The Jerusalem File

The Jerusalem File

by Joel Stone
The Jerusalem File

The Jerusalem File

by Joel Stone

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Overview

“Successfully grafts a classic hard-boiled detective plot line onto the complexities and dangers of life in modern Israel” (Publishers Weekly).

Levin has been living in Jerusalem for most of his adult life. Retired from the security services, he lives alone a few streets away from his ex-wife, continents away from his children. Adrift, Levin accepts a request to follow the wife of an acquaintance and discover her secret lover. Unlike the chaotic, incomprehensible suicide bombings he’s used to dealing with, at least this assignment seems like one that could possibly be solved.

As Levin watches the woman, Deborah, he begins to assess her as a potential lover might. And when the man her husband believes to be her paramour is murdered—and Deborah, in desperation, turns to Levin with her own unexpected request—his own moral universe becomes as conflicted as the struggle between Arab and Jew for the fate of the fabled city.

From the Pulitzer Prize–nominated author of A Town Called Jericho, this is both a twisting thriller and a “spare, pensive but never brooding study of obsessive love” (Kirkus Reviews).

The Jerusalem File is styled as a neo-noir mystery story set in contemporary Jerusalem. From the first page, however, the book throws off reflections of its far deeper facets. Joel Stone uses his short and elegantly crafted thriller as the occasion for something much more ambitious—a meditation on the politics of the modern Middle East and, at the same time, the more intimate politics of the human heart . . . A page-turner.” —Los Angeles Times

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781609459321
Publisher: Europa Editions, Incorporated
Publication date: 10/08/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 147
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Joel Stone was born in Brooklyn. He graduated from Princeton University and was a Fulbright Scholar at the Sorbonne. His first novel, A Town Called Jericho, was published in 1992 and nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. He died in 2007 and is survived by his wife, the poet Dorothy Stone.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Let's begin this way. Levin went to the movies. It was pure Hollywood, an action epic — the panoramic and the deeply personal — meaning widescreen violence and screw-tight sex, very good guys versus the world's worst, along with breathtaking special effects. Levin saw these dreadful movies once in a while, for reasons ranging from amusement to a malice toward pop America and her works. Today, he was primarily here to kill time.

But the movie couldn't quite kill enough. The sun was still shining when he came out of the moviehouse smack into Jerusalem's light. No place he knew had such a contrast between the darkness and the light ... The sun glaring on old yellow stone. The shaded recesses of alleys and arcades. The uniform darkness of synagogue, church and mosque. God created light. But suppose not. Suppose light came first, and then the cool, consoling dark.

At a kiosk, he bought a copy of the Holy Land Times and took it into a cafe, going to an inside table well back from the sidewalk. The other patrons had the same idea. The rear tables were occupied, the front ones were not, a no-man's land in a sidewalk cafe. This was Jewish West Jerusalem, where people peered from behind coffee cups, on the watch for a man or a woman with extra bulk around the middle, or too-loose clothes, or fast nervous eyes, or eyes so vacant they looked dead. It was a Jewish national game, picking out the Arab suicide bomber, adding up all the signs and praying that you were wrong. Nobody was exempt, because disguises were part of the game: the bomb might be hiding in the Yeshiva student's briefcase, or strapped beneath the Hassidic's long coat, or under the benign Bedouin's robe. Any treachery was possible. So when a pregnant Palestinian woman entered the cafe, in her headscarf and floor-length abaya, all heads immediately turned, even those of the two Arab waiters. This was rare enough to be alarming in Jerusalem, a lone Arab woman in a Jewish cafe. Levin watched from behind his open newspaper. The woman took a table in the back, waited quietly, and ordered tea. That was reassuring. In the dash to paradise, the suicider rarely stopped and sat down. And yet, the tension lingered: what was the woman expecting, what was the abaya pregnant with?

