Echobeat

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by Joe Joyce


  He turned into O’Connell Street at the Nelson Pillar, balancing the bike with brakes and pedals as a bus went by, its interior blue lights casting its passengers into spectral relief. A group of carol singers belted out ‘Adeste Fidelis’ outside Clerys and a tram clanged its way through the traffic on the other side of the central median, now an air-raid shelter, its grey concrete wall broken by posters for the Christmas Eve sweepstake to raise money for the Red Cross. The ads on the buildings around O’Connell Bridge were dark, no longer flashing their messages for Players cigarettes and Bendigo tobacco and, beyond, Bovril. He threaded his way across another line of cyclists and in front of a plodding dray into Bachelors Walk. He cycled fast down the quays by the darkening river, speeding up as the traffic eased and had worked up a slight sweat by the time he reached the Red House, the offices of G2, in army headquarters on Infirmary Road.

  ‘Enjoy your mystery tour?’ Captain Bill Sullivan greeted him as he came into their shared office and slumped into his chair.

  ‘Long day for very little,’ Duggan said, placing a carbon paper between two sheets of flimsy white paper and winding them into the typewriter.

  ‘Boss wanted to see you when you got back.’

  ‘Urgently?’

  ‘Don’t think so.’

  ‘Anything happening?’ Duggan opened the empty Gold Flake packet Murphy had given him and shook it upside down. A few strands of tobacco fell out.

  ‘There’s a war on,’ Sullivan said.

  ‘Still?’ Duggan pulled at the silver paper in the packet and a small pad of folded paper came out with it.

  ‘Your secret mission didn’t end it after all.’ Sullivan made no attempt to hide the hint of resentment at not having been told where Duggan had gone and what he’d been doing. He was in his mid-twenties, a couple of years older than Duggan, whom he believed was favoured by their immediate commander.

  Duggan gave a short laugh and turned his attention to unfolding the pad of paper. Torn from a lined copybook, it had a handwritten list of ships’ names in neat capital letters. He typed his report quickly, its structure already clear in his head, and added the vessels’ names at the end. He read it through when finished and signed his initials at the bottom.

  ‘By the way,’ Sullivan said as Duggan got up. ‘Are you coming to the New Year’s Eve dinner dance in the Gresham?’

  ‘Yeah,’ Duggan said without enthusiasm. ‘Sure.’

  Sullivan held out his hand. ‘One pound fifteen.’

  ‘One pound fifteen?’ Duggan stopped. ‘That’s very expensive.’

  ‘It’s New Year’s Eve.’

  ‘I haven’t got anyone to bring.’

  ‘Don’t worry, we’ll fix you up with someone. But I need the money by Thursday.’

  ‘St Stephen’s Day?’ Duggan scratched his head, thinking he could maybe borrow a few quid from his father over Christmas.

  ‘That’s Thursday,’ Sullivan said, as if Duggan was a little slow. ‘You back on Thursday?’

  Duggan nodded and left, dropping his report for Captain Anderson into the office that dealt with the British and went on to Commandant Charles McClure’s office. There was a visible haze of cigarette smoke over McClure’s desk as usual, stoked by a spiral of fresh smoke from a cigarette lying in an ashtray. Duggan gave him a quick run through of what Murphy had told him and of seeing Thomsen on the train.

  McClure leaned back and picked up his cigarette without thinking. ‘It’s not good,’ he sighed. He was in his mid-thirties, a narrow face with bright brown eyes. ‘If they go on losing ships at this rate.’

  Duggan nodded, knowing what he meant. It wasn’t good for neutral Ireland. The British had to do something about the losses and one option was to blame the lack of port and other facilities on the west coast of Ireland for making it more difficult to defend the transatlantic convoys. Everyone in G2 was all too aware of the danger, especially now that Churchill had made it clear in his recent speech how impatient he was with the situation.

  McClure and Duggan had talked it through afterwards.

  ‘Invading us doesn’t make much military sense,’ McClure had suggested. ‘But they’ve got to do something. And that just might be it. Seizing Berehaven and re-establishing their naval base down there.’

  ‘That’s as far away from the border as you can get,’ Duggan had pointed out.

  ‘Exactly. So they’d have to launch a full-scale invasion to get there. It’d be madness. A pointless diversion, causing needless havoc.’

