Read The Templar Prophecy Online
Authors: Mario Reading
TWENTY-SEVEN
Udo smashed the last queer left standing and then gave him a second belting across the hind quarters for good measure. His pickaxe handle was splintered and he was sweating with the effort of fag-bashing. âRight. We're out of here.' He signalled to Lenzi. âYour whistle.'
Lenzi blew his whistle.
The LB Sonderkommando pulled back. One man stepped sideways and raised his helve over a crawling man.
âNo more bashing, you silly cunt. That's it.'
The man lowered his pickaxe handle.
Once outside they began to run.
âAnybody hurt?'
âNo, Udo. We took them completely by surprise. We fucking wrecked them.'
Those amongst the Leather Bar's clients who were still conscious groaned and wailed in pain. Legs, arms and hips were broken. Hands had been crushed. Knees shattered. The
landlord, who had been caught telephoning, had a smashed ribcage and a fractured femur. Men were dragging themselves around the floor as in the aftermath of a major traffic accident.
Udo looked at Sibbe.âDid you get those two who were running away?'
âYes, Udo. We smashed their phones too.'
âGood. This was an excellent operation. Excellent. You are all getting better. Working like a team for a change.'
âThank you, Udo.'
âNow you see what we can accomplish when we work together. No one can stand against us.'
They drove slowly out of town, each in opposite directions. Then they curved back towards the pre-arranged rendezvous, which was at the fourth angle of an imaginary square.
âPickaxe handles down.'
The men laid their pickaxe handles in a grid on the ground.
Udo squirted lighter fuel on them, fired up the matchbox and threw it onto the grid.
The pickaxe handles burst into flame.
âTake off your over-clothes and masks.' Udo waited until the handles were well alight. âNow dump the clothes on top.' Udo took the second sachet of lighter fuel and squirted it over the clothes. He threw the empty sachets onto the bonfire. âRight. We're out of here.'
Udo's Sonderkommando dispersed back into their vans. Two of the vans started straight off, but Udo waited behind for a moment, watching the bonfire. It reminded him of archive film he had seen of the Brown Shirts on the
night of the Burning of the Books in 1933. His grandfather had been present at the Munich burning. In Berlin, forty thousand people had gathered at the Opernplatz to hear Joseph Goebbels's speech denouncing decadence and moral corruption, and twenty-five thousand un-German books had subsequently been torched.
âThis time we will do it right,' Udo said to his silent audience.
When he was sure that the bonfire was roaring, he gunned his engine and followed the others.
TWENTY-EIGHT
âThe police have been to see my mother and Clive.'
âAnd?'
âAnd nothing.' Hart shrugged his shoulders. âAs far as Clive is concerned I am still in Central America. As far as my mother is concerned, I may as well be in Greenland. I didn't disabuse either of them of their notions. I hardly think their phones will be tapped yet.'
âI'm sorry, John.'
Hart gave a long sigh. âWhy has all this happened? Ever since Syria my life seems to have gone to shit.'
âSorry to add insult to injury, but the police have been to your flat too.'
âYou sent someone along to check?'
âI asked Wesker to sniff around a little. See if you were home. It was clear he thought I was suffering from withdrawal symptoms â that I thought you were cheating on me.'
âDoes he still think that?'
âNo.'
âWhat else did you tell him?'
âNot a lot. Wesker will have worked it all out for himself by now. He doesn't need me to baby him along.'
âLovely lot, journalists.'
âThey're your only friends.'
âOnly because I'm part of a story.'
âThere is that.'
Hart and Amira looked at each other. The tension between them was palpable.
âDoes Wesker know I'm not even seeing you at the moment? Far less anyone on the side?'
Amira ducked her head as if Hart's words might leave a scar behind them if they struck her. âI got you your fake passport.' She tossed it onto the table between them. âIt's good for most things. But I wouldn't try travelling to the US if I were you.'
âI've no intention of travelling to the US. It's way too close to Guatemala. Like two thousand miles close.'
Amira laughed. Hart smiled back. Both were hyper-aware how things stood with them. But neither dared address the underlying issues.
âHow did you get it?'
