The Night of the Generals
The Night of the Generals
Hans Hellmut Kirst
Translated from the German by J. Maxwell Brownjohn
The Night of the Generals
PART ONE
Prelude
Even death has its funny side
WARSAW, 1942
1
The body lay in the middle of the room between the table and the bed. Anyone looking at it from the door would have mistaken it for a bulging sack. It lay huddled up, face buried in the carpet.
“Nice carpet, that,” said the man who stood surveying the scene, legs planted firmly apart. “Pity about the blood, though. It’s completely messed up.”
He looked like a healthy, contented boy. His cheeks were plump and ruddy and his eyes friendly and appealing, as though on the look-out for congenial playmates.
“Death occurred barely two hours ago,” said another man, who was leaning against the door-post. “We notified you immediately in accordance with standing instructions.”
The cheerful, boyish-looking man, whose name was Engel, nodded. Kneeling down, he grasped the corpse by the hair, pulled the head back and inspected the face. It stared back at him with waxen rigidity, mouth agape and eyes wide with horror. Something of the dead woman’s wild, dark beauty remained in spite of her contorted expression.
“She must have been spectacular in bed,” mused Engel.
His companion, who was still leaning against the doorframe, motionless as a graven image, gave no sign of having heard his remark. His eyes were like extinct craters, grey, inaccessible and hard as volcanic rock. He looked gnarled and desiccated, like an old gnome.
“Did you hear, Liesowski?” Engel asked the gnomelike man. “For a corpse, I think she looks pretty good—or don’t you agree?”
“Naturally I agree,” replied Liesowski.
“Even when you agree with me you manage to be irritating,” said Engel. He rose to his feet with a grunt. Having made an excellent dinner on the pick of the left-overs from the generals’ table, washed down with schnapps, he had been planning an agreeably strenuous night with a woman agent in military intelligence. Instead, his after-dinner entertainment had turned out to be a dead body. “What’s the matter, don’t you like her?”
Detective-Inspector Roman Liesowski of the Warsaw police shook his head a trifle indulgently. “I’ve never been able to see much charm in a corpse, Herr Engel.”
“Not even in your capacity as a Polish patriot?”
“I’ve been a policeman for almost as long as I can remember and I’ve come across a lot of dead bodies in my time, but my sole reaction is always: who did it? I’ve spent a lifetime hunting down murderers without developing the slightest sense of patriotism.”
“That,” said Engel cheerfully, “is probably the reason why you’re still alive and kicking, Liesowski. We Germans give you a chance to do your duty, and in return you’re allowed to breathe our air, eh?”
Engel laughed gaily and slapped the breast of his leather raincoat, which gleamed dully in the subdued light. “Well, my friend, why did you send for me? Not just to show me a beautiful corpse, surely?”
“The woman’s name was Maria Kupiecki.”
“Well? She’s only one corpse among many. They’re as thick as fleas on a dog’s back in this city. The world’s full of them, so why disturb my well-earned night’s rest?”
“Maria Kupiecki—also known as ‘Countess’ Kupiecki—was one of the people whom we have to provide with police protection on request. Her name figures in your official list, so she must have been working for German intelligence.”
“Ah, now I get it!” Engel beamed happily like a schoolboy who has been given a new football. “That explains why I was struck by your smug attitude the moment I came in. I know exactly what you’re thinking: one traitor less! Any murder’s all right with you, but a patriotic murder’s twice as welcome.”
“Take a closer look at the body,” recommended Liesowski, unruffled. “This piece of butchery had nothing to do with patriotism.”
“Why not? Don’t you think any of your keen and determined fellow-countrymen would go to such lengths?”
‘This isn’t what one would call a normal murder. The man didn’t just finish her off. He made a revolting mess of the body.”
Engel slowly withdrew his gaze from the Inspector and transferred it to the inert bundle, once a human being, which lay on the floor in front of him.
