metal.
âItâs Brunoâs gun, all right,â I said. âIt doesnât look like he even got his hand on it. Iâd like to see that shirt please.â
Strunck glanced at his Reichskriminaldirektor for approval.
âLet him see it, Inspector,â said Nebe.
The shirt was from C & A, and heavily bloodstained around the stomach area and the right cuff, which seemed to confirm the general set-up.
âIt does look as though this was the man who murdered your partner, Herr Gunther,â said Heydrich. âHe came back here and, having changed his clothes, had a chance to reflect upon what heâd done. In a fit of remorse he hanged himself.â
âIt would seem so,â I said, without much uncertainty. âBut if you donât mind, General Heydrich, Iâd like to take a look round the place. On my own. Just to satisfy my curiosity about one or two things.â
âVery well. Donât be too long, will you?â
With Heydrich, Nebe and the police gone from the apartment, I took a closer look at Klaus Heringâs body. Apparently he had tied a length of electrical cord to the banister, slipped a noose over his head, and then simply stepped off the stair. But only an inspection of Heringâs hands, wrists and neck itself could tell me if that had really been what happened. There was something about the circumstances of his death, something I couldnât quite put my finger on, that I found questionable. Not least was the fact that he had chosen to change his shirt before hanging himself.
I climbed over the banister on to a small shelf that was made by the top of the stairwellâs wall, and knelt down. Leaning forward, I had a good view of the suspension point behind Heringâs right ear. The level of tightening of the ligature is always higher and more vertical with a hanging than with a case of strangulation. But here there was a second and altogether more horizontal mark just below the noose which seemed to confirm my doubts. Before hanging himself, Klaus Hering had been strangled to death.
I checked that Heringâs shirt collar was the same size as the bloodstained shirt I had examined earlier. It was. Then I climbed back over the banister and stepped down a few stairs. Standing on tiptoe I reached up to examine his hands and wrists. Prising the right hand open I saw the dried blood and then a small shiny object, which seemed to be sticking into the palm. I pulled it out of Heringâs flesh and laid it carefully on to the flat of my hand. The pin was bent, probably from the pressure of Heringâs fist, and although encrusted with blood, the deathâs-head motif was unmistakable. It was an SS cap badge.
I paused briefly, trying to imagine what might have happened, certain now that Heydrich must have had a hand in it. Back in the garden at the Prinz Albrecht Palais, had he not asked me himself what my answer to his proposition would be if âthe obstacleâ that was my obligation to find Brunoâs murderer, were âremovedâ? And wasnât this as completely removed as it was possible to achieve? No doubt he had anticipated what my answer would be and had already ordered Heringâs murder by the time we went for our stroll.
With these and other thoughts I searched the apartment. I was quick but thorough, lifting mattresses, examining cisterns, rolling back rugs and even leafing through a set of medical textbooks. I managed to find a whole sheet of the old stamps commemorating the fifth anniversary of the Nazis coming to power which had consistently appeared on the blackmail notes to Frau Lange. But of her sonâs letters to Dr Kindermann there was no sign.
6
Friday, 9 September
It felt strange being back in a case-meeting at the Alex, and even stranger hearing Arthur Nebe refer to me as Kommissar Gunther. Five years had elapsed since the day in June 1933 when, no longer able to tolerate Goeringâs police purges, I
Clive;Justin Scott Cussler