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The spies of warsaw

Page 15

by Alan Furst


  always worth stealing if you can. Ahh, but invasion plans, now you

  have diamonds. And they only come from one mine, the same I.N. Six

  that Sosnowski penetrated with his German girlfriends. But, alas, that

  probably can't be done again."

  "Probably not."

  "Still, if by circumstance, the right person, the right moment . . ."

  "In that case, it could be tried."

  "Surely it could. Well worth it, I'd think. But I doubt seduction is

  the answer, not anymore, not with the Gestapo and the SD. And old

  von Sosnowski was one of a kind, wasn't he--a hundred women a

  year, that was the rumor. Wouldn't work again, I'd say, reprise isn't the

  answer. No, this time it would have to be money."

  "Quite a lot of money," Mercier said.

  From de Beauvilliers, a rather gloomy nod of agreement. How-Furs_9781400066025_3p_all_r1.qxp 3/26/08 9:29 AM Page 116

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  ever, all was not lost. As he leaned toward Mercier, his voice was quiet

  but firm. "Of course, we do have a lot of money."

  That said, he returned to his lunch. Mercier drank some champagne, then, suddenly, and for no reason he could think of, he was very

  conscious of the life around him, the Parisian chatter and laughter

  that filled the smoky air of the restaurant. A strange awareness; not

  enjoyment, more apprehension. Like the dogs, he thought. Sometimes, at rest, they would raise their heads, alert to something distant,

  then, after a moment, lie back down again, always with a kind of sigh.

  What would happen to these people, he wondered, if war came here?

  3 December, Warsaw. Now the winter snow began to fall. At night, it

  melted into golden droplets on the Ujazdowska gas lamps and, by

  morning, turned the street white and silent. Out in the countryside,

  the first paw prints of wolves were seen near the villages.

  Mercier's mail grew fat with Christmas cards; the Vyborgs sent a

  manger with infant and sheep, similarly the Spanish naval attache.

  From Prince Kaz and Princess Toni--postmarked Venice--a yule tree

  dusted with bits of silver, and a Hope to see you in the spring, in girls'

  academy handwriting below the printed greeting. From Albertine a

  warm holiday letter, not so different from the one he'd sent her. By

  now she would be in Aleppo, he imagined, and found himself remembering the darkened hall that led to her room and the faint music he'd

  heard.

  From the Rozens, a Chanukah card with a menorah, and another

  from Dr. Goldszteyn, his sometime partner in the foursomes at the

  Milanowek Tennis Club. Inside the card was a letter, on a sheet of

  cream-colored stationery.

  Dear Colonel Mercier,

  We wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

  Sadly, I must take this occasion to say goodby. My family and I

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  will soon be in Cincinnahti, joining my brother who emigrated

  a few years ago. This will be a better situation for us, I believe.

  For your kindness and thoughtful consideration I thank you,

  and wish you happiness of the season. Sincerely yours,

  Judah Goldszteyn

  Mercier read it more than once, thought about answering the letter,

  then realized, a sadder thing than the letter itself, that there was nothing to be said. He was not able to throw the letter away, so put it in a

  drawer.

  The mail also included invitations, fancy ones--the Warsaw

  printers thrived this time of year--to more official gatherings than

  Mercier could ever hope to attend, and a few private parties. RSVP.

  He declined most, and accepted a few. A handwritten note from

  Madame Dupin, the deputy director of protocol at the embassy,

  invited him to a vernissage "for one of Poland's finest young painters,

  Marc Shublin." The vernissage--"varnishing," it meant, thus the

  completion of an oil painting--was an old Paris tradition, the first

  showing of an artist's new work, typically at his studio.

  Mercier had added the note to his no pile, but Madame Dupin,

  bright and forceful as always, had shown up at his office a day later.

  "Oh really, you must come," she'd said. "Congenial people, you'll

  have a good time. Marc's so popular, we're having it at an abandoned

  greenhouse on Hortensya street. Please, Jean-Francois, say yes, the

  young man's worth your evening, my friend Anna is invited, and

  everything else this year will be so boring. Please?"

  "Of course, Marie, I'll be there."

  On the afternoon of the eleventh, in suit and tie, Mercier took a trolley to the outskirts of the city to meet a man called Verchak. This was

  a favor done for him by Colonel Vyborg, thus an offer that could not

  be turned down, though Mercier doubted it would be productive. Ver-Furs_9781400066025_3p_all_r1.qxp 3/26/08 9:29 AM Page 118

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  chak had served with the Dabrowsky battalion in the Spanish civil war

  and, wounded in the fighting, had been allowed--"because of his family," Vyborg had said--to return to Poland. Most of the battalion had

  been made up of Polish miners, from the Lille region of France, almost

  all of them members of the communist labor union, who'd fought as

  part of the XIth International Brigade, prominent in the defense of

  Madrid. Emigre communists knew better than to try to re-enter

  Poland, so Verchak was a valuable rarity, according to Vyborg.

