That evening, Octavian saw me sitting on a bench on the landing stage reading the newspaper, and said to himself that no punter would spend his time in a brothel that way. He came down from the terrace, said good evening, asked if he could join me and I thought: This guy looks like a cop.
He asked me this and that as one punter to another, what the place was like, the service, the girls — he really did say girls, in English — and I thought: A cop from the countryside — before asking whether I worked in Mister Happy.
‘You mean do they provide guys here as well as girls?’
‘No, no …’ As far as I could see in the evening light, Octavian’s potato cheeks went red, and I thought: A gay cop from the countryside — well, best of luck in Frankfurt!
‘I heard …’ he went on. ‘Well, between you and me, I like girls really young, specially Russian chicks, so I thought if you work here, as a manager or for security … see what I mean? Well, I thought maybe you’d know whether there was anything of that nature to be … well, to be had here. It’s my first visit to this place.’
Now I did take a closer look at him. He was playing the embarrassed country bumpkin pretty well. Maybe not a policeman after all? But I was no criminal, and I had known a lot of clever policemen.
I put my paper down. ‘Show me your badge first, and then we’ll see what I can do for you.’
‘My badge?’
‘Well, or your ID — anything to convince me that my information will end up in the hands of the law and not some wretched little guy who fucks children and is trying to pretend he’s an undercover cop.’
‘Eh?’ Octavian, annoyed, made a face. The country bumpkin act abruptly disappeared. ‘What sort of crazy act are you putting on?’
I later learned that he’d had a long day — spent in dirty, stinking brothels full of teeny bopper entertainment and striptease, and had planned just to look in quickly on Mister Happy, which he knew to be a well-run establishment, and then finally have a beer in a place where he wasn’t forced to look at bare breasts the whole time. Some smart-ass like me was the last thing he needed.
In a bad temper, he asked, ‘Are you one of us, or what is this crap?’
‘Kemal Kayankaya, private detective. A friend of mine works here, but I’m not her pimp. No pimps allowed in Mister Happy.’
He hesitated for a moment and then replied, ‘Octavian Tartarescu, vice squad. Is there a beer to be had here at anything like a normal price?’
‘If I get it for us. Jever, Tegernsee Spezial — or one of those Belgian beers with champagne corks, but they’re expensive.’
‘Do they play golf here too, by any chance?’
I fetched us two Tegernsee Spezials, and then another two and then four, and so on. It turned into a really good evening. The sun sank into the river Main, the glowing sunset sky was reflected in the mirror-glass of the high-rise façades opposite, water splashed from the fountains around us, slow jazz piano music with a double bass came from the bar, and we talked about Frankfurt and the lives that had brought us here. One of us Romanian, the other Turkish — we fell into a kind of homeland euphoria for the city. The prettiest park, the best restaurants, the best Frankfurter green sauce, the lousiest but funniest beer kiosks, the best tramline for looking out the windows, the best high-rise building and so on, until after a while we came to the best place on the banks of the Main, and after about eight beers each that was, of course, where we were at that moment. Presumably we would have agreed on the Mister Happy landing stage even without the beer, but probably not so exuberantly.
And when a while later we were speaking and fondly mocking the Hessian dialect, both for fun and to prove how at home we were in Frankfurt, the thought briefly crossed my mind that the Turk and the Romanian might not really be as sure that they belonged here as they had thought. At least, I knew no Hans-Jörg from Frankfurt who would have celebrated his city so euphorically and with such childish pride — the city where, since the day he was born, he had never had to struggle with the registration office, hear himself slammed at the regulars table or wince at the slogans of election campaigns.
‘Octavian?’
‘Kemal. What’s it about?’ Cool, professional, chop, chop. Even though we hadn’t spoken to each other for months. When Octavian didn’t have a number of beers under his belt, his manner suited his appearance. That was probably why we were more acquaintances than close friends.
‘I’ve got something for you: pimping, child abuse, rape, drugs, murder …’
‘Hold on a minute, I’ll get a pen and paper.’
At the word murder I thought of Valerie de Chavannes. How had she been planning to pay me for the job? Or had her talk of being short of money been only a tall story to beat down my fee? Or had she thought that a more passionate embrace or a canvas in The Blind Men of Babylon series would do the trick? Had she already checked out how much a contract killing would cost?
‘Okay, carry on.’
‘The pimp and his customer are lying in an apartment in Schifferstrasse in Sachsenhausen. Café Klaudia is on the corner, the apartment is on the third floor above it. The customer is dead, murdered; the pimp is tied up and chained to a radiator.’
‘Tied up by you?’
‘Yes. His name is Abakay. He trafficks in underage girls; you’ll find all the details on his computer. Look for a file called ‘Autumn Flowers’. I got one of the girls out of there. She’s my client’s daughter, and I hope I’ve deleted all references to her from the computer. She’s not available as a witness, but you’ll find plenty of other girls.’
