When Fabel entered through the vast glass doors of the Architekturburo Scheibe, he was greeted by a tall, thin man of about thirty-five with a shaven head. He introduced himself as Thomas Paulsen, the Deputy Director of the practice. His smile had something of an apology in it.
‘Thank you for coming, Herr Chief Commissar, but I am glad to say that our concerns about Herr Scheibe have been allayed. We heard from him just ten minutes ago.’
‘I’m not here to follow up a missing person,’ said Fabel. ‘I need to talk to Herr Scheibe about a case that I am investigating. Where is he?’
‘Oh… he didn’t say. He apologised for dropping out of sight, but said that a family emergency had come up and he had had to attend to it at very short notice. He had to go out of town immediately after the Rathaus luncheon on Monday, and that’s why we have not been able to get in touch with him since,’ Paulsen explained. ‘I can tell you, we’re all very relieved. The main public and press launch is to take place tonight down at the Speicherstadt. Herr Scheibe has assured us that he will be there to make the presentation.’
‘You spoke to him yourself?’
‘Well, no… not spoke. He sent an e-mail. But he has guaranteed that he’ll be there.’
‘Then so shall I,’ said Fabel. ‘If you hear from Herr Scheibe again, please tell him that he will have to make time to speak to me.’
‘Very well… but I know that he will be extremely busy. There will be-’
‘Trust me, Herr Paulsen: what I have to talk to Herr Scheibe about is much, much more important. I’ll see you – and him – this evening.’
Fabel decided to have lunch at Dirk Stellamanns’s stand down by the harbour. The veil of cloud had shifted from the sun and the brightness became more vivid and sharp-edged, highlighting the bright tables and parasols ranged around Dirk’s cabin. It was busy when Fabel arrived but Dirk beamed over the heads of his customers when he saw his friend.
Fabel felt hot and sticky and ordered a Jever beer and a mineral water, along with a cheese-and-sausage roll, and took them over to one of the few free chest-high tables. Once the rush died down, Dirk came over to him.
‘How’s your Apache hunt?’
Fabel made a puzzled face.
‘The scalper – any closer to nailing him?’
‘Doesn’t feel like it.’ Fabel shrugged despondently. ‘I seem to have got bogged down in all kinds of crap. Genetic memories… terrorists… and I could write a book on scalping through the ages…’
‘You’ll get him, Jannick,’ said Dirk. ‘You always do.’
‘Not always…’ Fabel thought of how Roland Bartz had called him Jannick. ‘I’m thinking of chucking it in, Dirk.’
‘The job? You’d never do that. It’s your life.’
‘I don’t know that it is,’ said Fabel. ‘Or if it ever should have been. I’ve been offered something else. A chance to become a civilian again.’
‘I can’t see it, Jan…’
‘ I can. I’m fed up with death. I see it around me all the time. I dunno. Maybe you’re right. This case is getting to me.’
‘What did you mean about genetic memory? What’s that got to do with these killings?’
Fabel outlined as briefly and coherently as he could the work that the victim Gunter Griebel had been involved in.
‘You know something, Jan… I believe it. I think there’s something in it.’
‘You?’ Fabel grinned sceptically. ‘You’re joking…’
‘No…’ Dirk’s face was serious. ‘I really do. I remember, I’d only been in the force for a couple of years and we were called to a break-in. It was winter and it had been snowing. This guy had gone out through the back window in the middle of the night and had left his footprints in the snow. The only ones around. So all we had to do was to follow the footprints. We tracked him through the snow, moving fast to catch up with him. And we did, eventually.’
‘What’s your point?’ asked Fabel suspiciously, as if he was expecting a punchline.
‘It’s just that when we were doing it, when we were moving fast and at night, tracking down another human being, I got this really weird feeling. Not a nice feeling. I really felt that I had done it before. I felt it, but I couldn’t remember it.’
‘Don’t tell me you believe in reincarnation?’ asked Fabel.
‘No. No, it’s not that at all. But it was like a memory that wasn’t mine but had been passed down to me.’ Dirk laughed, suddenly self-conscious. ‘You know me… always had a mystical side. It was odd – that’s all.’
3.00 p.m.: Schanzenviertel, Hamburg
The building sat discreetly on a corner in the Schanzenviertel. Its architecture was Jugendstil and Fabel could see that behind the ugly graffiti the elegant stonework had been gracefully styled with Art Deco features. There was no door plate or any other notice on the wall to indicate the function of the offices within and, after he had shouted his name and the nature of his business through the entry system’s speakerphone, Fabel had to wait a few seconds before the buzz and clunk of the door indicated that he could enter.
Ingrid Fischmann was waiting for him at the top of the short flight of stairs. She was in her mid-thirties and had long straight light brown hair. Her face could have been pretty, were it not for the heaviness of her features that made them almost masculine. The shoulder-length hair and the long and loose-fitting skirt and top she wore combined in a vaguely hippie look that seemed out of sync with her age.
She smiled politely and extended her hand in greeting. ‘Herr Fabel, please come in.’
There were two main rooms off the tiny reception hall. One was clearly used exclusively for file storage and reference materials, the other was Frau Fischmann’s office. Despite the clutter of filing cabinets and bookshelves, and the wall planner and noticeboard on the walls, it still had the feel of a converted living room.
‘My apartment is two streets away,’ explained Frau Fischmann as she sat down behind her desk. Fabel noticed a copy of the 1971 ‘wanted’ poster of the Baader-Meinhof gang on the wall over by the office’s only window. Nineteen black-and-white faces were ranged under the title Anarchistische Gewalttater – Baader/Meinhof-Bande. The poster had taken on an almost iconic status, symbolising a particular moment and mood in German history. ‘I rent these offices. I don’t know why, but I’ve always felt it necessary to separate my living and working environments. The other thing is I use this as an address for all my business correspondence. Given the sensitivity of some of the people I write about, it’s a good idea not to advertise where I live. Please, Herr Fabel, sit down.’
‘May I ask why you write what you write? I mean, most of it happened before your time, really.’
Fischmann smiled, exposing slightly too-big teeth. ‘Do you know why I agreed to meet with you, Herr Fabel?’
‘To help me catch a psychotic killer, hopefully.’
‘Of course, there’s that. But I am a journalist, first and foremost. I smell a story in this, and I expect a little quid pro quo.’
‘I’m afraid I am not interested in horse-trading, Frau Fischmann. My only concern is to catch this murderer before more lives are lost. Lives are more important to me than newspaper stories.’
‘Please, Herr Fabel. I agreed to meet you because I have spent many years exposing the hypocrisy of those who dabbled or actively participated in domestic terrorism in the nineteen seventies and nineteen eighties, and who now seek public office or commercial success. In all my studies I have yet to come across a single solid intelligent reason for these spoilt middle-class brats to have been playing at revolutionaries. What offends me more than anything is the way some figures on the left sought to intellectualise the murder and mutilation of innocent citizens.’ Fischmann paused. ‘As a Hamburg policeman, you will be aware that the Polizei Hamburg experienced its fair share of suffering at the hands of the Red Army Faction and its supporters. You know that the first German policeman to be murdered by the Faction was a Polizei Hamburg officer.’