âHah,' Spokie said. âI don't remember you as one who ever fought back.'
He reversed his wheelchair and turned to the side. âTake me home,' he said to the major. Two men stood up from the next table and came over. They pulled the wheelchair back and wheeled their general away.
Durban Wednesday, 24 June 2009 | 38 |
âYou're going to have to eliminate him,' the general said in the car. They were on their way to Virginia Airport in Durban North.
âI thought you would say that,' the major said. âShall I make the arrangements?'
âYes.'
âConsider it done, General.'
The car stopped at the intersection where the old drive-in used to be. General van den Bergh looked across to his right. The site used to be a military base, the headquarters of the army in the province. Natal Command, it was named. Now it was a pale shadow of its former glory and there were rumours that it had been sold to a film-maker.
âWhat are we going to do about Weber?' the major asked.
They passed the site where the steel and concrete works for the football stadium were already in progress. âYou'll think of a way to end it,' the general said.
âDo you want him taken out?' the major asked. âIf we take De Villiers out in Hamburg, Weber will never know what happened. And he doesn't know much about us, does he?'
âHe's too dangerous to be left in place.'
âWe have a hold over him through his wife,' the major said.
âNo,' said the general. âBecause of his wife, he has a hold over us.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âWhat I mean,' the general said icily, âis this: if we hadn't involved his wife in the operation, we wouldn't be having this conversation now. And I suspect the same is true for De Villiers.'
âBut General, De Villiers would never have agreed to come to Hamburg unless we had a firm hold over him.'
âMajor, you don't have to grab a man by the testicles to persuade him to give you what you want, especially if he doesn't want for himself that which you want from him. Couldn't you have been more subtle? Perhaps asked him directly and explained to him why his presence at the bank was required.'
âBut General,' the major began, âhe would never have agreed, after what happened in Pretoria.'
âThat's my point exactly,' the general countered. âWe wouldn't be here if those goons you sent to rough him up hadn't killed his wife and children. That's where everything started going wrong for us. And now we have a lot of cleaning up to do.'
The major parked the car. He avoided the general's eye while he manoeuvred the wheelchair into position and helped the general out of the car. He spoke from behind the wheelchair when they were next to the small plane waiting for them. âWhat do you want me to do then, General?'
The general made the decision quickly. âGet rid of them,' he said. âBut for God's sake, don't make a mess of it again.'
âBoth of them?'
âThat's what “them” means, doesn't it?'
The major smiled with relief. âI'll get our precious Major de Villiers in Hamburg,' he said. âI have just the man for that. And I'll deal with Weber personally when I get back.'
âIt's now your problem, Major, and I don't want to hear of them again.'
âWhat about Weber's wife? And the girl in New Zealand?'
âLet them go. As soon as we've got what we wanted.'
The major saluted the general's flight at takeoff. The northeasterly was blowing fiercely.
De Villiers sat in silence in the passenger seat during the trip back to Weber's chambers. They took the lift and sat down in the room where, years before, they had sat together to prepare the case of the
Alicia Mae
. They talked about their plans for the next two days. Neither was completely open with the other. De Villiers now knew with certainty, for the first time, who had been responsible for the killing of his wife and children all those years before. He still didn't understand exactly why it had happened, but he knew for certain who was to blame. He was glad that he would have time to think about it before he saw the major again.
This time they would meet on his turf. De Villiers knew the St Pauli area well.
He had grown to admire Hamburg during his long visit all those years ago. He remembered that the city had been sacked and rebuilt four times. The Vikings had sailed up the Elbe in 845
AD
and set fire to the village which then had only about five hundred inhabitants. In 1030 the king of Poland burned Hamburg down to the ground and in 1842 the rebuilt city was razed again by a great fire. In 1943 Allied bombers destroyed it more comprehensively than anyone had ever done before. But each time the Hamburgers returned and rebuilt their city from the rubble. Each time they built their city higher and better. Each time their attitude said: this is our city. You may knock the bricks down, but you will never conquer our spirit.
