'Including the Zugspitze?' The Zugspitze, Germany's highest mountain, was why most people went to Garmisch-Partenkirchen in the first place.
'That's not a climb,' he said. 'That's a walk. You'll be walking up it yourself, in a couple of weeks.' He shook his head. 'But my real interest is tropical medicine. There's a small laboratory in Partenkirchen that the Amis let me use. I'm rather friendly with one of their senior officers. He comes to play chess with Eric once or twice a week. You'll like him. He speaks perfect German and he's a damned good chess player.'
'How did you meet?'
Henkell laughed. 'I was his prisoner. There used to be a POW camp in Partenkirchen. I ran the hospital for him. The lab was part of the hospital. The Amis have their own doctor, of course. Nice fellow, but he's not much more than a pill pusher. Anything surgical, they usually ask me.'
'Isn't it a bit unusual researching tropical medicine in the Alps?' I said.
'On the contrary,' said Henkell. 'You see, the air is very dry and very pure. So is the water. Which makes it an ideal place to avoid specimen contamination.'
'You're a man of many parts,' I told him.
He seemed to like that.
Just after Murnau, our road crossed the Murnauer marshes. Beyond Farchant, the basin of Garmisch- Partenkirchen opened out and we had our first view of the Zugspitze and the other Wetterstein Mountains. Coming from Berlin, I rather disliked mountains, especially the Alps. They always looked sort of melted, as if someone had carelessly left them out in the sun too long. Two or three miles farther on, the road divided, my ears popped, and we were in Sonnenbichl, just a short way north of Garmisch.
'The real action is down in Garmisch,' he explained. 'All the Olympic facilities, of course, from 'thirty-six. There are some hotels--most of them requisitioned by the Amis--a couple of bowling alleys, the officers' club, one or two bars and restaurants, the Alpine Theater, and the cable car stations for the Wank and the Zugspitze. Pretty much everything else comes under the control of the Southeastern Command of the U.S. Third Army. There's even a hotel named after General Patton. In fact, there are two, now that I think of it. The Amis like it here. They come here from all over Germany for what they call R-and-R. Rest and recreation. They play tennis, they play golf, they shoot skeets, and in winter they ski and go ice-skating. The ice rink at the Wintergarten is something to see. The local girls are friendly, and they even show American movies at two of the four movie theaters. So, what's not to like? A lot of them are from towns in the U.S. that are not so different from Garmisch-Partenkirchen.'
'With one crucial difference,' I said. 'Those towns don't have an army of occupation.'
Henkell shrugged. 'They're not so bad when you get to know them.'
'So are some Alsatian dogs,' I said, sourly. 'But I wouldn't want one around the house all day.'
'Here we are at last,' he said, turning off the road. He drove onto a gravel driveway that led between two clumps of lofty pines and across an empty green field at the end of which stood a three-story wooden house with a roof as steep as Garmisch's famous ninety-meter ski jump. The first thing you noticed about the place was that one wall was covered with a large heraldic coat of arms. This was a gold shield with black spots, and three main devices: a decrescent moon, a cannon with some cannonballs, and a raven. It all meant that the suit of armor from whom Henkell was probably descended had enjoyed shooting ravens, by the light of the silvery moon, with a piece of artillery. Beneath all this decorative nonsense was an inscription. It read '
'I guess your family have never suffered from acrophobia,' I said. Or poverty, I felt like adding.
'It's quite a sight, isn't it?' he said, pulling up outside the front door. 'I never get tired of looking at that view.'
Neat piles of logs framed the front door like so many cigarettes. Above the door was a smaller version of the coat of arms on the exterior wall. The door was the robust kind that looked as if it had been borrowed from Odin's castle. It opened to reveal a man in a wheelchair with a rug on his lap and a uniformed nurse at his shoulder. The nurse looked warmer than the rug and I knew instinctively which one of them I'd have preferred to have had on my lap. I was getting better.
The man in the chair was heavyset with longish, fair hair and a beard you might have picked for an important chat with Moses. The mustaches were waxed and left his face like the quillions on a broad-sword. He wore a blue suede Schliersee jacket with staghorn buttons, a
If Heidi had grown up she might have looked something like the nurse of the man in the wheelchair. She wore a pink knee-length dirndl, a white low-cut blouse with short puffy sleeves, a white cotton apron, lacy kneesocks, and the same sort of sensible shoes as her bearded charge. I knew she was supposed to be a nurse, because she had a little upside-down watch pinned to her blouse and a white cap on her head. She was blond, but not the sunny kind of blond, or the gilded kind, but the enigmatic, wistful kind you might find lost in some sylvan glade. Her mouth was slightly sulky and her eyes were a sort of lavender color. I tried not to notice her bosom. And then I tried again, only it kept on singing to me like it was perched on a rock in the Rhine River and I was some poor, dumb sailor with an ear for music. All women are nurses at bottom. It's in their nature to nurture. Some look more like nurses than others. And some women manage to make being a nurse look like Delilah's last stratagem. The nurse at Henkell's house was the second kind. With a face and figure like hers she would have made my old army great-coat look like a silk dressing gown.
Henkell caught me licking my lips and grinned as he helped me out of the Mercedes. 'I told you you would like it here,' he said.
'I love it when you're right like this,' I said.
We went into the house, where Henkell introduced me. The man in the wheelchair was Eric Gruen. The nurse's name was Engelbertina Zehner. Engelbertina means 'bright angel.' Somehow it suited her. They both seemed quite excited to see me. Then again the house wasn't exactly the kind of place you would just drop in unannounced. Not unless you were wearing a parachute. They were probably glad of new company, even if the company was wrapped up in himself. We all shook hands. Gruen's hand was soft and a little moist, as if he was nervous about something. Engelbertina's hand was as hard and rough as a sheet of sandpaper, which shocked me a little and made me think that private nursing had its tough side. I sat down on a big, comfortable sofa and let out a big, comfortable sigh.
'That's quite a walk,' I said, glancing back at the enormous drawing room. Engelbertina was already stuffing a cushion behind my back. That was when I noticed the tattoo on the top of her left forearm. Which went a long way to explaining how it was her hands were so tough. The rest of her must have been pretty tough, too. But for now I put it out of my mind. I was trying to get away from things like that. Besides, something good was cooking in the kitchen and, for the first time in weeks, I felt hungry. Another woman appeared in the doorway. She was attractive, too, in the same older, larger, slightly worn way that I was attractive myself. Her name was Raina, and she was the cook.
'Herr Gunther is a private detective,' said Henkell.
'That must be interesting,' said Gruen.
'When it gets interesting, that's usually the time to reach for a gun,' I said.
'How does one get into that line of work?' asked Gruen, relighting his pipe. Engelbertina didn't seem to like the smoke and waved it away from her face with the flat of her hand. Gruen ignored her and I made a mental note not to, and to smoke outside for a while.
'I used to be a cop in Berlin,' I said. 'A detective with KRIPO. Before the war.'
'Did you ever catch a murderer?' she asked.
Normally I'd flick a question like that off my lapel. But I wanted to impress her. 'Once,' I said. 'A long time ago. A strangler called Gormann.'
'I remember that case,' said Gruen. 'That was a famous case.'
I shrugged. 'Like I said. It was a long time ago.'