Read The Pale Criminal Online

Authors: Philip Kerr

The Pale Criminal (22 page)

‘What garter gun? I haven't got a gun like that. The only lighter I'm carrying is there on the table.'
‘Everyone who's worked with you knows about that gun. You've bragged about it often enough. Show me the gun and you're in the clear. But if you're not carrying it, then I'll figure it's because you had to get rid of it.'
‘What are you talking about? Like I said, I don't have–'
Korsch stood up. He said: ‘Come on, Eb. You showed that gun to me only a couple of days ago. You even said that you were never without it.'
‘You piece of shit. Take his side against one of your own, would you? Can't you see? He's not one of us. He's one of Heydrich's fucking spies. He doesn't give two farts about Kripo.'
‘That's not the way I see it,' Korsch said quietly. ‘So how about it? Do we get to see the gun or not?'
Deubel shook his head, smiled and wagged a finger at me.
‘You can't prove anything. Not a thing. You know that, don't you?'
I pushed my chair away with the backs of my legs. I needed to be on my feet to say what I was going to say.
‘Maybe so. All the same, you're off this case. I don't particularly give a damn what happens to you, Deubel, but as far as I'm concerned you can slither back to whichever excremental corner of this place you came from. I'm choosy about who I have to work with. I don't like killers.'
Deubel bared his yellow teeth even further. His grin looked like the keyboard of an old and badly out of tune piano. Hitching up his shiny flannel trousers he squared his shoulders and pointed his belly in my direction. It was all I could do to resist slamming my fist right into it, but starting a fight like that would probably have suited him very well.
‘You want to open your eyes, Gunther. Take a walk down to the cells and the interrogation rooms and see what's happening in this place. Choosy about who you work with? You poor swine. There are people being beaten to death here, in this building. Probably as we speak. Do you think anyone really gives a damn about what happens to some cheap little pervert? The morgue is full of them.'
I heard myself reply, with what sounded even to me like almost hopeless naivete, ‘Somebody has to give a damn, otherwise we're no better than criminals ourselves. I can't stop other people from wearing dirty shoes, but I can polish my own. Right from the start you knew that was the way I wanted it. But you had to do it your own way, the Gestapo way, that says a woman's a witch if she floats and innocent if she sinks. Now get out of my sight before I'm tempted to see if my clout with Heydrich goes as far as kicking your arse out of Kripo.'
Deubel sniggered. ‘You're a renthole,' he said, and having stared Korsch out until his boozy breath obliged him to turn away, Deubel lurched away.
Korsch shook his head. ‘I never liked that bastard,' he said, ‘but I didn't think he was–' He shook his head again.
I sat down wearily and reached for the desk drawer and the bottle I kept there.
‘Unfortunately he's right,' I said, filling a couple of glasses. I met Korsch's quizzical stare and smiled bitterly. ‘Charging a Berlin bull with murder ...' I laughed. ‘Shit, you might just as well try and arrest drunks at the Munich beer festival.'
13
Sunday, 25 September
‘Is Herr Hirsch at home?'
The old man answering the door straightened and then nodded. ‘I am Herr Hirsch,' he said.
‘You are Sarah Hirsch's father?'
‘Yes. Who are you?'
He must have been at least seventy, bald, with white hair growing long over the back of his collar, and not very tall, stooped even. It was hard to imagine this man having fathered a fifteen-year-old daughter. I showed him my badge.
‘Police,' I said. ‘Please don't be alarmed. I'm not here to make any trouble for you. I merely wish to question your daughter. She may be able to describe a man, a criminal.'
Recovering a little of his colour after the sight of my credentials, Herr Hirsch stood to one side and silently ushered me into a hall that was full of Chinese vases, bronzes, blue-patterned plates and intricate balsa-wood carvings in glass cases. These I admired while he closed and locked the front door, and he mentioned that in his youth he had been in the German navy and had travelled widely in the Far East. Aware now of the delicious smell that filled the house, I apologized and said that I hoped I wasn't disturbing the family meal.
