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Authors: J. Sydney Jones

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BOOK: The Keeper of Hands
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Or was it a missing person? A lover, perhaps? Werthen, via Berthe, who kept up with such matters, knew Salten had a rather complicated love life. On the other hand, Salten might have come on behalf of his current mistress, the Burgtheater actress Ottilie Metzel.

‘Is it appropriate that I speak of business here?’ His eyes trailed to the frolicking pair on the floor.

‘Shall we finish our tea? Then we can retire to my office.’

Berthe cast her husband a reproachful glance.

‘Actually,’ Werthen quickly added, ‘there’s no reason we could not discuss matters here. My wife is part of the agency, you know.’

Salten, small and courtly-looking, sporting a rather jaunty, self-satisfied moustache, nodded at Berthe, who was rearranging glasses in the cupboards. They were still settling in for the summer months when the family would spend more time in the country.

‘I didn’t know. Quite an unconventional family.’

Werthen was unsure how to take this comment. Was it a compliment or an insult? A man like Salten – part of the Jung Wien group of writers and an up-and-coming literary man who had, the year before, published his first collection of stories – might very well expect Werthen to be a staid old bureaucrat; a wills and trusts lawyer despite his sideline in private inquiries.

‘I of course mean no slight with that description,’ Salten hastily added, as if sensing Werthen’s discomfort.

‘None taken,’ Werthen said, but he traded glances with his wife once again.

‘For me, unconventional is a word of respect. A high compliment, in fact.’

Werthen smiled at the comment.

‘I know your work,’ Salten said.

‘I have had some small successes, to be sure,’ Werthen said. ‘The Mahler case among others.’

‘No, no,’ the other interjected. ‘I mean your literary work. I edited one of your pieces for
An der schönen blauen Donau.
I rather liked your boulevardier . . . What was his name?’

‘Maxim.’

‘Right,’ said Salten. ‘Rather a nice tip of the hat to our friend Schnitzler, I thought at the time.’

‘How so?’ Werthen asked, feeling suddenly protective of this short story he had written a number of years ago.

‘There is a certain resonance to the name,’ Salten said, obviously enjoying a discussion of the subject closest to his heart. ‘First there is the association with the establishment of that name in Paris. Maxim’s restaurant and cabaret caters to the rich and powerful of the world.’

‘I hadn’t really thought of that,’ Werthen said, thinking better now of his character, who was something of a silly skirt-chasing fop.

‘But how does Schnitzler come into it?’ Berthe inquired.

‘Well, there’s Schnitzler’s beloved Anatol, of course, the subject of his early plays. The constant playboy, forever in love and forever changing partners. You might recall that his best friend and sometimes advisor was named Max.’

Salten leaned back in his chair with a sigh. It was a physical gesture Werthen knew only too well from his years in the courtroom. The prosecution rests, your honor.

‘Those are indeed interesting associations, Herr Salten. And I am flattered that you, a well-known writer yourself, should remember the scribblings of an amateur.’

Salten made no immediate reply. He stirred his tea, blowing over the rim of the cup though the contents were long since cooled.

‘I am hardly the well-known figure you describe, Advokat Werthen. In my mind’s eye I am still poor little unhealthy Siegmund Salzmann from Budapest toiling away in my cousin’s insurance office. Those days are not so very far behind me.’

He looked wistfully at his dog and Werthen’s daughter. ‘It must be wonderful having a child.’

About to respond in the positive, Werthen was silenced by Salten’s next remark.

‘But enough of socializing. To the matter at hand. I come about murder, sir.’

The word resounded in the cosy kitchen like a blasphemy.

‘Whose murder, Herr Salten? A friend?’

‘I represent another in this inquiry.’

‘But surely the police—’

‘The victim is of too low a status to warrant their concern.’

‘And your client?’

‘Frau Josephine Mutzenbacher. I am currently engaged in writing her life story.’

‘A literary figure?’ Werthen asked, not recognizing the name.

Which comment brought a low chortle from Salten. ‘Hardly! In point of fact, the woman runs a brothel. Rather high-class, mind you, but a brothel all the same.’

‘A madam?’ Berthe said, now joining them at the table.

Salten pursed his lips in assent. ‘Frau Mutzenbacher is a rather amazing woman. Born in Ottakring, of course. Her father was a saddler. She herself was initiated into the world of Eros at a most tender age.’

