Read A Fear of Dark Water Online
Authors: Craig Russell
Tags: #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction
‘Administrative errors happen. Maybe her details have been accidentally wiped,’ said Fabel.
‘Mmm … just like her email to me has disappeared from my computer.’
‘That was because of a computer virus that we all know about.’
‘It’s a hell of a coincidence, though, isn’t it?’
‘I suppose it is,’ said Fabel. And if there was one thing Fabel didn’t believe in, it was coincidences.
‘And who’s to say that the Klabautermann Virus isn’t targeted? That it is a tool for deleting carefully selected information and hiding it in plain sight in a mass deletion?’
Fabel laughed. ‘I’m sorry, Herr Senator, but I think we’re wandering into the area of conspiracy theories.’
‘You think?’ Müller-Voigt poured more coffee. Fabel accepted it but knew he would regret it later. He had a low tolerance for caffeine and he knew that a second cup would keep him awake that night. Susanne habitually teased him about it, saying it was because all he had ever drunk while growing up in East Frisia was tea. But somehow Fabel didn’t think the coffee would be the only thing to keep him from sleep.
It was now dark outside and Fabel noticed that the lighting in the lounge increased automatically to compensate.
‘Look, Herr Müller-Voigt,’ said Fabel. ‘I have to ask you this. Did you give any money or gifts or anything of any value to Meliha? Maybe even information that may have some value or be of use—’
‘I see,’ Müller-Voigt cut across him. ‘You think that I’ve been honeytrapped. No fool like an old fool, is that it?’
Fabel started to protest but the politician held up his hand.
‘I don’t blame you. I have to admit that the thought had gone through my head, but the answer is no. I can honestly say that nothing of any material, commercial or political advantage ever passed between us. We became lovers. It was as simple and as complicated as that. And now she’s gone and I’m struggling to convince you that she ever existed. I’m beginning to struggle to convince myself of that.’
‘People either exist or they don’t, Herr Senator. And if they do exist then they leave material traces.’
‘That’s what I believed, too. But when I’d run out of all other ideas I used a contact I have in the education department. I got her to run a check with
her
contact in the University of Istanbul and gave her the rough span of years during which I reckoned Meliha would have been a student.’
‘And she drew a blank as well.’ Fabel made it a statement rather than a question.
‘That’s why I said to you that Meliha wasn’t missing, but that she has
disappeared
. Not just physically but, as far as I can see, from any form of public record. It’s almost as if someone has hit a button and deleted Meliha from existence.’
A silence fell over the two men. Fabel studied his coffee cup and considered what Müller-Voigt had told him. Fabel had heard stories like this before. People deranged with anxiety over a missing person elaborating their disappearance into some huge conspiracy, just to make sense of it. But Fabel knew this was not one of those cases. What Müller-Voigt was telling him made absolutely no sense at all, and Fabel believed every word of it.
‘If what you say is true … No, let me put that better: if what you suspect is true, then it would take massive resources and organisation. Are you saying the government, or
a
government is behind this? You said that you thought Meliha was into something that might have placed her in danger. What, exactly?’
Müller-Voigt regarded Fabel for a moment, as if assessing him.
‘Do you remember what I said about how we used to be more connected to Nature?’ he said. ‘That we could interpret our environment?’
Fabel nodded.
‘I need you to keep that in mind for a while. Have you heard of the Pharos Project?’
Fabel remembered the poster he had passed when running Susanne to the airport: the overdone symbolism of the lighthouse in the storm.
‘Not really,’ he said. ‘Heard
of
it but I don’t know anything much about it.’
