Fritz hated going to the Brown House. It had only been NSDAP headquarters for nine months, but in that time he had gone on many visits, sometimes with the political police as a guard, and sometimes on cases involving disputes with the Communists. The Brown House had once been Barlow Palace, and he continued to think of it that way, although to say so brought loud correction from anyone within hearing distance. The majestic view over Königsplaz belonged to a king, not to a tawdry political party whose leader’s niece had just been murdered.
This part of Munich had been the home to Ludwig the First, who abdicated in 1848. Fritz had always thought of Ludwig as a much more ancient king, perhaps because the buildings he sponsored had the look of Greece to them – the long, flowing columns, the grand arches. This was a regal part of Munich, regal and cold. As a boy, Fritz had walked through it, imagining himself at the mercy of men who were greater than he was.
The Brownshirts of the NSDAP did not belong here. Misfits and beer hall brawlers, they had obtained a sort of status in the last election, gaining almost 100 seats in the Reichstag by preaching a confused message of economic hope and hatred of groups, from the Communists to the Jews. Fritz had heard many of the speeches, impassioned all of them, and part of him wanted to believe them: that if Germany were only cleansed of its foreign element, it would be great again. If Germany stood on its own legs, it would be able to provide for its citizens. But ultimately, the speakers never said anything of consequence. They did not have a program for developing their reforms; they simply knew that change had to be made.
Fritz believed in detail, and the NSDAP’s denial of detail would have troubled him even if he hadn’t been in the Kripo. But he was, and as a member of the police force – even though he was not often on the street – he saw the one thing that made him turn away from NSDAP altogether: the violence. If a man could not be silenced by words, he was silenced with truncheons. Dissenters were beaten, sometimes to death.
A party based on violence would lead to a government based on the same violence, a government that would not listen to any voice raised in protest.
Despite his dislike for the Brown House, he was at their door before most of the men had arrived. His day had started even earlier: he had already spoken to Henrich, who agreed to begin his assistance by getting the letter from Frau Winter. Henrich had offered to accompany Fritz to the Brown House, but Fritz felt better in such a place alone. He did not want to have to protect someone else, particularly someone he had brought along unofficially.
When Fritz arrived, the door to the Brown House was unlocked. The lower floor was empty, except for a few party clerks who had arrived for work early. Even they wore pseudo military uniforms. They did not roll up their sleeves like other clerks in other party buildings. They wore boots and saluted crisply after speaking. Fritz avoided them and slipped into the small refreshment room he knew to be on the side.
Once he had found Hitler there, on an afternoon after the SA had broken up a Communist rally. On this morning, the refreshment centre was empty except for a slender young clerk whose white shirt was buttoned tightly around his neck, and whose blond hair was cut short, military style.
‘I am looking for Herr Hitler,’ Fritz said.
‘He is not in, sir. May I help you?’ The boy’s voice still broke from youth.
Fritz smiled at him, deciding in this military environ, the kindly older uncle routine would be a welcome change. ‘If he is not here, I would like to see Herr Amann or Herr Schwarz.’
The boy flushed. ‘I’m sorry, sir. It is a bit early for the offices to be full.’
‘Is Herr Strasser in?’
The boy straightened slightly. ‘I thought I saw Herr Strasser upstairs.’
Fritz let his smile broaden. ‘I would love to see him, if I could.’
‘I will take you upstairs,’ the boy said.
But Fritz laid a hand on his arm. ‘No. Just point me in the right direction. You probably have many tasks to get on with.’
‘Thank you, sir, but it would be no trouble.’
‘Ah,’ Fritz said quietly. ‘But it might, if you understand my meaning.’
The boy did. He was clearly used to secret meetings and discussions that clerks were not privy to. In clear, precise language accompanied by a flurry of hand signals, the boy gave Fritz directions to Strasser’s office. Fritz thanked the boy, and went upstairs.
The Brown House still had some of the palace’s former glory, but it had been lessened somehow. Even though the House was spotless, it had a tawdry air. Some of the change was the decorations: the blood flags flown during the 1923 putsch hung from the walls, the desks, and the phones (which had started ringing shortly after Fritz arrived, and never seemed to stop), and the party members themselves, who marched in as if they were part of a military regime.
