âYou'll forgive me, but I seem to have lost my sense of humour.' He opened the safe, and withdrew several packets of banknotes. âI believe we said five per cent. Would 40,000 close our account?'
âYou could try it,' I said, as he placed eight of the packets on the desk. Then he closed the safe, rolled back the carpet, and pushed the money towards me.
âThey're all hundreds, I'm afraid.'
I picked up one of the bundles and tore the paper wrapping off. âJust as long as they've got Herr Liebig's picture on them,' I said.
Smiling thinly, Six stood up. âI don't think we need ever meet again, Herr Gunther.'
âAren't you forgetting something?'
He began to look impatient. âI don't think so,' he said testily.
âOh, but I'm sure you are.' I put a cigarette in my mouth and struck a match. Bending my head towards the flame I took a couple of quick puffs and then dropped the match into the ashtray. âThe necklace.' Six remained silent. âBut then, you already have it back, don't you?' I said. âOr at least you know where it is, and who has got it.'
His nose wrinkled with distaste, as if it detected a bad smell. âYou're not going to be tiresome about this are you, Herr Gunther? I do hope not.'
âAnd what about those papers? The evidence of your involvement with organized crime that Von Greis gave to your son-in-law. Or do you imagine that Red Dieter and his associates are going to persuade the Teichmüllers to tell them where they are? Is that it?'
âI've never heard of a Red Dieter, or â '
âSure you have, Six. He's a crook, just like you. During the steel strikes he was the gangster you paid to intimidate your workers.'
Six laughed and lit his cigar. âA gangster,' he said. âReally, Herr Gunther, your imagination is running away with you. Now, if you don't mind, you've been very handsomely paid, so if you will please leave I would be most grateful. I'm a very busy man, and I have a lot of things to do.'
âI guess things are difficult without a secretary to help. What if I were to tell you that the man calling himself Teichmüller, the one that Red's thugs are probably beating the shit out of right now, is really your private secretary, Hjalmar Haupthandler?'
âThat is ridiculous,' he said. âHjalmar is visiting some friends in Frankfurt.'
I shrugged. âIt's a simple matter to get Red's boys to ask Teichmüller what his real name is. Perhaps he's already told them; but then, Teichmüller is the name on his new passport, so they could be forgiven for not believing him. He purchased it from the same man he was planning to sell the diamonds to. One for him and one for the girl.'
Six sneered at me. âAnd does this girl have a real name too?' he said.
âOh yes. Her name is Hannah Roedl, although your son-in-law preferred to call her Eva. They were lovers, at least they were until she murdered him.'
âThat's a lie. Paul never had a mistress. He was devoted to my Grete.'
âCome off it, Six. What did you do to them that made him turn his back on her? That made him hate you bad enough to want to put you behind bars?'
âI repeat, they were devoted to each other.'
âI admit it's possible that they might have become reconciled to each other not long before they were killed, with the discovery that your daughter was pregnant.' Six laughed. âAnd so Paul's mistress decided to get her own back.'
âNow you really are being ridiculous,' he said. âYou call yourself a detective and you don't know that my daughter was physically incapable of having children.'
I felt my jaw. âAre you sure about that?'
âGood God, man, do you think it's something that I might have forgotten? Of course I'm sure.'
I walked round Six's desk and looked at the photographs that were arranged there. I picked one of them up, and stared grimly at the woman in the picture. I recognized her immediately. It was the woman from the beach house at Wannsee; the woman I had socked; the woman who I had thought was Eva, and was now calling herself Frau Teichmüller; the woman who in all probability had killed her husband and his mistress: it was Six's only daughter, Grete. As a detective, you have to expect to make mistakes; but it is nothing short of humiliating to come face to face with evidence of your own stupidity; and it is all the more galling when you discover that the evidence has been staring you in the face all along.
âHerr Six, this is going to sound crazy, I know, but I now believe that at least until yesterday afternoon your daughter was alive, and preparing to fly to London with your private secretary.'
