Deadly Communion (27 page)

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Authors: Frank Tallis

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Detective and mystery stories, #Police Procedural, #Police, #Psychoanalysts, #Liebermann; Max (Fictitious Character), #Rheinhardt; Oskar (Fictitious Character)

BOOK: Deadly Communion
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The undertaker did not reply. His eyes were fixed on Liebermann. His expression was intense and focused.

Voices — laughter — the sound of cutlery.

Where
is it coming from?

Sprenger came forward again. Liebermann raised his hands and took a step backwards.

‘Herr Sprenger. I really must insist that you stay where you are.’

‘“Night is the other half of life, and the better half,”’ Sprenger repeated. His voice was a whisper. Liebermann saw the undertaker’s lips moving, but he produced no sound. He was repeating the sentence to himself, again and again.

Suddenly, Sprenger turned on his heels — and ran for the window.

Liebermann cried out: ‘No!’

Sprenger’s body shattered the glass and dropped from view. When the tinkling had subsided, there was a piercing scream. Liebermann rushed down the hallway. Immediately below the window, hanging from the exterior of the building, was a striped awning. A man dressed in a white shirt and black tails — a waiter — was kneeling beside Sprenger’s body.

Liebermann hurried down the stairs and out into the street. He sprinted towards the coffee house. The people who had been sitting at the tables outside were standing up and looking at Sprenger, aghast. A woman with a large floral hat was sobbing against the shoulder of a male companion.

‘I’m a doctor,’ said Liebermann, dropping to his knees and clutching Sprenger’s wrist. At first he thought he was imagining it, the sluggish, feeble beat. But it was definitely there. Sprenger had survived the fall.

49

R
HEINHARDT WAS SITTING IN
Liebermann’s office at the General Hospital feeling tired and extremely hungry. He took the Luger pistol from his pocket and studied its construction: the long barrel, the crescent trigger and elegant handgrip.

A
perfect example of the gun manufacturer’s craft.

Yet even with such a finely balanced weapon he had missed Sprenger —
twice.

Rheinhardt did not feel shame when he reflected on his inadequate marksmanship but rather a sense of relief, for he knew that if he had hit his mark he would — at that moment — be feeling quite different. He would not be looking forward to his bed, the warmth of his wife’s body, and a swift descent into untroubled, restorative sleep. Instead, he would be contemplating the night ahead with trepidation: a long night, sitting in the darkness, smoking and ruminating — wrestling with his conscience. Liebermann often spoke of unconscious motivation. Had some hidden part of his mind interfered with his aim? He was too weary to tackle such an esoteric question. His stomach was gurgling and for Rheinhardt hunger precluded thought. The feeling of emptiness, the nagging hollow at the very centre of his being, was too distracting. He put the Luger back into his pocket and wondered if he would be able to get to Café Eiles before it closed.

Rheinhardt opened one of Liebermann’s drawers and examined the contents: a formulary, a pen and a stethoscope.

But
no biscuits …

The door opened and Liebermann entered.

‘What are you doing?’

‘Looking for something to eat.’

‘Well, you won’t find anything in there. This may come as a surprise to you, Oskar, but not everyone keeps a store of
Linzer biscotten
among their work things.’

Rheinhardt closed the drawer and leaned back in his chair.

‘Well?’

‘His condition is stable.’

‘Will he live?’

‘Professor Bieler is very optimistic.’

‘I suppose that qualifies as good news.’ Rheinhardt folded his arms across his stomach. ‘The people of Vienna would have felt cheated if Sprenger had succeeded in his bid to evade justice.’

‘They might still be denied.’

‘You are thinking of the lead oxide …’

‘It is something the court must consider.’

‘Surely, Max, you cannot believe that Sprenger was driven to perform his atrocities by his hair dye! Not every individual unfortunate enough to suffer from lead poisoning then takes it upon himself to kill for sexual gratification!’

‘The brain is complex — and poisons may have effects that vary from individual to individual. It is not inconceivable.’

‘Are there any other cases similar to Sprenger’s that you know of?’

