Read The spies of warsaw Online
Authors: Alan Furst
apparition in the doorway, which searched the room, then waved to
Furs_9781400066025_3p_all_r1.qxp 3/26/08 9:29 AM Page 251
A S H A D O W O F WA R * 2 5 1
him. The weekly meeting of the Kreuzberg Model Railway Club, in the
basement of a local church, was one of the few pleasures in his humdrum existence, but now, even here, his past had returned to haunt
him. "A former acquaintance," he explained to the man beside him, a
stockbroker with an estate in the Charlottenburg district.
Halbach circled the trestle tables, then offered his hand. "Good
evening, Johannes. Your wife said I would find you here."
Elter returned the greeting, a smile frozen on his face.
"Can we speak for a moment?" There was no conspiracy in Halbach's voice, but, in a pleasant way, he meant
privately.
"We can go upstairs," Elter said.
"Don't be too long," the stockbroker said. "We are electing officers tonight."
"I'll be right back," Elter said. Coming directly from work, he
wore the uniform of a
Wehrmacht
corporal.
Halbach, heart pounding, followed Elter up the stairs to the
vestibule. The church beyond was empty, the altar bare. It had been
Lutheran once but now, in line with the dictates of the Nazi regime,
was home to a rather secular denomination known as "German Christian." Elter waited until Halbach climbed the last step, then, his voice
low and strained, said, "What are you
doing
? Coming here like this."
"Forgive me," Halbach said. "I had to come."
"Has something changed? Are you now free to go anywhere?"
"No, they are after me still."
"You could ruin me, Julius. Don't you know that?" Elter's face
was ashen, his hands trembling.
"It was Otto who sent me to see you," Halbach said.
Elter was stunned. "He's alive?"
"He is," Halbach said. "For the time being."
"Where . . . ?"
"I mustn't say, but what's happened is that he's fallen into the
hands of foreign agents."
Silence. Finally Elter said, "Then that's it."
"It need not be. But they will turn him over to the Gestapo and, if
Furs_9781400066025_3p_all_r1.qxp 3/26/08 9:29 AM Page 252
2 5 2 * T H E S P I E S O F WA R S AW
they do, he'll be forced to tell what he knows. And that
will
be the end,
for me, for you, for all of us who are still alive." Halbach let that sink
in, then said, "Unless . . ."
Elter's voice broke as he said, "Unless
what
?"
"It depends on you. On you alone."
"What could
I
do?"
"They want information, from the office where you work."
"That's espionage! Who are they?"
"They are Swiss, or so they say. And they offer you two things if
you comply: a Swiss passport, in a new name, and five hundred thousand Swiss francs. So you must choose, Johannes, between that and
the Gestapo cellars."
Elter put a hand on his heart and said, "I don't feel well." Down
below, the lights went out and another train began its run, the locomotive tooting its whistle.
Halbach reached out and rested his hand on Elter's arm. "This
was inevitable," he said, not unkindly. "If not today, tomorrow."
"My God, Julius, why do you do this to me? I was always a faithful friend."
"Because of that, I do it."
"But I don't have information. I know nothing."
"Trash. That's what they want. Papers thrown away in the wastebaskets."
"It's burned! Every bit of it, by the janitors."
"When?"
"At nine in the evening, when they come in to clean the offices."
"You must do it before nine."
"But there's too much; how would I carry it out of the building?"
"They want only the material from the section that works on plans
for war with France: three days of it. Leave the rest for the janitors."
"I thought you said they were Swiss."
Halbach grew impatient. "Oh who knows what these people are
up to, they have their own reasons. But the money is real, I know that
Furs_9781400066025_3p_all_r1.qxp 3/26/08 9:29 AM Page 253
A S H A D O W O F WA R * 2 5 3
personally, and so is the passport. Here, have a look." Halbach
reached into his jacket and handed Elter the Braun passport.
Elter looked at it, then gave it back. "I don't want to leave Germany, I have a family."
"That's up to you. Your money will be in an account in Zurich.
