and fixed in place by a rock atop the cement surround that topped the stuccoed plaster. Immediately, he looked away.
The rain held off. Fortunately, for Behar, it went away and found somewhere else to fall, because, for the second part of the job, he required sunshine. Which, the following morning, poured through the window of the shack and sent him off whistling to the better part of town, that part of town where people were used to certain luxuries. But this too turned out to be a difficult search, since the little gardens behind these houses were walled, so that Behar had to find a deserted street, check for broken glass cemented to the top of the wall-he’d learned about that years ago, the hard way-get a good grip, and hoist himself up. His first few attempts were unproductive. Then, at the very end of a quiet street, he found what he was looking for: a garden with two fig trees, a clothesline strung between them, laundry out to dry. Underpants, panties, two towels, two pillowcases, and two big white sheets.
He hauled himself the rest of the way and lay on the wall. Anyone home? Should he go and knock on the front door?
Back home, he experimented. Working with concentration-the remaining seven hundred drachma shimmered in his mind-he found he could wrap the sheet around his bare upper body and then button his shirt almost to the top, as long as he didn’t tuck it into his trousers.
Now for the hard part. He stayed home through the early evening, going out only after the bell in the town hall rang midnight. When he reached the school, the street was empty, though there were lights shining in the windows on both floors. But he had no intention of going in there, there wasn’t a bluff in the world that would get him past all those soldiers. No, for the Behars of the world there was only the drainpipe, at a corner toward the back of the building. He knew these pipes, fixed together in flanged sections, the flanges extending from the curve every three feet or so, he’d climbed them many times in his stealthy life. First, shoes off-the soles worn so thin and smooth he’d get no traction at all. He had no socks, so he climbed barefoot, his toes pressed against the flange, his fingers pulling him up to the next level.
In a few minutes he was on the roof. He crouched down, keeping his silhouette below the sight line from the street, and crawled over to the chimney. Yes, here was the wire. He wanted to touch it, this ribbon of metal worth a thousand drachma, but he had no idea what it might be for; perhaps it was charged with some mysterious form of electrical current and would burn his fingers with its magic. It was certainly a secret wire-that much he’d sensed in the voice of the foreigner-so,
The following morning he hurried off to the barbershop. In the back room, Pappou was cold and frightening. “Is it done? Whatever it is-done properly?” Behar said yes. Pappou sat still, his eyes boring into Behar’s soul, then he picked up the telephone and made a brief call. Asked for somebody with a Greek name, waited, finally said, “You can have your hair cut any time you want, the barber is waiting for you.” That was all. The foreigner appeared ten minutes later, and Pappou went out into the shop.
The foreigner asked where he’d found the wire; Behar told him. “Maybe I’ll go up to the roof myself,” he said. “What will I see?”
“A big white sheet, sir.”
“Flat?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Behar.” A pause. “If you ever,
A frightened Behar nodded emphatically. He understood all too well. The foreigner held his eyes for a time, then reached into his pocket and counted out seven one-hundred-drachma notes.
28 November.
For Costa Zannis, it began as a normal day, but then it changed. He was standing next to the captain in the school’s narrow cloakroom, which, with the addition of a teacher’s desk, had been turned into what passed for a liaison office. Pavlic was just about to join them, it was the most common moment imaginable; pleasant morning, daily chore, quiet talk. Zannis and the captain were looking down at a hand-drawn map, with elevations noted on lines indicating terrain, of some hilltop in Albania.
Then the captain grabbed his upper arm. A grip like a vise-sudden, instinctive.
Zannis started to speak-“What …”-but the captain waved him into silence and stood frozen and alert, his head cocked like a listening dog. In the distance, Zannis heard a drone, aircraft engines, coming toward them. Coming low, not like the usual sound, high above. The captain let him go and ran out the door, Zannis followed. From the north, two planes were approaching, one slightly above the other. The captain hurried back into the school and grabbed the Bren gun that stood, resting on its stock, in one corner of the entry hall. The windows rattled as the planes roared over the rooftop and the captain took off toward the street, Zannis right behind him. But the captain shouted for him to stay inside, Zannis followed orders, and stopped in the doorway, so lived.
In front of the school, the captain searched the sky, swinging the Bren left and right. The sound of the planes’ engines faded-going somewhere else. But that was a false hope, because the volume rose sharply as they circled back toward the school. The captain faced them and raised the Bren, the muzzle flashed, a few spent shells tumbled to the ground, then machine guns fired in the distance, the captain staggered, fought for his balance, and sank to his knees.
What happened next was unclear. Zannis never heard an explosion, the world went black, and when his senses returned he found he was lying on his stomach and struggling to breathe. He forced his eyes open, saw nothing but gray dust cut by a bar of sunlight, tried to move, couldn’t, and reached behind him to discover that he was pinned to the floor by a beam that had fallen across the backs of his legs. In panic, he fought free of a terrible weight. Then he smelled fire, his heart hammered, and he somehow stood up.
As he pulled Pavlic’s body toward the entry, there was a grinding roar and the rear section of the second story came crashing down onto the first floor. Zannis heaved again, Pavlic’s body moved. He could see an orange flicker now and then, and could feel heat on the skin of his face. Was Pavlic alive? He peered down, found his vision blurred, realized his glasses weren’t there, and was suddenly infuriated. He almost wanted-for an instant a scared ten-year-old-to look for them, almost, then understood he was in shock and his mind wasn’t quite working. He took a deep breath, which burned in his chest and made him cough, steadied himself, and dragged the body out of the building, the back of Pavlic’s head bouncing down the steps that led to the doorway. Immediately there was someone by his side, a woman he recognized, who worked in the post office across from the school. “Easy with him,” she said. “Easy, easy, I think he’s still alive.” She circled Zannis and took Pavlic under the arms and slid him across the pavement.
With one bare foot, and unable to see very much of anything, he headed back toward the school. As he entered the building, a reservist came crawling out of the doorway, and Zannis realized there were still people alive inside. But the smoke blinded him completely and the heat physically forced him backward. In the street, he sat