De Villiers wondered whether he would have the courage and spirit to rebuild himself. He had done so partially before, but that had been a long time ago. The world was different now and the stakes were higher. He was alone then; now he had a wife and child to take into account. Taking risks with his freedom or his life was no longer an option.
Weber phoned James Mazibuko as soon as De Villiers was out of the door. He had promised the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
âAh,' James Mazibuko said when Weber had finished his summary of the events at the airport. âWe need a change of plan here. Do you have pen and paper on you?'
âYes,' Weber said.
âTake down the following,' Mazibuko instructed.
Weber carefully noted the details given by Mazibuko and smiled to himself. âSo I might save my car after all?' He didn't know where the humour came from. Perhaps Mazibuko's irreverent attitude was contagious.
âIt's a crap car, anyway,' Mazibuko said. âI'd rather have the money.'
Hamburg Thursday, 25 June 2009 | 39 |
It took De Villiers only eighteen hours from boarding the first flight in Durban to get to Hamburg and St Catherine's Church.
When he left Johann Weber's chambers, he had an electronic ticket â business class, for Durban-Johannesburg-Frankfurt-Hamburg â in his pocket. Weber took him straight back to the airport to catch the first flight. Everything would depend on the timing, and they couldn't afford to make a mistake.
He made the telephone calls his New Zealand operation required while waiting for Lufthansa to call the passengers to the boarding gate. He also had to wait for the time zones to allow him to phone his daughter in New Zealand. He phoned Zoë at the appointed hour and told her again to cooperate fully with her captors and to be a good girl. He phoned Emma and promised that Zoë would be home within forty-eight hours. He phoned his men in Kawerau to make sure everything was in place for the final push. And then he made the most difficult call of all. He phoned his erstwhile colleague, Tau Kupenga.
The relationship between De Villiers and Kupenga had been a stormy one. The Maori detective had been suspicious from the start when De Villiers had joined the International Crimes Unit in Auckland as the most junior detective on the squad. De Villiers had ignored Kupenga's snide comments about Sharpeville, the 1981 Springbok tour and other events, but when Kupenga called him a japie once too often, De Villiers had reacted and, for his trouble, had been suspended and charged with racism. They had made up later when Kupenga had withdrawn his complaint. The affair had ended with their simultaneous promotion, which had resulted in De Villiers being appointed head of the unit and Kupenga being returned to his home district as head of detectives for the region. De Villiers needed him now to bring Zoë's recovery within the bounds of New Zealand law.
While De Villiers had no compunction to break the law in Europe or, for that matter, in South Africa, he had no intention of putting his New Zealand residence at risk by committing a serious crime there.
He got the number from
DS
Veerasinghe and called Detective Chief Inspector Kupenga on his cellphone. They were on first name terms, although Kupenga outranked De Villiers by one notch.
âTau,' he began. âIt's Pierre de Villiers here. I'm calling from South Africa.'
There was a moment's silence on the line, which could have been due to the distant connection or to Kupenga's surprise. âWhat the fuck are you doing over there while we are looking for your daughter over here?' Kupenga asked.
âIt's a long story, my friend, but I don't have the time to tell it now. I'll tell you everything when I get back home.'
âAnd when will that be?'
De Villiers had to make a quick calculation. New Zealand was two long-haul flights from Europe and he needed two days for his operations in Hamburg. âFour days at the most,' he said.
âWhy are you calling me?' Kupenga asked.
De Villiers didn't waste words. âI think I know where Zoë is. I'm pretty certain she's in your district.'
Kupenga played by the book. âYou were ordered not to interfere with the investigation.'
âI didn't,' De Villiers said. âI don't even know who they are and what they are doing. They interviewed me in the beginning, and since then I haven't heard from them.'
âUmpff,' Kupenga snorted. âI know you better than to believe that crap. And it's no wonder, if you're not even in the country.'
âTau, I don't have time for games. Do you have good men at Whakatane?'
âIs she in Whakatane?' Kupenga asked, incredulity in his voice. âThe last I heard they were looking for her in Auckland.'
De Villiers knew precisely where she was and had even viewed the address on Google Earth. âI'll know the exact address in forty-eight hours,' he lied, âand will tell you immediately so that you can take action.'
