Page 14 of Fatherland


  March could see that Nebe was impressed, despite himself. His little eyes were drinking in the art. ‘Was anyone else of high rank involved?’

  ‘You are familiar with the former Under-Secretary of State at the Foreign Ministry, Martin Luther?’

  ‘Of course.’

  ‘He is the man we seek.’

  ‘Seek? He is missing?’

  ‘He failed to return from a business trip three days ago.’

  ‘I take it you are certain of Luther’s involvement in this affair?’

  ‘During the war, Luther was head of the Foreign Ministry’s German Department.’

  ‘I remember. He was responsible for Foreign Ministry liaison with the SS, and with us at the Kripo.’ Nebe turned to Krebs. ‘Another fanatical National Socialist. You would have appreciated his – ah – enthusiasm. A rough fellow, though. Incidentally, at this point, I should like to state, for the record, my astonishment at his involvement in anything criminal.’

  Krebs produced his pen. Globus went on: ‘Buhler stole the art. Stuckart received it. Luther’s position at the Foreign Ministry gave him the opportunity to travel freely abroad. We believe he smuggled certain items out of the Reich, and sold them.’

  ‘Where?’

  ‘Switzerland, mainly. Also Spain. Possibly Hungary.’

  ‘And when Buhler came back from the General Government – when was that?’

  He looked at March, and March said: ‘In 1951.’

  ‘In 1951, this became their treasure chamber.’

  Nebe lowered himself into the swivel chair and spun round, slowly, inspecting each wall in turn. ‘Extraordinary. This must have been one of the best collections of art in private hands anywhere in the world.’

  ‘One of the best collections in criminal hands,’ cut in Globus.

  ‘Ach.’ Nebe closed his eyes. ‘So much perfection in one space deadens the senses. I need air. Give me your arm, March.’

  As he stood, March could hear the ancient bones cracking. But the grip on his forearm was steel.

  NEBE walked with a stick – tap, tap, tap – along the verandah at the back of the villa.

  ‘Buhler drowned himself. Stuckart shot himself. Your case seems to be resolving itself rather conclusively, Globus, without requiring anything so embarrassing as a trial. Statistically, I should say Luther’s chances of survival look rather poor.’

  ‘As it happens, Herr Luther does have a heart condition. Brought on by nervous strain during the war, according to his wife.’

  ‘You surprise me.’

  ‘According to his wife, he needs rest, drugs, quiet – none of which will he be getting at the moment, wherever he is.’

  ‘This business trip . . .’

  ‘He was supposed to return from Munich on Monday. We’ve checked with Lufthansa. There was nobody called Luther on any Munich flights that day.’

  ‘Maybe he’s fled abroad.’

  ‘Maybe. I doubt it. We’ll hunt him down eventually, wherever he is.’

  Tap, tap. March admired Nebe’s nimbleness of mind. As Police Commissioner for Berlin in the 1930s, he had written a treatise on criminology. He remembered seeing it on Koth’s shelves in the fingerprint section on Tuesday night. It was still a standard text.

  ‘And you, March.’ Nebe halted and swung round. ‘What is your view of Buhler’s death?’

  Jaeger, who had been silent since their arrival at the villa, butted in anxiously: ‘Sir, if I might say, we were merely collecting data –’

  Nebe rapped the stone with his stick. ‘The question was not addressed to you.’

  March wanted a cigarette, badly. ‘I have only preliminary observations,’ he began. He ran his hand through his hair. He was out of his depth here; a long way out. It was not where to start, he thought, but where to end. Globus had folded his arms and was staring at him.

  ‘Party Comrade Buhler,’ he began, ‘died some time between six o’clock on Monday evening and six o’clock the following morning. We await the autopsy report, but cause of death was almost certainly drowning – his lungs were full of fluid, indicating he was breathing when he entered the water. We also know, from the sentry on the causeway, that Buhler received no visitors during those crucial twelve hours.’

  Globus nodded. ‘Thus: suicide.’

  ‘Not necessarily, Herr Obergruppenführer. Buhler received no visitors by land. But the woodwork on the jetty has been recently scraped, suggesting a boat may have moored there.’

  ‘Buhler’s boat,’ said Globus.

  ‘Buhler’s boat has not been used for months; maybe, years.’

