they might have used him, sir?’
‘I don’t see any harm in asking.’
Ganz was unrepentant, the sort of client I wouldn’t have minded working for myself.
‘As I said, Kommissar, there was nothing in the newspapers about our daughter, and we saw your colleague here only twice. So as time passed we wondered just what efforts were being made to find our daughter. It’s the not knowing that gets to you. We thought that if we hired Herr Vogelmann then at least we could be sure that someone was doing his best to try and find her. I don’t mean to be rude, Kommissar, but that’s the way it was.’
I sipped my coffee and shook my head.
‘I quite understand,’ I said. ‘I’d probably have done the same thing myself. I just wish this Vogelmann had been able to find her.’
You had to admire them, I thought. They could probably ill-afford the services of a private investigator and yet they had still gone ahead and hired one. It might even have cost them whatever savings they had.
When we had finished our coffee and were leaving I suggested that a police car might come round and bring Herr Ganz down to the Alex to identify the body early the following morning.
‘Thank you for your kindness, Kommissar,’ said Frau Ganz, attempting a smile. ‘Everyone’s been so kind.’
Her husband nodded his agreement. Hovering by the open door, he was obviously keen to see the back of us.
‘Herr Vogelmann wouldn’t take any money from us. And now you’re arranging a car for my husband. I can’t tell you how much we appreciate it.’
I squeezed her hand sympathetically, and then we left.
In the pharmacy downstairs I bought some powders and swallowed one in the car. Becker looked at me with disgust.
‘Christ, I don’t know how you can do that,’ he said, shuddering.
‘It works faster that way. And after what we just went through I can’t say that I notice the taste much. I hate giving bad news.’ I swept my mouth with my tongue for the residue. ‘Well? What did you make of that? Get the same hunch as before?’
‘Yes. He was giving her all sorts of meaningful little looks.’
‘So were you, for that matter,’ I said, shaking my head in wonder.
Becker grinned broadly. ‘She wasn’t bad, was she?’
‘I suppose you’re going to tell me what she’d be like in bed, right?’
‘More your type I’d have thought, sir.’
‘Oh? What makes you say that?’
‘You know, the type that responds to kindness.’
I laughed, despite my headache. ‘More than she responds to bad news. There we are with our big feet and long faces and all she can do is look like she was in the middle of her period.’
‘She’s a nurse. They’re used to handling bad news.’
‘That crossed my mind, but I think she’d done her crying already, and quite recently. What about Irma Hanke’s mother? Did she cry?’
‘God, no. As hard as Jew Suss that one. Maybe she did sniff a little when I first showed up. But they were giving off the same sort of atmosphere as the Ganzes.’
I looked at my watch. ‘I think we need a drink, don’t you?’
We drove to the cafe Kerkau, on Alexanderstrasse. With sixty billiard tables, it was where a lot of bulls from the Alex went to relax when they came off duty.
I bought a couple of beers and carried them over to a table where Becker was practising a few shots.
‘Do you play?’ he said.
‘Are you stretching me out? This used to be my sitting-room.’ I picked up a stick and watched Becker shoot the cue ball. It hit the red, banked off the cushion and hit the other white ball square.
‘Care for a little bet?’
‘Not after that shot. You’ve got a lot to learn about working a line. Now if you’d missed it -’
‘Lucky shot, that’s all,’ Becker insisted. He bent down and cued a wild one which missed by half a metre.
I clicked my tongue. ‘That’s a billiard cue you’re holding, not a white stick. Stop trying to lay me down, will you? Look, if it makes you happy, we’ll play for five marks a game.’
He smiled slightly and flexed his shoulders.
‘Twenty points all right with you?’
I won the break and missed the opening shot. After that I might just as well have been baby-sitting. Becker hadn’t been in the Boy Scouts when he was young, that much was certain. After four games I tossed a twenty on to the felt and begged for mercy. Becker threw it back.
‘It’s all right,’ he said. ‘You let me lay you down.’
‘That’s another thing you’ve got to learn. A bet’s a bet. You never ever play for money unless you mean to collect. A man that lets you off might expect you to let him off. It makes people nervous, that’s all.’
‘That sounds like good advice.’ He pocketed the money.
‘It’s like business,’ I continued. ‘You never work for free. If you won’t take money for your work then it can’t have been worth much.’ I returned my cue to the rack and finished my beer. ‘Never trust anyone who’s happy to do the job for nothing.’
‘Is that what you’ve learnt as a private detective?’
‘No, it’s what I’ve learnt as a good businessman. But since you mention it, I don’t like the smell of a private investigator who tries to find a missing schoolgirl and then waives his fee.’
‘Rolf Vogelmann? But he didn’t find her.’
‘Let me tell you something. These days a lot of people go missing in this town, and for lots of different reasons. Finding one is the exception, not the rule. If I’d torn up the bill of every disappointed client I had, I’d have been washing dishes by now. When you’re private, there’s no room for sentiment. The man who doesn’t collect, doesn’t eat.’
‘Maybe this Vogelmann character is just more generous than you were, sir.’
I shook my head. ‘I don’t see how he can afford to be,’ I said, unfolding Vogelmann’s advertisement and looking at it again. ‘Not with these overheads.’
16
It was her, all right. There was no mistaking that golden head and those well-sculpted legs. I watched her struggle out of Ka-De- We’s revolving door, laden with parcels and carrier-bags, looking like she was doing her last-minute Christmas shopping. She waved for a taxi, dropped a bag, bent down to retrieve it and looked up to find that the driver had missed her. It was difficult to see how. You’d have noticed Hildegard Steininger with a sack over your head. She looked as though she lived in a beauty parlour.
From inside my car I heard her swear and, drawing up at the curb, I wound down the passenger window.
‘Need a lift somewhere?’
She was still looking around for another taxi when she answered. ‘No, it’s all right,’ she said, as if I had cornered her at a cocktail party and she had been glancing over my shoulder to see if there might be someone more interesting coming along. There wasn’t, so she remembered to smile, briefly, and then added: ‘Well, if you’re sure it’s no trouble.’
I jumped out to help her load the shopping. Millinery stores, shoe shops, a perfumers, a fancy Friedrichstrasse dress-designer, and Ka-De-We’s famous food hall: I figured she was the type for whom a cheque-book provided the best kind of panacea for what was troubling her. But then, there are lots of women like that.
‘It’s no trouble at all,’ I said, my eyes following her legs as they swung into the car, briefly enjoying a view of