âWhat action?' Kupenga asked. âAre we talking
AOS
here?'
âIf my information is correct,' De Villiers replied, âthe Armed Offenders Squad will be out-armoured and outgunned by the kidnappers. We're talking Special Forces here.'
âHow many people?'
âTwo men, heavily armed and well trained in urban guerrilla warfare, and two women. Not much known about them.'
âPierre,' Kupenga said slowly, âyou're not telling me everything you know.'
âTau,' De Villiers responded, âI've told you as much as you need to know.' He made another calculation. At this time of year, in June, Hamburg was in the same time zone as South Africa, ten hours behind New Zealand. âI'll phone you on your mobile at precisely 4 a.m. on Friday and give you the exact address. It will be within half an hour's drive from Whakatane,' he said and cut the connection.
At Frankfurt International, De Villiers bought three cellphones, one from each of the different cellphone outlets in the duty-free. He paid cash.
When he arrived in Hamburg, he didn't go to the seamen's lodge in St Pauli but booked into the Grand Elysée on Rothenbaumchaussee near the university where Mohammed Atta and the other nine-eleven plotters had planned their attacks on America. Once he was in his room, which faced the university complex, he sat down and perfected his own plotting. He strapped his Leatherman to his ankle and went downstairs for a light lunch in the Brasserie Grand Elysée. He played the tourist and stopped in front of a stand with brochures of the city's attractions. The words
Sankt Katharinenkirche
caught his eye. The brochure was in German, but he picked it up in any event. He read as much as he could understand during the meal.
St Catherine's Church was named after the patron saint of fire-men, nurses and the sick, De Villiers gathered. St Catherine of Siena (1347â1380). Known even during her lifetime for her ecstatic visions and for being immune to fire. He wondered whether she would care for him if his cancer came back.
Not if ⦠when
, a voice whispered in his inner ear. His hand dropped involuntarily to rub the operation scar below his belly button. On the way out, he took an English version of the brochure and slipped it into his pocket.
There was a line of taxis waiting outside the restaurant. De Villiers asked the driver to take him to the Hamburg International Maritime Museum. He waited for the taxi to drive out of sight before he walked back towards St Catherine's Church at Katharinenkirchhof 1.
The church was far more impressive than De Villiers remembered. He slowly walked around it, not like a tourist, but as a soldier scouting the scene of an operation. He craned his neck to look up at the spire a hundred and fifteen metres above the ground. The roof of the church and the spire were covered in verdigris. He'd read that the base of the church tower was the oldest remaining building in the city, and that it, together with the walls of the church, was the only part of St Catherine's left standing after the Allies' bombing raid named Operation Gomorrah
.
The sounds of an organ and a practising choir drifted out from one of the windows at the back of the church. De Villiers looked across to the churchyard where generations of parishioners had been buried.
According to the tourist brochure, the church dated back to before 1256 and was built on an island next to the harbour. A haven for sailors from around the world, it had served the spiritual needs of the maritime fraternity ever since. The church was destroyed by British bombers during Operation Gomorrah in July 1943, when forty-two thousand civilians were killed by the bombs and the firestorm they unleashed. A million Hamburgers had to be evacuated from their homes.
Where was St Catherine then, De Villiers wondered. Will she be here now to put out the fires burning inside me?
He carefully scouted the area around the church. There was a secluded area behind the church on Grimm-Strasse where tall shrubs would give some privacy. A body could be hidden there. The front steps of the church stood out in the open and were clearly visible from the road. Across the busy Bei den Mühren dual carriageway in front of the church was a canal. It would not do, he concluded, as it had a busy pedestrian and cycle path flush against its wall. There was continuous traffic along Bei den Mühren as it carried the road traffic along a principal quay of one of the busiest ports in Europe. De Villiers stood and watched for a while as heavy trucks laboured past in a continuous roll of thunder, almost to a schedule, like airplanes landing at a busy international airport. A gunshot would go unnoticed here. There were nooks and crannies behind the church. A man could be lured into one of the corners and dealt with there.