âThrough a crypto-anarchist network. I stumbled onto them once during an investigation, and I've used them a few times since when I've wanted to cover my traces on the internet. Muddle up search patterns. Use what they call cypherspace. It's a great resource when one encounters copyright problems
in the real world. Because in cypherspace no one can hear you cream.'
âThat's a dreadful pun.'
âIt's not mine.'
âI didn't think it was, Amira.'
They were both silent.
âI got the passport in exchange for information and immunity, if you really want to know. The cryptos now feel protected because they hold details of your false identity, which they have vowed to give up at the first sign of doubledealing. And we're protected because they need me to cover their backsides and give them warning in case they are ever investigated by the newspaper. Which I've promised to do.'
âThat's comforting. So they don't know who I actually am, but only my pseudonym? What a relief. I was anticipating blackmail. It would have made such a welcome change from being a murder suspect.'
âWhy is everything a source of amusement to you, John? These people aren't criminals. They really believe in what they are doing.'
âAs do you. Obviously.' Hart tried on a grin, but it was a poor substitute for how he really felt. âTell me, is there any nutcase-anti-statist-anarcho-looney-counter-capitalist-cyberpunk-hacktivist type group out there that you wouldn't support at a pinch and hand my identity over to?'
âNo. There isn't. And it's not your identity anyway. Your name is really John Hart and not Johannes von Hartelius, in case you've forgotten.'
A shadow crossed Hart's face. âActually, it is my real identity. Johannes von Hartelius is the name I would have been born with if my father had known where he truly came from. It's the oddest feeling. I don't think I've quite come to terms with it yet.'
âWell, you'd better come to terms with it soon. The LB are upping their game. Or at least we think they are. Racist and homophobic attacks are on the increase all around the Munich area. There have been the usual tit-for-tat reprisals from amongst the Turkish community against random whites, and angry street demonstrations by the gay community, with the equally inevitable backlash from “out of sight, out of mind” Joe Citizen. Which is exactly what the LB wants.'
âWhat do you think the LB are after in the long term? Is it anarchy, do you think? The same as your friends the cryptos?'
âNo. It's not anarchy they're after. It's political power. With the main population as sandwich meat between them and the opposition. It's exactly what the SA Brown Shirts and the communists did in Germany during the 1920s, when they faced up to each other in the streets. Each side thought they would come out the stronger. That the main mass of the public would attach itself to their bandwagon. And look what came of that. Adolf Hitler. Talk about unintended consequences.'
âBut these people are marginal. The situation isn't comparable, surely?'
âYou don't think so? The LB â or one of their offshoots â are already killers. Killers and maimers. The parallels with how the Nazis went about it is striking. It doesn't take much
to set people off during a Depression. They're frenetically keying into people's fears of being swamped by immigrants and gays and Jews.'
âJews? In Germany? After all that's gone before? You can't be serious.'
âYes, the Jewish thing is still up and running. It always is. And always will be.'
âBut I thought you sat astride that particular argument? Being half Jew and half Arab? Last I heard you were pro-Palestinian and anti-Zionist.'
âAnti-Zionist doesn't mean anti-Semitic. I may be against a Jewish state built on someone else's land, but I'm Jew enough to resent being singled out because I am Jewish, and Arab enough to resent being singled out because I am Arab.'
âBloody heck.'
âIt's not funny, John.'
âYou're always telling me things aren't funny. But laughter is sometimes the only possible answer when one bumps up against mass insanity.'
Amira shook her head. âFor as the crackling of thorns under a pot, so is the laughter of the fool: this also is vanity.'
âWhere does that come from?'
âEcclesiastes. I think it hits the mark, don't you?'
TWENTY-NINE
âThe lads are getting better, Effi. All except Sibbe and the new boy, Jochen.'
âWhat's wrong with them?'
âThey lied to me yesterday, at the gay bashing.'
âHow do you know?'
âThey told me they smashed up two queers who ran away from the car park as we arrived.'
âHow do you know they didn't?'
âWhen they handed me their pickaxe handles to burn there wasn't any blood on them. All the other pickaxes were dripping with it. Split and shattered. I could have sold theirs brand new.'
âDo you think they're undercover?'
âNo. I think they're scared. And squeamish. I think they should be put on special duties.'
