night. Danzig-Langfuhr Aerodrome was little more than a collection of hangars in a field. The other passengers headed for the small brick terminal building, but the Senate President’s big Mercedes-Benz was standing on the tarmac as they stepped out of the plane. A small shield on the radiator grille showed the crown and two white crosses on red of the Free City of Danzig, but the pennants that flew from each wing were swastikas. Arthur Greiser thrust his arm through Stefan’s and pulled him into the black limousine while the chauffeur held the door open for them.
The effects of the schnapps were evident on Greiser’s breath and in his behaviour. Stefan, for this short journey at least, was a new friend, a best friend. There would be no taxi for the Senate President’s friend! Arthur Greiser’s arrival home had brought the election back to the front of his mind. It was only days away now. He filled the first half of the drive to the city with scatological references to the socialists and Jews who would be swept away by the election, and the sham democracy that would be swept away by the election, and the Poles and their fucking priests who would be swept away by the election, and the need for any further elections that would be swept away by the election. And when everything that had to be swept away had been swept away, there would be a golden future. It would bring the city of Danzig back into the arms of the fatherland, which was sometimes the motherland, depending on whether Greiser’s feelings were martial or sentimental.
By the time they reached the outskirts of the city, the Senatsprasident was, thankfully, asleep again. The chauffeur, who seemed almost as pleased about that as Stefan, delivered him to the door of the Hotel Danziger Hof.
Greiser was right about one thing; his name, or in this case his car, with the sight of him snoring in the back seat, was enough. It was enough to bring the hotel manager out of his office to promise Stefan the best room he had available, and his personal attention at any time of the day or night. His expression changed when Stefan asked if Frau Anna Harvey was there. That was the name Hannah had been using, Mrs Anna Harvey, of Blackrock, Dublin. The manager looked puzzled, then angry, then puzzled again, as if he couldn’t relate the man who had got out of the Senate President’s car to the question he had just been asked. No, she wasn’t there. She certainly wasn’t there. In fact Frau Harvey had walked out of the hotel after only one night, one night when she’d booked a room for two, without a word to anyone. She had left her belongings in the room. And she hadn’t paid her bill.
Stefan stood in the luggage store behind the concierge’s desk at the Hotel Danziger Hof. Hannah Rosen’s small case, bearing a label with the name Mrs Anna Harvey, contained very little. There was not much more than a change of clothes and some underwear; a bag with soap, a flannel, toothpaste; make-up and a bottle of Chanel No. 11; a bracelet, a brush. He had seen her take off that bracelet and put it beside his bed. There were strands of her dark hair in the brush. He smelt the scent of her perfume. The porter who showed him the case had spoken to her before she left the hotel, the morning after she’d arrived. It was two days ago now. She had asked him for directions to the cathedral in Oliva. That was all. The man seemed slightly nervous, as if he had something more to say. When Stefan turned to leave he pushed a banknote into the porter’s hand. It was a five dollar bill. Adam Rosen had given him a roll of dollars at Baldonnel that morning. It was a lot more than the man expected. It was enough. He stepped in front of Stefan and pushed the door back into the lobby firmly shut. Stefan waited.
‘The police were here that night looking for her.’
‘Do you know why?’
‘They said she hadn’t registered her passport.’
‘You don’t think that was it though?’
‘They don’t send the Gestapo to check your passport.’