  Now he held the attention of his small audience, March felt a rush of exhilaration; a sense of release. He was starting to talk quickly. Slow down, he told himself, be careful.

  ‘When I inspected the villa yesterday morning, Buhler’s guard dog was locked in the pantry, muzzled. The whole of one side of its head was bleeding. I ask myself: why would a man intending to commit suicide do that to his dog?’

  ‘Where is this animal now?’ asked Nebe.

  ‘My men had to shoot it,’ said Globus. ‘The creature was deranged.’

  ‘Ah. Of course. Go on, March.’

  ‘I think Buhler’s assailants landed late at night, in darkness. If you recall, there was a storm on Monday night. The lake would have been choppy – that explains the damage to the jetty. I think the dog was alerted, and they clubbed it senseless, muzzled it, took Buhler unawares.’

  ‘And threw him in the lake?’

  ‘Not immediately. Despite his disability, according to his sister, Buhler was a strong swimmer. You could see that by the look of him: his shoulders were well-developed. But after he had been cleaned up, I inspected his body in the morgue. There was bruising here’ – March touched his cheeks – ‘and on the gums at the front of his mouth. On the kitchen table yesterday was a bottle of vodka, most of it gone. I think the autopsy report will show alcohol in Buhler’s bloodstream. I think they forced him to drink, stripped him, took him out on their boat, and dumped him over the side.’

  ‘Intellectual pigshit,’ said Globus. ‘Buhler probably drank the vodka to give him the guts to kill himself.’

  ‘According to his sister, Party Comrade Buhler was a teetotaller.’

  There was a long silence. March could hear Jaeger breathing heavily. Nebe was gazing out across the lake. Eventually, Globus muttered: ‘What this fancy theory doesn’t explain is why these mysterious killers didn’t just put a bullet in Buhler’s brain and have done with it.’

  ‘I would have thought that was obvious,’ said March. ‘They wanted to make it look like suicide. But they bungled it.’

  ‘Interesting,’ murmured Nebe. ‘If Buhler’s suicide was faked, then it is logical to suppose that Stuckart’s was, also.’

  Because Nebe was still staring at the Havel, March did not realise at first that the remark was a question, addressed to him.

  ‘That was my conclusion. That was why I visited Stuckart’s apartment last night. Stuckart’s murder, I think, was a three-man operation: two in the flat; one in the foyer, pretending to repair the elevator. The noise from his electric drill was supposed to mask the sound of the shot, giving the killers time to get away before the body was discovered.’

  ‘And the suicide note?’

  ‘Forged, perhaps. Or written under duress. Or . . .’

  He stopped himself. He was thinking aloud, he realised – a potentially fatal activity. Krebs was staring at him.

  ‘Is that it?’ asked Globus. ‘Are the Grimms’ fairy stories over for the day? Excellent. Some of us have work to do. Luther is the key to this mystery, gentlemen. Once we have him, all will be explained.’

  Nebe said: ‘If his heart condition is as bad as you say, we need to move quickly. I shall arrange with the Propaganda Ministry for Luther’s picture to be carried in the press and on television.’

  ‘No, no. Absolutely not.’ Globus sounded alarmed. ‘The Reichsführer has expressly forbidden any publicity
. The last thing we need is a scandal involving the Party leadership, especially now, with Kennedy coming. God in heaven, can you imagine what the foreign press would make of this? No. I assure you, we can catch him without alerting the media. What we need is a confidential flash to all Orpo patrols; a watch on the main railway stations, ports, airports, border crossings . . . Krebs can handle that.’

  ‘Then I suggest he does so.’

  ‘At once, Herr Oberstgruppenführer.’ Krebs gave a slight bow to Nebe and trotted off along the verandah, into the house.

  ‘I have business to attend to in Berlin,’ said Nebe. ‘March here will act as Kripo liaison officer until Luther is caught.’

  Globus sneered. ‘That will not be necessary.’

  ‘Oh, but it will. Use him wisely, Globus. He has a brain. Keep him informed. Jaeger: you can return to your normal duties.’

  Jaeger looked relieved. Globus seemed about to say something, but thought better of it.

  ‘Walk me to my car, March. Good day to you, Globus.’

  WHEN they were round the corner, Nebe said: ‘You are not telling the truth, are you? Or at least, not all of it. That is good. Get in the car. We need to talk.’

