I showed him the face of the Rolex on my wrist. I had more or less decided not to sell it. Neumann winced as he saw the time.
'I expect she got held up,' I said.
He shook his head sadly. 'She won't come now. Women.'
I gave him a cigarette. 'These days the only woman you can trust is another man's wife.'
'It's a rotten world, Herr Gunther.'
'Yeah, well, don't tell anyone, will you.'
Chapter 10
On the train to Vienna I met a man who talked about what we had done to the Jews.
'Look,' he said, 'they can't blame us for what happened. It was preordained. We were merely fulfilling their own Old Testament prophecy: the one about Joseph and his brothers. There you have Joseph, a repressive father's youngest and most favoured son, and whom we can take to be symbolic of the whole Jewish race. And then you have all the other brothers, symbolic of gentiles everywhere, but let's assume they are Germans who are quite naturally jealous of the little velvet boy. He's better looking than they are. He has a coat of many colours. My God, no wonder they hate him. No wonder they sell him into slavery. But the important point to note is that what the brothers do is as much a reaction against a stern and authoritarian father a fatherland if you like as it is against an apparently over-privileged brother.' The man shrugged and started to knead the lobe of one of his question-mark shaped ears thoughtfully. 'Really, when you think about it, they ought to thank us.'
'How do you work that out?' I said, with considerable want of faith.
'Had it not been for what Joseph's brothers did, the children of Israel would never have been enslaved in Egypt, would never have been led to the Promised Land by Moses. Similarly, had it not been for what we Germans did, the Jews would never have gone back to Palestine. Why even now, they are on the verge of establishing a new state.' The man's little eyes narrowed as if he had been one of the few allowed a peek in God's desk-diary. 'Oh yes,' he said, 'it was a prophecy fulfilled, all right.'
'I don't know about any prophecy,' I growled, and jerked my thumb at the scene skimming by the carriage window: an apparently endless Red Army troop convoy, moving south along the autobahn, parallel to the railway line, 'but it certainly looks like we ended up in the Red Sea.'
It was well named, this infinite column of savage, omnivorous red ants, ravaging the land and gathering all that they could carry more than their individual body weights to take back to their semi-permanent, worker-run colonies. And like some Brazilian planter who had seen his coffee crop devastated by these social creatures, my hatred of the Russians was tempered by an equal measure of respect. For seven long years I had fought them, killed them, been imprisoned by them, learned their language and finally escaped from one of their labour camps.
Seven thin ears of corn blasted with the east wind, devouring the seven good ears.
At the outbreak of the war I had been a Kriminalkommissar in Section 5 of the RSHA, the Reich Main Security Office, and automatically ranked as a full lieutenant in the SS. Apart from the oath of loyalty to Adolf Hitler, my being an SS-OberSturmFnhrer had not seemed much of a problem until June 1941, when Arthur Nebe, formerly the director of the Reichs Criminal Police, and newly promoted SS-GruppenFnhrer, was given command of an Action Group as part of the invasion of Russia.
I was just one of the various police personnel who were drafted to Nebe's group, the aim of which, so I believed, was to follow the Wehrmacht into occupied White Russia and combat lawbreaking and terrorism of whatever description. My own duties at the Group's Minsk headquarters had involved the seizure of the records of the Russian NKVD and the capture of an NKVD death-squad that had massacred hundreds of White Russian political prisoners to prevent them from being liberated by the German Army. But mass murder is endemic in any war of conquest, and it soon became apparent to me that my own side was also arbitrarily massacring Russian prisoners. Then came the discovery that the primary purpose of the Action Groups was not the elimination of terrorists but the systematic murder of Jewish civilians.
In all my four years' service in the first, Great War, I never saw anything which had a more devastating effect on my spirit than what I witnessed in the summer of 1941. Although I was not personally charged with the task of commanding any of these mass-execution squads, I reasoned that it could only be a matter of time before I was so ordered, and, as an inevitable corollary, before I was shot for refusing to obey. So I requested an immediate transfer to the Wehrmacht and the front line.
As the commanding general of the Action Group, Nebe could have had me sent to a punishment battalion. He could even have ordered my execution. Instead he acceded to my request for a transfer, and after several more weeks in White Russia, during which time I assisted General Gehlen's Foreign Armies East Intelligence Section with the organization of the captured NKVD records, I was transferred, not to the front line, but to the War Crimes Bureau of the Military High Command in Berlin. By that time Arthur Nebe had personally supervised the murders of over 30,000 men, women and children.
After my return to Berlin I never saw him again. Years later I met an old friend from Kripo who told me that Nebe, always an ambiguous sort of Nazi, had been executed in early 1945 as one of the members of Count Stauffenberg's plot to kill Hitler.
It always gave me a strange kind of feeling to know that I very possibly owed my life to a mass- murderer.
To my great relief, the man with the curious line in hermeneutics left the train at Dresden, and I slept between there and Prague. But most of the time I thought about Kirsten and the abruptly worded note I had left her, explaining that I would be away for several weeks and accounting for the presence of the gold sovereigns in the apartment, which constituted half of my fee for taking Becker's case, and which Poroshin had taken it upon himself to deliver the previous day.
I cursed myself for not writing more, for failing to say that there was nothing I wouldn't have done for her, no Herculean labour I would not have gladly performed on her behalf. All of this she knew of course, made manifest as it was in the packet of extravagantly worded letters that she kept in her drawer. Next to her unmentioned bottle of Chanel.
Chapter 11
The journey between Berlin and Vienna is a long time to spend brooding about the infidelity of your wife, so it was just as well that Poroshin's aide had got me a ticket on a train that took the most direct route nineteen and a half hours, via Dresden, Prague and Brno as opposed to the twenty-seven-and-a-half-hour train which went via Leipzig and Nuremberg. With a screech of wheels the train drew slowly to a halt in Franz Josefs Bahnhof, mantling the platform's few occupants in a steamy limbo.
At the ticket barrier I presented my papers to an American MP and, having explained my presence in Vienna to his satisfaction, walked into the station, dropped my bag and looked around for some sign that my arrival was both expected and welcomed by someone in the small crowd of waiting people.
The approach of a medium-sized, grey-haired man signalled that I was correct in the first of these calculations, although I was soon to be apprised of the vanity of the second. He informed me that his name was Dr Liebl and that he had the honour of acting as Emil Becker's legal representative.
'I have a taxi waiting,' he said, glancing uncertainly at my luggage. 'Even so, it isn't very far to my offices and had you brought a smaller bag we might have walked there.'
'I know it sounds pessimistic,' I said, 'but I rather thought I'd have to stay overnight.'
I followed him across the station floor.
'I trust that you had a good journey, Herr Gunther.'
'I'm here, aren't I?' I said, forcing an affable sort of chuckle. 'How else does one define a good journey these days?'
'I really couldn't say,' he said crisply. 'Myself, I never leave Vienna.' He waved his hand dismissively at a group of ragged-looking DPs who seemed to have camped out in the station. 'Today, with the whole world on some kind of journey, it seems imprudent that I should expect God to look out for the kind of traveller who would only wish to be able to return from whence he started.'
He ushered me to a waiting taxi, and I handed my bag to the driver and climbed into the back seat, only to find the bag come after me again.
'There's an extra charge for luggage carried outside,' Liebl explained, pushing the bag on to my lap. 'As I said, it's not very far and taxis are expensive.