“ | Some times in life, even if we want to, there are things we can't do over and we can't ever make right. | ” |
—Schubart |
Hans Georg Schubart (ハンス・ゲオルグ・シューバルト, Hansu Georugu Shūbaruto?), also known as the "Vampire of Bavaria", is a prominent figure in the Bavarian business community, who is said to play and manipulate the German and, by extension, the European economy like a fiddle and bleed his competitors financially dry. This, alongside his other eccentricities, such as his blindness, seclusion, and frequent late-night excursions, is what earns him his seemingly unsavory nickname.
He is the biological father of Karl Neumann.
Biography[]
Early Life and Business Career[]
Born in the first half of the twentieth century[citation needed], very little is known about Schubart's personal life before he went into business. It can be assumed he spent large amounts of his childhood and teenage years reading; this habit followed him through adulthood, as he claims his reason for being so successful despite never having received a proper college education was that he read every book he could get his hands on.
In a casual conversation that Lotte Frank, Karl Neumann, and Johan Liebert had while the latter was volunteering to take care of orphan children, Johan disclosed some information about Schubart: he had gone bankrupt three times in the past (one of which occurred in the late 1960s) and disappeared for a while after each downfall, only to resurface later and regain his throne.
Margot Langer[]
Around the year 1974, Schubart became a client of Margot Langer, a nineteen-year-old call girl who often served businessmen and other members of high society. The relationship between the two was not strictly professional, so they often discussed their personal lives. In addition to revealing that her real name was actually Helenka Nováková , Margot once told him about the time she and her friend attempted to cross the Czech-German border, but how the other woman was captured and sent back. That woman, later revealed to be Věra Černá, was said to have lived in a building with a sign containing three frogs next to Čedok Bridge. Schubart took note of this fact.
In 1977, Margot became pregnant with Schubart's child. For reasons unknown, she had to permanently leave him shortly after. At their parting, Schubart handed her a rabbit's foot and asked of her to give it to their child. The two never saw each other again.
Three Frogs[]
Four years after her disappearance, Schubart was still searching for Margot. Having remembered the information she told him about her friend in Prague, he decided to pay the woman a visit to see if she knew of Margot's whereabouts.
He found the Three Frogs next to Čedok Bridge and knocked on the door. Waiting inside was a beautiful blonde woman. His search turned up nothing though, as Věra had no more information than he did. Before leaving he noticed something that sent chills down his spine -- behind the woman stood a pair of fraternal twins, listening to every word of their conversation.
Blue Sophie[]
Schubart's continuous efforts in searching for Margot bore no fruit, and he gradually began slowing down his financial activities. Johan's flight into economics, on the other hand, had only just begun. After his money laundering services went up in a gory mess, he began living with Margot Langer. Shortly after she was the
victim of a "phantom killing", the young man slowly started closing in on Schubart.
Several months before her death, Margot poured her heart out to former prostitute Blue Sophie at a bar. When Johan killed Margot in 1996, Sophie took on the deceased woman's identity. Schubart found her and, despite being fully aware of the fact that she was a fraud, began showering her with money in an attempt to compensate for his sins. It became a regular habit; every night at 2 AM he and his bodyguard would venture over to her living quarters. She was also frequented by university students trying to pass off as Schubart's son, namely Edmund Fahren and his blonde accomplice as well as Karl and Lotte. She met an untimely death in 1998 after trying to blackmail Johan.
Murders in the 1990s[]
As touched upon in the above segment, Johan Liebert began getting closer and closer to Schubart even before Margot's death. In 1993, Schubart's former head housekeeper was murdered; back when she worked for him, the woman would always read poetry to her employer. As a thank you, he gave her a generous amount of poetry books from his personal collection. Mr. Gauck, Schubart's lifelong business rival and "friend" in a sense, was also killed. Hans, the Vampire's former chauffeur who taught him about birdwatching and an accountant he met while birdwatching -- all dead. On the surface level, these appeared to be random, unrelated incidents, but Richard Braun's later investigation brought to light their unifying link with Schubart.
University of Munich[]
After finally fading away from the business world, Schubart settled down in a mansion close to the University of Munich. He employed young men from the school to read Latin to him -- a different boy for every day of the week, notably Karl Neumann on Tuesdays, Edmund Fahren on Thursdays, and Johan Liebert on Fridays. Female students like Lotte Frank could occupy positions as housecleaners, maids, et cetera.
