' The scene of the crime,' quoted Nebe, rolling the phrase round his mouth like a fine wine. 'It's good to talk to a detective again.'
'Just to satisfy my professional curiosity, Arthur: how did you find the chocolady?'
'Oh, it wasn't me, it was K/nig. He tells me that it was you who told him how best to go about looking for Doctor Heim.'
'It was just routine stuff, Arthur. You could have told him.'
'Maybe so. Anyway, it seems that K/nig's girlfriend recognized Heim from a photograph. Apparently he used to frequent the nightclub where she works. She remembered that Heim used to be especially keen on one of the snappers who worked there. All Helmut had to do was persuade her to come clean about it. It was as simple as that.'
'Getting information out of a snapper is never as simple as that,' I said. 'It can be like getting a curse out of a nun. Money is the only way to get a party-girl to talk that doesn't leave a bruise.' I waited for Nebe to contradict me, but he said nothing. 'Of course, a bruise is cheaper, and leaves no margin for error.' I grinned at him as if to say that I had no particular scruples when it came to slapping a chocolady in the interests of efficient investigation.
'I'd say K/nig wasn't the type to waste money: am I right?'
To my disappointment, Nebe merely shrugged and then glanced at his watch. 'You'd better ask him yourself when you see him.'
'Is he coming to this meeting too?'
'He'll be here.' Nebe consulted his watch again. 'I'm afraid I have to leave you now. I've still one or two things to do before ten. Perhaps it would be better if you stayed in here. Security is tight today, and we wouldn't want another incident, would we? I'll have someone bring you some coffee. Build a fire if you like. It's rather cold in here.'
I tapped my glass. 'I can't say that I'm noticing it much now.'
Nebe regarded me patiently. 'Yes, well, do help yourself to some more brandy, if you think you need it.'
'Thanks,' I said, reaching for the decanter, 'I don't mind if I do.'
'But stay sharp. You'll be asked a lot of questions about your Russian friend. I wouldn't like your opinion of his worth to be doubted merely because you had too much to drink.' He walked across the creaking floor to the door.
'Don't worry about me,' I said, surveying the empty shelves, 'I'll read a book.'
Nebe's considerable nose wrinkled with disapproval. 'Yes, it's such a pity that the library is gone. Apparently the previous owners left a superb collection, but when the Russians came they used them all as fuel for the boiler.' He shook his head sadly. 'What can you do with subhumans like that?'
When Nebe had left the library I did as he had suggested and built a fire in the grate. It helped me to focus my mind on my next course of action. As the flames took hold of the small edifice of logs and sticks I had constructed, I reflected that Nebe's apparent amusement at the circumstances of Heim's death seemed to indicate that the Org was satisfied Veronika had told the truth.
It was true, I was no wiser as to where she might be, but I had gained the impression that K/nig was not yet at Grinzing, and without my gun I did not see that I could now leave and look for her elsewhere. With only two hours to go before the Org's meeting, it appeared that my best course of action was to wait for K/nig to arrive, and hope that he could put my mind at rest. And if he had killed or injured Veronika, I would settle his account personally when Belinsky arrived with his men.
I collected the poker off the hearth and stoked the fire negligently. Nebe's man arrived with the coffee, but I paid him no attention, and after he had gone again I stretched out on the sofa and closed my eyes.
The fire stirred, clapped its hands a couple of times, and warmed my side.
Behind my closed lids, bright red turned to deep purple, and then something more restful 'Herr Gunther?'
I jerked my head up from the sofa. Sleeping in an awkward position, even for only a few minutes, had made my neck as stiff as new leather. But when I looked at my watch I saw that I had been sleeping for more than an hour. I flexed my neck.
Sitting beside the sofa was a man wearing a grey flannel suit. He leaned forward and held out his hand for me to shake. It was a broad, strong hand and surprisingly firm for such a short man. Gradually I recognized his face, although I had never met him before.
'I am Dr Moltke,' he said. 'I've heard a great deal about you, Herr Gunther.'
You could have blown froth from the top of his accent it was so Bavarian.
I nodded uncertainly. There was something about his gaze I found deeply disconcerting. His were the eyes of a music-hall hypnotist.
'I'm pleased to meet you, Herr Doktor.' Here was another one who had changed his name. Another one who was supposed to be dead, like Arthur Nebe. And yet this was no ordinary Nazi fugitive from justice, if indeed justice existed anywhere in Europe during 1948. It gave me a strange feeling to consider that I had just shaken hands with a man who, but for the mysterious circumstances surrounding his 'death', might well have been the world's most wanted man. This was 'Gestapo' Heinrich Mnller, in person.
'Arthur Nebe has been telling me about you,' he said. 'You know, you and I are quite alike it seems. I was a police detective, like yourself. I began on the beat and I learnt my profession in the hard school of ordinary police work. Like you I also specialized: while you worked for the murder commission, I was led to the surveillance of Communist Party functionaries. I even made a special study of Soviet Russian police methods. I found much there to admire. As a policeman yourself, you would surely appreciate their professionalism. The MVD, which used to be the NKVD, is probably the finest secret police force anywhere in the world. Better even than the Gestapo. For the simple reason, I think, that National Socialism was never able to offer a faith capable of commanding such a consistent attitude towards life. And do you know why?'
I shook my head. His broad Bavarian speech seemed to suggest a natural geniality which I knew the man himself could not possibly have possessed.
'Because, Herr Gunther, unlike Communism, we never really appealed to the intellectuals as well as to the working classes. You know, I myself did not join the Party until 1939. Stalin does these things better. Today I see him in quite a different light than I did of old.'
I frowned, wondering whether this was Mnller's idea of a test, or a joke. But he seemed to be perfectly serious. Pompously so.
'You admire Stalin?' I asked, almost incredulously.
'He stands head and shoulders above any of our Western leaders. Even Hitler was a small man by comparison. Just think what Stalin and his Party have stood up to. You were in one of their camps. You know what they're like. Why, you even speak Russian. You always know where you are with the Ivans. They put you up against a wall and shoot you, or they give you the Order of Lenin. Not like the Americans or the British.' Mnller's face suddenly took on an expression of intense dislike. 'They talk about morality and justice and yet they allow Germany to starve. They write about ethics and yet they hang old comrades one day, and recruit them for their own security services the next. You can't trust people like that, Herr Gunther.'
'Forgive me, Herr Doktor, but I was under the impression that we were working for the Americans.'
'That is wrong. We work with the Americans. But in the end we are working for Germany. For a new Fatherland.'
Looking more thoughtful now, he got up and went over to the window. His manner of expressing deliberation was a silent rhapsody more characteristic of a peasant priest wrestling with his conscience. He folded his thick hands thoughtfully, unclasped them again and finally pressed his temples between both fists.