“Please, with my compliments, as well as those of the manager,” Kupric said.
By now Vlado was half expecting a welcoming committee to march through the door, unfurling a WELCOME INSPECTOR PETRIC banner while chanting factory slogans.
“Tell me,” Vlado asked, “are your police appointments always so public?”
Kupric seemed crestfallen. His smile vanished. “It’s not as if people know why I’m talking to you,” he said. “Or even that you’re working for the Interior Ministry. I have the manager’s trust. I am a foreman. And when I said I was receiving an important guest from the police he was only too happy to accommodate me. If he had asked for more information I was ready to tell him it was a small matter of the government seeking help in identifying tobacco smugglers, but as it was he never bothered to ask. As I said, he trusts me. And so does your ministry.”
Kupric lit a cigarette, snapping a silver Zippo shut with a rebuking click. “I would have thought my sort of attitude and ability would be reason for confidence, not ridicule.”
“Perhaps I’m just not familiar with the way these things work,” Vlado said, unsure whether to feel appalled or stupid. He reached into his bag, shuffling through papers until he found a spiral pad and a pen.
“So then, Mr. Kupric, if you will bear with my relative inexperience in these matters, I am told you have news of Mr. Vitas. Perhaps you could begin with the first time that you heard his name mentioned with anything you considered improper or illegal behavior.”
Kupric’s face went long and grave. He said that he’d first heard of Vitas entering the cigarette trade a few months back.
“It was all pretty vague then, something about a ham-handed attempt to stuff Drinas into empty Marlboro cartons. Not much future in that game. One round of sales and then your credibility was burned for good. Unless you were Interior Ministry police chief. Then maybe you felt like you could make your own rules.”
“And this was when?”
“Two, three months ago. Not so long. The next thing I hear, maybe a few weeks after that, is that he was piecing off a share of the incoming tobacco. We like to complain here about supply, but we had plenty stockpiled from before the war. And no matter how much fighting there is, another load always seems to come in over the hills just in time. The U.N. won’t lift a finger for us unless you pay the right people, and even then it’s hard. But by truck and by other means, it gets here. Even by donkey cart once.
“So, anyway, this was the supply line Vitas wanted to tap into. As I said, the word on it was vague, but he was supposedly using his people to pry loose some as it came over the mountain.”
“ ‘His people?’ Meaning, Interior Ministry police?”
“Who knows? But why not. Easy enough for him to say they were confiscating it for prosecutions in smuggling cases. Easy enough afterward to then make it all disappear.”
“And might I ask where this ‘word’ was coming from?”
“From my sources, of course.”
“Some names would be helpful. Or even a single name.”
Kupric assumed a look of ridicule, as if he was dealing with a rank amateur.
“I am not much good as an undercover man if I blow my sources,” he said, snorting smoke out his nostrils. “Suffice it to say, these are people who know what they are talking about. These are people who are plugged into the networks, the supply lines, and we all know where those supply lines eventually lead. So obviously they have their reasons for wanting to remain anonymous, and if we don’t indulge them, or if we start throwing around their names in the wrong circles, then they’ll be of no use to us at all inside of a week, I can tell you that for certain. Besides, it is their bosses you want. Not them.”
Still, Vlado chafed at the idea.
Kupric continued. “The longer Vitas stayed in, the more pressure he applied. There are ways this sort of thing is done in this kind of business. One way is to start killing your competitors, frowned upon these days because it attracts the wrong kind of attention. Another way is like with any business, through sweat and hustle. You undercut your competition’s prices, move in on their markets with better service and faster delivery.” Another new capitalist who already thinks he knows it all, Vlado thought with amusement. “Then there’s the way Vitas used. He simply began throwing his weight around, and this only invites retaliation, and not the sort that is likely to leave you standing. I think that’s why Vitas is dead.”
“You think? Or you know?”
“I know, or know as well as I ever could without having seen the shooting or heard the order.”