Occasionally students from the university would come to him, claiming to be his long-lost son, but all proved to be loose ends.
Edmund Fahren[]
In the summer of 1997, a young man named Edmund Fahren, Schubart's Thursday reader, admitted to the tycoon that he was his son.
Schubart was delighted, and fully believed that this boy would be the one, for he didn't seem to be after his inheritance. He brought this topic up with Karl, unintentionally crushing his real son's spirit.
Naturally, Fahren was simply being manipulated by Johan Liebert, as he knew that by using this boy he could get closer to Schubart. When Karl entered the picture, however, Fahren was nothing but an imposition so Johan put him up to suicide. Schubart consequently entered a depressive state and was neglecting his health. Even after Richard Braun concluded that Fahren really couldn't have been Schubart's son, his condition still did not improve.
The Secret Woods[]
Johan befriended Lotte and she introduced him to Karl. The three of them became good friends, and while discussing Schubart's past, Johan mentioned that every time the tycoon went bankrupt he would disappear to a certain place which always made him feel better. Lotte then asked Johan if he knew where this place was, and she and Karl devised a plan to take the old and half-blind Schubart there. Lotte trapped Kunz, Schubart's bodyguard, in a bathroom and took Schubart in the Obenberg forest to cheer him up. However, upon their arrival they found that the forest had been cleared, with construction implements for its eventual conversion as a business district. Schubart asked Karl if he could see the lake, and Karl reluctantly said yes so as not to disappoint the old man. Lotte too had to lie about the greens
of the forest. Moments later, Schubart remarked that he could not hear the wrens chirping, much to Karl's already dissonant feelings about the conversion of the forest that he told Schubart the place had been turned into a construction site. Johan appeared behind them suddenly, claiming that if they listened long enough, they would hear the beautiful crying of the wrens. He then employed his imagination and told Schubart that apples had fallen in the grove and he pretended to pick one up, placing it in the elderly man's hand. He then continued his imaginary excursion, describing to Schubart the flowing vibrance of the autumn leaves and how they caught the rays of the setting sun, how the lake was so still it looked like a mirror. Schubart took a bite from the apple Johan gave him and he suddenly had a hallucination of the once-blooming Obenberg Forest. The old man was moved to tears by the sight of it.
Reunion with Karl Neumann[]
With Johan's help, Lotte and Karl had succeeded in brightening the elderly man's spirits. The following Tuesday while Karl was reading to him, Schubart told the young man that his Latin had greatly improved; this caused Karl to admit that he had actually been tutored by Johan. When Schubart began going off about what a talented, distinguished young man Johan was, Karl felt as though he could never truly live up to his father's expectations and decided to quit his job as a reader.
That evening, he confessed his plan to Johan. The blonde man asked him if he had any sort of proof he could use to identify himself as Schubart's son, to which Karl admitted that he had been keeping a rabbit's foot his mother gave to him over a decade ago. He figured that it would be best to give it to Johan for safe keeping.
Instead of using the rabbit's foot to make himself look like Schubart's son, Johan uncharacteristically told Schubart the truth, that Karl was his real son. After a short phone call, the older man showed up at Karl's room for a teary-eyed reunion.
Book Donation Ceremony[]
Having resumed his financial activity alongside Karl and his new secretary Johan, the two young men proposed that he give away his book collection -- which he had no need for with his failing eyes -- to the university, where it would be accessible to the students. Schubart thought it was a fantastic idea and set the date for September 4th. While making preparations, the small gesture somehow turned into a nationwide event, and the guest list kept getting bigger and bigger.
Johan's original plan was to have Roberto shoot Schubart from the top of the balcony; Tenma would be blamed for it and he would be in control of Germany's economy. However, after coming into contact with The Nameless Monster, his plans changed and he instead decided to decorate the library's interior with glaring, monstrous flames.
A few nights before the ceremony, Julius Reichwein showed up at Schubart's home. To his surprise, the older man was already well aware of the reason for his visit -- he knew it would be about Johan. As Reichwein finished presenting his information about the youth, Schubart said that Johan was the beyond-human, chaotic monster he had aspired to be so badly in years past. He compared the young man to the biblical Beast of Revelations, specifically quoting the passage 13:4, "People worshiped the dragon because he had given authority to the beast, and they also worshiped the beast and asked, 'Who is like the beast?
