Zion (Jerusalem)

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Zion (Jerusalem) Page 12

by Colin Falconer


  Chandler took his cue. As he got up he almost tripped over the briefcase. “They’re keeping you busy, I see.’

  “Just a few files.”

  “Well, I’d better let you get on then.”

  When he was gone, Talbot looked at his watch. Nine twenty-six. Great God in heaven! He picked up the briefcase and walked out.

  Asher’s hand was on the ignition key. “Something must have gone wrong.”

  “We can’t leave, Ash. Either we drive out with the files or they take us out in a pine box. That’s it.” Netanel’s voice sounded curiously detached.

  “You’ve got ice water in your veins, Netya.”

  “Dying the first time is hard. After that it gets easier.”

  The side door opened and a tall, pale man in a pinstriped suit appeared. Netanel jumped out of the jeep and met him at the foot of the steps. He saluted. “Lieutenant Brian Jenkins, sir.”

  “Make sure these arrive safely,” Talbot said, and handed Netanel a heavy briefcase. “I shall expect to have these returned to me at five thirty at the very latest.”

  “Yes, sir,” Netanel said, and saluted again. He jumped back into the jeep, the briefcase cradled on his lap.

  Talbot watched them disappear along the drive, the tires crunching on the gravel.

  Chapter 13

  Kfar Herzl Kibbutz

  On bright warm days the washing lines at the kibbutz would flutter with washing; but today there were no flags of drying clothes flying on the breeze. Instead, the wooden pegs held thousands of sheets of newly printed photographic negatives.

  Sarah stood outside the laundry at this spectacle. The washhouse behind her - as well as the school and the dining hall - had been seconded for the day by the Haganah. Cameras, chemicals and developing tanks had been brought in the previous day by Shai photographic specialists and fifteen of the kibbutzniks had been placed at their disposal by Yaakov Landauer.

  The moment Asher and Netanel had arrived with their prize, the group had swung into action.

  The two men - still in their British uniforms - were lounging at a table on the veranda smoking cigarettes. When he saw Sarah, Asher got to his feet and followed her to the end of the veranda. “Got a few snaps for the family album?”

  “You would not believe what was in that briefcase,” Sarah said, keeping her voice low.

  “Try me.”

  “There is everything the British have on us . . . the Haganah, the Palmach, Stem, and the Irgun Zvai Leumi. Thousands of names, in alphabetical order. Age, address, employment, even duties within the organization. They have far more than we suspected, far more.”

  “Anything about me?” Asher asked her.

  “You’re listed under ‘L’ for liabilities.” Then she was serious again. “They could destroy us. They have details on our internal structure, how the Palmach is deployed, weapons estimates, the lot. If they want to destroy us, they can.”

  “What’s the good news?”

  “That is the good news.” She lowered her voice to a whisper. “There was also found a large white envelope, sealed with red wax, bearing the official seal of the British government. It was countersigned by Sir Alan Cunningham and the Chief Secretary of the government. We believe no one else - until today - has seen the contents.”

  “You’re making me curious.”

  “There are fourteen typewritten pages, an operational order for the military. The code name for the operation is Broadside. The objective of the operation is to destroy the Haganah.”

  Asher said nothing. He watched the kibbutzniks scuttle back and forwards from the washhouse to the laundry lines.

  “There are maps of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv and Haifa, pinpointing the houses of our senior commanders. There are also maps of many of our kibbutzim showing the locations of suspected sliks. There’s no doubt about it, Attlee wants us destroyed.”

  “What size operation are they planning?”

  “As soon as Cunningham receives the password from Whitehall, he will order an immediate curfew. The order outlines military operations against forty-nine separate towns and settlements using armor and infantry. It even authorizes the use of the RAF and artillery in the event of resistance.”

  “God in heaven. When?”

  “The operational orders are signed April 16th. That’s nearly two months ago. The order could come into effect any day.” Sarah glanced at Netanel. “This is just between the two of us,” she said.

  ‘This is making my leg ache,’ Asher said and eased himself into a sitting position on the verandah rail. “What’s going to happen now?”

