Ruin Value: A Mystery of the Third Reich

Ruin Value: A Mystery of the Third Reich

by J. Sydney Jones

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Overview

In 1945 Nuremberg, an American intelligence officer tracks a killer: “Powerful . . . Fans of WWII mystery fiction should consider this one mandatory reading” (Booklist).
  Nuremberg is a dead city. In the aftermath of World War II, two-thirds of its population has fled or is deceased, with thirty thousand bodies turning the ruined industrial center into a massive open grave. Here, the vilest war criminals in history will be tried. But in Nuremberg’s dark streets and back alleys, chaos rules.
Captain Nathan Morgan is one of those charged with bringing order to the home of the war crime trials. A New York homicide detective who spent the war in Army intelligence, he was born to be a spy—and now, in 1945, there is no finer place for his trade than Nuremberg. As the US grapples with the Soviets for postwar supremacy, a serial murderer targets the occupying forces. Nathan Morgan may be the perfect spy, but it’s time for him to turn cop once more.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781480426870
Publisher: MysteriousPress.com/Open Road
Publication date: 10/01/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: NOOK Book
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 602,470
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

J. Sydney Jones (b. 1948) is an American author of fiction and nonfiction. Born in the United States, he studied abroad in Vienna in 1968 and later returned to Austria to live there for nearly two decades. In the late 1970s he began writing travel books, many of which concern central Europe, and published his first thriller, Time of the Wolf, in 1990. In 2009 Jones published The Empty Mirror, a mystery set in late-nineteenth-century Vienna that would become the first book in his Viennese Mystery series, of which the most recent installment is The Keeper of Hands (2013). Jones lives with his wife and son in California. 
J. Sydney Jones (b. 1948) is an American author of fiction and nonfiction. Born in the United States, he studied abroad in Vienna in 1968 and later returned to Austria to live there for nearly two decades. In the late 1970s he began writing travel books, many of which concern central Europe, and published his first thriller, Time of the Wolf, in 1990. In 2009 Jones published The Empty Mirror, a mystery set in late-nineteenth-century Vienna that would become the first book in his Viennese Mystery series, of which the most recent installment is The Keeper of Hands (2013). Jones lives with his wife and son in California. 

Read an Excerpt

Ruin Value

A Mystery of the Third Reich


By J. Sydney Jones

MysteriousPress.com

Copyright © 2013 J. Sydney Jones
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4804-2687-0



CHAPTER 1

November 8, 1945

Nuremberg, Germany


There are 1.5 gallons of blood in the human body. It comes out warm, if allowed an exit wound, around 89.6 degrees Fahrenheit. It's also red, though that is something of an illusion. Actually, plasma, the water of life, the real source of the blood liquid, is clear, like thick water. No color, only clarity.

Sasha Orlov, a corporal in Supply for the Seventh Army Corps in the Soviet military, had blood group type O.

Sasha was known to his comrades as "the Calculator." He counted everything. It was a compulsion. He could do nothing to stop the ceaseless, unrelenting tally of steps walked, buildings passed, glasses of water consumed, birds darting in a flock overhead. Because of it, he was the butt of mirthless jokes, the object of pity.

It also made him an excellent supplies controller. Give him a room full of sacks of wheat and he could count them in an instant; not just estimate their number, but actually tally them in his mind. A boxcar of tinned pork, dried sardines, and canned milk? No problem for Sasha Orlov, the Calculator.

Sasha Orlov's final reckoning: Three hundred and seventy-seven. The number of steps from the tram stop to this corner near Saint Johannis Hospital. Fifteen. The number of vials of penicillin he was carrying with him. Twelve, eleven, forty-four. The expiration date of said penicillin—but that date was no longer affixed to the vials. Twenty-five thousand four hundred and thirty-one. The number of American dollars he had earned in the past four months selling illicit supplies. He dealt only in the capitalist currency.

Sasha Orlov was a rich man.

He was also dying.

Exposed to air, blood tends to coagulate. In minor injuries, small oval bodies in the blood, platelets, collect to form a plug in a blood vessel. Or in more serious injuries, platelets go on full alert, working in an intricate series of steps to ultimately convert fibrinogen to fibrin. This insoluble protein in turn forms a delicate microscopic latticework of fibrils within which the blood plasma and cells are captured, made inert. Free flow ceases; clotting begins.