Who can wage war against it?'"
Schubart went to the book donation ceremony fully expecting Johan's initial plan to unfold, but as the young man's cold hands grasped his own while they made their way to the podium, he realized a much crueler fate was about to be delivered. And with the simple strike of a match, the room was set ablaze, further pronouncing Schubart's internalized image of Johan as a beast from hell.
Shortly after the doors were shot down, Johan made a quick disappearance and Schubart, along with Nina Fortner, became the flames' captive after a burning curtain fell on him. Luckily, he was rescued by Tenma and told him that his son would meet him in Dresden to deliver a message.
Recovery[]
Schubart was interrogated by Inspector Heinrich Lunge in the hospital on the following day. Although he was reluctant to respond, Lunge noted that Schubart definitely heard and understood every word he said. A few days later he arranged to have Karl meet with Tenma in Dresden to deliver the message that the mother of the twins he had gotten involved with was still alive, perhaps in Prague. Using this information, Tenma was able to locate the Three Frogs.
The tycoon began looking for Věra Černá again, and he sent Reichwein to the Three Frogs in search of her, but their efforts dug up nothing. Reichwein also helped him cope with his trauma from the book donation ceremony.
When Tenma was arrested he tried to hire Fritz Verdemann to represent him, but the lawyer declined his requests and accepted some of the doctor's former patients' proposal instead.
Ending[]
When Ruhenheim's madness began, he, Karl, Lotte, and many others had to go into hiding to ensure the safety of their lives. The process was free of complications and after everything ended they were able to return to their normal lives.
Schubart is seen in the last episode sitting with his son as he says that he would like to meet Tenma again someday.
Relationships[]
Helenka Nováková[]
Helenka was the prostitute whom Schubart fell in love with, and it can definitely be said that she did not hold only professional feelings for him in return. They often discussed matters concerning their personal lives during their times of intimacy, and Helenka even bore him a son (though the latter was probably not an anticipated event). After they separated in 1977, Schubart lived with the belief that Helenka hated him, but the truth was that she never stopped loving him and even implored their son to not hate him either.
Johan Liebert[]
Schubart is terrified of, yet equally fascinated by Johan. He sees Johan as what he had once dreamed of becoming -- a man who can't be rationalized and is seemingly above everything human, an individual who effortlessly toys with people's everyday patterns of life like a child disrupting a line of ants.
He often compares Johan to the Beast from the Book of Revelation.
Karl Neumann[]
At first, Karl and Schubart had a very difficult relationship, as Schubart disapproved of Karl's slow Latin-reading abilities. He would often yell at him, yet Karl tried his best to please him anyway. Initially Karl planned only to see how miserable of a person his father was, yet he slowly began warming up to him, longing for acceptance whilst concurrently fearing he wouldn't be able to live up to his father's expectations. When Johan revealed Karl's blood relation to Schubart, Schubart happily accepted Karl as his son, and the two began making up for lost time.
Kenzo Tenma[]
Tenma is a man whom Schubart can relate to but also respects immensely. Both had the unfortunate experience of losing many people close to them because of Johan, and were slowly being isolated into their own little doomsdays. Yet, despite being alike in some ways, Schubart also recognizes that Tenma is the only one who can put a stop to Johan's wrath.
Another Monster[]
Schubart was not present for his son's interview with Werner Weber, though it was revealed that before learning of Johan's true intentions he had planned to make him his heir instead of Karl.
Quotes[]
- "You must know what people call me, that infamous nickname of mine. Oh yes, the much feared 'Vampire of Bavaria'. I'll be straight with you, that nickname pleased me very much. I'd push myself harder and harder, never relenting, and oh how it did grow. How it swelled the monster inside me."
- "I can always sense it. Yes, the presence of something so unerringly precise, like Johan. I feel as though he's not of this world at all. "
- "Sometimes in life, even if we want to, there are things we can't do over and can never make right."
- "I saw hell right there in his eyes. Hell, in the eyes of a living human being."
Trivia[]
- According to Lotte, Schubart had a phone line inside his mansion that he would use to manipulate the European stock market.[citation needed]
- The manga uses the name "Schuwald", but the anime adaptation by Madhouse shows "Schubert" in Episode 33.