Near him, a quartet of Israeli teenage girls — did their mothers know they were here? — were chatting and giggling over dishes of ice cream. What sweetness, what innocence, except for their tight T-shirts, skimpy shorts and bared bellies. At his advanced age, what was Levin to do? He really and truly resented them, little sirens with trims of baby fat. They couldn't know the impact they had on a man, they couldn't. Or could they? It was undeclared war between their bare bellies and the Arab woman's bulging yet modestly covered one, with its promise of an explosion, of one kind or another, for Jewish Israel.

And then Levin was suddenly on real alert. His reason for being here, one half of it, had walked in, a stocky, thirtyish man, rumpled and bookish in a round-shouldered way, and in fact carrying a book, an oversized art book, which could be a genuine aspect of him or else something to hide behind. Levin knew both to be true. He was Weiss, an assistant professor, an art historian. Passing Levin, he sat down at a table in the corner, where he immediately ducked behind his opened book. Levin heard the waiter repeat his order for an iced cappuccino. The big art book had a woman's portrait on the cover; Botticelli, said the title. It had no secret meaning for Levin. Perhaps it meant something to the parties in the case.

He had his Holy Land Times up in front of him and peeked around it the way Weiss did with his art book, not the first time they had sat in this type of situation. They were both waiting for the same event, the same arrival, and before very long she walked in, Levin's other reason for being here, a striking, well dressed woman, dark-haired, well tanned, age forty-two, Deborah, his client's wife. She went to the table next to Weiss, without hesitation, with nothing to hide behind either. For an instant, the Botticelli moved, Levin saw Weiss's bright, happy eyes, and felt a bit like scum, sitting here and spying on them. The waiter came. She ordered an iced cappuccino also, and then sat sipping it through a straw. Levin strained for something between them, a word, a sign, hands reaching under the tables. All he saw, when Weiss's head bobbed up again, was that he too was sipping through a straw. Side by side, secretly intimate, their parted lips were draining their glasses.

They were lovers, according to her husband, Kaye, his manic client. It was clear to Kaye that Weiss, in the plaintiff's words, was regularly fucking Deborah. They might appear in innocent play, like sipping through straws, exchanging side-glances in a shop, sitting at opposite ends of a bench. But it was all filth, all foreplay, Kaye knew beyond all doubt. He wouldn't be fooled. Second opinions didn't interest him. Levin's job was to prove that Kaye was right.

They connected here, but if the plot held, the cafe was only their point of contact, not their final destination. The plan would vary; this time, Weiss was the first to leave. Without warning, he closed his book, stood up, and walked past the empty sidewalk tables and up the pleasant, tree-lined street. Levin sat still. He knew that he had only to follow Deborah to have them both; and five minutes later, that moment came. He was sorry to leave, not merely because he was so comfortable here. He felt he was wasting his time, hunting for proof of the lovers' guilt. Besides, he wished he could have looked at the teenage girls a little longer. It was pretty shameful, that here he was, a more than middle-aged man, undone by clingy T-shirts and taboo baby fat. Not that he would ever touch them. But how nice to be in their vicinity, to store up the memory, and not let Kaye's obsession with Deborah take him away. They were so young. What a shame — what a shame it was, in every burning sense of the word.

When he was outside the cafe, Levin looked back. All was the same: the vacant sidewalk tables, the people sitting in the back, the pregnant Arab woman, the Israeli teenage girls. Body parts, both luscious and horrific, blew through his imagination, equally beyond his control.

Yet all seemed peaceful. The cafe was not suddenly blown up. The customers inside lingered and drank their coffee. The girls laughed and licked their spoons. Levin returned to the trail of Deborah Kaye, who was following Weiss to their love nest.

Around them — it was part of the picture — the epic struggle went on, the blood bath, the terror and the counter-terror, the good guys against the bad guys, the endless fighting, with the suicide bombers claiming credit for the breathtaking special effects.

CHAPTER 2

Jews and Arabs. As enemies, they were made for each other. First of all, each had a long memory. Levin knew you always started with that. Then, each was absolutely in the right and had no trouble expressing it, with impassioned lips, hands, this or that century's weaponry. Add the fact, double-edgy, that they were physically alike, if you peeked under their beards and their clothes, Semites both, smallish, dark, dark-eyed, with the same easy to draw big nose. Abraham and Ibrahim. In a bathhouse, given the dual circumcisions, it wouldn't be so simple to tell them apart. Of course, their clothes were a different story, the more so the more basic they were: The black-hatted, black-coated ultra-Orthodox, town dwellers to the core. The head-swathed and sandal wearing Arabs, looking like nomads wherever they dwelled.

