Desert Run
Desert Run
Desert Run
A Lena Jones Mystery
Betty Webb
www.bettywebb-mystery.com
Poisoned Pen Press
Copyright © 2006 by Betty Webb
First Edition 2006
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2005934982
ISBN-10 Print: 1-59058-234-9
ISBN-13 Print: 978-1-59058-234-3
ISBN-13 eBook: 978-1-6159-52243
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.
Poisoned Pen Press
6962 E. First Ave., Ste. 103
Scottsdale, AZ 85251
www.poisonedpenpress.com
info@poisonedpenpress.com
Dedication
For Paul
Acknowledgments
The author gratefully acknowledges her many debts to: the granddaddy of all books about Arizona’s Great Escape, The Faustball Tunnel: German POWs in America and Their Great Escape, by John Hammond Moore, Random House, 1978; John Leptich, at the Scottsdale Tribune, for sparking her interest in this story; Elizabeth Bruening Lewis, for details about the escape; Larry Jorgensen, former guard at Camp Papago, for firsthand information; former Camp Papago POW Rolf Koenigs, now a resident of Glendale, Arizona, for insights on camp life; the Papago Trackers and the Arizona National Guard Historical Society; U.S. Senator John Kyl’s office for information on Ethiopian immigration patterns; Tom Bonsall, for information on car productivity during World War II; the Phoenix Studebaker Club, for information on Golden Hawks; Steve Ralls, Director of Communications for the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, for information on the treatment of gay World War II veterans; the Superstition Mountains Museum in Apache Junction, Arizona, for information on the legend of the Lost Dutchman Gold Mine and topographical information on the Superstitions Wilderness; Kathleen Cady, for information about SSI payments and practices; the Sheridan Street Irregulars for their vigorous critiques; Toni Laxson, of the Scottsdale and East Valley Tribune newspapers for information on crime reporting techniques; and last but certainly not least, Marge Purcell and Debra McCarthy for manuscript troubleshooting.
Contents
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Epilogue
Author’s Note
Sources
More from this Author
Contact Us
Chapter One
December 24, 1944
At 1:36 a.m. on Christmas Eve, Gunter Hoenig, crewman on German U-boat 237, ate Arizona dirt.
The gunnery mechanic didn’t mind. Dirt was better than mud, and at least the narrow, one hundred and seventy-eight foot tunnel he and his comrades had dug underneath the prison camp fence remained as arid as the desert above before last night’s rain began to fall. Taking heart from the encouraging shouts behind him, Gunter spit the dirt out of his mouth and crawled on. Less than thirty feet left to go and they would all be free. Once out of the tunnel, he and the other twenty-seven German prisoners of war would make their way to Mexico, where supporters of the Reich would smuggle them back to Germany.
Gunter smiled. The Americans had outsmarted themselves, believing they could outwit members of the Reich’s great navy merely by caging its sailors on this inland sea of sand. As Kapitan zur See Erik Ernst pointed out, where humans live there will always be water, and Arizona had proved no exception. The maps smuggled into camp showed that this seemingly arid country was criss-crossed by manmade canals which fed into great rivers. Oh, German sailors understood rivers! And rafts! The raft Das Kapitan had designed and he and his friend Josef had built would navigate those rivers all the way to the sea. What difficulty would riding a mere river prove to men who had conquered the mighty Atlantic? As for their less adventurous comrades behind them in the tunnel, Mexico was less than two hundred miles away, and their feet would be sufficient.
“Schnell, schnell!” Kapitan Ernst, right behind him, barked. “Quickly, quickly!” He followed up his words with a blow across Gunter’s buttocks.
Did Das Kapitan think he wasn’t already hurrying? Not for the first time Gunter ground his teeth in fury at his commander. Perhaps once he and Josef reached the canal, they would make their own plans.
That final freedom must wait. First, escape through this narrow tunnel (not much narrower than U-237!), then a sprint to the high brush by the canal. Then he would tell Josef his thoughts and they would slip away from Kapitan to navigate Arizona’s waters on their own. Perhaps their commander had managed to save them when the U-boat caught fire, but he had abandoned so many others. Fifteen men dead, and all because of his cowardice.
Gunter could still hear his shipmates’ screams.
Ach, no time to think of that now. Just hands and knees churning up dirt, but good, all good, because the end of the tunnel was less than twelve feet ahead. He could already see the velvet night.
Above him, in the camp itself, the remaining German prisoners drank home-made schnapps and sang Stille Nacht to cover any noise their escaping comrades might make. They had grown fat and happy and preferred the comforts of camp to the unknown dangers of the desert. Well, good luck to them. But for him, the taste of freedom was sweeter than any Christmas pudding.
Only ten feet more. Five. Three…
Hands reached down to pull him out into the mesquite-scented air.
Freedom. Danke Gott!
Chapter Two
It was a good day to film, but a bad day to die.
The elderly star of Escape Across the Desert sat slumped in his wheelchair, blood ruining his white shirt and every other surface in the small kitchen. I’d seen neater slaughterhouses.