  The driver saluted and opened the rear door. Nebe manoeuvred himself painfully into the back seat. March got in the other side.

  ‘At six o’clock this morning, this arrived at my house by courier.’ Nebe unlocked his briefcase and pulled out a file, a couple of centimetres thick. ‘It’s all about you, Sturmbannführer. Flattering, isn’t it, to merit such attention?’

  The windows of the Mercedes were tinted green. In the half-light, Nebe looked like a lizard in a reptile house.

  ‘Born, Hamburg, 1922; father died of wounds, 1929; mother killed in a British air raid, 1942; joined the Navy, 1939; transferred to the U-boat service, 1940; decorated for bravery and promoted, 1943; given command of your own boat, 1946 – one of the youngest U-boat commanders in the Reich. A glittering career. And then it all starts going wrong.’

  Nebe leafed through the file. March stared at the green lawn, the green sky.

  ‘No police promotions for ten years. Divorced, 1957. And then the reports start. Blockwart: persistent refusal to contribute to Winter-Relief. Party officials at Werderscher Markt: persistent refusal to join the NSDAP. Overheard in the canteen making disparaging comments about Himmler. Overheard in bars, overheard in restaurants, overheard in corridors . . .’

  Nebe was pulling pages out.

  ‘Christmas 1963 – you start asking round about some Jews who used to live in your apartment. Jews! Are you mad? There is a complaint here from your ex-wife; one from your son . . .’

  ‘My son? My son is ten years old . . .’

  ‘Quite old enough to form a judgement, and be listened to – as you know.’

  ‘May I ask what it is I am supposed to have done to him?’

  ‘“Shown insufficient enthusiasm for his Party activities.” The point is, Sturmbannführer, that this file has been ten years maturing in the Gestapo registry – a little here, a little there, year in, year out, growing like a tumour in the dark. And now you’ve made a powerful enemy, and he wants to use it.’

  Nebe put the folder back in his briefcase.

  ‘Globus?’

  ‘Globus, yes. Who else? He asked to have you transferred to Colombia House last night, pending court martial from the SS.’ Colombia House was the private SS prison in General-Pape Strasse. ‘I have to tell you, March, there is easily enough here to send you to a KZ. After that, you’re beyond help – from me or anybody else.’

  ‘What stopped him?’

  ‘To start court-martial proceedings against a serving Kripo officer, he first had to get permission from Heydrich. And Heydrich referred it to me. So what I said to our beloved Reichsführer was this. “This fellow Globus,” I said, “is obviously terrified that March has got something on him, so he wants him done away with.” “I see,” says the Reichsfuhrer, “so what do you suggest?” “Why not,” say I, “give him until the Führertag to prove his case against Globus? That’s four days.” “All right,” says Heydrich. “But if he’s not come up with anything by then, Globus can have him.” ’ Nebe gave a smile of contentment. ‘Thus are the affairs of the Reich arranged between colleagues of long standing.’

  ‘I suppose I must thank the Herr Oberstgruppenführer.’

  ‘Oh no, don’t thank me.’ Nebe was cheerful. ‘Heydrich genuinely wonders if you do have something on Globus. He would like to know. So would I. Perhaps for a different reason.’ He seized March’s arm again – the same fierce grip – and hissed: ‘These bastards are up to something, March. What is it? You find out. You tell me. Don’t trust anyone. That’s how your Uncle Artur has lasted as long as he has. Do you know why some of the old-timers call Globus “the submarine”?’

  ‘No, sir.’

  ‘Because he had a submarine engine hooked up to a Polish basement during the war, and used the exhaust fumes to kill people. Globus likes killing people. He’d like to kill you. You should remember that.’ Nebe released March’s arm. ‘Now, we must say goodbye.’

  He rapped on the glass partition with the top of his cane. The driver came round and opened March’s door.

  ‘I would offer you a lift into central Berlin, but I prefer travelling alone. Keep me informed. Find Luther, March. Find him before Globus gets to him.’

  The door slammed. The engine whispered. As the limousine crunched across the gravel, March could barely make out Nebe – just a green silhouette behind the bulletproof glass.

  He turned to find Globus watching him.

  The SS general started walking towards him, holding a Luger outstretched.

  He is crazy, thought March. He is just about crazy enough to shoot me on the spot, like Buhler’s dog.

