I had to squint to see in the dark. A small sliver of light came from Hank's bedroom. I pushed the door open. Hank was lying in bed, his breathing shallow. Beside him on the bedside table was a lamp emitting a glow so dull it barely illuminated his face.
I remembered the scene from
Apocalypse Now
when Martin Sheen confronts Marlon Brando at his compound in the jungle. All you can see is the top of Brando's head, bald and glistening, the rest of his body obscured by the darkness. At this moment I felt like Martin Sheen, come to kill Brando while the natives danced outside. Brando had a hard life. His son Christian shot his sister Cheyenne's boyfriend in Brando's living room in Beverly Hills. Christian was convicted of manslaughter and Cheyenne hanged herself at her mother's house in Tahiti. Everyone paid the price for the crime; everyone was punished.
All this raced through my mind as I watched Hank from the doorway. I wasn't even sure he'd heard me enter. His mouth was wide open and facing the ceiling. His eyes were closed. I was about to leave, thinking with relief that he had fallen asleep, when I heard his voice in the darkness.
âSounded like you were having a fun night,' he said.
âI hope it's about to get better, but I don't like the chances.'
âClose the door. Did anyone see you come in?'
The single lamp gave the feeling of being inside a cave. âThe CIA were trailing me for a while, but I gave the cab driver a fiver to lose them.'
âThis is no time for jokes.'
âYou're damn right it's not. The fiver wasn't enough so I had to blow him too.'
I sat on the edge of the bed, still squinting to adjust to the light, and Hank sat up. He was skinny but otherwise he appeared strong. As he pushed himself up on his arms, I could see the long thin scars of his suicide attempt running up his wrists like reeds on a riverbed, and I thought of Benji. The scars cut right through the blurred tattoo on his wrist, and I saw for the first time what the bandages at the hospital had been covering. In the middle of the tattoo the skin glistened wet and pink, probably infected. It looked like he had tried to cut it out.
âWhat's the crisis Hank?'
He pointed to the wall, as if that explained everything. Stacks of old newspapers were piled high in the corner of the room. So, the newspapers in the living room had never been thrown out, just moved into his bedroom.
âWhat do you know about vigilantes?' Hank asked.
âThat's a hell of a fire hazard, Hank. You drop a lit cigarette and this place would go up like the Wicker Man.'
âNot a bad idea. Fire would be clean, leave no trace.'
âWhat do you mean vigilantes?'
âWhat do you know?'
âI don't know a thing.'
âYou know a lot of things about a lot of pretty screwy stuff.'
âIf by vigilantes you mean people taking the law into their own hands, can't say I've met many. Are you trying to tell me you're Batman?'
âI'm not the hunter, Hilda. I'm the hunted.'
âNo, you're a paranoid old man. By the way, if you think people are out to get you, you shouldn't leave the front door unlocked.'
âIt doesn't matter now.'
I smoothed down his bed covers, tucked in the corners. âWell you seem perfectly fine to me, apart from the obvious dementia, so if you're looking for someone to stick a pillow over your face you'll have to find somebody else. Try Jake. He'd probably find killing you therapeutic.'
âShut your yapper and get me one of those newspapers,' he said, pointing to the corner of the room.
âCan't we turn on a light?'
âNo lights. Just the newspaper.'
âFine,' I said as I stood, âbut if I trip and fall, I'm suing your ass.'
I walked over to the newspapers, kicking aside an empty beer bottle on the way. âNow I'm more scared of being crushed to death,' I said, looking at the towering pile of newsprint in front of me. âWhich one?'
âChrist, the one on the ground. Do I have to draw you a map?'
I picked up the newspaper that was lying on the floor, separate from the others. It was the
Los Angeles Times
from last Saturday, the headline a spate of car-jackings in Long Beach. I threw it to Hank like a Frisbee. He rustled through the first few pages, found what he was looking for.
âThere,' he said, jabbing at the article.
I snatched the paper back, scanned the article.
âJWA charged in US,' I read. âWhat are they? Your favourite band or something?'