Knowing it was pointless but praying it wasn’t, I knelt beside him and put my finger on his neck, hoping a tell-tale throb would prove he hadn’t yet bled out. “Kapitan Ernst?”
Dead men seldom answer. The former U-boat commander’s flesh was cool and rigor well-established, meaning that he had died long before sunup. Duct tape sealed both arms to the wheelchair, almost as if the killer feared that the ninety-one-year-old double amputee might put up a fight. I doubted he had, so why the overkill, why so many disfiguring blows? Why had the killer beaten Ernst to death, taking his good sweet time?
Him? Violence like this usually pointed to a male perpetrator. Then again, women were getting meaner these days.
The police would want to know the exact time I discovered the body, so I checked my Timex. Seven twenty-six a.m. I took one final look at Ernst, then backed out of the kitchen. Retracing my footsteps as closely as possible, I exited the house the same way I had entered, leaving the door open behind me. When I reached the curb, I fished my cell out of my carry-all and called 911. Then I called Warren Quinn, director of Escape Across the Desert, and told him that Das
Kapitan would never be ready for his closeup.
***
Up and down the street of the quiet Scottsdale neighborhood, men and women were backing BMWs and Mercedes out of their driveways, some of them clutching travel mugs in one hand and cell phones in the other, leaving them to steer with their knees. I winced as one of these suburban Kamikazes came perilously close to my restored 1945 Jeep. When the driver passed by with at least a half-inch to spare, I gave her the finger, but she didn’t even notice—she was too busy applying eye-liner. Nearby, someone was cooking bacon and its fatty scent drifted away on the crisp breeze humming through the Papago Buttes. From one house I could hear a blender, and from another, the yapping of a small dog. Birds sang, children laughed.
Until the news helicopters thundered in.
The film crew of Living History Productions was working out of Papago Park, the site of an old World War II German POW camp. The thousand-acre desert park dividing the city of Phoenix from Scottsdale was only a quarter-mile west, so along with the news copters, Warren and his assistant director Lindsey Reynolds beat Scottsdale PD to the murder scene by a good three minutes. Lindsey looked her usual cool self, but Warren was in such a state it took all my strength to keep him from running into Ernst’s house.
“He can’t be dead, Lena! I need him for my last scene!”
If Ernst had been murdered at the beginning of the shoot, I would have been shocked at Warren’s seeming heartlessness, but after being around movie people for several weeks, I was getting used to the Hollywood credo: film first, feel later.
“Believe me, Warren, he’s dead.”
“But…” The director stopped and took a deep breath. During the pause, his usual compassion overrode his business concerns. “Poor old guy. What happened? Heart failure?”
“Kind of.” Not really a lie, because when you come right down to it, all deaths are ultimately the result of heart failure. Drown, your heart stops. Take a bullet to the brain, your heart stops. Get the holy living hell beat out of you while you sit duct-taped to your wheelchair, your heart stops.
Warren stared at the house, no longer anxious to enter, maybe because he’d noticed the blood on my shirt. He ran trembling fingers through his beach-blond hair. In his early forties, he still had a clean, farm-boy face, only slightly hardened by his sharp eyes. “Does he have relatives? Kids?”
“Not that I know of.”
When he swallowed hard, I began to regret not closing the front door behind me, because the scent of death was beginning to mingle with the odor of frying bacon. It was an unfortunate combination, but I’d smelled worse.
Warren pulled himself together. “Lindsey, we have to let everyone on the set know we’re closing down for the day. Out of respect.”
Lindsey shook her perfectly coiffed head and when she spoke, her voice was calm. “No need. We’ll just shoot around him.”
***
One by one front doors opened along the street, and by the time several Scottsdale PD cars came screaming up, the sidewalk in front of Ernst’s house was filling up with not only Ernst’s neighbors, but the gaggle of film buffs the shoot always attracted. The area bustled with a frenzy it probably hadn’t experienced since that Christmas Eve night in 1944 when twenty-eight German POWs, Kapitan zur See Erik Ernst among them, dug under the Camp Papago fence and fled into the desert. Some crowd control was in order, so I was happy to see Captain Kryzinski, my old boss from my days at Scottsdale PD, exiting an unmarked cruiser. Whenever a crime involved—however peripherally—someone of Warren Quinn’s stature, the brass wanted to cover their collective butts.
While detectives and crime-scene techs trooped past him and a couple of uniformed officers began to cordon off Ernst’s property, Kryzinski gave me a grim look. “Great, another high-profile murder. The Chamber of Commerce will be thrilled. So what are you doing, Lena, messing around with these film types? You got some piddly little security gig going with them or something?”
“Hardly piddly.” I explained that after some expensive camera equipment had disappeared a month earlier, Living History Productions hired Desert Investigations to run background checks on a few gaffers. After I fingered the culprit, Warren kept me on to act as a go-between his company, the Arizona Film Commission, and over-friendly locals. The money was more than double my usual fee, and the job’s relatively tame duties made a nice respite from the dark cases I normally worked. Until today.