  ‘Surely their politicians aren’t that mad,’ Duggan had offered, more in hope than belief. He had a politician uncle and knew just how carried away they could get when they persuaded themselves of something.

  McClure changed the subject now, switching to the new element in Murphy’s information. ‘Tell me again about the Americans in Derry.’

  Duggan told him. ‘It seemed very vague,’ he concluded. ‘Just gossip really. Maybe somebody jumping to conclusions.’

  ‘It wouldn’t surprise me if it was true.’

  ‘But why would they be there?’

  ‘Planning. Looking at setting up their own naval facilities in Lough Swilly.’

  ‘But Roosevelt’s promised not to get involved in the war,’ Duggan said.

  ‘The election’s over,’ McClure gave him a wry smile. ‘Besides,’ he raised one finger, ‘he only promised not to involve American soldiers in foreign wars. He’s been doing his best to provoke Germany into declaring war on America with all the help he’s been giving the British and so on.’

  ‘You think they will?’

  ‘Been too smart to fall for it so far. But it’s going to cause us a lot more trouble if the Americans get involved.’

  ‘It could shorten the war, though.’

  ‘And drag us into it. They’d be much more demanding than the British and even more impatient with our neutrality if they abandon theirs. Anyway,’ McClure stubbed out his cigarette and began flicking through a pile of papers on the right of his desk, ‘let’s not get carried away with hypothetical situations. We’ve enough on our hands. External Affairs wants a briefing on our German friends.’

  ‘Yeah?’

  ‘We’re going to see them on Thursday,’ he came to the bottom of his pile of papers without finding what he was looking for and began again from the top, more slowly. ‘Put together a report on all the suspected agents.’

  ‘All of them?’ Duggan asked, thinking of the work involved and the lack of time. He was due to take the train west to his parents’ home the following day, Christmas Eve, and return on the first train the day after the holiday. On the other hand, he could do most of it off the top of his head. He didn’t need to consult too many files.

  McClure thought for a moment. ‘No. Just the confirmed ones.’

  ‘With Hermann Goertz at the top?’

  ‘As usual,’ McClure sighed. Goertz was an experienced German spy and had evaded capture since the previous summer when he parachuted into Ireland. He’d been in contact with the IRA and other pro-German groups and individuals, but always seemed to be one step ahead of the Irish authorities.

  McClure found what he was looking for. He fished out a single sheet of paper from his pile and handed it across the desk to Duggan. There was a name and address handwritten along the top of the page – ‘Gertie Maher, Iona Road, Drumcondra’ – and ‘Adelaide Agency’, with an address in O’Connell Street, underneath.

  ‘She could be the one we’re looking for,’ McClure said, changing the subject again. ‘The person to work in Mrs Lynch’s place.’

  Mrs Lynch’s café on Liffey Street was popular with German airmen and sailors who had been washed up in Ireland one way or another and interned in the Curragh military camp. They were allowed out on parole on day releases and tended to congregate in the café when they visited Dublin.

  ‘Real name Gerda Meier,’ McClure continued. ‘Aged twenty. From Vienna. Jewish. Her father wisely got his family out in 1935, seeing the way the wind was
blowing. Came to Cork and set up some kind of textile factory.’

  ‘She speaks English?’

  ‘With a Cork accent,’ McClure smiled. ‘It mightn’t fool Corkmen but I doubt if our German friends will be able to detect the discrepancy. She’s a shorthand typist or receptionist with that flat-renting agency in O’Connell Street and is willing to give up her Saturday afternoons to be a waitress in Mrs Lynch’s and let us know what she hears.’

  ‘And it’s been cleared with Mrs Lynch?’

  McClure nodded. ‘But she won’t pay her. And on condition that Gertie, Gerda, doesn’t frighten the customers by talking politics.’

  ‘So are we paying her?’

  ‘She doesn’t want money. She’s happy to strike a blow at Herr Hitler any way she can. Go and meet her and see what you think. Make it clear to her that we only want her to keep her ears open. Listen to whatever they’re chatting about. Not to engage in any chat with them. And, obviously, not to let them know she understands German.’