Effi looked at him. âYou know what that means?'
âOne's an orphan, the other might as well be. His brother is
queer. I know that for a fact. I think that's why he held back.'
âIt's not his fault his brother is queer.'
âBut it's his fault he held back.'
âYes. It is.'
âSpecial duties?'
âYes. Tell them they've been chosen out of all the others because you're so impressed by their commitment.'
âThey'll like being postmen. Foreign travel and all that.'
âJochen will have to let his hair grow out a bit.'
âWe've got time. They'll need training.'
âWhen's your next outing?'
âSaturday.'
âWho is it this time?'
âWe won't know until the actual night. It's better that way.'
âYou enjoy all this, don't you, Udo?'
âNo. It's not about enjoyment for me. It's about setting the record straight.'
THIRTY
Hart was slowly getting to grips with the basics of the German language. He was studying for up to six hours every day. He was studying so much his brain hurt.
Amira was still not inviting him into her bed. And he wasn't pushing for it. He couldn't quite understand why.
Sometimes he went out, heavily disguised in a trilby that Amira's Egyptian father, Nassif, used to wear in a bid to appear more conventional when he went to visit his wife's Jewish relatives in Swiss Cottage. It hadn't worked. According to Amira, her mother's family had viewed being a Coptic Christian as akin to being a golem. In their view, the New Testament was an abhorrence, and those who believed in it abhorrent in turn. Such people â Catholics, Protestants, Copts, Russian Orthodox, Eastern Orthodox, etc. â were behind every evil thing that had happened to the Jews in the twenty centuries that had elapsed since the Crucifixion. Nassif hadn't dared argue.
In an effort to exact compensation of sorts, Amira's grandparents had pressurized Nassif into agreeing to Amira carrying their surname, arguing that in the Jewish tradition descent was guaranteed by the female line. The ever-tolerant Nassif had gone along with it in a doomed attempt to keep the peace and be accepted by his wife's family â which was something that a less gullible man might have realized was never going to happen. Amira had abominated âniceness' ever since.
No wonder she's so mixed up, thought Hart. Being part of a family like that must have been worse than being brought up in a convent. Religion had a lot to answer for, he decided, and those who hid behind it as an excuse not to think for themselves were the worst offenders. Wasn't there enough strife in the world without adding to it by default?
In the end they both agreed that Hart should wait at least another week before travelling to Bavaria, by which time any interest the British police had in him might have dwindled. The Holy Lance was being endlessly talked about on the internet, and there was much toing and froing of experts opining on this and that. Germany's leading dendroarchaeologist had agreed to travel to Bavaria and pronounce on the newly discovered Lance's possible age, and then compare it in detail to pictures taken of the original Vienna Lance before it fell into Hitler's hands. The LB's claim that the Holy Lance at present held in the Hofburg Imperial Palace Treasure Chamber in Vienna was actually one of Hitler's forgeries â and that General Patton had been
fooled into assuming it was the original one â had thrown the cat amongst the proverbial pigeons.
It would no longer seem so surprising, therefore, if Hart, in his von Hartelius guise, heard about it and came calling. The LB were busy claiming that âmanifold destiny' intended them to have the Holy Lance, which is why it had been dug up on their leader's land. Insane as it all sounded, there were many people out there both willing and able to swallow the lie.
âAnd what is your plan after that, John? After you go knocking on Effi Rache's door saying, “Look, it's me!”?'
âThere is no plan after that. I'm going to wing it until I discover what I need to know.'
âI see. Good thinking. And I just sit here and play backstop to your forward?'
âI'll pass you on any information I find out.'
âThat's big of you. I hope you've got your backstory down pat, or they'll skin you alive.'
âWhy are you always so pissed off at me? You only have to look at me to become aggressive.'
âI'm not aggressive.'
âYou could have fooled me.'
Amira scowled at him. âI don't like to be owned.'
âOwned? How can I possibly own you? I don't even get to fuck you any more.'
âOh, that's what it is? Fucking? Not even making love. Just fucking.'
âI would be scared to make love to you in your present state. You might think I was trying to own you.' Hart ducked the tea
towel Amira threw at his head. âAmira, why do you always make life so bloody complicated?'