“How so?”
“Like I told you, it was the word in the network. One day it seemed to be everywhere: Vitas had pushed too hard, and with too little evidence of having the force to back it up. He was a man with a title and a name, but little else in the way of connections that would help him survive any serious challenge. The only way to deal with that kind of threat was to take out the name and the title. Which meant taking out the man himself. If you make yourself a target in a war zone, sooner or later you’re going to be hit. And that’s what happened to Vitas, sooner rather than later.”
“Is anything you heard ‘in the network,’ as you say, in the way of specifics? Or about the structure of these competing operations that might offer some hints as to who was responsible. Who might have been hurt the most by what he was up to, for instance?”
“Specific as far as who gave the order? None. Nor is it likely that anyone who knows will talk about it, unless he wants the same fate. As for the structure, and who was being hurt, take your pick. Any of a half dozen men in this city had enough power to have ordered it, or even another two dozen from the next rung down, although taking out the chief of the Interior Ministry police probably would come from the top, and you’ve doubtless seen the intelligence reports on that chain of command.”
He had, in fact—four single-spaced typed sheets that Kasic had tucked into the slim file to brief Vlado on the current state of smuggling in the city. That information squared neatly with Kupric’s assessment—a half-dozen men, each at the top of a fairly small operation, each with chunks of the markets for every consumer good from gasoline to meat.
After a short pause, Kupric said, “Look, I’m not going to be able to solve your case for you, or point the finger at your man. I’m only telling you what was the common knowledge to be heard during the past two weeks by anyone with ears.”
“Though I suppose you’ll want extra compensation for this ‘common knowledge,’ if you haven’t already gotten it, or whatever it is they parcel off to you from the larger action for these choice pieces of information.”
“Only what is due to me. And nothing that will generate anything more in the way of illegal traffic. I only parcel off, as you put it, the share that would inevitably come my way anyway Only enough to keep my hand in the game so I can keep my contacts alive.”
“All for the greater good, of course.”
“You act as if you are above all this, with your exemption from the army and your regular pay and your heated office. So tell me, do you have a family?”
“Yes.”
“And they are still here in the city?”
“No,” Vlado said. “Gone to Germany.”
“Yes, I see,” followed by a silent stare, as if Vlado’s answer had closed the case. “Mine is still here. Four boys and a girl. And my wife, of course. All living in four rooms, although we really can’t use the fourth room, the largest, because it faces south across the river and the window is gone and the walls are full of metal. So don’t tell me how I should get along in life, or that I am holding back too much, and don’t think that you can dictate in any way what I can or can’t do.”
For a price I could, Vlado nearly said, though he wasn’t at all sure what that price would be, or who would pay it. He only knew he was weary of the justifications for everyone’s petty chisel, one game of scramble and hustle after another, and usually for nothing but wat
er, a little extra food and a roof over your head.
CHAPTER 6
From the cigarette factory, Vlado recrossed town toward the city center, to meet the second of Kasic’s sources. He was a butcher, Muhamer Hrnic, who ran a meat counter in a market hall near the outdoor Markale Market. By now it was midafternoon, so the crowds had peaked out. Only a few dozen people were still walking among the stalls and counters inside the dim, drafty hall. This was the best time of year for the half dozen or so butchers who’d set up shop along the long walls of the building. The weather was cold enough to keep their meat from spoiling even though there was no electricity, and the doors and windows of the building were kept open to keep it that way. As customers stooped to peer into the counter windows their breath fogged the glass.
On the counters in the middle of the hall, a few forlorn women in shawls and head scarves tried to peddle the last of their small piles of loose cigarettes and other odds and ends. Others offered orphaned bottles of Sarajevska Piva, the local beer still being brewed, though lately it tasted sourly of corn and old socks.