  “We’ve sent a preliminary report to the Red House in Tel Aviv. Anyone named on the list will have to be moved immediately. We’ll need new command centers in all the major towns, and almost every kibbutz will have to make new sliks. We’ve checked out what the British have on Kfar Herzl for example. They have our cache pinpointed exactly.”

  “How did they get all this?”

  “The CID have been in Palestine for thirty years. Perhaps it’s the aggregation of three decades’ work, or perhaps there’s a high level leak. The important thing is we shift all our pieces before Bevin and the Red Poppies have a chance to checkmate us.”

  “Thank you, Henry Talbot!”

  “He may not look like Moses but our English gentleman has parted the sea for us. He’s shown us the way out.”

  The Hill of Evil Counsel

  Henry Talbot stood at the window of his office and stared at the Old City. It was late afternoon and the sunlight bounced off the golden Dome of the Rock, hurting the eyes. The Dome was built, the Muslims said, to commemorate the place where Mohammed rode to heaven on his horse, El-Bureq.

  The towers of the yeshivoth rose from the ancient Jewish Quarter, where the ones called the Forgotten of God had kept the faith since the time of the Diaspora. The Church of the Holy Sepulcher, built on Golgotha, the site of Christ’s crucifixion, was lost in the heat haze. So many beliefs jostled for purchase down there.

  Men needed religion, Talbot thought, not to teach themselves to love, but as a justification to kill. If there had been no Christ, no Mohammed, they would have had to invent one.

  Or perhaps that was exactly what they had done.

  If the devil needs a disguise, he thought, then he would call himself God. In that guise he had set Catholics against Huguenots, Saracens against Crusaders, and now Arabs against Jews.

  The muezzin high in the minaret of the Al-Aqsa began the call to Asr, the late afternoon prayer. His song echoed around the Kidron valley and the Mount of Olives. Talbot looked at his watch. If the briefcase was not back by five thirty, it was all over for him.

  Perhaps it was anyway.

  Judean Hills near Al-Naqb

  Netanel cradled the briefcase between his knees as the jeep bounced between dark stands of pines. The steep sides of the wadi crowded in, throwing dark shadows across the road. The sound of the motor echoed along the rock walls as the jeep labored up the ridge. The stillness made Netanel uneasy.

  “What do you want for yourself, Netanel?” Asher said.

  Netanel shrugged and did not answer.

  “Come on, what do you dream about? Everybody has a dream.”

  “Do they? What’s yours?”

  “I want to start a new kibbutz, in the Negev. I want to build it up from nothing, like Yaakov did with Kfar Herzl. I want to create an oasis in the desert. That’s what I want when this is over.”

  “Do you think it will ever be over?”

  “Yes. One day.”

  Although there were still a few hours of sunlight remaining, the high walls of the wadi had imposed a premature dusk. The pines were black and malevolent, and the air cool.

  “You’re a dark horse, Netya, I’ll never understand - ”

  Asher heard a crack like a whip as a bullet zipped through the air close to his face. He heard a clang-clang as more bullets slammed into the jeep. He stood on the brakes.

  “Get out!” he screamed.<
br />
  He grabbed Netanel’s shirt and pulled him down the slope beside the road. When they reached the bottom of the wadi they lay on their bellies in the dust and listened.

  “Where are they?” Netanel whispered.

  “I don’t know!” Asher fumbled for his holster. The only weapons they had were standard issue British Webley specials. They were only any use in close combat, not in a sniper duel.

  A bullet slammed into the dirt just a few inches away from his face, and fragments of stone peppered his cheek.

  “The trees!” Netanel shouted. He pulled Asher to his feet and they zigzagged towards a stand of pines. Two more shots whipped at the ground as they ran.

  They threw themselves face down in the dirt, breathing hard. Silence, except for the whine of mosquitoes.

  “Are you all right?” Netanel whispered.

  Asher put a hand to his face. It came away wet with blood. He couldn’t see out of one eye. “I don’t know.”

