With a slight nod, Speckbauer seemed to flick away a retort unspoken.
“Indeed,” he said instead. “On your first ‘normal’ weekend since you started. Wait until you have a family.”
“Really?”
“Oh sure. You’ll move up the ladder if you have kids. You’ll be awarded the sacred weekend more often. You’ll do great, I’m sure.
Education and all that.”
“Well, I suppose I’ll bear that in mind, Herr Oberstleutnant.”
“‘Herr Oberstleutnant?’ Are we back to that?”
Felix gave Speckbauer a skeptical look.
“I think it might be preferable, under the circumstances.”
“What, are you suspicious of compliments?”
“But how can you make that observation?”
Speckbauer’s eyes narrowed, but not unkindly.
“For example, you held the hand of this unfortunate boy, Himmelfarb, when it was necessary. You won his confidence, didn’t you?”
“I-”
But then Felix stopped. He wouldn’t let Gebhart look bad in front of this cop.
“I know,” said Speckbauer. “You were ‘encouraged to.’ I know.
But look at what happened. He fell for you. He wanted to tell you things, and you only.”
Felix watched an old woman enter the shop.
“Hansi Himmelfarb had found a friend in you. So you have a gift, I say. People trust you, you see.”
Something sagged inside Felix. He thought of Frau Himmelfarb, her leathery face already ruddy from the wind and sun of the spring and her outdoor life, the headscarf she would have put on each morning and left on until going to bed. All the Himmelfarbs had wanted, or expected, was to continue their simple life there on a mountain farm that had probably been in their family for centuries, to carry on the routines, to improve things a little, to hand it on.
Speckbauer’s scrutiny of him was not the cynical survey he had expected.
“You are agitated,” he said. “Don’t be suspicious. It’s to your credit.”
“What?”
“Agitation suggests you have morals. You are not ‘cool.’ All to the good.”
“I don’t know where this is going.”
Speckbauer rested one leg over the other, ankle over knee, and studied the side of his shoe. A woman with deep olive skin and a hijab entered the bakery.
“You drove down here because you believe you need to be involved,” Speckbauer murmured then. “That’s not irrational. Guilt too, perhaps? Were you trying to think of what you might have overlooked on that visit to the Himmelfarbs’, when you had that pedal ground into the floor on the autobahn, putting the Mercs and the Porsches in your rearview mirror?”
“Some of the time, yes.”
“What did you remember then? From when the boy was talking.”
“That’s the trouble,” Felix said. “Nothing.”
“The kid said ‘sleep.’ ‘They’re sleeping.’”
“Yes.”
“But he wouldn’t go up there. He wouldn’t go out of the house, basically. Don’t you think he knew they were dead?”
“Who knows what goes on in a mind such as that,” said Felix.
“The shrinks call it ‘averse.’ Are you sure the boy didn’t mention days, or time?” “No.”
Speckbauer put his leg back down and he studied the tabletop.
Then he narrowed his eyes.
“Well, you were out of town,” he said. “So you didn’t do it, did you?”
“That’s not funny, if you’ll allow me to say so, Herr Oberstleutnant.”
“I will. I certainly will. But you’ve surely copped on to why I’m talking to you here. You know, I’m sure of it. I saw it on your face.”
When Felix didn’t speak, Speckbauer leaned in over the table.
“Okay, then, I’ll say it. There is something wrong when a citizen phones his Gendarmerie post with a request to talk to them to a certain officer Kimmel and he and his family burn to death in a house fire not long after. Are you hearing me?”
Felix nodded.
“Now you need to know this as well. I we are checking each and every part of the goings on concerning this, including calls and records from the post that day. Even gossip. Things overheard, and passed on. Rumours. Notes left lying around. Remarks passed to spouses. Fiancees, even.”
Speckbauer’s gaze was not unfriendly.
“Everyone,” Speckbauer added. “Without exception.”
The Muslim woman at the counter was not quick with her change. Felix eyed the carefully neutral expression of the clerk waiting. It was the Austrian way in action all right, Giuliana had said many times: whatever you say, say nothing.
“You have an opportunity now, Felix,” said Speckbauer. “Or Inspektor, if you prefer. Your opportunity is to assist in this case.
Your expertise is being requested from your post Kontrolinspektor at the moment. Schroek? So it is a semi-big deal.”
“Expertise? I don’t have any. I’m a probationary Gendarme.”
“Ah, but you have a friendly face. And you are a local boy.”
“But my duties at the post?”
“Duties? Permit me to say this: those duties can be assumed by other staff there. Doing talks to pimply teens who are going out to piss cheap beer into your garden that night anyway, just to show you what they think of your presentation, well that’s a duty fair enough. But it’s one that can wait. You know the area up there, don’t you?”
“The mountains? A bit, I suppose.”
“Of course you do. Your grandparents are seven kilometres across the mountain. Your father spent half his youth up there, didn’t he? Didn’t you go with him at all? Of course you did. All those wee roads and tracks? The passes? The Wildererweg?”
“It was some time back.”
“Really, now I doubt you’ll be so modest in your experience profile when you make a serious try for the Alpini. Stop back pedalling, okay? You can drive, can’t you?”
“Of course.”
“And, equally important, is your interest in night life?”
“Pardon?”
“Come on now. Clubs? You have mates that can still ring the bell late into the night, don’t you?”
In Speckbauer’s gaze Felix now read a sly dare to bite back.
“You could go into a club or a cool-guy bar, and you wouldn’t look like me or, Gott sei dank, our dear Franzi. What I mean is, you won’t look like a cop. Got it?”
“No, actually, Herr Oberstleutnant.”
“‘All will be revealed,’ as the good book says. ‘In the fullness of time.’ For now, take my word on it. Have I come to the problem side yet? The negatives?”
“It sounds like it’s been done.”
“Ah. Funny fellow. Listen to me. This part is not so funny.”
Speckbauer waited for a couple to go by.
“It is now beginning to dawn on you that this is a serious affair, I hope. When we find out who those two dead men are, then I’ll be telling you what that means. But right now, I think that there are people who may be curious about what you know.”
“But I don’t know anything, beyond what I’ve told you.”
“Sure. But who’s to say someone doesn’t think that the Himmelfarb boy, or his family, told you something? And that you know something important that they’d prefer you didn’t know…?”
“Who?”
Speckbauer’s eyes went flat, as though they had slipped out of focus.
“Who could that be,” Felix repeated. “Who are you talking about?”
“Ah. I see I have your attention here.”
“I don’t think you should play games like this, Herr Oberstleutnant, with respect.”
“Really,” said Speckbauer. “You can shove your respect and your Herr Oberstleutnant up your arsch, Gendarme. You’re mad and I know it. That’s good. You should be.”
“This is some kind of a threat you are suggesting?”
“If I knew who ‘they’ were, I’d tell you. I don’t put people’s safety at risk. Especially not a fellow officer.”
Speckbauer sat back and studied the intricacies of the fittings that held the shelves and counters. Felix wondered if the faint low tone he was hearing was Speckbauer humming again. He was about to push back his chair when the sunglasses appeared in the window.
It took Felix a moment to realize that the pale face and the glasses belonged to Speckbauer’s sidekick.