“Get this straight, Liesowski,” Engel said softly, as if anxious to avoid being overheard. “If you try and concoct any unpleasant surprises for us you’ll end up a corpse yourself.”
Roman Liesowski raised both hands as though in surrender, but it was a half-hearted and not particularly convincing gesture. His expression was morose. “We seem to be at cross purposes. I’m talking about a bestial murder, nothing more. I’ve drawn no political conclusions whatsoever.”
For a brief instant Engel seemed disconcerted and his smile lost some of its ebullience, but he quickly regained his air of exuberant geniality.
“All right then, you can proceed with your inquiries under my supervision, but I shall have to notify my superior. Until Major Grau arrives I can only hope you don’t come up with anything stupid. I don’t want to have to find a replacement for you if I can avoid it.”
“I shall be glad to do all I can,” Liesowski replied dryly, “but judging by the look of things I can’t promise that you’ll be overjoyed at the results of my investigation. Perhaps it would be better—better for you, I mean—if you took over the case yourself.”
But Engel had resumed his inspection of the body. “Why did the bitch have to die?” he asked with the sudden petulance of a child whose balloon has burst. “She looks as though she’d have given one a good time. It’s always the same, though. Women like her bring nothing but trouble in the end.”
The air in the room was close and muggy. It was a compound of stale perfume, the foetid sweetness of blood-soaked clothing and the acrid smell of Engel’s Brazilian cigar.
Major Grau, head of counter-espionage for the Warsaw area, arrived an hour later. His overcoat, which was draped negligently round his shoulders, made an elegant rustling sound, audible evidence that he selected only the finest materials for his wardrobe.
“There’s no need to apologize,” he announced, “not in advance, at least. I’m at your disposal day and night if necessary. Was it necessary in this case?”
Before Engel could reply the Major demonstrated his observance of formalities by extending his hand to the Polish policeman—not forgetting to remove his pigskin glove first— and uttering a few cordial words of greeting. Liesowski sketched a small bow.
“First, let us deliberate,” said Major Grau, his features illumined by a look of gentle, scarcely perceptible irony. “Be good enough to send your men outside, Inspector. I think it would be appropriate if we opened the proceedings in private. Allow me to commandeer your chair, my dear Engel. It looks extremely comfortable—but then the whole room gives a cosy impression. I know it already, by the way. This isn’t my first visit, though from the look of things it will probably be my last.”
Major Grau chatted away like a guest at an afternoon tea party. He selected a cigarette from his gold case, but not before offering one to Roman Liesowski, who tucked it away in his breast pocket.
“I’m listening,” said Major Grau, when the Inspector’s assistants had left the room as instructed. His air was that of a business man awaiting a proposition.
Liesowski recounted the known facts with due objectivity: at 11:05 p.m. screams had been heard, but produced no immediate reaction from anyone in the house; shortly afterwards someone telephoned the police and a policeman called to
investigate; towards midnight the homicide squad turned up, identified the body without difficulty and informed the German authorities; Sergeant Engel arrived, postponed further investigation and notified Major Grau.
“What a frightful smell there is in this house!”
“It’s the smell of war, Major.” Roman Liesowski’s tone was explanatory, like that of a sewer-worker speaking from professional experience. “Poor food, insufficient soap, windows hermetically sealed because of the black-out, clothes caked with months of sweat—and now blood as well. It’s the characteristic aroma of our time, at least in this part of the world.”
Major Grau smiled faintly in apparent agreement, then raised one pigskin glove. “For the moment I’m solely interested in facts, Inspector. You’ve told me your findings. Now I should like to know what conclusions you’ve drawn.”
The Major seemed reluctant to lavish undue attention on the body, which still lay in its original position on the carpet. His gaze rested on a portrait hanging between the two windows. It depicted a Polish noblewoman of Chopin’s day, mysteriously dark and graceful but endowed with a pale, almost transparent skin and provocatively scarlet lips, a blend of delicate sensitivity and passionate abandon.
