‘I’ll phone you and talk about it,’ she said.
Then she had to bring Alex to the wash-room. That took a long time, almost half an hour, while I sat in the café thinking. I wished there was something I could do for Alex. I wished there was something I could say that would make him smile, just once.
When they came back, I tried to speak to him, but he didn’t respond. I could think of nothing that might draw him out.
I looked at Anke. I think it was the only time I met her on these visits that she refused to cry. She wouldn’t allow herself to cry with Alex there. It was only alone with me that she could properly grieve about her life.
We talked for a while about Jürgen’s practice. She told me that Jürgen had finally employed another gynaecologist. She would have to be careful now, because Jürgen had more time on his hands. But he was still spending all of his day either in the practice or with Alexander. His energy was boundless.
Anke told me that she and Jürgen still slept together. She still loved Jürgen. Nothing had changed in that respect. And he still loved her. If he knew anything about our weekly meetings, he was accepting it. Maybe he had begun to accept, as I did, that Anke could never be tied down. She thrived on freedom.
She began to tell me about the afternoon when Jürgen came home early from the practice and forced her to make love. She had not rejected him or asked him to stop. But he had forced himself on her like a stranger.
I asked her if it was repulsive to her.
‘It wasn’t that,’ she whispered, leaning over the table again, whispering. ‘It was the way he did it.’
She was reluctant to talk while Alex was there, sitting so passively beside her. Then she felt she had to say it.
‘You know what he did? He raped me. There is no other word for it,’ she said. ‘I think he really wanted it to be like that. He didn’t ask me. He could have asked me and there would have been no problem. But instead he came bursting in and dragged me into the living-room by my hair and then threw me on the floor.’
Anke looked around the restaurant as though she was afraid somebody might be listening.
‘He didn’t talk. He didn’t kiss me or fondle me or anything, he just brutally raped me. He wanted it to be like that. He wanted to act like a complete stranger.’
‘But how?’ I asked. ‘Did you resist or something? Did you try and stop him?’
‘No, no,’ she insisted. ‘I would never do that. Maybe I would play hard to get. But he knows that. No…this time he had obviously made up his mind to rape me. I don’t know where he got the idea, maybe at the practice…
‘He just threw me face down on the floor and said: I’m going to fuck you.’
She was fingering one of the silver milk jugs on the table, perhaps thinking about putting it in her pocket. But she was concentrating on Jürgen.
‘It was anal…’ she whispered. ‘He buggered me.’
For a moment, we both paid more attention to our coffee than to anything else. Anke looked around the restaurant to see if anyone was watching her.
‘I still can’t walk,’ she said, smiling. Then she seemed to change her attitude towards the whole episode.
‘It’s not as though I’m against it, or anything like that. It’s just the manner in which he did it. He wanted to frighten me. Afterwards, he was very sorry. He kept saying how sorry he was. He kept hugging me and saying he would never do it again.’
Alexander was staring at some people at the table next to us. They seemed irritated by it. Perhaps they were put off their food.
‘He’s been apologizing for it ever since,’ Anke said after a pause. ‘I think he really was very sorry about it. He keeps saying he doesn’t know what came over him. It was so unlike him. I tell him to forget about it, but he can’t. He keeps telling me how much he regrets what happened.’
It was time for Anke to leave again. She would phone me, she promised. I took them to the station. On the way, we talked about other things. I told Anke that I had received a letter from somebody who had known or who knew where Franz Kern was. I told her I would be going back down to Nuremberg soon.
I walked on to the platform with them. I made sure they got on the train all right and waved at them when the train began to pull out. Alex didn’t move. Anke took his hand and waved it for him. It was the last time I saw him.
Then I got my own train back to Düsseldorf. I couldn’t stop seeing this image of Alex, waving. I had this imaginary view from the air of two trains speeding away from each other in opposite directions, Anke and Alex on one, myself on the other, all of us staring out at the fields, at the flat landscape of the Ruhr valley.
40
For weeks, Anke had stayed at home every day with Alexander. I told her it would be better for her not to come down to Dusseldorf any more until Alex was better. She said he wasn’t going to get better. Anke was on the phone to me almost every day to give me the details. She was sick with sadness. Jürgen had been putting forward his proposal again to give Alex a peaceful, premature death. They couldn’t bear to see him suffering any more.
Anke was unsure about the idea. I could see that she had second thoughts; stronger feelings of doubt and guilt. She kept asking me what to do. I told her it was unfair for me to influence her one way or the other. It was so easy for me to say something on the phone.
The next day she rang up and said she was coming to Düsseldorf the following day. She needed to discuss the whole thing; she was racked by indecision and Jürgen was placing her under pressure. The nurse would look after Alex. She dismissed any danger of Jürgen arriving home unexpectedly and counting the hours she was away. She insisted she had to meet me. I agreed to meet her at Düsseldorf station this time, on the Intercity arriving at 11.
I left the apartment early the next morning. It plagued me to think of Alexander. Somehow it seemed that Anke wanted my consent. My blessing. All I had to say to Anke was, yes, Anke, I believe you’re doing the right thing, and it would be over. Why would she not leave me out of this?