  The two-room apartment in a workers' district was scrupulously

  clean--cleanliness being the Polish antidote to poverty--and smelled

  of medicine. Mercier was taken to the second room, bare of decoration except for a small cedar tree set on a bench and hung with beautiful wooden Christmas ornaments, where he was shown to the good

  chair, while Verchak sat on a handmade plank chair across from him.

  Pana Verchak served tea, offered sugar, which Mercier knew not to

  accept, then left the room.

  A broken man, Mercier thought--no wound was physically

  apparent, but Verchak was old and slumped well beyond his years. His

  Polish was slow and precise, for which Mercier was grateful, and

  someone, Vyborg no doubt, had urged him to be forthcoming.

  Mercier said only that he was Vyborg's friend and wished to hear of

  Verchak's experience of the war in Spain.

  Verchak accepted this and began a recitation, clearly having told

  his story more than once. "In the first week of November, it was cold,

  and rained every day; we took the village of Boadilla, near the

  Corunna road, that led from Madrid to Las Rozas. The Nationalists

  wanted to cut that road and lay siege to the city and, after some hours,

  while we prepared defensive positions, they attacked us. They surrounded the village."

  "What sort of attack was it?"

  Verchak looked out the window for a moment, lost in his memory, then turned back to Mercier. "We couldn't stop it, sir," he said.

  "First the planes bombed us, then came tanks, then two waves of

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  infantry, then more tanks. But we held on for a long time, though half

  of our men were killed."

  "You fired at the tanks."

 
"With machine guns, but it meant little. One of them we set on

  fire, with a field gun, and we shot the crew as they came out of the

  hatch. One or two others got stuck in a ravine, and we put hand

  grenades under the engine in the back. But there were too many of

  them."

  "How many?"

  Verchak slowly shook his head. "Too many to count. We were

  next to the Thaelmann Battalion, German communists, mostly, and

  they said it was called 'Lightning war.' "

  "In Polish, they said that?"

  "No, sir. In German."

  "So then, Blitzkrieg?"

  "It might've been that. I don't remember."

  "It was their word? The Germans in the Thaelmann Battalion?"

  "I think they said they'd heard it from the German advisors who

  fought with the Nationalists."

  "How did they come to hear it, Pan Verchak? From a prisoner?"

  "They might've, sir, they didn't say. Perhaps they listened to the

  Germans talking on their radios. They were very clever people."

  "Did the planes return?"

  "Not that day, but the following morning, as we moved back

  toward Madrid. We were out of ammunition. They sent us blank cartridges, the officers in Madrid."

  "Why would they do such a thing?"

  "For courage, people said, so we wouldn't retreat."

  "Did the men in the tanks talk to the planes, Pani?"

  "I wouldn't know, sir. But I do know it can be done."

  "Really? Why do you say that?"

  "I saw it with my own eyes, later, when we fought at the Jarama

  river. The tanks were on our side there, big Russian tanks, and I saw a

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  tank commander, halfway out of the open hatch, using a radio and

  watching the Russian war planes in the sky. He shouted at them--I

  was only a few feet away--when the bombs began to fall on our own

  trenches. Then, after he shouted, the bombing stopped. Not soon

  enough, sir, some of the comrades were killed, but it did stop. Of

  course, he shouldn't have been out of the tank, for the Moors shot

  him." Verchak stopped for a moment, as though he could see the tank

  commander. "It was a terrible war, sir," he said.

  Verchak's wife returned to the room soon thereafter, a signal,

  Mercier thought, that her husband could not continue much longer.

  When Mercier rose to leave, he slid a thousand zloty into a piece of

  folded paper from his notepad and put it under the Christmas tree.

  The Verchaks looked at each other--should they accept such a gift?--

  and Pana Verchak started to speak. But Mercier told her it was an old

  French tradition, in this season, that entering a home with a Christmas tree, a gift must be left beneath it. "I have to follow my traditions," he said, and, as he'd well known, they would not argue with

  that.

  11 December. Ominous weather, as night fell, the air ice cold and

  completely still. At eight-thirty, Mercier strolled over to the old greenhouse on Hortensya street, a facility long disused, that had once

  served the parks and gardens of the city. It was, Mercier thought, typical of Madame Dupin to adopt some artist in the city where she

  worked; she was forever doing things, involving herself in an endless

  series of projects and pastimes. Shublin was at the door of the greenhouse, Madame Dupin at his side. He was young, with a roughneck's

  good looks, and very intense. What other pleasure, beyond the satisfaction of patronage, he might have provided for Madame Dupin was

  open to question--as, in fact, was her erotic life, a subject of some

  speculation in the diplomatic community. That night she was effusive

  and excited, taking Mercier's hand in both of hers and near joyful that

  he'd actually shown up. Clearly, she'd feared he wouldn't.