Their battle might go on forever, if the past meant anything, the holy Jews and the holy Arabs, laying claim to the same holy land. This was a battle of the truest of Biblical proportions: the vastness of the stakes and the tinyness of the terrain. For Levin, the only way to continue living here was to anticipate the worst, try to go unnoticed, and be uncommonly careful. Go about your business. Read about the Arab terror and the Jewish bulldozers and assassinations, take sides, even change sides, if only for a day. Don't despair at the anger all around you, since hearts that harden can also soften, maybe. Trust yourself. Follow your own good nose, Jewish or Arab, and you might end up all right. Of course, it helped to be one of the non-practicing, the non-believing, someone who thought that blowing up both the Dome of the Rock and the Western Wall would be a good start toward peace. Kick out the holiness. Plant grass and trees there instead.

It also helped to be retired, finally detached, from his life in government in the security service. The heroic days were far behind him. He had been on secret missions, armed and disguised, but in the later years had manned a desk as a faceless intelligence analyst. He was in no sense a detective, whatever people thought, and even if he now found himself trailing an adulterous wife for a jealous husband. His sole unpaying client was something of a friend, who had begged Levin to do it; but the man inspired Levin's sympathy less and less. Kaye might have been in a bad situation. But he was also obsessive and vicious. It reminded Levin of a movie in which a fanatic cornered his prey, saw him jump to his death, and immediately leaped too, in order to continue the pursuit into hell. Kaye could be capable of that. He was thirstily and hungrily jealous, which meant he wouldn't stop until his suspicion proved mathematically true. He would hound Weiss and his wife until it was. And then what? Exposure? Divorce? Something bloody? Levin was growing uneasy. Playing detective, he had become a player for real. Whatever the outcome, he could be responsible.

He had been two weeks on the trail. It had tempted him as something interesting and rather charitable to do with his time. But he should have foreseen the embarrassment. From intelligence analyst he had gone to the gutters — gone from being a secret eye to a private eye, by any measure a big step down. It was shabby work. One day he would track Deborah to the various stops she made, and the next day he would follow Weiss. He would wait outside the place where they were finally headed, seeing nothing physical, only the moving hands of his watch, while his mind filled up with porno guesswork. He didn't take his licensed pistol along; except for Kaye no one seemed dangerous. Instead, he had a loaded camera, a tiny one, at the ready in his pocket. Kaye of course wanted pictures, meaning pictures that were conclusively obscene, graphic guilt being the object of it all. Levin tried to discourage him about the pictures and the degree of snooping they would require. He honestly couldn't visualize himself crashing in on the couple.

Was this to be his retirement hobby? He moved in such narrow passages these days that being invited into someone else's life, becoming a voyeur for a man he didn't even really like all that much, had a perverse attraction — a strange logic.

Part of him said, "Get out now." but for some reason he didn't completely understand, the other part said, "Stick around. This could get interesting." But despite his training, there were kinks in this friend and this friendly favor he hadn't anticipated. For now, he asked Kaye to be patient, to rely on circumstance, such as the lovers taking a hotel room, or clinched in a parked car, or lying together on the beach — or never doing any of these things, which might at least clear them of adultery. It could be they were Platonic soul-mates, sharing a love for Florentine art, one of Weiss's classroom specialties, something approaching that. Kaye only laughed at the idea. He wanted pictures of what he logically assumed and coolly expressed, that Weiss was sticking it into his wife. Weiss was a filthy pig — Veiss, as Kaye sneered, obviously playing on the English sound of it, besides nailing him with Vice. Kaye had no end of witty commentary and moral outrage. All right — one picture. One picture of the lovers. To be fair, Kaye was entitled to that.