Six's face darkened, and for a moment I thought he was going to attack me. âWhat the hell are you babbling about now, you bloody fool?' he roard. âWhat do you mean “alive”? My daughter is dead and buried.'
âI suppose that she must have come home unexpectedly and found Paul in bed with his bit of brush, both of them drunk as cats. Grete shot them both and then, realizing what she had done, she telephoned the only person she felt she could turn to, Haupthandler. He was in love with her. He would have done anything for her, and that included helping her to get away with murder.'
Six sat down heavily. He was pale and trembling. âI don't believe it,' he said. But it was clear that he was finding my explanation only too plausible.
âI expect it was his idea to burn the bodies and make it look like it was your daughter who had died in bed with her husband, and not his mistress. He took Grete's wedding-ring and put it on the other woman's finger. Then he had the bright idea of taking the diamonds out of the safe and making it look like a burglary. That's why he left the door open. The diamonds were to stake their new life somewhere. New lives and new identities. But what Haupthandler didn't know was that somebody had already been in the safe that evening and removed certain papers that were compromising to you. This fellow was a real expert, a puzzler not long out of prison. A neat worker too. Not the sort to use explosives or do anything untidy like leave a safe door open. As drunk as they were, I'll bet that Paul and Eva never even heard him. One of Red's boys, of course. Red used to carry out all your dodgy little schemes, didn't he? While Goering's man Von Greis had these documents, things were merely inconvenient. The Prime Minister is a pragmatist. He could use the evidence of your previous criminality to ensure that you were useful to him, and make you toe the Party's economic line. But when Paul and the Black Angels got hold of them, that was altogether more uncomfortable. You knew that Paul wanted to destroy you. Backed into a corner you had to do something. So, as usual, you got Red Dieter to take care of it.
âBut later on, with Paul and the girl dead, and the diamonds gone from the safe, it looked to you as though Red's man had been greedy, and that he'd taken more than he was supposed to. Not unreasonably you concluded that it was he who had killed your daughter, and so you told Red to put things right. Red managed to kill one of the two burglars, the man who had driven the car; but he missed the other, the one who had opened the safe, who therefore still had the papers and, you assumed, the diamonds. That's where I came in. Because you couldn't be sure that it wasn't Red himself who had double-crossed you, and so you probably didn't tell him about the diamonds, just as you didn't tell the police.'
Six took the dead cigar from out of the corner of his mouth and laid it, unsmoked, on the ashtray. He was starting to look very old.
âI have to hand it to you,' I said. âYour reasoning was perfect: find the man with the diamonds and you would find the man with the documents. And when you found out that Helfferich hadn't hazed you, you put him on my tail. I led him to the man with the diamonds and, you thought, the documents too. At this very moment your German Strength associates are probably trying to persuade Herr and Frau Teichmüller to tell them where Mutschmann is. He's the man who really has the documents. And naturally they won't know what the hell he's talking about. Red won't like that. He's not a very patient man, and I'm sure I don't have to remind you of all people of what that means.'
The steel magnate stared into space, as if he had not heard one word I had said. I grabbed the lapels of his jacket, hauled him to his feet, and slapped him hard.
âDid you hear what I said? These murderers, these torturers, have your daughter.' His mouth went as slack as an empty douche-bag. I slapped it again.
âWe've got to stop them.'
âSo where's he got them?' I let him go and pushed him away from me.
âOn the river,' he said. âThe Grosse Zug, near Schmöckwitz.'
I picked up the telephone. âWhat's the number?'
Six swore. âIt's not on the phone,' he gasped. âOh Christ, what are we going to do?'
âWe'll have to go there,' I said. âWe could drive there, but it would be quicker by boat.'
Six sprang round the desk. âI've got a slipper at a mooring close by. We can drive there in five minutes.'
Stopping only to collect the boat keys and a can of petrol, we took the BMW and drove to the shores of the lake. The water was busier than on the previous day. A stiff breeze had encouraged the presence of a large number of small yachts, and their white sails covered the surface of the water like the wings of hundreds of moths.
