Marc Lucas was another such ‘Cassandra’, as his wife Sandra had christened him, though his gift was less well developed than his brother’s. Otherwise, he might have been able to prevent the tragedy of six weeks ago – a nightmare that seemed to be repeating itself at this moment.
‘Stop, hang on a minute,’ he called to the girl above him.
The thirteen-year-old was miserably cold. She stood poised on the extreme edge of the five-metre board with both arms hugging her ribs, which showed through the thin material of her swimsuit. Marc wasn’t sure what was making her shiver, the cold or her fear of jumping. It was hard to tell from where he was, down here in the empty swimming pool.
‘Fuck you, Luke!’ Julia yelled into her mobile.
Marc wondered how the scrawny girl had been spotted up there at all. Neukölln’s public baths had been closed for months. Some passerby must have caught sight of her and called the emergency services.
‘Fuck you and get lost!’
She leant over and looked down at the grubby tiles as if selecting a suitable spot to land on. Somewhere between that big puddle and the mound of dead leaves.
Marc shook his head and put his own mobile to his other ear. ‘No, I’m staying. Wouldn’t miss this for a pension, sweetheart.’
Hearing a murmur behind him, he glanced up at the fireman in charge, who had stationed himself on the edge of the pool with four colleagues and a jumping mat. The man looked as if he was already regretting having enlisted Marc’s help.
They’d found his phone number in the pocket of Julia’s jeans, which she had left neatly folded, together with the rest of her clothes, beside the ladder of the diving platform. It was no accident that she was wearing the swimsuit she’d had on when she ran away from home that summer day when her drug-addicted stepfather had been lurking beside the lake yet again, waiting for her.
Marc looked up once more. Unlike Julia, he had no hair left for the wind to ruffle. Not long after he left school his hair had already receded to such an extent that the barber had advised him to shave it off completely. That was thirteen years ago. Today, when his routine was governed by a hundred cups of coffee a week, it occasionally happened that some unknown woman smiled at him on the Underground – but only if she’d fallen for the lie peddled by men’s magazines, which claimed that bags under the eyes, worry lines, stubbly chins and other signs of degeneration were marks of character.
‘What the fuck are you talking about?’ he heard her ask. Her breath steamed furiously. ‘What wouldn’t you miss?’
November in Berlin was notorious for its sudden cold spells, and Marc wondered which Julia would be more likely to die of, multiple injuries or pneumonia. He himself was quite unsuitably dressed. Not just for the weather, either. None of his friends went around in jeans full of holes and scuffed old trainers. But then, none of them did a job like his.
‘If you jump I’ll try to catch you,’ he called.
‘Then we’ll both wind up dead.’
‘Maybe. But it’s more likely my body will cushion your fall.’
It was a good sign that Julia had allowed him to climb down into the grimy pool ten minutes ago. She’d threatened to jump at once if the firemen so much as threw a mat into the empty basin.
‘You’re still growing, your joints are very supple.’
He wasn’t sure this was true, given her intake of drugs, but it sounded vaguely plausible.
‘Don’t talk crap!’ she yelled back.
He could now hear her even without a phone.
‘Land the wrong way, and you could spend the next forty years unable to move anything but your tongue. Until one of the tubes that drains your body fluids gets clogged up and you die of blood poisoning, thrombosis or a stroke. Is that what you want?’
‘What about you? You want to die if I land on top of you?’
Julia’s husky voice didn’t sound like a thirteen-year-old’s. It was as if the dirt of the streets had coated her vocal cords, which now betrayed her soul’s true age.
‘I don’t know,’ Marc replied honestly. An instant later he held his breath: Julia was caught by a gust of wind and swayed forwards. She retained her balance by flailing her arms.
For the moment.
This time Marc didn’t turn to look as a groan went up from the crowd behind him. Judging by its volume, the police and the firemen had been joined by a number of interested spectators.
‘Anyway,’ he said, ‘I’ve just as much of a reason to jump as you.’
‘You’re only talking crap to stop me.’
‘Really? How long have you been coming to the “Beach”, Julia?’
Marc liked the street kids’ name for his Hasenheide office. The Beach… It sounded vaguely optimistic, but it suited the human flotsam washed up there daily by the billows of misfortune. Officially, of course, the centre had a different designation, but even local government records had long since ceased to refer to it as the ‘Neukölln Juvenile Advice Bureau’.
‘How long have we known each other?’ he persisted.
‘Search me.’
‘Eighteen months, Julia. Have I ever bullshitted you in all that time?’
‘I dunno.’
‘Did I ever lie to you? Did I ever make an attempt to inform your parents or teachers?’
She shook her head. At least, he thought he saw her do so from down below. Her jet-black hair flopped around her shoulders.
‘Have I ever told anyone where you get the stuff or where you crash?’
‘No.’
Marc knew that, if Julia jumped, he would have to justify himself in that very respect. On the other hand, if he somehow managed to dissuade this crack-addicted teenager from committing suicide, it would be attributable simply and solely to his having gained her trust in the preceding months. He didn’t blame people who failed to understand that – his friends, for example, who still couldn’t grasp why he was wasting his law degree on ‘anti-social elements’, as they called them, instead of cashing in on it with some big law firm.
‘You weren’t there,’ Julia said sulkily. ‘Six weeks, you’ve been gone.’
‘Look, we’re two different people. I don’t live in your world, but I’ve got problems of my own, and right now they’re so bad, many other men would have topped themselves long ago.’
Julia flailed her arms again. From down below it looked as if her elbows were grimy, but Marc knew that the dark scabs were from self-inflicted cuts. It wouldn’t be the first time a self-harmer turned serious. Youngsters who slashed themselves with a razor blade, so as at least to feel something, were among his most frequent customers at the ‘Beach’.
‘What happened?’ she asked in a low voice.
Gingerly, he felt the sticking plaster on his neck. It would need changing in two days’ time at most. ‘It doesn’t matter. My shit wouldn’t make yours any better.’
‘You can say that again.’
Marc smiled and glanced at his mobile, which was registering an incoming call. Turning, he caught sight of a woman in a black trenchcoat staring at him wide-eyed from the edge of the pool. It seemed that the police psychologist had just turned up and wasn’t entirely happy with his approach. Standing behind her was an elderly gentleman in an expensive-looking pinstripe suit. He gave Marc a friendly wave.
He decided to ignore them both.
‘Remember what I told you the first time you wanted to go back on the stuff because the pains were so bad? Sometimes it feels wrong-’
‘-to do the right thing,’ Julia broke in. ‘Yeah, yeah, I’ve had that crap up to here! But you know something? You’re crazy. Life doesn’t just feel wrong. It is wrong, and your stupid bullshit isn’t going to stop me from…’