I glanced out of the window and, seeing that the weather was dull, I smiled as I imagined her glee at the prospect of another shower of rain falling upon the Fuhrer's Olympiad. Except that now I was going to get wet too.
What had she called it? âThe most outrageous confidence-trick in the history of modern times.' I was searching in the cupboard for my old rubberized raincoat when she came through the door.
âGod, I need a cigarette,' she said, tossing her handbag onto a chair and helping herself from the box on my desk. With some amusement she looked at my old coat and added, âAre you planning to wear that thing?'
âYes. Fräulein Muscles came through after all. There was a ticket for today's games in the mail. She wants me to meet her in the stadium at two.'
Inge looked out of the window. âYou're right,' she laughed, âyou'll need the coat. It's going to come down by the bucket.' She sat down and put her feet up on my desk. âWell, I'll just stay here on my own, and mind the shop.'
âI'll be back by four o'clock at the latest,' I said. âThen we have to go to the airport.'
She frowned. âOh yes, I was forgetting. Haupthändler is planning to fly to London tonight. Forgive me if I sound naive, but exactly what are you going to do when you get there? Just walk up to him and whoever it is he's taking with him and ask them how much they got for the necklace? Maybe they'll just open their suitcases and let you take a look at all their cash, right there in the middle of Tempelhof.'
âNothing in real life is ever all that tidy. There never are neat little clues that enable you to apprehend the crook with minutes to spare.'
âYou sound almost sad about it,' she said.
âI had one ace in the hole which I thought would make things a bit easier.'
âAnd the hole fell in, is that it?'
âSomething like that.'
The sound of footsteps in the outer office made me stop. There was a knock at the door, and a motorcyclist, a corporal in the National Socialist Flying Corps, came in bearing a large buff-coloured envelope of the same sort as the one I had consigned earlier to the waste-paper basket. The corporal clicked his heels and asked me if I was Herr Bernhard Gunther. I said that I was, took the envelope from the corporal's gauntleted hands and signed his receipt slip, after which he gave the Hitler Salute and walked smartly out again.
I opened the Air Ministry envelope. It contained several typewritten pages that made up the transcript of calls Jeschonnek and Haupthandler had made the previous day. Of the two, Jeschonnek, the diamond dealer, had been the busier, speaking to various people regarding the illegal purchase of a large quantity of American dollars and British sterling.
âBulls-eye,' I said, reading the transcript of the last of Jeschonnek's calls. This had been to Haupthandler, and of course it also showed up in the transcript of the other man's calls. It was the piece of evidence I had been hoping for: the evidence that turned theory into fact, establishing a definite link between Six's private secretary and the diamond dealer. Better than that, they discussed the time and place for a meeting.
âWell?' said Inge, unable to restrain her curiosity a moment longer.
I grinned at her. âMy ace in the hole. Someone just dug it out. There's a meet arranged between Haupthandler and Jeschonnek at an address in Grünewald tonight at five. Jeschonnek's going to be carrying a whole bagful of foreign currency.'
âThat's a hell of an informant you have there,' she said, frowning. âWho is it? Hanussen the Clairvoyant?'
âMy man is more of an impresario,' I said. âHe books the turns, and this time, anyway, I get to watch the show.'
âAnd he just happens to have a few friendly storm-troopers on the staff to show you to the right seat, is that it?'
âYou won't like it.'
âIf I start to scowl it will be heartburn, all right?'
I lit a cigarette. Mentally I tossed a coin and lost. I would tell it to her straight. âYou remember the dead man in the service-lift?'
âLike I just found out I had leprosy,' she said, shuddering visibly.
âHermann Goering hired me to try and find him.' I paused, waiting for her comment, and then shrugged under her bemused stare. âThat's it,' I said. âHe agreed to put a tap on a couple of telephones - Jeschonnek's and Haupthändler's.' I picked up the transcript and waved it in front of her face. âAnd this is the result. Amongst other things it means that I can now afford to tell his people where to find Von Greis.'