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  Shublin and his friends had gone to great lengths to turn the old

  greenhouse into an artist's studio. The artist's props--skulls, statuettes of deformed people and imaginary beasts, easels bearing newspaper decoupages, a dressmaker's mannikin on a wire cage--had been

  imported for the evening, and his largest canvas hung from an iron

  beam on ropes, flanked by a pair of skeletons, their names on cardboard squares tied beneath their chins. Mercier immediately liked the

  painting, as well as the others propped against the cloudy old glass

  walls: fire. Fire in its every aspect--orange flames roaring into azure

  skies, black smoke pouring from a brilliant yellow flash, fire, and more

  fire.

  Mercier, his costume for a bohemian soiree a bulky sweater and

  corduroy trousers beneath a long overcoat, with a black wool scarf

  looped insouciantly--he hoped--about his neck, was introduced here

  and there. For a time, he spoke with a professor of art history and

  brought up the subject of Polish war paintings, for him a particular

  treasure he'd discovered in Warsaw--huge battlefield scenes laden

  with cavalry and cannon, exquisitely detailed and compelling. But the

  professor didn't much care for them, and, discovering that Mercier

  was French, went on and on about Matisse. Mercier spoke also with

  Shublin's girlfriend, who was very up-to-date on European politics--

  perhaps the last thing in the world he wanted to talk about. But she

  was smart and amusing, and Mercier discovered he was, as promised,

  actually having a good time. The wine and vodka were plentiful, and

  platters of hors d'oeuvres had been brought in from a good restaurant, generously provided by Madame Dupin. With secret embassy

  funds? Lord, he hoped not.

  It was nine-fifteen when Anna Szarbek appeared. The same Anna

  Szarbek; dark-blond hair, swept across her forehead and pinned in

  back, deep green eyes, wary and restless, the slight downward curve of

  her nose and heavy lips suggesting sensuality. Suggesting it to him, certainly. His heart rose to look at her, he wanted to rush her through the

  night in a taxi, off to his bedroom, there to relieve her of coat, boots,

  sweater, skirt, and all the rest, there to see what he'd barely touched

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  the night they danced together. And then . . . Well, his imagination

  was in perfect order, and therein her desire, in their first moment

  together, was the equal of his, and his desire was making him almost

  dizzy. But not so much that he didn't search the room for Maxim, who

  was nowhere to be seen, and Mercier, elated beyond reason, felt a

  great smile appear on his face. His search of the room did reveal

  Madame Dupin, turned partly away from a conversing group, a sharp,

  inquisitive eye directly on him. Was this why she'd wanted him here?

  Was she matchmaking? Could that be true? Back and forth he went.

  Trapped, meanwhile, by the most boring man on earth--"But,

  you understand, the laws of the city expressly forbid them to build a

  wall there! Myself I find it almost impossible to believe"--Mercier

  kept saying "Mm," and "Mm," his eyes wandering rudely over the

  man's shoulder. Anna was easy to spot--her sweater was a deep red,

  with a design in tiny pearls below a raised collar--as she navigated


  through the crowded greenhouse. Stopped to have a look at the skeletons, peered nearsightedly at the cardboard nameplates, responded

  with a wry smile, and moved on.

  "We could go to court, serve them right, having to hire some

  expensive lawyer. . . ."

  "Mm. Mm."

  Now she saw him. She had been looking for him. His heart leapt.

  "Forgive me, I think I'll have another glass of wine."

  "You don't have a glass of wine."

  "Then I'll go and get one."

  Mercier worked his way toward her, and they exchanged conspiratorial smiles-- oh what a crowd--at the difficulty of his progress. At

  last they stood together and shook hands, her skin cold from the night

  outside. "Very nice to see you again," he said.

  "I think I saw you at the foreign office cocktail party," she said.

  Her voice was slightly husky--he'd forgotten that, as well as the faint

  accent.

  "You did. I saw you too, but I couldn't get over to say hello."

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  "You seemed busy," she said.

  "An official reception. I had to be there. But this is much nicer."

  "A Marie Dupin affair, they're always good parties. Poor Maxim

  had to interview a politician, so I almost didn't come, but, I thought,

  why not? And I'd promised."

  "Something to drink?"

  "Yes, good, I can use it. The cold tonight is awful, even for Warsaw."

  They made their way to the bar in the far corner. "Two vodkas,

  please," Mercier said. Then, to Anna, "Is that all right with you? Insulation against the weather."

  "Yes, thanks. I knew it would be freezing in here, I mean, it's

  glass."

  "They have kerosene heaters."

  Anna wasn't impressed. "Poor plants."

  "Not anymore. What do you think of the paintings?"

  "A little frightening--they're not cozy fires."

  "War fires, you think?"

  "Violent, anyhow. At least they don't show what's burning.

  Houses, or ships."

  "Maybe you're meant to imagine them."

  She nodded, yes, could be, searched in her bag, found a cigarette

  and a lighter, and handed the lighter to Mercier. He lit her cigarette

  and said, "I'll go find you an ashtray, if you like."

  "Let's go together, I don't know a soul in here."

  As they began to move toward the hors d'oeuvres table, a heavy

 

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