Tesmer laughed scornfully. âI thought you were just a sloppy dresser.'
âHey, this is a fifty-mark gown. You don't think I'd tear it just for your benefit, do you?'
âYou could afford to buy it, then you could also afford to lose it. I always thought your kind made too much money.' I leaned back in my chair. I remembered Tesmer as one of Police Major Walther Wecke's hatchet-men, charged with rooting out conservatives and Bolsheviks from the force. A mean bastard if ever there was one. I wondered how Stahlecker managed to survive.
âWhat is it you earn, Gunther? Three? Four hundred marks a week? Probably make as much as me and Stahlecker put together, eh, Stahlecker?' My friend shrugged non-committally.
âI dunno.'
âSee?' said Tesmer. âEven Stahlecker doesn't have any idea how many thousands a year you make.'
âYou're in the wrong job, Tesmer. The way you exaggerate, you should work for the Ministry of Propaganda.' He said nothing. âAll right, all right, I get it. How much is it going to cost me?' Tesmer shrugged, trying to control the grin that threatened to break out on his face.
âFrom a man with a fifty-mark gown? Let's say a round hundred.'
âA hundred? For that cheap little garter-handler? Go and take another look at him, Tesmer. He doesn't have a Charlie Chaplin moustache and a stiff right arm.'
Tesmer stood up. âYou talk too much, Gunther. Let's hope your mouth begins to fray at the edges before it gets you into serious trouble.' He looked at Stahlecker and then back at me. âI'm going for a piss. Your old pitman here has got until I come back into the room to persuade you, otherwise . . .' He pursed his lips and shook his head. As he walked out, I called after him:
âMake sure you lift the seat.' I grinned at Stahlecker.
âHow are you doing, Bruno?'
âWhat is it, Bernie? Have you been drinking? You blue or something? Come on, you know how difficult Tesmer could make things for you. First you plum the man with all that smart talk, and now you want to play the black horse. Pay the bastard.'
âLook, if I don't black horse him a little and drag my heels about paying him that kind of mouse, then he'll figure I'm worth a lot more. Bruno, as soon as I saw that son of a bitch I knew that the evening was going to cost me something. Before I left Kripo he and Wecke had me marked. I haven't forgotten and neither has he. I still owe him some agony.'
âWell, you certainly made it expensive for yourself when you mentioned the price of that gown.'
âNot really,' I said. âIt cost nearer a hundred.'
âChrist,' breathed Stahlecker. âTesmer is right. You are making too much money.' He thrust his hands deep into his pockets and looked squarely at me. âWant to tell me what really happened here?'
âAnother time, Bruno. It was mostly true.'
âExcepting one or two small details.'
âRight. Listen, I need a favour. Can we meet tomorrow? The matinee at the Kammerlichtespiele in the Haus Vaterland. Back row, at four o'clock.'
Bruno sighed, and then nodded. âI'll try.'
âBefore then see if you can't find out something about the Paul Pfarr case.' He frowned and was about to speak when Tesmer returned from the lavatory.
âI hope you wiped the floor.'
Tesmer pointed a face at me in which belligerence was moulded like cornice-work on a Gothic folly. The set of his jaw and the spread of his nose gave him about as much profile as a piece of lead piping. The general effect was early-Paleolithic.
âI hope you decided to get wise,' he growled. There would have been more chance of reasoning with a water buffalo.
âSeems like I don't have much choice,' I said. âI don't suppose there's any chance of a receipt?'
7
Just off Clayallee, on the edge of Dahlem, was the huge wrought-iron gate to Six's estate. I sat in the car for a while and watched the road. Several times I closed my eyes and found my head nodding. It had been a late night. After a short nap I got out and opened the gate. Then I ambled back to the car and turned onto the private road, down a long, gentle slope and into the cool shade cast by the dark pine trees lining its gravelled length.
In daylight Six's house was even more impressive, although I could see now that it was not one but two houses, standing close together: beautiful, solidly built Wilhelmine farmhouses.
I pulled up at the front door, where Ilse Rudel had parked her BMW the night I had first seen her, and got out, leaving the door open just in case the two Dobermanns put in an appearance. Dogs are not at all keen on private investigators, and it's an antipathy that is entirely mutual.