âJustice War Alliance,' he said in a hushed voice.
âYou mean like the Justice League of America? Is Superman their leader too?'
Hank's eyes lowered, drifting to something invisible on the bedspread, but I could tell he was just avoiding my gaze. I read the article again, this time more closely. Apparently some group calling themselves the JWA had been hunting down war criminals since the fifties and dispensing their own special brand of justice. It sounded like something from the TV show âGet Smart', a vigilante organisation inflicting Indian burns and wedgies on the bad guys. But Hank was taking this very seriously. I could feel him watching me as I read, waiting for my reaction. I looked at him, my face blank, and I could see his disappointment. He'd been hoping this was the moment when all his ramblings and failed suicide attempt finally made sense, but I was only more confused. I put the paper down on the bed and kept looking at it, avoiding him.
âSo what?' I said. âSounds like an urban legend to me. Anyway, what's it got to do with you?'
âI've read the paper every day for nearly fifty years, looking for any mention of them. Last week a German was taken out on the freeway with a sniper rifle. The car crashed into the wall and when the cops dragged the guy from the wreckage they saw they had a goddamn homicide on their hands. They'd blown this guy's brains all over his windscreen. I know it was them.'
âDo you know what this guy did? Why the JWA were supposedly after him?'
âHe threw people against electric fences at the camps. To see what would happen.'
âSo he got what was coming to him.'
âSome might say.'
âIs this why you're hiding out in here? Because you think some vigilante group is hunting you down? You're a Holocaust survivor for Christ's sake!'
Hank scratched at his arm where his tattoo used to be. His nails were jagged and cut into his tender skin, drawing blood to the surface. âI was only eight when I went into the camp. I wasn't a Jew, or a homo, or even a gypsy. I didn't have to be there. You know why I was there?'
I sat down on the edge of the bed, shook my head.
âI was there because I was a stupid son of a bitch. Threw stones at the Nazis as they goosestepped into town. I still remember braining one right on the head. Four of them chased me down into an alleyway, picked me up and dragged me off. Threw me on the back of the wagon with the rest of them. No one saw it happen and, if they did, I guess they couldn't have done anything anyways. I didn't even get to say goodbye to my parents.'
âThat was brave Hank,' I said. I imagined a valiant young boy taking up arms against the invading forces, striking a blow while the adults were too complacent and scared to retaliate. Hank just laughed.
âBrave, hell. I was just a little shit. Threw rocks at everything in those days. I'd had my ass beat just days before for throwing stones at the Hooper shop window.'
âWhy doesn't that surprise me?'
âRemember this ain't no movie, Hilda. This ain't no
Schindler's
List
.'
âObviously.'
âSometimes your life can turn on a dime just for some stupid shit you done. I get taken from my family because I'm a stupid, shit-head kid who doesn't know any better. I didn't deserve to be there. That's how I felt anyway. I wasn't part of the grand plan, I was just collateral damage. It made me angry. But not at the Nazis, no way. I was angry at the people in the camp. The other kids. The ones who were
meant
to be there. I kept away from them, sat on my own, ate with my back turned to them. I wanted to show that I was different, that it had all been a stupid mistake and that the guards would see that. They'd let me out and I could go back to my parents. But it didn't happen. Days and weeks and months passed and still I was there. Soon I forgot what my parents even looked like.'
I didn't know what to say. I was frozen to my spot on the bed, wanting to run away but desperately wanting to know the truth. All of Benji's horrible predictions about Hank seemed to be coming true, all of Jake's warnings. I tried to imagine what it was like for a boy in that situation, how he would feel, what he might do to survive.
âAt first it wasn't so bad, all things considered. We got three squares a day and they put us to work. As the war dragged on things started to deteriorate. That's when people started to disappear in the middle of the night. The guards made us fight for food. We'd stand in circles and kick the living shit out of each other, just to get a scrap of bread. I was a pretty good fighter but it was tiring. There was more food to go around when kids just disappeared. Poof!'
Hank threw his hands up, like a magician dispensing of a rabbit in midair.