âBecause it is complicated.'
âHow?'
âIf you don't know, I can't tell you.'
Hart hunched forward. He folded the tea towel and laid it carefully on the table between them like a peace offering. âMaybe you should have an affair with Wesker? He's an alcoholic. That would complicate matters nicely, wouldn't it?' He raised an eyebrow to show that he wasn't being serious. Wesker looked like a cross between a gurnard and a bullmastiff, and he didn't want to risk Amira launching the teapot at him. âWhere is the great man, by the way? I have a funny feeling we haven't heard the last of him.'
âHe's in Bavaria.'
âAh. Poodling around for you again?'
âYes. Poodling around arranging a safe house for us in Rottach Egern. Wesker and I have agreed to collaborate on the LB story.'
âCosy. And where's Rottach Egern?'
âAcross Lake Tegernsee from Bad Wiessee. Which is where Effi Rache lives, in case you've forgotten.'
Hart sat back in his chair. âSo you're serious about all this? You're really going for the big story? You're not going to cut me loose and move on to the next thing?'
âNo. I'm not going to cut you loose.' Amira looked down at her hands. âI love you, John. That admission may surprise you, because you have me down as such a cold fish, obsessed with
my career and my politics to the exclusion of all else. But I love you so much it hurts.' She raised a hand to prevent him interrupting. She refused to look him in the eye. âMy heart flutters like a teenager's when you enter the room. When you make love to me I feel like I am dying and have gone to heaven. I love the look of you. I love the smell of you. I love the sound of your voice.'
âSo where's our problem, then?'
âI love you but I can't live with you.'
âThat's crazy, Amira.'
âNo, it's not. I can't live with you because I know that part of you still wants me to knuckle down and become a sort of glorified
hausfrau
, whilst you go off gallivanting around the world. Oh, you wouldn't want me to grind completely to a halt. You'd like me to go on writing a few articles for the girlie bits in the magazines â get myself a picture byline and an audience gleaned from the
Daily Telegraph
culture pages. Live in a cottage in the country. Raise a brood. But I'm better than that.'
Hart sat back in bewilderment. âWhen have I ever said that?'
âYou don't need to say it. All I have to do is look at your face when we talk about children and my whole future is spread out in front of me like a roadmap. You're never going to forgive me for aborting our child, are you? It's always going to be there between us.'
Hart closed his eyes. âIt's not a matter for forgiveness. But you should have asked me. Allowed me the chance to sway you.'
âThere. I told you. We're no further forward.'
Hart stood up. His chair crashed onto the floor dramatically, though he hadn't intended for it to do so. âRight. That's it. I'm not hanging around here for another week, whilst you resent me and imagine I'm trying to ground you. I'm leaving for Germany now. We can't go on like this â hot and cold, cold and hot. You're not going to change and neither am I. We either accept that and agree to a compromise, or we're finished. You go your way and I go mine.'
âBut â'
âListen to me, Amira. I've no intention of curtailing your career. Or telling you what you ought to be doing. Or turning you into a
hausfrau
. I've never done that and I never will. I'm not your father and I'm not your mother and I dearly wish you'd stop projecting them onto me. My only concern at the moment is to find the people who killed Colel Cimi, my father and Santiago, and make them pay for it. If that brings you a prizewinning story, all well and good. If it doesn't, I'm sorry, but I'm still going to do it. If your crypto-arsehole friends cut up rough about getting me my passport, they can hand me over to the police and have done with it.'
Hart began shovelling his clothes directly from the coffee table into his holdall.
âJohn, you can't allow emotion to sway you in this.' Amira was as close to tears as she was ever likely to come. âYou're not nearly ready yet. The LB are dangerous. Far more dangerous than you suspect. Your cover needs to be perfect.'
âWhat can be more dangerous than premeditated murder?
I saw my father nailed to a wall and speared. I saw Santiago degutted. And Colel Cimi floating face down in a lake with a broken neck. I'm fresh from my own botched execution and a repeat bout of malaria. And still I can't speak German. Look at me.' Hart raised his hands into the air and let them fall. âI'm about as ready as I'm ever likely to be.'