15. Zoppot Pier
Stefan took the same tram through the suburbs of Danzig that Hannah had taken. He walked through the same gardens to the cathedral. It had been impossible to sleep. He had lain in the bedroom at the Danziger Hof, staring out of the window, waiting for the dawn. The idea that Hannah was in danger had become real in Ireland, but not as real as it was here. He knew a lot more about her now. He understood her sudden departure before Christmas. There had been a part of her she kept shut away; he had sensed that. He thought it had all been personal, but at least he knew it was about something else now. And for anyone who had grown up in Ireland in the last twenty years, none of it was so remarkable. When he was child, it was all around him. Guns were smuggled and money was collected and people were hidden in barns and attics. As a boy, while his father was still a policeman in Dublin, he could sense which of his friends’ fathers were Volunteers and Sinn Feiners and IRA men. David Gillespie tried hard to keep his family outside what was happening, but Stefan knew instinctively what it was good not to see and even better not to talk about. What Hannah Rosen was doing in Palestine didn’t feel so far away. But if he had thought Robert Briscoe was exaggerating the danger, to put pressure on him to help, he didn’t think so now. He knew Germany would feel very different from the place he’d visited as a child. He’d read enough after all. But it was much more. The hours at Tempelhof had unsettled him. There was danger, directionless perhaps, but there all around him, hanging in the air. And it was here too in Danzig. He felt its breath as Arthur Greiser welcomed him to the Free City.
A Mass was ending at the cathedral when he arrived. The sun was shining. There were people everywhere. Through the open doors of the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity and the Blessed Virgin he heard the organ. He recognised a Bach Chorale. His mother used to play it on the piano at Kilranelagh. ‘Es ist das Heil uns kommen her.’ It is salvation brings us here. He walked slowly through the crowd, taking his bearings. He had already decided that the less attention he drew to himself the better. It wouldn’t take him long to find the priest, but he would rely on his own resources; he wouldn’t walk in and leave his calling card. There was no question now; Hannah was missing. All he knew was that she had set off to find Father Francis Byrne at the cathedral in Oliva. That was where he had to start.
As he looked through the crowd towards the cathedral doors he was suddenly staring at someone he knew. He recognised him immediately. The face was thinner. There wasn’t the same sense of immaculate, careful dress. If anything he looked scruffy. But Stefan hadn’t forgotten the man who had smiled at him so contemptuously in the hallway of the house in Merrion Square. He hadn’t seen him since the day he arrested him, but the image was fixed in his head. It was Hugo Keller. And as he stared, he was aware that Keller would almost certainly recognise him. He stepped back into the shadow of a tree. People were standing in groups, talking. Keller seemed to be waiting for someone. The Austrian turned back towards the cathedral; a priest was coming out. And as the two men met, Stefan had no doubt who Keller had been waiting for. He had never seen the priest before, but he was there now; thirty-five perhaps, not very tall, with fair hair just starting to recede. Stefan couldn’t begin to explain what the abortionist was doing here with Father Francis Byrne, but he knew he needed to be careful. He knew Danzig was a place where anything that couldn’t be explained was probably dangerous.
The mass-goers were drifting away from the cathedral square. Keller and Byrne walked towards the gardens, deep in conversation. The priest was agitated. He didn’t speak loudly, but Stefan could feel he was holding his voice in check, along with his emotions. The two men were close to him now. He turned his back and walked in the opposite direction. Then he stopped abruptly and looked round, across the square and through the trees. They were heading for the park. There were other people going that way too, back to Oliva and Zoppot and the trams into the city. Stefan waited. Once the two men were in the park the trees would be thick enough to hide him. He would be able to follow them without being seen. He wouldn’t approach them together. He still needed to start with Father Byrne. As he watched their backs ahead of him he could see that they had stopped talking now. It was not a happy silence. They were both angry, but as the conversation resumed Stefan could tell that it was Hugo Keller who was controlling it.
The priest and the abortionist emerged on to the main road through Oliva. Stefan stayed back among the trees at the park gates. He watched them approach the tram stop. A Number 2 tram was pulling up, heading back into Danzig. He was unsure what to do. If he got on the tram Keller might see him. He stepped out on to the road uncertainly. He might have to risk it. At the tram stop Byrne took an envelope from his pocket. He thrust it furiously into Keller’s hand, then spun round and walked rapidly away towards Zoppot. Keller watched him go, a satisfied smile on his face. He put the envelope in his pocket. And as the doors of the tram opened he got on.
Stefan didn’t want to lose Keller after all this. He knew the Austrian’s presence here was no coincidence, but he had to follow one or the other. And it still had to be the priest. It was the priest Hannah had come to see. He