‘It will be a while yet before we sit down and eat,' said the old man. ‘My wife and daughter are still working in the kitchen.' He smiled nervously, no doubt unaccustomed to the politeness of public officials, and led me into a reception room.
‘Now then,' he said, ‘you said that you wished to speak to my daughter Sarah. That she may be able to identify a criminal.'
‘That's right,' I said. ‘One of the girls from your daughter's school has disappeared. It's quite possible she was abducted. One of the men, questioning some of the girls in your daughter's class, discovered that several weeks ago Sarah was herself approached by a strange man. I should like to see if she can remember anything about him. With your permission.'
‘But of course. I'll go and fetch her,' he said, and went out.
Evidently this was a musical family. Beside a shiny black Bechstein grand were several instrument cases, and a number of music-stands. Close to the window which looked out on to a large garden was a harp, and in most of the family photographs on the sideboard, a young girl was playing a violin. Even the oil painting above the fireplace depicted something musical–a piano recital I supposed. I was standing looking at it and trying to guess the tune when Herr Hirsch returned with his wife and daughter.
Frau Hirsch was much taller and younger than her husband, perhaps no more than fifty – a slim, elegant woman with a set of pearls to match. She wiped her hands on her pinafore and then grasped her daughter by her shoulders, as if wishing to emphasize her parental rights in the face of possible interference from a state which was avowedly hostile to her race.
‘My husband says that a girl is missing from Sarah's class at school,' she said calmly. ‘Which girl is it?'
‘Emmeline Steininger,' I said.
Frau Hirsch turned her daughter towards her a little.
‘Sarah,' she scolded, ‘why didn't you tell us that one of your friends had gone missing?'
Sarah, an overweight but healthy, attractive adolescent, who could not have conformed less to Streicher's racist stereotype of the Jew, being blue-eyed and fair-haired, gave an impatient toss of her head, like a stubborn little pony.
‘She's run away, that's all. She was always talking about it. Not that I care much what's happened to her. Emmeline Steininger's no friend of mine. She's always saying bad things about Jews. I hate her, and I don't care if her father is dead.'
‘That's enough of that,' her father said firmly, probably not caring to hear much about fathers who were dead. ‘It doesn't matter what she said. If you know something that will help the Kommissar to find her, then you must tell him. Is that clear?'
Sarah pulled a face. ‘Yes, Daddy,' she yawned, and threw herself down into an armchair.
‘Sarah, really,' said her mother. She smiled nervously at me. ‘She's not normally like this, Kommissar. I must apologize.'
‘That's all right,' I smiled, sitting down on the footstool in front of Sarah's chair.
‘On Friday, when one of my men spoke to you, Sarah, you told him you remembered seeing a man hanging around near your school, perhaps a couple of months ago. Is that right?' She nodded. ‘Then I'd like you to try and tell me everything that you can remember about him.'
She chewed her fingernail for a moment, and inspected it thoughtfully. ‘Well, it was quite a while ago,' she said.
‘Anything you might recall could help me. For instance, what time of day was it?' I took out my notebook and laid it on my thigh.
‘It was going-home time. As usual I was going home by myself.' She turned her nose up at the memory of it. ‘Anyway, there was this car near the school.'
‘What kind of car?'
She shrugged. ‘I don't know makes of cars, or anything like that. But it was a big, black one, with a driver in the front.'
‘Was he the one who spoke to you?'
‘No, there was another man in the back seat. I thought they were policemen. The one sitting in the back had the window down and he called to me as I came through the gate. I was by myself. Most of the other girls had gone already. He asked me to come over, and when I did he told me that I was–' She blushed a little and stopped.
‘Go on,' I said.
‘–that I was very beautiful, and that he was sure my father and mother were very proud to have a daughter like me.' She glanced awkwardly at her parents. ‘I'm not making it up,' she said with something approaching amusement. ‘Honestly, that's what he said.'
‘I believe you, Sarah,' I said. ‘What else did he say?'
