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The spies of warsaw

Page 16

by Alan Furst


  gust of wind hit the greenhouse, then the sound of hail, loud against

  the glass roof. It stopped almost immediately. "I don't know anybody

  either," Mercier said. "You're supposed to introduce yourself around,

  at these affairs."

  "Not me. You have to be the bright and cheerful sort to do that.

  I'm not. Are you?"

  "No."

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  "I didn't think so."

  "I depend on introductions, then I can socialize. Otherwise--"

  "It's the dreadful corner. And the hopeful smile."

  They circled around the professor, now with an older woman

  wearing a cloche hat and still raving on about Matisse. Then Madame

  Dupin materialized in front of them. "Hello you two, I see you found

  each other."

  "We did," Anna said. "You've got a good crowd."

  "Marc is pleased, anyhow I think he is; he doesn't talk, I was

  afraid of the weather, but, as you see . . ."

  "We're in search of an ashtray," Mercier said.

  "Over by the food. Try the smoked sturgeon while you're there,

  it's from the chef at the Bristol." Again the wind moaned. "Oh my,"

  Madame Dupin said. A brief shower of hail rattled furiously against

  the greenhouse. "Listen to it, perhaps we'll have to stay all night." She

  scowled up at the heavens, the embattled hostess, then said, "I'm off,

  my dears. Please try and circulate."

  When she'd gone, Anna said, "Maybe we should."

  Mercier shrugged. "Why?"

  She grinned. "Such a scoundrel," she said, and gave him a playful

  push on the shoulder.

  "Oh yes, that's me," he said, meaning very much the opposite, but

  wishing it were so.

  At the food table they found an ashtray, then tried the sturgeon,

  the smoked trout, and salmon roe with chopped egg on toast. Anna

  ate with zeal, once making a small sound of satisfaction when one of

  the hors d'oeuvres was especially good. Next, back to the bar for

  another vodka, and they clinked glasses before they drank. Outside,

  the storm began to beat wildly against the glass.

  "Maybe we'll have to stay all night," Mercier said.

  "Please!" she said. "You'll get me in trouble."

  "Well, at least let me see you home."

  "Thank you," she said. "That I would like."

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  *

  Twenty minutes later, they said good night to Shublin and Madame

  Dupin and left the greenhouse. Mercier looked around for a taxi, but

  the street was deserted. "Which way is home?" he said.

  She pointed and said, "Up there. It's a block off Marszalkowska,

  where we can take a trolley car, or we're much more likely to find a

  taxi."

  They set off, heading west, then north, against the wind, which

  howled and moaned in the narrow street, sent a sheet of newspaper

  flying past, and made it difficult to walk. It wasn't so bad at first, but

  soon enough striding boldly into the storm changed to walking sideways, hunched over, eyes half shut, the hail stinging their faces.

  "Damn!" she said. "This is worse than I thought."

  Mercier kept searching for a taxi, but there wasn't a headlight to

  be seen anywhere.

  "I'm going to have to hang on to you," she said. "Do you mind?"

  "Not at all."

  She held his arm with both her own, tight against her body, and

  hid her face behind his shoulder. Moving slowly, they made their way

  to Marszalkowska avenue, the Broadway of Warsaw. "How much further?" Mercier said. He sensed she wasn't doing well.

  "Twenty minutes, on a nice day."

  She was trembling, he could feel it, and, when he turned to look at

  her, there were frost crystals in her eyelashes. "Maybe we'd better get

  inside somewhere," he said. The cold was brutal, her sweater thin, and

  her winter coat more stylish than warm.

  "Allright. Where?"

  "I don't know. The next place we see." Up and down the avenue,

  the Marszalkowska cafes and restaurants were shuttered and dark. In

  the distance, a man made slow progress, holding his hat on his head,

  and the streetlamps, coated with ice, glowed dimly on the whitened

  pavement, with not a tire track to be seen.

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  "My father used to talk about these storms," she said. "They blow

  down from Siberia, a gift to Poland from Russia." Her teeth chattered,

  and she held him tighter.

  Mercier had begun to consider doorways, maybe even trying the

  door of one of the cars parked on the avenue, when he saw, up ahead

  somewhere, light shining on the sidewalk. "Whatever that is," he said,

  "that's where we're going."

  He felt her nod, urgently: yes, anything.

  The light came from a movie theatre, from a ticket booth set back

  beneath a small marquee. The old lady in the booth wore one shawl

  over her head and another around her shoulders. As Mercier paid, she

  said, "You shouldn't be out in this, my children."

  In the theatre, the audience, unaware of the storm outside, was

  laughing and having a good time. Mercier found seats and rubbed his

  frozen hands.

  "That was awful," Anna said. "Really. Awful."

  "Maybe it will die down," Mercier said. "At least we'll be warm

  for a while."

