“In the establishment press?”
I nodded.
“Then you don’t know shit. The Bund was the most effective citizens’ lobby this country’s ever known. The only patriots with the foresight to warn against getting involved in the kike-war. So instead of heeding the warning and rewarding them for their foresight,
Latch said, “Major blunder. Sociologically as well as politically. World War Kike was the first step toward mass mongrelization. Opened the sluices for all the Asian and Semitic sewage Europe had no use for.”
I ignored him, concentrated on Ahlward. “Like I said, D.F., all I know about the Bund is what I’ve read. Which no doubt
Ahlward gave a petulant, impatient look and slapped the desk hard. “That’s because the establishment was too
It reminded me of stuff I’d heard during internship. On the back wards of state hospitals. He reeled it off in the flat tones of a high school thespian.
I said, “Cleansing spear,” and looked at the banner behind him.
Latch said, “The spear of Woden. The ultimate cleansing machine.”
Once again I ignored him and asked Ahlward: “What about Crisp and Blanchard and the rest of them? They second-generation Bundists too?”
His eyes narrowed. “Something like that.”
“No skinheads for you, huh, D.F.?”
Latch laughed and said, “Punks. Rank-amateur clowns. We prize discipline.”
I said, “So, am I right about the mountain-man bit, D.F.?”
Ahlward sat back in the swivel chair and put his hands behind his head.
“Okay,” I said. “So you’re living off the land and hiding from the government. Just like some of your former enemies on the left. Your movement’s in trouble. So is the left. Cointelpro, Nixon, J. Edgar. Divide and conquer and it’s working. It gets you thinking. By squaring off against the left, you’re giving the establishment exactly what it wants. Some people on the left realize it too. And you all come to realize that when you stop to think about it, the radical right and the radical left have lots in common. You both believe society has to be torn down in order to totally restructure it. That democracy is weak and inefficient, controlled by the international bankers and running- dog press-by the talking class. A new populism is called for- empowering the working man. And the main issue that used to separate you- race- is no longer that big of a stumbling block. Because there are white leftists enraged at the uppity blacks who’d tried to kick them out of their own movement. White leftists getting in touch with their own racism.”
“A beacon of wisdom,” said Latch, “shining through the shit pile.”
I said, “I don’t know who thought of it first, D.F., but somehow you communicated and a new concept was conceived. Wannsee Two. Pressing inward from the outermost edges in order to squeeze the center and crush it to death. Which is how you got together with old Gordie here.”
A quick look at Latch, then back to Ahlward. “Though to tell the truth, D.F., I really can’t see the appeal. You’re clearly a man of action. He’s nothing more than a hot-air purveyor living off his wife’s money.”
Latch swore and waited for Ahlward to defend him. When the redheaded man didn’t speak, I went on.
“He’s the proverbial empty barrel making lots and lots of noise. A lap dog- the ultimate
Latch jumped to his feet. The impact jostled Milo; his body rolled to the edge of the sofa, then rolled back. His mouth gaped. As I searched the battered face for signs of consciousness, I felt another wasp-sting on my cheek. A new layer of pain veneering a three-year-old jaw injury. Memories of wires and putty… My head shot back. Another layer.
Latch was standing over me, spittle collecting in the corners of his mouth: a lap dog gone rabid. He raised his arm to hit me again.
He struck out, and the rattling in my head reverberated like acid rock pumped through a cheap amplifier.
After the knife, petty annoyance.
I looked up at him and said, “Temper, temper, Gordie.”
He ground his teeth and drew back his fist. Just before impact, I feinted to one side. His hand grazed me. He was caught off balance and stumbled.
Ahlward looked disgusted. He said, “Sit down, Gordon.”
Latch righted himself, stood there panting, his hands bunched. High color in the freckled cheeks. The welfare glasses askew.
My head hurt, but not that badly. My arms were numb. Gazelle-anesthesia, or loss of circulation?
I said, “Why don’t you sit down and toot your harmonica, Gordie?”
He balled his hand, started to retract it. Ahlward’s voice froze it mid-motion like a blast of liquid nitrogen.
“
Latch looked back and forth between the two of us. Spat in my face and returned to the couch. But no more casual leg-cross. He sat on the edge, hands on knees, huffing with rage.
A gob of his saliva had landed on my cheek. I lowered my head, wiped it as well as I could on my shoulder.
I said, “How impolitic, Councilman.”
Latch said, “He’s mine, Bud. When the time comes.”
I said, “I’m touched, Councilman.”
Ahlward turned to me and said, “That all you have to say, turd?”
“Oh, no. There’s plenty more. Back to Wannsee Two. The meeting no one believes ever took place. But it did. Somewhere rural and secluded- away from the
Ahlward’s eyelids drooped. He touched his gun.
I said, “A redux of the Hitler-Stalin buddy bit. You even came up with a new insignia that said it all: red for the left, the spear for the right, a circle signifying the union.”
I turned to Latch: “If the folks on Telegraph Avenue only knew.”
He said, “You’re an idiot. It