Authors: Dave Warner
âMathias, I urgently needed to speak to Pieter Gruen's widow, so please call me.'
The more he thought about it the more convinced he became
that he could be onto something. Those wounds were gruesome. It had to be somebody very aggrieved about Pieter Gruen. Clement called the Federal Police and Immigration to see if any Manfred Gruen had entered the country in the last three months. The woman he spoke with at Immigration said she would be back in touch. Just before she was about to hang up he had another thought: the mother could have remarried, the boy may have been raised with a different name.
âActually I'm not even certain about the last name but Manfred is not that common. Can you look up all those for me?'
She said she would âmodify the search criteria' and rang off. Now he felt he was out of the sand and running on firm ground. He left his office and found Ryan Gartrell who was helping run down leads on white SUVs.
âI need to speak to Hilda Gruen, Pieter Gruen's widow. The Hamburg Police might have an address. If not, see if she was receiving any benefits as widow of a police officer, we might be able to locate her from those.'
Clement copied the post-it note Risely had given him and handed it over. âThe Germans have assigned an English-speaking liaison officer to us. Ask for him.'
The door to Risely's office opened and Risely stepped out in a fresh suit. Clement hit him with his theory on Manfred Gruen.
âIt's slim but it fits,' Clement concluded.
Risely was feeding off the energy too. âYou've spoken to Immigration? Federal Police?'
âYes.'
âGood. I have a conference in ten. You want me to mention the vehicle?'
âNo. It's our best chance of finding Osterlund alive. Our killer gets wind we're onto him he might kill him ⦠if he hasn't already.'
Chelsea Verschuer swung in from the back door. âThe wind is too strong. We're going to move it to the library.'
Risely was in agreement.
Clement left them working out the wording of the statement. On hot bricks, Clement took himself back down to the AV room where Manners was hunched over a computer.
âHow's it going on that numberplate?'
He shook his head. âI don't know if I'm going to be able to do this. I'm not getting anywhere. I've tried three programs but it's still blurred.'
âThen ask Perth for help.'
Clement returned to the main room and paced, worried now that he had banked so much on technology.
Time drizzled. He called Earle, found him already on his way back from Derby. The second candidate had been no more likely than the first. Clement gave him the latest.
âYou guys have all the fun and I'm battling a cyclone. It's getting nasty.'
Clement told him to take care on the road. He turned to see Ryan Gartrell advancing rapidly.
âThat was quick,' he observed.
âIt's a police murder. The Germans are desperate to put it away. Good news is we have a name. Hilda Gruen became Hilda Bourke and the pension was sent to a Manchester bank for twenty-five years.'
Bourke? It seemed familiar but it was a common enough name he supposed.
Gartrell continued, âBut they don't have any current address on her yet. They are going back through correspondence.'
âOkay, good.'
Once more he was becalmed. There had to be something he could do. He looked across at the whiteboard, thought of pieces still missing in the puzzle. Okay, suppose this was payback for Pieter Gruen. How did the killer know Schaffer was bent? How did he know Osterlund was Donen?
It clicked. The drug dealer who claimed to have been Gruen's friend! Clement felt he was getting his groove back. At great risk to himself this dealer had presented at the station to warn the police they had a leak. He had been telling the truth after all when he said he did not recognise the Emperor from the photos they showed. What was his name? Clement was sure it had been in the files but couldn't recall it right now. He would be mid-sixties, he knew what Osterlund looked like and he knew one of the cops was bent.
Clement went through the Pieter Gruen file until he found reference to the drug dealer. There it was: Michael Wallen.
He dialled the number on the post-it and was answered in English.
âHamburg State Police, Erik Brohlen speaking.'
Clement introduced himself.
The German was polite. âWe are still looking for the information on Hilda Gruen.'
âThis is something else, Erik. It might be a long shot but I need to locate the drug dealer, Michael Wallen, who is mentioned in Pieter Gruen's file. If he is still alive I think he might be around sixty, sixty-five.'
Brohlen took down the details. He sounded optimistic.
âIf he had a police record we could have his date of birth and full name. I will call you back soon, Inspector.'
True to his word he was on the line in five minutes.
âMichael Wallen: date of birth, eleventh September nineteen fifty-two, owns an apartment in Harburg.'
Clement gratefully copied the phone number. Translation could be a problem but he thought he'd try his luck anyway. He dialled, the phone rang. A man answered.
âHallo.'
âDo you speak English? This is Detective Clement of the West Australian police.'
The words bounced back soaked in confusion.
âPolice? Australia?'
âYes, you speak English?'
âA little.'
âAm I speaking to Michael Wallen?'
âNo. He is my father. I am Rolf Wallen.'
âMay I speak with your father?'
âHe is not here.'
A flicker of optimism warmed Clement. âHe is away?'
âHe is dead.'
It could be a lie. âI am sorry. How long?'
âJuli.'
July. Six months. âWas it sudden? Unexpected?'
âNo. He was sick a long time.' Rolf Wallen was becoming curious rather than defensive. âAustralia? Kangaroos?'
âWestern Australia, yes.'
âThis is about what?'
âDid your father ever mention a man named Pieter Gruen?'
âJa, of course. He is a ⦠how you say ⦠Hercules to our family.'
âA hero.'
âJa, hero. My father say we owe everything to him.'
âDid any of Pieter Gruen's friends meet with your father?'
âNo. My father is honest about his life. He is junkie in old days. Gruen give him his life but he is a policeman.'