  Netanel wiped the blood away with his sleeve and examined the injury. “You’ve got a cut over your right eyelid and another one on your forehead. Must have been stone fragments. Nothing serious.”

  “I’m also getting bitten to hell by mosquitoes.” Asher twisted around. “Where are the bastards?” He wriggled behind the trunk of one of the pines and stared up at the road. Netanel took up a position five yards away, his own revolver cradled in the crook of his arm.

  “Here they come.”

  A shadow slipped down the hillside towards the jeep. There was more movement on their left, and he heard the tumbling of a small rockfall.

  “I’ll drill the sons of whores,” Netanel whispered.

  “Wait until they’re closer. We only have ten rounds between us. See how many there are first.”

  A figure scampered across the road and took cover behind the jeep. Asher squinted into the false dusk. The man appeared to be dressed entirely in black, not like an Arab at all.

  But if it wasn’t an Arab, then who was it?

  “Did you see that?”

  “Herrgottsacrament!” Netanel said.

  They heard whispering to their left. The words carried to them on the still of the evening with absolute clarity.

  Hebrew.

  Asher sat up and sang out the words of his religion’s most sacred prayer: “Shma Yisrael, Adonai Eloheinu, Adonai Ehaaa-aaadr …’ He drew out the final syllable in the traditional way, in imitation of Ben Joseph Akiba’s final dying breath, as he was flayed to death by the Romans.

  “Hear O Israel, the Lord Our God, the Lord is One.”

  His voice echoed around the wadi, and was greeted with a silence.

  “Who are you?” a voice shouted eventually, in Hebrew.

  “Haganah! Who are you? Irgun, Stem, what?”

  He heard someone curse.

  Asher stood up, scrambled over the dry wadi and up the slope to the road. A man with thinning black hair and tortoiseshell glasses was leaning against the jeep, a Sten gun cradled in his arms. He was wearing a black jersey and black trousers.

  “Asher Ben-Zion.”

  “Moshe Meodovnik.”

  “Irgun?”

  Meodovnik nodded. “We thought you were British soldiers.”

  Asher examined the jeep. There were a dozen bullet holes in the coachwork and the radiator was shattered. Water hissed on to the road, sending up a white plume of steam. Asher roared with frustration and kicked the tire.

  “Shame. Nice vehicle,” Meodovnik said.

  “Have you any idea what you’ve done?”

  “It was a mistake. These things happen.”

  Netanel followed Asher up the slope. “Take it easy, Ash,” he said.

  The rest of the Irgun gang had converged on them now. They were mostly Yemenites, Netanel noted, peasants and fanatics.

  Asher’s right fist took Meodovnik on the point of the chin and sent him sprawling on to the road. He lay there for a few seconds, stunned, then scrambled for his gun. Before he could reach it Netanel was already standing over him, holding his revolver to the man’s head. “Why don’t we all calm down?”

  “Sabra prick,” Meodovnik hissed.

  The other Irgun soldiers had their weapons pointed at Asher. No one moved.

  Netanel clicked the safety off his revolver. “Let’s just say it’s been a bad day all round,” he whispered in the Irguni’s ear.

  Meodovnik put up his hands in a gesture of conciliation. “Yes. Let’s not forget we’re on the same side. All right?”

  Netanel lowered the revolver.

  Meodovnik stood up, slowly. “If you informed us of your operations, this sort of thing would not happen,” he said. He turned and marched back up the road. The others followed.

  “How are we supposed to get back to Jerusalem?” Asher shouted after him.

  “Try walking!”

  Asher looked at Netanel, who spread his hands in a gesture of resignation. Asher sat on the running board and put his head in his hands. Poor Henry Talbot.

  The Hill of Evil Counsel

  Talbot looked at his watch. Ten minutes past six. He stared at the driveway leading from the main gates, watching the shadows lengthen. He felt strangely calm. The day had lasted a century, a hundred years of fretting and sweating, his attention fixed on the inexorable passage of the hands of the clock.

  And, in the end, his reprieve had not come.

  The door opened and Chandler looked in. “Still here, Henry? Time to go home, you know.”