By 10.30 on Wednesday I stood waiting for her in the underground aisle of the Hauptbahnhof, walking up and down, past the flowersellers, the bookshop, the magazine shop, every now and again passing the escalator to platform 13, from where she would emerge. I had waited there so often for her to spring into view suddenly at the top of the escalator. Lately, there was a distraught look in her eyes; even though she smiled, I could see she was thinking back to Münster and her son.
I heard the announcements spilling down from the platforms. The Intercity from Osnabrück and Münster arrived. Passengers came rushing down. I kept searching the faces for Anke’s. Ready to embrace her and lead her away. But she wasn’t there. Instead, almost the last passenger to come down the escalator, I saw Jürgen.
‘Jesus,’ I said, almost out loud.
My first impulse was to run, or to hide. I thought it was some coincidence. But then Jürgen had seen me. He came down with his hands in his pockets, smiling. Then he extended his arms towards me. He embraced me, his hands clapping my back. He had a tearful expression.
‘I am glad to see you. It’s been so long.’
I couldn’t believe this was true. I might have expected him to show only resentment and hostility at this stage. I was taking Anke away from him. I might have expected Jürgen to kill me, maybe to plunge some gynaecological instrument straight into my back. Instead I felt the warmth of his friendship.
‘I came instead of Anke. She stayed at home with Alex. We are very worried about him.’
He led me away with his arm around my shoulder. I kept asking myself questions. Why didn’t Anke phone and warn me? Maybe she did. Then Jürgen answered for me.
‘Anke tried to phone you, but you were out.’
Jürgen was wearing a suit. It looked as though he had taken his white coat off and come straight from the surgery.
‘How is Alex?’ I asked.
‘That’s what I’ve come to talk to you about,’ Jürgen said. ‘I’m n
ot going to talk about you and Anke. I know that you meet. But I haven’t come here to talk about that. There is not much I can say anyway…
‘I’ve come to talk to you as a friend. Can we go somewhere for lunch around here?’
I suggested an Italian place close by, where I had intended to bring Anke. It felt so strange to be walking with Jürgen. I was still getting over the fright. But I was glad to talk to him. I had missed him.
‘Has Anke told you?’ he asked.
‘Yes. About Alex, you mean?’
Jürgen knew the restaurant. He could have looked around and thought to himself: so this is where they meet. He could have run a hostile imagination over the Italian décor, over the menu, over the waiters and the stone busts which were placed all around, at the doors and at the wine bar. Instead, he showed none of that. It was as though he had a deeper imagination. As though Anke and I were only on the surface, or as though he understood what we did without malice.
The waiter took the order for cannelloni and brought wine. Jürgen sipped the wine calmly and began to talk. He leaned forward towards me.
‘I’ve come here because I want to ask you something. I want your advice. You know that I am going to go ahead with this act of mercy for Alex. We cannot bear to see him suffer any longer like this. You have met him yourself. What would you do?’
I was surprised, both by the direct question and by the fact that he knew so much about Anke and myself; even about Alex’s trip to Gelsenkirchen. I had thought about my answer. It was the same as what I would have said to Anke.
‘I know you’re not doing it for yourselves,’ I said. ‘I know you are doing it for Alex. It kills me to hear it. I thought he looked terrible when I met him. Maybe it is for the best. But I don’t know the medical background. I don’t know what his chances are. But if his life has become as pointless as you say, then I am behind you.’
‘He has no chance,’ Jürgen said, looking down at the table.
Jürgen began to explain the whole background to me. He did it like a doctor, without any emotion, without any hint of personal attachment. He weighed everything up and made it very clear; basically it was all down-hill for Alex. There was no hope for leukaemia cases like this. Then he began to explain his plan to spare him the pain of slow death.
‘It’s easy for me to talk about it, as a medical expert. It detaches me from the real tragedy,’ he said. ‘I am driven only by the urge to cut short his agony.’
‘But how are you going to do it?’ I wanted to know.
‘It is very simple. It’s done on the drip, you know, intravenously through the arm. First sugar, then pain-killers, morphine, then potassium. It could be done with morphine alone at this stage. But that is the best way. Basically, Alex will just fall asleep.’
Jürgen said it all without enthusiasm, as though he couldn’t stomach the idea himself. He hated the efficiency of his plan, but saw no way out.
‘Of course, the whole thing is very risky for me. If this is discovered, my life is finished as a gynaecologist. I have thought about all of this. If somebody found out, or exposed me to the public, I would become a household name, for the wrong thing. The press would seize on something like this…
‘But I don’t care. I want to do this for Alex. There is no way out.’
There was no way that anything I would say was going to stop him. I trusted him. I told him it wasn’t my decision, but that I was fully behind him. I didn’t want him to risk his profession. I told him I was on his side.
‘I don’t know when exactly it will have to be done. I will phone you. Or Anke will phone you.’
We walked back to the station, up to platform 13 for the Intercity to Münster. Jürgen said that after all this was over I would have to come and visit them again. He would definitely take the time off to teach me hang-gliding.