Kryzinski flicked his eyes toward Warren, who despite his distress was as handsome as half the actors in Hollywood. “You finally give up on Dusty?”
How quickly gossip travels in the desert. After several years of pseudo-intimacy, my boyfriend Dusty began disappearing for weeks at a time. Despite several bouts in rehab, where each time he swore to turn over a new leaf, he had disappeared again. This time I wasn’t waiting for him to come back. Not that my love life, or lack thereof, was any of Kryzinski’s business. Besides, Warren and I enjoyed only a professional relationship.
“Forget about Dusty, Captain. I have.”
“Whatever you say.” He turned away from Warren and studied Ernst’s house, a stucco ranch half-hidden behind several twisted olive trees. “It’s weird, don’t you think, a former POW living right across the street from his old prison camp?”
“Ernst was a weird guy.” But Kryzinski was right. The neighborhood was an odd place for a U-boat captain to end up, but as I’d learned from my work on the documentary, Camp Papago hadn’t exactly been Devil’s Island. Also, the view from Ernst’s picture window must have been spectacular. On a clear day—and most Arizona days were clear—he would have been able to see the red-mauve Papago Buttes rising in the distance, the muted greens of tall saguaros thrusting up through the scrub and the vivid red blooms of prickly pear cactus attracting rainbow hummingbirds. But with careful scrutiny, he would also see the leveled ground where the prison camp’s barracks once stood, and in some places, the deep impressions in the earth from the weight of stockade towers.
Kryzinski followed my gaze, but didn’t find the view all that interesting. “How come you were the one to discover the body? You acting as his chauffeur or something?”
I shook my head. “I decided to watch some filming before I went to my office, so I was hanging around the set. Lindsey usually took care of picking up Ernst whenever he was needed, but she had something else to do this morning so yesterday she asked his care-giver to bring him over. When Ernst didn’t arrive by eight and nobody answered his phone, Warren asked me to drive over and see what the holdup was.” I glanced around to make certain no children or tender-eared grannies were within hearing distance. Closest were Warren, Lindsey, and the pesky, whippet-sized salesman from the autoplex down the street who had driven them over in the ’57 Studebaker Golden Hawk he was trying to sell Warren. I kept my voice low anyway. “When I knocked, the door swung open. I called Ernst’s name, but I knew before I went in. Death has an odor.”
Kryzinski narrowed his eyes. “Yet you continued on inside the house. I’m disappointed in you, Lena. An experienced detective like yourself should know better.”
Up above, a red-tailed hawk wheeled through the cloudless sky, its lonely keee-rrr announcing that it hadn’t eaten in a while. A tough life, for all its seeming freedom, but a life I envied at moments like this, when I wanted to be elsewhere, doing anything other that what I was doing, even dealing with ground kill rather than people.
“Lena?”
The hawk drifted behind the Papago Buttes so I had to look at Kryzinski again. “I knew something was wrong so I continued into the house to render aid.”
He wouldn’t let it go. “Since you could smell what you smelled, what made you think you could ‘render aid’? Were you planning to give him last rites?”
Lucky hawk, who never had to explain his actions. “Okay, so I was pretty sure Ernst was dead, but I…Oh, who the hell knows why I went in. I’m human, and I just wanted to help.” What was with my old boss? Maybe it was his age. Since I’d se
en him last, his formerly glossy black hair had turned as flat and gray as cement.
“Sorry. It’s just that so much has been going on down at the department lately, what with the new Police Chief and all. I need to make sure my detectives are dotting their i’s and crossing their t’s.”
There was no point in reminding him that I hadn’t been one of his detectives for three years. Old habits die hard. So did my affection for him, and it softened my answer. “Actually, Captain, I was worried about Ernst before I reached the house. He’d been acting weirder than usual the last few days, always dropping hints about some big secret he was going to reveal in the film’s final interview. He said the secret was ‘like gold.’”
“Interview? I thought this was a movie?”
I passed on Warren’s explanation of how his documentaries worked. “Besides the re-enactments of various aspects of the escape, Warren planned to do a series of interviews with some of the original people involved with the camp. He’s lined up a couple of historians, some of the camp’s surviving guards, and Fay Harris. You know, the reporter for the Scottsdale Journal. I think you two used to go out.” He neither confirmed or denied. “Okay, so maybe I was wrong. She’s the one who wrote the book, Escape Across the Desert, which Warren optioned for the documentary. The pivotal interviews were to be with Ernst, since he was the only escapee Warren could get. There are a few more POWs still alive back in Germany, but from what I hear, their health is too fragile for them to make the trip. And one over on the west side of Glendale, but he didn’t want to be involved in the project. So as far as the German side of the story goes, Ernst was Warren’s ‘star,’ as he liked to call himself.”
Kryzinki frowned as a young police officer staggered out Ernst’s door and vomited under an olive tree. “That’s all very interesting, but what kind of ‘big secret’ was Ernst hinting about? Do you think he meant gold, the metal? Or was that just a manner of speech?”
“Nobody knows. Warren doubted that Ernst had anything new to add to the information already known about the escape, but he humored him anyway. Anything to keep him happy.”