Pierre Frei - Berlin - A Novel

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Berlin: A Novel: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Set in a devastated Berlin one month after the close of the Second World War, Berlin has been acclaimed as “ambitious. filled with brilliantly drawn characters, mesmerizingly readable, and disturbingly convincing” by the
. An electrifying thriller in the tradition of Joseph Kanon and Alan Furst,
is a page-turner and an intimate portrait of Germany before, during, and after the war. It is 1945 in the American sector of occupied Berlin, and a German boy has discovered the body of a beautiful young woman in a subway station. Blonde and blue-eyed, she has been sexually assaulted and strangled with a chain. When the bodies of other young women begin to pile up it becomes clear that this is no isolated act of violence, and German and American investigators will have to cooperate if they are to stop the slaughter. Author Pierre Frei has searched the wreckage of Berlin and emerged with a gripping whodunit in which the stories of the victims themselves provide an absorbing commentary. There is a powerful pulse buried deep in the rubble.

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'My husband is on the veranda. Just go through the living room.'

Klaus Dietrich was wearing shorts and a polo shirt. resting in a deckchair and looking relaxed. He had taken off his troublesome prosthesis and put his leg up. He glanced up from his newspaper in surprise. 'Captain Ashburner?'

Ashburner, taken aback, glanced at the amputated limb. 'I didn't know about that.'

'Oh, just ignore it. I do.' The inspector hauled himself up by the table with practised ease.

'I went to your office, but you'd left. I apologize for disturbing you at home, but that's all I'm planning to apologize for.'

'What's the matter, Captain?'

A phone call from the city commandant's office, that's what's the matter,' Ashburner said angrily. Asking why I am preventing you from questioning Private Dennis Morgan and why, furthermore, I am withholding an item of evidence from you.'

'Well, aren't you?'

Ashburner took the scrap of olive-green fabric from his pocket and handed it to the inspector. 'I've had this examined. It's certainly from an officer's trench coat. However, such coats are traded on the black market, so it could have been worn by a German. You can question Private Morgan in my office any time. Are you happy now?'

'Not until we've caught the murderer. I'm sorry I had to turn to the commandant's office. Your Sergeant Donovan was blocking all our attempts to investigate, and we couldn't reach you. Captain, this case may be taking an unexpected turn. I need a permit to visit the Brandenburg penitentiary. The NKVD is holding former CID Chief Superintendent Wilhelm Schluter there, for mass executions in Ukraine. I want to question him about the murder of a woman in Berlin before the war. There could be parallels.'

Ashburner made a couple of notes. Inge Dietrich joined them. 'You're welcome to stay and eat with us, Mr Ashburner.'

'Potato soup a la Uncle Tom,' said Dr Hellbich sarcastically, appearing behind her. 'You grate a couple of raw potatoes into boiling water, add salt and a pinch of spice if available, and there you are. Guaranteed to be an entirely new experience for our overseas guest. Do you by any chance have a cigarette?'

Dietrich was embarrassed. 'My father-in-law — Captain Ashburner,' he introduced them.

'Pleased to meet you. I'm sorry, sir, I don't smoke. Thank you for the invitation, ma'am, but I have a dinner date.' Ashburner turned to Dietrich. 'With an acquaintance from the Soviet commandant's HQ, who may be able to help us.'

'I'll show you out.' Dietrich hopped to the door on one leg: it didn't seem to bother him at all. Ashburner stopped for a moment in the living room, looking at the framed photograph on the sideboard. It showed a laughing Klaus Dietrich with the epaulettes of a colonel. The Knight's Cross with oak leaves stood out brightly from the black uniform of the Panzer troops.

And I didn't know that either,' said Ashburner, impressed, as he swung himself up into his jeep.

картинка 9

Ashburner quickly fetched the statements and photographs relating to the two murder cases from his office and put them in the jeep. Major Berkov had surprised him by phoning. 'Do you know the "Seagull" in Luisenstrasse? Through the Brandenburg Gate, left into Neue Wilhelmstrasse and across the Spree.'