Nearby at one end of the room were a few card tables selling old sections of garden hose, plumbing joints, clamps, assorted nuts and bolts, tangled lengths of wire, and light bulbs burned to within a few hours of their expiration. It was as if a crew of handymen had dumped out the contents of their toolboxes. Vlado glanced around for Grebo’s card table, but he and Mycky had either packed it in for the day or were selling outside this afternoon.
Hrnic’s meat counter was at the far end. He was a large man in a white smock streaked with the dried blood of cows, goats, and lambs, darkened into streaks and squirts, then smeared. The smock looked as if it hadn’t been washed in weeks. He had a wide face and gray eyes, and close-cropped silvery hair with lank bangs with a few strands drooping toward his eyebrows like untied shoelaces.
His meat looked reasonably fresh. Two sides of what Vlado supposed was lamb were hanging from hooks, suspended over the counter. In the display case there were a few passable pork chops, and arrayed on top were several large boles of deep brown cured meat, the salty ham that went down best with a little bread and a few belts of plum brandy
The prices never failed to make Vlado gasp, thirty Deutschemarks a pound for the fresh meat, forty and more for the cured ham.
Vlado introduced himself quietly, and Hrnic ordered a teenage girl behind the counter, probably his daughter, into action. She poured hot water from a thermos into a cupful of instant coffee and sugar, then whipped them into a chocolate-colored froth. She brought them over to an empty counter where Hrnic had led Vlado. The butcher then directed his daughter toward the cured meat, holding two fingers apart to indicate the width of how much she should slice. She nimbly wrapped the chunk in white paper and brought it to Vlado.
“For your troubles,” the butcher said.
Everyone was so generous today.
Vlado ignored it for a moment, saying, “I suppose you know why I am here. You’ve supplied us with certain information on Esmir Vitas, and I’m looking for any leads or ideas on why he might have been killed and who might be responsible.”
Hrnic followed with a tale similar to what Vlado had heard from Kupric, only this time Vitas was said to be horning in on the meat trade. He was pushing too hard too fast, not going about it the way one had to these days. Then word filtered out that he would soon be dealt with, that he didn’t have the muscle to back up his title. It was, of course, common knowledge. Then he was dead.
“Tell me, then, if this word was such common knowledge, don’t you suppose a man with the contacts Vitas had would have heard it, too, and would have taken steps to either stop it or fight back? And surely he wouldn’t have been foolish enough to meet someone down by the Miljacka alone and after dark.”
“I suppose you would know these things better than me, being from the Interior Ministry’s special police,” Hrnic said. He said it with a hint of a sneer, as if Vlado was himself damaged goods by having come from the same ship that until yesterday had such a corrupt captain at the helm.
Vlado took a moment to explain his position, and the ministry’s promise of his independence. None of it seemed to inspire anything but further scorn.
“So then you don’t even have good ministry contacts,” Hrnic said.
Vlado was feeling pushed toward a dead end. “No. No ministry contacts to speak of. But we’re here to talk about your contacts. Where does your meat come from?”
“Igman,” he said proudly, like a winemaker who had just mentioned his grapes came from Bordeaux.
“Mount Igman? A dangerous place, by all accounts.”
“Yes. We like to say that depending on which way a lamb falls when he is slaughtered he could end up on the platter of one side or another.”
“In fact, any sort of steady supply from such an unsteady source as Igman would seem to indicate a certain of cooperation with, what should we call it—unfriendly sources? Tell me, do you agree to this cooperation, or does your source do that? Or maybe it’s both of you.”
The smile drained from Hrnic’s face. He looked back toward his meat counter, pretending to check on business, although Vlado saw there were no customers at the moment.
“I cannot tell you for sure of course,” Hrnic continued in a lowered voice. “I only know that my supplier says that Igman is the source. All other arrangements are left to him. I am the last man in a very long chain, so who am I to say where this chain really leads.”
“Unless we decided that for this investigation we should pull in the links of this chain, one by one, which we can do, you know.”