  But all Globus did was hand him the gun. ‘Your pistol, Sturmbannführer. You will need it.’ And then he came very close – close enough for March to smell the sour odour of garlic sausage on his hot breath. ‘You have no witness,’ was all he whispered. ‘You have no witness. Not any more.’

  MARCH ran.

  He ran out of the grounds and across the causeway and off, up, into the woods – right the way through them, until he came to the autobahn which formed the Grunewald’s eastern boundary.

  There he stopped, his hands clutching his knees, his breath coming in sobs, as beneath him the traffic hurtled towards Berlin.

  Then he was off again, despite the pain in his side, more of a trot now, over the bridge, past the Nikolassee S-bahn station, down Spanische Allee towards the barracks.

  His Kripo ID got him past the sentries, his appearance – red-eyed, breathless, with more than a day’s growth of beard – suggestive of some terrible emergency which brooked no discussion. He found the dormitory block. He found Jost’s bed. The pillow was gone, the blankets had been stripped. All that remained was the ironwork and a hard, brown mattress. The locker was bare.

  A solitary cadet, polishing his boots a few beds away, explained what had happened. They had come for Jost in the night. There were two of them. He was to be sent East, they said, for ‘special training’. He had gone without a word – seemed to have been expecting it. The cadet shook his head in amazement: Jost of all people. The cadet was jealous. They all were. He would see some real fighting.

  THREE

  he telephone kiosk stank of urine and ancient cigarette smoke, a used condom had been trodden into the dirt.

  ‘Come on, come on,’ whispered March. He rapped a one-Reichsmark piece against the cloudy glass and listened to the electronic purr of her telephone ringing, unanswered. He let it ring for a long time before he hung up.

  Across the street a grocery store was opening. He crossed and bought a bottle of milk and some warm bread which he gulped down beside the road, conscious all the time of the shop’s owner watching him from the window. It occurred to him that he was living like a fugitive already – stopping to grab food only when he happened across it, de
vouring it in the open, always on the move. Milk trickled down his chin. He brushed it away with the back of his hand. His skin felt like sandpaper.

  He checked again to see if he was being followed. On this side of the street, a uniformed nanny pushed a baby carriage. On the other, an old woman had gone into the telephone kiosk. A schoolboy hurried towards the Havel, clutching a toy yacht. Normal, normal . . .

  March, the good citizen, dropped the milk bottle into a waste bin and set off down the suburban road.

  ‘You have no witness. Not any more . . .’

  He felt a great rage against Globus, the greater for being fuelled by guilt. The Gestapo must have seen Jost’s statement in the file on Buhler’s death. They would have checked with the SS academy and discovered that March had been back to re-interrogate him yesterday afternoon. That would have set them scurrying in Prinz-Albrecht Strasse. So his visit to the barracks had been Jost’s death warrant. He had indulged his curiosity – and killed a man.

  And now the American girl was not answering her telephone. What might they do to her? An army truck overtook him, the draught sucked at him, and a vision of Charlotte Maguire lying broken in the gutter bubbled in his mind. ‘The Berlin authorities deeply regret this tragic accident . . . The driver of the vehicle concerned is still being sought . . .’ He felt like the carrier of a dangerous disease. He should carry a placard: keep clear of this man, he is contagious.

  Circulating endlessly in his head, fragments of conversation –

  Artur Nebe: ‘Find Luther, March. Find him before Globus gets to him . . .’

  Rudi Halder: ‘A couple of Sipo guys were round at the Archiv last week asking about you . . .’

  Nebe again: ‘There is a complaint here from your ex-wife; one from your son . . .’

  He walked for half an hour along the blossoming streets, past the high hedges and picket fences of prosperous, suburban Berlin. When he reached Dahlem, he stopped a student to ask directions. At the sight of March’s uniform, the young man bowed his head. Dahlem was a student quarter. The male undergraduates, like this one, let their hair grow a few centimetres over their collars; some of the women wore jeans – God only knew where they got them. White Rose, the student resistance movement which had flowered briefly in the 1940s until its leaders were executed, was suddenly alive again. ‘Ihr Geist lebt weiter’ said the graffiti: their spirit lives on. Members of White Rose grumbled about conscription, listened to banned music, circulated seditious magazines, were harassed by the Gestapo.