I helped Six remove the green tarpaulin from the boat, and poured petrol into the tank while he connected the battery and started the engine. The slipper roared into life at the third time of asking, and the five-metre polished-wood hull strained at the mooring ropes, eager to be up-river. I threw Six the first line, and having untied the second I stepped quickly into the boat beside him. Then he wrenched the wheel to one side, punched the throttle lever and we jerked forwards.
It was a powerful boat and as fast as anything that even the river-police might have had. We raced up the Havel towards Spandau, Six holding the white steering-wheel grimly, oblivious to the effect that the slipper's enormous wake was having on the other waterway craft. It slapped against the hulls of boats moored under trees or beside small jetties, bringing their irate owners out on deck to shake their fists and utter shouts that were lost in the noise of the slipper's big engine. We went east on to the Spree.
âI hope to God we're not too late,' shouted Six. He had quite recovered his former vigour, and stared resolutely ahead of him, the man of action, with only a slight frown on his face to give a clue to his anxiety.
âI'm usually an excellent judge of a man's character,' he said, as if by way of explanation, âbut if it's any consolation to you, Herr Gunther, I'm afraid I gravely underestimated you. I had not expected you to be as doggedly inquisitive. Frankly, I thought you'd do precisely what you were told. But then you're not the kind of man who takes kindly to be being told what to do, are you?'
âWhen you get a cat to catch the mice in your kitchen, you can't expect it to ignore the rats in the cellar.'
âI suppose not,' he said.
We continued east, up-river, past the Tiergarten and Museum Island. By the time we turned south towards Treptower Park and Köpenick, I had asked him what grudge his son-in-law had had against him. To my surprise he showed no reluctance to answer my question; nor did he affect the indignant, rose-tinted viewpoint that had characterized all his previous remarks concerning members of his family, living and dead.
âAs well-acquainted with my personal affairs as you are, Herr Gunther, you probably don't need to be reminded that Ilse is my second wife. I married my first wife, Lisa, in 1910, and the following year she became pregnant. Unfortunately things went badly and our child was still-born. Not only that, but there was no possibility of her having another child. In the same hospital was an unmarried girl who had given birth to a healthy child at about the same time. She had no way of looking after it, so my wife and I persuaded her to let us adopt her daughter. That was Grete. We never told her she was adopted while my wife was alive. But after she died, Grete discovered the truth, and set about trying to trace her real mother.
âBy this time of course Grete was married to Paul, and was devoted to him. For his part, Paul was never worthy of her. I suspect he was rather more keen on my family name and money than he was on my daughter. But to everyone else they must have seemed like a perfectly happy couple.
âWell, all that changed overnight when Grete finally tracked down her real mother. The woman was a gypsy from Vienna, working in a Bierkeller on Potsdamer Platz. If it was a shock to Grete it was the end of the world to that little shit Paul. Something called racial impurity, whatever that amounts to, gypsies running the Jews a close second for unpopularity. Paul blamed me for not having informed Grete earlier. But when I first saw her I didn't see a gypsy child, but a beautiful healthy baby, and a young mother who was as keen as Lisa and I that we should adopt her and give her the best in life. Not that it would have mattered if she'd been a rabbi's daughter. We'd still have taken her. Well, you remember what it was like then, Herr Gunther. People didn't make distinctions like they do these days. We were all just Germans. Of course, Paul didn't see it that way. All he could think of was the threat Grete now posed to his career in the S S and the Party.' He laughed bitterly.
We came to Grünau, home of the Berlin Regatta Club. On a large lake on the other side of some trees, a 2,000-metre Olympic rowing course had been marked out. Above the noise of the slipper's engine could be heard the sound of a brass band, and a public-address system describing the afternoon's events.
âThere was no reasoning with him. Naturally, I lost my temper with him, and called him and his beloved Fuhrer all sorts of names. After that we were enemies. There was nothing I could do for Grete. I watched his hate breaking her heart. I urged her to leave him, but she wouldn't. She refused to believe that he wouldn't learn to love her again. And so she stayed with him.'