He quickly cast his eyes Berthe’s way, not wanting to cause embarrassment. Seeing none, he proceeded.

‘They called her Pepi. She entered the brothels at the age of twelve, as a licensed prostitute. But by cunning, and sometimes sheer disarming honesty, she worked her way up in her chosen profession. Now, at the age of fifty, she operates one of the finest houses in the Empire. And what is most incredible about the woman is that she has not an ounce of bitterness about her hard life. On the contrary, she is quite humorous in the detailing of her various liaisons.’

‘And the victim is therefore one of the good lady’s working ménage, one assumes,’ said Werthen. ‘The person deemed of too low status by the police?’

‘Exactly.’

‘Does this have anything to do with that unfortunate girl found in the Prater on May Day?’ Berthe asked.

The death had made the headlines in an otherwise dull news climate, but had been just as quickly forgotten when supplanted by a much bigger news story: the death of Count Joachim von Ebersdorf several days later, victim of bad shellfish. An absurd way to die, Werthen thought. Eating oysters in land-locked Vienna.

‘Very good, Frau Werthen.’

Werthen waited for his wife to correct Salten. Instead, she smiled wanly at his compliment.

‘Meisner, actually,’ she said after a pause. ‘Frau Meisner. I kept my maiden name.’

This made Salten sit up in his chair. ‘My apologies, Frau Meisner.’

Werthen was tiring of all this toing and froing. ‘The murdered girl, Herr Salten. What is Frau Mutzenbacher’s interest in her, other than commercial?’

‘You’ll have to ask her that, Advokat. That is, if you accept the commission.’

‘Frieda, dear,’ Berthe said to their daughter. ‘Don’t pull the doggie’s ears. She doesn’t like that.’

‘Sof ears,’ the child said.

‘They are that,’ Salten said. ‘Like silk.’

Frieda, squatting by the rather impatient animal, craned her neck Salten’s way.

‘Sill,’ she said.

‘Silk.’

‘And how is it you have come to me?’ asked Werthen, redirecting the conversation once again.

‘Well, it was over a game of Tarock, actually. I enjoy a hand or two at the Café Landtmann now and again, and two days ago my usual partners and I were joined by Gustav Klimt.’

‘I would never credit Klimt with the patience for cards,’ Berthe said, but her eyes were still on Frieda and the dachshund.

‘True,’ said Salten. ‘It is my considered judgment that he would be better off with a more physical pastime.’

‘Such as lifting dumbbells,’ Werthen said. ‘I mean it quite literally. He is very much the one for exercise.’

‘And for cream pastries,’ Berthe added. ‘Please, Frieda. Not the doggie’s ears.’

Salten eyed his beloved Mimi warily. ‘Perhaps I should tie her up outside.’

He got up and did so. Meanwhile, Berthe took Frieda to another room.

Once Salten returned, the dog began whining outside.

‘Quite a social animal, the dachshund. They don’t like being left alone.’

‘I’m sure she’ll survive,’ Werthen said. ‘So it was Klimt that put you on to me?’

‘I mentioned quite casually the intentions of Frau Mutzenbacher, and he immediately came up with your name.’

‘Most kind of him.’

‘He also mentioned you are quite zealous in your billing. I don’t believe there will be a problem with Frau Mutzenbacher.’

‘Did you know the girl in question?’

‘Mitzi? I’d seen her about. As I say, I am engaged by Frau Mutzenbacher on her memoirs.’

‘I mean in a professional way.’

‘You are a direct one, aren’t you?’

‘I like to know where I am in a case.’

‘No. Not that I haven’t been known for dalliances. I am, of course, now engaged to Fräulein Metzel of the Burgtheater.’

Werthen nodded at this information, but remained silent.

‘She was not my type,’ Salten added.

‘How is that?’

‘I do not know how familiar you are with such establishments as Frau Mutzenbacher’s, Advokat.’

‘Educate me.’

‘Well, there are usually young women to satisfy almost every taste. Including the hard-pressed woman of good birth who takes up the trade to pay off her father’s debts.’

‘A fabrication?’

‘Generally so. At Frau Mutzenbacher’s, always. Her premises are the home of illusion. The high-class lady fallen low appeals to the sensitive trade – the talkers rather than doers, if you understand?’