Sasha Orlov's type O blood was working to expectation, coagulating in brackish puddles amid the mortar and building debris of what was once a ground-floor apothecary with three more floors of apartments above. The blood was steaming in the chill November air, vapors rising from it like steam over a stove.

The problem was that Orlov's blood was clotting only outside his body. The arterial slashes at his throat would not be stanched, would not be plugged by hardworking platelets.

The blood did not look red in the darkness of night; it was a black inchoate field of muck against the lighter rubble. It wet the front of Orlov's thick coat. Above the turned-up collar of that coat, a gash was made from ear to ear, deep enough to rip through skin, muscle, arteries, and trachea, exposing white gaping cartilage and allowing the blood to spurt free at an alarming rate.

The killer looked down at the body, watching closely as the blood slowed from a fountainlike spurt to a trickle, a pulsing flow that followed the autonomic reflexes of the now dead body of the Russian soldier.

Orlov made a hissing sound. It did not come from his mouth; rather it was gas escaping from his belly, pushing out through the new opening in the trachea.

The killer watched and heard all of this, oblivious to the world around, to the voice of a child crying from a cellar not fifty-five yards away from this murder scene.

The first of many, the killer thought, feeling warmth inside, a coursing glow of sweet warmth.

The killer leaned down and placed the neatly cutout page of a novel into the dead man's right hand. Words were underlined on the page—a message, a warning. The dead man's hand was still warm, the fingers pliable, the pads of the fingers spongy to the touch. With a sudden flash of inspiration, the killer took the page of the novel back, slashed several quick marks at the bottom of it with the scalpel, writing in blood. Then the page went back in the dead soldier's hand.

While still crouched by the body, the killer wiped the blade of the scalpel on the Russian's coat, then carefully wrapped it in the purple scrap of velvet kept for that purpose, and stowed it in a coat pocket.

The killer stood once again, alert now. Ready to move away before being detected, back into the night.

Despite the biting cold, the killer's face was glowing with warmth, energized by death, sporting a grin at once ironic and self-satisfied.


"It says here you were incarcerated in Flensburg."

The American paused, expecting Beck to reply. Beck did not comply with the invitation. Instead, his mind was on the food parcel his mother had brought to the prison that afternoon. A whole Pressburger sausage, three oranges (unheard of this time of year!) with only a little browning on their dimpled skins, two Suchard milk chocolate bars with raisins, a tin of Norwegian sardines in oil. Fell off a truck, his mother answered when asked their origin.

Beck regretted the question now; not because it was rude, but stupid. Where would such things come from but the black market?

His mother did not look as if she were getting enough food for herself, and here she was bringing food to her forty-five-year-old son who seemed to have gotten himself into trouble again.

Up to two years ago, Beck had been more accustomed to dishing out trouble to others. Such is life.

"Is that true?" the American persisted.

Beck shot him a weary look. So young, so fervent, so damn healthy. The Americans all appeared to have been raised on a pure vitamin diet. They were enormous. This one not so big as the others, Beck determined, but aggressively healthy looking nonetheless. As if he had just gotten off the squash courts or out of an Olympic-size swimming pool. This American's cheeks radiated warmth; his body sat energetically forward on the chair as if he were about to set off on a marathon. And his face: Such innocence should only be found in Gothic church frescoes. Masaccio, perhaps? Yes, from the church in the Oltrarno. My God, what is its name? Have I completely forgotten all the little joys of my former life?

"Flensburg. That was a camp for German political prisoners, if I am not mistaken," the American army captain said, leafing through his file. He suddenly looked up from the papers in his lap and fixed Beck with a steely gaze: "You seem like you might've been an honest cop. You want to help yourself out here or not?"

Perhaps not so innocent after all, Beck concluded.

"And how might I do that?" Beck said in English, obviously surprising his interlocutor. The American had been using a very proper school German. Beck's English came from the time he spent as a student in London, not long after the First World War. They were building a better world then, one in which cultural exchanges were encouraged. However, Beck's English was not so much the result of exchanging culture, but bodily fluids. Lisa was her name, a nurse at Charing Cross Hospital. Pubs and fog and a tiny bedsit that smelled of sex and tea. That was a time.

