his cheeks. ‘Who’s
Ben shrugged. ‘Them.’
Jarrett said, ‘The same bastards who persecuted me, ruined my life and put me in jail.’
‘I’d say you brought that on yourself, no?’
‘I’m not a Holocaust denier.’
Ben smiled coldly. ‘You’re denying that, too?’
‘They call me a Jew hater, a fascist, a terrorist. I’m none of those things, all right? I’m a revisionist historical scholar whose only crime was to ask questions about things that everyone else was afraid to. I’ve served my time. Now why don’t you just bugger off and leave me alone?’
‘Uh-huh. Now I have some questions to ask you.’
‘What kind of questions?’
‘Let’s you and I go for a boat ride.’
Ben ushered the man down the path. He was pretty certain they weren’t being followed by any of Luc Simon’s people, but he didn’t want eavesdroppers. The last thing he needed was to draw Interpol’s attention to whatever it was that his sister had got herself involved in. That was something for him, and him alone, to deal with.
As they approached the bridge, a small thin man with a straggly moustache and a money pouch on a strap around his shoulder appeared at the side of the canal, hovered near the boat mooring and eyed them expectantly.
Ben pointed down at the barge. ‘How much for the tour?’ he asked, and the guy told him it was twelve euros each. The boat had a little wheelhouse at the front, and behind it was seating for about a dozen passengers. Ben reached for his wallet, counted out a hundred and eighty euros and handed it to the boatman. ‘Just him and me. No other passengers. There’s a little extra for you.’
The boatman shrugged and stuffed the cash in his pouch.
‘I don’t like going on the water,’ Jarrett muttered. ‘I can’t swim.’
‘Good.’ Ben shoved him towards the edge and made him climb down the ladder to the barge. Ben went down after him and pushed him towards the stern, as far from the wheel-house as they could get. The boatman climbed down, started up the gurgling engine and cast off.
The canals wound gently through the old medieval city, past ivied stone buildings and under trees that leaned far out across the water. Jarrett held on tightly to the chrome railing at the barge’s stern, looking down at the wake that the barge’s lazy propellers were churning up behind them. Ben stood next to him, watching him.
‘I’m happy in this place,’ Jarrett said quietly. ‘I like the way people leave me alone. I can lose myself here and forget about all the shit that’s out there, and all the things that were done to me.’
‘I know exactly how you feel,’ Ben said.
Jarrett looked at him in surprise.
‘You feel betrayed. You showed the world what you thought was the honest truth, and you were stood on. You feel hard done by. And you know what? I don’t give a shit about your burning martyr act. I despise you and I don’t want to be here. But unfortunately, I need your help.’
Jarrett’s face was twisted in hate. ‘Like what?’ he spat out.
‘Like information.’
‘On?’
‘Your speciality,’ Ben said. ‘What’s in it for me?’
‘A lot, Jarrett. Believe me. Talk to me and good things will happen. Like not being found floating in the canal with a bullet in your brain. How’s that for starters?’
Jarrett stared at him for a long time, then seemed to decide that Ben meant it. He let out a sigh, seeming to deflate a little so that his shoulders drooped. ‘OK. I get the picture. What do you want to know?’
‘I want to know why a bunch of neo-Nazi terrorists would be interested in Hans Kammler.’
Jarrett’s eyebrows climbed up his high brow. ‘Kammler? SS General Hans Kammler?’
‘Is there another one I need to know about?’
Jarrett leaned on the rail and puffed out his cheeks. ‘Might help if I knew what it was about Kammler they were after.’
‘Right up your street,’ Ben said. ‘Some documents that could allegedly prove that the Nazi Holocaust didn’t happen.’
Jarrett frowned. ‘My street? Hold on. I’ve never said it didn’t happen. Just that it was grossly exaggerated. That only just over a million died, not the six million that are claimed. And that it wasn’t the big Jewish extermination it’s cracked up to be. That was a Zionist fabrication cooked up by the British to help gain control over the Middle East by filling Palestine with poor, suffering Jewish refugees in 1947.’
‘Save the lecture for someone who might actually swallow it,’ Ben said. ‘Just answer my question.’
Jarrett was silent for a few moments. The only sound was the singing of the birds, the soft burble of the boat and the distant throb of traffic. Finally he said, ‘Well, I can see why a Holocaust revisionist might be interested in any documents written by Kammler, if they were to shed light on the Auschwitz business.’ Jarrett nodded to himself. ‘I can certainly see that.’
‘What Auschwitz business do you mean?’
‘I take it you’re aware that Kammler was in charge of the SS Building Division that built the so-called death camp, and personally oversaw the design of the alleged gas chamber?’
‘I’m aware of it,’ Ben replied. ‘I’m not so sure about the “so-called” and “alleged” part, though.’
Jarrett gave a grim smile. ‘That’s the whole crux of the debate. This is the very thing the bastards put me in jail for. You see, revisionists believe that the gas chamber you see today if you go on a guided tour of Auschwitz is really just a reconstructed air-raid shelter, dressed up to look like it was used for homicidal purposes, when in fact that’s anything but the case. There’s a whole load of stuff they don’t want you to know.’
‘They?’
‘Yes, they,’ Jarrett said hotly, and the thread veins in his cheeks burned red. ‘Like the fact that the work camp inmates had their own theatre and swimming pool. The fact that there are virtually no traces of the lethal Zyklon B compound in the gas chamber walls, far less than in the delousing rooms where they used it solely for the inmates’ hygiene. Even pro-Holocaust historians have admitted that ninety per cent of the stuff was used for routine health maintenance, as a pesticide. I mean, why go to the trouble of looking after your prisoners if you’re just going to exterminate them anyway? Doesn’t make sense. Then there’s the little detail that the holes in the gas chamber ceiling, through which the Nazis were supposed to have poured the crystals to produce the cyanide gas, were demonstrably added after the war by the Soviets as a deliberate propaganda stunt.’
Ben listened carefully. This was exactly the kind of well-rehearsed poison he’d expected to hear from a man like Jarrett, and it just washed over him. What he found painful was the thought that his own sister, whose memory he’d clung to so dearly for all these years, could have ever bought into these terrible distortions.
He put that concern aside and focused on the matter at hand. ‘So you’re suggesting that these people want to get their hands on the Kammler documents because they believe they’ll find evidence of what the gas chamber was really used for?’
‘Showing that nobody was ever actually gassed there,’ Jarrett finished with a smile. ‘Exactly. But those are documents that I’ve never heard of before. I’d be kind of interested to see them myself. Where are they?’
‘As if I’d ever tell you.’
‘Shame. There are a lot of unanswered questions about Hans Kammler. Nobody even knows what happened to him, or why a guy so high up in the Nazi hierarchy, answerable only to Hitler himself by 1945, was never even mentioned at the Nuremburg Trials after the war. Deep conspiracy stuff. CIA plots and all that. Outside of my area.’ Jarrett gave a dark chuckle. ‘You’d have to talk to a guy called Lenny Salt for that kind of thing. Actually, he was interested in Kammler too, come to think of it. It was a long time ago. I’d forgotten until now.’
‘Who is he?’
‘Conspiracy freak. Some kind of scientist, I think, at Manchester University. Physics, it was. Strange-looking fellow. Came to one of my talks once.’
‘One of your revisionist pals?’
Jarrett seemed about to object to Ben’s tone, then bit his lip and shook his head. ‘Hardly. He wasn’t interested in my views at all. In fact, he was quite violently opposed to them. But I did get the impression that he seemed to know an awful lot about Kammler. More than I do, for that matter.’ He paused, pursing his lips. ‘And I’m