Werthen nodded. He’d had some experience of the trade during his years of criminal law in Graz, but thought it better to let Salten play the
magister ludi
in this regard. No telling what a fellow might blurt out when in an educative mood.

‘Then of course there is the pale young thing who never says a word, the mute of the boudoir. And the tough woman with the heart of gold, the soft woman with the harsh voice and tendency toward discipline. I’m sure you understand.’

‘And what was Mitzi’s role?’

‘The child virgin. Don’t get me wrong,’ said Salten quickly, seeing Werthen’s look of disapproval. ‘She was neither. But she was quite young-looking, a diminutive young woman who could and did easily pass for thirteen. In point of fact, she was nineteen.’

‘So her clients believed she was a child?’

‘I would assume so, though I’m hardly privy to their thoughts. Really, you must put these questions to Frau Mutzenbacher. I only saw the girl in passing a few times. Bringing tea to us as we worked during the day. That sort of thing. She seemed to be a special favorite of Frau Mutzenbacher.’

The whines grew more insistent from outside.

In the end, Werthen, deciding prostitutes also deserve justice, agreed to the commission and set up a time for an interview with Frau Mutzenbacher the following Monday. The case was already over two weeks old, so there seemed no need for undue haste, and Werthen and his family had planned a weekend in the country.

Salten said his goodbyes to Berthe and Frieda and went off down the lane, with Mimi trotting along quite proudly in front.

That evening Berthe experimented with a new spaghetti recipe. They waited for these breaks from Vienna and their housekeeper, Frau Blatschky, and her traditional Austrian cooking, to try more exotic fare. Werthen had noticed that of late his wife had taken more of an interest in cooking. He doubted very much that it was merely a sign of increased domesticity. Instead, he supposed that she was finding variation, and a sense of discovery in whatever way she could, for as a new mother she had been tied more closely to home since Frieda’s birth.

Stein, freshly scrubbed after his day’s exertion building the tennis court, looked at his plate of pasta with a degree of suspicion. Then, watching Berthe twirl a bit round the tines of her fork, followed suit and was soon slurping along with the rest.

They had moved on to the meat course, veal, which for Stein was more recognizable, when he said, ‘The rye grass is experimental at best.’

‘Pardon?’ Werthen said.

He was watching Frieda, who was lingering over her pasta, busily painting her cheeks a brilliant orange with the sauce.

‘We’re not really too sure about how well it will do in this loamy soil. Your father and myself, that is.’

‘I did not expect you were referring to your own father,’ Werthen said with a smile. Stein senior had long since been pensioned off, though still living on the von Werthen estate. ‘Young’ Stein, as he was called although he was a bit older than Werthen, had taken his place a number of years ago.

‘He still misses the work,’ Stein said ruefully.

‘Why the experiment?’ Werthen said at length.

‘Well, to see what grass will be best for your father’s new place.’

‘New place?’

Stein laid down his fork. ‘You didn’t know he is purchasing land near here?’

Werthen felt his entire face sag in dismay, then hurriedly got control of his emotions.

‘I expect he was planning it as a surprise.’

‘Yes,’ Berthe chimed in. ‘Very much a surprise.’

‘I must apologize,’ Stein said, his face reddening at his perceived
faux pas
.

‘Not at all, Stein,’ Werthen reassured him. ‘One assumes he is not creating a tennis academy to rival the All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club?’

A polite demi-laugh issued from Stein. ‘It’s to round out the new estate. I believe there’s to be an equestrian ground, as well. It is the sole topic of conversation at Hohelände.’

‘It’s only natural they want to be near their only grandchild,’ Berthe said.

They were lying side by side in bed, gazing up at the darkened ceiling.

‘Perverse, not natural. Stein says the property is near here. Just a bit of breathing room, that is all I require.’

‘They probably assume that now we have a summer home they would not see much of us at Hohelände.’

‘And they would be right. I do not have the fondest memories of that house.’

‘Even though that’s where we met?’

The bed boards underneath the cotton mattress creaked as Werthen rolled on to his side to face his wife.

‘You are being awfully conciliatory about this. It affects us both, you know. They’ll be constantly underfoot, or expect us to be their guests. This is my little piece of heaven and I do not appreciate interlopers.’

‘It’s the Burgtheater for you, Karl. So dramatic.’

‘Have you forgotten how difficult my father and mother are to be around? And I repeat, why are you suddenly the peacemaker?’

BOOK: The Keeper of Hands
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