When he reached the second floor, the sound of the phones grew fainter. The air was chill and smelled of leather. The ancient marble covering the floor was cloudy white, like ice on a wind-shrouded lake. Even though the large windows let in a lot of light, the glass diffused it, making it as cold as the rest of the place.
He checked in the other offices. They were empty, the doors surprisingly unlocked, although nothing sat on desktops except telephones, pen holders and calendars. Hitler’s office was the largest and the most obvious. The marble floor had been covered with a reddish-brown carpet, with furniture to match. The windows overlooked Königsplaz. A large bust of Mussolini stood against one wall, along with a series of framed photographs.
Fritz went inside and stood before the row of photographs. Among them was one of a World War I unit, with Hitler in the centre, looking thinner and tired. Another was a studio portrait of a beautiful woman. She had black hair combed into a subtle marcel. Her eyebrows were plucked to single curved lines, and she wore only a slight tinge of make-up. A fur wrap warmed her shoulders, leaving her neck and collar bare. But those details were not the ones that made her stunning: it was her expression. Her eyes held a proud warmth, her chin was jutted forward, suggesting confidence, and her near-smile was just enough to make her appear mysterious and inviting at the same time.
It took him a moment to recognise the face. Geli. The photograph made her look older and more sophisticated than her years suggested.
But she had no cunning, like Gisela had had.
None at all.
The hair on the back of his neck prickled. He was being watched. He whirled. A man peered in the door. He was not wearing the uniform of the clerks, nor was he dressed as a Brownshirt. He wore a suit, and wire-framed glasses that enlarged his eyes. He was balding, his features soft, his mouth in a straight line. He clearly had not expected Fritz to be in Hitler’s office.
‘I’m looking for Gregor Strasser,’ Fritz said.
The man studied him for a moment, as if Fritz had spoken a completely foreign language. Then the man said, ‘Gregor Strasser’s office is down the hall, to the right.’
‘Thank you,’ Fritz said, and pushed past the man. The man did not follow him, nor did he say anything else. When Fritz finally arrived at Strasser’s office, he turned, and the strange man was gone.
Strasser’s door was open as well. His office lacked the opulence of Hitler’s. The polished desk was clear, the single window had its curtains drawn back. It did not look as if anyone had been in the office all morning.
Fritz sighed. He didn’t want to make an appointment, didn’t want his name known more than it was. But he also knew his time was limited. He simply could not be everywhere. He had to choose his meetings, and choose them well.
‘Who let you up here?’ The voice boomed in the marble hallway. Fritz turned. The man facing him was bowed with middle age. His round face suggested his stout build came from too much beer rather than too much exercise. He had the sharp-eyed look of a man with no sense of humour.
‘I was told I would find Herr Strasser here.’
The man assessed Fritz. ‘You are a reporter?’
‘No.’
‘Then what are you to see Herr Strasser for?’
Fritz returned the stare. He was taller than the other man and more athletic, both of which he could use to his advantage if he had to. ‘I do not routinely tell one man another’s business.’
A smile touched the other man’s lips. He apparently enjoyed jousting. ‘You can tell me. I am the party treasurer. I know all the secrets.’
‘I bet you do, Herr Schwarz,’ Fritz said, keeping his own glee from his face. Finally someone he did need to see. ‘I am Detective Inspector Stecher. I am here about Geli Raubal.’
Herr Schwarz clasped his hands behind his back. ‘Such a tragedy. The poor child.’
‘Yes.’ Fritz took a step toward him. ‘Is there a place where we can talk?’
‘We’re the only ones on the floor, Inspector.’
‘I saw another man only a moment ago. I prefer some privacy.’
Herr Schwarz brought his chin up with unfeigned surprise. He hadn’t known about the other man.
‘There is my office,’ he said. He led Fritz farther down the opulent hallway to an office no bigger than a walk-in closet. A goose-necked lamp was on the desk, illuminating some papers scattered on top. Files stood under the window. This looked like a place where someone worked.
Herr Schwarz pulled out a chair for Fritz, then sat behind his desk. He slid the papers in a drawer with an easy movement that appeared to be born of habit. Then he folded his hands on the empty desktop. The round pool of light from the lamp spotlighted his clasped fingers. ‘How may I help you, Inspector?’
