Also by Philip Kerr
THE BERNIE GUNTHER BOOKS
The Berlin Noir Trilogy
March Violets
The Pale Criminal
A German Requiem
The One from the Other
A Quiet Flame
If the Dead Rise Not
Field Gray
Prague Fatale
A Man Without Breath
OTHER WORKS
A Philosophical Investigation
Dead Meat
The Grid
Esau
The Five-Year Plan
The Second Angel
The Shot
Dark Matter: The Private Life of Sir Isaac Newton
Hitlers Peace
Prayer
Research
January Window
FOR CHILDREN
Children of the Lamp
The Akhenaten Adventure
The Blue Djinn of Babylon
The Cobra King of Kathmandu
The Day of the Djinn Warriors
The Eye of the Forest
The Five Fakirs of Faizabad
The Grave Robbers of Genghis Khan
One Small Step
The Winter Horses
G . P . P UTNAMS S ONS
Publishers Since 1838
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Group (USA) LLC
375 Hudson Street
New York, New York 10014
USA Canada UK Ireland Australia New Zealand India South Africa China
penguin.com
A Penguin Random House Company
Copyright 2015 by Thynker, Ltd.
Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Kerr, Philip.
The lady from Zagreb / Philip Kerr.
p. cm. (Bernie Gunther ; 10)
A Marian Wood Book.
ISBN 978-0-698-14289-3
1. Gunther, Bernhard (Fictitious character)Fiction. 2. Private investigatorsGermanyFiction. 3. GermanyHistory19331945Fiction. I. Title.
PR6061.E784L33 2015 2015002935
823'.914dc23
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Version_1
THIS BOOK IS FOR IVAN HEL D , WITHOUT WHOSE ENCO URAGEMENT IT WOULD N EVER HAVE EXISTED.
And if you ask again whether there is any justice in the world, youll have to be satisfied with the reply: Not for the time being; at any rate, not up to this Friday.
ALFRED DOBLIN
I had come to Yugoslavia to see what history meant in flesh and blood.
REBECC A WEST
It was written I should be loyal to the nightmare of my choice.
JOSEPH CONRAD
Prologue
French Riviera, 1956
W olves are usually born with deep blue eyes. These lighten and then gradually fade to their adult color, which is most often yellow. Huskies, on the other hand, have blue eyes and because of this, people think that there must be blue-eyed wolves, too, but, strictly speaking, there arent any; if you ever meet a wolf with blue eyes, then it is very likely not a pure-blooded wolf but a hybrid. Dalia Dresner had the most strikingly blue eyes of any woman I ever saw; but Ill bet that there was a small part of her that was wolf.
Dresner had been a star of German cinema back in the thirties and forties, which was when Id been involved with her, albeit briefly. She is almost forty now but even in unforgiving Technicolor she is still astonishingly beautiful, especially those slow-blinking, ray-gun blue eyes that look as if they might have destroyed a few buildings with a careless glance or a particularly wide-eyed stare. They certainly managed to burn a hole through my heart.
Like the pain of parting, you never really forget the face of a woman youve loved, especially when its the face of a woman the press had called the German Garbo. Not to mention the way they make love; somehow that tends to remain in the memory, also. Perhaps this is just as well when the memory of making love is pretty much all youve got.
Dont stop, she would whimper on the few occasions when I was trying to please her in bed. As if I had any intention of stopping, ever; Id happily have continued making love to Dalia until the end of time.
I was seeing her again in the Eden Cinema in La Ciotat, near Marseilles, reputed to be the worlds oldest and possibly smallest movie theater. Its where the Lumire brothers showed their first film, in 1895, and sits right on the seaside, facing a marina where lots of expensive boats and yachts are moored all year and just around the corner from the crummy apartment Id been living in since leaving Berlin. La Ciotat is an old fishing village enlivened by an important French naval shipbuilding yardif you can use words like important in the same sentence as the French Navy. Theres a nice beach and several hotels, in one of which I work.
I lit a cigarette and as I watched the film I tried to recall all of the circumstances that had led up to our first meeting. When was it exactly? 1942? 1943? Actually, I never thought Dalia looked much like Garbo. For me the actress she most resembled was Lauren Bacall. Germanys Garbo was Josef Goebbelss idea. He told me that the solitary Swede was one of Hitlers preferred actresses and Camille one of the Fhrers favorite films. Its a little hard to think of Hitler having a favorite film, especially one thats as romantic as Camille, but Goebbels said that whenever the Fhrer saw this film there were tears in his eyes and he was glowing for hours afterward. For Goebbels, I dont doubt that relaunching Dalia as German cinemas answer to Greta Garbo had been another way of currying favor with Hitler, and of course with Dalia herself; Goebbels was always trying to make up to some actress or other. Not that I could blame him for trying to make up to Dalia Dresner. Lots of men did.
Shed spent much of her life living in Switzerland but she was born in Pula, Istria, which, after 1918 and the dissolution of Austria-Hungary, was ceded to Italy; but this peninsula was always a natural part of Yugoslaviaindeed all of Dalias ancestors had been Croatianand, in order to escape forced Italianization and the cultural suppression of Mussolinis fascists, she was taken to live in Zagreb from a very early age. Her real name was Sofia Brankovic.
After the war was over shed decided to leave her home near Zurich and go back to Zagreb to find what remained, if anything, of her family. In 1947, shed been arrested by the Yugoslavian government on suspicion of collaborating with the Nazis during the war, but Titowho it was generally held was infatuated with herintervened personally and arranged for Dalias release from custody. Back in Germany she attempted a comeback career but circumstances stalled her return. Fortunately for Dalia she was offered work in Italy and appeared in several well-received films. When Cecil B. DeMille was looking to cast Samson and Delilah in 1949 he considered Dalia Dresner before choosing to cast the more politically acceptable Hedy Lamarr. Hedy was goodshe was certainly very beautifulbut I strongly believe Dalia would have been convincing. Hedy played the part like a thirty-five-year-old schoolgirl. Dalia would have played it like the real thing. As a seductive woman with brains that were as big as Samsons muscles. By 1955 she was again working in German film when she won the Volpi Cup for best actress at the Venice Film Festival in a film called