Wednesday, August 14
th
, 2019. Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany.
I was at a car park close to my workplace at the University Clinic Hamburg-Eppendorf, trying to cover my hospital scrubs with my much too warm coat while lighting the Camel Blue cigarette I had needed for at least an hour. The hospital management doesn't want us, the few remaining smokers on staff, to send "wrong signals" by smoking next to the building. And I realize it looks bad to have a nurse like me smoking in front of the hospital cancer center. But what can you do if you're an addict with a stressful workday?
I recognized Daniel Hartwig's spectacular, lemon yellow 1970s BMW 2002 Cabriolet immediately. As he passed close by, I noticed the license plate HH-DH 1975 and was completely sure. HH for Hansestadt Hamburg. DH for Daniel Hartwig. 1975 for his year of birth. He had kept the same car and seemed proud of it, judging from its shiny condition and the total lack of rust on a car from half a century ago.
So. Daniel Hartwig was back. I'd been waiting for more than 15 years to get a chance to meet him again. He got out of the car, locked it with a key and started walking in the direction of the cancer center where I work. He must have been 45 at the time. Behind the sunglasses he looked like himself, apart from the potbelly and the bald spot on top of his head that he didn't have 15 years ago. But we all age, don't we? I guess I don't look 19 anymore myself.
I started following Daniel Hartwig discreetly. On the way I realized the smoking cigarette between my fingers. I took a final deep drag and bent down to put it out on the asphalt. My curiousness about Daniel Hartwig had won over my craving to smoke. I put the remains of the cigarette back into the pack, started a new piece of chewing gum and removed my coat to return to my professional persona, 34-year-old nurse Sara Cremers at the Cancer Center of the University Clinic Hamburg-Eppendorf.
Daniel Hartwig entered through the door I had exited minutes before and I followed him into the building, curious about what he wanted here and struck by the thought that he was looking for me. After all these years.
Thursday, May 20
th
, 2004. Hamburg-Winterhude.
The story had started a couple of kilometers to the south-east of the hospital, on a bench at the north end of the AuΓenalster Lake. It was the year of my final highschool exams, my
Abitur.
I was 19 years old and on my daily morning run on the 7.4 kilometer route around the lake. The bench was a fixture on my trip with its view of the water and the millionaires' villas surrounding the lake.
I was, by most, considered a pretty girl. A meter and seventy-five centimeters tall with long brown hair and brown eyes. I have a... I wouldn't say "dark complexion"... but I tan easily and I have a cleft chin which is, I know from experience, considered charming by many men. At the time back in May 2004 I had just gotten the very first of the numerous tattoos that adorn my body today, a set of two discreet stars below my right ear.
All sweatty, introvert and thinking about my next oral exam I didn't notice the guy with the camera until he practically sat down next to me on the bench.
"Water?" he asked, handing me an unopened bottle of Gerolsteiner natural, non-sparkling mineral water.
Without thinking twice I grabbed the bottle, unscrewed the lid and gulped down half its ice-cold content at once.
"Thanks!" I smiled and got a look at the guy who was in his late twenties to early thirties and had put down a large camera bag next to him on the bench. In his hand he held a professional Nikon camera.
"I'm Dieter, by the way," he said, putting the camera in his lap and extending his right hand with a smile.
"I'm Sara. Sorry about the sweat."
I shook his hand.
"You live around here, Sara?"
"No. Not here. I live over at St. Georg."
I pointed south to the eastern bank of the lake in the direction where I was sharing a modest two-room flat with my mother just north of the main railway station, the
Hauptbahnhof.
"You live alone?"
"I'm 19. I live with my mum. I'm still in highschool."
"Oh. You look older."
At 19 it is not necessarily a bad thing to look older than you are. I more or less took it as a compliment. I took another sip from the bottle as Dieter continued:
"Can I take some pictures of you?"
"What for?"
"Oh... I work for an agency. We're constantly looking for new models."
"Models? I'm not a model."
"Well... You're young, pretty, sporty. I think your face would be exactly right for an assignment this summer?"
"Really? I don't think..."
"We'd be going away to Sylt for a week in July. We are going to stay in a house that we've rented by the beach. Have you ever been to Sylt?"
"Yeah. Once. As a child. But it's not a place where I can afford to go."
"Did you like it there? The beach, the dunes, the North Sea, the promenade, the nature, the restaurants...?"
"I think Sylt is very nice. And very expensive."
"Would you like to go there again? It wouldn't cost you a cent. We would pay you 2000 β¬ for the job. And your meals. Nice meals. And you would have lots of free time to enjoy the island."
"And what would I do in return?"
"Just let me take some pictures of you while we're there. You'll dress up in some nice clothes and shoes provided by our client and we'll walk around while I'm taking pictures of you."
"And what are you going to do with the pictures?"
"They will belong to our client who will use them commercially. In magazines all over Europe and on the internet."
"And who is that client?"
"That's confidential."
"So... is it porn?" I asked sceptically.
Dieter laughed it off.
"Porn? No. It's serious business. I promise. Your private parts will be covered at all times."
"And who will be there when you take the pictures?"
"I prefer to work alone. So it'll just me you and me. But before each shoot there will be a professional stylist to do your hair and make-up."
"I don't know... I think I've got to run..."
"It's 2000 β¬. And it's Sylt for a week."
"Yeah..."
"Will you think about it, Sara?"
"Sure."
"Here's my card," he said and handed me a purple card with white letters:
"Dieter Hamann, Commercial Photographer". There was an email address, a mobile phone number and an address in the inner city close to city hall.
I put his card into my back pocket.
"I'll think about it," I said, getting to my feet, feeling the soreness in my legs after sitting down for too long.
"Sara, wait!" he said. "Can I take some snapshots of you now?"