‘I understand you were on site when Geli Raubal’s body was discovered.’
Herr Schwarz smiled tightly. ‘Not quite. Frau Reichert called me, quite upset, and I came as quickly as I could.’
‘Why did she call you, Herr Schwarz?’
‘Is this an official interrogation, Inspector?’
Fritz crossed his legs and leaned back in the chair. ‘It’s not an interrogation. It is an inquiry. We need to finish our paperwork before we can close the file.’
‘The girl is dead and buried, a suicide. It would seem the file is already closed.’
Fritz smiled. ‘Would that it were so easy.’
‘It sounds as if the Kripo has more paperwork than Reichstag.’
‘New bureaucracies only seem to create litters of paper.’
‘But I thought the Bavarian government did not follow all of the policies of Berlin.’
‘No,’ Fritz said. ‘It only follows the most inconvenient ones.’
Both men laughed, but the sound was polite – more a requirement of the kind of conversation they were having than any real enjoyment they felt.
‘Well, then,’ Herr Schwarz said, ‘I will help you in any way I can.’
‘Then tell me why Frau Reichert called you.’
Herr Schwarz unclasped his hands and pushed his chair away from his desk. ‘Herr Hitler was out of town and –’ again the tiny smile ‘– Frau Reichert is the type of woman who cannot make decisions for herself. I probably would not have come if Frau Winter had been there.’
‘Frau Winter can make decisions for herself?’
Herr Schwarz raised his eyebrows. ‘Have you met Frau Winter?’
‘Yes.’
‘Then you already know. I arrived, took one look at the poor girl, and knew we had to take some action.’
‘Action, Herr Schwarz?’
‘We could not leave her in such a sorry position in the Führer’s apartment.’
Führer. Leader. Fritz had heard the word used in reference to Hitler before but had not thought about it until that moment. He had assumed it only natural that members of the party would call Hitler their leader, but not in a casual sentence, and in such a reverential tone.
‘Why couldn’t you leave her in such a position?’Fritz asked. ‘Most people allow the authorities to deal with the dead.’
‘Most people are not prominent members of Munich society,’ Herr Schwarz snapped. ‘Most people do not have the press trailing them like dogs.’
‘So you took it upon yourself to dispose of Geli’s body.’
‘I disposed of nothing.’ Herr Schwarz sat upright in his chair. His cheeks were flushed. ‘I sent her to Vienna, as her mother wished.’
‘After contacting the Minister of Justice.’
‘We needed papers to get her out of the country.’
‘You would have had papers if you had waited for the Kripo.’
‘What are you accusing me of, Inspector?’
Fritz studied Herr Schwarz for a moment. His face was such a deep red that he appeared to be overheating. ‘I am accusing you of nothing, Herr Schwarz. I am merely curious why you and your friends created more work for me.’
‘For you, sir?’
Fritz nodded. ‘If you had gone through the normal channels, I would not be here now. You would be at your day’s work, and I would be pursuing paperwork on another case. Instead, I sit here, and quite frankly, Herr Schwarz, I do not enjoy it. I find each member of the NSDAP that I deal with to be belligerent and defensive which is beginning to make me think you all have something to hide.’
‘We have nothing to hide.’
Fritz smiled. ‘See? You are defensive, sir. Tell me, why did Frau Reichert call you?’
‘Because she did not know what to do.’
‘She said it was because Geli’s door was locked and she did not know how to open it.’
‘The door was locked,’ Herr Schwarz said quickly. ‘It was.’
‘And you forgot that detail?’
‘It seemed unimportant. We told Franz Gürtner of it.’
‘You forgot that you kicked in a door?’
‘I didn’t kick it.’
‘Who did?’
‘I don’t remember.’
‘Well, it was either you or Max Amann, wasn’t it? Or was someone else there?’
‘No one else was there.’
‘Then Max kicked in the door. That is, if it was locked in the first place.’
Herr Schwarz took a ‘kerchief from his pocket and mopped his brow. ‘This feels like an interrogation, Inspector.’