Inge said nothing. I took a long angry drag at my cigarette and then stubbed it out like I was hammering a lectern. âLet me tell you something: you don't turn him down, not if you want to finish your cigarette with both lips.'
âNo, I suppose not.'
âBelieve me, he's not a client that I would have chosen. His idea of a retainer is a thug with a machine-pistol.'
âBut why didn't you tell me about it, Bernie?'
âWhen Goering takes someone like me into his confidence, the table stakes are high. I thought it was safer for you that you didn't know. But now, well, I can't very well avoid it, can I?' Once again I brandished the transcript at her. Inge shook her head.
âOf course you couldn't refuse him. I didn't mean to appear awkward, it's just that I was, well, a bit surprised. And thank you for wanting to protect me, Bernie. I'm just glad that you can tell someone about that poor man.'
âI'll do it right now,' I said.
Rienacker sounded tired and irritable when I called him.
âI hope you've got something, pushbelly,' he said, âbecause Fat Hermann's patience is worn thinner than the jam in a Jewish baker's sponge-cake. So if this is just a social call then I'm liable to come and visit you with some dog-shit on my shoes.'
âWhat's the matter with you, Rienacker?' I said. âYou having to share a slab in the morgue or something?'
âCut the cabbage, Gunther, and get on with it.'
âAll right, keep your ears stiff. I just found your boy, and he's squeezed his last orange.'
âDead?'
âLike Atlantis. You'll find him piloting a service-lift in a deserted hotel on Chamissoplatz. Just follow your nose.'
âAnd the papers?'
âThere's a lot of burnt ash in the incinerator, but that's about all.'
âAny ideas on who killed him?'
âSorry,' I said, âbut that's your job. All I had to do was find our aristocratic friend, and that's as far as it goes. Tell your boss he'll be receiving my account in the post.'
âThanks a lot, Gunther,' said Rienacker, sounding less than pleased. âYou've got -' I cut across him with a curt goodbye, and hung up.
Â
I left Inge the keys to the car, telling her to meet me in the street outside Haupthändler's beach house at 4.30 that afternoon. I was intending to take the special S-Bahn to the Reich Sports Field via the Zoo Station; but first, and so that I could be sure of not being followed, I chose a particularly circuitous route to get to the station. I walked quickly up Königstrasse and caught a number two tram to Spittel Market where I strolled twice around the Spindler Brunnen Fountain before getting onto the U-Bahn. I rode one stop to Friedrichstrasse, where I left the U-Bahn and returned once more to street level. During business hours Friedrichstrasse has the densest traffic in Berlin, when the air tastes like pencil shavings. Dodging umbrellas and Americans standing huddled over their Baedekers, and narrowly missing being run over by a Rudesdorfer Peppermint van, I crossed Tauberstrasse and Jagerstrasse, passing the Kaiser Hotel and the head office of the Six Steel Works. Then, continuing up towards Unter den Linden, I squeezed between some traffic on Französische Strasse and, on the corner of Behrenstrasse, ducked into the Kaiser Gallery. This is an arcade of expensive shops of the sort that are much patronized by tourists and it leads onto Unter den Linden at a spot next to the Hotel Westminster, where many of them stay. If you are on foot it has always been a good place to shake a tail for good. Emerging on to Unter den Linden, I crossed over the road and rode a cab to the Zoo Station, where I caught the special train to the Reich Sports Field.
The two-storey-high stadium looked smaller than I had expected, and I wondered how all the people milling around its perimeter would ever fit in. It was only after I had gone in that I realized that it was actually bigger on the inside than on the outside, and this by virtue of an arena that was several metres below ground level.
I took my seat, which was close to the edge of the cinder track and next to a matronly woman who smiled and nodded politely as I sat down. The seat to my right, which I imagined was to be occupied by Marlene Sahm, was for the moment empty, although it was already past two o'clock. Just as I was looking at my watch the sky released the heaviest shower of the day, and I was only too glad to share the matron's umbrella. It was to be her good deed of the day. She pointed to the west side of the stadium and handed me a small pair of binoculars.