  He was already stuck in Henry Street the next morning when he realised his mistake: he shouldn’t have come this way on Christmas Eve. The street was crowded with shoppers who had taken over the roadway as well, reducing traffic to less than their own walking pace. He abandoned his attempt to cycle through them and walked with the bike up past the raucous shouts from Moore Street. He was almost at the side of the GPO when the crowds thinned enough and he threw his leg over the saddle and pedalled up to the Pillar and turned left.

  The Adelaide Agency was close to the Carlton cinema, a shiny metal plate beside a narrow doorway leading straight onto stairs. He went up to the first floor where a sign on a door identified the agency and said to knock and enter. Inside there was a cramped reception area with two bentwood chairs and a small square table between them and a desk with a young woman behind it. She was talking on the phone, running through the details of flats to let in Rathgar.

  Gertie Maher, he thought, Gerda Meier. She had black hair that curled up in a flounce just above her shoulders and dark brown eyes and was gesticulating with her right hand as she enumerated the advantages of the flat she was describing. He listened carefully to her accent. He doubted it would pass muster with any Corkman, probably not sing-song enough, but it was hard to place.

  She paused to listen to something on the phone and then began to describe another flat. He picked up a typed list from the table and glanced down at it. The Adelaide Agency’s market was immediately clear to him: larger flats in the better southern suburbs, suitable, as one said, ‘for two ladies (Protestant)’. The prices looked expensive, £60 a year for a two-bed.

  She finished on the phone and he turned to her, unsure which name to call her by.

  ‘I’m Paul Duggan,’ he said, showing her his identity card. She looked at it carefully and put her hand out and said, ‘Pleased to meet you’.

  ‘I understand you’re willing—’ he began but she put a finger to her lips.

  ‘We must speak quietly,’ she said, dropping her voice and pointing over her shoulder to the door behind her.

  Duggan nodded and continued in a quieter tone, ‘—that you’re willing to help us.’

  ‘Yes,’ she nodded. ‘I will spy for you.’

  ‘It’s not exactly spying,’ he said, taken aback by her directness. Then, realising what he had said, he added, ‘I mean, not like that. It’s not dangerous.’

  She shrugged. ‘I’ll start on Saturday, after lunch. We’re open here only for the morning and I’ll go to the café at two o’clock.’

  ‘Okay,’ he said. ‘That’s great.’

  The door behind her opened and a middle-aged man came out with his overcoat on and his hat in his hand. He glanced at Duggan and immediately dismissed him as a client.

  ‘I’ll be about an hour, Gertie,’ he said to her, ignoring Duggan.

  ‘Yes, sir,’ she replied. And to Duggan, ‘If you decide which area you prefer we’ll identify the best places for you.’

  Duggan looked after the man and dropped the list he realised he still had in his hand, on the desk. ‘Your boss?’ he asked.

  ‘Mr Montague,’ she said.

  ‘Does he know your real name?’

  ‘My real name is Gertie,’ she gave him a defiant look. ‘Gertie Maher.’

  ‘I mean, where you come from?’

  ‘Sprechen sie Deutsch?’

  He nodded.

  ‘He doesn’t know anything,’ she continued in German. ‘We don’t have conversations.’

  Duggan nodded. ‘You know the arrangement with Frau Lynch?’ he asked in German.

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘And you know what we want?’

  ‘Yes. I’m to listen to what they talk about and see who they meet and report to you. I’m not to talk to them about politics or the war. They must not know I understand German.’ She rattled it off like a lesson she had been taught.

  ‘Good. That’s what we want. Nothing dangerous.’

  ‘Can I flirt with them?’

  Duggan laughed and then wondered if he had understood her German correctly. ‘Only in English,’ he said, in English.

  She nodded, as if she was merely accepting another instruction.

  ‘I’m sorry they won’t pay you,’ Duggan continued, not specifying who ‘they’ were. ‘Since you’re giving up your Saturday afternoons.’

  ‘It’s nothing. Maybe I’ll get some tips,’ she gave a hint of a wintry smile. ‘Take some money back off the Nazis.’

  ‘I hope the work won’t be too hard.’

  ‘I don’t think so,’ she shrugged. What was there to serving tea and coffee and pastries? ‘Are you the spymaster?’

  ‘Me?’ Duggan laughed in disbelief at the idea. ‘No. Do I look like a spymaster?’

  ‘Who do I report to?’