‘I’m sorry,’ Fritz said. ‘It’s just that I am trying to resolve this case and I am being thwarted at every turn. Be honest with me, Herr Schwarz. Who smashed Geli’s face?’
‘Her face?’A drop of sweat ran down his cheek. ‘No one.’
‘But her nose was broken.’
‘The Münchner Post lies.’
‘I saw her myself, Herr Schwarz.’
Herr Schwarz caught his breath. The room was hot. The goose-neck lamp gave off heat as well as light. Faint sounds of ringing phones travelled up from the floor below. Otherwise the building was silent.
‘Didn’t Herr Hess tell you? I was certain he would. Since he was at your side when you came to Hitler’s apartment on Saturday. He kicked down the door, didn’t he? He’s the one who took charge of Geli’s body. He’s the one who accompanied her to Vienna.’
‘She hurt her face when she fell,’ Herr Schwarz said in a strangled voice.
‘How does a woman hurt her face when she falls on her back?’
Another bead of sweat ran down Herr Schwarz’s cheek. ‘I don’t know,’ he said. ‘I am not a doctor.’
‘Clearly,’ Fritz said. ‘Now, why don’t you tell me what really happened?’
Herr Schwarz took a deep breath, then patted at his face daintily with the handkerchief. He cleared his throat. ‘Frau Reichert called me to help her. She was afraid for Geli who had not come out of her room since the day before. The door was locked, and she could not get in. I brought Max who apparently called Rudolph. Rudolph kicked in the door, as you said, and there was Geli, dead. We hadn’t thought she would be dead. She was willful. We thought she was being difficult because Herr Hitler had left her alone again.’
He took another breath, and closed his eyes. ‘She had the gun in her hand. She was clearly dead. We panicked, Inspector. Max mentioned headlines, and we knew that we had to get her out before the newspaper photographers arrived. But by then Frau Winter had arrived, and when she saw Geli, she went for the police. Once the police knew, the reporters would know, so we carried Geli to Max’s car and got her away from the apartment.’
‘Just like that?’
‘No. It was difficult. We had to use the back stairs. For a such a thin girl, she was heavy.’
All the stories were different enough to make Fritz worry. Most witnesses did not alter the chain of events, only the details of those events – what the victim wore, what was in the room. ‘So Frau Reichert was afraid for Geli. Why?’
‘She did not come to her door after repeated knocks.’
‘But you thought Geli was willful.’
‘Frau Reichert tends to over dramatise.’
‘So she thought something had happened to Geli?’
‘She thought Geli had left through her window and run away.’
‘From the second floor? It’s a twelve-foot drop. Surely the girl wasn’t that foolish.’
‘No one knew how foolish Geli was.’
‘Meaning?’
‘It is more logical for the girl to jump than to shoot herself because she cannot go to Vienna.’
‘I suppose it is,’ Fritz said. He kept his voice even, neutral. ‘But perhaps there was another reason for her death?’
‘Such as?’
‘I did not know her, Herr Schwarz. You did.’
Herr Schwarz opened his eyes and leaned forward. ‘There was talk that morning of her being despondent over her first public singing engagement. She was going to go to Vienna to see her coach, but when Herr Hitler demanded that she stay in Munich, she grew even more depressed. She could not face performing without the help. So she died.’
Fritz’s clothes felt too tight. The heat in the room was growing. ‘It seems such a trivial thing to die over.’
Herr Schwarz shrugged. ‘We cannot know what is important to someone else.’
‘No, we can’t,’Fritz said. ‘But it seems odd to me that no one spoke of Geli’s upcoming performance or of her fear of it until now. I thought she wanted to go to Vienna to get engaged.’
‘The Münchner Post again. Inspector, you must not believe all that you read.’
‘I don’t.’ Fritz resisted the urge to loosen his collar. ‘I merely get curious when everything I hear contradicts. I didn’t even know that Geli was a singer.’
‘She wasn’t much of one,’ Herr Schwarz said. ‘It is probably good for Munich that she did not perform.’
‘Why is it that everyone I speak to did not like Geli?’
Herr Schwarz stared at Fritz for a long moment. Then he looked down. ‘Geli distracted the Führer. If she wanted to shop, he would shop. If she wanted pastries, he found pastries. She was a creature controlled by whim. She had no place in the NSDAP.’
