south from Dresden, the spy took a stick and drew semicircles in the dirt to show overlapping fields of fire. Morath crawled into two-man pillboxes, sighted along machine guns aimed down mown strips of cornfield, saw tank traps to fall in and tank traps made of cement posts, “dragon’s teeth,” wound in generous tangles of barbed wire. He squinted through Swiss sniperscopes fitted to Steyr rifles and fired a ZGB 33, the Czech machine gun made in Brno-used as the model for the British Bren,
After Morath reloaded, the curved-box magazine locked in place with a loud metallic snap.
“When you talk about your trip to the mountains,” Novotny said, “don’t forget to mention that Europe would be better off if Adolf did not have control of the Czech machine shops.”
Morath agreed. “Of course,” he said, “if it should come to that, I imagine the workers here would be-prone to error.”
But his conspiratorial smile was not returned. “Just between us,” Novotny said, “if it should happen that we are betrayed by those who claim to be our friends, we may not be so quick to give our lives in their service. That sort of business is bloody, Morath. There is always interrogation, always reprisal-you can only create a resistance movement when people don’t care about their lives.”
Novotny drove him back to the Europa that evening. A fine summer dusk, flights of swallows swooping and climbing in the sky above the hotels. In the lobby, the mother and daughter smiled at him, looking warmer than ever.
Dr. Lapp, wearing a flat-brimmed straw boater at a jaunty angle, was waiting for him in the room, fanning himself with a room-service menu.
“I didn’t hear you knock,” Morath said.
“Actually, I did knock,” Dr. Lapp said, slightly amused. “Of course, I’ll be happy to apologize, if you wish.”
“Don’t bother.”
Dr. Lapp stared out the window. The streetlamps were on, couples strolling in the mountain air. “You know, I cannot abide these people, the Czechs.”
Morath hung up his jacket, then began undoing his tie. He did not want there to be a war in Europe, but he was going to take a bath.
“They have no culture,” Dr. Lapp said.
“They think they do.”
“What, Smetana? Perhaps you like Dvorak. Good God.”
Morath took off his tie, looped it over a hanger, sat on the edge of the bed, and lit a Chesterfield.
“I should mention,” Dr. Lapp said, “that I saw Count Polanyi not so long ago and that he sends his best regards. He said that you were considering, at one time, a vacation in Britain. Is it so?”
“Yes.”
Dr. Lapp nodded. “Can you still go?”
Morath thought about Cara. “Maybe,” he said. “Maybe not.”
“I see. Well, if you can, you should.”
“I’ll try,” Morath said.
“They’re weakening, the British. This morning’s London
“He doesn’t trust the French?”
Dr. Lapp’s laugh was dry, and delicate, and very brief.
It was almost dark, they sat in silence for a long time. Finally, Dr. Lapp stood. “There is something I want you to look at,” he said. “I’ll send it along tomorrow, if you don’t mind.”
He closed the door silently behind him. Morath left the room in darkness. He went into the bathroom and turned on the water. There was a bright green mineral stain below the spout.
He booked a call to Paris early the next morning, the hotel operator rang his room an hour later. “So much traffic, sir,” she apologized. “Not usual for August.”
In Paris, a very elegant voice: “Good morning, this is Cartier.”
Polanyi liked to say that the great fault in poets was that they never sang of the power of money in affairs between men and women. “So for that we are left to the mercy of cynics-bartenders, novelists, or lubricious aunts.” Amusing when he said it but not so amusing in real life. Morath didn’t like himself for making this telephone call, but he could think of nothing else. The other possibility was flowers, and flowers weren’t enough.
He found himself telling the saleswoman almost everything. “I understand,” she said. She thought a moment, then added, “We have just completed a new design, a bracelet, which might be exactly right for Madame. A little exotic-emeralds set in silver and black onyx-but very personal. And not at all the usual thing. Do you think she would like that?”
“Yes.”
“She would be the first in Paris to have it-it’s a new style for us. Would she like
He knew she would. The saleswoman explained that the size was easily adjusted-so the bracelet could be sent by Cartier messenger to the residence. “And finally,
“Just say, ‘Love, Nicky.’ “
Later on, he was able to get through to an officer at the Credit Lyonnais. A bank draft would be sent over to Cartier that afternoon.
Novotny showed up at eleven and they worked most of the day, spending much of the time in the car, driving east on the northern borders of Moravia and Bohemia. More fortifications, more barbed wire, more artillery pointed toward Germany. “What happens to all this,” he asked, “if the Sudetenland is granted independence?”
Novotny laughed. “Then it all belongs to Hitler,” he said. “With good, flat roads running straight to Prague. A hundred kilometers, more or less, about two hours.”
By nightfall they had turned back to the west, headed for the Kreslice barracks and a regimental dinner-a farewell dinner-with the general in attendance. “There may be a speech,” Novotny said.
He paused a moment, peering into the darkness to find his way. They rattled over the crest of a mountain, then Novotny rode the brakes down the steep grade on the other side. “Decin,” he said-a cluster of lights in the trees. This was, Morath thought, one last demonstration: that Czech forces could move east and west without returning to the roads in the valleys. They’d improved the old village paths, used mostly for cows and goats. In the beams of the headlights he could see where holes had been filled with small stones and packed down flat.
“And then, after the speech …” Novotny said.
“Yes?”
“Perhaps you would consider …”
Morath was blinded. An explosion of yellow light, then blackness, with the dazzling afterimage of a fiery star. He pressed his hands against his eyes but it wouldn’t fade. Something had burnt the air in front of his face then gone whizzing away into the trees. Novotny yelled-apparently in Czech, Morath didn’t understand. He shoved the door open, then reached for Novotny, who seemed frozen in place. As he grabbed hold of a sleeve there were two pings, metal on metal, and another tracer bullet, this one on the other side of the windshield. Morath could hear the machine gun, firing disciplined, five-round bursts. When he smelled gasoline he pulled with all his strength, dragging