âAnd your father never met with any of the police or family?'
âI am sorry. I do not understand.'
âWe have a murder case here that may have something to do with the murder of Pieter Gruen.'
âThat's a long time.'
âYes it is. But back then your father told the police somebody in the police was corrupt, informing to the Emperor.'
âMy father tells me about this.'
âI believe he was right.'
âToo late for my father.'
It was said matter of fact, not with bitterness.
âYes, Rolf, but you can help us. I think sometime in the last year or so your father must have met with somebody associated with Pieter Gruen.'
âI don't know this.'
âDid he ever have any contact with Gruen's family?'
âHe send a parcel and a letter, I remember. A long time back. I am zwölf.'
Clement went with the word it sounded most like. âTwelve?'
âA boy, not teenager. I give some of my toys.'
âIt was to another boy?'
âJa. In England. The boy, Manfred. He is my age.'
On the way out to the pit for the last time the dark peeled away and dawn shone on the memory of that first meeting with his saviour. He had sat enthralled listening to Wallen's slow plodding words.
âHe was my best friend. He will always be my best friend.'
Wallen stirred the sugar through his coffee relentlessly. His fair hair was still thick in clumps though with sparse areas like a well-worn walking track, his eyes were tired and his skin grey. They were in a little café just a street from the railway station, a cheap place where the smell of toast and cooked ham hung in the air, and there was a greasy patina on the check plastic tablecloths. The majority of the customers were men in vinyl jackets that had been long soaked in cigarette smoke and whose razors had not quite done the job on cheeks and chins. It had been an impulse decision to ring from Munich. The tournament was over and the rest of his party were spending their last day sightseeing but he felt he could not let the chance pass. Wallen had offered to come to Munich but he thought he would like to see Hamburg so they arranged to meet here.
Wallen's face adopted its natural line of concern and missed opportunity.
âI was so shocked about your father. I should have tried to contact your family years ago but I was scared. Not just for me, I had a young family. I'm not a brave man. After I tried that first time with the police, I was worried Donen would know I'd tried to talk. For years I ran. And then when I stopped running I couldn't find an address for your family. Finally I rang the police and pretended to be an old colleague of Pieter's and somebody found that Manchester address.'
Yes, that made sense. He would never forget the day the parcel arrived with the letter.
âI bought that t-shirt for myself but never wore it. I know it was too big for a young kid but I thought one day you can wear it.'
âI still have it. I never took it out of its wrapping. And the letter of course.'
He was alone at home reading
Harry Potter,
a boy similarly deprived of family by evil, when the parcel finally arrived.
âAt first Hilda didn't want me to write back,' he said. The coffee was too strong for him. He sipped it and put it down.
âI can't blame her. I was a druggie, not then, but before. I've got hep C to show for it. Anyway, I'm glad you did.'
They talked for a long time. About family at first: Wallen in detail describing his own kids and wife, then, asking about his schooling, and Hilda and her second husband. The proximity of the train station meant they could squeeze the juice out of every detail before he climbed on his return train to Munich.
âAnd you're a sportsman too?' Wallen's eyes crinkled over the rim of his cup.
âWe came third out of seven.'
âI never made any team, hopeless. Pieter would have been proud.'
âTell me about him.'
Wallen recounted how they met, how he didn't have much to do with him at first, how he had saved Pieter Gruen once and how Pieter had in turn saved him from something much more pernicious than a group of skinheads.
âThe whole operation could have come crashing down because of me. He put his own life in danger to tell me to clear out. He trusted me. And the worst part is, sometimes I fearâat the endâhe might have thought it was me.' Wallen shook his head bitterly.
Hours had passed. Shifts of diners had come and gone.
âDo you know exactly what happened to him?'
âAs I wrote you, the man they called the Emperor killed him. I heard that from a very reliable source.'
âIs it true they chopped him up with a chainsaw?'
Wallen did not want to meet his eyes. âYes.'
Donen himself had cut Pieter Gruen to pieces while he was still alive.
âThe man who told me this heard it from one of the men who was actually there, one of the Emperor's bodyguards, a man named Klaus. I couldn't live with this image of my friend Pieter. I am a coward at heart and I tried to blot it out but I could not and eventually I went to the police. They did not believe me. You understand after that I had to disappear too. Once Donen knew I was prepared to talkâ¦'
âWhere is Donen now?'
âIf I knew that I would track him down and kill him myself.'
âDo you have any photos of Donen?'
âNo. He was too careful. And back in those days it wasn't like now with cameras in phones. But if the cops thought they had a photo of Donen they were wrong.'
It was on the train on the way back to Munich that he looked at his reflection in the window and promised he would track down those men and kill them no matter what. He was pragmatic about it though. He was sixteen. First he had to complete his schooling, and he had to prepare himself, be ready to give up his own life. But in the years that took, his desire never wavered. Every arrow he shot was through their hearts, every math problem he solved, the mystery of how to find them, every sentence he wrote, part of their obituaries. There could be no future until the past had been dealt with to his satisfaction, however long that took. And now here he was on the other side of the world and finally it had been done and his life could restart when Donen's ended.
The woman from Immigration got back in touch to say there was no record of a Manfred Gruen entering the country in the last five months. They were still in the process of compiling a list of people named âManfred' who had entered Australia in that time. Clement had thought the chance of Manfred having his father's surname was fifty-fifty so he wasn't too discouraged.