  ‘Oh,’ he realised what she meant. ‘To me.’

  ‘I will see you there?’

  ‘No, I won’t go there. I will call here on Monday.’ He took a fountain pen from the desk and wrote his phone number on a sheet of paper and added his first name only. ‘If there’s anything urgent you can call me at that number. If I am not there and it is really urgent ask for him.’ He leaned down and added Commandant McClure’s name under the number.

  ‘You can’t come here every time.’ She took the sheet of paper and folded it over and over until it was as small as she could make it.

  ‘No,’ he agreed. ‘Just this Monday. Then we’ll make another arrangement.’

  ‘Okay,’ she stood up and held out her hand. She was about five feet ten, a couple of inches shorter than him. ‘I will see you then.’

  ‘And thank you very much for doing this,’ he repeated as he shook her hand. ‘We really appreciate your help.’

  As he went down the stairs, Duggan felt slightly uneasy. She insisted she was Gertie Maher, not Gerda Meier, but she seemed keen to speak German. Would she do what they wanted? Or did she just want an opportunity to hurl abuse at some Germans?

  Two

  ‘Good Christmas?’ Commandant McClure asked as Duggan drove along the northern quays. It was getting dark and the streets were empty, in the last hours of their holiday torpor before public social life began again.

  ‘The usual,’ Duggan passed a couple of cyclists. ‘At my uncle’s for Christmas Day.’

  ‘How is he?’

  Duggan glanced at him, unsure whether that was just a polite inquiry or something more. His uncle was Timmy Monaghan, a Fianna Fáil backbench TD, with whom he now had an uneasy relationship since Duggan had managed to assert his independence earlier in the year. A constant manipulator, Timmy had been responsible for Duggan’s move to G2 from an infantry battalion and had since tried to use him in various ways.

  ‘Still his old self,’ Duggan sighed. He hadn’t wanted to meet him after their previous disagreements but Duggan’s mother had insisted on the annual ritual of going to Timmy’s country house for Christmas dinner. Timmy had carried on as if nothing had happened between them, his usual
bluff self. For which Duggan was grateful in one way: it removed the apprehension with which he had gone home for Christmas. ‘How was it for you?’

  ‘Exhausting,’ McClure said. ‘Children up in the middle of the night with Santa Claus. Got back to sleep again after a couple of hours but this double summer time makes you feel like you’ve been up for three days with only one night’s sleep.’

  Duggan laughed, not sure what he meant, and turned into Merrion Square at the traffic light on Clare Street. He drove by the National Gallery and Leinster Lawn and let the car coast across the street to the kerb outside Government Buildings. All the offices along the street were shut, their windows dark.

  ‘Unusual time for a meeting, isn’t it?’ Duggan offered, looking for a sign of life in the building. There was none.

  ‘Unusual times, full stop,’ McClure replied as he went up the steps and pressed a large round bell. They waited in silence, McClure tapping the file with Duggan’s report on the known German agents against his thigh. The street was deserted, the cowled street lights at the corners throwing down pools of feeble light. The cold air smelled of turf smoke tinged with a noxious edge of coke from the gasworks down by the river when the cold northern breeze shifted a few degrees.

  The door swung open and a young uniformed garda looked at them.

  ‘Commandant McClure and Captain Duggan for an appointment with the Secretary of External Affairs,’ McClure flashed an identity card at him while Duggan held out his.

  The garda nodded and let them into the small lobby. ‘Hang on a second till the porter comes back and he’ll bring you up.’

  The porter took them along a spacious corridor with little lighting, mimicking the partial blackout in the streets, and up a stairs and down another dimly lit corridor and knocked on a door. There was a sound from within and he opened it and stood back to let McClure and Duggan enter.

  It was a perfunctory office, an upright hat stand with a dark hat and heavy coat on it inside the door, and a couple of chairs in front of a desk. The only light in the room came from a green-shaded art deco desk lamp. ‘Gentlemen.’ The man behind the desk stood up and introduced himself as Pól Ó Murchú and gave each of them a cursory handshake. He was approaching forty, gaining weight and balding, and the world’s many cares were beginning to etch his face. ‘The Secretary has been delayed’ – he paused as he sat down again and reconsidered the word – ‘detained with the Taoiseach. He asked me to brief you.’

 

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