"First of all, you can help yourself by telling me why you were in Flensburg," the American said.

Beck got up from the seatless toilet bowl where he had been perched when the American entered, pulled up his pants, and yanked the chain on the overhead tank, flushing the bowl. So much for a quiet release of bowels, he thought.

Beck took a seat on the cot—the only remaining available place in the six-by-eight-foot cell. He sat as upright as possible but was, of course, lower than the American, who was strategically perched on the lone hardback chair by the door. Beck was no stranger to the subtle psychologies of interrogation; he, in turn, fixed the American with his own concentrated gaze.

"Would you like to hear the expurgated or unexpurgated version?"

"The truth will suffice."

Irony. Beck had not credited the young officer with such a facility.

"Let us say, then, that my Gestapo colleagues and I had a falling out over who was really in charge of criminal investigations in the Nuremberg district. That argument manifested itself specifically and, finally, in a needless and idiotic order. I refused to institute it at Kripo; ergo, I was a political criminal."

"The order?"

Beck hesitated, blew air out, shrugged. "To shoot on sight any Jew caught in the district after the final transports had been sent to the occupied territories. It seemed a senseless piece of cruelty. Those people would be sent to their deaths once captured anyway. Why make my Kripo personnel complicit in their murder?"

The American officer was silent, staring at Beck with those innocent but not so innocent eyes.

"Not exactly what you wanted to hear, eh? Not exactly drawing a line in the sand for morality."

"So you admit knowledge of the death camps?"

"Of course. All of Germany knew. The news was not broadcast on the weekly Hitler familyhour broadcast, but we knew. Anyone who says differently is, well ... I understand there are no more Nazis to be found in Germany now. Emigration must have been fierce since the end of the war."

This brought the edge of a smile from the American.

"Look," Beck said. "I think you have the wrong man with me. I've got nothing to give you. Nobody to inform on. We've had a dozen years of informing against one another; we're all soul sick of it. Sick of kids selling their parents to the Gestapo because they were too strict. Of jealous neighbors shopping old Frau Meyer on the second landing because she had half a cube of black-market butter."

The captain listened to the speech, then recrossed his legs. He picked at invisible lint. The view slot in the door in back of the American opened, an eye peered in and then the slot slid quickly shut, causing a sudden puff of air to hit the back of the captain's neck and make him jerk.

"They like to make sure we are safe in here," Beck said with heavy irony. "After Ley's suicide a couple weeks ago, security's been tightened." He was referring to the Nazi labor leader who had wrapped a towel around his neck and hanged himself from the pipe over his toilet. "They want to ensure there are some Nazis left to go on trial." He cast a rumpled smile the American's way. "And I still think you're sniffing at the wrong dog with me. I hire snitches; I don't play that role myself."

"I'm not asking for that sort of collaboration, Herr Beck. Others may, perhaps, but not me."

I, Beck wanted to correct. His usage was British; he found American English almost quaint.

The American waited a silent moment and then looked at his file once again. Beck wondered if he really had any information there beyond directions to his billet and a list of names. Something about the way the American was conducting this interview made Beck wonder if he hadn't been a cop himself.

"Can we get back to Flensburg?" the American asked. "I assume you were liberated with the advancing armies."

Beck let out a small laugh. "Hardly. The advancing army in question was Soviet. Our jailers left in advance of their arrival. As did we prisoners. Not a nice prospect being captured by Ivan."

"And so you made your way back here. To the American zone."

"Back here," Beck emphasized. "To my home."

Beck did not want to go down that road—did not want to tell the American how he'd come home to find it had been obliterated, as was almost all of the inner city of Nuremberg, in the Allied bombing raids of January and February of 1945. The street where he had lived—gone. His apartment house at 23 Breite Gasse—gone. A pile of rubble, scraps of blackened brick and mortar with the detritus of family possessions scattered here and there. He hadn't the heart to even look for a memento. The charred remains of the dozen apartments that had once stood there. Gone, along with his wife of fifteen years, Helga, and their ten-year-old daughter, Lisabette. Had his wife ever known of the secret betrayal involved in their child's name? Not Elisabette, but Lisabette, in memory of his British nurse.