Deborah was half a block ahead of him, the distance that Levin normally maintained. He felt secure enough. So far, she and Weiss had kept to neighborhoods in West Jerusalem, busy Jewish streets where they wouldn't stand out, and where Levin didn't stand out either. Like it or not, he was built for anonymity, medium all the way round, medium height, medium weight, medium gray. Unlike the secret-eye days, his disguise now was his unadorned self, his only prop the Holy Land Times, which he could sit and hide behind, or swat flies with, or roll up and swing as he walked, as he was doing now. He had actually met Weiss once, but that was at a public event and a few years ago and clearly had been forgotten. Deborah he had never met at all. A youthful type, she had a free, loose walk in her smart outfit and high heels. She was a woman you would notice, with her curly dark hair, her tanned, squared shoulders. He could picture her on the deck of a sailboat, or playing a good game of tennis. She wasn't stunning, but she dressed splendidly. Today she was wearing a sleeveless white cotton dress and carried a small white-sequined purse, in contrast to the coffee-table art book that Weiss sweatily lugged around. She no longer practiced law, but she taught a class at the law school, so she wasn't completely idle. She might be bored though. Levin figured she would have to be pretty desperate, too. He couldn't fathom what she saw in Weiss, beyond his fawning attention and his being ten years younger, which shouldn't have been enough for a woman like her. But maybe it was. One never knew.

As she walked, she window-shopped, the expected things, dresses, jewelry, shoes, a fancy chocolatier. Looking in, she would stand with her feet apart and her hand on her hip. It was very likely just a mannerism, but Levin would look sharply around for Weiss, as if she were slyly posing for her eager lover. Their liaisons were made of moments like that, touchless, tantalizing, like the two of them sitting with their cappuccinos and sucking on straws. When he called them lovers, Levin still had no proof. But being suspicious of people kept you alert. Back in the service, hot suspects were filed with known terrorists, just to be safe.

Few Arabs mingled here on Jewish Jerusalem's streets, though many worked in the restaurants and shops, often out of sight, in the kitchens and small back rooms. What made it more pathetic was that they were happy to get the work. If this enraged them, they couldn't show it, not there on the job. But their hearts must have leaped when one of their own hit back, pushed a button, exploded a bomb — Levin knew they must, even if most recognized the horror. Sometimes it wasn't human not to be inhuman. The same was true on his own, the Jewish side too. Kaye, Deborah, Weiss, they were probably in sympathy with the Arabs, and could understand their longing for a homeland. Levin knew this because he moved in the same enlightened Jewish circles. But when the Arab bomb struck, all that went up in smoke. The tribes of Israel could turn savage too, and bomb and bulldoze in revenge.

As she looked at shoes and chocolates, was she thinking about sex and Weiss? It was interesting how the flow, the story, was everything. If he merely passed her on the street, he would have given her a second glance, beyond a doubt. But would he be visualizing her about to strip off her clothes and totally abandon herself to sex? Probably not. As a cheating wife, she amassed sexuality, took it on as a sinking ship does water. Her walk in high heels dripped with it — her curly dark hair seemed dampish, a little like prying into her lower, tangy patch of mossy hair. Levin honestly didn't think he would use the camera. But he wouldn't mind having the opportunity to use it, being that close to the intimacies of Deborah Kaye.

She went into a jewelry store. Perhaps she wanted to escape the heat, or to browse and fill in time. She had been glancing at her watch, as if waiting for zero hour, whatever positive joy zero meant. Levin stationed himself at a bus stop across the street, pretending to read his Holy Land Times. Bus stops were notorious terrorist targets. If a bus came, or a queue formed, he would move; meanwhile, nobody coming or going had the look of a suicide bomber. By its name, the jewelry store was Armenian, so you could call it neutral ground, neither Jewish nor Arab, although how risk-free it was depended on the meaning of risk. An Armenian himself had warned Levin: "Never buy jewelry from an Armenian."

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "The Jerusalem File"
by .
Copyright © 2009 Dorothy Stone, Estate of Joel Stone.
Excerpted by permission of Europa Editions.
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.

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