41
Three weeks later, I was on my way to Nuremberg again to meet the real Franz Kern. The woman, Frau Jazinski, who had answered my ad in the Frankfurter Allgemeine, tried at first to establish my reasons for wanting to meet him. She wouldn’t even say whether he was alive or not. She asked me to give my reasons in writing in the most specific terms. I remained evasive in my next letter, stressing that I had nothing to do with researching war crimes or anything. All I wanted was to pass on a message from somebody, a colleague who had been in Laun with Franz Kern.
Eventually, Frau Jazinski gave me a cautious invitation. I phoned her and set up a date to travel to Nuremberg. She still gave little information about Kern, and I had the feeling that she was acting as a go-between, that it was really Franz Kern who had seen the ad and asked her to vet me on his behalf.
I stayed at the Pension Sonne again.
‘Another market survey?’ the owner Frau Schellinger asked with a broad smile. She told me straight out that she liked it when her old guests came back again.
The following afternoon I went to visit Frau Jazinski at the address she had given me, a large house close to the city centre. She answered the door herself and searched me with her eyes. I could see she had her suspicions about me. She turned out to be Franz Kern’s daughter, his only child. She offered me some coffee and told me that her father had just recently come out of hospital and that he was still unwell. With that, she asked me to give the message to her so that she could pass it on to him.
I told her it was personal. I could only pass it on myself. All this was beginning to sound far too clandestine and intriguing. I wished she weren’t so suspicious and that everything would be more simple. I assured her again that I had nothing to do with war-crimes detection. I had no interest in the holocaust. I would leave that to somebody with a clean slate.
By the time she agreed to drive me over to her father’s apartment I realized that she had been kept completely in the dark. She wanted to find out something for herself before I met Kern. He had told her nothing about Laun. And nothing about the journey home either.
On the way over in the car, Frau Jazinski became more friendly. She began to tell me about their business. They owned a big hi-fi shop in the city centre. She insisted on driving down the street and asking me to look at the shop.
‘My father started this business on his own after the war. It wasn’t easy. Things were very hard for him and my mother. They had to save every Pfennig.’
How often had I heard that story? She went on praising her father for building up the shop. In the past ten years, with her husband taking over as managing director, the turnover had multiplied a hundredfold, she said proudly. I told her she was in the right business.
She still didn’t know exactly why I had come to visit her father. Franz Kern had consented to see me without telling her why. She was sure it would all come out sooner or later.
I asked her about her mother. She was dead. Almost ten years ago.
Franz Kern lived in the top half of a house. The living-room had a spacious balcony looking out over a large garden. The walls were lined with books. The place was well looked-after.
I was going to be surprised by this meeting. I had no idea what he looked like, no idea what to expect.
Franz Kern was a tall man; even in his late seventies, he was as tall as I was. He stood up from his chair by the window to greet me, grimacing a little with stiffness or pain. I begged him not to get up on my account. We shook hands and he asked me to sit down, pointing with the palm of his hand towards an armchair. He was a very calm man, who moved around the room slowly on his stick. He was able to close the window on his own, until his daughter came running and told him to leave it to her. Maria, as he called her, went out to make coffee in the kitchen.
Kern looked at me for a long time. He had a likeable smile. You could have nothing against him. He just kept staring at me until I looked away. Old people are allowed to do that.
‘You look like her,’ he said quietly.
I didn’t reply.
‘Bertha…Where did she get to?’ he asked, almost in a dreamy way, still looking at me, but
somehow as though he was actually talking to her. And somehow, he wasn’t expecting me to answer. He put his finger up to his mouth to say: Shhhh.
He didn’t want his daughter to know. We sat like mute men looking at each other while Maria brought in the coffee, filled the cups and apportioned the ostentatious strawberry cake she had brought. We sat there without ever mentioning anything. Kern was saying nothing while Maria was there. So we talked about the united Germany – what else? It was like talking about the weather. Maria said how exciting it was for Germany. Kern sat back.
‘At long last,’ he said. ‘At last, we can breathe like Germans again. It’s what we were all running from at the end of the war. This Soviet monster…’
He seemed angry.
‘We saw the tanks, the Red Army tanks behind us as we fled…’
He wasn’t boastful; I’ve met survivors with varying emotions, from anger to indifference. I’ve met survivors who talked about their luck, like a lottery prize. And survivors who claimed credit for their own lives, people who reckoned they were indestructible, as though they had an invincible charm which saved their own necks. They made themselves look like those trick birthday candles which flare up every time you blow them out. It was as if nothing in the perverse logic of the Reich had anything to do with it; their being alive. There were others I met who had put their trust in God, and thanked God with every mouthful of cake, with every word, for their existence.
Franz Kern was none of these. He acknowledged that he was just lucky, no more. Or can you say that survivors are lucky, he asked. Can you be lucky at the expense of somebody else? In any case, Kern didn’t take his life for granted.
He turned to Maria, his daughter, and asked her if she had something to do in the area. If she wished, she could leave us to talk for a while. She was a little put out. But she left and said she would be back in an hour. I told her I could make my own way back if she liked. But she insisted on driving me back. She was afraid her father might never tell her anything and was determined to squeeze some information out of me on the way home.
The Last Shot Page 14