I knocked on the door. I heard it echo in the hall and, seeing the closed shutters, I wondered if I'd had a wasted journey. I lit a cigarette and stood there, just leaning on the door, smoking and listening. The place was about as quiet as the sap in a gift-wrapped rubber tree. Then I heard some footsteps, and I straightened up as the door opened to reveal the Levantine head and round shoulders of the butler, Farraj.
âGood morning,' I said brightly. âI was hoping that I'd find Herr Haupthandler in.' Farraj looked at me with the clinical distaste of a chiropodist regarding a septic toenail.
âDo you have an appointment?' he asked.
âNot really,' I said, handing him my card. âI was hoping he might give me five minutes, though. I was here the other night, to see Herr Six.' Farraj nodded silently, and returned my card.
âMy apologies for not recognizing you, sir.' Still holding the door, he retreated into the hall, inviting me to enter. Having closed it behind him, he looked at my hat with something short of amusement.
âNo doubt you will wish to keep your hat again, sir.'
âI think I had better, don't you?' Standing closer to him, I could detect the very definite smell of alcohol, and not the sort they serve in exclusive gentlemen's clubs.
âVery good, sir. If you'll just wait here for a moment, I'll find Herr Haupthändler and ask him if he can see you.'
âThanks,' I said. âDo you have an ashtray?' I held my cigarette ash aloft like a hypodermic syringe.
âYes, sir.' He produced one made of dark onyx that was the size of a church Bible, and which he held in both hands while I did the stubbing out. When my cigarette was extinguished he turned away and, still carrying the ashtray, he disappeared down the corridor, leaving me to wonder what I was going to say to Haupthändler if he would see me. There was nothing in particular I had in mind, and not for one minute did I imagine that he would be prepared to discuss Ilse Rudel's story about him and Grete Pfarr. I was just poking around. You ask ten people ten dumb questions, and sometimes you hit a raw nerve somewhere. Sometimes, if you weren't too bored to notice, you managed to recognize that you were on to something. It was a bit like panning for gold. Every day you went down to the river and went through pan after pan of mud. And just occasionally, provided you kept your eyes peeled, you found a dirty little stone that was actually a nugget.
I went to the bottom of the stairs and looked up the stairwell. A large circular skylight illuminated the paintings on the scarlet-coloured walls. I was looking at a still life of a lobster and a pewter pot when I heard footsteps on the marble floor behind me.
âIt's by Karl Schuch you know,' said Haupthändler. âWorth a great deal of money.' He paused, and added: âBut very, very dull. Please, come this way.' He led the way into Six's library.
âI'm afraid I can't give you very long. You see, I still have a great many things to do for the funeral tomorrow. I'm sure you understand.' I sat down on one of the sofas and lit a cigarette. Haupthändler folded his arms, the leather of his nutmeg-brown sports jacket creaking across his sizeable shoulders, and leaned against his master's desk.
âNow what was it that you wished to see me about?'
âActually, it's about the funeral,' I said, improvising on what he had given me. âI wondered where it was to be held.'
âI must apologize, Herr Gunther,' he said. âI'm afraid it hadn't occurred to me that Herr Six would wish you to attend. He's left all the arrangements to me while he's in the Ruhr, but he didn't think to leave any instructions regarding a list of mourners.'
I tried to look awkward. âOh, well,' I said, standing up. âNaturally, with a client such as Herr Six I should like to have been able to pay my respects to his daughter. It is customary. But I'm sure he will understand.'
âHerr Gunther,' said Haupthandler, after a short silence. âWould you think it terrible of me if I were to give you an invitation now, by hand?'
âNot at all,' I said. âIf you are sure it won't inconvenience your arrangements.'
âIt's no trouble,' he said. âI have some cards here.' He walked around the desk and pulled open a drawer.
âHave you worked for Herr Six long?'
âAbout two years,' he said absently. âPrior to that I was a diplomat with the German Consular Service.' He took out a pair of glasses from his breast pocket and placed them on the end of his nose before writing out the invitation.
âAnd did you know Grete Pfarr well?'
He glanced up at me briefly. âI really didn't know her at all,' he said. âOther than to say hallo to.'
âDo you know if she had any enemies, jealous lovers, that sort of thing?' He finished writing the card, and pressed it on the blotter.