  On the screen, a diminutive soldier with a Hitler mustache was

  saluting an officer, a vigorous salute yet somehow wrong--a parody

  of a salute. A close-up of the officer's face showed a man at the end of

  his patience. He spoke angrily; the soldier tried again. Worse. He was

  the classic recruit who, believing he has assumed a military posture,

  only manages to mock the prescribed form. Mercier leaned over and

  whispered, "Do you know what we're watching?"

  " ' Dodek na froncie, ' Dodek Goes to War. That's Adolf Dymsza."

  "I know that name."

  "The Polish Charlie Chaplin."

  "Have you seen it?"

  "No, actually I haven't." After a moment, with a laugh in her

  voice, she said, "Were you concerned?"

  "Of course," he said.

  "You can be very droll, colonel."

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  "Jean-Francois."

  "Very well. Jean-Francois."

  From behind them: "Shhhh! "

  "Sorry."

  Mercier tried; but the film was more romantic comedy than farce,

  and the hiss and crackle of the sound track was particularly loud, so

  he missed much of the dialogue, and that's what was making the audience laugh. At one point, Anna also laughed, and Mercier whispered,

  "What did he say?"

  In order not to annoy the man behind them, she whispered by his

  ear. "In French, it's 'That's odd, my dog said the same thing.' " But

  then, she didn't turn away, she waited, and, when he turned toward

  her, her eyes closed and they kissed--tenderly, her lips dry, moving

  softly against his. After a few long seconds, she sat back in her seat,

  but her shoulder rested against his,
and there it stayed.

  Forty minutes later, the film ended and they had to leave the theatre. The storm had not abated. They walked quickly, her hands in the

  pockets of her coat; neither one of them wanted to be the first to

  speak. Then, as the silence grew heavy, Mercier saw a horse cab. He

  waved and shouted, the driver stopped, and Mercier took Anna's hand

  and helped her into the carriage. This might have been an opportunity

  sent down by the gods of romance, but it wasn't to be. Anna was

  quiet, and thoughtful. Mercier tried to start a light conversation, but

  she, politely enough, made it clear that talking was not what she

  wanted to do, so he sat in silence as the intrepid horse, its blanket covered with melting hail, clopped along the avenue until Anna directed

  the coachman to turn into the street that Mercier remembered from

  the night he'd taken her to the Europejski.

  He helped her out of the carriage as he asked the driver to wait--

  he would take the cab back home--then the two of them stood facing

  each other. Before he could say anything, she put her hand flat against

  his chest and held it there--a gesture that silenced him, yet somehow,

  and he felt it strongly, meant also attraction--desire mixed with

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  regret. He could see in her face that she was troubled: about what had

  happened in the movie theatre, about what had happened all evening.

  "Good night," she said, "Jean-Francois."

  "May I see you again?"

  "I don't know. Maybe better if we don't."

  "Then, good night."

  "Yes, good night."

  In Paris, during Mercier's meeting with the people at the Deuxieme

  Bureau, the Wehrmacht's planned tank maneuvers at Schramberg had

  been discussed at length. And so, on the tenth of December, four German agents of the Service des Renseignements had been sent into the

  town: an elderly gentleman and his wife, who were to celebrate their

  wedding anniversary by walking the low hills of the Black Forest; a

  salesman of kitchenwares from Stuttgart, calling on the local shops;

  and a representative of UFA, the Berlin film production company, in

  search of locations for a new version of the Grimm brothers' fairy

  tales.

  Not a bad choice for a fairy tale, the older part of Schramberg:

  winding streets, half-timbered cottages with sloping rooves, shop

  signs in Gothic lettering. Adorable, really. And the townspeople were

  eager to talk, to praise their charming Schramberg, understanding

  perfectly the benefits to be had from film crews, who famously threw

  money about like straw. The best kind of business: they came, they

  annoyed everyone, but then they went away and left their money

  behind.

  So the local dignitaries, the mayor, the councilmen, went on and

  on, describing the gemutlich delights of the town. Though this was,

  please understand, not the best moment to visit. The Wehrmacht was

  coming, everybody knew it, one of the roads that wound up into the

  hills had been closed off, all the rooms at the inn had been reserved,

  and a few supply trucks were already there, with more to arrive at

  any moment. Oh well. Still, the good gentleman could see for himself

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  how picturesque the forest was, and, if the area up on the Rabenhugel,

  Raven Hill, was torn up by the army's machines, there were plenty of

  other places just as scenic. More scenic! And would the company

  be hiring local people to perform in the film? In a crowd, perhaps?

  Or even, say, as a mayor? Naturally they would, said the UFA man,

  it was always done that way. What about those two hefty fellows,

  seated by the window in the Schwarzwald coffeehouse, having their

  second breakfast? Oh no, they weren't local! They had just arrived,

  they were here to make sure that, that--um--that everything went

  well. Wink.

