into her shoes. Casson went to the balcony, opened the doors, looked out. Two black Citroens were just turning into the rue Chardin. He slammed the doors, ran back into the living room. “Right now,” he said.
They ran out the door, then down the stairs, sliding on the marble steps. Citrine slipped, cried out, almost fell as they flew around the mid-floor landing, but Casson managed to pull her upright.
Casson was out of breath. “Please,” he said. “Will you hide her?”
The baroness stared at him, then at Citrine. Slowly, the surprise and shock on her face turned to indignation. “Yes,” she said, her elegant voice cold with anger. “Yes, of course. How could you think I would not?” She took Citrine by the hand and gently drew her into the apartment.
As the door swung closed, Citrine stepped toward him, their eyes met. She had time to say “Jean-Claude?” That was all.
Casson did try, tried as hard as he could. Raced down four flights of stairs, footsteps echoing off the walls. When he reached the street, the men in raincoats were just climbing out of their cars. They shouted as he started to run, were on him almost immediately. The first one grabbed the back of his shirt, which ripped as he fought to pull free. He punched the man in the forehead and hurt his hand. Then somebody leaped on top of him and, with a yell of triumph, barred a thick forearm across his throat. Casson started to choke. Then, a cautionary bark in harsh German, and the arm relaxed. The man who seemed to be in charge was apparently irritated by public brawling. A word from him, they let Casson go. He stood there, rubbing his throat, trying to swallow. The man in charge never took his hands out of the pockets of his belted raincoat. A sudden kick swept Casson’s feet from under him and he fell on his back in the street. From there, he could see people looking out their windows.
24 June, midnight.
Midnight, more or less-they’d taken his watch. But from the cell in the basement of the rue des Saussaies he could hear the trains in the Metro, and he knew the last one ran around one in the morning.
He was in the basement of the old Interior Ministry-he’d had no idea they had cells down here, but this one had been in use for a long time. It was hard to read the graffiti on the walls, the only light came from a bulb in a wire cage on the ceiling of the corridor, but much of it was carved or scratched into the plaster, and by tracing with his finger he could read it-the earliest entry
The wall was covered with it. Phrases in cyrillic Russian, in Polish, what might have been Armenian. There was Annamese, and Arabic. Faces front and profile. Crosses. Hearts-with initials and arrows. Cocks and cunts, with curly hairs. Somebody loved Marguerite-in 1921, somebody else Martine. This one wrote
When he heard a deep rumbling sound, he thought for a moment that the RAF was attacking the factory districts at the edge of the city.
“One thing I will tell you.” A deep voice, from a cell some way up the corridor. Good, educated French, the melancholy tone of the intellectual. Not exactly a whisper, but the voice low and private, confidential. “Can you hear me?”
“Yes.”
“Are you injured?”
“No.”
“Then I will tell you one thing: sooner or later, everyone talks. And it’s easier on you if it’s sooner.”
He waited, heart pounding, but that was all.
There was no bed, he sat on the stone floor, back against the damp wall. The last Metro train faded away, the hours passed. Perhaps he could have hidden with the baroness, but then, not finding him, they would have searched the building. They had, no doubt, searched his apartment, but there was nothing for them to find there. Now, what remained was a final scene, he’d manage it as well as he could. The post in the courtyard, the blindfold. Farewell, my love.
What worried him came before that-“sooner or later everyone talks.”
They came for him an hour later.
A functionary, and his helper, an SS corporal in a black uniform. The functionary was a small man in his twenties, wearing a mole-colored suit with broad lapels. Hair parted in the middle; weak, sulky mouth. He said to the corporal, “Unlock this door.” Disdainful, chin in the air
Somebody’s son, Casson thought. A high official in the Nazi party- what shall we do with poor X? Well, this is what they’d done with him. They reached the top floor, Casson had been here before, for his meetings with Guske. All around him, office life: people talking and laughing and rushing about with papers in their hands. Typewriters racketing, telephones ringing. Of course, he thought, the Gestapo worked a night shift just like the police. A clock on the wall said 3:20. They took him to Guske’s office, made him stand against a wall at attention. “Could I have some water?” he said. He had a terrible, burning thirst-was that something they were doing to him on purpose?
“Nothing for you,” said the functionary. He picked up the phone, dialed two digits. A moment later: “We have him ready for you now, Herr
Guske arrived a few minutes later, all business and very angry. He gave Casson a savage glare-very much the honest fellow betrayed by his own good nature. Well, they’d see about
Guske walked slowly over to him and stood there. Casson looked away. Guske drew his hand back and slapped him in the face as hard as he could, the sound was a crack like a pistol shot. Casson’s face was hot, and tears stood in the corners of his eyes.
“It’s nothing,” Guske said. “Just so we understand each other.” He went back to his desk and settled in, still breathing hard. He thumbed through the file for a moment but he really didn’t have his concentration back. He looked up at Casson.
Guske read a note pinned to the inside cover of the dossier. “What is HERON? Code for what?”
“I don’t know.”
Guske’s face was mottled with anger. “And who is Laurent?”
Casson shook his head.
Guske stared at him. Casson heard the typewriters and the telephones, voices and footsteps. The rain outside the window. It seemed very normal. “I need,” Casson said, “to use the bathroom.”
Guske thought about it for a moment, then opened the door and called out, “Werner, come and take him down the hall.”
The functionary came on the run. Took him past offices, a long way it seemed. Around a corner. Then to an