‘I didn’t realise she was part of the party,’ Fritz said.
‘She wasn’t.’ Herr Schwarz clasped his hands on the desktop again. He didn’t seem to know what to do with them. ‘She was only involved because of her uncle. And even then she was a distraction.’
‘It sounds as if you don’t mind that she’s gone.’
Herr Schwarz sighed. ‘I should lie to you, Inspector, and tell you that Geli will be missed, but she won’t. Does that mean I opened that door and killed her myself? No. I did not. But to tell you I am sorry about her death is to lie. I am sorry about the way she died, and I think that it is another sign of Geli’s selfishness that she killed herself at the exact moment the Führer needed no taint of scandal.’
‘Do you think someone could have killed her?’
‘I thought you were not interrogating me,’ Herr Schwarz said.
‘It is a routine question in any case of unusual death,’ Fritz said.
The colour in Herr Schwarz’s face grew even deeper. ‘No,’ he said finally. ‘I do not think anyone killed her. Who would want to?’
‘Gregor Strasser.’
Herr Schwarz laughed, then covered his mouth.
‘I do not see what is so funny, Herr Schwarz.’
‘Gregor Strasser is a loyal party man. It is his brother Otto who is trouble.’
‘Otto tried to divide the party. But that is old news now.’
Not to Fritz it wasn’t. ‘He didn’t succeed.’
‘He went to Berlin with his followers. But he was not very successful. Gregor believes in the Führer. He stayed behind to do what he could. He would not interfere, particularly with Geli.’
‘Why not?’
‘Because he lacks cunning, Inspector. It takes a devious mind to do such things. He is not devious.’
‘But his brother is.’
‘His brother is.’
‘And where was Otto this weekend?’
Herr Schwarz shrugged. ‘I do not keep track of former party members.’
‘But you keep track of current members.’
‘I try.’
‘What of their guns?’
Herr Schwarz froze. ‘What of them?’
‘Geli was holding a gun when she was found, was she not?’
‘I – I believe so.’
‘What happened to it?’
A bead of sweat formed on Herr Schwarz’s brow. It slowly ran down. He stared at Fritz like an animal startled by sudden light. ‘I – ah – I do not know.’
‘But you saw it in her hand.’
‘Of course.’
‘Who removed it?’
‘Perhaps no one. Perhaps it was buried with her.’
Fritz shook his head. ‘I saw her body, Herr Schwarz. There was no gun.’
‘Frau Winter –’
‘Has not seen it, and it was not in the apartment. You carried Geli to the car. Was it in her hand then?’
‘I – I don’t know.’
‘But you carried her.’
His gaze skittered away from Fritz’s. ‘I do not know what happened to the gun.’
‘How did you carry her, Herr Schwarz? Wrapped in a blanket? Or was she still alive when you arrived? Did you kill her because she was an embarrassment to the party? Because her relationship with Herr Hitler was not quite proper?’
Herr Schwarz leaned back. ‘She was dead.’
‘Then how did you carry her?’
‘By the feet,’he said. ‘I had her feet.’
‘But not the gun.’
‘Go, please.’ Herr Schwarz stood. His shirt stuck to him, the sweat heavy around his armpits. ‘This is an illegal interrogation. She killed herself. She is dead. I will say no more.’
Fritz stood too. ‘What kind of gun was she holding, Herr Schwarz?’
‘You are to leave now,’ Herr Schwarz said.
‘Surely it can’t hurt to tell me that.’
‘I do not know guns,’ Herr Schwarz said.
‘You were in the war, were you not? A soldier knows guns.’
‘If you do not leave, I shall call for assistance,’ Herr Schwarz said.
Fritz stared at him for a moment. Herr Schwarz was clearly done. He would say no more, and he would contact help if he felt he needed it. Fritz didn’t need trouble with the NSDAP – at least no more than he already had.
‘I’ll go,’ Fritz said. ‘But you remind your people that a woman died. That is more than an inconvenience. That is a tragedy.’
‘Detective –’
Fritz held up his hand, and slowly backed out of the room. ‘I thank you for your time,’he said as he stepped into the hall.
It was empty.
He was able to leave the Brown House.
Alone.