‘Who’s the murderer?’
I hesitated for a moment. ‘When I got into the apartment the customer was dead, a narrow stab wound to the heart, and Abakay was standing over him bleeding from the chest. The dead man was still holding a kitchen knife. I assume it was a quarrel about money. Anyway, I didn’t find a murder weapon.’
‘How about the knife?’
‘Too broad. You’ll see, it’s as if he’d been stabbed with a knitting needle.’
‘Are you available as a witness?’
‘If I don’t have to give my client’s name.’
Octavian paused — it was a pause that he meant me to notice. Then he said, ‘A knitting needle. That’s the kind of thing you might expect to be a girl’s weapon. I hope you’re not shielding a murderess.’
‘Nonsense,’ I replied, but at the same moment I thought: Interesting. But Marieke could hardly be as cold-blooded as that; hearing me coming upstairs, hurrying into the bedroom, finger down her throat … All the same, I’d have liked to pay a quick visit to Abakay’s apartment to look for a needle or a shashlik skewer under the bed, just to be on the safe side.
‘Right. Then I’ll go straight there.’
‘The heroin is in the kitchen under a stack of frying pans.’
‘You must have really turned the apartment upside down.’
‘That’s exactly what I did. See you soon, Octavian. Call me if you have any questions.’
I closed my mobile, drank my espresso and looked at the time. Just after two. It would take the police several hours to search Abakay’s apartment, and I didn’t want to be seen around there until they were through with it. Although I’d told Octavian I’d be available as a witness I wasn’t sure about that. In all probability, Abakay knew people who could make life very uncomfortable for hostile witnesses, and I wasn’t up for that sort of thing anymore. In fact, ever since my office was blown up I’d been more cautious in general, and now I was sharing a four-room apartment in the West End with a woman who wanted to have my child. I had a great deal to lose, and that mattered to me more than whether Abakay got two or five years in jail.
That was why I wanted to avoid being seen with Octavian and his officers for now. I could still simply deny playing any part in the case.
I decided to leave questioning the waiter about the shashlik skewer and fetching my bike until the evening. Instead, I went to my office through the West En
d and the rail station area in the autumn sunlight, got into my new old Opel Astra, and drove to the Brentanobad stadium. There was going to be an under-fifteen girls’ football club game there at four o’clock, and Deborah’s niece Hanna was playing in defence.
Chapter 7
Deborah’s real name was Helga; she had adopted Deborah as a stage name when she was working as a table dancer and prostitute. Deborah was her grandmother’s name. When I asked why she had chosen to work as a stripper under the name of a relative who I knew was close and dear to her, Deborah had answered, ‘Because I loved her very much and she wouldn’t have minded. This way she’s always with me, if you see what I mean. I was nineteen when I came to Frankfurt, and life here wasn’t always easy, so I needed someone.’
Deborah came from Henningbostel, a village of a thousand inhabitants near Bremen, and at the age of eighteen she had followed a young man called Jörn to Klein Bremstedt, fifteen kilometres from her hometown. Jörn expected to take over his father’s pet food factory at some point. After two months in the attic storey of his parents’ guest apartment, Deborah knew that she wanted more from life than the smell of pet food and evenings spent watching TV with her future in-laws, and she packed her rucksack. At first she got less from life, namely a job at a checkout counter at Aldi five kilometres farther in Jösters. After a while she packed her rucksack again and went on, hitchhiking with the goal to reach a university town. She had no high school diploma so she couldn’t hope to study, but she thought a university town would be full of young people and something would turn up. She had considered Bremen, Hamburg or Hannover, but then a couple of teachers and their kids gave her a lift in their motor home from the Oyten service station all the way to Frankfurt; and because on the one hand Deborah expected more of life but on the other she had the modest undemanding north German nature, she was satisfied with her new place of residence, even though she knew nothing about Frankfurt before, except its name. She stayed with the teachers for a while, looking after their two small children, then began working as a waitress, moved into a shared flat and at some point decided to earn enough money to open an espresso and sandwich bar in Henningbostel. She missed her parents, her friends and the flat northern countryside; Frankfurt felt more and more like a huge, cold monster, and espresso — real espresso, not the bitter dishwater that came out of the drinks machines in bars in Jösters or Oyten — was something she got to know and learned to love at Café Wacker on Kornmarkt. In fact she had a natural bent for gastronomy. She found few things in life more fun than eating, and to this day I have found few things in life more fun than watching her at it. She ate like a cow — slowly, with relish, letting nothing disturb her. When she stood at the stove in her wine bar, making bean soup or lamb goulash, you felt she’d like to send the customers away and empty the pan all by herself, with a bottle of cool red wine to go with it.