  “Got a few things to catch up on.”

  “Feel like dropping over for a few drinks tomorrow night with Elizabeth? I’ve asked the Rogersons.”

  “Love to. What time?”

  “About eight. That all right?”

  “I’ll mention it to Elizabeth.”

  The door closed. He turned back to the window. The Haganah had betrayed him. Oh my God. What am I to do now?

  Chapter 14

  New City

  Marie’s eyes were gritty from exhaustion. She looked at her watch. Almost two in the morning; she had worked over seventeen hours straight. The little office was thick with cigarette smoke and the single light bulb did not throw enough light. Someone brought her a cup of coffee but she was too tired to drink it. The typewriter keyboard swam in her vision.

  When I am finished here, she promised herself, I am going to go home and sleep for two days.

  The Histadruth executive had put their entire staff at the disposal of the Haganah at the start of work that morning. They were typing lists, names and addresses, from photographic negatives. Haganah members, Marie supposed. Each typist had a mirror placed next to her typewriter so she could read the negative in the glass. It was a strain on the eyes and the nerves.

  Marie moved on to her last batch of negatives. It was increasingly difficult to concentrate, impossible to type too fast without making a mistake.

  RONSKI,

  Age:

  Address:

  Shlomo

  23

  16 HaHavazelet Street

  Jerusalem

  New City

  Haganah Reserve

  Michael

  ROSEN,

  Age:

  Address:

  38

  Flat 8

  120 Ben Yehuda Street Tel Aviv

  Known Stern Gang member

  29

  ROSENBERG, Netanel

  Age:

  Address:

  Apartment 6D 213 HaNasi Street Rehavia

  Palmach: Platoon Commander ROSENTHAL, David . . .

  Marie stared at what she had just typed. Netanel.

  She remembered the last time she had seen him, at the House in the Woods, when she had given him the silver Star of David.

  Netanel!

  At last, she had found him again.

  Talbieh

  The sun rose over the city, chasing the shadows down the tombs on the Mount of Olives. The muezzin’s voice carried across the city from the minaret of the Al-Aqsa.

 
; Allahu Akbar, la illaha Allah, Al-salat khayr min al- naum!

  God is most great, there is no God but God, prayer is better than sleep!

  Well then, I shall pray, Talbot thought, because I certainly can’t sleep.

  It was not yet dawn when he heard his household come awake: he listened to the clink of cutlery in the dining-room, the sweep of the broom in the courtyard, the smell of coffee roasting in the kitchen. The daily ritual he had always ignored now seemed so precious on this last, lonely time.

  The hamsiin rushed through the leaves of the fig tree outside the window. “Another hot day,” he imagined Chandler saying.

  Then he heard something else, something outside the normal routine; a vehicle drew up outside the house, and footsteps ran across on the cobbled court below. Something was at the front door. Then the footsteps receded and he heard a motor car driving away, very fast.

  A few minutes later Moussa entered carrying the briefcase. “Someone left this at the front door, Talbot effendi.”

  “Thank you, Moussa,” Talbot said. He accepted the briefcase and unfastened the straps. A manila envelope lay on top, “TALBOT” written in capitals in red ink on the front. He opened it.

  Inside was the postcard of himself and Majid. A photographic negative had been stuck on to it. There was a scrawled, handwritten note: “We are sorry."

  “Aren’t we all?” Talbot said aloud.

  He tore the postcard and the negative into small pieces and went to the double doors that opened on to the patio. He threw the pieces into the air, and let the hamsiin carry them away.

  Rehavia

  “Moshe Meodovnik,” Sarah said. “He’s a Russian émigré, came here in 1928 with his family. Maths professor, of all things. He was arrested by the British in 1938 for illegal possession of a firearm and was sentenced to five years in prison. In 1941 he was given the option of finishing his sentence or fighting with the Jewish Brigade. He served with distinction in North Africa and Italy. After the war we invited him to rejoin the Haganah as a regional commander. Instead he joined Irgun Zvai Leumi.”

 

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