âBecause I was quiet, and a loner, the other kids didn't pay much attention to me. They didn't know I was watching them. Didn't know I was
plotting
against them. Like some stinking, slimy sewer rat. Like the worst kind of dog.'
I put my hand on his. âYou were a kid,' I started to say, but Hank cut me off, shaking his hand free.
âKids are cruelâis that what you're going to say? Kids do the darndest things? I know what I was. I knew right from wrong.'
âNo you didn't. You were a child in a
concentration camp
. How the hell would you know the difference between right and wrong? A whole country didn't know the difference!'
The light in the room dimmed further, as the bulb of the lamp died. It was as if all the energy of the room was being sucked out by every word Hank said, as if the planet were growing darker just for us.
âI started to watch them,' he continued. âListen to their conversations. Some of them were planning an escape. A girl called Mary, her brother Eli, and some other kid. They were always whispering in corners, hiding behind their hands. They were going to try to squeeze through the fence at night. I told the guards.'
He looked at me for a response. I stared at the bedspread. There were smears of blood from where his cuts had stained as they healed.
âMary, Eli and that other kidâthey disappeared. The guards said I had done well. I got extra scraps of food and was allowed to take breaks while everyone else worked. It was a damn sweet deal. I started thinking about what else I could tell them. I spied on people. Looked for anything that would be worthwhile telling. If some kid stashed a crust of bread beneath his pillow for later, I made damn sure those guards found out about it, and the crusts became mine. But sometimes there was nothing to tell. Sometimes I had to make shit up. I got more crusts. More kids disappeared.'
Hank looked at his hands.
âI've lost count of how many kids disappeared.'
A helicopter flew overhead and for a brief, astonishing moment the room was bathed in its spotlight. I remembered back to a history class where we watched a documentary about the Holocaust. All those stick-thin bodies piled to the sky, eyes wide and unblinking, flies on their faces. My reaction had been one of incomprehension:
how could this have happened?
I also recalled Benji's reaction: he skipped out of class as if we'd just watched
Bambi
.
âMan, if someone had tried to get me into a concentration camp I would have kicked their asses,' Benji had said. âIt would be easy to get outta there. Just steal the guard's gun and shoot your way out.'
People loved to talk about what they would have done in a situation they have little understanding of. I knew I probably would have thrown myself on the fence, the easy way out.
Hank sat up, his posture stiffening as if he were bracing for something. âThen the war ended,' he went on. âI got out, got to see my parents again. But it wasn't the same. Nothing was. I left for America. I tried to forget. But the longer I lived the more it became clear to me what a terrible, terrible crime I had committed. The terrible thing I had done. When you become an adult, you look back on some of the shit you did as a kid and think, “Gee whiz, I was pretty messed up.” If you're lucky you get the chance to correct some of those wrongs. You see the fat kid you never invited to any of your birthday parties, the pimply girl whose pigtails you pulled. You get to say sorry. Sometimes they accept your apology. For me, it's too late for any of that. They are all dead.'
I understood some of what he meant. When I became friends with Benji it was partly because of a misguided sense of compassion. I didn't want to be the kind of person who picked on, bullied or ignored the strange kid. I wanted to be the one who became his friend, who tore away at the inadequate exterior and found a diamond beneath. Looking back, I can see it was patronising to Benji, and misguided. Sometimes there isn't a diamond beneath. But that's not how I felt about Hank. I wanted to believe he was a victim of circumstance.
Hank said, âWhen I got to LA, those dead kids followed me around like an army. But they weren't my protectors. I worked on movie stars' swimming pools. I screwed beautiful women. I tried to forget any of it ever happened. But every time I saw a group of kids let out of school, there they were, Mary, Eli, all the nameless faces. I saw them everywhere. In the end it was easier to see them at the bottom of a bottle. Then I started to see
them
. The JWA. They were tracking me. I was as good as dead.'
All the elements came together, obscure pieces of a fatal jigsaw puzzle. âYou think they're coming after you? For what you did?'