I nod. “As you wish.”

Don Camillo takes a gold cigarette case from the pocket of his white linen suit. “Cigarette, Don Pedro?”

“I don’t smoke.”

He takes a cigarette from the case. “I do.” He lights the cigarette, takes a deep inhalation, and blows a column of tumbling smoke toward my face. Just the right touch for mild intimidation.

“You were about to tell me the purpose of your visit, Don Camillo,” I remind him.

Don Camillo’s face hardens with mock seriousness. “You know, of course, about this trouble we’ve been having in the northern provinces.”

“We have spoken of it before,” I tell him. “I was not aware that it was very serious.”

“Serious? Well, no. But it’s growing, I’m afraid, Don Pedro, steadily growing.”

“I see.”

“It appears that two of the northern provinces have fallen completely to the rebels. Most distressful, as you can imagine.”

“Yes.”

“Most unfortunate,” Don Camillo says. “Don’t you think so, Don Pedro?”

“Of course.”

Don Camillo smiles with reptilian suspiciousness. “Of course, yes,” he says flatly. He takes another puff from his cigarette and leans back in his chair, his head cocked slightly toward the revolver in the belt of the guard who stands beside him. “You realize, don’t you, Don Pedro, that if El Presidente should be overthrown, your own position here in the Republic would be jeopardized?”

“Naturally.”

“Not only jeopardized, Doctor,” Don Camillo adds. He leans forward for emphasis. “Let’s speak plainly. They would crucify you, Dr. Langhof.”

It surprises me that Don Camillo thinks me capable of being moved by so common an allusion. “I know what the rebels would do,” I tell him. “I realize that my security is tied to El Presidente’s.”

Don Camillo smiles that thin, basilisk smile. Somewhere in the Republic there must be an academy that teaches these base, totalitarian facial expressions. In the Camp, there was nothing so ugly as a smile.

“Do you?” Don Camillo asks through his sneer.

“Do I what?”

“Do you perfectly realize how you are tied to El Presidente?”

Across the river I can hear a mynah bird cawing. I turn and glimpse its bright, orange beak through a fan of leaves.

“Do you perfectly understand, Dr. Langhof?” Don Camillo repeats.

I turn to face him. “Why do you doubt me, Don Camillo?”

“I doubt everyone,” Don Camillo tells me. “It is one of the rules of political life, as you must surely know, Doctor.”

I watch Don Camillo through a cloud of smoke. He insists upon a military aspect even to his civilian attire and festoons his chest with a display of ribbons and medallions. They tinkle slightly when he shifts in his seat. He has worn them to impress me with his capacity for terror. They represent his license to extract anything he wants from me, by any means he sees fit. It is the garment that legitimizes torture, that makes of it a civilized function. And so the man who wears the badge of state and then applies electrodes to his victim’s testicles does not do so as a base sadist slavering in his bedchamber, but as a cool and stately instrument of the civil will.

Don Camillo leans forward again, for emphasis; he is a man of limited gestures. “They are still hunting you, you know. That old man. Arnstein. The one who has tracked down so many others. He’s still looking. A phone call, and it would be all over for you, Dr. Langhof.”

Sometimes I see the old man, Arnstein, in my mind. He is slumped over a desk filled with papers and photographs, one of the crime’s relentless scholars.

“Many years have passed,” Don Camillo continues, “but never believe that you are forgotten.”

Against the far wall in Arnstein’s office, the files bulge, open-mouthed, screaming.

“They are still looking for you, Doctor,” Don Camillo goes on tediously, “be assured of that.”

I can see Arnstein’s files in my mind. They stand ghostly and alone — gray, silent cabinets filled with thousands of tattered papers. Somewhere among the thumbed, soiled pages, my name is underlined in red.

“There is no need to threaten me, Don Camillo.”

“A little party of commandos,” Don Camillo continues, “coming over the ridge there. What chance would you have against them? None. None whatever, let me assure you. They would come, and you would end up in a glass booth like the others.”

“How would such a circumstance serve El Presidente, Don Camillo?” I ask.

Don Camillo shakes his head. “It wouldn’t,” he says. “Not yet.” He leans back, watching me, imagining that I squirm under his gaze. His is the foolishness that conceives terror as the absolute solution. For him, the world is made secure by fear. If dread were a woman, he would take it to his bed for buggering.

“How could my leaving the Republic ever serve El Presidente’s purposes?” I ask.

“Oh, it probably couldn’t, Don Pedro,” Don Camillo admits. “But this business in the northern provinces, it’s very expensive. The treasury has been diminished. It is in need of resupply. It might be profitable for you to show your concern.”

“How might I show it?”

Don Camillo smiles. “You are very direct.”

“I have learned to be.”

“Yes. Good. Well, to your question. These diamonds you have in your possession.”

“What about them?”

“Forgive me for saying so, but you’ve been doling them out rather stingily over the years, Don Pedro.”

“El Presidente thinks me ungrateful?”

Don Camillo laughs. “No, no. Not at all. But you see, these rebels — the ones in the northern provinces — suppressing them is very expensive. My point is that perhaps you might be persuaded to give a little more than usual when El Presidente comes for his visit.”

“Then I will.”

Don Camillo looks surprised by my quick agreement. It is one of the self-justifications of the greedy to think everyone as greedy as themselves.

“You intend to make a special offering, then?” Don Camillo asks.

“Yes.”

Don Camillo’s eyes narrow. “How much?”

“Enough to make El Presidente happy.”

Don Camillo looks at me pointedly. “El Presidente is very sad, Don Pedro.”

“I will make him joyous.”

Don Camillo slaps his hands together loudly and a flock of parrots spray noisily into the air over the river. “Excellent!” Don Camillo cries. “Excellent! I knew I could depend upon you, Don Pedro.”

“You can tell El Presidente that I intend to make his visit here a very happy one.”

“I’m sure you do,” Don Camillo says. “He always looks forward to seeing you, Don Pedro. He considers you to be one of the first citizens of the Republic.”

“I will reaffirm my loyalty to him. You may be assured of that.”

“He never doubted it, of course,” Don Camillo says. He smiles broadly, then glances at his watch. “I must go, I’m afraid.”

“So soon?”

“I’m afraid so, Don Pedro,” Don Camillo replies. He grips the arms of the chair, grunts, and rises with difficulty from the seat. He is weighed down by the burdens of state and imported cream cheese. On his feet now, he extends his hand toward me. “So good to have seen you again, Don Pedro,” he says.

“And you, Don Camillo.”

“And Dr. Ludtz, how is he?”

“He is ill. A fever.”

Don Camillo crinkles his brow, imitating concern. “Sorry to hear it. I hope he’ll be better when El Presidente

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