âI'm quite sure she didn't,' he said crisply, removing his glasses and returning them to his pocket.
âIs that so? What about him? Paul.'
âI can tell you even less about him, I'm afraid,' he said, slipping the invitation into an envelope.
âDid he and Herr Six get on all right?'
âThey weren't enemies, if that's what you're implying. Their differences were purely political.'
âWell, that amounts to something quite fundamental these days, wouldn't you say?'
âNot in this case, no. Now if you'll excuse me, Herr Gunther, I really must be getting on.'
âYes, of course.' He handed me the invitation. âWell, thanks for this,' I said, following him out into the hall. âDo you live here too, Herr Haupthandler?'
âNo, I have an apartment in town.'
âReally? Where?' He hesitated for a moment.
âKurfürstenstrasse,' he said eventually. âWhy do you ask?'
I shrugged. âI ask too many questions, Herr Haupthandler,' I said. âForgive me. It's habit, I'm afraid. A suspicious nature goes with the job. Please don't be offended. Well, I must be going.' He smiled thinly, and as he showed me to the door he seemed relaxed; but I hoped I had said enough to put a few ripples on his pond.
Â
The Hanomag seems to take an age to reach any sort of speed, so it was with a certain amount of misplaced optimism that I took the Avus âSpeedway' back to the centre of town. It costs a mark to get on this highway, but the Avus is worth it: ten kilometres without a curve, all the way from Potsdam to Kurfürstendamm. It's the one road in the city on which the driver who fancies himself as Carraciola, the great racing driver, can put his foot down and hit speeds of up to 150 kilometres an hour. At least, they could in the days before BV Aral, the low-octane substitute petrol that's not much better than meths. Now it was all I could do to get ninety out of the Hanomag's 1.3 litre engine.
I parked at the intersection of Kurfürstendamm and Joachimsthaler Strasse, known as âGrunfeld Corner' because of the department store of the same name which occupies it. When Grunfeld, a Jew, still owned his store, they used to serve free lemonade at the Fountain in the basement. But since the State dispossessed him, as it has with all the Jews who owned big stores, like Wertheim, Hermann Teitz and Israel, the days of free lemonade have gone. If that weren't bad enough, the lemonade you now have to pay for and once got free doesn't taste half as good, and you don't have to have the sharpest taste-buds in the world to realize that they're cutting down on the sugar. Just like they're cheating on everything else.
I sat drinking my lemonade and watching the lift go up and down the tubular glass shaft that allowed you to see out into the store as you rode from floor to floor, in two minds whether or not to go up to the stocking counter and see Carola, the girl from Dagmarr's wedding. It was the sour taste of the lemonade that put me in mind of my own debauched behaviour, and that decided me against it. Instead I left Grunfeld's and walked the short distance down Kurfurstendamm and onto Schlüterstrasse.
A jewellers is one of the few places in Berlin where you can expect to find people queueing to sell rather than to buy. Peter Neumaier's Antique Jewellers was no exception. When I got there the line wasn't quite outside the door, but it was certainly rubbing the glass; and it was older and sadder looking than most of the queues that I was used to standing in. The people waiting there were from a mixture of backgrounds, but mostly they had two things in common: their Judaism and, as an inevitable corollary, their lack of work, which was how they came to be selling their valuables in the first place. At the top of the queue, behind a long glass counter, were two stone-faced shop assistants in good suits. They had a neat line in appraisal, which was to tell the prospective seller how poor the piece actually was and how little it was likely to fetch on the open market.
âWe see stuff like this all the time,' said one of them, wrinkling his lips and shaking his head at the spread of pearls and brooches on the counter beneath him. âYou see, we can't put a price on sentimental value. I'm sure you understand that.' He was a young fellow, half the age of the deflating old mattress of a woman before him, and good-looking too, although in need of a shave, perhaps. His colleague was less forthcoming with his indifference: he sniffed so that his nose took on a sneer, he shrugged a half shrug of his coathanger-sized shoulders, and he grunted unenthusiastically. Silently, he counted out five one-hundred-mark notes from a roll in his skinny miser's hand that must have been worth thirty times as much. The old man he was buying from was undecided about whether or not he should accept what must have been a derisory offer, and with a trembling hand he pointed at the bracelet lying on the piece of cloth he had wrapped it up in.