  For the anniversary couple, in loden-green outfits and matching

  alpine hats--a vigorous yodel could not be far in the future--the same

  story, as they produced their touring map for the lady who'd rented

  them a room. No, no, not there, that was forbidden, until after the

  fourteenth. You cannot go east of the town, to the Rabenhugel, but to

  the south--ah, there it was even lovelier, the magnificent pines, the

  tiny red birds that stayed the winter; south, much better, and would

  they care to have her make a picnic to take along? They would? Ach,

  wunderbar! She would see to it right away.

  And so for the salesman, in his Panhard automobile with sample

  pots and pans in the backseat, headed over to the town of Waldmossingen. Halted at a sawhorse barrier manned by three soldiers, he

  was told that this road was closed, he would have to go back to

  Schramberg, and then down to Hardt and circle around. Of course he

  knew the way, and only took this road for the scenery. Was this permanent, this road-closing? No, sir, only for a few days. "Heil Hitler!"

  "Heil Hitler!"

  13 December. Mercier took the early LOT flight to Zurich, then the

  train to Basel and a taxi to the French consulate. Climbing the stairs to

  the consul's office, he was his darkest self, tense and brooding and in

  no mood for polite conversation, a pre-combat condition he knew all

  too well. But the consul, a Mediterranean Frenchman with a goatee,

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  was just what the doctor ordered. "So, colonel, a stroll in the German

  woods?"

  Maybe the best approach, Mercier thought, irony in the face of

  danger. And it would be dangerous. The Wehrmacht wouldn't care

  much for a foreign military attache observing maneuvers--there to

  discover strengths and weaknesses, what certain tanks could do in the

  forest and what they couldn't. Because, if it came to war, such intelligence would lead to casualties, and could be the difference between

  victory and defeat.

  The people at 2, bis, in receipt of reports from their German

  agents, had acted quickly, sending to Warsaw maps of the Schramberg

  district: the roads, the walking paths in the forest, the hill known as

  the Rabenhugel, and two nearby hills with a view of the site to be used

  for maneuvers. A coded wireless message from the General Staff

  Meteorological Service predicted a nighttime temperature of 28

  degrees Fahrenheit, reaching 35 degrees by noon, and a possible light

  dusting of snow on the morning of the fourteenth. Mercier had his

  own field glasses, and the rest of his equipment, as promised in Paris,

  had been brought down to Basel by courier; a suitcase stood behind

  the consul's office door.

  The consul hefted it up onto a table, handed Mercier the key, and

  watched with interest as the contents were brought out: a Swiss army

  greatcoat--its insignia long ago removed--a peaked wool hat with

  earflaps, a blanket roll, a knapsack. When Mercier unwrapped a Pathe

  Baby, the 9.5-millimeter movie camera, the consul said, "Thought of

  everything, haven't they
."

  With the camera, a typed sheet of instructions. Simple enough:

  one cranked the handle; the action was operated by a spring. One roll

  of film was in the camera, ten more could be found in the knapsack;

  directions for reloading followed, with a diagram.

  "What about distance?" the consul said.

  "I would assume the lens has been refitted. Otherwise, they'll have

  the march of the tiny toys. But even so, it can be enlarged at the laboratory. At least I think it can."

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  "So, just aim and press the button?"

  Mercier pointed the camera at the consul, who waved and smiled,

  then went to a closet and produced a six-foot walking staff fashioned

  from a tree branch. "I won't tell you what we went through to obtain

  this, but Paris insisted that you have it."

  "War wound."

  "Then it will help. But please, colonel, try not to lose it," the consul said. "Now, you'll be leaving at dusk, your driver will arrive in an

  hour. If you'd like to rest until then, we've set aside a room for you.

  Care for something to eat?"

  "No, thank you."

  The consul nodded. "It was always that way for me, in la der-

  niere. " The phrase was common among people who'd been there, it

  meant the last one. He opened a drawer in his desk, produced a Swiss

  passport, and handed it to Mercier. Albert Ducasse, from Lausanne,

  thus a French-speaking Swiss. The photograph, applied at 2, bis, was

  a duplicate of the one in his dossier in Paris. The consul cleared his

  throat and said, "They've instructed me to ask you to leave your

  French passport with this office."

  Whose idea was that, Bruner's? Out of uniform, on foreign

  ground, in covert surveillance, he was, by the rules, a spy. But out of

  uniform, with a false identity--that made him a real spy.

  "Of course," the consul said, "if you are caught, in that situation,

  you could be shot. Technically speaking, that is."

  "Yes, I know," Mercier said. And gave the consul his passport.

  In the early dusk of winter, Mercier climbed into an Opel with German plates. The young driver called himself Stefan and said he was

  from an emigre family that had settled in Besancon. "In 'thirty-three,"

  he added. "The minute Hitler took power, my father got the suitcases

  down. He was a socialist politician, and he knew what was coming.

  Then, after we settled in France, the people you work for showed up

 

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