No more betrayal now—all gone.

"And you found yourself in prison once again?"

"That is an interesting way of putting it," Beck replied. He would really like to relieve his bowels now. His three days of constipation seemed about to resolve itself quite abruptly and violently.

The American consulted his files again. "It says here that Chief Inspector Reinhard Manhof denounced you for Kripo collaboration with the Gestapo and had you rearrested. Is that the case?"

"If that is what is says there, it must be so."

Beck had lost all patience now; his bowels were denying him any pretence of Geduld.

"Captain ...?"

"Morgan," the American offered.

"Precisely. Captain Morgan, may we please simply get to it? I will not do a he-said-I-said denial about that idiot Manhof. Suffice it to say he is now chief inspector, a position I held before him for eight years. And I am, conveniently for him, in jail. Neither do I have the will to inform on former members of the Kripo nor the documentary proof to implicate any of my former Gestapo 'colleagues' in their true crimes."

"This isn't about that...."

Beck put a hand up to halt the American.

"And if this interview is not to that end, then it is surely to sound me out about working for your intelligence services. Right? No need to confirm. Prison gossip is notoriously speedy in such matters. Wartime allies are falling out, no? The Soviets make better friends in time of need than in time of peace. And America can use the expertise of people who have been fighting Communism at its borders for almost three decades. Something along those lines. Isn't that what all this elaborate charade is about?"

"You tell me."

"I frankly have no time to tell you. I need very badly to make a return to the sacred precinct in which I was disturbed upon initiation of your visit. And as there is very little privacy afforded in these accommodations ..."

"I'll wait outside, then," Captain Morgan offered.

"No need to," Beck replied. "Earlier, you said I seemed to be an honest cop. Not a bad assessment. With the emphasis on cop. Not a spy. Not an intelligence officer, or whatever it is you euphemistically call it. There is no way I can be of service to you. You have a crime you want me to help solve, come back. We'll talk. Right now I've got more important business."


Captain Nathan Morgan walked down the long hallway of the witness wing of the Palace of Justice. All about him he could hear the rhythmic tapping of prison Morse code. Morgan knew many varieties of such code, but this one was unfamiliar to him. Each prison had its own system. They could be talking about anything from his visit to what would be for breakfast tomorrow. Or maybe it was something more vital, information smuggled from outside being passed along to the right correspondent. A spoon against the plumbing pipes.

The clacking reminded him for a moment of his nighttime listening post in Bern during the war. Spinning the dial of the short-wave radio through the ether over Europe and listening to the cricketlike cacophony of clandestine keymen tapping their coded messages from Paris to Berlin to Moscow and back. The Red and Black Orchestras, the spy cells of every country in the war and neutrals, too. The buzz of telegraphed traffic filled Morgan's nights for months.

His introduction to the world of spying.

Morgan thought of former Chief Inspector Werner Beck as he approached the control point in the witness wing. Something about the man stuck with you. Not his physical presence, that was for sure. A long, rangy fellow who looked badly in need of a good meal. His sandy hair thinning on top and also in need of a cut. A cop's eyes, though.

Morgan had grown up looking into a cop's eyes. He had also lived with a pair of them staring back at him from the mirror for many years. He knew the things that went on behind those gray eyes of Beck's.

Major Hannigan was waiting at the final set of gates.

"You find what you were looking for?" the senior MP asked as he ushered Morgan out of the wing. The question held the same animosity the man had displayed earlier when Morgan had come to him with his orders in hand.

"Not exactly," Morgan confessed.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Ruin Value by J. Sydney Jones. Copyright © 2013 J. Sydney Jones. Excerpted by permission of MysteriousPress.com.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

PART I,
November 8, 1945,
November 10, 1945,
November 11, 1945,
November 12, 1945,
November 13, 1945,
November 14, 1945,
November 15, 1945,
November 16, 1945,
PART II,
November 16, 1945,
November 17, 1945,
November 18, 1945,
November 19, 1945,
PART III,
November 20, 1945,
November 21, 1945,
November 22, 1945,
November 23, 1945,
November 24, 1945,
November 25, 1945,
November 26, 1945,
November 27, 1945,
November 28, 1945,
Acknowledgments,

Interviews

California 

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