‘The Pharos Project is purportedly an environmental organisation. It has a massive corporate conglomerate, headed by its founder, behind it. The European headquarters of the Pharos Project is, believe it or not, just a few kilometres from here. There’s an old disused lighthouse out on the coast, just to the north of Hörne: they’ve renovated the original lighthouse and added this massive building beside it. They call the building itself the Europa Pharos. You should see it – it is actually a beautiful piece of architecture and, of course, environmentally self-sustaining. It projects out on stilts over the water. There’s another one, apparently, on the coast of Maine, called the Americas Pharos. Anyway, the Pharos Project uses its status as an environmental research and pressure group to avoid being classed as a religious or philosophical movement, or an out-and-out political organisation.’
‘You’re saying they’re covering up being a cult?’
‘You met Fabian Menke from the BfV earlier today,’ said Müller-Voigt. ‘I’ve been talking to him about the Pharos Project and he admitted to me that it is a group that his people are monitoring. Closely.’
‘Doesn’t that, well,
concern
you? That the BfV is investigating an environmental organisation? After all, you are Hamburg’s most outspoken environmentalist.’
‘Let’s get one thing straight: the Pharos Project has nothing to do with anything I believe in. The Pharos Project
is
a cult. But more than that, it is a dangerous, malignant cult. You should talk to Menke about it.’
‘So what was Meliha’s connection to it?’
‘She was very guarded about her work but, like I said, I got the impression that she was some kind of investigator for whatever organisation she worked for. Or maybe an investigative journalist. But, again, I’ve searched for her on the internet and can find no trace of her ever having contributed to any journal, press or TV. In any case, I know she was gathering as much information as she could about the Pharos Project. She even asked me what I knew about it, which turned out to be a lot less than she did.’
‘And what
do
you know?’
‘Well, I’ve done quite a bit of research since Meliha disappeared. And I was able to get a fair bit from Menke. None of it is good. The Pharos Project meets all the criteria for a dangerous cult. It is highly dictatorial and its leaders, particularly Dominik Korn, are venerated as demigods; it demands that all its members donate all their wealth to it; it has some kind of doomsday agenda; it exerts total control over its members and has an incredibly hostile and aggressive attitude towards any critics.’
‘And you think that aggression has been directed towards Meliha?’
‘Remember what I said about us not engaging with our environment any more? Well, that kind of disengagement is exactly what the Pharos Project, specifically its leader, Dominik Korn, positively encourages. He believes that the best way to save the environment is for humankind to be removed from it.’
‘And how do they propose that is achieved?’ asked Fabel.
Müller-Voigt shrugged. ‘Most cults believe in some epiphanic moment. A Judgement Day, or Ragnarok, or Apocalypse. The Pharos Project is no different. They believe in an event they call the Consolidation. I don’t know any more than that. But I suspect that Menke will be able to give you more details. There was a limit to how much he was willing to share with me, but you’re not a politician, you’re a policeman.’
‘And you think that Meliha’s disappearance is connected to the Pharos cult?’
‘They don’t like people investigating or criticising them. And Meliha did seem to be looking into their activities before she disappeared.’ Müller-Voigt paused. ‘I’m going to get to the bottom of this, Fabel. I’ll do it without your help if I have to. It will make it difficult, but I’ll do it. The question remains, Herr Fabel: will you help me?’
‘As you’ve said yourself, there’s no evidence of a murder. There’s not even evidence that Meliha ever existed, from what you’ve told me. I simply can’t launch an official Murder Commission inquiry based on what you’ve given me.’
‘So you’re saying that you won’t help me?’
‘I didn’t say that. I’ll look into it. God knows I’ve got enough on my plate with this Network Killer case. But I’ll see what I can find out. But there’s no point in you looking at the washed-up body we found. It was a torso: no head, legs or arms.’
Fabel saw the colour drain dramatically from behind the politician’s tan. For a moment he thought Müller-Voigt was going to throw up.
‘Listen, Herr Senator, I think it’s unlikely that it’s Meliha. We believe the body was dismembered to avoid identification. According to everything you’ve told me tonight, Meliha doesn’t seem to have any kind of recorded identity. Give me a few days and I’ll see what I can find out.’