“There’s not much doubt about the motive,” declared Engel, who lost little of his boyish enthusiasm even in the presence of his superiors. “It looks as though one of her more energetic boy-friends was at work here. She’s as full of holes as a dummy after bayonet-practice. Maybe she drove him to it.”
“She was remarkably uninhibited,” remarked Grau. He turned to Liesowski with a look of bland inquiry. “I knew this lady. Indeed, who didn’t?”
“I didn’t,” said Engel gloomily.
“Our associates are a mixed bunch, Engel. You ought to devote a little more attention to them,” recommended Grau with extreme amiability. “Have you had the room searched, Inspector?”
“There were no documents of any kind,” answered Liesowski, “nothing in any way suspicious, no sign of papers having been removed and not the slightest indication of any so-called patriotic motive. It’s murder, that’s all, probably the ugliest I’ve ever come across—and I’ve seen plenty.”
“Very good,” said Major Grau. “Maria Kupiecki was a valuable collaborator of ours, but the reason for her death probably lay in her personal mode of life.”
“You may well be right, Major.”
“Are you in any doubt?” Grau put the question in a gentle voice. He smiled expectantly, almost as though he hoped for an affirmative answer.
Of all the Germans with whom Liesowski was compelled to work, Major Grau of Abwehr was the oddest. He fell into none of the predominant categories. He was neither cold-bloodedly brutal nor cynically condescending, neither officious nor prosaically bureaucratic. Roman Liesowski had every reason to think himself a good judge of human nature, but Grau remained an enigma and he found this disconcerting.
“Shall I repeat my question, Herr Liesowski? I should be glad to know if you feel any doubts about my line of reasoning?”
Liesowski’s gnomelike figure seemed to shrivel up even more and his eyes dimmed like two guttering candles on the verge of extinction. “Does that mean,” he asked with suspicious diffidence, “that you intend to take the case under your jurisdiction? For my part, I’m quite happy to regard the matter as closed.”
“The man’s incorrigible!” Engel grimaced at Major Grau and fished another cigar out of his breast pocket. “We’re dealing with an out-and-out patriot, Major. He may not realize it himself, but that’s what he is. I’m pretty sure he’s planning to drop us in the dirt. I don’t know exactly how yet, but that’s his game—I felt it the moment I got here. Something smells fishy round here, but what?”
“Your cigar, among other things, Engel. It’s worse than any corpse.”
Engel’s laugh was unabashed. He took the remark in good part, especially as his chief gave an impression of cheerful expectancy. Whatever his reasons, Major Grau seemed to be enjoying the situation.
“Engel is not only a valued colleague but a professional funny-man.” Grau smiled encouragingly at Liesowski. “I hope you’ll bear with him.”
“Then the case is closed as far as I’m concerned,” said the Inspector with alacrity. “I’ll put all the available details at your disposal, if you wish, also the witness my men have unearthed.”
“Witness? What witness? That’s news to me.” Engel shook his head. “This isn’t the first time an informer has been killed, you know. It could always be a simple case of robbery with violence, of course, but it’s far more likely to be revenge for reasons of misguided patriotism—and I admit that patriotism means different things to different people. All right then, wipe these people out and keep mum about it—that’s the usual rule, Liesowski, so why don’t you stick to it?”
“I don’t quite follow you,” said the diminutive policeman.
“My dear Liesowski,” said Grau in his best drawing-room manner, “allow me to try and clarify the situation. Two things seem firmly established: first, the murdered woman worked for us, and, secondly, she was no better than she should be. The question is, was she murdered because she was a whore or because she worked for us? In the former instance the case becomes a criminal matter and one which does not concern my department; in the latter, it becomes something aimed more or less directly at us. And now you produce a witness like a rabbit out of a hat. Engel finds this suspicious, but I must confess that my only reaction is one of curiosity. If your intention was to intrigue me I must ask you to explain your motives.”