“I was given strict assurances that this would not happen in this case. Strict assurances that my security would be protected,” Hrnic said, his voice rising again, his face reddening.
“Your security” Vlado said, feeling tired. “What good is your security when you have information that the chief of the Interior police is about to be killed and you don’t bother to share it until he is dead. How valuable can it be to ensure the protection of a source such as that?”
“And I am telling you, I’ve been ensured I will be protected.”
“Ensured by who?”
“The Ministry. By the people you don’t really work for, because you are so ‘independent.’ They told me to cooperate with you, but that I was not to jeopardize either my connections or my operation.”
“Yes, your operation,” Vlado said, and a vision came to mind of a rattling contraption with worn belts and pulleys, wheezing and smoking. He looked over at Hrnic’s counter, at its tough husks of cured meat and the stringy lamb, which may have been mutton or even goat for all Vlado knew, and he contemplated the meager profit possibilities at this level of what passed for organized crime.
He sighed, then asked in a weary but pleasant tone, “You can at least disclose the next link up from you. Your supplier. One name only.”
Hrnic said nothing.
“So this is our fine network of undercover men,” Vlado said. “Tell me, having met two of you so far today, are all of you so reluctant to ask questions of your sources, so timid about repeating names of anyone except the recently dead? Are you always rewarded for finding out so little so late?”
“The only way to learn things is to stay quiet,” Hrnic said sternly. “To not ask questions. That’s when things begin to spill out, only when they think you couldn’t care less.”
“And I guess it’s only when they want to grumble about something trivial like the chief of the Interior police being marked for death when they decide to tell you and everyone else about it.”
Hrnic set his mouth in a hard, firm line. Vlado snapped up the white bundle of meat from the counter and dropped it into his zippered briefcase.
“Thanks for the meat,” he said breezily, then strolled away.
He’d walked about thirty feet when the butcher called out.
“Wait,” Hrnic shouted.
Vlado stopped, turning slowly. Perhaps Hrnic was going to a
sk for the meat back, but Vlado would be damned if he’d return it. There had to be some price for insolence to the police. Besides, he was hungry.
But Hrnic seemed anything but angry. He was grinning, almost wildly, a leering banner of malicious joy.
“You wish to be introduced to the next step up in my ‘chain of command?’ Very well, then. You shall meet him.” He pulled off his grimy apron and tossed it onto a scale. “Mind the counter,” he snapped to his daughter; then he strode past Vlado with the resolve of a man on a mission.
“Follow me,” he said, not turning his head as he passed. “You’ll have your meeting, all right.”
They walked two blocks up a steep hill at a brisk pace, Hrnic panting like an old steam engine that had suddenly found its rhythm after years of disuse. Then they headed down a narrow side street where three young boys kicked a scuffed soccer ball across the cobbles through melting patches of ice. A toothless beggar kneeling in a doorway rose uncertainly to his feet. Seeming to recognize Hrnic, he held out a hand beseechingly.
Hrnic ignored him, striding briskly on without a word until they reached a dented steel doorway halfway up the block. “Wait here,” he said over his shoulder before disappearing inside.
A few moments later he reappeared, calmer now, almost smug in the way he looked Vlado squarely in the eye, as if daring him to turn back now, as if he’d had this scene dreamed up from the very beginning.
“He will see you now,” Hrnic announced with the flourish of a concierge.
Vlado followed him through the door, where a raw, elemental stench nearly knocked him to the floor. This must be their slaughterhouse, for the air reeked of fresh blood. It was the smell of life draining away by the drop, of fluids already rotting as they fall, the essence of animal panic lingering in the air like a ghost. This must be what made the animals bleat before they even saw the glint of a blade, or felt the first jab of metal sliding into their flesh.
They climbed two flights of stairs in the dark, the smell growing stronger as they rose. Then Hrnic shoved Vlado through an open doorway, where two bearded men in faded camouflage jackets frisked him roughly.
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