . . . and the F.B.I.”

  Laprade shook his head. But Sohlberg knew better.

  Sohlberg knew that law enforcement in the Boston area had be
en thoroughly infiltrated by the local godfather—Francis “Bobo” Messina. The underboss of the Patriarca crime family owned dozens of nude dancing bars that offered sex, drugs, and gambling—none of the legal kind.

  Sohlberg also knew that Messina’s partner and local muscle had been the FBI informant Whitey Bulger. The Irish gangster made $ 3 million a month in take-home pay from the nude bars until the FBI stopped protecting Whitey and his violent gang in 1994.

  Many a government bureaucrat or their spouse had been videotaped taking cash payoffs at the nude bars along with perks for their noses and groins. It wasn’t just coincidence that the U.S. Attorney in Boston never prosecuted anyone working for the Patriarca Family or any of the major drug cartels. The Messina-Bulger operation was so dirty that Urban Legend had it that you could catch herpes or some other venereal disease just from sitting on the chairs of a Patriarca-owned bar. Bobo Messina’s sewer of corruption included a state governor, a U.S. senator, and a couple of state prosecutors and judges.

  Sohlberg studied Pelle’s eyes which had the warmth of ice cubes. “How do I know that you didn’t have Gerardi killed?”

  “Like I said . . . Augusto La Torre ordered the hit . . . two of his Camorra soldiers from Naples gave Rico Gerardi a one-way ticket to hell.”

  “I doubt it,” said Laprade. “Gerardi didn’t have business with any Camorra in Naples or anywhere else.”

  “Correct . . . but those Neapolitans aren’t the brightest bulbs in the pack. They assumed Gerardi was the source of the leak that sank their dreams in Newark . . . remember? . . . The Malaysian boat that was picking up scrap metal?”

  Of course Sohlberg and Laprade remembered. Who could forget the seizure of a $ 132 million stash of meth precursor chemicals at the New York Port Authority?

  An inspired thought flashed in Sohlberg’s mind and he finally realized the game that Domenico Pelle had played. “You . . . you’re the one who supplied us the information on the drug shipments.”

 

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