âThat is where the Fuhrer will be sitting,' she said. I thanked her, and although I wasn't in the least bit interested, I scanned a dais that was populated with several men in frock-coats, and the ubiquitous complement of S S officers, all of them getting as wet as I was. Inge would be pleased, I thought. Of the Führer himself, there was no sign.
âYesterday he didn't come until almost five o'clock,' explained the matron. âAlthough with weather as atrocious as this, he could be forgiven for not coming at all.' She nodded down at my empty lap. âYou don't have a programme. Would you care to know the order of events?' I said that I would, but found to my embarrassment that she intended not to lend me her programme but to read it aloud.
âThe first events on the track this afternoon are the heats of the 400-metre hurdles. Then we have the semi-finals and final of the 100-metres. If you'll allow me to say so, I don't think the German has a chance against the American negro, Owens. I saw him running yesterday and he was like a gazelle.' I was just about to start out on some unpatriotic remark about the so-called Master Race when Marlene Sahm sat down next to me, so probably saving me from my own potentially treasonable mouth.
âThank you for coming, Herr Gunther. And I'm sorry about yesterday. It was rude of me. You were only trying to help, were you not?'
âCertainly.'
âLast night I couldn't sleep for thinking about what you said about â ' and here she hesitated for a moment. âAbout Eva.'
âPaul Pfarr's mistress?' She nodded. âIs she a friend of yours?'
âNot close friends, you understand, but friends, yes. And so early this morning I decided to put my trust in you. I asked you to meet me here because I'm sure I'm being watched. That's why I'm late too. I had to make sure I gave them the slip.'
âThe Gestapo?'
âWell, I certainly don't mean the International Olympic Committee, Herr Gunther.' I smiled at that, and so did she.
âNo, of course not,' I said, quietly appreciating the way in which modesty giving way to impatience made her the more attractive. Beneath the terracotta-coloured raincoat she was unbuttoning at the neck, she wore a dress of dark blue cotton, with a neckline that allowed me a view of the first few centimetres of a deep and well-sunburnt cleavage. She started to fumble inside her capacious brown-leather handbag.
âSo then,' she said nervously. âAbout Paul. After his death I had to answer a great many questions, you know.'
âWhat about?' It was a stupid question, but she didn't say so.
âEverything. I think that at one stage they even got round to suggesting that I might be his mistress.' From out of the bag she produced a dark-green desk diary and handed it to me. âBut this I kept back. It's Paul's desk diary, or, rather, the one he kept himself, his private one, and not the official one that I kept for him: the one that I gave to the Gestapo.' I turned the diary over in my hands, not presuming to open it. Six, and now Marlene, it was odd the way people held things back from the police. Or maybe it wasn't. It all depended on how well you knew the police.
âWhy?' I said.
âTo protect Eva.'
âThen why didn't you simply destroy it? Safer for her and for you too I would have thought.'
She frowned as she struggled to explain something she perhaps only half understood herself. âI suppose I thought that in the proper hands, there might be something in it that would identify the murderer.'
âAnd what if it should turn out that your friend Eva had something to do with it?'
Her eyes flashed and she spoke angrily. âI don't believe it for a second,' she said. âShe wasn't capable of harming anyone.'
Pursing my lips, I nodded circumspectly. âTell me about her.'
âAll in good time, Herr Gunther,' she said, her mouth becoming compressed. I didn't think Marlene Sahm was the type ever to be carried away by her passion or her tastes, and I wondered whether the Gestapo preferred to recruit this kind of woman, or simply affected them that way.
âFirst of all, I'd like to make something clear to you.'
âBe my guest.'
âAfter Paul's death I myself made a few discreet inquiries as to Eva's whereabouts, but without success. But I shall come to that too. Before I tell you anything I want your word that if you manage to find her you will try to persuade her to give herself up. If she is arrested by the Gestapo it will go very badly for her. This isn't a favour I'm asking, you understand. This is my price for providing you with the information to help your own investigation.'