‘He spoke to his driver and said, wasn't I a fine example of German maidenhood, or something stupid like that.' She laughed. ‘It was really funny.' She caught a look from her father that I didn't see, and settled down again. ‘Anyway, it was something like that. I can't remember exactly.'
‘And did the driver say anything back to him?'
‘He suggested to his boss that they could give me a ride home. Then the one in the back asked me if I'd like that. I said that I'd never ridden in one of those big cars before, and that I'd like to–'
Sarah's father sighed loudly. ‘How many times have we told you, Sarah, not to–'
‘If you don't mind, sir,' I said firmly, ‘perhaps that can wait until later.' I looked back at Sarah. ‘Then what happened?'
‘The man said that if I answered some questions correctly, he'd give me a ride, just like a movie-star. Well, first he asked me my name, and when I told him he just sort of looked at me, as if he were shocked. Of course it was because he realized that I was Jewish, and that was his next question: was I Jewish? I almost told him I wasn't, just for the fun of it. But I was scared he would find out and that I would get into trouble, and so I told him I was. Then he leant back in his seat, and told the chauffeur to drive on. Not another word. It was very strange. As if I had vanished.'
‘That's very good, Sarah. Now tell me: you said you thought they were policemen. Were they wearing uniforms?'
She nodded hesitantly.
‘Let's start with the colour of these uniforms.'
‘Sort of green-coloured, I suppose. You know, like a policeman, only a bit darker.'
‘What were their hats like? Like policemen's hats?'
‘No, they were peaked hats. More like officers. Daddy was an officer in the navy.'
‘Anything else? Badges, ribbons, collar insignia? Anything like that?' She kept shaking her head. ‘All right. Now the man who spoke to you. What was he like?'
Sarah pursed her lips and then tugged at a length of her hair. She glanced at her father. ‘Older than the driver,' she said. ‘About fifty-five, sixty. Quite heavy-looking, not much hair, or maybe it was just closely cropped, and a small moustache.'
‘And the other one?'
She shrugged. ‘Younger. A bit pale-looking. Fair-haired. I can't remember much about him at all.'
‘Tell me about his voice, this man sitting in the back of the car.'
‘You mean his accent?'
‘Yes, if you can.'
‘I don't know for sure,' she said. ‘I find accents quite difficult to place. I can hear that they're different, but I can't always say where the person is from.' She sighed deeply, and frowned as she tried hard to concentrate. ‘It could have been Austrian. But I suppose it could just as easily have been Bavarian. You know, old-fashioned.'
‘Austrian or Bavarian,' I said, writing in my notebook. I thought about underlining the word ‘Bavarian' and then thought better of it. There was no point in giving it more emphasis than she had done, even if Bavarian suited me better. Instead I paused, saving my last question until I was sure that she had finished her answer.
‘Now think very clearly, Sarah. You're standing by the car. The window is down and you're looking straight into the car. You see the man with the moustache. What else can you see?'
She shut her eyes tight, and licking her lower lip she bent her brain to squeeze out one last detail.
‘Cigarettes,' she said after a minute. ‘Not like Daddy's.' She opened her eyes and looked at me. ‘They had a funny smell. Sweet, and quite strong. Like bay-leaves, or oregano.'
I scanned my notes and when I was sure that she had nothing left to add I stood up.
‘Thank you, Sarah, you've been a great help.'
‘Have I?' she said gleefully. ‘Have I really?'
‘You certainly have.' We all smiled, and for a moment the four of us forgot who and what we were.
Driving from the Hirsch home, I wondered if any of them realized that for once Sarah's race had been to her advantage – that being Jewish had probably saved her life.
I was pleased with what I had learned. Her description was the first real piece of information in the case. In the matter of accents her description tallied with that of Tanker, the desk sergeant who had taken the anonymous call. But what was more important it meant that I was going to have to get the dates on which Streicher had been in Berlin from General Martin in Nuremberg, after all.
14
Monday, 26 September

Other books

It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis
Winter's Destiny by Nancy Allan
Twice Told Tales by Daniel Stern
Dreams A-Z by Gustavus Hindman Miller
Night Fire by Catherine Coulter
Don't Cry for Me by Sharon Sala
The Price of Temptation by Lecia Cornwall