'I don't know it, but I'll find it,' Ashburner promised.

'Shall we say eight?'

'Eight it is.' Ashburner was pleased that Berkov had called. He liked the cultivated Russian, so different from his earlier assumptions about their Red allies. He drove from Uncle Tom through the Grunewald to Halensee and the Kurfiirstendamm, which was in the British sector. The tower of the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church with its top broken off rose into the sky creating a bizarre spectacle. Tauentzienstrasse was full of rubble and ruins too. There were people clearing up everywhere. Women with grey faces under grey headscarves were knocking the remains of mortar off bricks. Elderly men passed them from hand to hand, conveying them to horsedrawn carts or trucks running on wood gas. It was amazing, what these half-starved Germans were doing.

He thought of the inspector and his family. Their life must be damn hard. On the other hand, hadn't the Germans brought it on themselves? Who had begun that crazy war, and who had lost it? Or were the Dietrichs just victims? Wouldn't it have been the same for him and Ethel and everyone else in Venice if Hitler had won the war? The idea of watching Ethel grating raw potatoes into boiling water at the stove amused him. He decided to tell her the story sometime, just to see her reaction. He braked sharply as he came to a shell crater overgrown with weeds in the middle of the street and drove around it.

He went along the overpass and then left towards Potsdamer Platz, where the Soviet-occupied sector of the city began, past the bustling black market in the square to the ruins of the German Reichstag, which he gathered had been a kind of parliament, and through the Brandenburg Gate. A red flag with the hammer and sickle was flying above it. Chunks of plaster crunched under his tyres as he stopped in Luisenstrasse.

The Berlin Artists' Club had been housed in what was once Prince Billow's town palace. Soviet cultural officers had named it after Chekhov's The Seagull, an image of which adorned the curtain of the Moscow artists' theatre. But Berlin's artists came less for the culture than because, thanks to the artistically minded Russians, there was plenty to eat here, and no disapproving waiter snipping bits off your ration cards.

Maxim Petrovich Berkov was waiting for his guest at a table half-hidden behind pot plants. 'Good evening, John. How are you?'

'I'm always feeling fine after working hours.'

And your beautiful girlfriend?'

Ashburner grinned. 'I'm not sure if it was the white BMW or its driver that impressed her most.'

'I'd be happy to take the lady for a drive.'

'I'd sooner you didn't. The glorious Red Army has made enough conquests. Maxim Petrovich, can we talk freely here?'

The major reached into the small bay tree behind him, and after a little groping about produced a small microphone from among the leaves. He broke the fine feed line with a jerk. A loose contact. Such sloppy work,' he remarked dryly.

The waiter brought the menu, and Berkov ordered a bottle of Crimean champagne. 'Yes, major,' said the waiter, and clicked his heels.

'Hasn't been properly re-educated yet,' remarked Berkov, amused. 'Usually the Germans adapt very quickly. Take Russian Eggs, for instance, that savoury little starter — they've renamed it Soviet Eggs. I can recommend it, by the way. And how about saddle of venison to follow? My boss's contribution to the cultural life of Berlin. General Bersarin doesn't just enjoy racing around the city on his looted Harley Davidson, he goes hunting in Goring's old preserves. He decides when the season ends. Oh, by the way, do you remember our first meeting?'

'You were looking for the grave of that man Kleist.'

'I've been reading up on the subject. She wasn't his mistress — Henriette was a romantic girl who made a suicide pact with the poet.'

Ashburner was glad to see the waiter bringing the champagne and their starters. It meant he didn't have to say anything on a subject where he was out of his depth. 'What's your sport?' he asked, changing the subject to be on the safe side.

'We played tennis at the Frunse military academy. Marshal Tukhachev- sky was keen to make his young officers gentlemen in the Western model. Stalin had him executed. An irreplaceable loss to the Red Army.'

'You're very outspoken, Maxim Petrovich.'

Ah, well, the microphone installed by our comrades from the Kommissariat just happens to be out of order.'

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