‘No. However, there are some historians who have posited a theory that the Roman Empire fell not because of the incursion of the barbarian hordes but because of a generalised insanity resulting from the widespread use of lead pipes and kitchenware. I suspect that the foundations of Sprenger’s thanatophilia were laid in his childhood and that the lead poisoning exacerbated his existing psychopathology.
If so, then the poisoning might represent a mitigating factor. I would be more than happy to prepare a medical report.’

Rheinhardt narrowed his eyes.

‘I think you’re pleased to have him here.’

‘I wouldn’t say
pleased,
exactly.’

‘What, then? You are not displeased.’

‘I am grateful that I have been afforded an opportunity to satisfy my professional curiosity.’

‘Psychiatrists,’ said Rheinhardt, shaking his head. ‘At what point do you baulk at the study of perversity and madness? Do you never think that some things are so dreadful — so appalling — that they should simply be left alone?’

‘It is always better to understand than not.’

The inspector had heard Liebermann’s pithy dictum many times before.

‘Are you so sure?’ Rheinhardt looked troubled. ‘Sometimes I wonder whether some minds are so deranged that nothing useful can come out of their study. Krafft-Ebing’s
Psychopathia Sexualis
has sold in thousands of copies and because it is a scientific work respectable gentlemen read it without scruple. Yet do they really read those cases — page after page of horror, sickness, and moral degeneracy — to improve their understanding of mental illness? I think not. They read the
Psychopathia Sexualis
because it is sensational and it arouses in them a dubious prurient excitement.’

There was an uncomfortable silence.

Rheinhardt ventured an appeasing smile. He realised that he might have gone too far.

‘I’m sorry, Max: I am tired and hungry. You are a peculiar breed — you psychiatrists — but invaluable, nevertheless.’ Liebermann inclined his head.

‘What do you want to do about Erstweiler?’

The sentence was delivered with a certain frosty reserve.

‘Good heavens! Erstweiler! Our trip out to Simmering feels like ancient history!’

‘I’ll be seeing him again tomorrow morning. Perhaps you should be here.’

‘Ten-thirty? Would that be convenient?’

‘It would indeed.’

Rheinhardt stood up and slapped a heavy hand on Liebermann’s shoulder.

‘Well done, Max. You’re a courageous fellow.’ The young doctor shrugged. ‘Could I interest you in a late dinner at Café Eiles?’

Liebermann returned Rheinhardt’s smile.

‘I was about to suggest something very similar myself.’

50

K
RISTINA WAS SITTING AT
her dressing table, inspecting her face in the mirror. A thin line had appeared which she had never noticed before, a hairline crack curving around her mouth. When her expression was neutral the mark was insignificant, as subtle as the craquelure in varnish. Indeed, she had to tilt her head in the light to see it. But if she smiled the line deepened.

Perhaps she had been laughing too much lately? Perhaps this was the cost of happiness? When she was younger, there had been very little to laugh about and her skin had been taut and smooth. She had been wrong — and more than a little naive — to assume that success and contentment would come without complications.

The house was silent. Her husband Heinz had not yet returned. The old general was dying, and the good doctor was doing all that he could to make the war hero’s last hours as comfortable as possible. Heinz was a good man. She did not like keeping things from him, but in this particular instance there really was no alternative.

I’ll do it now,
she thought.
Get it over with.

Kristina rose from her dressing table and crossed to the wall on which Czeschka’s Ashputtel lithographs were hanging.

Her mind went back to the day when the detective from the security office had come to question her. She remembered the young doctor who had accompanied him. What was it he had said? Something
about the lithographs being very fitting, given her occupation. He had made her quite anxious by standing so close.

Kristina followed the wall, pausing to consider each tableau. It was like participating in the fairy-tale equivalent of the
Via Crucis:
the stepsisters, Ashputtel by the wishing tree, the handsome Prince. The final lithograph was a portrait of Ashputtel with a white dove perched on her shoulder. An inscription below the image read
‘For she is the true one’.
Kristina pulled the bottom of the frame away from the wall and caught two sheets of paper as they fell from their place of concealment.

The first was a drawing of a naked girl lying on a divan. Her legs were parted, exposing her sex. She was wearing black stockings which were too large and had slipped down her skinny thighs. The collapsed silk had been executed with exquisite precision. A small but distinctive oval mole below the girl’s belly button had not escaped the artist’s meticulous eye.