You'll be given the number and the passport on Friday. You'll have to
put in a photograph, but they will tell you how to manage that."
Elter looked suddenly weary. "I don't know what to do."
"Do you want to die, Johannes?"
Elter's voice was barely audible. "No."
Halbach waited. Finally, Elter shook his head, slowly, sickened by
what life had done to him. "Friday, you said?"
"At the Hotel Excelsior. In the Birdcage Bar. Come in civilian
clothing, put the papers in a briefcase. Seven-thirty in the evening. Can
you remember?"
"Seven-thirty. The Birdcage Bar."
Halbach looked at his watch. "Walk me out, Johannes."
They left the vestibule and stood for a moment in the doorway of
the church. Across the street, Mercier was sitting behind the wheel of
the Renault, clearly visible with the driver's window rolled down.
"Is that one of them?" Elter said.
Halbach nodded. "Old friend," he said, "will you still shake
hands with me?"
Elter sighed as he took Halbach's hand. "I never imagined . . ." he
said.
"I know. None of us did. It's the wisdom of the gods--to keep the
future dark."
In the car, Mercier watched the two men in the doorway. The one
in uniform turned, and stared into his eyes with a look of pure hatred.
Mercier was holding the camera below the window; now he raised it,
looked through the viewfinder, and pressed the button.
*
Furs_9781400066025_3p_all_r1.qxp 3/26/08 9:29 AM Page 254
2 5 4 * T H E S P I E S O F WA R S AW
Mercier wasted no time. His valise and Halbach's suitcase were
already in the trunk of the Renault. Now he wound his way out of
Kreuzberg and onto the road that ran north to Neustrelitz. Beside
him, Halbach leaned his head back on the seat and closed his eyes.
"Not very far, is it?"
"Three hours, no more than that."
"Will he be at the bar?"
"I trust he will. Do you agree?"
"I'm not sure. He'll think about it, try to find a way out. And then
. . . well, you'll see, won't you."
A fine spring night. The road was dark and deserted and Mercier
drove fast. It was 11:30 when they reached the city of Rostock and, a
few minutes later, the port of Warnemunde. At the dock, the ferry--a
ferry from a cartoon; its tall stack would pump out puffs of smoke in
time to a calliope--was already taking on passengers, headed across
the Baltic to the Danish port of Gedser. Just up the street, at the edge
of the dock, a customs shed held the border
kontrol,
where two passengers waited at the door, then entered the shed.
"Shall I walk you through the
kontrol
?" Mercier said.
"No, I'll manage."
"There's one last train for Copenhagen tonight, on the other side.
Of course, once you're in Denmark, you may do whatever you like."
"I suppose I can. I'd almost forgotten, that sort of life."
"Will you fly to Zurich?"
"Perhaps tomorrow. The funds will be there?"
"We are true to our word," Mercier said. "It's all in the account."
Halbach looked out the window; the two passengers left the customs shed. "And will this," he said, "all this, make any difference, in
the long run?"
"It may. Who knows?"
Halbach climbed out of the car, retrieved his suitcase from the
trunk, returned to the passenger side, and looked in at Mercier, who
leaned over and rolled the window down. "Likely I won't see you
again," Halbach said.
Furs_9781400066025_3p_all_r1.qxp 3/26/08 9:29 AM Page 255
A S H A D O W O F WA R * 2 5 5
"No, likely not."
Halbach nodded, then walked toward the dock. At the door to the
customs shed, an older couple, poorly dressed, entered just as he
arrived. Then, a moment later, Halbach followed them. Mercier
waited, the Renault engine idling. The ferry creaked as it rose and
descended on the harbor swell. Mercier checked the time: 11:39. A
sailor walked down the gangway and stood by one of the bollards that
held the mooring lines. Now it was 11:42. Somebody in the customs
shed reached out and closed the door. Had something gone wrong?
They couldn't get this close, just to . . . Five minutes, six, then ten.
