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‘Brain already substantially degraded,’ Czrisini dictated imperturbably. Then he looked at the chief inspector and added, ‘Indicator for a time of death approximately four weeks ago.’

‘The twentieth of January then,’ Stave murmured.

‘Very possibly,’ Czrisini said.

The assistant glanced at the pair of them, clearly wondering how on earth they could have come to such an exact date.

‘Dental plate in the upper jaw,’ said the pathologist. ‘Two artificial molars in the lower jaw, gold. Right lingual bone and both upper laryngeal bones broken,’ Czrisini noted as he began dealing with the throat. ‘Typical in a strangulation case. Almost certainly the cause of death.’

The pathologist slowly made his way down the body, flayed it, and analysed the bones, nerves and internal organs.

‘Substantial partially digested foodstuff in the stomach,’ he noted. The smell did not improve. Czrisini’s assistant glance at Stave again.

‘Any idea what she might have eaten?’ the chief inspector asked.

‘Bread most likely. Or porridge. Enough at least for her not to be hungry.’

Eventually the doctor got to her lower abdomen. Stave came closer out of curiosity.

‘No sign of vaginal injury,’ Czrisini noted. He took up the scalpel again, sliced open the old scar, entering the woman’s body the way a surgeon must once have done.

‘Left fallopian tube missing.’

‘The result of an operation?’

‘Probably. The right-side tube has developed abnormally and the ovary is enlarged.’ He stopped, then cut away some tissue which Stave couldn’t identify as belonging to any organ.

‘There,’ the pathologist said, indicating something red in the ovary which the chief inspector didn’t recognise. ‘Something in the ovary. Saturated with blood. About the size of a cherry.’

Stave felt queasy for the first time. ‘An embryo?’ he wheezed.

‘No, a tumour,’ Czrisini replied.

‘Cancer?’

‘Whether it’s benign or malignant, I can’t tell easily. But it hardly makes any difference, does it?’

The chief inspector had pulled himself to. ‘Could she have had children?’

The pathologist stared long and hard at the corpse’s largely eviscerated abdomen, then at the organs he had removed, lying in the steel receptacles. Then he shook his head.

‘I doubt it. This woman has growths and deformations in her abdomen and probably had for some time. That is probably why the left fallopian tube was removed. The one on the right is also abnormal. And then there’s that tumour in her ovary. In any case there are no indications of a successful birth, no old vaginal scars. No, I would put money on her being childless.’

‘When did this woman have her operation?’

‘Hard to say. The scars are completely healed. Not in the last 12 months. But probably within the last ten years. Before that she would have been exceptionally young for an invasive procedure such as this.’

‘Between 1937 and 1946. In a private surgery?’

Czrisini gave him a surprised look and shook his head. ‘No, if it was all done properly it would have been in a hospital with a surgical ward.’

‘Did many hospitals in the Reich carry out operations of this nature?’

‘In the whole of the Reich? Hundreds.’

‘Pity.’

Stave followed the rest of the autopsy in silence. There was nothing more that might have been of any use to him.

A man who was the only other victim to have been beaten defending himself; a woman who might have been the mother of the child. What had cropped up in Burger-Prinz’s practice the other day as an elegant family drama hypothesis had been ripped asunder by the pathologist’s scalpel like some rotten internal organ. The woman lying on the dissecting table had never had children. And in all probability, she too had been beaten by the murderer prior to being strangled.

So, what was he left with? Four victims, all probably killed on the same day. Two medallions. The result of the autopsy. This woman was well-to-do. The earring shaped like a starfish. Delicate hands, not those of a manual worker. Nor were those of the old man, or the younger woman. That was too much of a coincidence to be chance, the chief inspector thought. All four victims belonged together.

Did the operation give him any other lead? If the dead woman wasn’t from Hamburg – and nobody here had identified her – then where might the operation have been carried out. In the east? Konigsberg? In the decimated capital, Berlin? It could have been anywhere from Flensburg to Garmisch. Who might remember her? Where might the surgeon live – if he was still alive, which in the circumstances was probably unlikely.

‘I’ll send you a report,’ Czrisini said, washing his hands.

‘Please send me copies of the other three autopsies too,’ Stave said, ignoring the stare of the assistant.

‘Sorry I brought you with me,’ he said to Maschke outside the door of the institute. The vice squad man had been leaning against a wall, smoking, his face still pale and the hand holding the Lucky Strike still shaking slightly. ‘I thought you would be interested in this part of working with the murder squad.’

‘I’d prefer to stick with my ladies of the night,’ Maschke said, not sounding in the least sarcastic.

MacDonald turned up in Stave’s office at the agreed time. The lieutenant was pale-faced and shifty-looking. He avoided Erna Berg’s eyes. And barely glanced at Stave. He was as nervous as a cat on a hot tin roof.

‘Should I put up a notice saying, “Out of bounds for German civilians”?’ the chief inspector muttered.

MacDonald stared at him in irritation for a second, as if he’d just been wakened from a dream, then shook his head apologetically.

‘We don’t even notice things like that, I’m afraid,’ he said glibly. ‘It’s old colonial tradition. Don’t let it get to you, old boy.’

‘Barriers are still barriers, and I’m no coolie,’ Stave replied.

‘Nonetheless a sign like that is honest and open,’ the lieutenant came back at him, with unexpected seriousness. ‘I can assure you that in England we have worse barriers. Often invisible, retrospective barriers – Oxford, certain clubs, the officers’ lounge. They somehow manage to make people ashamed of their background, their own family, their own name.’

Stave thought of his own, not exactly glorious career in the police. There had been trouble with the Nazis. Had he ever felt ashamed of his own background? Had he ever been shown the door because he had been born into the wrong family? He wondered what secret battles MacDonald had had to fight to get where he was today.

‘I’ve got nothing against your family name,’ he said.

‘You even manage to pronounce it properly,’ the lieutenant said with a smile. Stave smiled too. Does no harm to be up to speed at times, he thought but didn’t say.

Maschke came in. Following the autopsy, Stave had told him to take a break but he seemed to have recovered. We’ll get this done, between the three of us, the inspector thought to himself.

He closed the office door and went over the results of the autopsy. He had sent a photo of the earring to Department S but had had nothing back from them. The other earring had not turned up on the black market yet. An officer had gone round every jeweller in the city that had reopened. Nothing. And nobody remembered having made anything like it. Stave didn’t mention his visit to Burger-Prinz the previous day.

‘Anybody got any new ideas?’ he asked at the end.

‘We could send the photos and descriptions of the three adult victims to every CID department in all former parts of the Reich, or at least those where there are CID departments. Maybe one of them is not just a victim, but was also investigated by the police,’ Maschke suggested.

Stave nodded, annoyed with himself. It was a simple idea, he should have thought of it himself. It’s gradually getting on top of me, he thought. At least Maschke was still on the ball. ‘We should assume that they were all members of one family, a well-to-do family and not from Hamburg.’