The second drawing was of the same girl standing with a companion of roughly the same age. They were both naked and wore sulky expressions. Again, the oval mole was clearly visible.

Kristina stared at the images for some time and a few tears trickled down her cheeks. She wiped them away with the sleeve of her kimono and, bracing herself, crossed over to the enamel stove. She crouched down and opened the door in its base, releasing a blast of heat.

A complex set of emotions stayed her hand.

It felt very wrong to be burning art. Of course, the artist’s choice of subject matter was questionable but there was no denying his talent. And more importantly still, by proceeding with this barbarous act she felt that she was — in a sense — doing violence to herself.

Such considerations had made it impossible for her to destroy the drawings when she had first acquired them. Instead of doing what was necessary she had stupidly hidden them behind the lithograph of
Ashputtel and the white dove. What if the young doctor had touched the frame — and the drawings had fallen to the floor? She could not afford to be sentimental.

Kristina posted the first drawing into the stove. She watched the paper blacken, curl and then burst into flames. Something close to grief tightened her chest and her breath became laboured as she watched the image of the girl turning to ashes. Curiously, the bottom right-hand corner of the drawing resisted ignition, managing by some accident of physics to preserve its existence for a few more seconds more.

Kristina read the signature:
Rainmayr.

The paper turned from yellow to brown and then shrivelled to nothing.

51

‘H
ERR DOCTOR,
I
AM
concerned that we are not making very much progress,’ said Erstweiler.

Liebermann looked down at his supine patient and after a brief pause replied: ‘I am sorry that you are dissatisfied.’

‘My condition,’ Erstweiler continued, ‘or, rather, the natural state of anxiety that arises from my unusual
situation
remains unchanged. I cannot sleep, my bowels are still loose — and every moment of the day I live in dread of
his
appearance. You will forgive me, I hope, for questioning the efficacy of this treatment of yours. What did you call it?’

‘Psychoanalysis.’

‘None of the other patients are receiving it.’

‘No. It’s new.’

‘The modern world is too enamoured of novelty. Just because something is new does not mean that it is better.’ Erstweiler was clearly depressed and showing the irritability so typical of patients whose mood was low. ‘Perhaps the time has come, Herr doctor, to try something different. What about hydrotherapy?’

‘I do not think hydrotherapy will be very helpful.’

‘Why not? It helped that chap who kept on shouting about the Hungarians coming. When he returned to the ward after hydrotherapy he was much better.’

‘I do not think hydrotherapy is the appropriate treatment for
your
condition.’

‘What condition?’ Erstweiler raised his arms and let them fall heavily on the rest bed. ‘I have seen my doppelgänger … and if I see him again that will probably be the end of me. I am tired of all this talking, Herr doctor.’

‘Then perhaps you should try listening. Psychoanalysis is a listening cure as well as a talking one. It demands that I — for the most part — listen to you. But sometimes you must listen to me. I have been thinking about your dream, Herr Erstweiler, the dream of the English fairy story.’

‘What of it, Herr doctor? It was only a dream!’

Erstweiler sighed — exhausted by his own impatience.

‘Dreams,’ said Liebermann, ‘are shaped by processes in the mind that obey certain laws or principles. If one is conversant with those principles it is possible to interpret dreams. Dreams are the royal road to the unconscious.’

‘The unconscious?’

‘That greater part of the mind — ordinarily inaccessible — wherein can be discovered the answers to the most puzzling questions about human experience: in your case,’ Liebermann clapped his hands together lightly, ‘why it is that you have hallucinations of a double. It is my belief that the cause of your hallucinations is a set of memories buried in your unconscious. And your dream gives us some indication as to what those memories relate to.’

Erstweiler was about to speak, but before he could raise a further objection Liebermann added: ‘Allow me to explain.’

The young doctor leaned forward on his chair.

‘The language of dreams is symbolic; however, symbols, as they appear in dreams, usually possess features in common with the object or person they are supposed to represent. Thus, by studying these correspondences a dream can be made intelligible. Now, let us consider the content of your English fairy-tale dream, beginning with the most important element, the pivot around which the narrative turns.’

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