a hotel,” Mary Day told him quietly. “But I asked her to stay.”
“I don’t mind. But maybe she’d prefer it.”
“Money, Nicholas,” Mary Day said. “None of us has any. Really, most people don’t.”
Moni hung up the telephone. “Well, it’s the couch for me.”
The conversation drifted here and there-poor Cara in Buenos Aires, Montrouchet’s difficulties at the Theatre des Catacombes, Juan-les-Pins-then settled on the war. “What will you do, Nicholas, if it happens?”
Morath shrugged. “I would have to go back to Hungary, I suppose. To the army.”
“What about Mary?”
“Camp follower,” Mary Day said. “He would fight, and I would cook, the stew.”
Moni smiled, but Mary Day met Morath’s eyes. “No, really,” Moni said. “Would you two run away?”
“I don’t know,” Morath said. “Paris would be bombed. Blown to pieces.”
“That’s what everybody says. We’re all going to Tangiers-that’s the plan. Otherwise, doom. Back to Montreal.”
Mary Day laughed. “Nicholas in a djellaba.”
They drank both bottles Morath had brought back and, long after midnight, Moni and Mary Day fell dead asleep lying across the bed and it was Morath who wound up on the couch. He lay there for a long time, in the smoky darkness, wondering what would happen to them. Could they run away somewhere? Where? Budapest, maybe, or New York. Lugano? No. Dead calm by a cold lake, a month and it was over.
He had an awful headache the next morning. When he left the apartment, taking the rue Mabillon toward the river, Ilya emerged from a doorway and fell in step with him. He’d changed the green overcoat for a corduroy jacket, in more or less the same shape as the coat.
“Will your friend see me?” he said, his voice urgent.
“He will.”
“Everything has changed, tell him that. Litvinov is finished-it’s a signal to Hitler that Stalin wants to do business.” Litvinov was the Soviet foreign minister. “Do you understand it?” He didn’t wait for an answer. “Litvinov is a Jewish intellectual-an old-line Bolshevik. Now, for this negotiation, Stalin provides the Nazis with a more palatable partner. Which is perhaps Molotov.”
“If you want to see my friend, you’ll have to say where and when.”
“Tomorrow night. Ten-thirty. At the Parmentier Metro stop.”
A deserted station, out in the 11th Arrondissement. “What if he can’t come?” Morath meant
“Then he can’t. And I either contact you or I don’t.”
Moving quickly, he turned, walked away, disappeared.
For a time, Morath considered letting it die right there. Suddenly, Ilya
When Morath reached the Agence Courtmain, he called the legation.
“A fraud,” Polanyi said. “We are being used-I don’t exactly understand why, but we are.”
They sat in the backseat of a shiny black Grosser Mercedes, Bolthos in front with the driver. On the sixth day of May, benign and bright under a windswept sky. They drove along the Seine, out of the city at the Porte de Bercy, headed south for the village of Thiais.
“You went alone?” Morath said.
Polanyi laughed. “A strange evening at the Parmentier Metro-heavyset men reading Hungarian newspapers.”
“And the documents?”
“Tonight. Then
“Maybe it doesn’t matter now.” Litvinov had resigned two days earlier.
“No, we must do something. Wake the British up-it’s not too late for the diplomats. I would say that Poland is an autumn project, after the harvest, before the rains.”
The car moved slowly through the village of Alfortville, where a row of dance halls stood side by side on the quai facing the river. Parisians came here on summer nights, to drink and dance until dawn. “Poor soul,” Polanyi said. “Perhaps he drank in these places.”
“Not many places he didn’t,” Bolthos said.
They were on their way to the funeral of the novelist Josef Roth, dead of delirium tremens at the age of forty-four. Sharing the backseat with Polanyi and Morath, a large, elaborate wreath, cream-colored roses and a black silk ribbon, from the Hungarian legation.
“So then,” Morath said, “this fugitive business is just a ruse.”
“Likely it is. Allows the people who sent him to deny his existence, maybe that’s it. Or perhaps just an exercise in the Soviet style-deceit hides deception and who knows what. One thing that does occur to me is that he is being operated by a faction in Moscow, people like Litvinov, who don’t want to do business with Hitler.”
“You will take care, when you see him again.”
“Oh yes. You can be sure that the Nazi secret service will want to keep any word of a Hitler/Stalin negotiation a secret from the British. They would not like us to be passing documents to English friends in Paris.” He paused, then said, “I’ll be glad when this is over, whichever way it goes.”
He seemed tired of it all, Morath thought. Sombor, the Russians, God only knew what else. Sitting close together, the scent of bay rum and brandy was strong in the air, suggesting power and rich, easy life. Polanyi looked at his watch. “It’s at two o’clock,” he said to the driver.
“We’ll be on time, your excellency.” To be polite, he sped up a little.
“Do you read the novels, Nicholas?”
“
“There, that says it. An epitaph.” Roth had fled from Germany in 1933, writing to a friend that “one must run from a burning house.”
“A Catholic burial?” Morath said.
“Yes. He was born in a Galician shtetl but he got tired of being a Jew. Loved the monarchy, Franz Josef, Austria-Hungary.” Polanyi shook his head. “Sad, sad, Nicholas. He hated the emigre life, drank himself to death when he saw the war coming.”
They arrived at Thiais twenty minutes later, and the driver parked on the street in front of the church. A small crowd, mostly emigres, ragged and worn but brushed up as best they could. Just before the Mass began, two men wearing dark suits and decorations carried a wreath into the church. “Ah, the Legitimists,” Polanyi said. Across the wreath, a black-and-yellow sash, the colors of the Dual Monarchy, and the single word
In the graveyard by the church, the priest spoke briefly, mentioned Roth’s wife, Friedl, in a mental institution in Vienna, his military service in Galicia during the war, his novels and journalism, and his love of the church and the monarchy.
After the coffin was lowered into the grave, Morath took a handful of dirt and sprinkled it on top of the pinewood lid. “Rest in peace,” he said. The mourners stood silent while the gravediggers began to shovel earth into the grave. Some of the emigres wept. The afternoon sun lit the tombstone, a square of white marble with an inscription: Josef Roth
Austrian Poet
Died in Paris in Exile