‘Many a fine tune is played upon an old violin.’ Frau Hinkelburg laughed loudly and clamped her hand over her mouth in a gesture she believed refined. The diamonds on her hand caught the light. ‘Before the Frenchman, they say she was casting her eyes farther afield.’
‘What do you mean?’ said Anna-Luisa.
‘Your employer, my dear.’
Anna-Luisa laughed good-naturedly.
‘You think that’s funny?’
‘But Herr Bach and that fat old Frau Kersten …’
‘Yes, Frau Kersten would be a lucky woman to have Herr Bach as a husband,’ admitted Frau Hinkelburg as she thought about it.
‘Any woman would be a lucky woman.’
Frau Hinkelburg looked up sharply. Her ears were attuned to chance remarks and she never missed an innuendo. ‘Ach so!’ was all she said, but Anna-Luisa knew that one part of her secret was a secret no longer. Frau Hinkelburg put a freckled bejewelled hand upon Anna-Luisa’s thin white arm and smiled at her.
‘You were not here when the Wald Hotel was really a hotel. What a wonderful place! The chef was French, from Monte Carlo. People came from all corners of Europe – and from America too – to dine there and stay in the suites that face on to the gardens and the forest. There were floodlit fountains and an orchestra outside in the summer. They used to dance until two or three o’clock in the morning and the sound of the music could be heard right across the town on a still summer’s night. When I was a young girl I would open my bedroom windows and listen to the music and the voices of the fine people who left their motor-cars and chauffeurs waiting down there in Mauerstrasse. It will never be the same again.’
‘When the war is ended, perhaps …’
‘No, the world has changed since then. There is no place for romance now. Why, look at what the Wald Hotel is now used for.’
‘No one knows what it’s used for.’
‘I know,’ said Frau Hinkelburg. ‘My husband is an architect and he heard it from someone in the Burgomaster’s office.’ She leaned closer to emphasize the confidential nature of her theory. ‘It’s a human stud. Young carefully chosen Aryan girls are sent there to –’ she hesitated – ‘to have children by selected SS officers.’
‘How awful,’ said Anna-Luisa. She said it mechanically for she did not believe it.
‘Awful,’ agreed Frau Hinkelburg, ‘and yet fascinating. Is it not?’
‘There are so many stories about the men in the Wald Hotel.’
‘Because they so seldom emerge from the place.’
‘Probably,’ agreed Anna-Luisa.
‘Well, it’s understandable,’ said Frau Hinkelburg. ‘They have everything they want there, don’t they?’ She laughed coarsely; Anna-Luisa smiled.
‘Are you going anywhere tonight, Anna-Luisa?’
‘I have so much ironing to do.’
‘I thought you might be going to the Burgomaster’s birthday party at Frenzel’s. They are having Russian caviar and roast duckling. I am going.’
‘Herr Bach scarcely knows the Burgomaster.’
‘But his cousin Gerd knows him.’ She watched the girl carefully. ‘And you are a friend of Andi Niels, the Burgomaster’s secretary.’
‘He’s no friend of mine,’ said Anna-Luisa; ‘he’s horrid.’
‘He has a reputation,’ agreed Frau Hinkelburg, ‘but he wields a great deal of influence in this town. The girls with extra clothing-ration coupons … you’d never believe.’ She laughed again.
‘I have heard stories about him,’ said Anna-Luisa.
‘There are stories about everyone in this town. Small towns are always full of gossip. There are stories about you, even … you would laugh if you heard them.’
‘About me?’
‘It means nothing, child. A beautiful girl is bound to have stories told about her …’
‘In connection with whom?’ interrupted Anna-Luisa angrily.
The woman smiled and Anna-Luisa knew that she wanted her to be angry.
‘Whom?’ repeated Anna-Luisa. ‘What lies are being spread?’
‘I never listen to scandal,’ said the old woman haughtily. ‘It’s all stupid nonsense. I have told you that.’
‘With whom?’
‘With everyone, child; you would have to be the most energetic courtesan since Pompadour.’ She patted her arm again and the bejewelled rings flashed in the sunlight.
Fischer was a young man – twenty-four last birthday – but his bloodshot eyes and the black rings of tiredness around them made his appearance deceptive. Now that he had had a steaming hot bath and washed the Russian dust out of his hair he shook away some of his fatigue. He found a last clean set of underclothes and a reasonably clean shirt in his baggage. An orderly had just returned his boots to him brightly shining, although there were deep scratches that went right through the leather in places. His long leather overcoat hanging on the door was also beyond salvage. Its lapels were scuffed white and the sleeve seams had been ripped and resewn so many times that it was crookbacked. He put the Knight’s Cross over his head and tucked the lady’s garter to which it was attached under his collar out of sight.
In the front line no one any longer wore their conspicuous Leibstandarte cuffband but now Fischer put it on his sleeve. The words ‘Adolf Hitler’ shone bright and new compared with the faded fabric of his jacket. Fischer stroked the armband. The number one SS division, and he was to join number twelve. Ugh! He feared it might be like this rundown SS training depot where even the sentries were improperly dressed and the slow-witted young officers only half trained. It depressed him to think about it.
He looked at himself in the mirror. A tall slim man with a yellowish complexion that never altered no matter how long he spent in the sunshine. His eyes were black, intelligent and attractive. His brows were bushy, meeting above his large hooked nose to make a straight line across his face. At school he had been chosen to play Julius Caesar when his teacher said that he looked exactly like a Roman emperor. Adolf Fischer liked that idea and even now he would sometimes have too many drinks and surprise the other officers, who knew him only as a zealous and consistently savage warrior, by long quotations from Shakespeare’s play.
These rooms on the first floor with balconies overlooking the lake had once been the finest rooms in the hotel. The bridal suite, perhaps. Now they were used for officers in transit and they had been left unaltered even to the china jug and basin on the marble washstand with an enamel jug of boiling water delivered each morning to the rooms without baths. The pictures too remained: stag hunt, dawn in the mountains and Napoleon after Waterloo. There was a knock at the door.
‘Come in,’ bawled Fischer. He was surprised to find that his visitor was an old man who outranked him considerably. Embarrassed by the manner in which he had shouted, Fischer came to a stiff position of attention and waited with unseeing eyes until his visitor bid him relax.
‘Standartenführer Wörth,’ the old man introduced himself. His voice was quiet and his manner hesitant. Fischer had to watch his lips to understand his words. ‘I’m the commanding officer. Please continue with whatever you were doing. I only wished to offer you my greetings as I shall not be dining in the Mess this evening. The Burgomaster here in Altgarten is an old Allgemeine SS officer and he’s having a rather formal dinner party.’
It was frightening, thought Fischer. The German Cross medal on the old man’s pocket showed that he had been a fighting soldier in this war and yet now he’d become a mere vegetable, wrinkled and bent like an old turnip and so pale that Fischer felt positively tanned beside him.
‘I have acquaintances nearby, sir. It was my intention to call upon them this evening.’
‘Splendid,’ said the old man. ‘You’re going to this new “Hitler Jugend” Division.’
‘The Division commander was with me in the Leibstandarte. He’s asked for me.’
‘Reich Germans?’
‘Yes. All of them born in 1926, volunteers from the Hitler Jugend.’
‘It will be an élite division.’