them out, Teobaldo tried to hit him, and Gretchen spit in his face.

A scrutiny of Furtwangler’s Rolodex revealed the address of Manolo Nabuco, the pilot. A team was dispatched to arrest him at his home. Less than half an hour later, the call came through. They’d found him in bed with a teenage pros-titute, both of them high on cocaine. He’d been taken into custody without a fight.

Arnaldo awoke to find himself staring upward into a battery of lamps. He blinked against the glare, tried to move a hand in front of his face and couldn’t. His arms were still under restraint. A head poked into his line of vision, the face looking down on him.

“Oh no,” he said.

“Oh, yes,” Gloria Sarmento said, “sleeping on the job again, Nunes?”

“You!”

“Me.”

“This is a nightmare,” he said. “Please tell me it’s a night-mare.”

“There, there” she said, “you don’t have to worry any-more. You’ve been rescued. You’re safe at last. Now, just lie there quietly for a moment while Decio takes a picture of the two of us. I’m going to hang it on the wall of my office.”

She brought her smiling face down and put it cheek to cheek with Arnaldo’s. There was a flash as a strobe light went off.

“You shoulda let them kill me,” Arnaldo said. “It woulda been more merciful.”

Gloria’s number two, a gaucho from Rio Grande do Sul with the unlikely name of John Fitzgerald Kennedy Carvalho, walked into the cremation room, saw the partially consumed body of a baby on the grate, and managed to make it back into the hall before he vomited. He went into the bathroom and washed his mouth out with water. Then he went back and sealed the door with yellow crime-scene tape.

An Indian baby, just one, was found sleeping on a cot in one of the cells.

Silva was the one who found Bittler. The doctor was lying in a pool of his own blood, his body concealed behind the pump-oxygenator. His throat had been slashed from ear to ear. The cut was very clean, a sign that it had been made with an extremely sharp instrument. There was a look of sur-prise frozen on his face. Death would not have been imme-diate, but as a doctor, he would have known that his injury was fatal.

Later, a scalpel bearing traces of his blood, and Claudia Andrade’s fingerprints, was found among the medical instru-ments on a nearby table.

Paulo Couto, the chief medical examiner, who was famous for seldom speculating about anything, speculated that the scalpel was the instrument used to kill him.

Silva was convinced that it was Claudia who had done the job.

And Claudia was nowhere to be found.

Chapter Forty-nine

“Can you spare me ten minutes, Director?”

Sampaio put down his pen, motioned Silva forward, and smiled. “Well, finally,” he said. “What have you got on the bastard?”

Silva crossed the threshold carrying a briefcase. “It’s not about the minister’s press secretary,” Silva said. “It’s about that organ-theft business.”

Sampaio stopped smiling and picked up his pen.

Five minutes. Five minutes tops, not ten.”

Silva waited for his boss to look up again, but Sampaio didn’t. The director circled an item on the page in front of him and appended a few words. The words ended in an exclamation point.

“I could come back later, Director.”

Sampaio tossed the document into his out-box, picked up another one, and made an impatient gesture with the hand holding the pen.

“No, no,” he said, “just get on with it.”

“The anesthesiologist and that swine, Ribeiro, are being most forthcoming, trying to outdo each other to see who gets the best deal from the prosecutors. Turns out, there were three cemeteries in all, another even larger one in the Serra da Cantareira and a slightly smaller one near the reservoir in the hills above Cotia. There were false names on all the deeds and tax records, but in the end, they all turned out to be properties purchased by Bittler for the express purpose of burying his victims.”

Sampaio kept writing.

“The victims were all strangers to Bittler and his friends. It’s unlikely we’ll ever be able to identify them all.”

Sampaio didn’t reply, didn’t bother to look up.

“With the cooperation of Gretchen Furtwangler, Bittler’s former secretary, we managed to track the Argentinian who ran the travel agency. He was lying low in Buenos Aires. The Argentinian federal police took him into custody about an hour ago.”

Sampaio capped his pen and put it into the inside pocket of his jacket.

“And the woman? Any leads on her whereabouts?”

“No.”

The director expelled a breath, removed his reading glasses, and rubbed the bridge of his nose.

“Too bad for you. Because I’m telling you right now, the press is all over this, and I don’t intend to take the blame for allowing that woman to escape.”

“No, of course you don’t,” Silva said.

Sampaio gave him a sharp look.

“And what do you mean by that?”

“You’ve delegated the task of capturing her to me. Only that.”

The director chose to accept Silva’s explanation rather than prolong the interview. He replaced his reading glasses. “Just as long as we understand each other,” he said, “Now, if you’re finished. .”

“Not quite,” Silva said. “Bittler owned that clinic of his for more than thirty years. I have reason to believe that he might have been experimenting with heart transplants before there was any chance of them being a long- term solu-tion for anyone’s health problem.”

Sampaio glanced at Silva over the top of his half-moon lenses.

“That’s ancient history. No one cares about ancient history.

Before you jump to that conclusion,” Silva said, “you might want to take a look at this.” He opened the briefcase, extracted a photo, and slid it across Sampaio’s desk.

“First,” he said, “check out the inscription on the back.”

Sampaio flipped the photo over and studied it.

“German?” he asked.

“German,” Silva agreed. “It says, ‘Beppo and I. Opening Day.’ The handwriting is Bittler’s. Now look at the image.”

When Sampaio did, he was looking at two smiling men in white coats, arms on each other’s shoulders.

“That’s Bittler’s clinic in the background,” Silva said, “Bittler is the one on the left.”

“Who’s the guy standing next to him?”

“I got the photo when I searched Bittler’s office. It was in a silver frame on the mantelpiece.”

“I didn’t ask you where you got it. I asked you-”

“Back in 1985, when I was working out of the Sao Paulo field office, we got a call from the West German federal police. I say West German because the Berlin Wall was still up in those days.”

“You don’t have to be so damned precise. Stop wasting my time and get on with the story.”

“They’d searched the home of a guy named Sedlmeier, a lifelong friend of Josef Mengele’s”

“Mengele? That Nazi doctor? The one they called the Angel of Death?

“Him.”

“What did Mengele have to do with-”

Вы читаете Buried Strangers
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×