Stephen King – Different season

eyes light up like a pinball machine.’ Richler turned left and wheeled the nondescript

Chevy Nova down the freeway entrance ramp. Two hundred yards to their right was the

slope and the dead tree where Todd had dry-fired his rifle at the freeway traffic one

Saturday morning not long ago.

‘He’s saving to himself, “This cop is off the wall if he thinks Dussander had a Nazi

friend here in town, but if he does think that, it takes me off ground-zero.” So he says yeah, Dussander got one or two calls a week. Very mysterious. “I can’t talk now, Z-5, call later” — that type of thing. But Dussander’s been getting a special “quiet phone” rate for the last seven years. Almost no activity at all, and no long distance. He wasn’t getting a call or two a week.’

‘What else?’

‘He immediately jumped to the conclusion that the letter had been stolen and nothing

else. He knew that was the only thing missing because he was the one who went back and

took it.’

Richler jammed his cigarette out in the ashtray.

‘We think the letter was just a prop. We think that Dussander had the heart attack while he was trying to bury that body … the freshest body. There was dirt on his shoes

and his cuffs, and it was fresh, so that’s a pretty fair assumption. That means he called the kid after he had the heart attack, not before. He crawls upstairs and phones the kid.

The kid flips out — as much as he ever flips out, anyway -and cooks up the letter story on

the spur of the moment It’s not great, but not that bad, either … considering the

circumstances. He goes over there and cleans up Dussander’s mess for him. Now the kid

is in fucking overdrive. MED-Q’s coming, his father is coming, and he needs that letter

for stage-dressing. He goes upstairs and breaks open that box -‘

‘You’ve got confirmation on that?’ Weiskopf asked, lighting a cigarette of his own. It

was an unfiltered Player, and to Richler it smelted like horseshit No wonder the British

Empire fell, he thought, if they started smoking cigarettes like that.

‘Yes, we’ve got confirmation right up the ying-yang,’ Richler said. ‘There are

fingerprints on the box which match those in his school records. But his fingerprints are on almost everything in the goddam house!’

‘Still, if you confront him with all of that, you can rattle him,’ Weiskopf said.

‘Oh, listen, hey, you don’t know this kid. When I said he was cool, I meant it. He’d say

Dussander asked him to fetch the box once or twice so he could put something in it or

take something out of it’

‘His fingerprints are on the shovel.’

‘He’d say he used it to plant a rose-bush in the back yard.’ Richler took out his

cigarettes but the pack was empty. Weiskopf offered him a Player. Richler took one puff

and began coughing. ‘They taste as bad as they smell,’ he choked.

‘Like those hamburgers we had for lunch yesterday,’ Weiskopf said, smiling. ‘Those

Mac-Burgers.’

‘Big Macs,’ Richler said, and laughed. ‘Okay. So cross-cultural pollination doesn’t

always work.’ His smile faded. ‘He looks so clean-cut, you know?

‘Yes.’

‘This is no jd from Vasco with hair down to his asshole and chains on his motorcycle

boots.’

‘No.’ Weiskopf stared at the traffic all around them and was very glad he wasn’t

driving. ‘He’s just a boy. A white boy from a good home. And I find it difficult to believe that -‘

‘I thought you had them ready to handle rifles and grenades by the time they were

eighteen. In Israel.’

‘Yes. But he was fourteen when all of this started. Why should a fourteen-year-old-boy mix himself up with such a man as Dussander? I have tried and tried to understand that

and still I can’t.’

‘I’d settle for how,’ Richler said, and flicked the cigarette out the window. It was

giving him a headache.

‘Perhaps, if it did happen, it was just luck. A coincidence. There is a word I like very

much, Lieutenant Richler -serendipity. I think there is black serendipity as well as white.’

‘I don’t know what you’re talking about,’ Richler said gloomily. ‘All I know is the kid is

creepier than a bug under a rock.’

‘What I’m saying is simple. Any other boy would have been more than happy to tell his

parents, or the police. To say, “I have recognized a wanted man. He is living at this

address. Yes, I am sure.” And then let the authorities take over. Or do you feel I am

wrong?’

‘No, I wouldn’t say so. The kid would be in the limelight for a few days. Most kids

would dig that. Picture in the paper, an interview on the evening news, probably a school

assembly award for good citizenship.’ Richler laughed. ‘Hell, the kid would probably get

a shot on Real People?

‘What’s that?’

‘Never mind,’ Richler said. He had to raise his voice slightly because a ten-wheeler

was passing the Nova on either side. Weiskopf looked nervously from one to the other.

‘You don’t want to know. But you’re right about most kids. Most kids.’

‘But not this kid,’ Weiskopf said. ‘This boy, probably by dumb luck alone, penetrates Dussander’s cover. Yet instead of going to his parents or the authorities … he goes to

Dussander. Why? You say you don’t care, but I think you do. I think it haunts you just as

it does me.’

‘Not blackmail,’ Richler said. ‘That’s for sure. That kid’s got everything a kid could

want There was even a dune-buggy in the garage, not to mention an elephant gun on the wall. And even if he wanted to squeeze Dussander just for the thrill of it, Dussander was

practically unsqueezable. Except for those few stocks, he didn’t have a pot to piss in.’

‘How sure are you that the boy doesn’t know you’ve found the bodies?’

‘I’m sure. Maybe I’l1 go back this afternoon and hit him with that. Right now it looks

like our best shot.’ Richler struck the steering wheel lightly. ‘If all of this had come out

even one day sooner, I think I would have tried for a search warrant.’

‘The clothes the boy was wearing that night?’

‘Yeah. If we could have found soil samples on his clothes that matched the dirt in

Dussander’s cellar, I almost think we could break him. But the clothes he was wearing

that night have probably been washed six times since them.’

‘What about the other dead winos? The ones your police department has been finding

around the city?’

“Those belong to Dan Bozeman. I don’t think there’s any connection anyhow.

Dussander just wasn’t that strong … and more to the point, he had such a neat little

racket already worked out. Promise them a drink and a meal, take them home on the city

bus – the fucking city bus! – and waste them right in his kitchen.’

Weiskopf said quietly: ‘It wasn’t Dussander I was thinking of.’

‘What do you mean by th -‘ Richler began, and then his mouth snapped suddenly

closed. There was a long, unbelieving moment of silence, broken only by the drone of the

traffic all around them. Then Richler said softly: ‘Hey. Hey, come on now. Give me a

fucking br -‘

‘As an agent of my government, I am only interested in Bowden because of what, if

anything, he may know about Dussander’s remaining contacts with the Nazi

underground. But as a human being, I am becoming more and more interested in the boy

himself. I’d like to know what makes him tick. I want to know why. And as I try to answer that question to my own satisfaction, I find that more and more I am asking myself What

else.’

‘But-‘

‘Do you suppose, I ask myself, that the very atrocities in which Dussander took part

formed the basis of some attraction between them? That’s an unholy idea, I tell myself.

The things that happened in those camps still have power enough to make the stomach

flutter with nausea. I fed that way myself, although the only close relative I ever had in

the camps was my grandfather, and he died when I was three. But maybe for all of us

there is something about what the Germans did that pleases and excites us – something

that opens the catacombs of the imagination. Maybe part of our dread and horror comes

from a secret knowledge that under the right – or wrong – set of circumstances, we

ourselves would be willing to build such places and staff them. Black serendipity. Maybe

we know that under the right set of circumstances the things that live in the catacombs

would be glad to crawl out And what do you think they would look like? Like mad

fuehrers with forelocks and shoe-polish moustaches, heiling all over the place? Like red

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