Should he go to the shed? To do exactly what? Above the door, the
breeze toyed with the red and black flag. 11:51. The sailor at the bollard began to unhitch the mooring rope, and the ferry tooted its cartoon horn, once, and again. A few passengers had gathered at the
railing, looking back into Germany. Mercier's hands gripped the
wheel so hard they ached, and he let go. Now the couple left the shed,
the man supporting the woman with an arm around her waist. When
the sailor called out to them the man said something to the woman,
and they tried to hurry. Mercier closed his eyes and sagged against the
seat.
Not now. Please, not now.
The sailor tossed the mooring line
onto the deck and strolled over to the other bollard. Two crewmen
appeared at the end of the gangway, ready to haul it aboard.
Then Halbach came out of the shed, tall and awkward, running,
holding his hat on his head as he ran. At the end of the gangway, he
turned and looked at Mercier, then disappeared into the cabin.
Mercier took a hotel room in Rostock; then, early the following morning, drove back to Berlin and, at the northern edge of the city, parked
the car. Carefully, he searched the interior and the trunk, found no evidence left behind, and locked the doors. There it would remain. He
took a taxi to the Adlon and settled in to let the days pass. He felt
much safer now that Halbach was no longer in the country, and he had
to work to keep elation at arm's length. Because Elter might not show
Furs_9781400066025_3p_all_r1.qxp 3/26/08 9:29 AM Page 256
2 5 6 * T H E S P I E S O F WA R S AW
up at the Birdcage Bar, because the Gestapo might show up instead--
if he'd been caught in the act, or if he'd been so foolish as to go to his
superiors. Or, really, was that so foolish? Play the contrite victim, tell
all, hope for the best.
No,
Mercier told himself. That look of murderous hatred had
revealed something of Elter's true self--the brute inside the clerk.
Mercier had not been displeased by that look, far from it. It meant
secret strength, just what Elter would need to do what he had to. Save
Otto Strasser? Save Halbach? A joke. Elter would save Elter. And then,
struggling along on a corporal's pay, war on the horizon,
welcome to
Switzerland.
The Adlon was busy, only a luxurious double had been available.
A warm room, and very comforting, lush fabrics in subdued colors,
soft carpet, soft light. Mercier took off his shoes to stretch out on the
fancy coverlet, stared at the ceiling, missed Anna Szarbek. The telephone on the desk tempted him sorely, but that was out of the question. Still, there was something about these lovely rooms, not just
flattering--only success brought you to such places--but seductive.
Now he wanted her. She liked nice things, nice places. She would
march about in her bare skin, showing off her curves. He rose from the
bed, went to the telephone, and ordered dinner brought to the room.
Better to stay out of sight.
Friday
.
28 April. Hotel Excelsior. A vast beehive of a hotel, buzzing with
guests--the swarm concentrated at the reception counter and spread
out across the lobby. Mercier waited his turn at the desk, signed
the register, and handed over the Lombard passport--this was not the
Singvogel. A bellboy took his valise and they rode the elevator to the
eighth floor, as the operator, wearing white gloves, called out the floor
for each stop. In the room, he tipped the bellboy and, after he'd left,
paused before the mirror: anonymous as he could be, in dark blue
overcoat, gray scarf, and steel-gray hat. He left the valise in the room
and descended to the lobby.
Furs_9781400066025_3p_all_r1.qxp 3/26/08 9:29 AM Page 257
A S H A D O W O F WA R * 2 5 7
Across from the reception, the Birdcage Bar. Mercier pushed the
padded door open, and yes, there it was, as advertised: a gilded cage
suspended from the ceiling, its floor covered with oriental pillows for
the comfort of the bird presently in captivity, an indolent maiden, very
close to nude but for her feathered costume and tight gold cap. At rest
when Mercier entered, she now rose, circled the cage, went to her
knees, held the bars, and reached out for a passing guest, who circled
the outstretched hand with a nervous laugh and rejoined his wife at
their table.
Standing at the bar, Mercier surveyed the tables in the room.
Elter? Not yet, it was only 7:20. Surveillance? No way to tell, dozens of
people, drinking and talking; it could be any of them. Would this contact have been safer under a railway bridge? Maybe, but too late now.