‘Thank you, Fabel. I appreciate it. Can I ask you one more thing? Can we keep this between ourselves … for the meantime at least.’
‘Okay, Herr Senator,’ said Fabel. It wasn’t an official investigation after all. Yet.
‘You have to admit, though,’ said Fabel, ‘that you haven’t really given me much to go on. Is there
anything
you can tell me about Meliha that might help me?’
Müller-Voigt’s small laugh was both bitter and sad. ‘After Meliha disappeared, I thought about how little I really knew her. Every time I thought about talking to you – or someone like you – about her disappearance I realised how little I really had to tell you about her. But I
did
know her. I knew her as well as if we’d spent our whole lives together. If you like, I knew the
essence
of her.’ He thought for a moment. ‘She was a Kemalist. You know, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the father of modern Turkey. Atatürk is a massive figure for a lot of Turks because he created something so totally, radically different to everything that went before. He simply
rethought
the concept of Turkey and shaped a secular, progressive republic. He convinced an entire nation to put the past behind them and embrace a future that they had never considered. I can understand why he is so inspirational to Turks. As I said, Meliha was also deeply passionate about the environment. And that was her big thing: she believed that the world needed an “environmental Atatürk”. Someone who was capable of rethinking our entire way of life. She used to accuse me and others like me of being “pop-environmentalists”. Dilettantes.’
‘I don’t see how …’
‘“
Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned
”,’ said Müller-Voigt in English. ‘Do you know your Shakespeare, Herr Fabel?’
‘Congreve,’ said Fabel. ‘“
Heaven has no rage like love to hatred turned, Nor hell a fury like a woman scorned
” is from a play by William Congreve, not Shakespeare.’
Müller-Voigt grinned. ‘Of course, I was forgetting you’re a very
learned
policeman, aren’t you, Herr Fabel? Anyway, I think Meliha felt a little of that fury. Not that she had been scorned romantically, more
philosophically
. She was a great admirer of Dominik Korn, of his environmental views. At least when he set out his original vision for the Pharos Project. I think she saw him as the great hope for the future of the environment.’
‘Her “Atatürk of the Environment”?’
‘Exactly. But Korn had some kind of accident – a diving accident, I believe – after which he became increasingly reclusive. The Pharos Project, which had started off as a genuinely innovative environmental research organisation, became a weird cult driven by Korn’s increasingly bizarre philosophies. Meliha really had a bee in her bonnet about it. She felt it was more than a lost opportunity. It was a betrayal.’
‘So you think she was on some kind of mission to expose Korn and Pharos?’
‘I think that is entirely possible. If you’re asking me where to look for Meliha, then I suggest you start with the Pharos Project.’
‘By the way, the picture you’ve got in the digital frame – can you give me a hard copy of that?’
‘I can email it to you. I have a new laptop and a private email that are not connected to the State’s system so they haven’t been exposed to this bloody Klabautermann Virus.’
‘If you don’t mind, Herr Senator, I’d rather have a hard copy.’
For a moment Müller-Voigt looked surprised. ‘Okay … I think I’ve got a print in my office. I’ll have it couriered over to the Presidium tomorrow morning. If not I can print it out again when I get my old computer back. They’re de-virusing it or whatever the hell they do to get the data back.’
As Fabel drove away from the politician’s house all kinds of nagging thoughts worried away at the edges of his mind. The simplest explanation of the woman’s disappearance, and of the fact that there was no trace of her identity, seemed obvious to Fabel: that, for whatever reason, she had given Müller-Voigt a false name. That would explain the thing with the conference: she probably
did
have an official delegate’s badge, but it had been under a different name and, once she had introduced herself as Meliha Yazar, Müller-Voigt wouldn’t have thought to check her name tag. Maybe she was an investigative journalist or maybe she was a member of one of those extreme environmental groups Menke had mentioned, and she had simply been trying to get close to an influential member of the Hamburg government.