“My men have merely found a witness. I have no idea what his evidence consists of. All I know is that he was only too ready to make a statement at first, but when he heard that the German authorities were being called in he flatly refused to say another word.” Liesowski looked inquiringly at Major Grau. “Shall I have him brought in?”
“Please do,” said Grau.
Engel stood the witness against the wall with his arms above his head and felt him all over like a butcher examining a cow before slaughter. “All clear,” he announced. “Now we can pick his brains.”
The Pole ventured a faint smile, encouraged by the unwavering cheerfulness of Engel’s expression. Whatever Engel said sounded cheerful.
“Kindly put your questions, Herr Liesowski,” said Major Grau. “Engel will assist you if necessary.”
Liesowski nodded. He glanced at the Major’s hands, which lay folded in his lap as though in prayer. Engel sucked audibly at his cigar.
“Was it you who informed the police?” began the Inspector.
“Yes,” said the Pole, cautiously.
“Did you discover the body?”
“Yes.” The man’s eyes betrayed alarm.
“Monotonous, isn’t he?” remarked Engel.
“We have time,” said Major Grau amiably, “plenty of time. We’re prepared to be patient, too, provided it’s worth our while—and there’s no reason why it shouldn’t be.”
Further questions elicited the following facts: while the witness, whose name was Henryk Wionczek, was sitting in the communal lavatory on the second floor, he heard screams coming from the floor above. He had the distinct impression that they originated in the region of Maria Kupiecki’s room. It didn’t surprise him—she was an odd type, after all. Well, while he was sitting in the communal lavatory…
“It’s right by the stairs,” Engel explained. “If you squat on the pan you can see through the keyhole quite comfortably. The keyhole’s big, too. Isn’t that so, Liesowski?”
“Quite so.”
Major Grau sat up slowly, the silky cloth of his uniform jacket growing taut as he inhaled deeply. With a touch of impatience, he said: “Well, now ask him what he saw through the keyhole.”
Liesowski did so. Wionczek flinched almost imperceptibly, opened his mouth and promptly closed it again. Raising his head, he stared fixedly at the network of cracks that ran across the ceiling.
“Nothing,” he
gulped, “absolutely nothing. Nothing special, anyway, and the light on the landing was bad. I really didn’t see anything. May I go now?”
Liesowski closed his eyes momentarily. Major Grau’s gaze narrowed as though it had suddenly fallen on a painting of particular interest. Engel laughed delightedly, like a boy who has just seen a deck-chair collapse under a fat old lady.
“It looks as though I’ll have to go to work on this lad,” he said. “He obviously thinks we’re a bunch of idiots—and I don’t like that.”
“I feel the need for a short breather.” Major Grau got up, carefully smoothing a few imaginary creases from his immaculate tunic. “Meanwhile, Engel will continue the conversation with our witness. Make him an offer, Engel, and don’t be stingy. Herr Liesowski, may I ask you to accompany me?”
Grau stepped out into the corridor followed by the Inspector. It was a long, narrow passage with a high ceiling and pale green, peeling walls. Several Polish detectives stood there in the semi-darkness like stone sentinels. There were no civilians in sight.
Grau glanced at Liesowski’s worried face and gave a fleeting smile. “Don’t worry, Inspector. You mustn’t forget that there are certain differences between us and the S.D. or the Gestapo—differences which we set store by. Engel’s methods are a picnic by comparison, I can assure you.”
He went into the communal lavatory on the floor below, sat down on the seat and peered through the keyhole. The whole corridor was visible. He could even hear, with comparative ease, snatches of apparently amiable conversation drifting down from the room once inhabited by the murdered woman. Engel was administering one of his guaranteed cures for a defective memory. He was haggling like a horse-trader, offering foodstuffs in exchange for a full and immediate statement.
“Let’s go back,” Major Grau suggested, glancing at his watch. Little more than five minutes had elapsed, but past experience told him that this was long enough for Engel’s efforts to yield preliminary results.