Her homesickness for Henningbostel wore off over time and Frankfurt became her new home, despite her work in the sex trade. The dream she still cherished of a restaurant of her own helped her through many long and sometimes unpleasant days and nights on the job. In her leisure time she tried out restaurants, went to wine tastings and took cookery courses. We became more and more of a couple, and I was glad when, after a year at Mister Happy, she had got together enough starting capital to leave the sex trade and rent a premises in Bornheim for her bar. Deborah’s Natural Wine Bar, serving simple food and light, fresh wines, quickly became successful. Soon she could afford to bring her elder sister Tine, recently divorced, and Tine’s daughter, Hanna, from Henningbostel to Frankfurt. Tine was now working as a secretary for an insurance company, and she and her daughter lived in the Hausen district of the city. Hanna often came to see us, did jobs in the wine bar during her school holidays and was probably one of the reasons Deborah wished to have children. Two days ago, when we were drinking our aperitif and Deborah had said, ‘Kemal, I want to have a baby,’ I flippantly slipped, with her professional past in mind, ‘Who with?’ Whereupon she had marched off in a furious temper.
But ever since, that remark had kept going through my head, and it was the reason I spent a free afternoon watching two under-fifteen girls’ football teams rather clumsily kicking a ball about. I wanted to find out what it was like to stand with other fathers and mothers on the sidelines, a stale beer in my hand, watching kids stumbling over a football.
‘Hi, what are you doing here?’ asked Hanna when she spotted me after the game among the spectators, some fifteen of us in all. She was a tall, thin girl with a pierced tongue and blond hair irregularly cut with a beard-trimmer to a length of more or less a centimetre. She usually wore boy’s clothes, shabby trainers, cargo pants, baggy T-shirts in washed-out colours, and sometimes a scarf twisted thinly round her forehead. When she did that she looked like a jungle guerrilla fighter; I called her Rambo once, and she asked, ‘Who’s that?’ She had a delicate, pale, beautiful face that easily went unnoticed with the look she affected. For a while I thought she might be a lesbian, but of course I didn’t mention that to anyone. I could do without Deborah’s head-shaking and Tine’s indignant, ‘Oh, of course, just because a girl plays football!’
But then Hanna had her first boyfriend, a very popular character at her school, laid back, a skateboarder with a Leonardo DiCaprio look, and I saw that a girl who to me resembled an undernourished aid worker with a hair problem was obviously attractive to her own generation and in her own surroundings.
‘I was passing by, had some free time and wanted to see how you lot played.’ I gave her a thumbs-up. ‘Terrific!’
‘Oh, come on, don’t pretend. Do you have your car here?’
‘I do.’
‘Can you give me a lift?’
‘Sure. Where to?’
‘I’m ravenous — would you invite me to a meal?’
‘Okay, but in Sachsenhausen. I have to pick up my bike there.’
After she had showered and changed, we drove to Café Klaudia. There was a police car outside the door leading to Abakay’s apartment. We sat on the terrace, and Hanna ordered spaghetti with vegetable sauce and an apple-juice spritzer, and I had a cider. Hanna told me about the other girls on the team, their coach, her school, her plans to go on holiday with Leonardo DiCaprio, and I realised that we were attracting looks from the neighbouring tables — ah, Papa with his lively daughter! — that were not unwelcome to me. Genetics would have had to be in an unusually experimental mood to link my features with such a blonde, fair-skinned outcome as Hanna. However, we obviously gave off such a strong father-daughter aura that our very different outward appearance didn’t matter to those around us. Then I tried imagining that Hanna really was my daughter: a few of my genes, a few of my little habits, maybe a similar way of walking or smiling, her hair dyed and not a genuine blonde, and an Asiatic brownish complexion behind her fashionably pale makeup. But it didn’t work. I still saw Deborah’s sister’s daughter sitting there, and although I was fond of her I felt no impulse to take her hand with its bitten fingernails or to invite her to the cinema or anything like that. All the same: for the first time I was curious what such a feeling would be like.
When the waiter brought the bill, I asked if he happened to have noticed a shashlik skewer missing when he was clearing tables sometime shortly before noon.
‘Happens all the time — people are always going off with cutlery or cups or whatever else,’ replied the waiter, a young man with pearl earrings, a mop of frizzy hair and a dragon tattooed on his upper arm, who clearly couldn’t care less about items like missing cutlery.
‘That’s not what I asked.’
‘Are you from the police too?’
‘No,’ I said, but Hanna said, ‘Yes, he is.’ And to the waiter, who was at the most five or six years older than her, and whom she obviously liked, she added, ‘He’s a private detective — honest, he really is!’ And she grinned as if that was a totally crazy notion.
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